Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Owen DeLong

 On Feb 27, 2015, at 15:49 , Jimmy Hess mysi...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 4:23 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
 Things like KP are obvious. Things like adult content here in the US are, 
 for better or worse, also obvious (legal, in case you were wondering).
 
 I would prefer they replace use of the phrase lawful internet
 traffic;   with   Internet traffic not prohibited by law  and not
 related to a source, destination, or type of traffic prohibited
 specifically by provider's conspiciously published terms of service.
 
 The use of the phrase LAWFUL  introduces ambiguity,  since any
 traffic not specifically authorized by law could be said to be
 unlawful.

Since we are talking about US law, you are not correct.

Anything not specifically prohibited by law in the US is lawful.

 Something neither prohibited nor stated to be allowed by law is by
 definition Unlawful as well….

Sorry, but no, that’s simply not accurate in the united states as legal 
terminology applies:

From law.com http://law.com/ (I’m too cheap to pay for a subscription to 
Black’s):

unlawful
adj. referring to any action which is in violation of a statute, federal or 
state constitution, or established legal precedents


Ergo, lawful would be anything which is not in violation of a statute, federal 
or state constitution, or established legal precedents.

Owen



Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Owen DeLong

 On Feb 27, 2015, at 16:09 , Jim Richardson weaselkee...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 3:28 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
 Again, well settled.
 
 It is where the end user is viewing the content _and_ where the content is 
 served. If a CDN, then each node which serves the traffic must be in a place 
 where it is legal. There are CDNs which do not serve all customers from all 
 nodes for exactly this reason.
 
 Does this mean that viewing say, cartoons of mohammed, may or may not
 be 'illegal' for me to do, and result in my ISP being forced to block
 traffic, depending on what origin and route they take to get to me?
 
 Are we going to have the fedgov trying to enforce other country's
 censorship laws on us?


This is absurd.

The source server is under the jurisdiction of the sovereigns in that location. 
Any enforcement of their laws upon the source server is carried out at the 
source by them.

The recipient client is under the jurisdictions of the sovereigns in that 
location. Any enforcement of their laws upon the recipient is carried out there 
by them.

In the case of a US ISP, their local jurisdiction should (though I haven’t read 
the detailed rules yet) be pre-empted from content based interference by the 
federal preemption rules and the applicability of Title II. Federal law would 
still, however, apply, and so an ISP would not be allowed to route traffic 
to/from a site which they have been notified through proper due process is 
violating US law.

Beyond the borders of the US, the FCC has little or no ability to enforce 
anything.

Owen



Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Jim Richardson
I am sure The Gibson guitar company thought the same thing about the EPA.

At least we can be sure that a TLA govt agency wouldn't be used to
harass an administration's political opponents, right?

On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 8:27 PM, Owen DeLong o...@delong.com wrote:

 On Feb 27, 2015, at 16:09 , Jim Richardson weaselkee...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 3:28 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net 
 wrote:
 Again, well settled.

 It is where the end user is viewing the content _and_ where the content is 
 served. If a CDN, then each node which serves the traffic must be in a 
 place where it is legal. There are CDNs which do not serve all customers 
 from all nodes for exactly this reason.

 Does this mean that viewing say, cartoons of mohammed, may or may not
 be 'illegal' for me to do, and result in my ISP being forced to block
 traffic, depending on what origin and route they take to get to me?

 Are we going to have the fedgov trying to enforce other country's
 censorship laws on us?


 This is absurd.

 The source server is under the jurisdiction of the sovereigns in that 
 location. Any enforcement of their laws upon the source server is carried out 
 at the source by them.

 The recipient client is under the jurisdictions of the sovereigns in that 
 location. Any enforcement of their laws upon the recipient is carried out 
 there by them.

 In the case of a US ISP, their local jurisdiction should (though I haven’t 
 read the detailed rules yet) be pre-empted from content based interference by 
 the federal preemption rules and the applicability of Title II. Federal law 
 would still, however, apply, and so an ISP would not be allowed to route 
 traffic to/from a site which they have been notified through proper due 
 process is violating US law.

 Beyond the borders of the US, the FCC has little or no ability to enforce 
 anything.

 Owen



Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Livingood, Jason
I¹m not sure who gets to definitively answer the question (I would guess
that case law will develop around it but IANAL), but this sort of caveat
has been in the Open Internet rules for awhile. In general it means ISPs
can¹t block stuff like Facebook but have latitude to do stuff like block a
site/IP address that may be the source of an attack, etc.


- Jason

On 2/27/15, 2:24 PM, Bruce H McIntosh b...@ufl.edu wrote:

On 2015-02-27 14:14, Jim Richardson wrote:
 What's a lawful web site?

