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219 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
A Short History of the GNU Privacy Guard
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========================================
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It's been a decade now that the very first version of the GNU Privacy
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Guard [0] has been released. This very first version was not yet
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known under the name of GnuPG but dubbed "g10" as a reference on the
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German constitution article on freedom of telecommunication
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(Grundgesetz Artikel 10) and as a pun on the G-10 law which allows the
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secret services to bypass these constitutional guaranteed freedoms.
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Version 0.0.0 released on December 20th 1997 [1], was a barely working
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replacement of PGP avoiding all patented algorithm by using Elgamal
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and Blowfish instead of RSA and IDEA. It was prominently marked as a
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test version but nevertheless included most of the features of the
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current GnuPG. The data format however was not compatible with
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OpenPGP but oriented towards the PGP 2 format with a few extensions
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(e.g. to allow streaming of data). The OpenPGP working group was
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founded back in fall 1997 and I learned a bit too late about it to
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build "g10" according to the then existing draft. For copyright
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reasons it was practically not possible to reverse engineer the format
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used by PGP-5, so the establishment of the OpenPGP WG was the right
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thing at the right time.
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Before talking about GnuPG we need to go some more years back in
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history: To help political activists Phil Zimmermann published a
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software called Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) in 1991. PGP was designed
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as an easy to use encryption tool with no backdoors and disclosed
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source code. PGP was indeed intended to be cryptographically strong
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and not just pretty good; however it had a couple of initial bugs, most
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of all a home designed cipher algorithm. With the availability of the
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source code a community of hackers (Branko Lankester, Colin Plumb,
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Derek Atkins, Hal Finney, Peter Gutmann and others) helped him to fix
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these flaws and a get a solid version 2 out.
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Soon after that the trouble started. As in many countries the use or
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export of cryptographic devices and software was also strongly
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restricted in the USA. Only weak cryptography was generally allowed.
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PGP was much stronger and due to the Usenet and the availability of
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FTP servers and BBSs, PGP accidentally leaked out of the country and
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soon Phil was sued for unlicensed munitions export. Those export
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control laws were not quite up to the age of software with the funny
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effect that exporting the software in printed form seemed not to be
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restricted. MIT Press thus published a book with the PGP source code
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which was then scanned outside the USA to form the base of PGP-2i ("i"
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for international). Since then that version was used widely.
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The criminal investigations against Phil ended in 1996 and he founded
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PGP Inc to write PGP-5. The first public release was done in spring
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1997. The same year at the 39th IETF meeting at Munich in August Phil
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Zimmermann and Jon Callas asked the IETF to setup a working group to
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publish a standard for the protocol used by PGP-5 under the name
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OpenPGP. The main drive behind this was to allow widespread use of
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strong encryption even if at some point the new company would decide
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to stop selling and supporting PGP. As it turned out PGP Inc was
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acquired by Network Associates just a few months later and in 2002
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this company actually ceased support and development of PGP (though
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the PGP product was later continued by the new PGP Corporation).
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Also often claimed to be Free Software, PGP has never fulfilled the
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requirements for it: PGP-5 is straight proprietary software; the
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availability of the source code alone does not make it free. PGP-2 has
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certain restrictions on commercial use [2] and thus puts restrictions
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on the software which makes it also non-free. Another problem with
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PGP-2 is that it requires the use of the patented RSA and IDEA
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algorithms. The patent on RSA was only valid in the USA but the
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patent on IDEA was and is still valid [3] in most countries.
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Although the GNU project listed a requirement for a PGP replacement
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for some years on its task list, it was not possible to start
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implementing it as long as patents on all public key algorithms were
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valid. That changed when in April 1997 the basic patent on public key
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algorithms expired (the Diffie-Hellman US patent 4200770) and finally
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in August when the broader Hellman-Merkle patent (4218582) expired.
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A month later, at the Individual-Network Betriebstagung at Aachen [4],
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Richard Stallman continued his talk with a BoF session where he asked
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the European hackers to start implementing public key software. The
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arms trafficker laws of the USA prohibited the GNU project to write
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such software in their country or even by US citizens working abroad.
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Thus he told the European hackers that they are in the unique position
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to help the GNU with crypto software.
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Being tired of writing SGML conversion software and without a current
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fun project, I soon found myself hacking on PGP-2 parsing code based
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on the description in RFC-1991 and the pgformat.txt file. As this
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turned out to be easy I continued and finally came up with code to
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decrypt and create PGP-2 data. After I told the GNU towers that I
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will take up the PGP replacement implementation I spent the rest of
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the year replacing IDEA by Blowfish, RSA by Elgamal, implementing
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streaming encryption, adding some key management and getting the code
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into a reasonable shape.
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There used to be a plan for a free version of Secure Shell called PSST
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(later known as LSH) with a somewhat populated mailing lists
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maintained by Martin Hamilton. Martin was the so kind to setup a
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mailing list for g10 too and announced it on that list. This way we
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got the first subscribers. Eventually I made the first tarball, put
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it up to ftp.guug.de, the FTP server of the German Unix User Group,
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and wrote an announcement [5].
