Saturday May 25th 2013

Archive for December, 2010

Operation: Leakspin

Well, here you have me complaining about how the DDoS attacks of Anonymous are distracting from the real issue – the content of the cables leaked by WikiLeaks – and here you have Anonymous changing their strategy.

If this .gif that is popping up ’round the Internet is to be believed, Anonymous, instead of attacking websites of entities hostile to WikiLeaks, is going to delve into the content of the cables and spread it everywhere – including on YouTube, hidden behind tags like ‘Tea Party’ and ‘Justin Bieber’.

Delving into the cables and exposing and analyzing their contents is exactly what we’ve been trying to do at this blog the past two weeks (here, here, here, here and here), so this is welcome news. Keep up the good work!

Tentacle Arm Prosthesis

Behold: a fully functioning tentacle arm prosthesis, created by industrial design student Kaylene Kau.

via Mister Honk

Anonymous

- Update: Hackers have taken down the website of the Dutch Prosecutor’s Office and the Dutch police, after the arrest of a 16-year old hacker that was involved in the Amazon attack.

- Update 2: Prepare for attacks on Twitter and Facebook, as these sites are increasingly taking action against Anonymous hackers.

- Update 3: Operation: Leakspin – exposing the content of the WikiLeaks cables – is replacing Operation Payback. Live updates on Reddit. Operation Leakspin website here.

Y’all have heard about Anonymous probably by now. If you haven’t: it’s the group of anonymous hackers that is responsible for taking down for a couple of hours the websites of Visa, Mastercard, PayPal and Amazon, as well as the Swedish prosecutor’s office and Senator Joe Lieberman. These are all entities that in the past week have tried, one way or the other, to take WikiLeaks offline, or cut it short in its operations and resources.

The NYT (in an otherwise rather biased, pro-powers that be article, I must say) provides an overview:

In a campaign that had some declaring the start of a “cyberwar,” hundreds of Internet activists mounted retaliatory attacks on Wednesday on the Web sites of multinational companies and other organizations they deemed hostile to the WikiLeaks antisecrecy organization and its jailed founder, Julian Assange.

On Thursday, a man identifying himself as one of the activists from a group called Anonymous, who used the pseudonym Coldblood in an interview with BBC radio, said: “This campaign is not over from what I’ve seen. It’s still going strong.” The speaker had an English accent and said he was a 22-year-old software engineer with no specific political loyalty.

Within 12 hours of a British judge’s decision on Tuesday to deny Mr. Assange bail in a Swedish extradition case, attacks on the Web sites of WikiLeaks’s “enemies,” as defined by the organization’s impassioned supporters around the world, caused several corporate Web sites to become inaccessible or slow down markedly.

Targets of the attacks, in which activists overwhelmed the sites with traffic, included the Web site of MasterCard, which had stopped processing donations for WikiLeaks; Amazon.com, which revoked the use of its computer servers; and PayPal, which stopped accepting donations for Mr. Assange’s group. Visa.com was also affected by the attacks, as were the Web sites of the Swedish prosecutor’s office and the lawyer representing the two women whose allegations of sexual misconduct are the basis of Sweden’s extradition bid.

The Internet assaults underlined the growing reach of self-described “cyberanarchists,” antigovernment and anticorporate activists who have made an icon of Mr. Assange, a 39-year-old Australian.

Now these Anonymous guys are a pretty theatrical bunch (if you can call them a bunch; rather, they self-identify as a collective of anonymous individuals). Check out the website they use to advertise their goals, Why We Protest:

Anonymous is a cultural phenomenon which began on internet image boards. Many such boards require no registration for posting, and every poster remains anonymous. This format of communication is inherently noisy and chaotic. However, the unprecedented openness made possible by such boards has nurtured the appearance of a unique and persistent culture.

