Hello Cliffe,
I Believe, I provided enough information to be able to achieve what has
been asked here.
Anyway I'm bound to the US rules and abide and respect them, and
definitely am not a Lawyer, however my concern was not EAR (Export
Administration Regulations) the law is much more complicated than just
an export control regulation,
By considering the source of the message coming from a known University
in Iran working on dual purpose subjects, I personally prefer not to
help particularly (on implementation basis), and I think I have such right.
Tried to help as much as I could.
Providing legal advice requires attorney-client privilege/relationship
and I don't think just Google search result would be enough in such case.
Anyway this is not a legal mailing list, technical aspects have been
covered as much as it should, if you would like you may add additional
notes.
Best Regards,
Patrick K.
On 11/7/2010 10:37 AM, Cliffe wrote:
On 7/11/2010 10:39 PM, cto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
I'm sorry but with all due respects, I don't know if helping people in
Iran on the subject is legal or not (I'm not a Lawyer) but judging
from sources of your mail (which is Iran), I prefer not to be involved
in any particular help.
I have never heard anything that has suggested that there have ever been
US export laws regarding access control software, let alone helping
someone set up their free open source security software (please let me
know if you have heard otherwise). It has been 10 years since US
cryptography export laws have relaxed (and maybe they still apply to
embargoed destinations).
Just a quick google:
"controls on encryption did not apply to cryptographic equipment and
software if their functionality was limited to any of the following nine
categories:" ... "(5) Access control devices such as ATMs;"
Anyway this is a project develped primarily by the National Security
Agency of the USA, and its contributors.
That does not seem relevant to me...
Cliffe.
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