John Young wrote:
I appreciate what an honorable ISP admin will do to abide customer rights over intrusive snoopers and perhaps cooperative administrators above the pay grade of a sysadmin. Know that a decent sysadmin is on for about 1/3 of a weekday for 24x7 systems is a small comfort but leaves unanswered what can happen:
1. During that time when a hero is elsewhere.
2. Upstream of the ISP, the router of the ISP and the nodes serving routers, as well as at a variety of cache systems serving there various levels.
To expand on John Young's inquiry, I believe it would help elevate the level of the public discourse regarding potential future US data retention and interception laws if those inclined to comment on this issue were to take the time to research similar laws already passed in other countries in the course of the customary policy laundry process. Even a brief such investigation would teach the aspiring commentator that those responsible for the installation and maintenance of governmentally mandated snooping infrastructure at the ISP are largely required to hold active security clearances. To rephrase John's very valid question in a slightly more targeted fashion: how likely is it that cleared personnel working at the ISP will refuse an official request for law enforcement assistance? --Lucky Green --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to majordomo@wasabisystems.com