I wasn't aware that deep linking might leave one legally vulnerable. (and thanks for the description, John) It's hard for me to imagine how deep linking could be illegal. Take the case of Ticketmaster, as Amanda suggested. It sounds like Ticketmaster was able to successfully sue someone who found a way to get to internal pages, bypassing the advertisements. That would be like suing Tevo for allowing people to watch TV and skip the advertisements. I just don't see how it could be illegal to enable people to link from, say, my website to another website, even if it bypasses the top level pages. I could see a problem if I were somehow able to bypass a "members-only" or "private" area of the website, enabling people who weren't members to access that private or exclusive information. But, for public information, including advertisements, I don't follow the logic that it would be illegal to link deeply into a site. Perhaps, I'm using the wrong metaphor (i.e. Tevo). But, if I am, than what's a better one? ~Jenny