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US DOJ victim letter
- Subject: US DOJ victim letter
- From: ryan.g at atwgpc.net (Ryan Gelobter)
- Date: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 21:11:51 -0600
- In-reply-to: <20120128113933.695d3614@milhouse>
- References: <[email protected]> <CB485770.5A9A7%[email protected]> <CAMDXq5OiJ-gXeZW=MmLCD_PznnHyGfHjiMs=i1k2e_b1-S27OA@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <20120128113933.695d3614@milhouse>
The e-mail states it was sent to the specific e-mail address because it was
listed as the contact in WHOIS. Although you can opt-out from these notices
I believe as part of the DNS Changer case the court ordered the FBI to
notify ISPs.
On Sat, Jan 28, 2012 at 10:39 AM, John Peach <john-nanog at johnpeach.com>wrote:
> On Sat, 28 Jan 2012 16:30:47 +0000
> bmanning at vacation.karoshi.com wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Jan 27, 2012 at 10:20:08PM -0500, Martin Hannigan wrote:
> > > On Fri, Jan 27, 2012 at 1:32 PM, Randy Epstein <nanog at hostleasing.net>
> wrote:
> > > >
> [snip]
> > I missed the part where ARIN turned over its address database w/
> associatedd
> > registration information to the Fed ... I mean I've always
> advocated for
> > LEO access, but ther has been significant pushback fromm the
> community on
> > unfettered access to that data. As I recall, there are even
> policies and
> > processes to limit/restrict external queries to prevent a DDos of
> the whois
> > servers. And some fairly strict policies on who gets dumps of the
> address
> > space. As far as I know (not very far) bundling the address
> database
> > -and- the registration data are not available to mere mortals.
> >
> > So - just how DID the Fed get the data w/o violating ARIN policy?
> >
> > /bill
> >
> >
>
> Ours came from our whois information.
>
> --
> John
>
>