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ReadMe.amiga
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Wrap
PGP Signed Message
|
1995-09-25
|
12KB
|
214 lines
-----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-----