  DrModem Premium join:2006-10-19 USA | Take that, scum!
Yea. |
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  TKJunkMail Enjoy the sun Premium join:2002-03-03 Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast
| Global Crossing & Hurricane Electric looked other way ??
The size of the operation involved says that these 2 companies looked the other way while all these illegal operations were going on. If this isn't a reason to hold carriers responsible for the actions of their customers, I don't know what is. The law holding ISPs free from responsibility needs to be changed. -- My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page Ask yourself one question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do ya punk? |
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 DMNTD
join:2002-10-19 usa | DMNTD
nope, they are not police...deal with it. |
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  Transmaster Don't Blame Me I Voted For Bill and Opus
join:2001-06-20 Cheyenne, WY | reply to TKJunkMail Re: Global Crossing & Hurricane Electric looked other way ??
unforunately it will be up and running in a week with a new name and new servers. Nice hit anyway  |
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 RadioDoc 58ef2c0 Premium,ExMod 2000-03 join:2000-05-11
·AT&T Midwest
| reply to TKJunkMail You're damned right they looked the other way. People have been reporting this stuff directly to (at least) Hurricane Electric for quite awhile. They certainly knew of any criminal activity and their failure to address it until it was blown up in a major media outlet makes them culpable, especially since HE is not an "ISP" in the retail sense the law anticipates. |
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 DVOOR8
join:2001-12-24 USA
·Optimum Online
| reply to TKJunkMail I don't think it is bandwidth providers duty to police the way customers use the bandwidth they sell them. Why would they want to? That is a very dangerous slope to start down.
If I sell paper clips and rubber bands, does that make me responsible for making sure children don't launch paper clips into another child's eye?
The providers did the right thing, and pulled the service once they were shown proof of wrongdoing. |
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  TKJunkMail Enjoy the sun Premium join:2002-03-03 Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast
| said by DVOOR8 :I don't think it is bandwidth providers duty to police the way customers use the bandwidth they sell them. Why would they want to? That is a very dangerous slope to start down. If I sell paper clips and rubber bands, does that make me responsible for making sure children don't launch paper clips into another child's eye? The providers did the right thing, and pulled the service once they were shown proof of wrongdoing. They have been notified for ages. They just made too much money to do anything about it until it made the National press in the form of the Wash Post story. Then the negative PR value MADE them take action. And when notified of problems, they should have started their own investigation and not depend on some reporters to do it for them. -- My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page Ask yourself one question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do ya punk? |
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 SilverSurfer
join:2007-08-19
1 edit | reply to TKJunkMail said by TKJunkMail : If this isn't a reason to hold carriers responsible for the actions of their customers, I don't know what is. The law holding ISPs free from responsibility needs to be changed. Whatever happened to allegedly small government conservatives who abhor government interference in every little thing? I guess that only applies when it comes to their portfolios and Wall Street. Based on the junk you post here I am very sure that if you had stock in either company, you'd be singing an entirely different tune...one of deregulation instead of accountability. |
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  Rob In Deo speramus, God Bless the USA Premium join:2001-08-25 Kendall, FL
·Comcast
| reply to DVOOR8 said by DVOOR8 :I don't think it is bandwidth providers duty to police the way customers use the bandwidth they sell them. Why would they want to? That is a very dangerous slope to start down. If I sell paper clips and rubber bands, does that make me responsible for making sure children don't launch paper clips into another child's eye? The providers did the right thing, and pulled the service once they were shown proof of wrongdoing. If you own a home, and you lease it out, and multiple people inform you that the people leasing your home are using it host sex with children, you wouldn't do anything about it?
Your response would be "landlords don't have the duty to police the way tenants use the home" ?
