Using a Proxy To Circumvent IP Blocks is a No-Go, Says Court
Don't let judges near the Internet
If you're a normal Internet user, you probably think you have the right to access anything that's put before the public. Not any more, at least in America, where the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act has been invoked to support a user-specific ban on accessing a Website, and in which the use of a proxy to circumvent a block has been ruled illegal.
The decision was issued in a spat between Craigslist and screen-scraper 3Taps. As noted in the judgement, 3Taps was sucking down all of Craigslist's classifieds, offering an API to third parties, and created craiggers.com which the judgement says "replicated the entire Craigslist website".
Objecting to this, the classifieds site first blocked 3Taps and then sent it a cease-and-desist. When 3Taps turned to using proxies to circumvent the ban, Craigslist then took the case to the US district court of Northern California. It asked the court to find two things: that the violation of its terms and conditions brought 3Taps under the purview of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA); and that circumventing the ban by disguising its IP address also broke the CFAA.
On the terms and conditions question, Craigslist was rebuffed. However, in a decision that will send chills to anyone using a proxy to get around geoblocks, the court thought otherwise: "under the plain language of the statute, 3Taps was 'without authorization' when it continued to pull data off of Craigslist's website after Craigslist revoked its authorization to access the website.
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So, in a prison fight between American and Mary Stack, which one wins?
Trick question -- everyone wins.
This case not hinge on using a Proxy. This is pretty much standard IP law. You can't photocopy the local paper and re-sell the contents of the classifieds. You can't make copies of books from libraries. You can't video tape a "free" theater performance in the park and sell copies. You can't tape a concert, etc.
This is pretty much a non-story.