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> > Subject: ATF Takes Responsibility for Federal Software Policy > Enforcement > > WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Department of the Treasury announced today > that responsibility for enforcement of new federal regulations of the > software industry will fall under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of > Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF). As the regulations come into > effect, the bureau will be renamed to be the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, > Firearms, and Software (ATFS). > > The new regulations have been taken by most observers as a key > indication of the Federal Government's serious concern over the software > production scandal gripping the nation. The final verdict of the grand > jury investigation into the dangers of unregulated software production > was praised as a major victory by software leaders in Redmond last > month. > > The grand jury investigation centered on the disturbing trend that key > portions of the nation's critical infrastructure are being entrusted to > a software product for which the secret inner workings (known as `source > code') are becoming as prevalent as pornography on the Internet. > > The Director of the ATF's 5,000-strong team of agents has pledged his > full support to enforce the new regulations, under which all software > development must take place only in licensed facilities by trained > induhviduals. He was joined at a press conference this morning by the > Director of the National Infrastructure Protection Center, who said, > "It's about time the ATF took the entire software industry into its > jurisdiction." He continued, "We would never consider laying the > blueprints for our critical assets out for all to see. I applaud the > new regulations for bringing sanity to a long unchecked industry." > > The public will have until 1 Jun 2002 to dispose of all unregulated > software products they may own. Possession of unlicensed software > products can result in penalties up to 20 years in jail and > multi-million dollar fines. Currently, only Smallsoft of Redmond, > Washington, has achieved the necessary regulatory status to produce > software in compliance with the new regulations. > > An underground group of activists using the moniker ``the Electronic > Frontier Foundation'' (EFF) has been strongly critical of the Federal > Government's position throughout. Police have indicated the violent > clashes are expected between supporters of the EFF and US Presidential > nominee Billy Doors, the major proponent of the regulations, as he > addresses business leaders in Winnemucca, Nevada, this afternoon. >
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