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GPorter
It Always Works Better When It's On

join:2001-03-21
San Antonio, TX

Re: How does SBC stand RE: recent RIAA activity?

said by prosecutor See Profile:
No offense, but the idea that any legitimate business would not comply with an objectively legal subpoena, warrant, or other process should really bother you...
I agree with you wholeheartedly that the RIAA's use of subpoenas is legitimate and aboveboard. However, there is a written contract between the user and SBC, which is called the Terms of Service, that controls SBC's actions with the user's information.

When RIAA presented subpoenas to several colleges in the Northeast, most refused to cooperate because the subpoenas did not allow the schools to comply with what to them was an overriding statute-the higher education equivalent of the Privacy Act of 1974.

The schools had no intention of snubbing the court, they merely required more time than the subpoenas allowed to comply with other statutory requirements.

On the other hand, a number of ISPs have junked their legal responsibilities to their users, and given attorneys with questionable motives every shred of data on users at the mere threat of a subpoena. Don't they know that a subpoena is not a punitive document? Don't they know that it is a discovery tool that strictly limits (in this case) what information is sought? Don't they know that it is much easier to threaten using a subpoena than to actually obtain one? Sheesh!

I expect SBC to maintain the privacy of my user information until and unless presented with a valid subpoena issued by a bench with appropriate jurisdiction, much as the disclaimer for Broadband Reports' log in dictates. That's not too much to ask or expect from such a large company.
--
Glenn-Remembering 9-11-01 "Let's Roll!"

prosecutor
Do Your Duty--Be A Juror
Premium
join:2002-11-15
Plano, TX

Re: How does SBC stand RE: recent RIAA activity?

Time limits are a legitimate consideration. Overbreadth might be another.

Under no circumstances, however, can SBC (or any other internet provider) try to contract around its legal obligations to the court system. In other words, the contract does not, and cannot, matter. Your logic, taken to its extreme, might allow an ISP to contract with persons that it will notify them of the existence of a subpoena. This in turn would allow a pedophile or mafiosi to up and move prior to a legitimate law enforcement action.

Fact is, a number of major market ISP's are starting to limit the length of time they keep data in order to limit their subpoena exposure. This also means, however, that they may be (are) destroying evidence of the worst sort of criminal offenses imaginable.

Fact also is that SBC does require subpoenas for its records in every single case. The record center is here in Dallas. The system is cumbersome and slow, but it works in most cases. The hardest part is finding a real live human being to take responsibility for compliance.

GPorter
It Always Works Better When It's On

join:2001-03-21
San Antonio, TX

Re: How does SBC stand RE: recent RIAA activity?

said by prosecutor See Profile:
Time limits are a legitimate consideration. Overbreadth might be another.

Under no circumstances, however, can SBC (or any other internet provider) try to contract around its legal obligations to the court system. In other words, the contract does not, and cannot, matter. Your logic, taken to its extreme, might allow an ISP to contract with persons that it will notify them of the existence of a subpoena. This in turn would allow a pedophile or mafiosi to up and move prior to a legitimate law enforcement action.
I wouldn't want them to notify the subject of a subpoena. But I would expect them to-as you state elsewhere-require a subpoena before divulging information they have contracted to retain in confidence.

said by prosecutor See Profile:
Fact is, a number of major market ISP's are starting to limit the length of time they keep data in order to limit their subpoena exposure. This also means, however, that they may be (are) destroying evidence of the worst sort of criminal offenses imaginable.
From what I've read of these sorts of offenses, the only thing that is lost is the potential for information detailing the length of time the offender has been committing said offenses. On the other hand, maintaining a shorter archive of customer records reduces the number of personnel and amount of storage space needed. I call that a business compromise, not aiding and abetting.

said by prosecutor See Profile:
Fact also is that SBC does require subpoenas for its records in every single case. The record center is here in Dallas. The system is cumbersome and slow, but it works in most cases. The hardest part is finding a real live human being to take responsibility for compliance.
Bureaucracies of all sorts have a certain amount of inertia. Obtaining a subpoena is not exactly a speedy process, is it? On the other hand, having access to the actual keeper of records has the effect of deterring the casual (excuse the expression) hack lawyer attempting to intimidate a firm into releasing something that said hack lawyer has no legal right to.
--
Glenn-Remembering 9-11-01 "Let's Roll!"
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