Bush Administration Loosens Computer Export Laws 25
An anonymous reader contributes: "The State Department has issued this statement detailing the Bush Administration's approval for sharply raising technical specifications of exported computers to a group of more than 40 countries including Russia, China, India, Pakistan and Israel. The threshold for export without a license to Tier 3 countries will rise to cover computers capable of 190,000
million theoretical operations per second (MTOPs), up from 85,000
MTOPs now. The change is exptected to take take effect in January or February of 2002."
The sad part of this (Score:4, Interesting)
The sad part of this is that many of these hardware companies place the cryptographic export limit on all of their drivers, simply because they are afraid of legal action from Uncle Sam.
You CAN export the hardware.... it just won't do anything with the manufacturer's official drivers.
Thankfully, kernel.org has instructions for removing these bits of code from the Linux kernel, making it legal to use anywhere there is a computer that can run it.
Re:The sad part of this (Score:2)
Re:The sad part of this (Score:3, Informative)
B) Many countries have import or usage restrictions on encryption.
C) Just like guns, when you restrict exportation (or importation), you only restrict the law abiding citizenry, because the criminals will export/import anyway.
D) This whole regulation of encryption thingy, regardless of which nation does it, is absurd.
Corollary to Moore's Law (Score:3, Funny)
Bush? (Score:1, Flamebait)
I don't get it...
Maybe I don't know enough about the issue, but this seems like a good decision to me.
Bush making a good decision...I must not understand the issue fully.
Seriously, unless I'm missing something major this seems like a great idea to me. I think it's great that Bush is doing something AGAINST American opression. Yes, let them have good computers, maybe *gasp* they'll get a chance to overcome their poverty.
Although I think this maybe counter productive to Bush's agenda. I mean, if they aren't desperately poor where are we going find sweatshops to make our Old Navy fleeces!
If someone thinks I'm being really stupid and missing the point please explain why this isn't a good decision. Give me a reason to hate the president, I didn't vote for him!
Re:Bush? (Score:2, Informative)
Stop being a moron and become informed on issues!
Worth reading daily [boortz.com]
[bias but for once not to the left] [newsmax.com]
be an informed voter [lp.org]
View from right and left [foxnews.com]
Re:Bush? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Bush? (Score:2)
You're supposed to hate the candidate you didn't vote for? No wonder this country is so fucked!
Re:Bush? (Score:1)
Re:Bush? (Score:1)
Computers allow you (or are at least an integral part) to build things like rockets. I think that is the basic reason for limiting computing exports. Maybe it is no longer an issue, so Bush is lifting the bans. However, I do seem to remember lots of republicans lambasting Clinton for relaxing some tech export laws to countries like China, which was on this Bush list too....
Re:Bush? (Score:1)
I remember about 15 years ago my parents' computer company in Hong Kong was selling these Apollo Domain workstations to China thanks to the export restrictions in place then. To clear customs the computers were dismantled, and had a few critical components removed to allow them to be shipped. They just put them back together once they're in the country.
But really, those restrictions are pointless - you cannot limit the quantity of components, so how can anyone tell whether the computers are used separately or bunched together as a cluster? If they limit the export of say ultra high speed optical networking components then yes it'll put a bit of damper on building supercomputers using commodity products. Except for the fact that even gigabit network cards are commodity product made in Taiwan (heck, the Taiwanese company making them may well be manufacturing them in China...)
And what does an MTOP correspond to? (Score:3, Interesting)
How does the gov't measure or categorize an MTOP?
How many MTOPs can an AMD 1900+ do?
How many MTOPs can an IBM S/390 do?
How many MTOPs can a Sun 4500 or Starfire do?
How many terrorist countries will care about MTOP restrictions when they can cobble together 500 bargain basement PCs (say $150/machine) to make a (beowulf) super computer?
Re:And what does an MTOP correspond to? (Score:3, Informative)
Bill for Bill (Score:1)
2400 bps Modems == Munitions (Score:1)
Re:190 mtops (Score:1)