We are a collection of individuals united by ideas. You likely know Anonymous, although you don’t know exactly who we are. We are your brothers and sisters, your parents and children, your superiors and your underlings. We are the concerned citizens standing next to you. Anonymous is everywhere, yet nowhere. Our strength lies in our numbers. Our will as a whole is the combined will of individuals. Our greatest advantage is a knowledge of the fundamentals we share as human beings. This knowledge is a fruit of our anonymity.

Anonymous has left its mark on society more than once. Previous Anonymous projects have resulted in the closing of the white-supremacist radio show produced by Hal Turner, and the criminal prosecution of Canadian pedophile Chris Forcand. Anonymous has been called a “Cyber Vigilante Group” by The Toronto Sun and Global News, though in reality we are much more than that.

We are Anonymous. You can be Anonymous, too. Together, we can shape society.

They have gained some notoriety by appearing in public protesting the Church of Scientology, wearing Guy Fawkes from V for Vendetta masks (see above).

So what they’re doing now is making DDoS attacks on websites, employing what they call a “low orbit ion cannon”: a piece of software allowing your computer to become part of a network that engages in these attacks. The way they’re “organized” is that they communicatie via irc chatrooms and imageboards, and then pretty much at random decide which website to attack. Sometimes they vote, but there’s no leader or organizing body or anything.

The Economist has more information, and a chat interview with an Anonymous hacker. They call Anonymou a ”24-hour Athenian democracy”:

Anonymous is not WikiLeaks, and the more famous whistle-blower does not seem to be pulling the strings. Nor, in fact, does anyone. At any point, anybody can show up in one of several IRC conversations and make a case for a target. Whoever else is there registers a vote, or an argument. During the attack on Mr Lieberman’s site, anons argued that America’s .gov domains would be difficult to take offline, and therefore were not a worthwhile target. One anon pointed out that the Senator does not do business through his website. One wrote, simply, that the site was down in Germany, and that they were all going to jail.

But there is order, of a sort, within Anonymous. Anons, though they know each other only by their pseudonyms, develop trust over time through constant participation in the organising chats. The power of the group lies in a piece of software called a “low-orbit ion cannon”. Do not be put off by this scrap of jargon; an ion cannon is a fictional weapon used in fictional space epics. But the very real software allows someone to volunteer his own computer and network connection as part of a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack, a coordinated mass of requests that can crash a web server. Traditionally, a DDoS comes from personal computers that have been illegally loaded with software and tethered to a single command server as part of a “botnet”. The low-orbit ion cannon is, essentially, a volunteer botnet that Anonymous uses to take down websites.

About ten people, called “OPs”, are able to launch an attack. If any OP abuses his power—if he fails to heed what anons call “the hive mind” in IRC conversations— the other OPs can lock him out of the chat. If any anon fails to be inspired by the target, she can remove her own computer from the volunteer botnet, reducing its effect. Anonymous is a 24-hour Athenian democracy, run by a quorum of whoever happens to be awake. It’s hard even to define Anonymous as a “group”, since not all members participate in all projects.

So yeah. Taking down a corporate website of course harms a private actor, as it blocks payment traffic. So hacking is, and should be, illegal.

But I can’t deny having some sympathy for this. What I regret is that all the attention now goes to the payback actions of Anonymous, rather than the actual content of the WikiLeaks cables. The latter is what the debate should be about. But in the long haul, this idea of a global, loosely connected network of hackers that now acts as a counterweight to the centralizing tendencies of the surveillance state, is appealing to me. Now, for once, the state and the corporations are the victim of angry citizens, rather than the other way around. And let’s face it: the pressure by the U.S. government on Amazon, Visa, PayPal and MasterCard, and these corporations complying, to hurt and harm WikiLeaks is nothing but thuggish. They would never do that a newspaper. So they’re basically getting what they came for.

- Edit: Glenn Greenwald puts it this way, and I agree:

Whatever you think of WikiLeaks, they have not been charged with a crime, let alone indicted or convicted. Yet look what has happened to them. They have been removed from Internet … their funds have been frozen … media figures and politicians have called for their assassination and to be labeled a terrorist organization. What is really going on here is a war over control of the Internet, and whether or not the Internet can actually serve its ultimate purpose—which is to allow citizens to band together and democratize the checks on the world’s most powerful factions.

