Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-05 Thread Martin Hannigan
From a strictly operational perspective:

The only concern that I had with that request was with the v4 address
blocking. That ought to be rethought in the grand scheme of things i.e. v4
exhaustion.  There's a reasonable case to make regarding not tainting hosts
or specific blocks in this manner. Creating less usable v4 resources as we
approach exhaustion is not helpful, IMHO.

Best Regards,

Martin





 2009/5/4 John Levine jo...@iecc.com:

 Not withstanding the legality of such an order, how would one
 operationally enforce that order?


 The order has a list of IP addresses, so I expect the ISPs will just
 block those IPs in routers somewhere.

 Since offshore online gambling is equally illegal everywhere in the
 U.S., the ISPs have little reason to limit the block to Minnesota
 customers, giving them a lot of latitude in where they implement the
 block.




-- 
Martin Hannigan   mar...@theicelandguy.com
p: +16178216079
Power, Network, and Costs Consulting for Iceland Datacenters and Occupants


Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-05 Thread jim deleskie
Not only do we create  less usable v4 address space, if these guys
had a clue, and what ever you think of them with $$ envolved clue will
be found... they will just add more IP's from diffrent block, further
'wasting' IP space.

-jim

On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 3:18 PM, Martin Hannigan
mar...@theicelandguy.com wrote:
 From a strictly operational perspective:

 The only concern that I had with that request was with the v4 address
 blocking. That ought to be rethought in the grand scheme of things i.e. v4
 exhaustion.  There's a reasonable case to make regarding not tainting hosts
 or specific blocks in this manner. Creating less usable v4 resources as we
 approach exhaustion is not helpful, IMHO.

 Best Regards,

 Martin





 2009/5/4 John Levine jo...@iecc.com:

 Not withstanding the legality of such an order, how would one
 operationally enforce that order?


 The order has a list of IP addresses, so I expect the ISPs will just
 block those IPs in routers somewhere.

 Since offshore online gambling is equally illegal everywhere in the
 U.S., the ISPs have little reason to limit the block to Minnesota
 customers, giving them a lot of latitude in where they implement the
 block.




 --
 Martin Hannigan                               mar...@theicelandguy.com
 p: +16178216079
 Power, Network, and Costs Consulting for Iceland Datacenters and Occupants




Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Jim Popovitch
On Mon, May 4, 2009 at 10:53, Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com wrote:
 So is this going to become like the great firewall of China
 eventually? You can see in the letters that they are going to see how
 it goes and then maybe start blocking more stuff if they are
 successful. I can see a big nightmare heading this way if ISPs start
 caving in to requests like this.

Isn't this akin to a state legislature mandating that the DOT block
drugs at the state's border?

Also, why is the order to block sites rather than monitoring and
arresting Minnesotans who are violating the law?   Sort'a looks like
the MN legislature is trying to hide the bad behavior of it's
citizens. ;-)

-Jim P.



Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Scott Weeks


---
 successful. I can see a big nightmare heading this way if ISPs start
 caving in to requests like this.
---

It's happening all over the place.  Not picking on any country or list, just to 
post a few examples...

[AusNOG] Conroy censoring dissent? 
http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/2008-October/thread.html
http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/2008-November/thread.html
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22999659-2,00.html


[swinog] Censurship in Germany
http://www.mail-archive.com/swi...@lists.swinog.ch/msg03581.html

[swinog] Justice Order to block websites   
http://lists.swinog.ch/public/swinog/2008-January/thread.html



scott



Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Beavis
Hi,

 I host some gambling sites (off-shore) and I would like to get some
info on how i can put minnesota IP blocks on my Filter-List to comply
with their 'wacked politics'

-beavis

On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 3:38 PM, Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi there,

 I am just wondering if anyone knows any more about the attempt by
 Minnesota to block online gambling companies other than what's
 publicly available (e.g.
 http://www.gambling911.com/gambling-news/minnesota-regulators-try-block-access-gambing-sites-042909.html)?
 Such as a list or the letter to the providers?

 Thank you!

 Ken





-- 
()  ascii ribbon campaign - against html e-mail
/\  www.asciiribbon.org   - against proprietary attachments



Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Tim Peiffer


Not withstanding the legality of such an order, how would one 
operationally enforce that order?  Does this order force carriers into 
transparent proxy so that L7 filtering can be done?  Is the carrier also 
required to go through geolocator matching any given IP address with 
'Minnesota' so that the filtering can be selectively applied?


