Presi wrote:

> About this note in Mozilla.org:
> 
> "This source code is subject to the U.S. Export Administration
> Regulations and other U.S. law, and may not be exported or re-exported
> to certain countries   (currently Afghanistan (Taliban controlled
> areas), Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria) or to
> persons or entities prohibited from receiving U.S. exports (including
> Denied Parties, entities on the Bureau of Export Administration Entity
> List, and Specially Designated Nationals)."
> 
> If Mozilla is a international free software project supported by
> developers of many countries (not only from U.S.), why is under U.S.
> export laws?? If any individual person from Iran, Iraq, Libya, etc.
> want to use the software or collaborate in the project, is banned??
> 
> If the reason is that the server mozilla.org resides phisically in the
> U.S. what about move this server to another country that don't have
> these reestricticons?
> 
> I think we need to preserve the free software right without political
> reasons.
And you would bypass patent restriction

Still have to solve the harware, administration and bandwith costs.

Colin

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