I seem to remember that excessive port scanning was one of the issues that
was litigated in the new Zealand ORBS cases.
I think the GIEIS theory must be that the ends justify the means - even if
we bring servers to a total halt while they respond to all these pointless
scans, that's OK because our hearts are pure - we are only trying to reduce
spam.
I tried to read the GIEIS paper and I cannot understand what the proposal
is, what it is trying to achieve or what the prospect of a reduction in
spam
as a result would be.
I too looked at http://homepage.ntlworld.com/giza.necropolis. Like you, I
have little idea what is being proposed (it might have helped if it had been
written by someone with at least an elementary school understanding of
English spelling and grammar). Perhaps it is RMX without DNS (the
distributed DNS system being replaced for this purpose by the GIEIS Central
Servers), or something very similar to that, but it is not really clear. I
was particularly amused by the "encrypted ID code", which I take to be
invocation of the meaningless word-of-power "encrypted" rather than anything
to do with encryption as understood by cryptologists.
Statements that 'intellectual copyright' is reserved do not lend
confidence,
I am not aware of any such concept in US or international copyright law.
I'm not at all surprised that you are not aware of something that does not
exist!
Copyright protects the embodiment of an idea, never the idea itself. Even
the EU doctrine of moral right of the author does not cover this.
Perhaps the distinction between Copyright and Patent is lost on the author?
Phill
-----Original Message-----
From: Esa Laitinen [mailto:esa(_at_)laitinen(_dot_)org]
Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2003 2:14 AM
To: asrg(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org
Subject: Re: [Asrg] 'GIEIS' - The Fourth Response
On Thu, Jul 03, 2003 at 03:28:51AM +0000, Mark McCarron wrote:
It is worth addressing. A port scan only tests for basic
security and
access to a system. It is hardly a physical assault, also,
coming from a
trusted domain everyone would be quite aware it was not a
breach attempt on
their systems. Since these scans would be sent clear text
across the web
anyone with a little knowledge could analyse them. If
there was anything
suspisious it would be repoted instantly all over the world.
Nevertheless port scanning is illegal in some parts of the
world, with
convictions to back the claim (decision of Finnish Supreme
Court, case
number KKO:2003:36).
Welcome to Finland after you've started your large scale scanning ;-)
--
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