Tim Peiffer
Network Support Engineer
OIT / Networking and Telecommunications Services
University of Minnesota / NorthernLights GigaPOP



On Sat, May 2, 2009 at 9:34 AM, Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com 
wrote:
For anyone who cares, IMEGA released the letter from the state of 
Minnesota:


http://www.imega.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/ab001dd4.pdf

2009/4/29 Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com:

Hi there,

I am just wondering if anyone knows any more about the attempt by
Minnesota to block online gambling companies other than what's
publicly available (e.g.
http://www.gambling911.com/gambling-news/minnesota-regulators-try-block-access-gambing-sites-042909.html)? 


Such as a list or the letter to the providers?

Thank you!

Ken



--
Tim Peiffer
Network Support Engineer
Office of Information Technology
University of Minnesota/NorthernLights GigaPOP




Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Brandon Galbraith
On Mon, May 4, 2009 at 11:06 AM, Beavis pfu...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi,

  I host some gambling sites (off-shore) and I would like to get some
 info on how i can put minnesota IP blocks on my Filter-List to comply
 with their 'wacked politics'

 -beavis

 On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 3:38 PM, Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi there,

 I am just wondering if anyone knows any more about the attempt by
 Minnesota to block online gambling companies other than what's
 publicly available (e.g.
 http://www.gambling911.com/gambling-news/minnesota-regulators-try-block-access-gambing-sites-042909.html)?
 Such as a list or the letter to the providers?

 Thank you!

 Ken

Please see ongoing thread on geoIP to see how to go about doing this =)

-brandon

-- 
Brandon Galbraith
Mobile: 630.400.6992



Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread John Levine
Not withstanding the legality of such an order, how would one 
operationally enforce that order?

The order has a list of IP addresses, so I expect the ISPs will just
block those IPs in routers somewhere.

Since offshore online gambling is equally illegal everywhere in the
U.S., the ISPs have little reason to limit the block to Minnesota
customers, giving them a lot of latitude in where they implement the
block.

Regards,
John Levine, jo...@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of The Internet for Dummies,
Information Superhighwayman wanna-be, http://www.johnlevine.com, ex-Mayor
More Wiener schnitzel, please, said Tom, revealingly.



Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Ken Gilmour
So is this going to become like the great firewall of China
eventually? You can see in the letters that they are going to see how
it goes and then maybe start blocking more stuff if they are
successful. I can see a big nightmare heading this way if ISPs start
caving in to requests like this.



2009/5/4 John Levine jo...@iecc.com:
Not withstanding the legality of such an order, how would one
operationally enforce that order?

 The order has a list of IP addresses, so I expect the ISPs will just
 block those IPs in routers somewhere.

 Since offshore online gambling is equally illegal everywhere in the
 U.S., the ISPs have little reason to limit the block to Minnesota
 customers, giving them a lot of latitude in where they implement the
 block.

 Regards,
 John Levine, jo...@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of The Internet for 
 Dummies,
 Information Superhighwayman wanna-be, http://www.johnlevine.com, ex-Mayor
 More Wiener schnitzel, please, said Tom, revealingly.





Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Jeremy McDermond


On May 4, 2009, at 11:53 AM, Matthew Black wrote:

Instead of huffing and puffing your libertarian perspective (you  
called the AG's letter garbage), you might make a quick Google  
search of 18USC1084(d), which provides a wealth of information on  
the legality of such enforcement actions.


http://openjurist.org/325/f2d/148



But the Seventh Circuit specifically refuses to rule on any  
Constitutional issues surrounding the statute, instead choosing to  
rely on the district court's order that the defendants activities did  
not violate the law under 18 USC §1084(d).  The statute, as applied by  
Minnesota, could very well be unconstitutional and unenforceable in  
the manner that Minnesota seeks.  In this case the First Amendment may  
be applicable because this seems to be a prior restraint on speech.   
Additionally, it is content based because it seeks to restrict speech  
due to its transmission or reception of gambling information.  This  
means that the courts will apply a strict scrutiny test to it,  
requiring that the government have compelling reason to restrict the  
speech, and that they are applying the least restrictive method of  
controlling the speech.  This is usually a difficult burden for them  
to sustain.


