1998-01-09 - Re: Question on U.S. Postal Service and crypto

Header Data

From: “Brian B. Riley” <brianbr@together.net>
To: “Robert A. Costner” <dm0@avana.net>
Message Hash: 4c7a1b98f00298a00538bfadff5206f8e0c5ac5e4511caf15ee077f32b5a7771
Message ID: <199801090428.XAA02677@mx02.together.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1998-01-09 04:36:18 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 9 Jan 1998 12:36:18 +0800

Raw message

From: "Brian B. Riley" <brianbr@together.net>
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 1998 12:36:18 +0800
To: "Robert A. Costner" <dm0@avana.net>
Subject: Re: Question on U.S. Postal Service and crypto
Message-ID: <199801090428.XAA02677@mx02.together.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



On 1/8/98 3:26 PM, Robert A. Costner (pooh@efga.org)  passed this wisdom:

>At 10:45 AM 1/8/98 -0800, David Miller wrote:
>>> An interesting feature of the digital postmark is that the USPS was making
>>> the claim that if you receive an email that the USPS send to you that was
>>> not meant for you, then you have committed a federal crime when you read
>it.
>>
>>I'm not so sure about this, Robert.  I've heard the rumor that it is a crime,
>>but I have also heard that if something is delivered to your box, it is yours
>>and you are not required to send it back unopened if it is not addressed to
>>you.  I tend to believe the latter, as it is the side of the story shared by
>>USPS employees.
>
>I wasn't commenting on the legality, but on the fact that the USPS web page
>was making the claim that it was a crime.  Apparently whoever wrote the
>legal disclaimer felt that email could be misdelivered in the same fashion
>in which postal mail could be misdelivered and was making this claim.  I
>found the claim to be nutty and made me think they didn't know what they
>were doing.

 Maybe they are confusing an electronic mailbox with a snailmail box ... 
the USPS has always contended that they (the USPS) "own" your mailbox and 
use that criterion to prosecute people who drive around putting things 
like circulars etc in mailboxes. Maybe they we on a role thinking that if 
they got into the e-mail business they would 'own' that piece of your 
hard drive so to speak.


Brian B. Riley --> http://members.macconnect.com/~brianbr
 For PGP Keys  <mailto:brianbr@together.net?subject=Get%20PGP%20Key>

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