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Open WAP = Probable Cause?

RockoTDF writes "A court in texas has ruled that an open WAP is not a sufficient defense against child pornography charges, a ruling which could carry over to p2p users. In addition, it appears that an open WAP could be seen as probable cause by law enforcement."

20 of 466 comments (clear)

  1. Accept Jury Duty by gleather · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just a reminder to ACCEPT jury duty if you get called. It is one of the best ways to directly affect how things work in the U.S.

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    Idiot.
    1. Re:Accept Jury Duty by jimstapleton · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And that 1 time out of 100 where it's a tech case, you'll get booted because you have a clue about the subject matter.

      Remember, Justice isn't just blind, it's also retarded.

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    2. Re:Accept Jury Duty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Either that or they don't want people who think "Having a brain" means "Being disrespectful of authority on principle"

    3. Re:Accept Jury Duty by Atraxen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "how exactly would this involuntary servitude have any bearing on affirming or defending our rights?"
      - Your Comment

      "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense."
      - Amendment IV, Bill of Rights

      That's how - by sitting on a jury, so are upholding your right to be tried by one. This is, after all, a participatory republic (non-standard term intentionally used to avoid the inevitable and obligatory participatory democracy vs republic argument.)

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    4. Re:Accept Jury Duty by slughead · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just a reminder to ACCEPT jury duty if you get called. It is one of the best ways to directly affect how things work in the U.S.

      Sure, aside from the (already mentioned) fact that 99.9% of the time it's DUI or something else inane.

      Also, most of the time, juries are advised to not judge the law, but judge whether or not someone broke the law.

      Of course, there's jack they can do to you as a juror if you say "Hey, I can't in good conscience let this kid go to jail for something this stupid; NOT GUILTY!" However, the judge can claim a mistrial if he finds out that's the reason for the 'not guilty' verdict, even after the verdict is read.

      If I ever get on a jury for a law I disagree with, the defendant is going to walk either by hung jury, mistrial, or not guilty verdict, and that's that.

    5. Re:Accept Jury Duty by Otter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Given that neither the submitter nor 95% of the people commenting here correctly understand what the defendant was arguing, I'm not so sure I want you people on my jury either.

    6. Re:Accept Jury Duty by jb.hl.com · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I haven't sat on a jury yet, as I get dismissed right there. They don't want people with brains.

      No, they want someone who can actually do jury duty without making a fuss about how he's the only one who can think for himself in a room full of clueless sheep. The reason you got dismissed is because you were being deliberately obstructive, obnoxious even, for no real reason.

      You sound like you're trying to roleplay some kind of House M.D. fanfic. It's quite worrying.

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  2. Something is fishy here.. by EveryNickIsTaken · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This guy gave a conditional guilty plea even though "evidence" linked the yahoo account to his roommate. You don't accept a deal for 4 years in prison if you're not guilty. Clearly, someone is lying here.

    1. Re:Something is fishy here.. by EveryNickIsTaken · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, the headline should actually say "Open WAP defense not valid in cases where you have stacks of incriminating evidence in your residence."

    2. Re:Something is fishy here.. by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You don't accept a deal for 4 years in prison if you're not guilty. Clearly, someone is lying here.

      Because the general public (and thus the jury) probably won't understand what an Open WAP is and what it means in this case, his lawyer probably told him to take the deal instead of facing more time when he loses.

    3. Re:Something is fishy here.. by enjo13 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      More correctly it should say 'Open WAP is not protection from search warrant.' That's essentially what the legal question was here. Does the fact that one has a Open WAP prevent the police from having probable cause to search your residence for electronic crimes? This guy was making an argument that he was essentially an ISP for whoever happened to drive by his house. There are established protections for ISP's that prevent search and siezure of their equipment when someone downstream transmits across their network. This guy was arguing that he should enjoy those same protections. The court ruled that when you run a unsecured wireless network that the police have probable cause to assume that you might be directly involved in whatever illegal traffic crosses your network (it's not clear how this applies to wireless points that themselves have downstream nodes). That's all..

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  3. Probable Cause?!? by Rukie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thats like saying because you wanted to get a hand gun, your going to be a school shooter. There are TONS of open WAPs because people don't know better. It gives me the desire to go from home to home and do child porn searchs and FBI searches from all the homes to force this decision to get overturned. I mean come on.

    I don't know whether or not the guy was innocent/guilty but I do think that this "probable cause" thing is complete crap. If I see cops going down the streets with laptops I'll chase em away and sue the city! Mental anguish or something. (luckily, I don't live in texas ;))
    If they make openWAP's probable cause, then what about a coffee place where you get free wifi. Will the owner be held responsible for this customers actions? Will you be *REQUIRED* to get a permit for an open WAP. This is complete crap.

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    1. Re:Probable Cause?!? by profplump · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not necessarily. You could limit the scope of federal power to prevent it from being a hassle while still letting you pool resources when it is beneficial. Now if only Lincoln and FDR, or anyone since then, had respected those limits.

    2. Re:Probable Cause?!? by hazem · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However, the fact still remains that people are allowing themselves to be potentially unwitting accomplices to all manner of nefarious activity.

