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- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
-
-
- Never speak ill of yourself;
- friends will always say enough on that subject.
- Bonn, 26th May 1995
-
- Dear Amiga PGP community,
-
- with notable delay I release the latest version of the ongoing Pretty
- Good Privacy (PGP) project, but I think it was worth waiting a few days,
- because the first release of PGP 2.6.2i contained several nasty bugs you
- don't need to care about now.
-
- This version has been compiled from the sources Staale released on 7th
- May, with only minor modifications. I wrote a work-around for a but in
- SAS/C for example, which caused problems with local variables under OS 2.04
- or later. Furthermore, this version has been compiled with Robert Knop's
- main.c startup replacement code for the original SAS/C module, adding a few
- nifty features to PGP's command line environment. I'll quote the
- description from the source almost unmodified:
-
- | As with the standard __main(), this parses the input command line into
- | the argv array. However, here, the number of arguments is unlimited;
- | additionally, one may specify on the command line a list of arguments in
- | a file using the construction "@filename" (without quotes). The named
- | file will be read and all of the whitespace separated arguments therein
- | will be inserted to the argv array at that point. Since the string
- | parser is written recursively, embedded files may be nested; that is,
- | within one filename referenced on the command line with @, there may be
- | another filename referenced with @. Memory and stack space is the only
- | limit as to how far the nesting may go.
- |
- | Version 1.2 -- this version supports stderr redirection, similar to
- | unix, by specifying &filename (or & filename or &"file name" or & "file
- | name") on the command line. stderr is redirected by opening first
- | calling Close() on what is currently in __ufbs[2].ufbfh (hopefully this
- | simulates the SAS stdio destructor), and then Open()ing the file
- | __ufbs[2].ufbfh with the specified filename.
-
- If you think that description is not verbose enough, please don't
- hesitate to contact Robert Knop <rknop@citir5.caltech.edu> and to ask for
- further details. *grin*
-
- The archive contains two versions of PGP, "PGP.000" and "PGP.020". The
- first binary should run on any kind of Amiga architecture, while the latter
- has been compiled especially for the 68020/030/040 CPU and runs
- approximately two times faster on these Amigas than the other version. Both
- executables are pure and may be made resident to avoid loading and startup
- delays under heavy usage.
-
- Okay, those of you who use PGP for the first time may wonder what to
- do next. The best would probably be to finish reading this file. Then you
- might want to read the "ReadMe.1st" file (if you haven't done so already),
- which contains more generic stuff about this PGP version. After reading
- these files, you should take a look at doc/pgpdoc1.txt and doc/pgpdoc2.txt.
-
- Please don't try to use PGP without reading at least major parts of
- the manual! You won't be very successful. In the past people have always
- complained that PGP is too complicated, but there's not much I can do about
- that, I'm afraid. "Security" is something complicated in its nature and
- thus PGP is a bit complicated, too. Don't be scared away by the command
- line interface or the not-existing GUI -- after only one week, you'll be
- able to use PGP easily. I promise!
-
- If you want to stay tuned about the latest development in PGPAmiga or
- just seek help with problems you don't want to ask in world-wide news
- groups, you might want to subscribe to the PGPAmiga mailing list. Just send
- an e-mail to PGPAmiga-request@peti.rhein.de and put the word "ADD" (without
- quotes) in the message body. Please just ADD. Not more and not less. The
- subject of the mail doesn't matter, by the way.
-
- After about one day delay you'll receive a notification that you have
- been added to the mailing list. Don't expect to much traffic, though, as
- the list is usually pretty quite, except the times when new releases are
- out, which is by chance right now. :-) You can post to the list by sending
- e-mail to PGPAmiga@peti.rhein.de.
-
- You are also very welcome to send me your comments, questions or
- requests privately. My e-mail address is simons@peti.rhein.de. (People who
- know me for a longer time now should note the new address!) Really
- everything is welcome. Sending your questions to the mailing list might
- bring you enlightenment quicker, though, as I am usually fucking busy --
- not necessarily vice versa.
-
-
- Another important thing that has to be addressed is the fact that
- Philip Zimmermann, the original author of PGP, is deep into trouble,
- because the security agencies aren't very fond of people writing
- mega-secure encryption tools and then giving them away for free.
- Subsequently, Phil has encountered some problems. He has been explicitly
- told that he is the primary target of the investigation being mounted from
- the San Jose office of U.S. Customs. It is not known if there are other
- targets. Whether or not an indictment is returned in this case, the legal
- bills will be astronomical.
