Ainsi parlait Kasper Nielsen :
> > > so this is an US export law issue and not a Sun License issue?
> >
> > I think so. It would be possible to distribute it but it would take a lot
>
> of
>
> > work to get all paper work done and I think there was other conditions
> > (ie must be us citizen, must get the connections from embargoed countries
>
> blocked
>
> > etc)
>
> thats strange on http://java.sun.com/products/jsse/index-102.html they have
> a link to
>
> Download JSSE 1.0.2 global software and documentation with support for
> strong encryption.
>
> and a Download JSSE 1.0.2 domestic (US/Canada) software and documentation
> with support for strong encryption
>
> Don't know what the difference is, but I would imagine its legal to
> distribute something that is allready allowed to be globally distributed?
Sofar no one answered this mail... Does US crytopgraphy export restrictions 
apply to both version of JSSE, or only to domestic version ? And do these 
restictions apply everywhere, or only for US-based download location ?

Said otherwise, can jpackage project (jpackage.sourceforge.net) provide JSSE 
global version packages, as any other Sun java API packages, eventually only 
on non-US mirrors, or is it a special case ?
-- 
Guillaume Rousse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
GPG key http://lis.snv.jussieu.fr/~rousse/gpgkey.html

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