It seems obvious that Miller is breaking at least a few laws in his attempt at revenge. Suppose that when his scanning efforts were detected, SLS not only added his IP address to the list of sites banned from connecting to the SLS network, but the system also triggered a response to seek out his computer and delete key files on it to disable his operating system. What if SLS were part of an industry consortium that shared IP addresses flagged by its IDPSs, and all companies in the group blocked all of the ISP's users for 10 minutes? These users would be blocked from accessing perhaps hundreds of company networks. Would that be an ethical response by members of the consortium? What if these users were blocked for 24 hours?
It seems obvious that Miller is breaking at least a few laws in his attempt at revenge. Suppose that when his scanning efforts were detected, SLS not only added his IP address to the list of sites banned from connecting to the SLS network, but the system also triggered a response to seek out his computer and delete key files on it to disable his
What if SLS were part of an industry consortium that shared IP addresses flagged by its IDPSs, and all companies in the group blocked all of the ISP's users for 10 minutes? These users would be blocked from accessing perhaps hundreds of company networks. Would that be an ethical response by members of the consortium? What if these users were blocked for 24 hours?
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