Message-ID: X-RT-Original-Encoding: utf-8 References: Content-Type: text/html; charset="utf-8" X-RT-Interface: Web X-Mailer: MIME-tools 5.507 (Entity 5.507) Content-Disposition: inline In-Reply-To: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary RT-Send-CC: Content-Length: 903 I think "free distribution and use" was intended to mean (approximately) "you can freely use and distribute the software" and not "you can distribute the software if you don't charge for it".

I see that Gladman's current AES code has a license starting with reworded text:

> The redistribution and use of this software (with or without changes)
is allowed without the payment of fees or royalties provided that:

which I guess could still be said to have unclear applicability of "without the payment or fees or royalties".  But maybe it's a bit clearer.  I can look into updating the code and license.

MIT krb5 can be compiled with the OpenSSL crypto back-end if you want to avoid building the Gladman AES code.  I believe Fedora does this, so it's pretty well exercised.