While some comments are saying that legislation can narrow this down,
I don't think it's anything that can be agreed up front any longer.
Web is heading toward a complete change of protocol. One that can
operate between mutually hostile and untrustworthy principles.
(that's what the web is now, let's face it)
What the service provider's and your "legitimate" requirements are,
will have to be negotiated per transaction.
It's the end of the "uniform" web. But I think that already happened
and we're long into "The Splinternet".
As I said in Digital Vegan, technology access will not be defined by
the "have and the have-nots", but by the "will and the will-nots".
While some comments are saying that legislation can narrow this down, I don't think it's anything that can be agreed up front any longer.
Web is heading toward a complete change of protocol. One that can operate between mutually hostile and untrustworthy principles. (that's what the web is now, let's face it)
What the service provider's and your "legitimate" requirements are, will have to be negotiated per transaction.
It's the end of the "uniform" web. But I think that already happened and we're long into "The Splinternet".
As I said in Digital Vegan, technology access will not be defined by the "have and the have-nots", but by the "will and the will-nots".