nanog mailing list archives

Warrant Canaries


From: Michael DeMan <nanog () deman com>
Date: Sun, 5 Dec 2010 04:20:00 -0800


On Dec 4, 2010, at 9:06 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:

---- Original Message -----
From: "Adrian Chadd" <adrian () creative net au>

On Sat, Dec 04, 2010, Ken Chase wrote:
And if they come and ask the same but without a court order is a bit
trickier and more confusing, and this list is a good place to track the
frequency of and responce to that kind of request.

Except of course when you're "asked" not to share what has occured
with anyone. I hear that kind of thing happens today.

It does.  Hence, the Warrant Canary:

http://blog.kozubik.com/john_kozubik/2010/08/the-warrant-canary-in-2010-and-beyond.html

Cheers,
-- jra


Actually, my intuition is that warrant canaries are not a workable solution either.  I would presume that a violation 
of a 'secret' court order or national security letter where you are expressly ordered not to divulge the fact that you 
have received it could be violated either by any 'action' or 'inaction'.  So the 'inaction' of not updating the warrant 
canary would be a violation.

The interesting thing of course is that to avoid the 'inaction', and your regular process is to say update the warrant 
canary daily, you would be placed in the position where the government was asking you to lie to the public at large?

I have wondered about this for quite a while - has anybody on the list ever talked with an attorney with specific 
expertise in this area of law about this?  I am not expecting formal legal advice by any means, just curious if anybody 
has done any research on this topic and could share what they discovered.

- Mike

P.S. - Intent here is not to drag out the wikileaks thread, but rather start a new thread on the more general topic of 
legal/policies and warrant canaries, which although not a purely technical discussions seems more on-topic for the 
nanog list.  My apologies in advance if it is OT.










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