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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Slashdot | Perl's Chip Salzenberg Sued, Home Raided. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Slashdot | Perl's Chip Salzenberg Sued, Home Raided
by Decius at 10:33 am EDT, Jul 1, 2005

Days beforehand, I had made an internal report of unethical and apparently illegal behavior by the company: Use of open proxies for web harvesting to avoid blockage by web site operators. HMS apparently decided that working with me to address their use of open proxies was not an option.

Health Market Science is a large corporation with, compared to me, effectively infinite resources. My legal bills have topped $40K already over just two months. If HMS succeeds in tarring me with their false accusations, what's to stop your employer or client from doing the same to you, should your relationship sour?


 
RE: Slashdot | Perl's Chip Salzenberg Sued, Home Raided
by Acidus at 12:40 pm EDT, Jul 1, 2005

[snip]

His PDF about the use of Open Proxies is interesting, as its a project I am working on right now.

It seems that if a company is denying you access to its resources (ie banning IP blocks) and you circumvent that (by open proxies or other means) that is a crime.

To my knowledge, using an Open Proxy is not illegal. There are very fine hairs here. The law mainly revolve around being authorized to use a computer (And services on that computer). If you need to provide some type of username or password, or there is some type of splash page stating who is authorized, casual users may not access it without commiting a crime. However, a system that is offering a public service is consenting to your use.

The easy way to think about this is a Daytime or echo service versus a telnet or SSH service. To use the telnet or SSH service I must supply a username/password. If I don't have one (or am using one not granted to me), that is illegal. But anyone can connect to the Daytime Service or echo service and use it. Anyone is an authorized user.

We really need a lawyer to pipe up here.


 
RE: Slashdot | Perl's Chip Salzenberg Sued, Home Raided
by skullaria at 8:41 pm EDT, Jul 1, 2005

This is worth pulling out the paypal for.

Thanks for posting this.


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