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Cat signal up today – Internet Defense League puts out a call to all

April 13, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update

GET INVOLVED !!!

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It’s go time!  The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act is crazy, and probably means that the Department of Justice thinks that you’re technically a federal criminal.

We’re asking IDL members to join Fight for the Future, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Free Press, Demand Progress, Reddit, Boing Boing, and others in a week of activism for reform of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

We need to beat back that bad proposal to expand the CFAA — in a hurry.  So we’re asking the Internet Defense League to snap into action this week, starting today — Monday — for as long as possible.

You can grab Internet Defense League code for embeddable contact-Congress widgets by clicking here.

We’re asking you to post the widgets to your site to help let your visitors know about this threat, and to spur them to get involved.  You’ll be joining countless great groups and sites as we stand together against this awful proposal.

To learn more, go here: http://www.fixthecfaa.com/

The expansive CFAA was first passed in the mid-1980s, before most households had computers, let alone Internet access.  Yet law enforcement has interpreted it to criminalize even mundane Internet use, such as petty violations of websites’ fine-print terms of service agreements.  Under this interpretation commonplace Internet use would technically be criminalized, including:

-Sharing passwords for Facebook or other social media sites with friends;

-Starting a social media profile under a pseudonym;

-Exaggerating your height on a dating site;

-Visiting a site if you’re under the stipulated age requirement (under 18 for many sites)

-Blocking cookies in a way that enables you to circumvent a news site’s paywall.  (For instance, the New York Times website cannot block those who delete cookies from reading more than the allotted number of free articles each month.)

Additionally, it is under the CFAA that law enforcement has undertaken a recent spate of prosecutions of questionable merit – including that of our friend and Demand Progress cofounder Aaron Swartz, who committed suicide earlier this year while being prosecuted for downloading too many academic articles from JSTOR.

We’ve been pushing to change this, and have made some progress: Reps and Senators are pulling together a proposal called “Aaron’s Law”.

But… then last week members of the House Judiciary Committee floated an audacious proposal that would actually expand and harshen certain parts of the CFAA.  Think of it as the opposite of Aaron’s Law.  And we’re hearing that it could come up for a vote as soon as next week.

We need your helping mobilizing your visitors as we strive to beat back this awful proposal and to build momentum for Aaron’s Law.

Click here to read more here:

http://www.fixthecfaa.com/

Aaron’s death was tragic, but it has helped attune people to this terrible law, and now represents our best chance to fix it — or at least make sure that it doesn’t get any worse.  Please join us in those efforts.

Thanks team!
-Holmes Wilson
Internet Defense League

CISPA, the Privacy-Invading Cybersecurity Spying Bill, is Back in Congress

March 24, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

BY MARK M. JAYCOX  —  eff.org

It’s official: The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act was reintroduced in the House of Representatives yesterday. CISPA is the contentious bill civil liberties advocates fought last year, which would provide a poorly-defined “cybersecurity” exception to existing privacy law. CISPA offers broad immunities to companies who choose to share data with government agencies (including the private communications of users) in the name of cybersecurity. It also creates avenues for companies to share data with any federal agencies, including military intelligence agencies like the National Security Agency (NSA).

EFF is adamantly opposed to CISPA. Will you join us in calling on Congress to stop this and any other privacy-invasive cybersecurity legislation?

As others have noted, “CISPA is deeply flawed. Under a broad cybersecurity umbrella, it permits companies to share user communications directly with the super secret NSA and permits the NSA to use that information for non-cybersecurity reasons. This risks turning the cybersecurity program into a back door intelligence surveillance program run by a military entity with little transparency or public accountability.”

Last year, CISPA passed the House with a few handful of amendments that tried to fix some of its vague language. But the amendments didn’t address many of the significant civil liberties concerns. Those remaining problems were reintroduced in today’s version of CISPA. Here’s a brief overview of the issues:

Companies have new rights to monitor user actions and share data—including potentially sensitive user data—with the government without a warrant.

First, CISPA would still give businesses1 the power to use “cybersecurity systems” to obtain any “cybersecurity threat information” (CTI)—which could include personal communications—about a percieved threat to their networks or systems.  The only limitation is that the company must act for a “cybersecurity purpose,” which is vaguely defined to include such things as “safeguarding” networks.

