FBI Raids Homes and Seizes Bandwidth Pirates' PCs
Saturated Subnet writes "Recently in Toledo, OH FBI agents and a local police task force raided 13 residence and seized 23 computers. Some users of the local cable broadband provider had uncapped their cable modems." It appears to be a smaller ISP, and the
article says these 23 people cost them a quarter of a million bucks. Who
has time to look at $10,800 worth of pr0n?
If the detective said that, he should probably go back to school and find that LAWS are what he is to enforce. Not crimes. If he wants to enforce crimes, go work for the White House.
Umm, you know our policy system is f'ed up when this happens. They are probably going to be tried as terrorists. (I am serious about that!)
Just substitue $your_favorite_crime in the relevant parts of this, and you'll see how ludicrous it is.
/.'s readership. I mean c'mon. AFAIK, most of the /. crowd are sysadmins, programmers, etc....in other words, high-level tech people, and they are supposed to be intelligent. I shudder to this that the guy who programmed the software I may be using, or the guy who runs the NOC at my ISP doesn't think this is a crime.
/. crowd want this case to be treated (just a slap on the wrist)...and we'll see how you like that.
Dear customer,
We have detected that you have MURDERED your WIFE, blah blah blah. You have 3 days to BRING HER BACK TO LIFE, or your FREEDOM will pernamently be canceled and you will be blah blah blah.
A crime is a crime, and there are laws against stealing. You steal bandwidth, you get turned off, and your equipment gets seized pending an investigation.
I see so many people who pretend this isn't a real crime, that I have to wonder the avarage age of
How about this, next time your car gets stolen, the police treat the case the way a lot of the
"A terrorist is someone who has a bomb but doesn't have an air force." -William Blum