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Fire Walk With Me

(38,893 posts)
Thu Feb 21, 2013, 12:08 AM Feb 2013

Letter from Jeremy Hammond in Solitary on Eve of Court Date. Aaron Swartz...

The Sparrow Project ‏@sparrowmedia

Letter from Jeremy Hammond in Solitary on Eve of Court Date. Aaron Swartz & the Criminalization of Digital Dissent
http://www.sparrowmedia.net/2013/02/jeremy-hammond-on-aaron-swartz-the-criminalization-of-digital-dissent/
Retweeted by #occupybrussels

[New York, NY] The following is a statement released today, February 20th, 2013, by Jeremy Hammond’s lawyers. Supporters and lawyers have announced that they will be holding a press conference and rally at the Federal Courthouse at 9:30am February 21st, 2013 details are available HERE.

The following is Jeremy Hammond in his own words, written from solitary confinement at The Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in New York City…

The tragic death of internet freedom fighter Aaron Swartz reveals the government’s flawed “cyber security strategy” as well as its systematic corruption involving computer crime investigations, intellectual property law, and government/corporate transparency. In a society supposedly based on principles of democracy and due process, Aaron’s efforts to liberate the internet, including free distribution of JSTOR academic essays, access to public court records on PACER, stopping the passage of SOPA/PIPA, and developing the Creative Commons, make him a hero, not a criminal. It is not the “crimes” Aaron may have committed that made him a target of federal prosecution, but his ideas – elaborated in his “Guerrilla Open Access Manifesto” – that the government has found so dangerous. The United States Attorney’s aggressive prosecution, riddled with abuse and misconduct, is what led to the death of this hero. This sad and angering chapter should serve as a wake up call for all of us to acknowledge the danger inherent in our criminal justice system.

Aaron’s case is part of the recent aggressive, politically-motivated expansion of computer crime law where hackers and activists are increasingly criminalized because of alleged “cyber-terrorist” threats. The United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara, whose office is prosecuting me and my co-defendants in the Lulzsec indictment, has used alarmist rhetoric such as the threat of an imminent “Pearl Harbor like cyber attack” to justify these prosecutions. At the same time the government routinely trains and deploys their own hackers to launch sophisticated cyber attacks against the infrastructure of foreign countries, such as the Stuxnet and Flame viruses, without public knowledge, oversight, declarations of war, or consent from international authorities. DARPA, US Cyber Command, the NSA, and numerous federally-contracted private corporations openly recruit hackers to develop defensive and offensive capabilities and build Orwellian digital surveillance networks, designed not to enhance national security but to advance U.S. imperialism. They even attend and speak at hacker conferences, such as DEFCON, offer to bribe hackerspaces for their research, and created the insulting “National Civic Hacker Day” – efforts which should be boycotted or confronted every step of the way.

(More at the link.)

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Letter from Jeremy Hammond in Solitary on Eve of Court Date. Aaron Swartz... (Original Post) Fire Walk With Me Feb 2013 OP
What is the difference between A DOS attack Downwinder Feb 2013 #1
The difference between annoying your local bigot and messing with the Big Boys Demeter Feb 2013 #2
K&R'd! More snot Feb 2013 #3
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
2. The difference between annoying your local bigot and messing with the Big Boys
Thu Feb 21, 2013, 06:23 AM
Feb 2013

More power to retaliate.

snot

(10,702 posts)
3. K&R'd! More
Thu Feb 21, 2013, 12:41 PM
Feb 2013

from the article:

{Under the current version of the vague and over-reaching Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA),} {e}very time you sign up for a service like Gmail, Hotmail, or Facebook and click the “I agree” button that follows a long contract that no one ever reads, you could be prosecuted under the CFAA if you violate any of the terms.

* * * * *

The “Operation Payback” case in San Jose, California is another miscarriage of justice where 16 suspected Anonymous members (including a 16 year old boy) allegedly participated in a denial-of-service action against PayPal in protest of it’s financial blockade of Wikileaks. Denial-of-service does not “exceed authorized access,” as it is virtually indistinguishable from standard web requests. It is more akin to an electronic sit-in protest, overloading the website’s servers making it incapable of serving legitimate traffic, than a criminal act involving stolen private information or destruction of servers. PayPal’s website was only slow or unavailable for a matter of hours, yet these digital activists face prison time of more that 10 years, $250,000 in fines, and felony convictions because the government wants to criminalize this form of internet protest and send a warning to would be Wikileaks supporters.


More at the link in the OP.
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