Here is what is going to hurt or help the cops case.

"The volume of information is so expansive that in order to store and analyze 
the data safely and securely, police had to purchase storage hardware similar 
to what was used by Canadian military forces in Afghanistan. To access the 
files, many of which are password protected, the cops developed 
password-cracking software in-house that is slowly sifting through the mountain 
of information."

The key there is that the data was protected.  Did the datacenter control that 
protection and have access to the data or did their customer maintain that 
control?  Certainly a data hosting service is not required (or perhaps even 
allowed) to crack passwords to see what you are storing on their servers.

Steven Naslund
Chicago IL

>
>18 million dollars revenue in three months so certainly pretty large sized.
>
>Any idea which DC this is?
>
>http://motherboard.vice.com/en_ca/read/police-could-charge-a-data-cente
>r-in-the-largest-child-porn-bust-ever

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