At 02:47 PM 7/6/04 -0700, Hal Finney wrote:
>> Messages in storage have much lower judicial protection than messages
in
>> transit. (This does not have much technical merit, in the current
>> atmosphere of "damn the laws - there are terrorists around the
corner",
>> but can be seen as a nice little potential benefit.)

Ie zero.

>One thing I haven't understood in all the commentary is whether law
>enforcment still needs a warrant to access emails stored in this way.
>Apparently the ISP can read them without any notice or liability, but
>what about the police?

You are state meat, whether 5150'd or not.

>Also, what if you run your own mail spool, so the email is never stored

>at the ISP, it just passes through the routers controlled by the ISP
>(just like it passed through a dozen other routers on the internet).
>Does this give the ISP (and all the other router owners) the right to
>read your email?  I don't think so, it seems like that would definitely

>cross over the line from "mail in storage" to "mail in transit".

If you think the cable landings in Va/Md are coincidental, you are
smoking something I've run out of.  Its all recorded.  I'm sure the
archiving
and database groups in Ft. Meade will get a chuckle out of your
"the right to" idioms.






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