David Cameron Asked About Liking The Smiths

David Cameron has good taste, as he is a big fan of The Smiths. Unfortunately for him, Morissey and Johnny Marr are no fan of the British PM. This yesterday became the subject of debate in the House of Commons, when a Labour MP asked questions about the raise of tuition fees.

via Exile on Moan Street

La Resolution Continues

Snapped today in the Cairo metro system. It seems Egypt is joining in La Resolution!

Putting Facebook Into A Book

Blogging is very cool: it allows you to expand upon a host of issues, and it’s free-form. It doesn’t really mind what you write (although it’s way better if you make an effort). Yet it’s very ephemeral: a blog post that you put a lot of effort in may only be read by a couple of people, and disappears from the front page after a while. Therefore I’ve sometimes thought of putting the best stuff in a book or something.

The same goes, I guess, for social media like Facebook and Twitter, which are even more ephemeral and devoid of content. So here’s the idea of putting Facebook into a book. Ironically, Facebook originated from high schools’ ‘face books’, so yeah.

Bouygues Telecom asked us to come up with an idea to launch their facebook platform. They wanted us to create something that would go beyond using your profile picture in a funny way, or pranking your friends with a small joke.

We decided to look at the way we use facebook and found that even though we use the social networking site everyday, we forget our favorite moments we share online. So we created an app that could change that, and keep your facebook, in a book.

via Abduzeedo

Breakups: A Visualization

Lee Byron has created infographics based on Facebook status updates, Twitter feeds, the US census and a Durex survey. More here.

Krystal Klear – Tried For Your Love (Hudson Mohawke Remix)

Here’s a banger for ya. This latest remix by Hudson Mohawke of Krystal Klear’s Tried For Your Love is a winner. This is how you use the best from the golden age of rave to create a fresh new song. 

Hypnotic Video Of Donald Trump's Hair Blowing In The Wind

Sit back and relax…

via Buzzfeed

John Lennon R.I.P.

Today it’s thirty years ago that John Lennon was shot in New York City. I’m not that much of a Beatles fan (I like their songs, like everyone, and then especially the psychedelic work on Sgt. Pepper and the White Album), but they have to be recognized as harbingers – well, early adapters – of the 1960s counterculture, and of course the psychedelic explorations of that era. Let alone their huge innovation and influence on popular music.

Also, I once made a list of my favorite Beatles songs and then checked by whom they were written, and it turned out John Lennon (along with the Lennon-McCartney cooperations) had the most ones.

NME has a print article on the dark side of John Lennon: “John was the original Punk Rocker, his appetite for sex, drugs and rebellion matched only by his hunger for self-exploration.” And then Nerdcore has a scan of some great Lennon citations accompanying this article:

R.I.P.!

Short Animation: First Contact

A very cool, very well-made, funny short animation about why we haven’t made First Contact yet, and why UFO sightings have been in decline since the 1950s. Love the character animation.

Created by second year students of the Advanced 3D Productions Programme of the Media Design School.

Trying Assange

Due to an extended period of traveling my internet access ebbs and flows, so blogging will be light from this corner over the next forty days (most access is used to just try to catch up to events as they unfold!). But I thought this piece was a nice complement to Adriejan’s earlier post on his thoughts on what Assange has done via WikiLeaks and how it might be interpreted morally and legally. The article essentially brings in two pretty insightful lawyers to consider what lies ahead for lies ahead legally for Assange (on the leaks only):

GWEN IFILL: Now, for a look at the legal questions surrounding the Assange case, we turn to Jeffrey Smith, a partner at the Arnold & Porter law firm. He served as general counsel of the Central Intelligence Agency from 1995 to 1996. And Abbe Lowell, partner at the law firm McDermott, Will & Emery, he’s been involved in a number of high-profile cases and has defended clients charged with espionage.

Welcome to you both, gentlemen. Jeff Smith, what jeopardy is Assange actually in?

