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- Lawl Shcool
- Posts: 766
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Re: .
Was the TOS he quoted even accurate? I think it is OP's style to reword the language more favorably to his position.shredderrrrrr wrote:Should've let the guy stay longer so he could've called himself out even more...he obviously showed he was plenty capable of doing something that dumb.Lawl Shcool wrote:YES!
I vote for an un-banning so this thread doesn't die. I guarantee OP's third attempt at thread entry will be even better than his second.
- Always Credited
- Posts: 2501
- Joined: Wed Jun 24, 2009 1:31 pm
Re: .
That TOS is incorrect because, if needed, the government can serve a search warrant on TLS and compel any email address falling within the confines of that warrant. Such info can also be compelled by a subpoena with notice to the user, or a 2703(d) order with notice to the user.
So the TOS only means that TLS keeps its discretion to reveal the info or not. Its been held, however, that Terms of Service are insufficient in and of themselves to give users a Reasonable Expectation of Privacy in noncontent info (subscriber info, emails, ect.) because by its very nature, noncontent info has NO reasonable expectation of privacy. See Smith v. Maryland.
HTH.
So the TOS only means that TLS keeps its discretion to reveal the info or not. Its been held, however, that Terms of Service are insufficient in and of themselves to give users a Reasonable Expectation of Privacy in noncontent info (subscriber info, emails, ect.) because by its very nature, noncontent info has NO reasonable expectation of privacy. See Smith v. Maryland.
HTH.
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- shredderrrrrr
- Posts: 4673
- Joined: Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:36 am
Re: .
Damn, you know your shit.Always Credited wrote:That TOS is incorrect because, if needed, the government can serve a search warrant on TLS and compel any email address falling within the confines of that warrant. Such info can also be compelled by a subpoena with notice to the user, or a 2703(d) order with notice to the user.
So the TOS only means that TLS keeps its discretion to reveal the info or not. Its been held, however, that Terms of Service are insufficient in and of themselves to give users a Reasonable Expectation of Privacy in noncontent info (subscriber info, emails, ect.) because by its very nature, noncontent info has NO reasonable expectation of privacy. See Smith v. Maryland.
HTH.
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Re: .
Person must have panicked because he asked TLS only 4 hours into his/her exam . . .
OP is one of 35 people but I don't know how it can be narrowed down any more than that.
OP is one of 35 people but I don't know how it can be narrowed down any more than that.
Last edited by lawyerwannabe on Sun Apr 29, 2012 4:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Lawl Shcool
- Posts: 766
- Joined: Tue Oct 27, 2009 6:44 pm
Re: .
I was more referring to him adjusting the language he quoted but Always Credited FTW!shredderrrrrr wrote:Damn, you know your shit.Always Credited wrote:That TOS is incorrect because, if needed, the government can serve a search warrant on TLS and compel any email address falling within the confines of that warrant. Such info can also be compelled by a subpoena with notice to the user, or a 2703(d) order with notice to the user.
So the TOS only means that TLS keeps its discretion to reveal the info or not. Its been held, however, that Terms of Service are insufficient in and of themselves to give users a Reasonable Expectation of Privacy in noncontent info (subscriber info, emails, ect.) because by its very nature, noncontent info has NO reasonable expectation of privacy. See Smith v. Maryland.
HTH.
- Always Credited
- Posts: 2501
- Joined: Wed Jun 24, 2009 1:31 pm
Re: .
shredderrrrrr wrote:Damn, you know your shit.Always Credited wrote:That TOS is incorrect because, if needed, the government can serve a search warrant on TLS and compel any email address falling within the confines of that warrant. Such info can also be compelled by a subpoena with notice to the user, or a 2703(d) order with notice to the user.
So the TOS only means that TLS keeps its discretion to reveal the info or not. Its been held, however, that Terms of Service are insufficient in and of themselves to give users a Reasonable Expectation of Privacy in noncontent info (subscriber info, emails, ect.) because by its very nature, noncontent info has NO reasonable expectation of privacy. See Smith v. Maryland.
HTH.
Learned computer crimes from this guy:
http://www.law.gwu.edu/Faculty/profile.aspx?id=3568
- shredderrrrrr
- Posts: 4673
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Re: .
