piet@mcvax.UUCP (Piet Beertema) (05/22/84)
<...> Of course it's absolutely ridiculous that a sysop could ever be held responsible for messages EXCHANGED on his (his??) system! What's the relation between US laws and common sense? None, judging to this case. (Wasn't someone speaking about the relation between the Constitution and reality...?). -- Piet Beertema, CWI, Amsterdam ...{decvax,philabs}!mcvax!piet
dgary@ecsvax.UUCP (05/23/84)
Seems to me we ought to reserve judgment on this until we've heard some more details. So far I've heard one side of the story, and an incomplete one at that. I'm reminded that several years ago there was a trial of a woman prisoner for killing a guard. She claimed the guard had attacked her. The curious thing was how so many people lined up on both sides of the issue, and each side had a completely different version of the 'facts' in the case. So I'm inclined to wait until I have a bettter idea what really happened before I reach a decision, purely for the self--protective motive of not looking like a ninny down the pike. D Gary Grady Duke University Computation Center, Durham, NC 27706 (919) 684-4146 USENET: {decvax,ihnp4,akgua,etc.}!mcnc!ecsvax!dgary
perelgut@utcsrgv.UUCP (Stephen Perelgut) (05/23/84)
<If this bug was obscene, would we hear it?> Does this decision mean that, if I send an obscene postcard through the mail and a postal worker sees it, then the entire U.S. Postal System can be seized. (Or is it already seized - up!) -- Stephen Perelgut Computer Systems Research Group University of Toronto Usenet: {linus, ihnp4, allegra, decvax, floyd}!utcsrgv!perelgut CSNET: perelgut@Toronto
tac@teldata.UUCP () (05/24/84)
, (sop to the blank line eaters--consider it a religious sacrifice) In reference to the LAPD seizure of a BB system for a remark placed there by another person, I wonder if they have seized the local subway system for the graffiti left on the walls? From the Soapbox of Tom Condon {...!uw-beaver!teltone!teldata!tac} A Radical A Day Keeps The Government At Bay. DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed herein are those of everyone who matters, but not necessarily anyone you know, and most certainly not my employers!
jpm@bnl.UUCP (John McNamee) (05/24/84)
{Eat it!} As a user of the BBS that got taken down and a Sysop myself let me offer a few comments.... Tom's board has 10 sections on it. One of the sections is called "Underground" and at times there have been MCI, Sprint, etc. codes posted there. I am not sure if Tom deleted these or not. This section was also used for software trading and recently hosted a big debate over whether it is Ok to break into computer systems (it ended in a draw). The point of all this is that there was a place on Tom's BBS called "Underground" where illegal activities were discussed and MCI/Sprint/etc. numbers were exchanged. The underground was by no means the main feature of the BBS and other sections had a larger message volume. I run one BBS and co-sysop another. Messages related to phreaking or piracy are deleted as soon as I see them. The catch is that I might not see a message for over 24 hours during which time the police might come on and see the message. The police need the ability to take down a BBS devoted to phreaking. They should not take down a system like mine because one or two messages happen to be left and I don't zap them immediately. Tom's system lies in the middle. He has an "underground" section, but that isn't the main purpose of his BBS. I think the proper thing to do would have been to ask him to remove the section. -- John McNamee ..!decvax!philabs!sbcs!bnl!jpm jpm@Bnl.Arpa
rh@mit-eddie.UUCP (Randy Haskins) (05/26/84)
How would any of you people feel if (somehow, it doesn't matter how it happened...) the superuser password for your system appeared on one of these BBoards (along with dial-in numbers)? We still have a rash of children with TRaSh-80's calling up our DEC-20 trying to break in (fortunately, it's a little tougher than most people could manage). This started about January when some of our phone numbers appeared on a TRaSh-80 BBoard that someone locally was running. If someone had managed to crack our system, they couldn't have done too much damage, just made a few people who were taking courses lose work, you know, little trivial things like that (extreme sarcasm mode). Yeah, yeah, I know, we should make our system breakin proof. Well, it practically is, but I think it's just a bit annoying that these little BBoards can be used to spread information that probably shouldn't be spread. Also, how would you like it if on one of them your home address and the type of lock on your front door (including techniques for breaking same) appeared? Someone should be held responsible for the BBoard.... -- Randwulf (Randy Haskins); Path= genrad!mit-eddie!rh
ntt@dciem.UUCP (Mark Brader) (05/29/84)
Randwulf (mit-eddie!rh) writes:
... how would you like it if on
one of them your home address and the type of lock on your front
door (including techniques for breaking same) appeared? Someone
should be held responsible for the BBoard....
I say, someone should be held responsible for the ITEM ... the person who
posted it, of course. However, I suppose many of them allow anonymous
posting (I haven't used one myself). In that case it does seem fair to
make the BB administrator responsible since it was their decision to allow it.
