>>>>> "M.-A. Lemburg" <[email protected]> (M-L) wrote:
>M-L> Depending on how close a country follows the Wassenaar >M-L> Arrangement (http://www.wassenaar.org/) OpenSSL, Python >M-L> and all other open-source software falls under the >M-L> GENERAL SOFTWARE NOTE part 2.: >M-L> """ >M-L> The Lists do not control "software" which is either: >M-L> 1. ... >M-L> 2. "In the public domain". >M-L> """ >M-L> If you're shipping a closed-source product that includes >M-L> OpenSSL, then you'd have to follow the rules in category 5 >M-L> part 2 of the dual-use list: >M-L> http://www.wassenaar.org/publicdocuments/index_CL.html But Python is not in the public domain. Open source != public domain. Public domain means there is no copyright and no license attached to it, AFAIK. -- Piet van Oostrum <[email protected]> URL: http://pietvanoostrum.com [PGP 8DAE142BE17999C4] Private email: [email protected] -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
