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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: Italy orders ISPs to block sites
actually, they -can- order it... its the delivery thats the hard part. :) on-line gaming is handled pretty much the same way - the tax authorities really want to know where that loot came from ... or went to !!! :) --bill On Tue, Mar 07, 2006 at 09:13:21AM +0100, tom wrote: > > Hi Folks across the ocean.. > > I understand, that from an American point of view this kind of restriction > looks strange and is against your act of freedom, however here in Europe > gambling is a state controlled business that supports the state economy and > in most European countries gambling outside state controlled casinos is > simply illegal and forbidden by law. > So I doubt, that the European Court would really rule agaist this.... > Each country has specific laws, that othewr nations do not not understand > and we all should accept that. > Imagine, if kids in the US would be able to order Cannabis from Online-shops > in the Netherlands (as it is leaglized there)through mail order? Would you > or your legislation agree to that? > > See.. > > I hope you don't mind this commentary from a European... > > Tom > > > > > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] Im Auftrag von > Owen DeLong > Gesendet: Dienstag, 7. März 2006 08:54 > An: Christopher L. Morrow; Marco d'Itri > Cc: NANOG > Betreff: Re: Italy orders ISPs to block sites > > > Singapore seems to force all of their ISPs to send all HTTP requests through > a proxy that has a set of rules defining sites you are not allowed to visit. > > Owen > > > --On March 7, 2006 1:48:39 AM +0000 "Christopher L. Morrow" > <christopher.morrow@verizonbusiness.com> wrote: > > > > > > > On Tue, 7 Mar 2006, Marco d'Itri wrote: > > > >> > >> On Mar 06, Rodney Joffe <rjoffe@centergate.com> wrote: > >> > >> > It appears that Italy has ordered Italian ISPs to block access to a > >> > number of Internet Gambling sites. It would be interesting to see > >> > how the Italian ISPs are handling this, what with dynamic DNS and > >> > all that... > >> So far, the method officially recommended by the government entity > >> involved with collecting the gambling fees has been to create fake > >> zones on the caching resolvers of the large consumer ISPs. > > > > good thing people use dns servers other than those put up by their ISP > > :) when last faced with this situation, State-of-PA ChildPorn Law... > > Null routing the affected ip-addresses was the only 'good' solution :( > > > > -Chris > > > > -- > If this message was not signed with gpg key 0FE2AA3D, it's probably a > forgery. > >
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