Dooley himself Dooley himself
Dooley himself Dooley himself

My pgp E-mail is - Click on the link to mail me...
If you want to hide you messages to other than me then code it...

Below is my public key - Paste the key block below into a textfile or save this key block textfile - Import it into PGPkeys (Download PGP from www.pgpi.org.) - Right click in explorer or copy to clipboard or whatever (read the manual...) - ...to cryptate files or messages you want to send to me - If it has to be just between you and me...
Please note that this was initial written in 1998, and things may have changed, hopefully to the better...

My public key below can also be found on http://pgpkeys.mit.edu/ - search for 'Tom Kjeldsen' (keyID 0x18A94D8D)

-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Version: PGPfreeware 6.5.3 for non-commercial use http://www.pgp.com
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=/u6D
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

The PGPi project

October 1999
The PGPi project is a non-profit initiative, whose purpose is to make PGP freely and legally available worldwide. The project is largely based on unpaid, voluntary effort by security and privacy minded individuals. Funding for buying the PGP source code books is provided for through private donations and advertisement on our web pages. The PGPi project concentrates on four different areas:

Scanning and proofreading

Because of the strict US export regulations, strong encryption programs such as PGP cannot be exported electronically without a special license. In order to get around this problem, every time a new PGP version is released in the USA, we purchase the PGP source code books from a US book store, ship them to Europe, and scan, OCR and proofread the entire books (currently over 12,000 pages) to recreate the original program.

Internationalization and development

Because the US versions of PGP contain restrictions and limitations which are not relevant outside the US, we remove these limitations and add new features, while keeping compatibility with the US versions. Then we publish the corresponding PGPi version (e.g. PGP 6.0.2i is based on PGP 6.0.2, but with some modifications).

Translation and localization

In order to make PGP widespread, it must be localized and translated to other languages than English. PGP 2.6.3i has been translated into some 25 languages, and work is now going on to translate the PGP 5.x/6.x program and accompanying documentation.

Porting PGP to new platforms

The PGP 5.0 version from the US were originally only available for Windows, Macintosh and Linux. Thanks to the PGPi project, PGP 5.0i now runs on MS-DOS, Amiga, OS/2 and all kinds of Unix platforms.

Philip R. Zimmermann

December 2005
Philip R. Zimmermann is the creator of Pretty Good Privacy, an email encryption software package. Originally designed as a human rights tool, PGP was published for free on the Internet in 1991. This made Zimmermann the target of a three-year criminal investigation, because the government held that US export restrictions for cryptographic software were violated when PGP spread worldwide. Despite the lack of funding, the lack of any paid staff, the lack of a company to stand behind it, and despite government persecution, PGP nonetheless became the most widely used email encryption software in the world. After the government dropped its case in early 1996, Zimmermann founded PGP Inc. That company was acquired by Network Associates Inc (NAI) in December 1997, where he stayed on for three years as Senior Fellow. In August 2002 PGP was acquired from NAI by a new company called PGP Corporation, where Zimmermann now serves as special advisor and consultant. Zimmermann currently is consulting for a number of companies and industry organizations on matters cryptographic, and is also a Fellow at the Stanford Law School's Center for Internet and Society.