Indymedia Seizures Initiated In Europe
daveschroeder continues: "Rackspace's statement reads, 'In the present matter regarding Indymedia, Rackspace Managed Hosting, a U.S. based company with offices in London, is acting in compliance with a court order pursuant to a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT), which establishes procedures for countries to assist each other in investigations such as international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering. Rackspace responded to a Commissioner's subpoena, duly issued under Title 28, United States Code, Section 1782 in an investigation that did not arise in the United States. Rackspace is acting as a good corporate citizen and is cooperating with international law enforcement authorities. The court prohibits Rackspace from commenting further on this matter.'"
. . . each of Europe and the U.S. gets the other to do the dirty work that would be too hot in each home country. This was a J. Edgar Hoover through the side door.
And half the people on here thought it was all the US/FBI's fault, that we are the bad guys..
Go figure, It just wouldn't make sense to wait for the facts before opening ones mouth, Instead we slashdotters like to shoot from the hip
Personal Website
"as international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering." Another blatant misuse of laws! They make 'em for one purpose and then use 'em for another.. go figure!
Infinite time means everything that can happen, will. You being you is absolutely incidental. You do not exist.
from hosting with a large, multinational corporation.
It also serves as a good reminder to consider using encrypted discs for servers where the data should not fall into the hands of law-enforcement.
Rainer
Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin
Good citizen, this is not last week, we are not at war with oceana, we never were at war with oceana, and in any case last week does not officially exist.
Always *ALWAYS* make backups of everything and distribute many copies abroad.
This is not the first time that governments abuse their powers and surely won't be the last.
As a general rule, the US does not recognize offenses abroad that don't have what would be considered parallel offenses here. That is, if you visit Upper Freedonistan, and fail to tip your hat to one of the local women - punishable by six months in jail and a fine of 10,000 klopkas - the US will not usually extradite you to face punishment, because no parallel offense exists here. The French can harass Yahoo France all they like, but there is no way they'll get an American judge to operate that way here - treaties cannot and do not supersede the Constitution. That is, you cannot perform an end-run around the First Amendment merely by signing some treaty with another nation, in the end. Whether other nations behave similarly, I can't say, but I presume that for the most part, they do.
ABSURDITY, n.: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.
-b.
You cannot have a war on an inanimate object. Let me say that again: You cannot have a war on an inanimate object. That goes for drugs. Additionally: You cannot have a war against a tactic. "Terrorism" (of the sort seen in Iraq today) is a tactic which would have previously been covered by the adjective "guerilla" fighting.
Great how we let 3,000 people dying in a country of 260,000,000 eliminate some of our liberty that we're certain to never get back.
The concentration of power has been a society-destroying force in every major historic society. Think Roman Empire.
I think i'd prefer it if there WAS some "oceania" out there we could be at perpetual war with: at least it has borders which are easily defined. Terror is an excuse to use the military worldwide without checks and then to come after the citizens of your own country when they question the government's efforts to fight the terror.
The bottom line here, for what it's worth, is that the US (or political agents within the US) had absolutely nothing to do with Indymedia's drives being seized, even though that's what 90% of the posters in the original article immediately assumed. And, on top of that, the ONLY reason the FBI was involved was because Rackspace, Indymedia's host, is a US company. However, the FBI itself did not do any of the seizing. MLAT complicates the issue, but the fact is that if they had hosted in the UK with, say, a UK company as opposed to a US company, there would have been ZERO US involvement, and the US involvement in this is merely a tertiary formality of MLAT. The FBI was obligated to pass on the request to Rackspace under MLAT, but in fact performed no enforcement duty, according to Rackspace itself and Indymedia.org's own report.
No doubt conspiracy theorists will still think it was some kind of US/Bush/GOP attempt to silence critics, when in reality Europe has no further to look than its own doorsteps - Italy and Switzerland - for the seizure requests...
How is this on topic? The fact of the matter is that in this instance, the US had nothing to do with it. Also, FBI != CIA.
Encrypted disks just makes the disk by itself useless. Next time, law enforcement will just take the whole machine.
