Le 16/07/2016 à 19:04, Jan Ceuleers a écrit :
> On 16/07/16 17:42, Yuval Levy wrote:
>> Imposing the onus on the SMTP server operator is like imposing the onus
>> on gas stations for fueling vehicles used in criminal endeavors.  It
>> does not fly because the gas station can't possibly know what the user
>> will use the vehicle for, other than (probably) driving.
> You have ignored the OP's statement that he is a radio amateur, and that
> the FCC prohibits the use of encryption by radio amateurs. This is about
> ensuring that the spectrum that radio amateurs are licensed to use (a
> public resource) is not subverted for private purposes. Hams are
> supposed to be a largely self-policing community; encryption prevents that.
>
> As an individual radio amateur, the OP needs to ensure that he complies
> with the FCC rules if he wants to keep his license. If he cannot
> configure his SMTP server in a compliant manner he should not offer an
> SMTP-based service that transports messages across the ham frequencies.
>
Wouldn't this mean that data transport on those frequencies is forbidden ?

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