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History for IPR disclosure
Stanford University's Statement about IPR related to RFC 2945

Date Type By Text
2014-12-23 Changed disclosure metadata Ryan Cross Changed disclosure metadata
2014-12-23 Changed disclosure metadata Ryan Cross Changed disclosure metadata
2014-12-23 Changed disclosure metadata Ryan Cross Changed disclosure metadata
2000-04-26 Posted (System) IPR Disclosure Posted
2000-04-26 Submitted (System) IPR Disclosure Submitted
2000-04-26 Legacy (System)
From: http://www.ietf.org/ietf-ftp/IPR/WU-SRP

Received April 26, 2000
Kirsten Leute <kirsten.leute@stanford.edu>

Stanford University has a U.S. patent pending for the Secure Remote
Password (SRP) authentication …
From: http://www.ietf.org/ietf-ftp/IPR/WU-SRP

Received April 26, 2000
Kirsten Leute <kirsten.leute@stanford.edu>

Stanford University has a U.S. patent pending for the Secure Remote
Password (SRP) authentication and key-exchange system.  To encourage
widespread use of strong cryptographic authentication technologies,
Stanford University is granting royalty-free licenses for SRP when used in
its implicit server authenticating mode, such as implementations based on
RFC 2945.  Details will soon be available at
(http://otl.stanford.edu/industry/resources/rts.html).

Stanford University will also offer non-exclusive licenses in a
nondiscriminatory manner for use of SRP in its bi-directional
authenticating mode (SRP-Z) under reasonable terms and conditions.

Please contact me with any questions regarding the licensing of SRP.

Sincerely,

Kirsten Leute
Associate
(650) 725-9407
Fax: (650) 725-7295
kirsten.leute@stanford.edu

======================================================================================
Received December 22, 2000
From: Thomas Wu <tjw@CS.Stanford.EDU>

The SRP Authentication and Key Exchange System, as specified in
RFC 2945, is available royalty-free worldwide for commercial and
non-commercial use.

Extended variants of SRP, such as those based on SRP-Z, may require
a license, which Stanford will grant on a non-exclusive basis, under
reasonable and non-discriminatory terms.

For questions about SRP, please contact me or visit
http://otl.stanford.edu/

Tom Wu
tjw@CS.Stanford.EDU