This is who was accessing you:
Temp index.html file
You have reach document root for netscape
server running on port :80 on bluefs.census.gov


A suit has been filed regarding this intrusion into your privacy.

Privacy Suit Targets Netscape
by Chris Oakes
3:25 p.m. Jul. 7, 2000 PDT
A New Jersey-based website operator has filed a class action lawsuit 
charging that AOL/Netscape's Internet software violates electronic privacy 
law.
The suit alleges that the companies secretly monitor file transfers between 
Internet sites and Internet users.

"Unbeknownst to (Netscape users) ... defendants have been spying on their 
Internet activities," said the complaint, which was filed June 30 in the 
U.S. District Court for the Southern District Court of New York by New 
Jersey-based website operator Chris Specht.
The "SmartDownload" feature in the Netscape Communicator Web browser 
secretly transmits file download information to Netscape and America Online 
(which acquired Netscape in 1998), it states.
Chris Specht "has executable files he offers to Internet users browsing his 
sites to be downloaded, and he does not like the fact that Netscape is 
tracking file downloads on his website," said Specht's attorney Joshua 
Rubin, of New York law firm Abbey, Gardy & Squitieri.
Seeking to represent all affected website operators and users, Specht's 
class action suit claims the Netscape software's behavior violates two 1986 
laws governing privacy in electronic communications.
America Online did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the 
suit.
The Communicator product information describes SmartDownload as software 
that assists users downloading files from Internet sites. In addition to 
allowing users to pause downloads and continue them during a later 
connection, Netscape says the product shows "informative content from 
Netcenter while downloading."
This electronic awareness of all download activity conducted with 
SmartDownload is the target of Specht's complaint. The suit specifies 
Netscape's collection of data that identifies the name, type, and source of 
executable files users downloads, which Netscape collects along with cookie 
information that uniquely identifies the user.
The Netscape product material does briefly mention privacy policy: "As we 
expand the services of SmartDownload and its InfoBrowser, SmartDownload 
Profiling will allow us to send you customized information about the file 
you are downloading. To protect your privacy, none of this information is 
saved." It also notes that the feature can be turned off.
But Specht's suit charges that the "continuing surveillance" and uniquely 
identifying cookies let Netscape, over time, create a "continuing profile" 
of each visitor's file transfers.
"Your electronic communications are being bugged," said Rubin. "...The 
contents of an Internet server's computer-which contains communications 
between the site and the user-is being compromised."
The suit lays out an example: "If an Internet user uses SmartDownload to 
download Microsoft's Internet Explorer from Microsoft's Web site, 
SmartDownload will transmit to defendants the Internet user's 
identification string along with the name of the file and the file's 
location on the Internet... In so doing, Netscape is using SmartDownload to 
eavesdrop."
The suit says the company is in violation of the Electronic Communications 
Privacy Act of 1986, which addresses privacy issues that arose with the 
increased use of computers and electronic communications systems in the 
1980s. The act updated the codes, which were established in 1968, to 
clarify invasion of privacy when electronic surveillance is involved.
The second act cited, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986, clarifies 
criminal fraud and abuse felonies for federal computer crimes.
On this legal footing, Specht's suit seeks statutory damages: the greater 
of $100 per day for every day the software has been available (it was 
introduced in late 1998), or $10,000 per user for "theft of private 
information" on behalf of himself and all affected Netscape users.
Junkbusters' privacy advocate Jason Catlett said the suit is a descendant 
of a class action lawsuit filed after it was discovered that RealNetworks' 
music playback software was tracking users' listening habits.
In November 1999, a Pennsylvania law firm filed a still-pending class 
action suit charging that RealNetworks violated the Computer Fraud and 
Abuse Act, as well as state privacy laws and consumer protection statutes.
Soon after the practice was discovered, RealNetworks modified the software 
to cease the collection of data.
"Companies whose software collects information surreptitiously can now 
routinely expect to see these kinds of lawsuits, so we're starting to see 
more fine print (posted on the websites)," Catlett said in an email. "At 
least that's easier to read than an executable file."
If Specht's lawsuit, or the case against RealNetworks, is successful, 
companies could be forced to rethink their privacy policies.
"If a jury ever awards significant damages, all companies will be forced to 
change their attitude towards 'spyware,' because it will become a 
significant investment risk," Catlett said.
James Osbourne Holmes
[email protected]
FTNWO


-----Original Message-----
From:   Harvey Flatbush [SMTP:[email protected]]
Sent:   Sunday, July 16, 2000 1:47 PM
To:     [email protected]
Subject:        CS>Off Topic BUT Dirty Pool, you better check this out.

 << File: ATT00007.html >> My brother just sent me the message below. Does 
anyone know about this?


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi Harv,
Last night just before shutting down my computer, my firewall came up with
the message that my computer was trying to be accessed by
http://148.129.129.13 and asked me for an ok to let it in.

I didn't let it in, but,,,,,,,, I then opened my browser and typed in the
above 'url'
You ought to check this out and pass it onto your friends.
Frank


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