Interesting People mailing list archives

more on Ohio University announces changes in file-sharing policies


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Fri, 27 Apr 2007 09:48:19 -0400



Begin forwarded message:

From: "David P. Reed" <dpreed () reed com>
Date: April 27, 2007 9:41:33 AM EDT
To: dave () farber net
Cc: ip () v2 listbox com, Brett Glass <brett () lariat net>
Subject: Re: [IP] more on Ohio University announces changes in file- sharing policies

CALEA provides facilities. However, use of those facilities to spy on traffic requires a judicial warrant. It is not proper or legal for the owner of network facilities to use those facilities *as if they are a law enforcement agency*. Ohio U is not a law enforcement agency, and its CIO has no judicial warrant.

Note that this is a comment on Brett Glass's position that CALEA grants him power over "his" customers, lest I be viewed as attacking Mr. Glass, who has taken personal offense at mere disagreement before. I am debunking his *position* only , and I expect the usual ad hominem response attacking me no matter this disclaimer.

- David

David Farber wrote:


Begin forwarded message:

From: Brett Glass <brett () lariat net>
Date: April 26, 2007 1:33:20 PM EDT
To: dave () farber net, ip () v2 listbox com
Subject: Re: [IP] more on Ohio University announces changes in file- sharing policies

At 09:22 AM 4/26/2007, David Reed wrote:

It would be interesting to know whether Ohio University, an agency of
the state, is inspecting the content of packets being sent between
ordinary citizens in its enforcement activities in this regard.

Any facilities-based Internet provider -- public or private -- is
required by CALEA to be able to monitor traffic. And any responsible
ISP should be able to monitor his or her network for abuse. Media
piracy software (sometimes called "P2P" software by people who wish
to conflate it with legitimate software that operates in a peer to
peer mode) abuses the network, often without the consent of the user
who installed it. Universities have the right, and in fact an obligation,
to prohibit crimes on campus. And any ISP -- especially a University,
where much network abuse occurs -- is therefore fully within its rights
to prohibit abuse of the network.

--Brett Glass



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