JEFFREY SMITH: I think he’s in serious legal jeopardy. And I think he should be.

Obviously, the U.S. government is looking at a variety of charges, espionage being the most central. But there are a number of other things, as the attorney general said, for which he might be charged.

GWEN IFILL: For instance?

JEFFREY SMITH: Well, there’s a variety of possibilities, including mishandling of government property, theft, receipt of theft of government property, other things that I’m sure the government is looking at, possible disclosure of the identity of intelligence agents, any number of things.

GWEN IFILL: What kind of case can you imagine being made against him?

Is it one that could stick, Mr. Lowell?

ABBE LOWELL: Well, first, it’s not hard to charge him, because grand juries do that with not such a high level of proof.

The question will be whether a charge sticks. And that’s depending on a number of factors. One is, there’s never been a prosecution of the recipient of this kind of information under the Espionage Act, when that entity claims to have First Amendment media protection.

So, one issue will be whether or not WikiLeaks is a media outlet, and whether or not Assange is a journalist. If so, it’s one question as to whether that statute applies constitutionally. Secondly, if it does, there’s cases that say that, again, it’s easy to charge, but to convict, the government has to have proof beyond a reasonable doubt that he had the highest specific intent to do harm to the United States that you possibly can have.

And that may be something they can prove, but people shouldn’t think that this is just a walkaway. It’s not that easy.

GWEN IFILL: Not a slam-dunk. Define, first of all — assuming that espionage is one approach which the Justice Department is pursuing, define what that means.

JEFFREY SMITH: In this context, as Abbe says, it’s never been used, but the plain language of the statute does say that it is a crime for someone who has national defense information without authority to convey it to someone else, knowing that it will do harm to the United States.

Over the years, the courts have added to that, knowing that it will do harm, the requirement that the individual act in bad faith. And my own judgment is that that will be pretty easy to prove here. I do not think that what Assange did, this massive release of information, with no patina of journalism around it, I think it’s hard to believe that that will be constitutionally protected activity.

GWEN IFILL: Let’s talk — let’s just get that off the table, this whole question of whether he is a journalist and whether he is — what he did was constitutionally protected.

In your opinion?

ABBE LOWELL: Well, here’s what the government would say in bringing a case.

The government will say that this is just providing the vehicle of a site in which raw material is dumped out, with no editorial function and no real activity, ergo, it’s not really journalism.

And what journalists likely will say, because the line is a very fuzzy one, and it’s a dangerous one under the First Amendment, and Assange will say back, is, no, acquiring information by whatever means and disseminating it to the public is the definition of journalism.

It has not been tested. It is ironic that this issue of what is the new media, what is the Internet may be defined and tested under the auspices of a 1917 criminal statute called the Espionage Act.

GWEN IFILL: Because this is — what we remember is the Pentagon Papers, for instance, the case of Daniel Ellsberg, who wasn’t a journalist, but released these documents, which were hard-copy documents.

JEFFREY SMITH: Yes.

GWEN IFILL: They weren’t electronic documents, so it wasn’t as many. But does that make a difference in how we gauge this?

JEFFREY SMITH: I think there are a lot of differences.

First of all, the Pentagon papers case, as it went before the Supreme Court, was a prior-restraint case. That is to say, the government was trying to prevent The New York Times from publishing it, rather than prosecute Ellsberg for disclosing it.

And, even in that case, a majority of justices on the Supreme Court said, admittedly not central to the decision, but said that prosecution of journalists might be possible in some circumstances. Justice Douglas dissented.

But I think this may be a case — I think he has no real hope to call himself a journalist. He even solicits people on his Web site for them to submit classified documents or secrets. So, in some respects, he’s inducing others to violate the law. And I don’t think the courts would look favorably on that.

ABBE LOWELL: Gwen, the thing is that, up until now, these have been very selective cases with very selective disclosures…

GWEN IFILL: Right.

ABBE LOWELL: … whether or not it’s a single potential document or whether or not it’s a single specific disclosure, not hundreds of thousands, and not done in this fashion.

