German data rentention law
Sven Anderson
sven at anderson.de
Sat Nov 1 15:19:54 UTC 2008
Am 01.11.2008 um 02:50 schrieb Scott Bennett:
>> I will also not log even after January 1st. And I am fighting against
>> the law. But I was talking about the last resort, if a court will
>
> In what way? Are you participating in a lawsuit and requesting an
> injunction against the government to prevent it from enforcing the law
> until after the court case has been decided? Stashing hand grenades?
The first option, exactly. The injunction was already successful in a
way that the data is not allowed to be used, until the final decision
is made. And I'm fighting by word of mouth. No grenades, sorry.
>>> Second, the rest of the Tor community would not easily believe that
>>> trading off network security for network capacity in this way is a
>>> tradeoff they want.
>>
>> How do you know that?
>
> Good grief, Sven! Haven't you been reading this list during the
> last couple of years? The attitudes and reactions presented on this
> list ought to be enough to convince anyone to take Roger's point for
> granted.
Oh, so "Tor community" equals the people on the or-talk list? Ok, then
I agree. I was talking about the Tor users in general, which is of
course not the same.
>>> Third, if Tor tolerates this law because its network architecture
>>> resists
>>> it, and we let the law survive, then the next iteration of the law
>>> will
>>> be better adapted to Tor's threat model.
>>
>> If we switch off the Tor nodes, it's like the law was well adapted
>> from the beginning. So at least we gain more time. (If Tor
>> "tolerates"
>> the law or not will not influence legislation.)
>
> Not so. First off, no one is suggesting not running tor. The
> choice many tor *exit* operators appear to be considering is to stop
> providing *exit* service, nothing else. Most of them would still run
> tor as a relay.
I don't agree with other people on the list that DR law only affects
exit nodes. If the DR law affects Tor, then it affects all kind of
nodes.
> Secondly, the old adage that it is better to ask forgiveness than
> to ask permission frequently will not keep you out of jail, while a
> lawsuit to overturn enacted, but uncontitutional, legislation can
> usually
> be handled without the plaintiff having to go to jail.
Don't spread FUD. Nobody will go to jail because of non-loggin Tor
nodes. And the lawsuit is on it's way. There is no either or. But I
think you are not arguing against me here. I proposed minimal-logging
Tor nodes (in line with the DR law!) instead of switching them off
_only_ in case that non-logging Tor nodes turn out to be illegal. So
what I propose is supported by your argumentation.
>>> Fourth, we don't want to undermine the effort to make this data
>>> retention
>>> law go away, by showing "oh, the law isn't so bad".
>>
>>
>> I didn't suggest that. I'm talking about the time _after_ we lost the
>> fight against it.
>>
> The last I saw posted here, that fight hadn't been lost, so please
> do not refer to it in the past tense that way. The fight can go on
> with
> or without exits in Germany.
Sorry for my imprecise English, I should have written "_after_ we
might have lost...".
Regards,
Sven
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