|
|
|
|
|
by ChicagoBoy11
3642 days ago
|
|
But I think the "novelty" in his scheme is that he has separate canaries for different time periods -- so it may not be helpful in letting users know the number of requests received, but it would allow them to know when they had been received. Assume he had a scheme that just said the following: We have received no NSL letters in Jan 2016
We have received no NSL letters in Feb 2016
We have received between 0 and 249 NSL letters in March 2016
We have received no NSL letters in Apr 2016 |
|
The only reason the canary "works" is as a binary option - if you say "We have never received an NSL" up until you receive one, the government cannot compel you to continue including that line in your report, because that would be compelled speech which is legally difficult and (as far as anyone knows) hasn't been attempted. But anything you say beyond that related to the quantity or existence of NSLs is subject to the linked guidelines. In other words, they cannot force you to continue including a paragraph (the canary) in your report, but they CAN regulate anything you do choose to include in your report.
[1]: https://www.justice.gov/iso/opa/resources/422201412716042240...
Edit: NSL letter, ATM machine, blah