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Why An IP-Address Is NOT a Person

Can an IP-address be a criminal?

Not according to District Court Judge Harold Baker, who ruled against a copyright holder in one of the many mass-BitTorrent lawsuits earlier this year.

“The infringer might be the subscriber, someone in the subscriber’s household, a visitor with her laptop, a neighbor, or someone parked on the street at any given moment,” Judge Baker wrote at the time.

Unfortunately, Baker is one of the few judges who came to this decision, which deserves more attention from the courts.

A few hours ago the Electronic Frontier Foundation published an article on the subject, arguing that the authorities shouldn’t act as if IP-addresses are persons.

Below’s Marcia Hofmann‘s take in full, as posted on the EFF website.

This spring, agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) executed a search warrant at the home of Nolan King and seized six computer hard drives in connection with a criminal investigation. The warrant was issued on the basis of an Internet Protocol (IP) address that traced back to an account connected to Mr. King’s home, where he was operating a Tor exit relay.

An exit relay is the last computer that Tor traffic goes through before it reaches its destination. Because Tor traffic exits through these computers, their IP addresses may be misinterpreted as the source of the traffic, even though the exit node operator is neither the true origin of that traffic nor able to identify the user who is. While law enforcement officers have seized exit relays in othercountries, we weren’t aware of any seizures in the United States until ICE showed up at Mr. King’s home.

After the computers were seized, EFF spoke with ICE and explained that Mr. King was running a Tor exit relay in his home. We pointed out that ICE could confirm on the Tor Project’s web site that a computer associated with the IP address listed in the warrant was highly likely to have been running an exit relay at the date and time listed in the warrant. ICE later returned the hard drives, warning Mr. King that “this could happen again.” After EFF sent a letter, however, ICE confirmed that it hadn’t retained any data from the computer and that Mr. King is no longer a person of interest in the investigation.

While we think it’s important to let the public know about this unfortunate event, it doesn’t change our belief that running a Tor exit relay is legal. And it’s worth highlighting the fact that these unnecessary incidents are avoidable, and law enforcement agents and relay operators alike can take measures to avoid them in the future.

First, an IP address doesn’t automatically identify a criminal suspect. It’s just a unique address for a device connected to the Internet, much like a street address identifies a building. In most cases, an IP address will identify a router that one or more computers use to connect to the Internet. Sometimes a router’s IP address might correspond fairly well to a specific user—for example, a person who lives alone and has a password-protected wireless network. And tracking the IP addresses associated with a person over time can create a detailed portrait of her movements and activities in private spaces, as we’ve pointed out in a case in which the government is seeking IP addresses of several Twitter users in connection with the criminal investigation of Wikileaks.

But in many situations, an IP address isn’t personally identifying at all. When it traces back to a router that connects to many computers at a library, cafe, university, or to an open wireless network, VPN or Tor exit relay used by any number of people, an IP address alone doesn’t identify the sender of a specific message. And because of pervasive problems like botnets and malware, suspect IP addresses increasingly turn out to be mere stepping stones for the person actually “using” the computer—a person who is nowhere nearby.

This means an IP address is nothing more than a piece of information, a clue. An IP address alone is not probable cause that a person has committed a crime. Furthermore, search warrants executed solely on the basis of IP addresses have a significant likelihood of wasting officers’ time and resources rather than producing helpful leads.

In the case of Tor, the police can avoid mistakenly pursuing exit relay operators by checking the IP addresses that emerge in their investigations against publicly available lists of exit relays published on the Tor Project’s web site. The ExoneraTor is another tool that allows anyone to quickly and easily see whether a Tor exit relay was likely to have been running at a particular IP address during a given date and time. The Tor Project can also help law enforcement agencies set up their own systems to query IP addresses easily. These simple checks will help officers concentrate their investigative resources on tracking down those actually committing crimes and ensure that they don’t execute search warrants at innocent people’s homes.

If you run an exit relay, consider operating it in a Tor-friendly commercial facility instead of your home to make it less likely that law enforcement agents will show up at your door. Also follow the Tor Project’s advice for running an exit relay, which includes setting up a reverse DNS name for your IP address that makes it clear your computer is running an exit relay.

To learn more about the legal issues surrounding Tor, read EFF’s Legal FAQ for Tor Relay Operators.

This post is from the News Bits section of TorrentFreak where we present stories from around the web in a concise summary format. Full TorrentFreak articles can be found here. If you have a tip please let us know. News Bits have their very own RSS feed
  • http://twitter.com/icanhazsake Ninja

    Ah, sanity and wisdom for a change. It is good, it’s setting a precedent and an important one that will contain copyright bullies faster than what happened to Crossley.

    As pointed out by EFF it’s a clue. You’d have to get a search warrant and do some forensics to actually say if the person has or has not the infringing material and even if it’s proven that the person has it, you can’t say if he/she actually uploaded anything from the work. Even if your ratio is above 1 chances are you never uploaded a full copy of the content.

    Score 1 for sanity and wisdom. It’s unfortunately insanity and stupidity is still far ahead.

  • Rekrul

    In the case of Tor, the police can avoid mistakenly pursuing exit relay operators by checking the IP addresses that emerge in their investigations against publicly available lists of exit relays published on the Tor Project’s web site. The ExoneraTor is another tool that allows anyone to quickly and easily see whether a Tor exit relay was likely to have been running at a particular IP address during a given date and time. The Tor Project can also help law enforcement agencies set up their own systems to query IP addresses easily.

    What makes you think that the police are in any way ok with having people run Tor exit nodes? They want people to be afraid of having their door kicked in. The more afraid people are, the less likely they are to run exit nodes, or engage in any activity that makes it harder for the police to track people. They won’t leave exit nodes alone because then they lose the intimidation factor and more people might act as exit nodes.

  • http://tinyurl.com/ANoiXioNA-personal-info ANoiXioNA

    Agree…….. 100%

    but…
    “”If you run an exit relay, consider operating it in a Tor-friendly commercial facility instead of your home to make it less likely that law enforcement agents will show up at your door. “”

    HYDRA effect will strike again…. as always……
    exit relays will pop up everywhere……. On every server……

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  • Anonymous

    tinyurl.com/2df4ccp

  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

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