Subversive Pessimist
13th October 2004, 11:52
Thanks to MLM-Juche for posting this article at PoFo.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FBI shuts down 20 antiwar web sites: an unprecedented act of Internet
censorship
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/oct2004/inte-o13.shtml
By our correspondent
13 October 2004
The US government move to shut down nearly two dozen antiwar,
anti-globalization web sites on October 7 is an unprecedented exercise of
police power against political dissent on the Internet. The World Socialist
Web Site denounces the attack on the Indymedia sites and demands a halt to
all such attempts at suppressing political criticism of the US government.
The shutdown was carried out by Rackspace, a US-based web-hosting company
with offices in San Antonio, Texas, and greater London, in response to an
order from the FBI requiring it to turn over two of its British servers that
were hosting dozens of Indymedia sites. There are conflicting accounts of
the legal process, with Indymedia attributing the order to a US federal
district court, while the Electronic Freedom Foundation, which is supplying
legal representation to the group, describes it as a "commissioner's order"
directly from the FBI itself.
At least 20 national web sites, including those for Brazil, Britain, France,
Germany, Italy and Uruguay were taken down when the hard drives for the
servers were given to the FBI. Most of the sites were restored to service by
the end of the weekend, but they may have lost significant digital content
because of the removal of the hardware.
The seizure appeared to be politically timed. It came just one week before
the start of the third session of the European Social Forum (ESF), a large
gathering of antiwar and anti-globalization activists, scheduled to take
place in London October 15-17. The ESF was to be broadcast live via
streaming video on many of the Indymedia sites.
The FBI said the action was taken at the request of Italian and Swiss
authorities, under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, which provides for
cooperative efforts by various national police agencies against
international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering. According to a
statement issued by the web-hosting firm, "Rackspace is acting as a good
corporate citizen and is cooperating with international law enforcement
authorities."
The invocation of such a treaty against a group of left-wing web sites with
no link to any form of terrorism is an outrageous smear. Indymedia was
formed in 1999 to provide live on-the-spot coverage of the
anti-globalization protests in Seattle. It has expanded into a worldwide
network of 140 locally based sites that provide extensive coverage of
political activities that are frequently blacked out by the
corporate-controlled media.
According to a statement issued by the Indymedia network, the group was
asked by the FBI last month to remove a story posted on one its member sites
about Swiss undercover police. The story included photographs of two secret
police officers who had acted as agents provocateurs during
anti-globalization protests last year outside the G-8 summit meeting in
Evian, France. The FBI conceded that the posting of this information did not
violate any US law, and Indymedia did not take down the information.
The two policemen had engaged in violent actions in the centre of Geneva,
the Swiss city adjacent to Evian, where most of the anti-globalization
protests took place. These provocations became the pretext for police
attacks on peaceful demonstrators. The Indymedia report gave the names and
addresses of the undercover cops as well as their photographs.
Indymedia said it could not be sure that the FBI action was related to the
Swiss police exposure "since the order was issued to Rackspace and not to
Indymedia." Two other possible motives have been suggested: one relating to
the politics of Italy, the other relating to the US elections.
According to some Internet reports, the federal prosecutor for the Italian
city of Bologna, Marina Plazzi, has begun an investigation of Indymedia for
possible "support of terrorism," claiming a link between the group and
attacks on Italian soldiers in the Iraqi city of Nasiriya last November.
Plazzi claims to have contacted the FBI as well as the Italian Department of
Justice.
Several leaders of the neo-fascist National Alliance party have demanded the
outright shutdown of Indymedia, including Alessandra Mussolini,
granddaughter of the fascist dictator. National Alliance leader Gianfranco
Fini is the deputy prime minister in the coalition government headed by
billionaire Silvio Berlusconi, and a fervent supporter of Italian
participation in the occupation of Iraq.
According to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), which
condemned the Indymedia shutdown, this action may be related to a court case
heard September 30 in San Jose, California, against some Indymedia activists
who helped expose security flaws in the electronic voting machines that will
be used by tens of millions of voters in the November 2 US elections.
