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grcool2016-05-29 15:20:54
Burglary protection
grcool, 2016-05-29 15:20:54

Legal confirmation of server hacking?

I received a summons to the Moscow District Court as a defendant in a civil case "on the protection of honor and dignity" for writing on a separate blog site, which I am not the author of, but the domain is registered in my name. (Domain .NET, registered through R01, server located in Germany )
After contacting the author of the blog, it turned out that the author of the blog did not create this entry. Reading the server logs showed that the entry was created from a foreign IP through the wordpress admin.
Is it possible to confirm the hacking of the server by logs, for presentation in court? Is it necessary to order an examination or is it enough to contact a notary? In the second case, does anyone know how to find a notary who will take on such a task? Googling on this subject yields very little information.

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7 answer(s)
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spotifi, 2016-05-29
@spotifi

A notary can attest to the fact of recording (screenshot).
And the fact of hacking can be determined by another person - this is an expert. I really don't see what he can do there. Most likely - nothing. Good experts are expensive.
You can refer to the fact that this is an open blog, and you are not making entries - contact a lawyer.
Should force the inscription to be removed at best.

D
Dimonchik, 2016-05-29
@dimonchik2013


only you need to defend yourself to a lawyer not "how to do it right in life", but "how to do it right in jurisprudence"

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Alexander, 2016-05-29
@NeiroNx

Legally, a blog is like a wall ("fence") in the yard - anyone can make entries, but you can only delete them. Even if you lease this wall - people from hooligan motives can leave any notes - this does not mean that the owner of the wall is responsible for them.
The act of hacking will be difficult to prove without the person who confessed to it - since even schoolchildren now know how to use a proxy.

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Maxim Shishkin, 2016-05-29
@lsoul

There are enough opportunities to fight off the plaintiff, judging by the description.

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xmoonlight, 2016-05-30
@xmoonlight

A paper from the hoster/provider with a seal that they confirm that the server has been hacked. And the issue is resolved.

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Vyacheslav Belyaev, 2016-07-14
@TroL929

Your situation is certainly non-standard, and I also advise you to contact a lawyer. In my opinion, "the case is sewn with white threads."
And I, like others, would very much like to know the result and the way to solve this problem. Please post back when it's resolved.)

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