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
> >
Quoting Dan Brosemer ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> On Tue, Dec 14, 1999 at 02:19:35PM +, David Wright wrote:
> > Quoting Colin Watson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Glen S Mehn) wrote:
> > If ssh were non-free, and I were to download it from a site in the US,
> > then I would've broken
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Wright) wrote:
>Quoting Colin Watson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Glen S Mehn) wrote:
>[...]
>> > ... Ssh uses cryptography that you
>> >technically have to license in the US to use, so it's a "non-US"
>> >package.
>>
>> With the slink version that's true, bu
On Tue, Dec 14, 1999 at 02:19:35PM +, David Wright wrote:
> Quoting Colin Watson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Glen S Mehn) wrote:
> If ssh were non-free, and I were to download it from a site in the US,
> then I would've broken the law, wouldn't I? Whereas, because it's non-US,
>
Quoting Colin Watson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Glen S Mehn) wrote:
[...]
> > ... Ssh uses cryptography that you
> >technically have to license in the US to use, so it's a "non-US"
> >package.
>
> With the slink version that's true, but that really makes it non-free
> rather than no
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Glen S Mehn) wrote:
>Add this line to your /etc/apt/sources.list:
>
>
>deb http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US stable non-US
>
>and then type apt-get install ssh. Ssh uses cryptography that you
>technically have to license in the US to use, so it's a "non-US"
>package.
With t
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