CISPA overrides existing privacy law, and grants broad immunities to participating companies. Read the rest of this entry →

‘Cat Signal’ to Appear Worldwide – Rally against CISPA

March 24, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Politics

Internet Defense League Gears up for Fight Against CISPA

by ALEX LUHRMAN  –  independent.com

'Cat Signal' projected on the Bay Bridge from Mozilla's headquarters. @EFF

‘Cat Signal’ projected on the Bay Bridge from Mozilla’s headquarters. @EFF

A massive group of influential Internet organizations is standing in defiance of a controversial cybersecurity bill which they claim will give unprecedented powers to the U.S. Government to monitor and censor your Internet. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), in an on-line petition against the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA), claims that the proposed “legislation would give the government, including military spy agencies, unprecedented powers to snoop through people’s personal information — medical records, private emails, financial information — all without a warrant, proper oversight or limits”.

Internet Defense League members who participated in and engineered last years Internet blackout have pledged, and already activated plans, to put a stop to this legislation. Last time they did this they practically melted Congress’s telephone lines.

On March 19, 2013, the ACLU, Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), Mozilla, Access, and another 33 organizations sent a letter to the White House asking the president to renew his threat to veto the CISPA bill. In it, they claim that “H.R. 3523 effectively treats domestic cybersecurity as an intelligence activity and thus significantly departs from longstanding efforts to treat the Internet and cyberspace as civilian spheres.” They also noted that “CISPA would provide companies dangerously broad legal immunity for actions they took based on information ‘identified, obtained, or shared’ under the bill.” Mozilla, creator of the popular web browser Firefox, issued a scathing statement last year when the bill was first introduced, stating “The bill infringes on our privacy, includes vague definitions of cybersecurity, and grants immunities to companies and government that are too broad around information misuse.”

Regardless of whether President Obama responds to the March 19 letter, he may soon be forced to respond to a petition titled “Stop CISPA”, launched a little over a month ago on the whitehouse.gov website, which has already amassed over 106,000 signatures. According to the White House website, “a petition must reach 100,000 signatures within 30 days” for it to necessitate a response.

Read the rest of this entry →

Kim Dotcom: the internet cult hero spoiling for a fight with US authorities

January 20, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

German-born former hacker says his eyes have been opened to US tactics after his Megaupload site was shut down last year

 in Auckland  –  guardian.co.uk


In massive, swaggering capital letters, “Mega” stretches across the grassy slope in front of Dotcom Mansion. A huddle of electricians and carpenters are removing the wooden stencils and wiring in the fluorescent tubes. They are up to G. All around the vast grounds of Kim Dotcom‘s luxury home just north of Auckland, New Zealand, gardeners and technicians are busy, like Oompa-Loompas at the Chocolate Factory, setting up for the big night, overlooked by life-size inflatable giraffes and hippos.

On Sunday, almost a year after the internet entrepreneur and several of his associates were arrested in a spectacular dawn raid on the mansion, about 200 invited guests will gather at the opulent estate for the launch of Mega. The new cyberlocker service is a simplified, super-encrypted successor to Megaupload, the file-sharing site that once reputedly accounted for 4% of all internet traffic, and which US prosecutors had taken offline moments before the helicopters descended in New Zealand a year ago.

After spending almost a month in prison in early 2012, Dotcom and his co-accused were awarded bail – the first of a series of court victories that have left the prosecution case looking increasingly wobbly. With any hearing for extradition to the US to face criminal copyright charges having been pushed back, it is hard not to see the extravagant unveiling of the new site as a two-finger gesture aimed at US authorities. Read the rest of this entry →

How to Fund an American Police State: Real Money for an Imaginary War

March 6, 2012 in Editorial, Headline, Occupy, Politics

by: Stephan Salisbury   –  truth-out.org

At the height of the Occupy Wall Street evictions, it seemed as though some diminutive version of “shock and awe” had stumbled from Baghdad, Iraq, to Oakland, California.  American police forces had been “militarized,” many commentators worried, as though the firepower and callous tactics on display were anomalies, surprises bursting upon us from nowhere.

There should have been no surprise. Those flash grenades exploding in Oakland and the sound cannons on New York’s streets simply opened small windows onto a national policing landscape long in the process of militarization — a bleak domestic no man’s land marked by tanks and drones, robot bomb detectors, grenade launchers, tasers, and most of all, interlinked video surveillance cameras and information databases growing quietly on unobtrusive server farms everywhere.

 

The ubiquitous fantasy of “homeland security,” pushed hard by the federal government in the wake of 9/11, has been widely embraced by the public.  It has also excited intense weapons- and techno-envy among police departments and municipalities vying for the latest in armor and spy equipment.

In such a world, deadly gadgetry is just a grant request away, so why shouldn’t the 14,000 at-risk souls in Scottsbluff, Nebraska, have a closed-circuit-digital-camera-and-monitor system (cost: $180,000, courtesy of the Homeland Security Department) identical to the one up and running in New York’s Times Square?

