Strafgesetzbuch (StGB)
§ 240 Nötigung
(1) Wer einen Menschen rechtswidrig mit Gewalt oder durch Drohung mit
einem empfindlichen Übel zu einer Handlung, Duldung oder Unterlassung
nötigt, wird mit Freiheitsstrafe bis zu drei Jahren oder mit Geldstrafe
bestraft.
(2) Rechtswidrig ist die Tat, wenn die Anwendung der Gewalt oder die
Androhung des Übels zu dem angestrebten Zweck als verwerflich anzusehen ist.
(3) Der Versuch ist strafbar.
(4) In besonders schweren Fällen ist die Strafe Freiheitsstrafe von
sechs Monaten bis zu fünf Jahren. Ein besonders schwerer Fall liegt in
der Regel vor, wenn der Täter
1.
eine Schwangere zum Schwangerschaftsabbruch nötigt oder
2.
seine Befugnisse oder seine Stellung als Amtsträger mißbraucht.
being forced to spend manhours (= money) to 'delist' from 3rd party dns
blacklists is 'empflindliche uebel', and yes you are forcing them into a
'handlung (delisting/acting AGAINST their paying customer), duldung
(ignoring the fact that you call them and others affected by your block
'spammers') or 'unterlassung' (interfering with their provider immunity
and right to sell services to anyone, anywhere, and keep doing so - as
long as those don't break the law -there- and even if they do you can
still sell them services as that's their problem -there- not yours.
per-se. ;)
now. that's just the blackmail part and just the BRD part... other eu
memberstates usually have simular laws...
if you knowingly and willingly insert ips into a blackmail
infrastructure which you have advertised with the argument that you KNOW
a listing has impact on 1/3rd of the worlds mail delivery, or worse,
such as spamhaus DROP, where you KNOW a listing causes part of the
internet to completely drop that traffic, as you advertise it just for
-that- purpose and know how many nodes use it, that completely falls
under pretty much any computer sabotage act out there -ever-.
but... ofcourse... to you... some not-even-illegal use of 'smtp' or some
wintendo virusses that could be out there, are of higher priority than
keeping the internet working, and not breaking any laws yourself.
keep in mind, we, the owners of the internet, isps and carriers, and yes
we do OWN it, 'tolerate' blacklists... as long as they don't go around
making silly demands, such as 'contacting' them, or gaining too much
influence and starting to 'demand' to disconnect things without even
bothering to get a court order.
what's next... the RIAA setting up one as well?
On 31 ينا, 2017 ص 04:17, ox wrote:
On Mon, 30 Jan 2017 13:21:54 +0000
HRH Prince Sven Olaf von CyberBunker <sv...@xs4all.nl> wrote:
smtp is just one of many protocols out there, a primitive, fairly
unimportant and severely lacking in terms of security one at that,
and it's protection cannot be a reason for any disconnection -ever-.
This thread is about DNSBL and not about the smtp protocol but the
replies helped us all understand why it is important to permanently list
entire IP ranges. (Even if the resources change hands)
Personally, I think that block times should be increased or become more
permanent.
Practically and right now, some of the block lists that I feed data
into is talking about discontinuing 24 hour blocks completely and
moving to much longer block times.
Other lists are considering completely discontinuing auto de-listing.
The effect of this will mean that abuse@ will have to become more responsive
in order to avoid being more permanently listed.
Andre