To the best of my knowledge, and I do follow the fields, none of the items you raise is illegal under U.S. law.
But then there are guys like Senator Stevens, of Alaska, who sits on the committee that regulates telecommunication, who called the internet, "a collection of tubes". I presume he meant vacuum tubes.
It might seem obvious to us that spoofing a site that requires a subscription, by pretending to be a googlebot, is in a whole different class than hacking into Wall Street and stealing a billion dollars. But, I suggest, this is not obvious to those less familiar with technology, like Senator Stevens.
During the Reagan administration some bright spark came up with the notion that work on encryption technologies should be "born classified". The same bright sparks decided that work on encryption should be shoehorned into the same laws that prohibited the export of high tech weapons.
There was a lot of discussion over the truly bizarre implicaitons of this law in Peter Neumann's RISKS digest. Let me repeat my recollection of a story, as it was first published in RISKS.
One correspondent on the digest had been involved in the development of some new cell phones. Remember this was about twenty years ago. The cell phones he worked on had a facility to encrypt conversations. He was planning a trip to Europe, and he wanted to bring a pair of these phones with him, to show some colleagues.
He realized that he could probably just have packed them in his luggage, with no one the wiser. But he decided, as an exercise, to try to fully respect the existing law, and go through all the right channels, and do all the right paperwork, to bring the phones with him legitimately.
He described doing a lot of work, many phone calls, many letters. Finally, he thought he had taken all the required steps, but one. One of his contacts said something like: "There is one final form you have to fill out --
form mumble-mumble-mumble. But you can ask for that form, and fill it out, at the airport."
So, when he gets to the airport, he tells his story, and explains to a customs official that he needs a "form mumble-mumble-mumble".
"
Form mumble-mumble-mumble? Could you please come with me sir?" Well, he follows the official down a couple of deserted hallways, the official opens a door for him, he enters -- and the official locks the door behind him!
He is locked in this room -- and left to stew for a long time. I can't remember whether he missed his flight. As he waits he can't really hear anything that would give him a clue as to how long he would have to wait. Finally, he can hear, for a minute or so, the footfalls of a guy walking down those deserted hallways. A tough-looking official enters. Our hero writes that the guy reminded him of the Sergeant Joe Friday, from the old TV show Dragnet. The official looks at him, and says,
"So -- you are the guy trying to carry a bomb?"I think he was eventually able to carry the phones with him to Europe. I can't remember what steps he took to prepare for his return.