
suckure at gmail
Jul 27, 2007, 11:21 AM
Post #14 of 22
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fucktard morons, (now write me a 10 paragraph response, im waiting!) On 7/27/07, Tremaine Lea <tremaine [at] gmail> wrote: > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On 27-Jul-07, at 7:49 AM, Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt wrote: > > > On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 18:23:37 MDT, Tremaine Lea said: > > > >> Apparently you've never heard of a mail administrator tagging > >> outbound email for all users. It's pretty common. Of course, you may > >> lack the experience of dealing with large companies. > > > > The fact a large company does it doesn't make it any less stupid. > > And you > > think a large company could afford their own mailserver rather than > > making their > > people use Gmail (now wrap your head around the concept of > > "confidential mail > > anywhere *near* a Google-owned server"... ;) > > I was as amused by that as you. > > > > > > To pick up on a part of the sig that Nick didn't rip into publicly: > > > >> "and delete it from your system" > > > > Presumably, Tremaine, in his self-claimed role as "Security > > Consultant" > > *and* "Paranoia for hire", realizes that it quite likely sat on my > > site's main > > mail server for anywhere from several seconds to several hours (in > > fact, there > > are probably copies on *3* different servers in our mail cluster) - > > and that > > until some *other* piece of mail happens to land on those same > > blocks of storage, > > the text is quite easy to recover by any decent computer forensics > > practitioner. > > Yes, I do realize this. Duh. > > > > > > On the other hand, actually going in and overwriting the affected > > block(s) is > > quite challenging, especially when it's a 10 terabyte mailstore > > handling > > several million messages a day for 100K users. We'll be happy to > > do it - *IF* > > Tremaine's company is willing to indemnify us for the downtime. > > Why would I (or the company I contract to) be interested in what you > do to delete Sergio's email? > > > > > > So there's 2 possible outcomes here: > > > > 1) The request has zero legal standing, and Tremaine's company is > > relying on > > the kindness of strangers rather than using PGP or S/MIME to > > actually secure > > their mail. This sort of thing is usually called "lack of due > > diligence", > > and I don't think any company wants to be flaunting it. > > Speaking of due diligence... I'm pretty sure literacy and following > a trail of information is basic to this field. As you've clearly > missed, Sergio has nothing to do with me, the company I work with, > or ... hell, who knows. I don't know the guy from Adam. Or you. > > > > > > 2) The request *does* have legal standing - in which case > > Tremaine's company > > may indeed have some liability to pick up any and all associated > > costs. > > > Again with the not being able to follow the bouncing ball. > > > > > Particularly interesting is the legal question of what happens when a > > "please delete all copies" request is attached to something that's > > sent to > > a company that is required to retain copies of *everything* for > > regulatory > > compliance (as is true for some financial-sector companies)..... > > That's the only really interesting thing you've contributed, and it's > a good question. Any one know of any court cases on this? > > - --- > Tremaine Lea > Network Security Consultant > Intrepid ACL > "Paranoia for hire" > > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.4.7 (Darwin) > > iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJGqgm0AAoJEKGa22zRy9WCEvgIALax083+iHxWUphyIh+aXg7+ > d9oqyw8CRe6iZ5Fe6GKYh1RHXO07PrJAx3kttMUyzvsIEupwsVmQdFtdzyGm7wPu > U1MRBPMFV9pIMhr6BF5Q96mYLmNf8dRvmMCIAoEoo1HmXRp3KocKzliLd3RqNJ6G > 7Rsp+WOtpZJHnX4O+2Hn2EVAjIZTP3kZ7wko7FNVUTQcTe703/Cx9h82eGDgVmVZ > zaasGUsEX2Y9hgvPPFYdNebnX8EihkFZ1FjaLKpyXzl2aLBTGsmFKtoK0KdbS93Y > YwgMPiDByvXKNqTCR1Ehzl9c/Y6KVUMgR34jyFs9OQCr8/Cr2ePKZ5WGdT+YCxk= > =bgWU > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > > _______________________________________________ > Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. > Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html > Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/ >
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