Aidan White, general secretary of the IFJ, declared, "We have witnessed an
intolerable and intrusive international police operation against a network
specializing in independent journalism.... The seizing of computers and the
high profile nature of this incident suggest that someone wanted to stifle
these independent voices in journalism."
A representative of the US-based Electronic Freedom Foundation said, "The
Constitution does not permit the government unilaterally to cut off the
speech of an independent media outlet, especially without providing a reason
or even allowing Indymedia the information necessary to contest the
seizure."
Reporters Without Borders, an international group defending freedom of the
press, also condemned the seizure of computer equipment in an open letter to
David Blunkett, the British Home Secretary. The letter declared: "This
intervention is the responsibility of the British authorities because it
relates to a hosting company operating on their territory. Closure of
websites is a serious step, the reasons for which should definitely be made
public."
This intervention by American police to shut down antiwar web sites has been
widely reported in Europe, with accounts carried in the British Guardian and
Independent and by the French news agency Agence France-Presse, among
others. But nothing has appeared as yet in the American mass media. This
silence only underscores the role of the American corporate media as the
accomplice of the Bush administration's attacks on democratic rights, both
at home and abroad.
The suggested connection between the Indymedia shutdown and the US elections
is especially significant. At the September 30 court hearing in northern
California, federal judge Jeremy Fogel ruled in favor of two Swarthmore
College students and the Online Policy Group, an Internet service provider
that hosts an Indymedia site, in their suit against Diebold Election
Systems, a leading manufacturer of electronic touch-screen voting machines.
The two students had web-posted internal Diebold company memos describing
flaws in the software of the voting machines that would permit vote rigging
and alteration of vote totals. The Online Policy Group was a party to the
suit because it served as the Internet service provider for the San
Francisco Bay Area Indymedia web site, which posted a link to the memos.
Diebold had brought lawsuits against several other groups that posted the
memos, but the two students, active in the Swarthmore Coalition for the
Digital Commons, filed a civil suit against Diebold claiming that it had
unfairly used provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
Judge Fogel ruled that Diebold had violated provisions in the act that make
it illegal to knowingly misuse copyright law to stifle free speech. He
ordered the giant manufacturer to pay damages as well as court costs and
lawyers' fees.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FBI shuts down 20 antiwar web sites: an unprecedented act of Internet
censorship
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/oct2004/inte-o13.shtml
By our correspondent
13 October 2004
The US government move to shut down nearly two dozen antiwar,
anti-globalization web sites on October 7 is an unprecedented exercise of
police power against political dissent on the Internet. The World Socialist
Web Site denounces the attack on the Indymedia sites and demands a halt to
all such attempts at suppressing political criticism of the US government.
The shutdown was carried out by Rackspace, a US-based web-hosting company
with offices in San Antonio, Texas, and greater London, in response to an
order from the FBI requiring it to turn over two of its British servers that
were hosting dozens of Indymedia sites. There are conflicting accounts of
the legal process, with Indymedia attributing the order to a US federal
district court, while the Electronic Freedom Foundation, which is supplying
legal representation to the group, describes it as a "commissioner's order"
directly from the FBI itself.
At least 20 national web sites, including those for Brazil, Britain, France,
Germany, Italy and Uruguay were taken down when the hard drives for the
servers were given to the FBI. Most of the sites were restored to service by
the end of the weekend, but they may have lost significant digital content
because of the removal of the hardware.
The seizure appeared to be politically timed. It came just one week before
the start of the third session of the European Social Forum (ESF), a large
gathering of antiwar and anti-globalization activists, scheduled to take
place in London October 15-17. The ESF was to be broadcast live via
streaming video on many of the Indymedia sites.
The FBI said the action was taken at the request of Italian and Swiss
authorities, under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, which provides for
cooperative efforts by various national police agencies against
international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering. According to a
statement issued by the web-hosting firm, "Rackspace is acting as a good
corporate citizen and is cooperating with international law enforcement
authorities."
The invocation of such a treaty against a group of left-wing web sites with
no link to any form of terrorism is an outrageous smear. Indymedia was
formed in 1999 to provide live on-the-spot coverage of the
anti-globalization protests in Seattle. It has expanded into a worldwide
network of 140 locally based sites that provide extensive coverage of
political activities that are frequently blacked out by the
corporate-controlled media.
