Because a warrant can't force you to log something you never logged, and he doesn't seem like the kind of person that would sell out when he didn't have to, and then shut down when forced to sell out.
Why do you assume he's a lying bastard like the people at hushmail?
Actually, I read about a case (US) where the court ruled that a service operator had to turn on logging. The rationale was that the required data existed on the server, albeit only transitorily in memory, and therefore was "in possession" and therefore subject to seizure with a warrant.
This was maybe a year or two ago. Sorry I don't recall enough, or have time to look this up. It may have been a lower court decision, subject to appeal.
This is really the point that bothers me - if the NSL type of thing is now going to extend to removing the right of server operators to decide what code will or won't run, then this campaign against citizens being able to communicate privately shifts from "design a non-tappable service" to more like a whack-a-mole situation with only transitory, small scale possibilities of private communication being available.
Why do you assume he's a lying bastard like the people at hushmail?