Unix software and USSR
Thomas Tornblom
thomas at uppsala.telesoft.se
Mon Oct 1 20:09:23 AEST 1990
In article <11394 at alice.att.com> dmr at alice.att.com (test) writes:
2) crypt(1) and the 'encrypt' entry point in crypt(3)--as opposed
to the 'crypt' entry point used for passwords--were removed
from overseas distribution. The distinction was fine. Approximately,
the one-way character of the password mechanism did not fall within
the protected area, whereas the ability of both crypt(1) and
the general DES encode-decode to produce secret messages put
them in the category of things that needed licences for export.
Note that DES was not treated specially here-- crypt(1) is not
DES, for example. (Though doubtless any mention of 'DES'
served as a flag to the watchful.)
Hi Dennis!
crypt(1) has nothing to do with DES, it is a "one-rotor machine designed
along the lines of the German Enigma". I don't think DES is or was subject
to any export restrictions.
At least in the man pages on our machines the only thing I could find that
was restricted was crypt(1).
Thomas
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