nanog mailing list archives

Re: Question of privacy with reassigned resources


From: William Herrin <bill () herrin us>
Date: Wed, 4 Aug 2010 17:49:42 -0400

On Wed, Aug 4, 2010 at 3:42 PM, Steven Bellovin <smb () cs columbia edu> wrote:
On Aug 4, 2010, at 1:35 17AM, William Herrin wrote:
For the latter, you're providing significant amounts of a public
resource (IP addresses) to a business whose contact information you're
contractually and ethically obligated to reveal. If a particular
complex is worried about publishing their location, they can always
rent a P.O. box. If you're the only one doing the worrying, don't.

I strongly disagree -- you're revealing the precise address of any
tenant in those buildings.  Don't do that...

Then discuss it with the apartment complex, Steven, and encourage them
to get a PO box to use in place of their physical address. Or just buy
a box from mail boxes etc. yourself and set up mail forwarding each
time you set up a new apartment complex. The main point of the
exercise is that the address consumer (the apartment management
company, a for-profit business) be identifiable and directly reachable
by phone, email and postal mail, not that they provide accurate
coordinates for targeting the nukes. Plenty of reasonable ways to meet
the spirit of the rules. The letter too.




On Wed, Aug 4, 2010 at 4:08 PM, Eric Brunner-Williams
<brunner () nic-naa net> wrote:
During the P3P too-and-fro on what constituted PII I lost the argument that
masking off the last bits constituted acceptable non-disclosure of PII.

Whole other ball game, Eric. In the platform for privacy preferences
(P3P) one participant in a data flow asserts that he will keep the
other participant's behavior confidential. P3P examines what knowledge
the asserter may glean and publish from that data flow without
violating that confidentiality. You rightly lost the argument because
the subnet, plus other information that doesn't by itself identify a
user, can often be combined to identify a specific user and his
behavior with a relatively high level of confidence. So can
algorithmic one-way hashes of the address and most other variants on
the meme that could reasonably facilitate reconstructing a particular
user's data flow.

No such agreement exists with respect to the public permitting
for-profit businesses the exclusive use of a portion of the public's
IP addresses. Quite the contrary, that public (as it expressed itself
to ARIN repeatedly for a decade and a half and as recently as ARIN's
public meeting earlier this year) insists that for-profit businesses
granted the exclusive use of 8 or more of the public's IP addresses
publicly reveal who they are and how to directly contact them.

Public. Get it?

Regards,
Bill Herrin


-- 
William D. Herrin ................ herrin () dirtside com  bill () herrin us
3005 Crane Dr. ...................... Web: <http://bill.herrin.us/>
Falls Church, VA 22042-3004


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