The only thing encrypted disks get you on a public webserver is protecting those who access your site, but honestly, all that info is easily accessible with a ethernet tap and sniffer, or automatically via the fancier managed switches- and if you are concerned about protecting the privacy of your users, don't log their IPs in the first place.
Please help metamoderate.
Any enforcement was done by the UK Metropolitan Police IN the UK, not by the FBI. Sorry to disappoint.
It doesn't matter whether the war is against a country, an inanimate object, or a tactic. It doesn't matter whether it's real or imagined. All that matters is that the citizens of the state are kept fearful of and distracted by the target of the war. It also gives the state a pretext to deal with "troublesome" citizens. That was the point Orwell was making. It doesn't matter whether the war can be won or not, because it's merely a tool of distraction.
AEIOU: open-source anonymous internet currency
The problem with this is, how do you show police abuse of a foreign country if our police will assist them in comvering up the event?
It's amazing, if this was Fox news reporting riots in G8 and police abuse pictures, it would stay on the air. (Not that FOX shows anything negative about police actions.)
Riot control is being censored in all media, hence Indie news agencies. Being here in Seattle, we saw the police mass arrest people, tear gas and physically assault peaceful protesters. The police chief had the local news agencies stop broadcasting, and they complied. (It was reported in the SeattleTimes about the "Blackouts")
I read that people are suing NY City because of the RNC mass arrests. They had to let people go who wouldn't plead guilty. So they arrest you, and you agree you commited a crime so they can fine you and let you go, after the RNC.
In the DNC they had people in "Protest Zones" aka, caged off areas with barb wire. Thats now how protesting works.
Police spending is up in Riot control. But what Riots? We hardly ever have real Riots with stores and property being damaged, but we do have people protesting.
Learn from history folks.
Just as Whites never saw the abuse of blacks in poor areas, Working people don't see the police abuse on peaceful protesters. LA's Blue Shield took years to bust, organized crime in our own freaking Police departments!
News is being censored, your freedoms eroded, polution is increasing, corporation crime is on the increase, people dieing in a police action.
We need to protect the Indie news agencies, its the only objecting voice in the crowd of sheep.
-
http://www.studentsfororwell.org
This is clear prior restraint and a First Amendment violation. No treaty can override that. Remember, the Patriot Act gag order provisions were ruled unconstitutional by a U.S. District Court last week. Further use of those provisions by the Government is questionable and may be illegal.
Undercover cops whose names are known by everyone aren't in any danger - they're just unable to ever take part in more undercover operations. Undercover cops whose names are only known by a few non-police (as they must have already been, if Indymedia was about to "out" them in the first place) may be in great danger.
investigations such as international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering.
Which of the three does publishing news stories fall under?
________________________________________________
suwain_2
... we'd better agree on what's constitutional and acceptable on a freedom & rights perspective. I've got the nagging feeling that some italian (I'm one, so I speak for my own county's perspective) office really wanted to do something that our own apparatus wouldn't allow without painstaking authorizations and outrage so, given the chance, they turned to a more "liberal" establishment (US) to get the job done without too many hassles. It stinks, as far as I'm concerned the responsibility rests in our turf for having done something we ourselves legislated to disallow (and it doesn't matter if it's business as usual for the US... everyone responds to himself... and that applies to nations too)
Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
You've just made it so they have to capture both the auth servers and the data servers at once.
Try this protocal:
The server comes up normally, it has normal unencrypted disks except for one partition.
Whenever the server reboots, it pages a sysadmin.
If a sysadmin gets paged, he uses SSH to login to the server and manually mounts the encrypted partition - using cut + paste to get the passphrase to the SSH window.
-- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
indymedia also likes to join any controversy in the anti-government side, no matter who is acrually right. For example, they are in favor if Basque independence, and call ETA detainees 'political prisioners'.
indymedia is an open publishing system. Saying that indymedia is pro-ETA on the basis of some posts there is like saying Slashdot is pro-terrrorist on the basis of a few wacko posts here. Just because some posters hold a particular view doesn't mean that the organisation holds it.
It is fair to critisise indymedia for not exercising enough editorial control to make their site authoritative. It is not fair to attribute unpopular views to them that they do not neccessarily hold.