Read the rest of this entry →

Any .com a target? US takes down ‘illegal’ website outside America

March 4, 2012 in Headline, Politics, World News

The conviction of Canadian billionaire Calvin Ayre in the US on charges of online gambling and money laundering has sparked fears that anyone owning an Internet .com domain could fall under US jurisdiction.

The federal judge implicated Ayre and four colleagues in almost $10 billion of illicit winnings paid out to gamblers. Ayre’s four colleagues are currently outside the US, yet face a possible jail sentence of 25 years.

In connection with the charges, Calvin Ayre’s website Bogdan.com was seized and shut down on Monday by Homeland Security on a federal court order. However other Bogdan sites, namely Bogdan.eu and Bogdan.co.uk remain active. Read the rest of this entry →

Wikileaks: The global intelligence files

March 1, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

Wikileaks: Today, Monday 27 February, WikiLeaks began publishing The Global Intelligence Files – more than five million emails from the Texas-headquartered “global intelligence” company Stratfor. The emails date from between July 2004 and late December 2011. They reveal the inner workings of a company that fronts as an intelligence publisher, but provides confidential intelligence services to large corporations, such as Bhopal’s Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and government agencies, including the US Department of Homeland Security, the US Marines and the US Defense Intelligence Agency. The emails show Stratfor’s web of informers, pay-off structure, payment-laundering techniques and psychological methods, for example : Read the rest of this entry →

EXCLUSIVE: Cointelpro Gothic II: Midwestern Police State Paranoia Continues! Winona & Des Moines hubs of spurious “terrorism” & great FBI statistical accomplishments!

March 1, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics

http://www.hongpong.com/archives/tags/breaking

EARLIER: October 13, 2010: Cointelpro Gothic: Docs prove Iowa FBI’s Wild Rose Rebellion a pretend RNC “Terrorism Enterprise” for great “statistical accomplishment”

BY DAN FEIDT — HongPong

Feds Invade Homes of Independentistas and Trade-Unionists, Steal Documents, Brutally Assault Journalists

Another level of the seemingly endless, unregulated Midwestern law enforcement campaign against political activists has been revealed in 525 pages obtained from the Department of Justice by Freedom of Information Act requests filed by David Goodner of Des Moines. (FULL PDF 62MB / Scribd.com)

Two related stories emerge: in 2004-2006, federal agents spurred to achieve career-advancing “statistical accomplishments” spied on people the G-Men linked with the CrimeThinc Anarchist publishing label — in Des Moines and Winona, MN anyone linked to anything CrimeThinc is deemed a great target for further snooping. Read the rest of this entry →

FBI moves into new Minnesota headquarters, protest outside slams repression

February 22, 2012 in Headline, Occupy, Politics

By Mick Kelly

Protest against repression of anti war activists at new MN/Dakotas FBI Field Office (Fight Back! News/Kim DeFranco)

Brooklyn Center, MN – Protesters gathered outside the new headquarters of the FBI here, Feb. 17, to protest the agency’s targeting of anti-war and international solidarity activists. The protest coincided with the FBI’s announced move-in day to their new fortress-like building.

Participants in the protest included peace activists whose homes were raided by the FBI Sept. 24, 2010.

“The FBI is waging a war on civil liberties,” said Jess Sundin of the MN Committee to Stop FBI Repression. “We are here today to send a message: ‘Opposing U.S. wars is not a crime.’ We will not be silenced or intimidated by the FBI.”

The FBI, along with U.S. Attorneys in Chicago and Minneapolis, are trying to make a case for indicting the activists on ‘material support for terrorism’ charges. To that end, a grand jury is meeting in Chicago. Barry Jonas, Assistant U.S. Attorney in Chicago, recently stated that the investigation will continue. Read the rest of this entry →

FBI Provide Weapons for Attempted Terrorist Attack on US Capitol

February 20, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Politics

If the latest news from the Department of Justice is to be believed, a 29 year old terrorist conspired to develop and carry out an attempted terrorist attack on U.S. soil.

In fact – as the DOJ press release story goes – Amine El Khalifi, an illegal immigrant from Morocco, was arrested in Washington for allegedly attempting a suicide attack against the U.S. Capitol building.

The news reports all indicate that Amine El Khalifi planned this and other attacks over several months, and that he was only captured after a carefully planned investigation was carried out by the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force.

However, when you start digging more deeply into the story than most journalists appear willing to do, you will learn a few disturbing facts about the case that make it apparent this is more of a fabricated attack scenario than a nefarious Al-Qaeda sleeper-agent.

