• my_hat_stinks
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    3 months ago

    I suggest you read the next few words in that sentence which you conveniently left out of your quote, might help clear up any confusion.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      It’s not a legal proceeding, he’s the (very capable) victim of a crime at that moment. It’s his experience as an individual, not an authority.

      It’s like if he had a security camera on his front porch and filmed porch pirates stealing his deliveries, then turned his sprinkler on

      • my_hat_stinks
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        3 months ago

        That argument doesn’t work, all you’re doing is pointing out the issues with vigilantism. He’s also committing a crime, are the scammers now in the right too since they’re targeting a suspected criminal?

        This is why trials exist.

        • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          What crime? He’s accessing resources they connected to his network

          • my_hat_stinks
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            3 months ago

            Accessing a system you’re not authorised to access, regardless of how that access was obtained, is generally not legal. The way to sort that out is, you guessed it, a trial.

            • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              When someone opens a connection on your network you are not obligated to avoid utility of those connected systems. It is not a crime to connect to things which have willfully joined your network.

              If someone puts a camera on your network, you can view it. Authorization is moot when it’s in your house.

              Edit I agree if you seek out someone else’s network and connect to and operate devices there.

              Edit edit put simply they forfeit any expectations of privacy when they open a connection to his network

              • my_hat_stinks
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                3 months ago

                This is very untrue and you definitely shouldn’t be giving out legal advice like this on topics you’re not knowledgeable on, but exactly which part is a crime and how criminal it is will depend on your local laws. Some such computer misuse laws are intentionally written very broadly with generic wording precisely so that edge cases such as unintentionally granting an unauthorised party access to a system does not clear them of wrongdoing when they do so.

                As for how to tell which laws are relevant and whether you’ve breached them? Well, I’m sure the answer will shock you.

                • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                  3 months ago

                  Nothing on lemmy is legal advice lmao.

                  Further, they opened 2 way remote desktop connectivity. That is a literal invitation

                  Edit now that that is covered, and completely distinct from all previous points and lines of discussion, it’s pretty shady to be looking for legal safe harbor for scammers who rob people all over the world every day.

                  They are opening persistent 2 way connections to people’s machines with the clear goal of destroying them. There is little argument to suggest it is inappropriate to observe them while they do it.

                  • my_hat_stinks
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                    3 months ago

                    it’s pretty shady to be looking for legal safe harbor for scammers who rob people all over the world every day.

                    This is an argument that happened entirely within your own head, not in this thread. I think I made it clear right from the start I’m against scammers and approve of (ethical) actions taken against them, but I’m also against people who dox, invade privacy, engage in vigilantism, and gain unauthorised access to other’s computer systems (particularly when it’s for profit and ego). These are not mutually exclusive, there is no disconnect there. I even gave an example of more appropriate actions to take against scammers, notably actions that are actually effective.

                    Criticism against “justice” porn is not remotely the same thing as condoning scammers. You’re arguing in bad faith and you know it.