Bush is a Nazi (even though Nazis are on the extreme left, not the extreme right)
Huh? Nazis were on the extreme right, and rose to power in Germany as a reaction to Communism on the left.
The facts in front of you are the Bush administration sold this war to the world based on Iraq possessing WMD's, and having ties to 9/11 and Al Qaeda. Neither of these were true. its revisionism to make out like it was really about "Freedom and Democracy" and because Saddam liked to build palaces.
You are missing two critical fact about Saddam's obstruction of the WMD inspection regime.
A) When the war was actually launched he was cooperating with U.N. inspectors, the inspectors had to flee the country ahead of the invasion.
B) The CIA has after billions of dollars spent and a year and a half of unfettered searching found no WMD's so apparently as troubled as it was, the sanctions worked.
The bottomline is when the time came for the U.N to authorize the invasion of Iraq it didn't, so as a result, the U.S. invasion was illegal under current international law. Either you abide by UN votes or you don't in which case you should get out, instead of adhering to the decisions you like and ignoring the ones you don't. Building consensus is hard, it usually ends in everyone being unhappy but its usually better than unilateralism.
It appears the U.N.'s judgement was in fact right because they didn't buy the U.S. propaganda that Saddam was on the verge of giving a nuclear bomb to Al Qaeda.
The fact that Saddam was a prick and built palaces is no justification for preemptive warfare. Before the first Gulf War and sanctions Iraq was in fact a pretty prosperous place. It was a secular state versus an extremist Islamic state like Saudi Arabia or Iran. Yes Saddam was a two bit dictator but the world is full of those. If the U.S. wanted to take him down they should have done it in the first gulf war when they had a fresh justification. If they would done it then it would have saved the lives of millions, for example the lives of the Kurds and Shia's George H.W. Bush encouraged to revolt and then turned his back on.
"I'm wondering how much aid the U.S. has given your country through the years."
I'm American, though I'm increasingly embarrassed to admit it. The chump change the U.S. hands out in foreign aid doesn't even register against what its sucked out of the world over the years. The World Bank and IMF in particular hand out billions of dollars most of which disappears into the pockets of corrupt dictators, and leave the country and its people deeply in debt, worse off, and at the mercy of the tyranny of the IMF's economic dictates. I'm willing to bet you the third world would be a better place if the IMF never existed. It is just another tool by the U.S. to acquire control over poor nations.
@de_machina
A lot of mourning over an organization that made Fox News look like it was completely unbiased. Good riddance to them.
/. is that "biased" is mostly defined as any opinion you don't agree with. Courts ruled a way you didn't like? Obviously they were biased because they were bought off (in some fashion never actually explained). Don't like the way a news story was written? Must have been the work of the evil Corporations/Americans/Israelis/Europeans/Arabs!
/.'ers who have this problem, but alas, I suspect it is far more than that.
I know this comment's a karma burner, but to hell with it. I'm sick of people who bitch about CNN being biased, and then point to IndyNews as the "accurate" source of information.
One of the most important life lessons I've learned on
Get a grip. It's impossible to report truth, because the facts lend themselves to any number of truths if you arrange them properly. And, no matter what you do, you MUST arrange the facts in order to report a story.
What's worse is that Europeans have been steadily conditioned by their news media to believe that they are somehow less susceptible to media bias, or that their media doesn't have any. I don't know what's scarier anymore: the obviously biased US news sources, or the more subtly biased European news sources. I pray that it is only European
In summary: shut up. You are not unbiased in any way, shape, or form. Your news sources are not unbiased in any way, shape, or form. You will need to use your head to discern facts from the truth that is given to you, and then use these facts to reconstruct a more likely truth about the situation. What's worse is that you will need to consider that other people can do this, yet come up with a different truth than you.
-Erwos
Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
You fail to fully understand the mind of the /. RW Troll. For them, not only everything leftist is evil, but everything evil must be leftist too.
