This message was forwarded to me, and while I'm not an employee of en.com,
I am involved in the providing of internet services and often get a good
laugh out of your posts to NANOG:
>
> Please cancel this message, if not the entire account. While you probably
> shouldn't be carrying alt.sex.pedophilia, you have to worry about users
> posting to that group. As an online provider, you can be held liable for
> illegal child porn posts.
>
> --Dean
Dean,
Could you please provide me with your current legal credentials, including
states in which you currently are accepted by the bar? As I've seen
your continuous legal advice, browbeating and extortion of ISPs, and
misrepresentations of United States Code, it compels me to remind you that
in most states the providing of legal advice without being a lawyer is a
felony. As stated in 4705.01 of the Ohio Revised Code (the state where
en.com is located):
No person shall be permitted to practice as an attorney and counselor at
law, or to commence, conduct, or
defend any action or proceeding in which the person is not a party
concerned, either by using or subscribing the
person's own name, or the name of another person, unless the person has
been admitted to the bar by order of
the supreme court in compliance with its prescribed and published rules.
Except as provided in section 4705.09
of the Revised Code or in rules adopted by the supreme court, admission to
the bar shall entitle the person to
practice before any court or administrative tribunal without further
qualification or license.
</snip>
I'm just curious how full of shit you actually are. If you are a lawyer,
I certainly hope you're a better lawyer than you are a system
administrator, your SMTP port is getting around more than the clap in a
Saigon bar. If you're not a lawyer, then allow me to be the first to
suggest politely that you fuck off. Worry about yourself and the
aweful name you're making for yourself. It's people like you that come
to mind when I configure .procmail.
--
__ Douglas A. Dever __ dever@chillin.com
What do you call a geek in the 90's? I prefer "sir."