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Inside the Decision To Shut Down Silent Mail

Trailrunner7 writes with this snippet from ThreatPost:: "Silent Circle's decision to shut down its Silent Mail email service may have come quickly yesterday, and the timing of the announcement admittedly was prompted by Lavabit's decision to suspend operations hours before. But the seeds for this decision may have been sown long before Edward Snowden, who reportedly used Lavabit as a secure email provider, was a household name and NSA warrants for customer data were known costs of doing business. ... 'When we saw the Lavabit announcement, the thing we were worrying about had happened, and it had happened to somebody else. It was very difficult to not think I'm next,' Callas said. 'I had been discussing with Phil [founder and PGP developer Phil Zimmerman] over dinner the night before, should we be doing this and what the timing should be. I was looking at it from point that I want to be a responsible service provider and not leave users in a lurch. [The Lavabit announcement] told me I have to start moving on it now.'"

2 of 182 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why not move? by jelizondo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    By your UID you should be old enough to remember Cayman Islands. Great place, white sandy beaches and a English-backed government.

    When the US Government (thru the OECD) decided that the 400+ banks in Cayman were laundering money, the Cayman government caved in and signed a treaty to provide OECD member states with access to bank information.

    Bear in mind, laundering money back then wasn't about financing terrorist organizations, it was about US citizens not paying taxes.

    More recently, the Swiss turned over data on US citizens who have (had?) Swiss bank accounts.

    Sorry, Antigua won't stand up to the US. No more than Cayman or the Swiss did.

    And no, it will not take a aircraft carrier and its group off the coast. It will only take a call from some senior D.C. politicians before they cave in.

    --
    Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
  2. You comply with the subpoena or go to jail... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We were a small ISP, and we got subpoenas multiple times per month. You don't say no to a court order, unless you want to spend some time in court/jail explaining to the judge why you feel like you shouldn't have to comply. This is fine if you're a hippie, have tons of time and money, nothing to lose, and could care less about eventually having a criminal record.
    Due to CALEA, we were required to buy equipment to fulfill "tapping" requests from law enforcement. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communications_Assistance_for_Law_Enforcement_Act You can thank Clinton and Congress (1994) for that.
    It was another cost of doing business if you wanted to be a service provider in the U.S. Don't like it? You do something else....and so I did.