Re: Operational impact of filtering SMB/NETBIOS traffic?
Dennis Glatting [dennis.glatting@software-munitions.com] wrote:
Dumb question:
Could filtering be considered a violation of First Amendment rights? Furthermore, when is it and when is it not?
Uh, I think that might be taking things a little too far. I really think the only law involved -might- be contractual (IE, 'our contract says they our connect is unfiltered' or some such). You can sign contracts that limit your speech (NDA's, for instance), so I don't really see this as a First Amendment thing. Mike -- Mike Johnson Network Engineer / iSun Networks, Inc. Morrisville, NC All opinions are mine, not those of my employer
Dennis Glatting [dennis.glatting@software-munitions.com] wrote:
Could filtering be considered a violation of First Amendment rights? Furthermore, when is it and when is it not?
first amendment right? first amendment of what? for them that can't read into the above: 8^) jim -- noting that the NA in NANOG stands for North American, which, if i recall my geography correctly, is not strictly the USofA. -- [ Jim Mercer jim@reptiles.org +1 416 410-5633 ] [ Reptilian Research -- Longer Life through Colder Blood ] [ Don't be fooled by cheap Finnish imitations; BSD is the One True Code. ]
participants (2)
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Jim Mercer
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Mike Johnson