Don't worry about it, see, a vital part of a strong fascist movement is the redefinition of the German/American/whatever people's historical enemies to create a popular myth that the current fascist movement has always existed, and has always warred against some single master-enemy, of which all other enemies are merely aspects. So, while the Nazis had a Heathen Anglo-Russo-Semitic Communist Movement which sought to bring down the Civilized Aryan Holy Roman Bismark Empire, other fascist movments might have a Liberal-Communist-Nazi-Islamic-Globalist-Atheist New World Order out to destroy the Evagelical Protestant Republic of American Freedom. Hence the constant comparisons of Saddam to Stalin or Hitler, or the suggestion that the UN was in Saddam's pocket. Saddam is merely an aspect of the larger Order which has Ever sought to bring down the eternal march of American Freedom, which is merely the end of the continuous march of progress which has foiled the Order at every stage since the dawn of civilization.
Calling Nazi's "left wing" or "right wing" doesn't make sense the context of the US. American politics don't really mesh with European politics in that sense: in most European countries, for instance, the leftists are the hawks and the right wingers want to end military spending.
Naziism was socialist in fact, not just in name, in that the state controlled most of the means of production. So in that sense, they were leftist. Naziism gets associated with the right in America because their rhetoric of traditional blue-collar values as against the elitist urban bourgeois matches a lot of right-wing American rhetoric ... the closest match to naziism in a lot of policies was the American Populist movement: people like Huey P. Long. Even then, it doesn't quite work because the Populists didn't rely so heavily on ceremony and ritual as a means of political control.
All's true that is mistrusted
"Your argument is flawed. The US invasion wasn't strictly illegal by international law. Hussein was in material breach of the Gulf War cease-fire, and a number of UN treaties."
...quote lengthy rant on Saudi Arabia here...
Excepting you are doing exactly what I said you were doing. You like the resolutions that sanctioned and condemned Saddam so you are using them as justification, but you when you either didn't get a vote or lost the vote sanctioning the most extreme form of enforcement, an invasion, and all of sudden the UN's will is irrelevant. Since the UN passed all those resolutions it was the UN's call to decide if they had been violated and what the punishment should be, instead the U.S. through a tantrum and decided itself. Like I said the U.S. should either get out of the U.N. or be thrown out instead of using it when its convenient, and then ignoring it when its convenient.
What does this have to do with anything I said. Saudi Arabia had nothing to do with George H.W. Bush sending signals to the Kurds and Shia at the end of the first gulf war that the U.S. would support them if they revolted against Saddam. They did revolt, and the then first Bush administration looked the other way while Saddam slaughtered them. As a new height in hypocrisy George W. Bush uses some of the mass graves full of those rebels as justification for the second war, though most of those people are dead thanks to the actions of his dad's administration.
"if the House of Saud falls to a fundamentalist regime like the old Taliban or the Iranian government the world as a whole will be in a really nasty spot."
So its OK to topple a despotic regime in Iraq with a high probability it will be replacted with a fundementalist regime like the one in Iran. But somehow its crucial to the entire world that a despotic, already fundementalist regime in Saudi Arabia stay in power. Not sure you were aware but Saudi Arabia already closely resembles Afghanistan under the Taliban, women are deeply oppressed and people are routinely beheaded in public because thats what Islamic law stipulates. The only key difference is Saudi Arabia has lots of oil money, and its royal family is massively corrupted and many of them are decidedly bad Muslims, thanks to the womanizing, gambling, jet setting etc. things that most people do when they are filthy rich.
I'm pretty sure Americans are no judge as to whether the world would be a better or worse place if the House of Saud was deposed. America might be worse off for it because they own like 7% of America which is why we don't complain about all the things we complained about with Saddam and the Taliban. Americans think the House of Saud is sacred because they have massive influence over America's political, economic and media leaders, the kind of influence massive quantities of money can buy. The poor Taliban didn't have that kind of money.
"HW Bush was warned off deposing Hussein the first time because of tensions in moderate nations, specifically Jordan and Saudia Arabia."
So why did that matter then and it was irrelevant the second time around when most of the world condemned the invasion? Was it because the Saudi's secretly gave it the green light the second time and as I said above the Saudi's practically own the Bush administration?
@de_machina
Rackspace may be a US company but Rackspace in London is subject to UK law not US law. If they took down and handed over Indymedia's servers simply on the basis of a US subpoena communicated to them this would not be lawful in the UK.