I doubt it very much. I bet you'd be the first one there, with a shotgun, a baseball bat, and ready to kick some ass. |
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  morbo Complete Your Transaction
join:2002-01-22 00000 clubs:
·Charter Pipeline
·AT&T Southwest
| set who is accountable
it's clear that there is a conflict of interest by hosting companies and internet providers and policing the connections. they make money off of the spammers too, so what is their incentive to police them?
what we need is a clear chain of command for dealing with these problems. dare i say it? a SPAM CZAR! we at least need a new system to quickly identify and shut down spammers. if it needs to be a small and nimble federal government entity with the authority to shut down connections within 2 hours, then so be it. obviously, we need checks and balances so that the power isn't exploited, but there needs to be some type of system that we don't have at this moment. |
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  woody7 Premium join:2000-10-13 Torrance, CA
·EarthLink
·DSL EXTREME
1 edit | reply to TKJunkMail Re: Global Crossing & Hurricane Electric looked other way ??
"TK Junk Mail
The size of the operation involved says that these 2 companies looked the other way while all these illegal operations were going on. If this isn't a reason to hold carriers responsible for the actions of their customers, I don't know what is. The law holding ISPs free from responsibility needs to be changed." --
Here's another one that I kind of agree with.... -- BlooMe |
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  Tsume
join:2004-02-23 Johnson City, TN
·Embarq
·ViaTalk
·Comcast
| reply to TKJunkMail said by TKJunkMail :The size of the operation involved says that these 2 companies looked the other way while all these illegal operations were going on. If this isn't a reason to hold carriers responsible for the actions of their customers, I don't know what is. The law holding ISPs free from responsibility needs to be changed. ISPs should be free from RESPONSIBILITY unless the law has absolute proof they had knowledge of felonies occuring on their network and took no action in disabling their access and/or reporting them to the authorities.
I really think the way this should work is:
1, ISP receives tones of reports and decides to look into it, finds illegal activity, immidiately cuts them off and alerts authorities OR
2, ISP receives tons of reports, does nothing, the government agency in charge of overseeing them receives reports as well (because people will realize the ISP isn't doing their job), government comes in and orders ISP to shut down access, ISP complies.
Either of those scenarios works, #1 is ideal. What happened here is that the ISP did not want to do their job right away, and #2 didn't occur either because people didn't report it to the authorities, or because the authorities did nothing to get the ISP to cut off access (or maybe they don't have the power to do that, which they should).
The only time the ISP should be punished (besides by the bad PR it receives) is if it directly violates an order of the court or other governing authority. |
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 DVOOR8
join:2001-12-24 USA
·Optimum Online
| reply to TKJunkMail said by TKJunkMail :said by DVOOR8 :I don't think it is bandwidth providers duty to police the way customers use the bandwidth they sell them. Why would they want to? That is a very dangerous slope to start down. If I sell paper clips and rubber bands, does that make me responsible for making sure children don't launch paper clips into another child's eye? The providers did the right thing, and pulled the service once they were shown proof of wrongdoing. They have been notified for ages. They just made too much money to do anything about it until it made the National press in the form of the Wash Post story. Then the negative PR value MADE them take action. And when notified of problems, they should have started their own investigation and not depend on some reporters to do it for them. Bandwidth providers are not investigative authorities and have no place doing any investigation into illegal activity or another companies actions.
If the proper authorities were notified by anyone or had a reason to act, suppliers of bandwidth ALWAYS comply with whatever law authorities request of them. Sounds to me that even law enforcement wasn't onto this. |
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 MGD Premium,MVM join:2002-07-31 Fort Lauderdale, FL
1 edit | About time !!
Kudos to Brian Krebs,
McColo has been the source of multiple crybercrime activities for years. Back in June they played host for two dozen fraud sites that were part of a massive global Russian / Ukrainian based card fraud operation »Ebook websites, fraud charges, Devbill/DigitalAge/Pluto The "Berry" site group, which were uncovered by the folks at »aa419.org targeted hijacked UK card data, and were a sub division of the multi year US Devbill/DigitalAge/Pluto fraud operation documented here: »Ebook websites, fraud charges, Devbill/DigitalAge/Pluto and is still ongoing.
The aa419.org database lists 40 McColo sites »db.aa419.org/fakebankslist.php?p···rchtype= most associated with this fraud.