So, therefore, the WikiLeaks case is going to be the test at the outer limits of how far the First Amendment may protect. And what are those words in that very old statute, the Espionage Act, going to mean, when they were written in the wake of World War I for a phenomenon of maps and ledgers and diagrams, and being applied in 2010 to terabytes of information?

GWEN IFILL: Well, and also to kind of a post-terror environment, or which…

JEFFREY SMITH: Yes.

GWEN IFILL: But I’m curious, one little detail, which is, he’s not a U.S. citizen. How liable is he under these laws?

JEFFREY SMITH: Well, there’s one case in which an East German citizen was convicted under the statutes.

I don’t think — he undoubtedly would raise the question of extraterritorial application, but I don’t think his citizenship makes any difference. It will have had an impact on the United States. And I think the courts won’t give him any slack on that issue.

ABBE LOWELL: And he, if he wants to, will raise the defense of whatever he gets out of the First Amendment which would be applicable to him in the United States, even if he wasn’t a U.S. citizen. So, it will cut both ways.

But, because he is not in the United States, there’s the extra issue of whether he can be extradited. And that’s a whole different set of obstacles for the U.S. to get. And, anyway, it’s just not that simple, that he’s done something and we’re going to have him here the day after tomorrow to face charges.

GWEN IFILL: Nothing is terribly simple in this case.

What — what about the idea that he has stolen government property, that he is in possession and is disseminating something that belongs to somebody else?

JEFFREY SMITH: I think there’s a relatively minor dimension of this. It may be a case — a charge brought against him, but the much more serious is the espionage harm to the national security.

And I think that I’m — frankly, I’m hopeful that the government is able to obtain jurisdiction over him and successfully prosecute him.

ABBE LOWELL: I think that’s what the attorney general was referring to, in part.

GWEN IFILL: Yes.

ABBE LOWELL: I mean, I — it’s an easier, in some ways, case to make than to sort through the First Amendment protection of the Espionage Act’s application to the media.

And the wrinkle there is that he’s not the one who stole the information, at least as far as what is being reported.

GWEN IFILL: Private Bradley Manning is alleged to have — the Army private — to have done it.

ABBE LOWELL: That’s right. So, as to whether or not the normal theft of government information can be applied to him is yet another complication. Now, it is a serious crime. And it can be charged and punished as a felony. And it’s always easier to go after the easier statute than it is to do the other.

So, if you’re looking at — to what the federal government could do, they will look at the Espionage Act. They will look at the theft of government information or government material. And we will see if there’s even a more creative one that the attorney general had in mind.

GWEN IFILL: What is the difference, theoretically, between what Julian Assange did in this case and what newspapers did in publishing the information he gave them, The New York Times, The Guardian in London?

JEFFREY SMITH: I think it’s a fundamental difference. What Assange did was solicit this young private, assuming that’s — he’s the source of it, to give him the secrets. And then he just put it out or is proposing to put it out.

What the newspapers have done, in my judgment, is constitutionally protected. They looked at the material. They talked to the U.S. government. They asked the U.S. government what harm would result. They made certain redactions in the documents. They did other reporting surrounding the cables to see how it fit in the broader picture of what’s going on.

And I think that’s fundamentally different than what Assange did.

GWEN IFILL: And…

ABBE LOWELL: And from a…

GWEN IFILL: Go ahead.

ABBE LOWELL: … First Amendment point of view, Gwen, though, not so fast.

GWEN IFILL: Well, that’s what I was going to ask. Is there a broader definition of the First Amendment protection here that could be applied?

ABBE LOWELL: You know, Jeff is correct that, in terms of conduct, depending on what conduct is found, whether or not he did solicit the private or not, for example, would be a very big difference.

JEFFREY SMITH: Yes.

ABBE LOWELL: But — but, putting that aside, let’s just say that you are comparing apples to apples, and the apples were what he discloses to the public and what the other media disclosed. If it’s the same cables with the same redactions, if it’s the same kind of information, that will not distinguish his conduct well from what the other, let’s say, more traditional media does.

