> The access by an ISP of information within an internet packet, other than that information used for routing, is equivalent to wirtetapping a phone or opening sealed postal mail.
This starkly contrasts with the American way, where email headers buried inside the packet are seen as "routing information" like a USPS letter's mailing address. It's a serious question: what is 'routing information'? Is it the destination IP (the mailing address of the packet) or the to:, cc:, bcc: lines deep inside the packet(s)?
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[ 14.6 ms ] story [ 830 ms ] thread> The access by an ISP of information within an internet packet, other than that information used for routing, is equivalent to wirtetapping a phone or opening sealed postal mail.
This starkly contrasts with the American way, where email headers buried inside the packet are seen as "routing information" like a USPS letter's mailing address. It's a serious question: what is 'routing information'? Is it the destination IP (the mailing address of the packet) or the to:, cc:, bcc: lines deep inside the packet(s)?