Self-confessed hacker Gary McKinnon will not now face legal action in the U.K. following a decision by the Crown Prosecution Service, but the U.S. extradition warrant remains open.. NASA hacker Gary McKinnon will face no legal action in the U.K. The Crown Prosecution Service has decided the appropriate jurisdiction for the McKinnon case is the U.S., after discussing the case with the U.S. Department of Justice and the police. The link for this article located at CNET is no longer available. . The U.K. will take no legal measures against Gary McKinnon, the hacker who breached NASA systems, following a ruling by the Crown Prosecution Service.. Gary McKinnon Extradition, Cybercrime Jurisdiction, Legal Actions, NASA Hacker. . Alex
Just in case we needed more evidence that the US court system alone will not be enough to stem the tide of spam, here is a story which demonstrates one of the big stumbling blocks to enforcement: jurisdiction. . . .. A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit brought by America Online (AOL) against a group of Floridians the company accused of conspiring to spam its users, lawyers for the defendants announced late Tuesday. The case, which was dismissed last week by Chief Judge Claude Hilton of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, centered around claims by AOL that a number of Florida-based computer technicians conspired with others to send bulk e-mail through AOL's system, said lawyers with the Virginia-based firm Albo & Oblon in a statement. Hilton ruled AOL had failed to demonstrate that "Virginia had jurisdiction over the Florida defendants simply because AOL's business resides in Virginia and the alleged bulk emails had gone through Virginia," said Albo & Oblon. In the ruling, Hilton also said that asserting jurisdiction over the defendants would violate their right to due process, and that merely enabling someone to transmit material over the Internet was insufficient to permit such jurisdiction. The link for this article located at Reuters is no longer available. . A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit brought by America Online (AOL) against a group of Floridian. needed, evidence, court, system, alone, enough. . Anthony Pell
The case of Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov, charged with violating copyright law by writing software that strips copy and use restrictions out of Adobe Systems e-books, will be heard in March 2002. The US District Court will hear . . . . The case of Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov, charged with violating copyright law by writing software that strips copy and use restrictions out of Adobe Systems e-books, will be heard in March 2002. The US District Court will hear Sklyarov's appeal against his indictment on the issue of US jurisdiction over the case, and another appeal that challenges the constitutionality of the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), under which Sklyarov was originally charged. Sklyarov, a Russian citizen, was arrested in July at the end of the Def Con hacker conference in Las Vegas, where he had given a presentation on e-book security. He was charged with violating the DMCA, which makes it a crime to traffic in tools or information designed to circumvent copy control schemes for encrypted content. Update: It seems CW360 has now decided to allow access to registered users only :( Enter at your own peril. Last time we'll be posting to their site... The link for this article located at CW360 is no longer available. . Alexei Petrov is under scrutiny for violating the Copyright Act by circumventing Microsoft software safeguards. Judicial proceedings are scheduled for April 2023.. Dmitry Sklyarov, DMCA Charges, E-book Copyright Issues. . Anthony Pell
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