Information Security News mailing list archives

Re: E-Mail Snooping Ruled Permissible


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Tue, 6 Jul 2004 04:32:00 -0500 (CDT)

Fowarded from: Thor <thor () hammerofgod com>

I vehemently disagree...  I can't imagine any scenario where anyone
outside of a 3 letter agency would even begin to see this as a good
thing.

As an ISP, you need only stipulate your virus scans and spam blocks as
part of the contractual agreement with your client- thus obtaining
"consent" for those actions.

The incredibly narrow interpretation of the term "in transit" by
Kermit the Judge, even in light of acknowledging the nature of the
required storage of electronic communications in some form, not only
creates precedent for future atrocities in regard to the violation of
our privacy in general, it grants specific sweeping powers to those
who wish to bypass the spirit of the wiretap law.

This a nothing but a Bad Thing (tm).

t


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "InfoSec News" <isn () c4i org>
To: <isn () attrition org>
Sent: Friday, July 02, 2004 5:34 AM
Subject: Re: [ISN] E-Mail Snooping Ruled Permissible


Forwarded from: Mark Hoffer <hoffer53 () hotmail com>

Hello:

Coming from the ISP side of things, this is a great sigh of relief.
Before this ruling, some could have interpreted the law in a way that
the ISP could not scan for viruses or block spam.  I agree that email
should not be snooped on, but every user should know that the privacy
of an email is like that of a postcard.

Now about this wiretap law - is it unlawful for me to use a packet
sniffer to troubleshoot a customer's connection and to watch for
malicious traffic on my network?

-Mark Hoffer

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "InfoSec News" <isn () c4i org>
To: <isn () attrition org>
Sent: Thursday, July 01, 2004 7:33 AM
Subject: [ISN] E-Mail Snooping Ruled Permissible


Forwarded from: Marjorie Simmons <lawyer () carpereslegalis com>

http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,64043,00.html

By Kim Zetter
June 30, 2004

E-mail privacy suffered a serious setback on Tuesday when a court
of appeals ruled that an e-mail provider did not break the law in
reading his customers' communications without their consent.

The First Court of Appeals in Massachusetts ruled that Bradford C.
Councilman did not violate criminal wiretap laws when he
surreptitiously copied and read the mail of his customers in order
to monitor their transactions.

Councilman, owner of a website selling rare and out-of-print
books, offered book dealer customers e-mail accounts through his
site. But unknown to those customers, Councilman installed code
that intercepted and copied any e-mail that came to them from his
competitor, Amazon.com. Although Councilman did not prevent the
mail from reaching recipients, he read thousands of copied
messages in order to know what books customers were seeking and
gain a commercial advantage over Amazon.



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