You may not do any of the following while
accessing or using the Services: (i)
access, tamper with, or use non-public areas of the Services, fanatix's computer systems, or the technical delivery systems of fanatix's providers; (ii) probe, scan, or test the vulnerability of any system or network or breach or circumvent any security or authentication measures; (iii)
access or search or attempt to
access or search the Services by any means (automated or otherwise) other than through our
currently available, published interfaces that are provided by fanatix (and only pursuant to those terms and conditions), unless you have been specifically allowed to do so in a separate agreement with Fanatix (NOTE: crawling the Services is permissible if done in accordance with the
provisions of the robots.txt file, however, scraping the Services without the prior consent of fanatix is expressly prohibited); (iv) forge any TCP / IP packet header or any part of the header information in any email or posting, or in any way use the Services to send altered, deceptive or false source - identifying information; or (v) interfere with, or disrupt, (or attempt to do so), the
access of any user, host or network, including, without limitation, sending a virus, overloading, flooding, spamming, mail - bombing the Services, or by scripting the creation of Content in such a manner as to interfere with or create an undue burden on the Services.
The Intelligence Authorization Act
currently making its way through Congress contains a
provision that would allow federal law enforcement warrantless
access to some browser history.
Although some requirements
currently exist to deal with potential national security risks (such as restricting
access to the leased space by owners and other parties and certain informational certifications by potential lessors), the GAO concluded that these
provisions do not adequately address its concerns.