In this case, the gambling issue seems much like the pornography  
issue.  In _Center for Democracy and Technology v. Pappert_, 337  
F.Supp 606 (W.D. Pa. 2004), the Eastern District of Pennsylvania  
looked at a Pennsylvania state law that looks much like this federal  
law and required ISPs operating in the state to block based on a  
letter from the state attorney general.  In trying to determine  
whether the law provided the least restrictive method, the court  
looked to the types of blocking that the ISPs could employ.   
Specifically they examined DNS blocking, IP blocking, and URL  
filtering.  The court decided that DNS blocking wasn't particularly  
effective and would require ISPs to deploy additional equipment.   
Additionally, URL filtering was impractical because of the deployment  
costs as well.  The only practical alternative the court recognized  
was IP blocking, but they said that because it could severely  
overblock (because of name based virtual hosting) that it wasn't  
narrowly tailored enough block to pass Constitutional muster.


The situation in _Center for Democracy_ seems remarkably similar to  
what Minnesota seems to be trying to do with the federal statute.   
There's certainly the chance that the federal district courts in  
Minnesota, or the appeals courts will disagree with the Western  
District of Pennsylvania's assessment of the situation, but as long as  
the strict scrutiny standard is applied, and there's a danger of  
overblocking, then I would expect the Supreme Court to uphold any as  
applied challenges to the statute.


Disclaimer:  I am not a lawyer.  This is not legal advice.  If you  
need legal advice, you should hire a real lawyer licensed in your  
jurisdiction.



matthew black
speaking only for myself and not my employer
california state university, long beach


--
Jeremy McDermond
Xenotropic Systems
mcde...@xenotropic.com





Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread Jack Bates

Jeremy McDermond wrote:
manner that Minnesota seeks.  In this case the First Amendment may be 
applicable because this seems to be a prior restraint on speech.  
Additionally, it is content based because it seeks to restrict speech 
due to its transmission or reception of gambling information.  This 


Well, one does have to wonder if first applies, as there is perfectly 
legal information on some of those sites(ie, reading about strategy is 
not illegal). I believe some of those listed also had support for 
freeplay, which is not illegal (and probably why gambling sites like to 
combine the two).



Jack



Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-04 Thread John R. Levine

So is this going to become like the great firewall of China
eventually?


Who knows.  It's hardly the first government attempt to block illegal 
content, viz. the secret Pennsylvania list of child porn sites.


R's,
John



Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-02 Thread Ken Gilmour
For anyone who cares, IMEGA released the letter from the state of Minnesota:

http://www.imega.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/ab001dd4.pdf

2009/4/29 Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com:
 Hi there,

 I am just wondering if anyone knows any more about the attempt by
 Minnesota to block online gambling companies other than what's
 publicly available (e.g.
 http://www.gambling911.com/gambling-news/minnesota-regulators-try-block-access-gambing-sites-042909.html)?
 Such as a list or the letter to the providers?

 Thank you!

 Ken




Re: Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-05-02 Thread Jeffrey Lyon
What a pile of garbage. I would definitely get a legal review of a
request like that before blocking any of my customer's traffic.


-- 
Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team
jeffrey.l...@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net
Black Lotus Communications of The IRC Company, Inc.

Look for us at HostingCon 2009 in Washington, DC on August 10th - 12th
at Booth #401.



On Sat, May 2, 2009 at 9:34 AM, Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com wrote:
 For anyone who cares, IMEGA released the letter from the state of Minnesota:

 http://www.imega.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/ab001dd4.pdf

 2009/4/29 Ken Gilmour ken.gilm...@gmail.com:
 Hi there,

 I am just wondering if anyone knows any more about the attempt by
 Minnesota to block online gambling companies other than what's
 publicly available (e.g.
 http://www.gambling911.com/gambling-news/minnesota-regulators-try-block-access-gambing-sites-042909.html)?
 Such as a list or the letter to the providers?

 Thank you!

 Ken






Minnesota to block online gambling sites?

2009-04-29 Thread Ken Gilmour
Hi there,

I am just wondering if anyone knows any more about the attempt by
Minnesota to block online gambling companies other than what's
publicly available (e.g.
http://www.gambling911.com/gambling-news/minnesota-regulators-try-block-access-gambing-sites-042909.html)?
Such as a list or the letter to the providers?

Thank you!

Ken