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                Date: 2001-03-24
                 
                 
                US: Cybercrime und SPAM
                
                 
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      Wie jetzt versucht wird, das Netz in den Griff zu kriegen,  
darüber sagt dieser Artikel ziemlich viel. Man nehme einen  
[einflußreichen] Abgeordneten, der gegen die Interessen der  
US-Dienste immer schon die Interessen der IT-Industrie  
vertreten hat, nämlich freie Verschlüsselung zum Zweck des  
E-Kommerz. 
 
Und schon kommt mit einem politisch korrekten  
Gesetzentwurf gegen SPAM eines der Cybercrime Proposals  
zum Verbot bestimmter Programme mit ins Spiel. 
 
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Use a Spam, Go to Prison by Declan McCullagh  
(declan@wired.com) 2:00 a.m. Mar. 24, 2001 PST 
 
WASHINGTON -- Rep. Bob Goodlatte does not want you to  
read this article. 
 
The conservative Virginia Republican, who is co-chairman of  
the Congressional Internet Caucus, hopes to punish the  
publication or redistribution of columns such as this with a  
$15,000 fine and up to one year in federal prison. 
 
Why? Because I've included a short Perl program that could  
be used to spam -- and it seems certain to be banned under  
a bill that Goodlatte has recently introduced. 
 
Goodlatte's Anti-Spamming Act of 2001 allows the Secret  
Service to police software that "is designed or produced  
primarily for the purpose of concealing the source or routing  
information of bulk unsolicited electronic mail messages." 
 
It's part of a knee-jerk reaction against unsolicited e-mail on  
Capitol Hill, and it follows in the footsteps of the Digital  
Millennium Copyright Act, which movie studios have used in  
an unsuccessful bid to rid the Net of a DVD-descrambling  
program. 
 
Goodlatte -- who is chairman of the House Republican High  
Technology Working Group -- has spent years lobbying to  
make it easier to export encryption products, but also was a  
vocal supporter of the DMCA and the Communications  
Decency Act. 
 
This time around, instead of making it a crime to spam,  
Goodlatte has decided to amend existing law to ban  
spamware, but since the bill is worded so broadly, it might  
imperil other programmers instead. That's not a surprise:  
Software is flexible stuff, and it's tricky to ban some  
applications without going too far. Other potential problems  
include that Goodlatte's bill can't remove spamware hosted  
overseas and could run afoul of the First Amendment. 
 
A second section of his anti-spam measure says it's illegal  
to distribute software that "has only limited commercially  
significant purpose or use other than to conceal such source  
or routing information." 
 
That could cover utilities like the Perl script below. It's been  
slightly altered, but it was originally written as a legitimate  
autoresponder CGI script that worked by forging the From:  
line of an e-mail message: 
 
	#!/usr/bin/perl 	open (MAIL,"| /usr/lib/sendmail -t -oi"); 	 
print MAIL <<END; 	To: newsfeedback\@wired.com 	 
From: spammer\@spammer.com 	Subject: MAKE MONEY  
FAST! 
 
	$1000 a Week, a FREE Car, and FREE Leads!!! 	Rule  
#1 PUT YOUR FRIENDS ON HOLD... do not sell to people  
you know 	until you are making money... 	I will give you  
more FREE leads than you can CALL... 	END 	close  
MAIL; 
 
Mehr 
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,42599,00.html
                   
 
 
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edited by Harkank 
published on: 2001-03-24 
comments to office@quintessenz.at
                   
                  
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