Federal Judge Says It's OK To Port Scan Networks 18
Alex Bischoff writes: "As noted in this Politech posting, a federal district judge says it's OK to do port scans on networks. 'The court concluded that an
imperceptible slowdown in performance was not damaged under
the Georgia law.'" Note that this is a very specific situation; only one data point out of many that will be required to figure out how various laws apply to the Internet.
Re:Port scans OK? (Score:1)
Re:Uh. Shouldn't This Be On The Main Page? (Score:1)
JOhn
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:1)
You can cut a hole in someones throat and they die. You can cut a hole in someone throat and they get to breathe again while you try and get the lump of potato out!
The `why` is more important than the `what`.
Yeah sure (Score:1)
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:1)
A ping is more analagous to knocking on doors. Port scanning is more like checking to see if the doors and windows are locked.
If you came home from work and someone was knocking on your door, you wouldn't think anything of it. However, if you came home from work and found someone checking to see if your doors and windows were unlocked, you would probably call the police.
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:1)
Which is exactly my point. I didn't say it was a felony, but there are consequences. There are no consequences for port scanning.
Re:Uh. Shouldn't This Be On The Main Page? (Score:1)
Knocking on Doors (Score:1)
IMHO, a port scan is analogous to knocking on a door. It's what happens afterwards, how the information gained is used, that determines if the subsequent actions are criminal.
port scan (Score:1)
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:2)
Checking to see if doors and windows are locked normally requires an attempt to open them. That is often used as an analogy for portscans, but I really don't like it- Trying to open windows and doors is an attempt to gain access, but portscanning is purely informational.
A portscan is more like looking at a building, seeing where the doors and windows are, and maybe reading the make and model from the doors, windows, and locks. The "trying windows and doors to see if they're unlocked" analogy would be better applied to running actual exploits against a machine.
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:2)
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:2)
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:2)
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:2)
Re:Knocking on Doors (Score:2)
I can port scan all day long, check for sendmail hacks all day long, but until I actually hit cr/lf after dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda1 it ain't squat.
Definiton of damage (Score:2)
The statute requires damage. Either in the loss of data, or the loss of computing resource. Since a portscan takes minimal resources (generally speaking) there is no damage.
Given the way the the decision is written, it would not be a violation until after I hit the on the command line of rm -F -r
Portscanning (Score:3)
Uh. Shouldn't This Be On The Main Page? (Score:5)
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