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Right the next day Peter Gutmann offered to allow the use of his
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random number code for systems without a /dev/random. This eventually
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helped a lot to make GnuPG portable to many platforms. The next two
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months were filled with code updates and a lengthily discussion on the
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name; we finally settled for Anand Kumria's suggestion of GnuPG and
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made the first release under this name (gnupg-0.2.8) on Feb 24 [6].
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Just a few days later an experimental version with support for Windows
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was released. (That release also fixed an alignment problem on Alpha
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boxes which was detected due to kernel log files filling up the hard
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disk and an admin asking whether they really need to be backed up. ;-)
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In July 1998 the first more or less OpenPGP draft compliant version
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was released. Matthew Skala had contributed Twofish code done cleanly
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from scratch (Twofish was at that time a promising AES candidate and
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suggested by Schneier as a Blowfish replacement; however we had some
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copyright concerns with the reference code). Michael Roth contributed
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a Triple-DES implementation later the year and thus completed the
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required set of OpenPGP algorithms. Over the next year the usual
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problems were solved, features discussed, complaints noticed and
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support for GPG in various other software was introduced by their
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respective authors.
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Finally, on September 7, 1999 the current code was released as version
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1.0.0 with the major update of including Mike Ashley's GNU Privacy
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Handbook [7]. A year later the RSA patent was to expire on September
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20; the patent holder placed the patent into the public domain 3 weeks
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earlier and thus we could release 1.0.3 with RSA support already on
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September 18. One of the major obstacles on widespread use public
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cryptography had gone (far too late of course).
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Also in 1999 the German government decided that strong encryption will
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not be regulated in any way and that its use is recommended for
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everyone. To publicly support this statement the Ministry of
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Economics funded the porting of GnuPG and related software to
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Microsoft Windows [8]. The US government was not keen to see that and
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tried to urge the German government to revise the decision to allow
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unregulated distribution of crypto software [9]. That did not work
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out and to the end the USA had no other way than to weaken their own
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export rules.
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Although we still develop GnuPG using servers located in Europe the
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new US export controls eventually allowed US hackers to contribute to
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GnuPG development. In 2001 David Shaw joined the project and since
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then he is one of the most active GnuPG hackers and the co-maintainer.
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It's now a long time since GnuPG could be managed as a fun project and
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thus I now spend most of my professional life maintaining and extending
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GnuPG. In 2001 I founded g10 Code, a Free Software company for the
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development and support of GnuPG and related software. The most known
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project is probably GnuPG-2 which started under the name NewPG as part
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of the broader Aegypten project. The main goal of Aegypten was to
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provide support for S/MIME under GNU/Linux and integrate that cleanly
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with other mail clients, most notably KMail. Although having been
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actively used since 2004, we released 2.0.0 only one years ago.
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It was not that much fun writing X.509/CMS (commonly named S/MIME)
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software compared to the elegant and very interoperable OpenPGP
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protocol. Having mastered that we meanwhile achieved to provide a
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software which is really useful and works nicely with almost any other
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S/MIME implementation. It also turned out that we could port GnuPG-2
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to Windows - despite my original claim that a modern POSIX platform
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will be needed for GnuPG-2. This development also showed that it is
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viable to develop Free Software as a business.
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With the new tools and from a user's perspective S/MIME and OpenPGP
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will soon not make much of a difference anymore. However I had to
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smile when I today read a report on the last RSA Europe conference
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where a quick poll during a talk showed that OpenPGP is the mostly
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used encryption protocol.
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Recall that GnuPG is just one tool; there are numerous other tools out
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to solve related privacy problems. Kudos to all who worked on writing
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and deploying privacy tools over all these years!
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Happy Hacking,
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Werner
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[0] http://www/gnupg.org
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[1] ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/historic/g10-0.0.0.tar.gz
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[2] from pgpdoc2.txt: "Finally, if you want to turn PGP into a
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commercial product and make money selling it, then we must agree
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on a way for me to also make money on it. [...] Under no
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circumstances may PGP be distributed without the PGP
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documentation, including this PGP User's Guide."
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[3] "valid" is meant in the sense the patent holders use it and does
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not imply that I regard patents on software a valid concept. See
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http://www.fsfeurope.org/projects/swpat/background.en.html .
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[4] http://www.dascon.de/IN-BT97/programm.html
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[5] http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-devel/1997-December/014131.html
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There are just a few mails in December mainly discussing patent things.
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[6] http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-devel/1998-February/014208.html
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[7] http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-announce/1999q3/000037.html
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[8] http://partners.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/11/cyber/articles/19encrypt.html
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[9] http://www.heise.de/tp/r4/artikel/5/5124/1.html
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=== Remarks ===
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In a reply to this mail Alan Olsen remarked on the ML:
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MIT was forced to use the RSAREF library which had a non free
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license. At first they used the RSAREF2 library, but then they were
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told to use the RSAREF1 library. (I diffed the two libraries and
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determined that the only difference was that RSAREF2 had fixed a
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number of buffer overflows and other security flaws. There were no
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added features.)
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If I remember correctly, 2.5 had RSAREF2 and 2.6 had RSAREF1. One
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of the main reasons for the creation of the "International version"
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was the use of RSAREF. (Besides the security issues, it was pretty
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damn slow. In the days of the i386 people cared about speed.)
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Jaime Suarez translated the text in his blog, see
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http://wordpress.mundocripto.com
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