On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 18:33:20 -0600, Scott Ladewig wrote:

>  (2) Whoever, as an owner or employee of an enterprise indicated in
>  subsection (1) and without authorization:

Key phrase: "without authorization"

If the users have authorized the suppresion of messages containing virii, then it's 
perfectly ok to discard them.

Most ISPs allready has conditions that their customers must agree to when signing up 
(exactly how this is done, and how visible it is to the user, is quite different 
between different countries), such as rules against spam, harrasment and illegal 
activities.

They could put a requirement that the user authorize the ISP to supress mails 
containing virii, trojans and other malicious executable content in their 
contract/agreement.

Same goes for employers. They can allow personal mail on the condition that the 
employee authorizes the employer to supress certain mails.

/Jonas

-- 
Jonas Eckerman, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.fsdb.org/


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