And I will tell you, whether or not it changes the charge will be a very big part of his defense, to show that those two acts are the same.

GWEN IFILL: It sounds very much like, at least from a legal sense, this story is just beginning.

JEFFREY SMITH: Yes.

GWEN IFILL: Jeff Smith and Abbe Lowell, thank you both very much.

JEFFREY SMITH: You’re very welcome.

To be clear, the piece is full of opinion, legal and otherwise, but I think it nonetheless provides a good look at the considerations on the table and, in part at least, some of the perspectives likely being considered at various levels of the U.S. government. It is quite interesting that this case may be “tested under the auspices of a 1917 criminal statute called the Espionage Act”. Clearly those who drafted the Act had no capacity to envisage some of the practical realities at the heart of this case. That said, I think the principles of the Act are what are at play in this case, and so it is probably a red herring to point to a lack of congruence between a 1917 Act and technological innovation.

Obama, Master Of Life And Death

Another victory for executive power, another loss for the Rechtsstaat. According to a US federal judge, there are no legal limits on the President’s power to order the killing of alleged terrorists outside the US, even if these individuals happen to be US citizens. At least, no legal limits that can be enforced in a US courtroom – Judge Bates of the DC District Court ruled that the matter amounts to an unjusticiable “political question”.

The NY Times:

WASHINGTON — A federal judge threw out a lawsuit on Tuesday that sought to block the American government from trying to kill Anwar al-Awlaki, a United States citizen and Muslim cleric accused of playing a significant role in Al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen.

The ruling clears the way for the Obama administration to continue to try to kill Mr. Awlaki and represents a victory in its efforts to shield from judicial review one of its most striking counter-terrorism policies.

The court not only rejected the lawsuit on the grounds that Mr. Awlaki’s father had no standing to file it on behalf of his son, but held that decisions to mount targeted killings overseas are a “political question” for executive officials to make — not judges.

In an 83-page opinion, Judge John Bates of the District of Columbia district court acknowledged that the case raised “stark, and perplexing, questions” — including whether the president could “order the assassination of a U.S. citizen without first affording him any form of judicial process whatsoever, based the mere assertion that he is a dangerous member of a terrorist organization.

But even though the “legal and policy questions posed by this case are controversial and of great public interest,” he wrote, they would have to be resolved on another day or outside of the courts, since this case had to be dismissed at the onset.

The Justice Department had no immediate comment on the ruling. But Jameel Jaffer, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union who helped represent Mr. Awlaki’s father, Nasser al-Awlaki, in the matter, called the decision “a profound mistake” that he said would dangerously expand presidential powers.

“If the court’s ruling is correct, the government has unreviewable authority to carry out the targeted killing of any American, anywhere, whom the president deems to be a threat to the nation,” Mr. Jaffer said. “It would be difficult to conceive of a proposition more inconsistent with the Constitution, or more dangerous to American liberty.”

Judge Bates rejected the notion that his ruling amounting to holding that the executive possesses “unreviewable authority to order the assassination of any American whom he labels an enemy of the state.” His ruling emphasized that it was limited to the circumstances of Mr. Awlaki, whom the intelligence community has said is engaged in specific operational planning of attacks against the United States.

“The court only concludes that it lacks capacity to determine whether a specific individual in hiding overseas, whom the director of national intelligence has stated is an ‘operational member’ ” of Al Qaeda’s Yemen branch, Judge Bates said, “presents such a threat to national security that the United States may authorize the use of lethal force against him.” Robert Chesney, a University of Texas law professor who specializes in national security law, said the limits of the theory articulated by Judge Bates would be a matter of hot dispute.

“The slippery slope is obviously the concern here,” Mr. Chesney said. “Judge Bates is at pains not to decide this question for other circumstances. But the question remains, what else besides this fact pattern would enable the government to have the same result — no judicial involvement in a targeted-killing decision?”

