Using Net Proxies Will Lead To Harsher Sentences
Afforess writes "'Proxy servers are an everyday part of Internet surfing. But using one in a crime could soon lead to more time in the clink,' reports the Associated Press. The new federal rules would make the use of proxy servers count as 'sophistication' in a crime, leading to 25% longer jail sentences. Privacy advocates complain this will disincentivize privacy and anonymity online. '[The government is telling people] ... if you take normal steps to protect your privacy, we're going to view you as a more sophisticated criminal,' writes the Center for Democracy and Technology. Others fear this may lead to 'cruel and unusual punishments' as Internet and cell phone providers often use proxies without users' knowledge to reroute Internet traffic. This may also ultimately harm corporations when employees abuse VPN's, as they too are counted as a 'proxy' in the new legislation. TOR, a common Internet anonymizer, is also targeted in the new legislation. Some analysts believe this legislation is an effort to stop leaked US Government information from reaching outside sources, such as Wikileaks. The legislation (PDF, the proposed amendment is on pages 5-15) will be voted on by the United States Sentencing Commission on April 15, and is set to take effect on November 1st. The EFF has already urged the Commission to reject the amendment."
What about forced proxy usage? Like using opera mini. Even in sockets mode, it seems to pipe through the Swedish proxy.
from 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
to 45 2F 6E 40 3C DF 10 71 4E 41 DF AA 25 7D 31 3F
We will rename Proxies to Application Firewalls once they get all the wording in their laws right and passed! :o)
"My immediate reaction is "WTF? What kind of moron doesn't make things 64-bit safe to begin with?" Linus
I'm working on a single drop-in ASPX/C# page that contains a web proxy, so that any newbie web hacker can have an anonymising web proxy in their own web site. I'll leave the PHP version to somebody else :-) The idea being that if thousands of (overwise legitimate) web sites in dozens of countries have proxy pages in then the national firewalls will have a lot of trouble blocking them out. The basic rule i'm going with is that it remains text only - so that it's below the MAFIAA and think-o-the-children lobbiests' radars. Watch this space.
Every telco that I know of uses a transparent proxy to improve performance.
There are proxies on the receiving end too.
Heck, proxies usually make things _easier_ for law enforcement, they tend to keep logs that they can get at without letting the target know.
Oh, I get it, they're against private ownership of proxies.
That's fine, ban the proxy!
just rename the US government to "Entertainment Industry Protection, Inc?". I mean, that's basically your government's only function now...
Let's imagine you buy a gun, and take steps to do it anonymously. You go out of state to a place that lets you evade checks. What do you think the police are going to think?
This is nothing new, and nothing exceptional.
that the government can spy on us but we can't spy on them....
Wait a minute, government for the people by the people....
Seems the government has gone arrogant...
Welcome to America, circa post-9/11.
This isn't really anything new, just a continuation of the erosion of our privacy that's been increasing at a faster rate since 9/11, that's all. I'm not even going to waste my time in attempting to put blame on any particular party either. We would likely be reading about this regardless of who is sitting in the White House.
Oh, and you can forget about that "for the people, by the people" stuff. Seems like the last time that held any standing in Congress was when the author was still alive.
A proxy serves to protect the initiator by acting on its behalf. It represents the initiator to the source being addressed.
Lawyers are proxies for their clients.
Being represented by a lawyer is a 'sophistication' and should lead to a harsher sentence.
Lest one think that "in committing a crime" doesn't apply, consider that a person swears to tell "the whole truth", that not doing so is lying which is perjury, and that the lawyer representing the person attempts to promote one particular version of the truth, thus not "the whole truth". A lawyer perjures on behalf of their client, and the ubiquitous "or causes to" term can be applied, making the client responsible for the perjury committed by the lawyer.
"I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
So prison rape is approved by judges as a part of sentencing?
I guess we could have figured that one out, but it's nice to know for sure.
Insanity: voting in the same two parties over and over again and expecting different results
If you're doing something that is in a grey area legally, you'd better not use a proxy in case it turns out to be illegal.
In fact, you should think wice about using a proxy at all. Since we all probably commit minor crimes occasionally, accidentally.
Using a proxy now exposes you to risk, which must be weighed against the risk of not using one.
Perhaps this is aimed at preventing the establishment of ubiquitous proxy usage.