

...the page in question, disruptj20.org, had helped organize protests of Trump's inauguration. And the DOJ is demanding personal info and 1.3 million IP addresses of visitors to the site.
According to Dreamhost, that personal info includes "contact information, email content, and photos of thousands of people." That could easily lead the DOJ to identify anyone who used the site in service of exercising their Constitutionally-protected rights of free speech, the website host pointed out.
rstrong wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2017 3:22 amEngadget: DOJ demands info on 1.3M visitors to protest-organizing website
...the page in question, disruptj20.org, had helped organize protests of Trump's inauguration. And the DOJ is demanding personal info and 1.3 million IP addresses of visitors to the site.
According to Dreamhost, that personal info includes "contact information, email content, and photos of thousands of people." That could easily lead the DOJ to identify anyone who used the site in service of exercising their Constitutionally-protected rights of free speech, the website host pointed out.
billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2017 9:07 amBut, but I'm sure they asked the same from Spencer's contact list for the riots he sponsored this weekendrstrong wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2017 3:22 amEngadget: DOJ demands info on 1.3M visitors to protest-organizing website
Petition to Attorney General Jeff Sessions:
We demand that you immediately withdraw the Justice Department’s warrant requiring the web-hosting platform DreamHost to turn over 1.3 million IP addresses, emails and message content for people who visited the disruptj20.org website. There is no legitimate law enforcement purpose for this information, and this warrant has a chilling effect on speech. It runs afoul of both the First and Fourth Amendments. As such, it must be withdrawn immediately.
Petition to Jeff Sessions:
We demand that you immediately withdraw the DOJ effort to force Dreamhost, the web host for the Trump Resistance site disruptj20.org, to turn over the IP addresses, emails and message content from the 1.3 million site visitors leading up to the Resistance March on Inauguration Day.
I thought about that but assumed the warrant was only for site visitors before and perhaps just after J20. If it's for current ones, too, I will visit and join.billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Thu Aug 17, 2017 4:44 amShouldn't there be a movement to post on this site. Give the fucks 50 million names.
was
We are all Dreamhost.
Thank you for raising your voice for free speech and calling for the Department of Justice to withdraw its overly broad, speech chilling warrant for information from DisruptJ20.org
You may have heard that yesterday the government narrowed its warrant to drop the request for the 1.3 million IP addresses of all those who visited the anti-Trump protest site.
This is an important victory and it would not have happened without people like you standing up for our rights. However, the government has not dropped the warrant altogether and is still seeking information about First Amendment protected activity. The government is still conflating dissent with criminality by promoting a false narrative that an information sharing hub about inauguration day protests is responsible for a "premeditated riot."
The warrant needs to be withdrawn, not amended.
This is not an isolated occurrence; it is part of a wider crackdown on dissent. The fight isn't over yet, DreamHost will still go to court to challenge the government's warrant tomorrow. We will continue to monitor the situation and fight for the right to dissent.
We will continue to keep you updated as this situation develops.
#Resist,
Chip Gibbons
Policy & Legislative Counsel
https://rightsanddissent.org/
Trump May Not Finish His Term But the Assassination Complex Will Live On
... a dangerous consequence of the overwhelming, obsessive focus on the daily Trump affairs is a virtual dearth of coverage on the permanent, unelected institutions of U.S. power, namely the military and the CIA....
Vrede too wrote: ↑Mon Aug 28, 2017 11:15 amTrump Administration Can Sift Through User Data of Inauguration Protest Website, Judge Rules
FBI Paid Informant + Mentally Ill Man = Another Fake Terror Plot
Trump May Not Finish His Term But the Assassination Complex Will Live On
... a dangerous consequence of the overwhelming, obsessive focus on the daily Trump affairs is a virtual dearth of coverage on the permanent, unelected institutions of U.S. power, namely the military and the CIA....
To quote a comment about it on Techdirt:Vrede too wrote: ↑Mon Aug 28, 2017 11:15 amFBI Paid Informant + Mentally Ill Man = Another Fake Terror Plot
Just to be clear:
They took an actual Paranoid Schizophrenic and actually concocted a government conspiracy to have him arrested.
Let that sink in a while, then tell me who the crazy party in this debacle really is.
