As I live in France, I think I can give you some insights. There is some points
to be enlighted in this law.
The law stated that you are responsible of your connection usage. It simply
means, legally, that if someone (undercover or not) else use it, you could be
disconnected. They called it the
Yes, i am.
And also, i'm trying with kaspersky 2010, but windows xp.
2009/10/22 Ted Smith
> On Thu, 2009-10-22 at 10:23 +0400, jackwssp q wrote:
> > I try with trial version of kaspersky, and nothing to fear. it's looks
> > like just a warning about danger program.
>
> Are you saying that the a
>
>
> The law stated that you are responsible of your connection usage. It simply
> means, legally, that if someone (undercover or not) else use it, you could
> be disconnected. They called it the "négligence caractérisée", meaning you
> didn't take any countermeasures to prevent someone else from
The law stated that you are responsible of your connection usage. It simply
means, legally, that if someone (undercover or not) else use it, you could be
disconnected. They called it the "négligence caractérisée", meaning you didn't
take any countermeasures to prevent someone else from using yo
hgiuh ghj wrote:
>> Can you give more information about this provision? Is an ISP responsible
>> for the
>> actions of their users? Is a message board owner liable if someone posts
>> unauthorized
>> material? What about an email service provider? What about foreign sites, or
>> corporate sites?
hgiuh ghj wrote:
> As I live in France, I think I can give you some insights. There is
> some points to be enlighted in this law.
>
> The law stated that you are responsible of your connection usage. It
> simply means, legally, that if someone (undercover or not) else use
> it, you could be disconn
> The lack of anonymity will then deter users from committing crimes, and make
> it possible> to punish the guilty.
I agree that if something goes wrong, you need to know who is responsible
because the society needs to know. The problem is this system could turn into a
kind of "management by te
> Why you, France people, doesn't protest against that mad law, why you
> all don't go in streets for protesting?
> It seems to me that all the World go down the drain if there are so
> unrighteous laws existing even in the democratic countries (or already
> not democratic?).
To tell the truth
hgiuh ghj wrote:
>
> > Why you, France people, doesn't protest against that mad law, why you
> > all don't go in streets for protesting?
> > It seems to me that all the World go down the drain if there are so
> > unrighteous laws existing even in the democratic countries (or already
> > not democra
> I am simply afraid that it will be able so that the states will put us
> to death or into concentration camps for using the Tor or any other net
> anonimity means...
Everyday some people make some steps against anonymity (freedom in fact) while
some do the opposite. This law may be a starting
Maybe this is a stupid question,
but I have to ask this as my provider addressed me, very unpleasant :-(
Is it possible to run Bitorrent through tor and can I disable it on an
exit-Server?
Thanks for any advice
Tom
***
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2009/10/23
>
> Maybe this is a stupid question,
> but I have to ask this as my provider addressed me, very unpleasant :-(
>
> Is it possible to run Bitorrent through tor
Yes it is.
> and can I disable it on an
> exit-Server?
>
> In practice,no, at least not via exit policy(port blocking).
You
On Friday 23 October 2009 16:45, i...@nichtsospannend.de wrote:
> Maybe this is a stupid question,
> but I have to ask this as my provider addressed me, very unpleasant :-(
>
> Is it possible to run Bitorrent through tor and can I disable it on an
> exit-Server?
Sorry to bother you. For unknown r
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Hash: SHA1
i...@nichtsospannend.de wrote:
> Is it possible to run Bitorrent through tor and can I disable it on an
> exit-Server?
This question has already been addressed with much flames on this very
own mailing list, take a deeper look at the archives ;-)
The
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