By publishing it in a mathematical journal you automatically get the property/patent of it, if I understood things right. So if it is really a such a great formula as you say, then you should do it.
Quote:
|
because it might be used to compromise encryption and security codes
|
You should not have concerns about this, simply because you might be the first to have found that formula, but if you don't publish it someone else will find it in the future (1 year/10years...not really important) and publish it...or do you believe to be so unique that no1 else can go down the path you went to find that formula?
So write an article (if you have never written them, check out on arxiv or elsewhere how they are written) and submit it to a journal. Then some "qualified mathematician" will review it and tell you what you have to change to get it published...
By the way I just figured out a few days ago how it works when publishing an article. You send it in to a given journal, this journal then sends it to a researcher acive in that field (usually a professor I guess), who then gives feed-back directly to you.