Though masquerading as a US based Delaware corporation, McColo is operated and controlled from Russia, only the servers are US based.
MGD EDIT= added text & link |
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 DVOOR8
join:2001-12-24 USA
·Optimum Online
| reply to Rob Re: Global Crossing & Hurricane Electric looked other way ??
said by Rob :said by DVOOR8 :I don't think it is bandwidth providers duty to police the way customers use the bandwidth they sell them. Why would they want to? That is a very dangerous slope to start down. If I sell paper clips and rubber bands, does that make me responsible for making sure children don't launch paper clips into another child's eye? The providers did the right thing, and pulled the service once they were shown proof of wrongdoing. If you own a home, and you lease it out, and multiple people inform you that the people leasing your home are using it host sex with children, you wouldn't do anything about it? Your response would be "landlords don't have the duty to police the way tenants use the home" ? I doubt it very much. I bet you'd be the first one there, with a shotgun, a baseball bat, and ready to kick some ass. Wow, that is perhaps the most ignorant statement I have seen. I would do the right thing and contact the proper authorities and handle it like someone who cares about the outcome. I am not going to try and battle crime myself nor launch my own investigation for publicity which is what this was. |
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  jhboricua ExMod 2000-01 join:2000-06-06 Minneapolis, MN clubs:
2 edits | reply to TKJunkMail said by TKJunkMail :The size of the operation involved says that the DOJ looked the other way while all these illegal operations were going on. There, fixed it for you. The current laws give the DOJ what they need to act on this. If this has been reported for ages, why did the DOJ failed to step in to shut down McColo? If the evidence was so clear, why weren't existing laws used?
Nothing in the existing laws prevents the DOJ from shutting dows these operations.
There's no need to burden ISPs with more RIAA/MPAA friendly and innefective legislation. |
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  Rob In Deo speramus, God Bless the USA Premium join:2001-08-25 Kendall, FL
·Comcast
| reply to DVOOR8 said by DVOOR8 :said by Rob :said by DVOOR8 :I don't think it is bandwidth providers duty to police the way customers use the bandwidth they sell them. Why would they want to? That is a very dangerous slope to start down. If I sell paper clips and rubber bands, does that make me responsible for making sure children don't launch paper clips into another child's eye? The providers did the right thing, and pulled the service once they were shown proof of wrongdoing. If you own a home, and you lease it out, and multiple people inform you that the people leasing your home are using it host sex with children, you wouldn't do anything about it? Your response would be "landlords don't have the duty to police the way tenants use the home" ? I doubt it very much. I bet you'd be the first one there, with a shotgun, a baseball bat, and ready to kick some ass. Wow, that is perhaps the most ignorant statement I have seen. I would do the right thing and contact the proper authorities and handle it like someone who cares about the outcome. I am not going to try and battle crime myself nor launch my own investigation for publicity which is what this was. And what if the authorities did nothing? You would just ignore it?
Just let them continue to do what they do without taking any action?
Where does it become your responsibility? Never? |
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 SilverSurfer
join:2007-08-19
| said by Rob :Where does it become your responsibility? Never? Most States have laws that punish and/or strongly disincentivize vigilantes. Suggest you become acquainted with yours otherwise you may find yourself sharing a jail cell with the same individual you thought you had a right to enforce the law upon. |
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  mod_wastrel
join:2008-03-28
·magicjack.com
| reply to TKJunkMail It's not the responsibility of "carriers" to determine what is and is not criminal activity. Anyone who thinks there is a crime being committed should contact the legal authorities (police, FBI, whatever) and let them make the determination. Technically, carriers should not be monitoring the details of what customers are doing (wire-tapping). Carriers should simply cooperate with authorities, sometimes initiating action when they receive complaints from others, but not acting unilaterally to determine whether crimes are being committed. The authorities may want to allow certain activities to continue briefly so as to collect and trace evidence. |
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  jhboricua ExMod 2000-01 join:2000-06-06 Minneapolis, MN clubs: | reply to Rob If the evidence is there, why would the authorities ignore it? |
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