In fact, it is likely that the attempted terrorist attack against the U.S. Capitol Building would never have materialized if it weren’t for the careful efforts of the undercover FBI agents encouraging El Khalifi to act out his extremist beliefs.

Read the rest of this entry →

Google admits tracking Safari users

February 19, 2012 in Headline

Internet giant says it circumvented security settings in browser to track users on desktops and iPhones.

Google has come under attack for violating users’ privacy and ignoring their wishes after admitting that it intentionally circumvented security settings in Apple‘s Safari browser to track users on both desktop computers and iPhones.

A number of other advertisers exploited the loophole it had created to track those users too.

Read the rest of this entry →

Google offering money in exchange for users’ search history

February 10, 2012 in Headline, Politics, Update, World News

The Screenwise project offering money in exchange for users' search history.

GOOGLE is offering money in exchange for users’ search history in a bid to “learn more about how everyday people use the internet”.

The new Screenwise project is asking for volunteers to install a Chrome browser extension that allows data to be collected in exchange for “up to $25 in gift cards”.

The website says those who sign up will be given a $5 Amazon.com Gift Card code, and then an addition $5 gift card code every three months for staying with the project as a “thank you.”

Google is also reported to have a more extensive version of the program in which web surfers participate by installing a “high-end router”.

The Screenwise Data Collector project is offering $100 on signup, plus $20 per month up to one year’s involvement, technology website Ars Technica reports.
“What we learn from you, and others like you, will help us improve Google products and services and make a better online experience for everyone,” the Screenwise website says.

Read the rest of this entry →

Waging War in Secret vs. American Democracy

February 9, 2012 in Headline, Politics, Update, World News

By fighting terrorism with covert CIA actions, President Obama deprives us of the ability to meaningfully evaluate American foreign policy.

The War in Iraq is mostly over. We’re drawing down forces in Afghanistan. Barring an unexpected terrorist attack or another Libya-style troop deployment, Election 2012 will proceed in a world where the War on Terrorism is being waged by intelligence agencies making drone strikes in places like Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, and one in which we may be taking covert action inside Iran too.

In others words, much of American foreign policy will be a state secret.

Think about what that means for democracy.

The Iraq War was a major campaign issue in 2004 and 2006. President Obama owes his victory in 2008 partly to the fact that he opposed it, persuaded voters he’d exercise better judgment if faced with a “3 a.m. phone call,” and vowed to double down on winning the War in Afghanistan.

Read the rest of this entry →

FBI Enlists Internet Café Owners to Spy on Customers

February 9, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics

The US government has developed massive surveillance capabilities to monitor communications, travel and financial transactions in this country and abroad. But, even the government cannot monitor everything Americans do—not directly, anyway.  Thus, it created the Communities Against Terrorism (CAT) program to enlist your friendly local businesses as spies for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

The CAT program, funded by the State and Local Anti-Terrorism Training program (SLATT) is described as a “tool to engage members of the local community in the fight against terrorism.” The program interprets “local community” to mean businesses, and only registered businesses may access the program’s flyers listing “potential indicators” of terrorist activity.

Each flyer is designed for a particular kind of business. For example, this list was prepared for owners of internet cafes. Unquestionably, someone planning a terrorist attack has engaged in one or more of the “suspicious” activities on that list. But so, too, have most of the estimated 289 million computer users in this country.

Read the rest of this entry →

Government ‘may sanction nerve-agent use on rioters’, scientists fear

February 9, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

by  Steve Connor     -   from independent.co.uk

Leading neuroscientists believe that the UK Government may be about to sanction the development of nerve agents for British police that would be banned in warfare under an international treaty on chemical weapons.

A high-level group of experts has asked the Government to clarify its position on whether it intends to develop “incapacitating chemical agents” for a range of domestic uses that go beyond the limited use of chemical irritants such as CS gas for riot control.

The experts were commissioned by the Royal Society, the UK’s national academy of sciences, to investigate new developments in neuroscience that could be of use to the military. They concluded that the Government may be preparing to exploit a loophole in the Chemical Weapons Convention allowing the use of incapacitating chemical agents for domestic law enforcement.

The 1993 convention bans the development, stockpiling and use of nerve agents and other toxic chemicals by the military but there is an exemption for certain chemical agents that could be used for “peaceful” domestic purposes such as policing and riot control.

The British Government has traditionally taken the view that only a relatively mild class of irritant chemical agents that affect the eyes and respiratory tissues, such as CS gas, are exempt from the treaty, and then only strictly for use in riot control.

