From: Peter Bradie Area: Public Key Encryption To: John Stephenson 16 Apr 95 18:59:00 Subject: A quick test UpdReq -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- -=> Quoting John Stephenson to Kevin Berry <=- JS> You don't have an footer for PGP on that message, some how it a. got JS> cut off, or b. was never there. Trying it with BlueWave, John. Looks to be working slick on this end. Thanks for preparing the program for us. ___--BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBL5GvX4SYnLg9ADyZAQHoJgP/RgipjMleN/RpYRHSgZzTTHn2Uvvy39na 0dJBgQLCuQcVsGd3eMYCAuZQXNl8O3X/xd3sALfFujIjKk5qVxBMpQ2DwZoUc8DH MvtSfXpiOrs/7iC0BO3s24Cy1XRhk9ap5Vzt0ugXyNwiqqtACENLLL2BE+3t6SXa wvJjile86IY= =MihS ___--END PGP SIGNATURE----- ... With Alzheimers, you can hide your own Easter eggs... ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.10 201434369420143436942014343694201434369420143436942014343694718 From: David Chessler Area: Public Key Encryption To: Richard Dale 18 Apr 95 19:29:00 Subject: Re: encrypted messages UpdReq On 04-12-95 (22:00), Richard Dale, in a message to Victor Hugo about "RE: ENCRYPTED MESSAGES", stated the following: RD>VH>* Where is Ilegal ??, I live in Mexico which is my zone? RD> PGP is illegal in many countries and disapproved of in most others. No, not true. The only countries where PGP is known to be illegal are France and several Arab states. It is legal in most of Europe and Asia, and all of the Americas, plus Australia and Oceania. > The MIT version is illegal to export from the U.S. to everywhere > (except Canada, I believe), but that's like trying to stop the > ocean from making waves. The MIT and European versions are available on European and Asian FTP sites. RD> Caution: if your country has a BATF^M^M^M^M secret police, it's Why all the carriage returns after BATF? :-) You mean ^H, which is backspace. When talking to foreigners it's not smart to use abbreviations for obscure government agencies, like the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms. BATF, by the way, has nothing to do with export of munitions, or most other issues that might be on topic in this conference. The only reason most people in the US has heard of it is its unfortunate tendency to be trigger-happy, and to falsify evidence for search warrants (as in the unfortunate events in Waco, Texas). > best to assume that the government does not like encryption. > * Origin: Sound Advice - 24 Nodes (816)436-4516 (1:280/333) -- ___ __ david.chessler@neteast.com d_)--/d chessler@capaccess.org chessler@trinitydc.edu * SLMR 2.1b * E-mail: ->132 1:109/459 david.chessler@neteast.com 201434369420143436942014343694201434369420143436942014343694718