Ok, so whose fault is that? Not the FBI's. Rackspace said it was being a "good corporate citizen" and helping international law enforcement entities.
This was NOT an FBI (or US) operation. No. Really. It wasn't.
However it seems more likely that the US subpoena was the subject of a request for mutual legal assistance from the US Attorney General to the UK Home Secretary under the MLA Treaty.
OK, and? The reason the US received the request was because the hosting provider was a US company, albeit doing business in the UK. There were probably more MLA requests; in fact, there were probably MLA requests from Italy and Switzerland to the US, and possibly even the UK, and between the US and the UK.
It would for the Metropolitan Police, probably accompanied by the FBI, to enforce the request and take possession of the servers.
Indeed. "Metropolitan Police" not being a US law enforcement entity. I understand how that could be confusing. And "probably" accompanied by the FBI? They don't even know that for sure; they just know that the subpoena ORIGINATED from the FBI; for all we know, US FBI agents weren't even there. But since the request stemmed from an FBI subpoena, it's a hell of a lot more interesting to say that the "FBI" seized the hard drives, isn't it? Rather than waiting to find out the actual story, which is that Switzerland and Italy asked for assistance compelling a US company operating in a third nation to cease from publishing dangerous materials - i.e., the photos and identification of Swiss undercover police officers. I'm not saying it's right, just that that's what happened.
This begs the questions: Why did the Home Office agree?
Who knows. But that has nothing to do with the US.
What grounds did the USA give for the seizure of the servers?
Probably that it received a request for assistance from the Italian and Swiss governments.
Were these grounds of a "political" nature?
*Sigh* I suppose you can argue that EVERYTHING in government is "political", to some extent.
Has the Home Office requested that the servers be returned?
Who knows. But, again, that has nothing to do with the US.
What does this action say about freedom of expression and freedom of the press?
That you'd better now reveal the identities of undercover law enforcement officers, with thinly veiled threats? (And yes, that goes for Valerie Plame, too, since some retard will surely bring it up, but Plame has NOTHING to do with this instance or Indymedia, or the fact that Italy and Switzerland were who initiated the Indymedia requests, not the US or the FBI.)
A trail that started in Switzerland and Italy has now ended fairly and squarely in the lap of the UK Home Secretary to justify.
Indeed. The "UK Home Secretary" not being the "US" or the "FBI".
The FBI was minimally and tangentially involved here. It did not initiate the request. It did not perform the seizure. No seizure took place within the US. The only relationship anyone in the US has with this is due to the fact that Rackspace was a US company. If it were not, we wouldn't be talking about the FBI right now (though conspiracy theorists would still believe that it was someone in the US with political motivations who was responsible...they just can't fathom the US not being intentionally involved for malevolent reasons).
I'm sure people are trying to figure out what's going on; it's just that people seem to try to be laying the lion's share of the blame here on the US, when I'm not sure, in this instance, that's where it should be laid.
I don't know that this is the only reason, and likely neither do you. In fact, what is your connection to this whole thing anyway?
We might not know for certain, but if Rackspace was not a US company, and were instead e.g. a UK company, how or why would the US have even been involved? The servers were physically in the UK, and it was the Swiss and Italian authorities who had problems with some of the content. So, why would the US FBI have been involved under those circumstances? I realize that's a hypothetical, but the only reasonable reason the FBI was involved, given the information that we DO have (IF we trust what the US has said so far) indicates that the only reason the FBI or any US agency was involved is because Rackspace is a US company. Otherwise, indeed, why would it have been involved? (I realize this requires us to actually believe the FBI when it says the request initiated with Swiss and Italian authorities, when it says it's not an FBI operation, and when it says it was simply facilitating an MLA treaty request.)
Anyway, I'm not going to continue showing your trollishness. I'm a bit busy.
In the story submission, I acknowledged "because Indymedia's hosting company, Rackspace.com, is a U.S. company, the FBI coordinated the request". I have said as much in several other posts. But I still stand by the assertion that the US, or political agents within the US, had NOTHING to do with the initiation of this request, and the FBI's involvement with facilitation of handling MLAT requests and generating a US subpoena, in this particular instance, was incidental.