-
- If this case comes to trial, it will be one of the most important
- cases in recent times dealing with cryptography, effective communications
- privacy, and the free flow of information and ideas in cyberspace in the
- post-Cold War political order. The stakes are high, both for those of us
- who support the idea of effective personal communications privacy and for
- Phil, who risks jail for his selfless and successful effort to bring to
- birth "cryptography for the masses," a.k.a. PGP. Export controls are being
- used as a means to curtail domestic access to effective cryptographic
- tools: Customs is taking the position that posting cryptographic code to
- the Internet is equivalent to exporting it. Phil has assumed the burden and
- risk of being the first to develop truly effective tools with which we all
- might secure our communications against prying eyes, in a political
- environment increasingly hostile to such an idea -- an environment in which
- Clipper chips and Digital Telephony bills are our own government's answer
- to our concerns. Now is the time for us all to step forward and help
- shoulder that burden with him.
-
- Phil is assembling a legal defense team to prepare for the possibility
- of a trial, and he needs your help. This will be an expensive affair, and
- the meter is already ticking. I call on all of us, both here in the U.S.
- and abroad, to help defend Phil and perhaps establish a groundbreaking
- legal precedent. A legal trust fund has been established with Phil's
- attorney in Boulder.
-
- If you wish to donate some money to Philip Zimmermann, you may
- transfer it to an account here in Germany -- what is usually quite a lot
- cheaper than transferring it to overseas. Here is the information you will
- need:
-
- Account owner: Peter Simons
- Bank : Commerzbank Bonn, Germany
- Account No. : 1112713
- Bank No. : 380 400 07
-
- This is NOT my private account! It is only used to collect the
- donations for Philip. Every single dollar I receive will be transferred to
- the account in the States monthly, with minimum fees. If you donate any
- money, you might want to send an e-mail to me (simons@peti.rhein.de) and to
- Philip Dubois (dubois@csn.org) to let us know. Sending a copy to Phil's
- lawyer will furthermore make sure that I can by no means keep anything for
- myself as he knows exactly what amount has been given.
-
- If you need any further information, please don't hesitate to contact
- me under simons@peti.rhein.de and I will happily try to help. You may get
- my PGP public key from any keyserver or by fingering simons@comma.rhein.de.
-
- Please be generous! Consider that PGP is completely free for you to
- use and Phil got nothing but trouble in return. One can easily imagine what
- a software company had charged you for a tool like that!
-
-
- Last but not least a note of more private nature. I can easily write
- something private now, as more than 95% of my readers have probably skipped
- to something else in the distribution right now. :-)
-
- I have been following PGP and the related tools for quite some time
- now and while working on the different versions, I have got to know many,
- many nice people who I in a strange way call friends even though I have
- never met them personally. However, I just wanted to let these people know
- that I will leave the Amiga platform anyday soon and while I would not only
- probably but CERTAINLY forget half of them when dishing that message out
- via e-mail, I can reach almost anyone of them via this way.
-
- Due to the growing network I have to administrate and my work for the
- Institute of Discrete Mathematics, I was forced more and more into UNIX.
- And while UNIX is a pain in the *** for the beginner, it is a damned
- powerful operating system for the experienced user -- not to mention all
- the fun ones has administrating a system for other users. (Hmm, does that
- sound sarcastic?)
-
- The point is, there's a good chance that I'll convert to UNIX full
- time and get rid of my Amiga within the coming months and though the vast
- majority of the readers will ask themselves right now: "Why the %#$! is he
- telling me all that BS?" I felt like throwing it in.
-
- I am sure that I will do any releases that are to come in the very
- next weeks, but long term someone else will have to take the project over.
- Maybe Robert Knop can do that? We'll see...
-
-
- Even more last than "last" but still not least though, I would like to
- thank several people for their continuous support and help. First of all
- Robert Knop who wrote major parts of the Amiga-specific code in this
- release and who is furthermore maintaining the US-Version of PGPAmiga.
- Thanks a lot to Staale Schumacher, too, who is the first PGP maintainer who
- actually bothered to include the Amiga-specific changes in the main source
- tree. Subsequently I have to thank not the whole MIT-PGP team, who have
- ignored the Amiga platform for years and made my job very difficult. Also
- thanks a lot not for consequently ignoring all bug reports from Robert and
- me concerning violations of the ANSI-C standard. Well, I guess that's
- life...
-
- Further thanks go to Arno Eigenwillig, Richard Gooch, Andreas M.
- Kirchwitz, Thomas & Walter Mildenberger, Frank Bergknecht, Michael van
- Elst, Petra Zeidler, Ignatios Sovatios, Sylvia, Judith, various Anjas,
- Sascha and all the people who have donated money to the legal defense trust
- fund. I am sure that I have forgotten a thousand people who I do remember
- the second, the signed archive has bee uploaded to the FTP server...
-
-
- Thank you all for a wonderful time and many great experiences in
- approximately three and a half years of PGP'ing.
-
-
- Peter Simons <simons@peti.rhein.de>
-
-
-
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- -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
-