Steven M. Bellovin wrote:
Mark Kent writes:
I recently claimed that, in the USA, there is a law that prohibits an
ISP from inspecting packets in a telecommunications network for
anything other than traffic statistics or debugging.
Was I correct?
No. Or at least you weren't; the
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], David Charlap writes:
Steven M. Bellovin wrote:
Mark Kent writes:
I recently claimed that, in the USA, there is a law that prohibits an
ISP from inspecting packets in a telecommunications network for
anything other than traffic statistics or debugging.
Was I
On Mon, 24 Jun 2002, Mark Kent wrote:
:I recently claimed that, in the USA, there is a law that prohibits an
:ISP from inspecting packets in a telecommunications network for
:anything other than traffic statistics or debugging.
A similar sentiment was expressed in a presentation at a
At 02:29 PM 6/24/2002, you wrote:
Point 3) is just about the same as 1), but it does imply
a slightly different motivation behind the inspection.
I know informing a suspect of a phone tap, in the telecom business will
get you hard time. SO again, check with your law people...a lot's changed
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Mark Kent writes:
I recently claimed that, in the USA, there is a law that prohibits an
ISP from inspecting packets in a telecommunications network for
anything other than traffic statistics or debugging.
Was I correct?
No. Or at least you weren't; the Patriot