USA Six Strikes ISP Watch

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Lauren Weinstein is one of the "old" men of the Internet. He created the PRIVACY Forum in 1992, and has been involved with Internet and other technology issues for well over 25 years, starting in the early 1970's at the first site on the Defense Department ARPANET (the ancestor of the Internet), which was located at UCLA. Weinstein is quoted as an expert on a wide range of technology topics and issues of technology's impact on individuals and society, by a wide range of newspaper and magazine articles, and participates in numerous local and network radio and television news programs, talk shows, and other venues where these issues are under discussion.

United States ISPs have now apparently launched their much ballyhooed "Six Strikes" copyright "education/punishment" program.
This is a singular event in the history of the Internet. I know not of any close parallels to this situation in contemporary history, where primary communications carriers will be acting in an extrajudicial (that is, without court actions) context to divert, throttle, block, or otherwise tamper with personal communication channels, at the bequest of private third parties.

Because these actions are taking place outside the specific realm of any existing regulatory regime, it is important to understand exactly how ISPs deploy, manage, and presumably escalate this program over time.

So today I'm announcing the "USA Six Strikes ISP Watch" to gather information about "six strikes" activities here in the United States.
If you receive such a "six strikes" notification while online or in any other manner, I would appreciate your forwarding to [email protected] as much of the following information as you feel comfortable providing (this data will only be used for aggregate analysis/reporting):
- A screenshot of any Web-based strike notice and/or a copy of any associated email (the latter with full headers if possible)
- If it's not obvious from the screenshot or email, what strike number is this for you?
- A statement as to whether or not you feel that the strike (or any previous strikes) is/are in error
- What do you plan to do about the strike? (Nothing? Appeal? Something else?)
- What impact, if any, has the strike had on your Internet connectivity? (Browser diversions? Rate throttling? Connectivity blocks to some or all sites? Impacts on non-Web traffic such as VoIP services or anything else?)
- Any other thoughts or comments that you'd like to add
Again, I will only use or report this data in the aggregate. Any examples published will be redacted and anonymized.

Thank you very much!
--Lauren--

http://lauren.vortex.com/archive/001012.html
 
I wonder how many spammers will title their email as an ISP warning now to be sure people open them. Once opened,it will look official with links to install malicious code or use it to get as much information from the person as possible for identity theft. I'm betting there will be a rash of these. Thank you Janet.
 
I wonder how many spammers will title their email as an ISP warning now to be sure people open them. Once opened,it will look official with links to install malicious code or use it to get as much information from the person as possible for identity theft. I'm betting there will be a rash of these. Thank you Janet.

I have an email address with my isp but I have no idea what it is nor have I ever checked it. They're welcome to spam away presuming they send it electronically. If they send something by snail mail I'll be happy to let anyone know. My ISP wasn't one of the "big guys" who had agreed to this so I hope it takes longer for compliance.
 
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