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http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/02/20/i...ill/index.html
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Hello, hello, Department of Redundancy Department!
The ISP or cell carrier ALREADY KEEP THIS INFORMATION!!!!! LE can have it at the drop of a warrant. WTF would you require that a WiFi hotspot keep the info? it's already recorded at every transfer spot across the net. Your provider already tracks what IP the traffic comes from; and many of your digital cell sites use the 'net instead of dedicated landlines now, too. Jeezus, what a waste of time and money.
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Our constitution protects aliens, drunks and U.S. Senators. -Will Rogers |
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many ISPs do not keep logs for anywhere close to 2 years.
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How does an unsecured Wi-Fi hotspot even identify who is using their bandwith at any given time?
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"When the winds of change blow hard enough, the most trivial of things can become deadly projectiles." - Unknown. |
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my guess is that, if they thought about it at all...which they prolly didn't...they want the MAC address. of course, MAC addresses can be spoofed...so, um, epic FAIL on that one. i'm not actually all that familiar with running Wi-Fi, though, so there could be something i am missing.
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i'll bet the disk drive manufacturers' lobby loves this bill, though...
in fact, i wonder if they were the ones who came up with the idea...
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Now supposing they did record the mac address of the user. Wouldn't that only be useful in matching things up with existing suspects? Maybe the next step will be to database all network card sales. ![]() If this crap passes I'm telling my wife it is back to hardwiring the house. She'll just have to keep a long cat5 handy when she wants to work on the laptop in rooms other than her office.
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"When the winds of change blow hard enough, the most trivial of things can become deadly projectiles." - Unknown. |
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it would be (if MAC addresses were actually reliable) useful in providing evidence against a known suspect. also, in theory at least, i guess they could potentially figure out who originally bought the network adapter/laptop with the network adapter in it if it was purchased with a credit card. i suppose they could also match it up to a known MAC address from another source. for example, if they already have a MAC address/ISP account correlated in their database and see that MAC address used on a WiFi hotspot, they could potentially match the MAC address to the ISP subscriber. i suppose they could even just ask all the major ISPs to search their logs for that MAC address (at least some of them would prolly cooperate). if the person ever logged into an ISP account with that MAC address, they could get a name that way. this investigative stuff is all just supposition on my part though. i have zero experience in that area. just thinking of how i might try to approach it based on my knowledge of networking (then again, i have had more than one idea that did not actually work in my life ).what i do know is that: 1. making yourself appear to be someone else in computer logs is not terribly difficult (both IP addresses and MAC address are easily spoofed). thus, this legislation could easily lead to innocent people being harrassed or worse...while not actually working to catch child predators as i imagine most of them are smart enough to hide their ID (though, on second though, given the idiots on that "to catch a predator show", maybe they aren't that smart). 2. forcing small ISPs to keep logs for two years could put them out of business and, in general, might drive up the price everyone pays for internet connectivity. 3. getting people who run home networks to keep those logs is absolute fantasy...most of them would have absolutely no clue how to do it even if they wanted to...and they don't have the disk space for it. same for coffee shops etc. who offer free Wi-Fi hot spots.
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