Reminds be of Al Capone and tax evasion ;-) Good ol' America.
On Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 7:49 PM, T Biehn <[email protected]> wrote: > Yes. > The FBI was investigating the AT&T incident, presumably the AT&T incident > was what the fed were serving against. > What possible valid search warrant could be executed? There was no hack, > breach, illegal access of data, or anything else for that matter. > > If you leave a system online with no password which allows you to scrape > content you have a legal right to scrape that content. > > -Travis > > > On Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 11:10 AM, <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On Wed, 16 Jun 2010 10:09:22 EDT, T Biehn said: >> >> > I doubt the search warrant will hold up in court. >> >> Do you have any actual basis for saying that? Sure, the warrant might be >> bullshit, it might be solid - the article doesn't give us enough info >> either >> way to tell. >> >> "Auernheimer was also arrested in March for giving a false name to law >> enforcement officers responding to a parking complaint." >> >> Sad. The dude may have the intelligence to pull the hack, but not have >> the >> wisdom to not dig a hole deeper. Just man up and take the frikking parking >> ticket. ;) >> >> > > > -- > FD1D E574 6CAB 2FAF 2921 F22E B8B7 9D0D 99FF A73C > http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?search=tbiehn&op=index&fingerprint=on > http://pastebin.com/f6fd606da > > _______________________________________________ > Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. > Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html > Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/ >
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