Just a nit...

David Wright wrote:

> Quoting Dan Brosemer ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> > However, you are breaking the law if you attempt to:
> > 
> > 3.  Export it _from_ the US to a country other than Canada or export it
> > _from_ Canada to a country other than the US if the original source was
> > inside the US.
>                                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> I don't think I'd like to debate this point with US immigration.

You quoted `original source'.  Let me quote the rebuilt sentence
that comes from:

`you are breaking the law if you attempt to export it _from_
 Canada to a country other than the US, if the original source
 [comes from] inside the US.'

So you'd be talking with Canadian immigration about the export,
not US immigration.

> If I take linux on a laptop to the US, all the non-US stuff will
> be coming off it first, whatever its original source.

Of course, that's the law.  If you take XTEA from the UK into the
US, it's illegal to export it later.

However, I'm perfectly happer having XTEA on a Canadian ftp
server, since it's crypto code that _doesn't_ come from the US.

Peter

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