According to a statement issued by the Indymedia network, the group was
asked by the FBI last month to remove a story posted on one its member sites
about Swiss undercover police. The story included photographs of two secret
police officers who had acted as agents provocateurs during
anti-globalization protests last year outside the G-8 summit meeting in
Evian, France. The FBI conceded that the posting of this information did not
violate any US law, and Indymedia did not take down the information.
The two policemen had engaged in violent actions in the centre of Geneva,
the Swiss city adjacent to Evian, where most of the anti-globalization
protests took place. These provocations became the pretext for police
attacks on peaceful demonstrators. The Indymedia report gave the names and
addresses of the undercover cops as well as their photographs.
Indymedia said it could not be sure that the FBI action was related to the
Swiss police exposure "since the order was issued to Rackspace and not to
Indymedia." Two other possible motives have been suggested: one relating to
the politics of Italy, the other relating to the US elections.
According to some Internet reports, the federal prosecutor for the Italian
city of Bologna, Marina Plazzi, has begun an investigation of Indymedia for
possible "support of terrorism," claiming a link between the group and
attacks on Italian soldiers in the Iraqi city of Nasiriya last November.
Plazzi claims to have contacted the FBI as well as the Italian Department of
Justice.
Several leaders of the neo-fascist National Alliance party have demanded the
outright shutdown of Indymedia, including Alessandra Mussolini,
granddaughter of the fascist dictator. National Alliance leader Gianfranco
Fini is the deputy prime minister in the coalition government headed by
billionaire Silvio Berlusconi, and a fervent supporter of Italian
participation in the occupation of Iraq.
According to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), which
condemned the Indymedia shutdown, this action may be related to a court case
heard September 30 in San Jose, California, against some Indymedia activists
who helped expose security flaws in the electronic voting machines that will
be used by tens of millions of voters in the November 2 US elections.
Aidan White, general secretary of the IFJ, declared, "We have witnessed an
intolerable and intrusive international police operation against a network
specializing in independent journalism.... The seizing of computers and the
high profile nature of this incident suggest that someone wanted to stifle
these independent voices in journalism."
A representative of the US-based Electronic Freedom Foundation said, "The
Constitution does not permit the government unilaterally to cut off the
speech of an independent media outlet, especially without providing a reason
or even allowing Indymedia the information necessary to contest the
seizure."
Reporters Without Borders, an international group defending freedom of the
press, also condemned the seizure of computer equipment in an open letter to
David Blunkett, the British Home Secretary. The letter declared: "This
intervention is the responsibility of the British authorities because it
relates to a hosting company operating on their territory. Closure of
websites is a serious step, the reasons for which should definitely be made
public."
This intervention by American police to shut down antiwar web sites has been
widely reported in Europe, with accounts carried in the British Guardian and
Independent and by the French news agency Agence France-Presse, among
others. But nothing has appeared as yet in the American mass media. This
silence only underscores the role of the American corporate media as the
accomplice of the Bush administration's attacks on democratic rights, both
at home and abroad.
The suggested connection between the Indymedia shutdown and the US elections
is especially significant. At the September 30 court hearing in northern
California, federal judge Jeremy Fogel ruled in favor of two Swarthmore
College students and the Online Policy Group, an Internet service provider
that hosts an Indymedia site, in their suit against Diebold Election
Systems, a leading manufacturer of electronic touch-screen voting machines.
The two students had web-posted internal Diebold company memos describing
flaws in the software of the voting machines that would permit vote rigging
and alteration of vote totals. The Online Policy Group was a party to the
suit because it served as the Internet service provider for the San
Francisco Bay Area Indymedia web site, which posted a link to the memos.
Diebold had brought lawsuits against several other groups that posted the
memos, but the two students, active in the Swarthmore Coalition for the
Digital Commons, filed a civil suit against Diebold claiming that it had
unfairly used provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
Judge Fogel ruled that Diebold had violated provisions in the act that make
it illegal to knowingly misuse copyright law to stifle free speech. He
ordered the giant manufacturer to pay damages as well as court costs and
lawyers' fees.