The A.C.L.U., along with the Center for Constitutional Rights, brought the lawsuit on behalf of Mr. Awlaki’s father last summer. It first had to receive permission to represent Nasser al-Awlaki from the Treasury Department, which has labeled Anwar al-Awlaki a “specially designated global terrorist.”

Granted, Judge Bates was in an unenviable position, having to juggle national security concerns and fundamental human rights. No matter how he would have ruled, he was going to be severely criticized.  Nevertheless, that doesn’t delegitimize critique on his ruling – here are three points:

First, Judge Bates denied the father of Mr. al-Awlaki standing to bring the claim, arguing that Mr. al-Awlaki’s incommunicado status is of his own choosing – surely he could easily walk up to the US embassy in Yemen to claim his constitutional rights. It is rather unfortunate that the judge relies on this legal fiction: who really believes that the US government would quietly sit down with one of the most sought-after individuals on its hit list, rather than fire a – Presidentially authorized –missile at him as soon as he discloses his location?

Second, the political question doctrine is a well-known and legitimate tool that prevents judges from having to meddle in political issues, such as foreign affairs and national security. Yet in this case national security concerns directly challenge one of the most fundamental human rights, namely the right not to be killed without due process (presuming that capital punishment is okay in the first place, which it is not). It’s the very raison-d’être of the judiciary to offer a counter-balance against the executive in these situations – Judge Bates effectively undermines the carefully constructed checks and balances of the American constitutional system.

Third, the slippery slope is very real. Judge Bates understandably tries to do away with this case on the basis of exceptional circumstances, arguing that this case of a “specially designated global terrorist” is one-of-a-kind. Yet a similar logic applied to the 775 “unlawful combatants” at Guantánamo Bay, the approximately 3000 extraordinarily renditioned individuals, and the War on Terror as a whole. Repeated exceptions for hard cases dilute the rule of law. As the ACLU stated, this expansion of executive power could prove more dangerous to American liberty than a former imam in Yemen.

P.S.: It would be interesting if this case goes up to the Supreme Court, though I’m not optimistic about the outcome of such a ruling.

Your Kid's On Drugs

This is the Reefer Madness of the 80′s:

Via Everythingisterrible.com

Julian Assange To Appear In Court Today / Update: Has Been Arrested

According to The Guardian, Julian Assange is set to appear in a British court today to discuss the Interpol arrest warrant issued by Sweden.

If you think about it, this is unbelievable. When ever does someone accused of relatively minor sexual misconduct come on an international Interpol arrest list?

Only when that person angers U.S. and European governments, of course.

- BREAKING: Julian Assange has been arrested.

- Update: WikiLeaks will continue releasing cables today:

Today’s actions against our editor-in-chief Julian Assange won’t affect our operations: we will release more cables tonight as normal

- Update 2: Mooi: XS4ALL, de oude internetprovider van hacker en internetactivist Rop Gonggrijp (was ook betrokken bij de publicatie door WikiLeaks van de Collateral Damage-video), neemt samen met de Amsterdamse hoster Byte WikiLeaks.nl over.

- Update 3: New shit has come to light: Assange has told the City of Westminster Magistrates Court that he will fight extradition to Sweden. Also, credit card company Visa has suspended all payments to Wikileaks. More on Huffpost.

- Update 4: De VPRO heeft ook een mirror van WikiLeaks online! Dat maakt twee Nederlandse publieke omroepen. Screw you, CDA.

The Guardian:

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, is expected to appear in a UK court today after his lawyers said he would meet police to discuss a European arrest warrant from Sweden relating to alleged sexual assaults.

As the legal net continued to close around the whistleblowers’ website and the US attorney general, Eric Holder, said he had authorised “a number of things to be done” to combat the organisation, Assange appeared to be reconciling himself to a lengthy personal court battle to avoid extradition to Sweden.

Jennifer Robinson, a solicitor with Finers Stephens Innocent, which represents the Australian freedom of information campaigner, told the Guardian: “We have a received an arrest warrant [related to claims in Sweden]. We are negotiating a meeting with police.”