Find who turned in a shit test. Done.lawyerwannabe wrote:Person must have panicked because he asked TLS only 4 hours into his/her exam . . .
OP is one of 35 people but I don't know how it can be narrowed down any more than that.
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Re: .
Systematic1 wrote:+1shredderrrrrr wrote:OP:
Last edited by lawyerwannabe on Mon Apr 30, 2012 11:26 am, edited 2 times in total.
- monkey85
- Posts: 394
- Joined: Fri Feb 20, 2009 7:07 pm
Re: .
Get Orin on this guy's case!Always Credited wrote:Learned computer crimes from this guy:
http://www.law.gwu.edu/Faculty/profile.aspx?id=3568
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Re: .
Been lurking, but came on to say that Kerr is awesome. His work saved me considerable time this semester at my externship.Always Credited wrote: Learned computer crimes from this guy:
http://www.law.gwu.edu/Faculty/profile.aspx?id=3568
Last edited by CyLaw on Sun Apr 29, 2012 5:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- chrispronger
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Mon Nov 29, 2010 11:12 pm
Re: .
If it's just males, down to ~19. I could probably narrow it down to ~5 after eliminating folks who don't know/probably wouldn't know about TLS and folks who are too smart to formulate a question this way.lawyerwannabe wrote:Person must have panicked because he asked TLS only 4 hours into his/her exam . . .
OP is one of 35 people but I don't know how it can be narrowed down any more than that.
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Re: .
add in some knowledge of DC, possibly an unlikelihood of being a minority, obsession with money/big law, and general douchebaggery and you got yourself a lineup!
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- Lawl Shcool
- Posts: 766
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Re: .

edit: from google search FYI of "racist dc lax bro"
Last edited by Lawl Shcool on Sun Apr 29, 2012 5:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUH3JQjcweMdailygrind wrote:Nice try, OP. Banned.minutemanmike wrote:Wouldn't this be a breach of TOS, would you ever want to post here again if they did that? I mean in the "anonymous" portion of Legal Employment I'd be deathly afraid to ever post if it could be linked to me.Always Credited wrote:Non-content electronic information (including basic subscriber information, IP addresses, and any email accounts he registered under) can be turned over by a private party (TLS) to another private party (Duke) without violating either the Wiretap Act or the Stored Communications Act.Morgan12Oak wrote:It sounds like at least one, probably multiple people have already turned him in already so I think that is going to be satisfied. I doubt the mod's turn over much unless they get some sort of formal nice request from Duke. The higher chance is if someone already knows who he is. Or, in the alternative he turns himself in thinking that it becomes less severe and calculates his chances of being caught from the above two are relatively high.
Just saying.
GO MODS GO
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I'm so glad I kept coming back here.
- shredderrrrrr
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Re: .
Any of these guys named Mike? Or have we established that wasn't a real name?beachbum wrote:Don't forget about knowledge of DC.chrispronger wrote:If it's just males, down to ~19. I could probably narrow it down to ~5 after eliminating folks who don't know/probably wouldn't know about TLS and folks who are too smart to formulate a question this way.lawyerwannabe wrote:Person must have panicked because he asked TLS only 4 hours into his/her exam . . .
OP is one of 35 people but I don't know how it can be narrowed down any more than that.
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Re: .
Guessing is not going to do any good.chrispronger wrote:If it's just males, down to ~19. I could probably narrow it down to ~5 after eliminating folks who don't know/probably wouldn't know about TLS and folks who are too smart to formulate a question this way.lawyerwannabe wrote:Person must have panicked because he asked TLS only 4 hours into his/her exam . . .
OP is one of 35 people but I don't know how it can be narrowed down any more than that.
Last edited by lawyerwannabe on Mon Apr 30, 2012 11:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: .
Going to draw a line in the sand here and say that there is no way his name is Mike. Though the "minuteman" description would go along with his self-deprecating sexual attitude (see earlier when he referred to his "tiny dick")
Last edited by Morgan12Oak on Sun Apr 29, 2012 5:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- alwayssunnyinfl
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Re: .
Now that TLS is done convincing 0Ls not to go to law school, the next mission is convincing parents to stop thinking it's a good investment.I.P. Daly wrote:The top two threads in "Forum for Law School Students" involve cheating and popping pills.
Seriously? What are you waiting for?
Now there's a charge.
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