Remailer extensions
Hi all, In pondering the last few days of discussion it occurs to me that a test might be possible. In short: Is it legal for a business to anonymously remail physical mail? The process I propose is as follows: 1. Some party mails an envelope to 'Remailers-R-Us'. 2. Inside that envelope is the real mail addressed and stamped along with say a $1 money order for processing. 3. The people at Remailers-R-Us simply take the dollar and deposit it in the bank while depositing the letter they received in the local mail drop. Now the Remailers-R-Us obviously can't open the mail since that would be tampering. To this end I make reference to some comments I made about a year ago regarding the results of encrypting every stage of the remailer sequence. To wit, the only way to guarantee protection is if the remialer is not able to read the actual contents of the mail, even if they were so disposed. I would also like to point out (the obvious I admit) that the founding fathers apparently embarced anonymous distribution via their 'publius' handle. It seems to me that a federal prosecutor would have a hard time claiming there was no precedence for such actions. Such a claim to my way of thinking would be fundamental in any attempted prosecution for anonymous remailing. Also, as far as I can find out, there was no persecution of the newspapers for printing this material anonymously, they apparently were not held to task for the content. This seems to indicate that English commen law of that day (and its descendants here today) embraced anonymous speech as well. Jim Choate
participants (1)
-
Jim Choate