I think it is a fallacious debate to discuss whether Tor servers or services are illegal or legal. Like any other tool, it is all about intent. I know that as engineering types we tend to not like relativism but the law is very much about that. Intent is ultimately very critical to obtaining a criminal conviction. Every day someone does something that might otherwise be considered a crime but because of intent is innocent. For example, ****I shoot a bear out of season, this is a crime right? What if I told you the bear was attacking a four year old little girl, does that change your mind? ****It is not a crime to send an encoded letter. It is a crime to send an encoded letter that communicates an impending attack on someone. ****It is not a crime to make a phone call. It is a crime to make a telephonic bomb threat. ****A gun is not a crime. Shooting someone is a crime (mostly). ****An ISP selling internet service that most people use for legal purposes is not doing anything illegal when someone uses it to illegally share music because they did not intend to commit a crime. ****If you build a server solely for hosting copyrighted software for illegal distribution, you are a criminal. If someone hacks your FTP server and hides a piece of copyrighted software there for illegal distribution you are probably not a criminal as long as you take some action to prevent the crime once you are aware of it. Steven Naslund -----Original Message----- From: Brian Johnson [mailto:bjohnson@drtel.com] Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2012 3:26 PM To: Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu; nanog@nanog.org Cc: nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: William was raided for running a Tor exit node. Please help if <SNIP HEADERS>
This is a misleading statement. ISP's (Common carriers) do not provide a knowingly illegal offering, ... TOR exit/entrance nodes provide only the
former.
This is also a misleading statement. Explain the difference between a
consumer ISP selling you a cable Internet plan knowing that NN% of the
traffic will be data with questionable copyright status, and 1 of of 5 or so will be a botted box doing other illegal stuff, and a TOR node providing transit knowing that NN% will be similarly questionable etc etc etc.
You actually are saying what I said, just you misunderstand your own point. You clipped my entire statement to make it appear to say something else. A TOR node, in and of itself, is not infrastructure for passing packets. It's a service on the infrastructure. I never implied that the traffic through/from the ISP or the TOR was more or less legal than the other.
In other words, if TOR exit nodes provide a "knowingly illegal offering", then Comcast is doing exactly the same thing...
No they are not. See previous. <SNIP ongoing blathering> - Brian