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States prepare brakes on citizen-detention option, NDAA

February 8, 2012 in Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, Video Perspective

by Bob Unruh   –  from  wnd.com

State and local officials in surging numbers are telling Washington they simply won’t cooperate with any plans to detain Americans the federal government may choose to describe as “belligerents.”

The issue centers on provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act of 2012, signed by President Obama, for the indefinite and rights-free detention of those Washington cites as belligerents, whether American citizens or not.

WND reported when  Rep. Daniel P. Gordon Jr. immediately drafted a resolution in the Rhode Island legislature to express opposition to the sections of the NDAA “that suspend habeas corpus and civil liberties.”

Now the Tenth Amendment Center confirms that the resistance to the federal bureaucracy is catching on.

The instruction manual on how to restore America to what it once was: “Taking America Back.” This package also includes the “Tea Party at Sea.”

Read the rest of this entry →

Demonstration at MN Obama campaign headquarters, part of National Day of Protest Against NDAA

February 8, 2012 in Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, Video Perspective

By Kelly O’Brien   –  from  fightbacknews.org

Protest against NDAA at Obama campaign headquarters, Feb. 3 (Fight Back! News/ Jess Sundin)

Minneapolis, MN – More than 75 people rallied here, Feb. 3, as a part of the National Day of Protest against the provision of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that allows for indefinite detention without trial. The protest occurred outside the Obama campaign headquarters. President Obama signed this unconstitutional bill into law Dec. 31. According to Anh Pham of the Committee to Stop FBI Repression (CSFR), “This law allows the government to continue to oppress anyone who doesn’t agree with them.”

Sam Richards of Occupy Minneapolis stated, “The NDAA of 2012 is the largest assault on our rights since the Patriot Act. Obama ran as a champion of civil liberties. We demand an end to the attack on our civil rights.”

This demand rang clear as activists joined in chants, speeches, guerrilla theater and an occupation of the Obama headquarter building as part of the direct action. The message of the protest was apparent, with signs such as “No war on our rights: No NDAA,” and chants like “Hey Obama, pay attention! We say no to indefinite detention!”

Video by Rogue Media
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NDAA is now law, Hope you don’t get Indifinitely detained

February 6, 2012 in Editorial, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective

Uploaded by on Feb 6, 2012

On Febuary 3rd 2012, a group of protesters from Occupy St. Paul and Minneapolis went to Obama’s campaign HQ in Minneapolis to let them know how they felt about the NDAA. This law that Obama signed into law on Ney Year’s Eve allows for anyone labeled as hostile to the state to be indefinitely detained without a trial. This is what happened.

Panetta: “When we say someone is a terrorist, then we can kill them, because they’re a terrorist.”

February 5, 2012 in Headline, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

from — patriot-newswire.com

In an interview with CBS 60 Minutes’ Scott Pelley, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta revealed more about the secret process the Obama administration uses to kill American citizens suspected of terrorism without trial. According to Panetta, the president himself approves the decision based on recommendations from top national security officials.

“[The] President of the United States obviously reviews these cases, reviews the legal justification, and in the end says, go or no go,” Panetta said.

“So it’s the requirement of the administration under the current legal understanding that the president has to make that declaration, not you?” Pelley asked. Panetta replied, “That is correct.”

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According To The FBI, Internet Privacy Is Now Considered To Be Suspicious Activity

February 5, 2012 in Headline, Politics, Update, World News

from  — endoftheamericandream.com

According To The FBI, Internet Privacy Is Now Considered To Be Suspicious Activity

When you use the Internet in a public place, do you prefer to have as much privacy as possible?  Well, that makes you a potential terrorist.  According to the FBI, Internet privacy is now considered to be suspicious activity.  If you are out in public and you attempt to keep snoopers from peeking at your computer screen, then according to the FBI they should gather as much information about you as they can and they should report you to the authorities immediately. If this seems completely and totally ridiculous to you, then you are not alone.  Millions of Americans have become deeply concerned about the constantly expanding definition of “suspicious activity” in the United States.  Sadly, the federal government is now engaging in an all-out attempt to have us all spy on one another.  All over America, the Department of Homeland Security is running ads promoting the “See Something, Say Something” campaign.  They even had 8,000 stadium workersat the Super Bowl this year go through special training on how to spot potential terrorists.  So the next time you see a hot dog vendor, keep in mind that he might also be part of a special anti-terrorism task force.

The following are some quotes from a government document entitled “Potential Indicators of Terrorist Activities Related to Internet Café“.  In between each quote, I have included some commentary.  It is absolutely amazing what the definition of “suspicious activity” now includes….

“Are overly concerned about privacy, attempts to shield the screen from view of others”

Read the rest of this entry →