Sp1d3r-W0lf,

That was a very good question, and I'll try to give you a good answer.

Corporate espionage and sabotage are rampant. For instance, the Biotech industry is at war with itself as competitors try and get intelligence on what patents the other companies are working on. The banking industry, though they will never admit it publicly, is loosing a large amount of money from intercepted and decoded transactions. SSL is a joke.

Another use of this would be field agents communicating with their home offices.

A packet sniffer can easily monitor all data that leaves or enters someone's NIC card. The FBI can install Carnivor at the ISP level and harvest data.

There are many solutions available today for the public at large: PGP, P3P, SSL, etc.

However, there are times where a company may have a need and desire for the strongest protection that technology can provide, and they should have it.

Sure, I admit that this is a hardcore protocol almost to the point of insanity; I set out to build it just to see if I could. And I had a lot of fun doing it also. However, getting the client/server synchronization working took a few years off of my life, it was a rewarding experience once it all flowed together.

I haven't had any sales yet because it hasn't been out yet a week, and most people do not even know that it exists. All I can do is hope that someone out there will find it to be a fun toy and order it.