      Damn straight! And lets start with all those guys in yellow hats building and maintaining roads. Just think of all the illegal things that happen because of roads:

      people can transport drugs anywhere there's a road
      terrorists can move about freely
      child kidnappers can quickly take their victims somewhere else
      drunk drivers use roads to kill their victims
      people speed in their cars
      and worst of all, people talk on their cellphones while driving

      Roads must end! And we can start with those horrible people who build and maintain them. /sarcasm

      A lot of people intentionally open WAPs so others can access the internet. In my town, Portland, OR, there are groups actively encouraging this.

      If anything, this is a move by the police (state) to keep people afraid of being free. But that's what it's like in the land of the (not so) free and the home of the (not so) brave.

    3. Re:Probable Cause?!? by anothy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      this is fun.

      first, you provide two alternatives (current US government vs. 50 independent states) and implicitly assert that they are the only two available. this is false. historically, we've got the Articles of Confederation, of course, to illustrate an obviously distinct alternative, but then there's the fact that the current US government does not particularly resemble the government we had ~200 years ago. the most significant changes have been the results of amendments, but changes in judicial interpretation is also very important. some of these changes have been positive (yay for no more slavery! yay for women voting!), some are negative (what happened to all other powers falling to the states or the people?), and on several the jury's still out (like direct election of senators; much more complicated than it seems). the point is change happens, if only slowly, and that change represents another alternative (arguably the most viable).

      second, why are you assuming or asserting that having 50 independent countries would suck? there's nothing to prevent those countries from entering into treaties to, for example, allow unfettered travel between them or share a currency. this is much the same as the origin of the EU (another example of where the current incarnation does not reflect the initial formulation). personally, that actually sounds kinda good. decentralizing the power would likely have the effect of making us a bit less abusive of it, at least. several of our states have intact free-standing governments that predate the US. probably more than any industrialized country in the world, the US Federal government could just close up shop with a relative minimum of fuss and a short transition period.

      sounds kinda fun, actually; would certainly be an exciting change. Vermot's got its own succession movement; probably the largest in the country. there's a smaller but still noticeable one in Hawai'i, which makes sense (since we got the country in the first place through pretty bad means), a bunch of "the south will rise again!" yahoos down in the Confederacy, and a few not-really-significant ones in other places (like Manhattan). the trickiest legal issue is what the status of the reservations would be; they're already "odd", to say the least, but they sorta bypass the states and "report" directly into the federal government. maybe just stop futzing around with this "dual sovereignty" and "conquered nation" nonsense and make them independent? simplest, but not clear it's best (most would be friggin' tiny, for starters).

      oh, and there is no "US continent". ;-)

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  4. The Stack of Kiddie Porn DVDs convicted him... by Erioll · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The stack of Kiddie Porn DVDs convicted him, not the open access point. The whole thing revolves around the fact that they found an IM of somebody with an IP originating from his residence that contained a child porn picture. This got them a search warrant, and they found additional evidence including a stack of DVDs with child porn images on them (and think HOW MANY images are needed to fill more than one DVD).

    The only point where the open access point comes in to it is that he claimed that because it was open, it means that ANYBODY could have used IPs from inside his house, and thus the search should have been thrown out, and the evidence gathered suppressed. But the judge didn't go for it.

    In non-technical terms, it's like claiming that your house is always unlocked, thus any evidence they ever find there should never be admissible, since anybody could have put it there. And as I said above, the judge didn't go for it, and rightfully so IMO. So this isn't "police look for open access points, and go fishing wherever they find one" but rather "an open access point doesn't get you out of finding DVDs of illegal material in your house."

    1. Re:The Stack of Kiddie Porn DVDs convicted him... by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or better yet its like them finding a trail of blood into your house, and claiming you always keep it unlocked. Good point. Sorry, I don't have mod points.

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  5. If you did what you suggest by mcg1969 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you did what you suggest---go to a bunch of open WAPs and do child porn searches---then none of the people you target will ultimately get in trouble. They might get their homes searched, but the FBI wouldn't find any evidence of child porn, because you're long gone.

    Furthermore your second paragraph isn't a fair characterization of what happened here. The cops aren't going around searching for open WAPs. It was the defense that brought this argument, not the cops. The allegedly illegal IM traffic came from the defendant's IP address, and he used the open WAP argument to suggest that since it could have been a drive-by or neighbor, that they didn't have enough evidence to search his house. Well, they may not have had enough evidence to convict, certainly---but you don't need nearly as much to get the search warrant. I frankly agree with that decision. The evidence stated that a crime was committed in the vicinity of that house.

    1. Re:If you did what you suggest by hab136 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you did what you suggest---go to a bunch of open WAPs and do child porn searches---then none of the people you target will ultimately get in trouble. They might get their homes searched, but the FBI wouldn't find any evidence of child porn, because you're long gone.

      Even if they find nothing, it's standard procedure to take everything that even remotely looks like a computer (like your Xbox/PS3/Wii), along with all accessories - printers, CDs, etc - and then only return it 3 years later when your lawyer hounds them enough.
  6. did anybody not see this one coming? by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "For the children! We've got to close down the Internet for the children!"

    You can bet that the child pr0n horseman will cause all anonymous access to the Internet to be lost, no matter the cost to the public. At some point somebody is going to write a "render your own kiddie porn no real children involved" program, at which point the authorities are going to have to make or break the case that kiddie porn causes child abuse. What if it doesn't? Will they lie to protect their power over us? Will the Pope still be Catholic?

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