Torng was a professor in the College of Engineering, which is one of the private colleges at Cornell. So the argument of "especially for state-funded schools" is moot in this case.
If in Russia it is "illegal to design a scheme that prevents private citizens from making copies of media for their own use" (http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/ a/2001/08/02/sklyarov.DTL), would an Adobe programmer who worked on the encryption software be arrested if she traveled there?
Torng was a professor in the College of Engineering, which is one of the private colleges at Cornell. So the argument of "especially for state-funded schools" is moot in this case.
If in Russia it is "illegal to design a scheme that prevents private citizens from making copies of media for their own use" (http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/ a/2001/08/02/sklyarov.DTL), would an Adobe programmer who worked on the encryption software be arrested if she traveled there?