, 2009-01-09
Last month, Lori Drew the middle-aged Missouri mother who participated in a plan to deceive a 13-year-old girl that ultimately led to the girl's suicide was convicted by a Los Angeles federal jury of several misdemeanor counts of unauthorized access to MySpace's computers.
Expand all |
Post comment
The Drew Verdict Makes Us All Hackers
2009-01-12
Jon (1 replies)
Jon (1 replies)
Re: The Drew Verdict Makes Us All Hackers
2009-01-12
Mark D. Rasch (2 replies)
Mark D. Rasch (2 replies)
Re: Re: The Drew Verdict Makes Us All Hackers
2009-01-13
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Re: Re: The Drew Verdict Makes Us All Hackers
2009-01-15
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Legal pieces
2009-01-12
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Legal pieces - Other Countries
2009-01-13
Mark D. Rasch (1 replies)
Mark D. Rasch (1 replies)

This whole case is a farce. Making TOS violations equivalent to hacking is a horrible precedent, and will undoubtedly come back to bite us later.
Some websites and services have decent and meaningful TOS agreements, and I don't want to dismiss or take away from their value, but creating the potential for any/all TOS violations to become criminal offenses is disgusting. TOS agreements exist between the provider and subscriber, and therefore any violations there should be worked out between them, not the state or federal authorities. A worst case scenario resulting from a TOS violation should be the service in question being denied, not jail time.
This is just asinine.
[ reply ]
Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/489/35318#35318