I'll just add that the US certainly ain't standing up for Free Speech anymore. And their sense of justice is quite whacked since this is all done in the dark now.
Yes, yes, it seems that the US didn't really do anything to help the situation, from your perspective. But the US wasn't the only responsible authority here. It can be argued that the US created the legal weight that ultimately resulted in the seizure, but again, this is only because Rackspace was a US company. Otherwise the US would have had no standing whatsoever, and, quite frankly, would not have even been approached by any Swiss or Italian authorities.
"Women are not routinely executed like in Afganistan under the Taliban. Quite frankly you are terribly wrong."
You are putting words in my mouth. I said "women are deeply oppressed" and "people are routinely beheaded in public". I didn't say "women are beheaded in public" though I'm pretty sure they must be if they violate the laws that call for beheading. The key point is most Saudis, outside the royal family. don't really have a better life than those under the Taliban and Saddam did. Women had more rights under Saddam. Americans don't seem to realize this because Saudi Arabia is an ally so they haven't been demonized by propaganda the way Saddam and the Taliban have.
"They, despite innuendo, do not support terrorism against the West."
As you recall there were 80+ pages censored from the Congressional 9/11 report that were entirely about Saudi Arabia's role in 9/11. I'd sure like to read what they said.
You seem to be echoing a Bush administration propaganda theme that the Saudi's are pure as driven snow. I doubt that is true and you seem to have fallen for some very good propaganda that said, Saddam was involved in 9/11 and Saudi Arabia wasn't. Reality is almost certainly the exact opposite.
The Saudi's have only very recently officially started to fight terrorism, partially thanks to the fact Al Qaeda launched attacks in Saudi Arabia against Arabs. Prior to that they either denied the problem or were indifferent as long as it was targeted at infidels.
Unofficially its a near certainty wealthy Saudi's are still funnelling large sums into Madrassa's to raise new extremists and to fund Al Qaeda, Hamas and the rest.
"First off, foreign investment is a way of life in the US, and has been for two hundred plus years. It's nothing new."
There is nothing new about it but when a small number of foreign investors own a stake as big as this one, they are insured they will get special treatment. If they pulled their investment out they could single handedly crash markets. You just have to factor in they get special treatment when the U.S. government deals with them. For example they get 80+ pages of embarrassment censored out of report on their involvement in 9/11, and they get to fly their nationals out of the country right after 9/11. After Pearl Harbor most Japanese Americans were rounded up, stripped of their property, and eventually landed in concentration camps.
@de_machina
Keep reading and you will see 400+ comments and not one discussion about indymedia .. not one idea as to why the servers were taken. ... they can just do it in the open as long as they throw out a bunch of candy & coupons. you all will be to busy bickering about who has what and too fucking crippled form your societial induced ADD to even notice.
do any of you people on this site realize that your constant bickering has made you impotent? i could likely perptrate anything I wanted and as long as I could get you all to aruge about it here, there wouldn't be a resolution.
i could give a rats ass about indymedia per se as I think thier "reporting" is shit, but whenever anyone's servers are nabbed (and more so when it is anyone trying (at least) to report on something) you should try to pay attetion
after a childhood of mtv and "speak your mind, man" and video games and fucking porn every 3 seconds and "my rights! my rights!" every other second you people are fuckiong seless. freedom of speech isn't powerful in the slightest as long as you can be filled with a constant from cradle-to-grave stream of nonsense.
the revolution, when it comes (and from whatever section the grab comes from) doesn't need to be some deep dark conspiricary that you all masturbate about to
So often we go on about losing our rights, but what do we do to utilize the ones we have? We are growing complacent. We may get a little frightened when we see a stick, but the rest of the time we are content to sit around munching our carrots, blind to what is going on around us.
Indymedia.org is my homepage, and I am very concerned about this sudden seizure. Just who are these agencies, I wonder, who requested the seizure, and why? These are the things we should be asking, instead of silly jokes and bickering.
On a side note, I'd like to point out that most of the stories and articles on Indymedia are submitted by independent reporters and researchers, and are more or less posted immediately. They just publish the stories, not create them.
Sleep is futile.