Mark Brader
msc@qubix.UUCP (Mark Callow) (05/31/84)
From rh@mit-eddie.UUCP (Randy Haskins)
> Someone should be held responsible for the BBoard....
Sure! Just like someone should be held responsible for all the information
that passes through the mail and over the phone lines every day :-). They
are equally good ways of spreading your dialup phone numbers or the type
of lock on your front door. In fact the information from the BBS *is*
distributed over the phone line.
Do *you* want to be responsible for everything that passes through your
system on usenet every day?
--
From the TARDIS of Mark Callow
msc@qubix.UUCP, decwrl!qubix!msc@Berkeley.ARPA
...{decvax,ucbvax,ihnp4}!decwrl!qubix!msc, ...{ittvax,amd70}!qubix!msc
"I'm a citizen of the Universe, and a gentleman to boot!"
snafu@ihuxi.UUCP (Dave Wallis) (05/31/84)
I suspect that the reason the cbb was confiscated was not that information such as phone credit card numbers were posted, but rather that the sa knew that the questionable data was being posted and blessed its existence. The fact that there was a newsgroup titled "underground" indicates that the sa condoned the newsgroup and the information contained in it. I seriously doubt that a system would be confiscated in the event that similar data appeared and the sa made every effort to delete that type of posting and remove newsgroups created for that purpose. Obviously the Post Office and US Mail service have a similar problem, but have never been the subject of siezure. By allowing the "underground" newsgroup to exist, the sa is probably guilty of conspiracy to commit any crimes discussed in the newsgroup, just as anyone who fails to report knowledge of a crime can be prosecuted for conspiracy in the crime. I don't really like the idea that an sa is responsible for anything done with the computer, but he should be responsible enough to prevent the computer from being used for questionable activities when the intent is clear. -- Dave Wallis ihnp4!ihuxi!snafu AT&T Technologies, Inc. (312) 979-5894
hart@cp1.UUCP (06/01/84)
No, but you just may spend some time behind bars. -- ====================================================================== signed: Rod Hart (wa3mez) Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. Co. Bell Atlantic Inc. Silver Spring, Md. gamma!cp1!hart - umcp-cs!cp1!hart - aplvax!cp1!hart ======================================================================
hart@cp1.UUCP (06/02/84)
>"Do *you* want to be responsible for everything >that passes through your system on usenet every >day?" That statement is real dangerous! My superiors would pull the plug in a minute if they thought the majority of the usenet participants felt that way. I think it best to let UNC take care of their own problems. Remember, there are people reading this stuff and making assumptions about the value of usenet. -- ====================================================================== signed: Rod Hart (wa3mez) Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. Co. Bell Atlantic Inc. Silver Spring, Md. gamma!cp1!hart - umcp-cs!cp1!hart - aplvax!cp1!hart ======================================================================
nessus@mit-eddie.UUCP (Doug Alan) (06/02/84)
Randwulf (mit-eddie!rh) writes:
... how would you like it if on
one of them your home address and the type of lock on your front
door (including techniques for breaking same) appeared? Someone
should be held responsible for the BBoard....
And what if your home address and type of lock on your lock on your
front door appeared on one of MIT's physical bulletin boards? Should
MIT be responsible? Foo! Perhaps the US government should be
responsible for allowing freedom of speech. Isn't the First Ammendment
just so annoying!
--
-Doug Alan
mit-eddie!nessus
Nessus@MIT-MC
"What does 'I' mean"?
dave@utcsrgv.UUCP (Dave Sherman) (06/03/84)
I do not have any knowledge of this situation other than what has been posted to the net, but I would like to clear up a miconception which has floated around through many postings. It appears likely that the system was "confiscated" not as some form of punishment by the LAPD but because the system and its records (and having the entire system may be the only way the LAPD can be sure it can reproduce the records) will ne required as evidence against the person who left the "AT&T calling card number" on the system. Alternatively, it may be needed as part of the investigation, so that the police can determine who left the information. This is quite different from "confiscating" as a form of punishment to the system administrator, and has quite different legal implications. If someone steals your tape recorder, and the police recover it, they might keep the tape recorder as evidence for the trial, and only return it after the trial. No-one suggests you've committed a crime. It's the same principle. (lrf, V nz n ynjlre) Dave Sherman Toronto -- dave at Toronto (CSnet) {allegra,cornell,decvax,ihnp4,linus,utzoo}!utcsrgv!dave
karn@mouton.UUCP (06/05/84)
Here's an interesting legal question related to the seizing of information as evidence: Suppose I encrypt my "evidence of wrongdoing" with a "secure" cryptosystem and commit the key to memory. The police seize my files and demand to have the key. Can I refuse to reveal it under the 5th amendment? Suppose I claim that I forgot it? Phil