Well, common sense would agree with you. but in the UK it is all about intent.
case law would also seem to suggest that it is not the intent of the attack that is involved, it would seem to be more the intent that the vitim percives... (not knowing much about law i do not know how this scans across to other sections of the law.) An example is: - http://news.zdnet.co.uk/internet/security/0,39020375,39226548,00.htm I dont know how this relates across international borders or in other countries. i dunno though, just my 2p Cheers S. On 11/16/05, Ansgar -59cobalt- Wiechers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2005-11-14 Levenglick, Jeff wrote: > > I would not run nmap against someone else, you could find yourself in > > legal trouble. > > Very doubtful. I'm not aware of any law that forbids even portscans, > much less network troubleshooting or the use of tools like nmap in > general. > > Regards > Ansgar Wiechers > -- > "Another option [for defragmentation] is to back up your important files, > erase the hard disk, then reinstall Mac OS X and your backed up files." > --http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25668 >
