On Feb 27, 2015, at 18:12 , Jim Richardson <weaselkee...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore <patr...@ianai.net> wrote:
>> I am not a lawyer (in fact, I Am Not An Isp), but my understanding is this 
>> is pretty well settled.
>> 
>> And it is not even weird or esoteric. If the content on the site is against 
>> the law in the jurisdiction in question, it is not legal (duh). Otherwise, 
>> yes it is, and no ISP gets to decide whether you can see it or not.
> 
> Which is the "jurisdiction in question" ? the originating website? the
> ISP? the CDN network's corporate home? my home?

Again, well settled.

It is where the end user is viewing the content _and_ where the content is 
served. If a CDN, then each node which serves the traffic must be in a place 
where it is legal. There are CDNs which do not serve all customers from all 
nodes for exactly this reason.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick

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