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From: Flash Gordon on 17 Jan 2008 17:28 Chilly8 wrote, On 17/01/08 21:49: > X-No-Archive: Yes > > "Leythos" <void(a)nowhere.lan> wrote in message <snip> >> Your beliefs and statements are unethical, you tell people to violate >> company policy all the time in these groups. <snip> > is based in the United States, ANY postings sent to either board is > NOT SUBJECT to ANY United States law. So any posts I make <snip> Just because something is legal does not mean it is ethical. You keep failing to address the point that adding to the costs of a business that is against the companies rules, or advising something which will add to the costs, is NOT ethical. Legality is a separate issue. -- Flash Gordon
From: Chilly8 on 17 Jan 2008 18:21 X-No-Archive: Yes "Flash Gordon" <spam(a)flash-gordon.me.uk> wrote in message news:hd1565xi1g.ln2(a)news.flash-gordon.me.uk... > Chilly8 wrote, On 17/01/08 21:49: >> X-No-Archive: Yes >> >> "Leythos" <void(a)nowhere.lan> wrote in message > > <snip> > >>> Your beliefs and statements are unethical, you tell people to violate >>> company policy all the time in these groups. > > <snip> > >> is based in the United States, ANY postings sent to either board is >> NOT SUBJECT to ANY United States law. So any posts I make > > <snip> > > Just because something is legal does not mean it is ethical. You keep > failing to address the point that adding to the costs of a business that > is against the companies rules, or advising something which will add to > the costs, is NOT ethical. Legality is a separate issue. Well, last October, someone from a high school, in New York, was using my proxy to listen to a figure skating event we cover. That is becuase one student in the school was a entrant in that competition, and her school-mates were using my proxy, to circumvent the school filters, so that could listen as their school-mate strutted her stuff at that particular skating competition. I got some E-mail from one of them praising me for giving them the ability to circumvent the school's firewall and follow that competition their school-mate was competing in. Since they were merely following the competition their school-mate was in, I see NOTHING wrong with providing the means to get around the school filtering system, and tune in to our broadcast of that event.
From: Sebastian G. on 18 Jan 2008 06:06 Chilly8 wrote: > I see NOTHING wrong with providing the means to get around > the school filtering system You see nothing wrong with advertising people to drive themselves into serious trouble? Now it's obvious that you are an idiot.
From: Chilly8 on 18 Jan 2008 15:30 X-No-Archive: Yes "Sebastian G." <seppi(a)seppig.de> wrote in message news:5vbfgsF1lke9mU1(a)mid.dfncis.de... > Chilly8 wrote: > >> I see NOTHING wrong with providing the means to get around > > > the school filtering system > > You see nothing wrong with advertising people to drive themselves into > serious trouble? Now it's obvious that you are an idiot. But these were just kids. Circumventing the school's filtering system to listen as their school-mate performed at this particular figure skating event was certainly NOT something that was going to haunt them for the rest of their lives. They were NOT breaking any New York laws by using my proxy to tune in to the event. No future employer is going to care much about something they did in high school, when they were teenagers.
From: Leythos on 18 Jan 2008 21:50
In article <fmonun$755$1(a)aioe.org>, chilly8(a)hotmail.com says... > and her school-mates were using my proxy, to > circumvent the school filters, See, you support unethical activity, you help people circumvent rules put in place to protect the networks and resources. You are unethical. -- Leythos - Igitur qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum. - Calling an illegal alien an "undocumented worker" is like calling a drug dealer an "unlicensed pharmacist" spam999free(a)rrohio.com (remove 999 for proper email address) |