<<On 16 Jan 2001 03:39:53 -0500, Marc Horowitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > If such databases existed, I'd want as many people as possible using > my ethernet address. It makes for plenty of reasonable doubt and > plausible deniability. Which is, of course, how anonymizing services achieve most of their value. If only one person is using an anonymizer, then they are still effectively traceable. If, on the other hand, that one person is mixed in with 140,000 other requests [an actual number] then they are more likely to be anonymous. -GAWollman
- Re: The Internet and the Law,... Harald Alvestrand
- RE: The Internet and the Law, the ... Christian Huitema
- 3GPP IPv6 identifiers (RE: Th... Harald Alvestrand
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Keith Moore
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Brian E Carpenter
- Re: The Internet and the Law,... Perry E. Metzger
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Greg Minshall
- Re: The Internet and the Law,... Brian E Carpenter
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Marc Horowitz
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Valdis . Kletnieks
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Garrett Wollman
- Re: The Internet and the Law,... Jon Crowcroft
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Keith Moore
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Stephen Sprunk
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Keith Moore
- Re: The Internet and the Law, the ... Valdis . Kletnieks
- Re: The Internet and the Law,... Keith Moore