Now *there* is a $64,000 question.  Even more interesting is, Who gets
to decide day to day the answer to that question? :)



Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Fri, 27 Feb 2015 19:28:11 -0400, deles...@gmail.com said:
 I wonder if lawyer sit around all day and argue about CIDR notation

Almost certainly not, because there's no murky gray areas about CIDR
notation, much less ones that potentially affect how they do their jobs.


pgpUYL92MiSPB.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Jimmy Hess
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 4:23 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
 Things like KP are obvious. Things like adult content here in the US are, 
 for better or worse, also obvious (legal, in case you were wondering).

I would prefer they replace use of the phrase lawful internet
traffic;   with   Internet traffic not prohibited by law  and not
related to a source, destination, or type of traffic prohibited
specifically by provider's conspiciously published terms of service.

The use of the phrase LAWFUL  introduces ambiguity,  since any
traffic not specifically authorized by law could be said to be
unlawful.

Something neither prohibited nor stated to be allowed by law is by
definition Unlawful as well


 Things like gambling are the question, as that changes per location.
--
-JH


Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Jim Richardson
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 3:28 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
 Again, well settled.

 It is where the end user is viewing the content _and_ where the content is 
 served. If a CDN, then each node which serves the traffic must be in a place 
 where it is legal. There are CDNs which do not serve all customers from all 
 nodes for exactly this reason.

Does this mean that viewing say, cartoons of mohammed, may or may not
be 'illegal' for me to do, and result in my ISP being forced to block
traffic, depending on what origin and route they take to get to me?

Are we going to have the fedgov trying to enforce other country's
censorship laws on us?


Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread deleskie
I wonder if lawyer sit around all day and argue about CIDR notation

Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Rogers network.
  Original Message  
From: Jim Richardson
Sent: Friday, February 27, 2015 7:26 PM
Cc: NANOG list
Subject: Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
 I am not a lawyer (in fact, I Am Not An Isp), but my understanding is this is 
 pretty well settled.

 And it is not even weird or esoteric. If the content on the site is against 
 the law in the jurisdiction in question, it is not legal (duh). Otherwise, 
 yes it is, and no ISP gets to decide whether you can see it or not.

Which is the jurisdiction in question ? the originating website? the
ISP? the CDN network's corporate home? my home?


Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore
I am not a lawyer (in fact, I Am Not An Isp), but my understanding is this is 
pretty well settled.

And it is not even weird or esoteric. If the content on the site is against the 
law in the jurisdiction in question, it is not legal (duh). Otherwise, yes it 
is, and no ISP gets to decide whether you can see it or not.

Things like KP are obvious. Things like adult content here in the US are, for 
better or worse, also obvious (legal, in case you were wondering).

Things like gambling are the question, as that changes per location.


A better question is: Can ISPs sell things like filtering services for a fee? 
Blocking is disallowed. But that is blocking by the ISP. Affirmative requests 
from the end user to block things are probably OK. But ... has anyone seen the 
actual rules?

-- 
TTFN,
patrick

 On Feb 27, 2015, at 16:46 , Livingood, Jason 
 jason_living...@cable.comcast.com wrote:
 
 Iąm not sure who gets to definitively answer the question (I would guess
 that case law will develop around it but IANAL), but this sort of caveat
 has been in the Open Internet rules for awhile. In general it means ISPs
 canąt block stuff like Facebook but have latitude to do stuff like block a
 site/IP address that may be the source of an attack, etc.
 
 
 - Jason
 
 On 2/27/15, 2:24 PM, Bruce H McIntosh b...@ufl.edu wrote:
 
 On 2015-02-27 14:14, Jim Richardson wrote:
 What's a lawful web site?
 
 Now *there* is a $64,000 question.  Even more interesting is, Who gets
 to decide day to day the answer to that question? :)



Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Jim Richardson
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
 I am not a lawyer (in fact, I Am Not An Isp), but my understanding is this is 
 pretty well settled.

 And it is not even weird or esoteric. If the content on the site is against 
 the law in the jurisdiction in question, it is not legal (duh). Otherwise, 
 yes it is, and no ISP gets to decide whether you can see it or not.

Which is the jurisdiction in question ? the originating website? the
ISP? the CDN network's corporate home? my home?


Re: What is lawful content? [was VZ...]

2015-02-27 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore
On Feb 27, 2015, at 18:12 , Jim Richardson weaselkee...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
 I am not a lawyer (in fact, I Am Not An Isp), but my understanding is this 
 is pretty well settled.
 
 And it is not even weird or esoteric. If the content on the site is against 
 the law in the jurisdiction in question, it is not legal (duh). Otherwise, 
 yes it is, and no ISP gets to decide whether you can see it or not.
 
 Which is the jurisdiction in question ? the originating website? the
 ISP? the CDN network's corporate home? my home?

Again, well settled.

It is where the end user is viewing the content _and_ where the content is 
served. If a CDN, then each node which serves the traffic must be in a place 
where it is legal. There are CDNs which do not serve all customers from all 
nodes for exactly this reason.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick