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|    |  Log_File  2002 | ||||||
| On the US legal bug Wendy Seltzer, http://openlaw.org Your experience here is actually a very interesting part of the project. It demonstrates how private parties can exert control of the public domain well beyond what the law requires. Even with institutional support for your installation, you are often at the mercy of other economic actors -- the ISPs whom the museum and you depend on for connectivity, who in turn depend upon higher-up ISPs to preserve their connections to the Internet. Any player in this chain has the ability to break the connection and prevent you from displaying and contributing to the public discussion, based on its own feelings, contracts, and interpretations of the law, before any judge is called in to determine whether the activity is legal. Curator Steve 
        Dietz:  Commment 
        Mailing List Lachlan Brown:  |  Location  On 
      the US legal bug  7.5.: 
      <nettime> 
      PDS  7.5.: 
      Re: <nettime> [L. Brown]  7.5.: 
      Re: 
      <nettime> 
      [F. Cramer]  8.5.:Re: 
      <nettime> KR  8.5.: 
      scan 
      reports  9.5.: 
      Server 
      Migration US  Port 
      scanning is legal in the US  10.5.: 
      provider vs kr CRACKED ..Minds of concern::breakingnews...!! May 12,2002  13.5.:New 
      York Times Article  RE2: 
      NYTIMES article  RE2: 
      NYTIMES article  RE:3 
      NYTIMES article: KR  15.5.: 
      wired article  [ 
      thing] review  19.5.: 
      Sonntagszeitung  13.6.: neural.it  14.6.:NZZ          | ||||||
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