Another lawyer representing Assange, Mark Stephens, added: “He has not been charged with anything. We are in the process of making arrangements to meet the police by consent, in order to facilitate the taking of that question and answer that is needed. It’s about time we got to the end of the day and we got some truth, justice and rule of law.”

Stephens explained that the interview would happen in the “foreseeable future” but he could not give a precise time. According to other sources, it is thought that Assange would appear before a court to negotiate bail .

Assange is seeking supporters to put up surety and bail for him. He said he expected to have to post bail of between £100,000 and £200,000 and would require up to six people offering surety, or risked being held on remand.

In recent days, Assange, 39, has told friends he is increasingly convinced the US is behind Swedish prosecutors’ attempts to extradite him for questioning on the assault allegations.

He has said the original allegations against him were motivated by “personal issues” but that Sweden had subsequently behaved as “a cipher” for the US.

Assange has also said that he declined to return to Sweden to face prosecutors because he feared he would not receive a fair trial, and prosecutors had requested that he be held in solitary confinement and incommunicado.

This weekend Assange said he was exhausted by the effort of running his defence against the allegations in Sweden and the release of the US embassy cables at the same time, as well as running WikiLeaks itself, which has split since some supporters became disaffected over Assange’s handling of the Afghanistan war logs. Once he turns himself in to the police, he will have to appear before a magistrates’ court within 24 hours, where he will seek release on bail. A full hearing of his extradition case would have to be heard within 28 days.

In the past, Assange has dismissed the allegations, stating on Twitter: “The charges are without basis and their issue at this moment is deeply disturbing.”

Last week Stephens added: “This appears to be a persecution and a prosecution. It is highly irregular and unusual for the Swedish authorities to issue [an Interpol] red notice in the teeth of the undisputed fact that Mr Assange has agreed to meet voluntarily to answer the prosecutor’s questions.”

CDA vs. PowNed in mirror WikiLeaks

Fantastisch: de autocraten van het CDA die PowNed sommeren hun mirror van WikiLeaks weg te halen, omdat het ‘niet hoort bij het takenpakket van een publieke omroep’. Nieuws verschaffen hoort niet bij de taken van een publieke omroep? Onderzoeksjournalistiek van Zembla dan ook maar afschaffen?

Volg de fittie hier en hierrr.

Volkskrant:

Het CDA in de Tweede Kamer vindt dat omroep PowNed geen kopie van WikiLeaks online moet houden. CDA-Kamerlid Ank Bijleveld vindt dat niet horen bij het takenpakket van een publieke omroep, wat PowNed is. Ze gaat minister Marja van Bijsterveldt, verantwoordelijk voor de publieke omroepen, vragen wat er aan gedaan kan worden.

PowNed zette eind vorige week de door WikiLeaks gelekte stukken in een zogeheten mirrorsite online, nadat WikiLeaks.org uit de lucht was gehaald. PowNed heeft de site nog steeds, update die ook, en laat weten zich voorlopig niks aan te trekken van de oproep van het CDA.

Bijleveld wil dat het kabinet ingrijpt. ‘Wij vinden dat een publieke omroep dit niet moet doen en het is belangrijk er voor te zorgen dat dit niet meer mogelijk is’, aldus Bijleveld.

Sarah Palin Kills A Caribou

Yugh. And it gives her a “great feeling of accomplishment”.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Q1IBfCiJ1E8]

White Pete

The descendants of Dutch immigrants in Holland, Michigan have also celebrated Sinterklaas this year on December 5th. The mayor of the town of Holland officially introduces the Sint in the clip below. But instead of showing up with his trusty helper zwarte piet (black pete) he came to Holland with a white pete! I wonder why? Well, at least they didn’t go for the rainbow petes.

Sinterklaas is definitely gaining ground in the U.S. Stephen Colbert is already into the spirit of St. Nicolas. And it’s also getting big in Canada. Move over Santa Claus! Sinterklaas is back.

Read more (in Dutch) on Joop.

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