The US taxpayer? Lots of other good comments there, too.
TigerSwan is in the news again:Vrede too wrote: ↑Sat Jun 24, 2017 7:41 pmAs Standing Rock Camps Cleared Out, TigerSwan Expanded Surveillance to Array of Progressive CausesVrede too wrote: ↑Sun Jun 04, 2017 2:20 amLeaked Documents Reveal Counterterrorism Tactics Used at Standing Rock to “Defeat Pipeline Insurgencies”
Leaked documents and public records reveal a troubling fusion of private security, public law enforcement, and corporate money in the fight over the Dakota Access Pipeline.
TigerSwan is based in Apex, North Carolina in Wake County.
Their defense: "It wasn't us! It was the people we subcontracted the work to!Thousands of files containing the personal information and expertise of Americans with classified and up to Top Secret security clearances have been exposed by an unsecured Amazon server, potentially for most of the year.
Setting aside the legal and ethical showstoppers on that one....
The bill won't survive a Constitutional challenge, but that doesn't mean it can't become law and cost people a lot of money in the mean time.Another anti-protesting law is in the works, prompted by oil pipeline demonstrations both in North Dakota and, closer to home, in the district of the state rep introducing the bill, Scott Martin of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
rstrong wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2016 10:49 amA Stingray device sets up a fake cell site to do man-in-the-middle attacks. It lets you download personal data from people's phones, track people through their cell phones, and listen to calls.rstrong wrote:But again, it won't be just the FBI. The NYPD will demand it. The DEA will demand it. The TSA will demand it. A hundred other police agencies will demand it. Consider the Stingray phone tracker - a mass surveillance device developed for the military and intelligence communities "to catch the terrorists", but now in widespread use by local and state law enforcement agencies. Now consider that every other country's police agencies will demand this "custom OS" too.
Developed for the military and intelligence community, they're not in common use by local police forces. The LAPD used a Department of Homeland Security grant in 2006 to buy a StingRay for "regional terrorism investigations". However, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the "LAPD has been using it for just about any investigation imaginable." They've shown up in Canada and Britain and elsewhere.
The latest to make the news is Memphis. Their mayor's election campaign explicitly mentioned Stingrays and the secrecy surrounding them, but now supports them post-election.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has called the devices "an unconstitutional, all-you-can-eat data buffet." The police defend this not in court, but signing nondisclosure agreements stating that law enforcement officers must do everything up to swallowing their cyanide pills (let suspects walk, route FOIA requests through the FBI, engage in parallel construction, etc.) to prevent information about the technology from making its way into the hands of defendants, judges or peskily inquisitive members of the public.
Suppose the FBI gets their mandatory back door into everyone's devices. (This fight is about setting a precedent for other brands of phones too. Plus fitness trackers and all those "internet of things" devices showing up in people's homes and devices now standard in new cars, tracking enabled even when you don't buy the service.) Does anyone believe for an instant that the TSA, CIA, DEA, NYPD, LAPD and everyone else will demand it? And similar organizations in other countries?
Does anyone believe for an instant that it won't be leaked? Consider the data breach that gave Chinese hackers personal details on 21.5 million government employees.
Other government agencies have had massive leaks too. The IRS has had multiple leaks of all the information needed for identity theft of huge numbers of citizens, repeatedly, even after declaring "all fixed!" We now know that Snowden wasn't the only one in the NSA leaking documents.On June 11, 2015, ABC News also said that highly sensitive 127-page Standard Forms (SF) 86 (Questionnaire for National Security Positions) were put at serious risk by the hack. SF-86 forms contain information about family members, college roommates, foreign contacts, and psychological information. At the time, OPM stated that family members names were not compromised. However, on June 13, 2015, OPM spokesman Samuel Schumach said that investigators had "a high degree of confidence that OPM systems containing information related to the background investigations of current, former, and prospective federal government employees, to include U.S. military personnel, and those for whom a federal background investigation was conducted, may have been exfiltrated."
[...]
The stolen data included 5.6 million sets of fingerprints. Biometrics expert Ramesh Kesanupalli said that because of this, secret agents were no longer safe, as they could be identified by their fingerprints, even if their names had been changed.