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Clamouring to criminalise internet insults
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| 31st July 2013
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| See article from
bbc.co.uk
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More than 1,700 cases involving supposedly abusive messages sent online or via text message reached Britain's courts in 2012, the BBC has learned following a Freedom of Information request. This is a 10% increase on the figures for 2011, according
to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS). Nearly 600 charges were brought between January and May 2013.. The revelations come as police say they are investigating abusive tweets sent to MP Stella Creasy. This has resulted in pressure 'to do
something' about abusive messages sent via Twitter. Del Harvey, Twitter's senior director of trust and safety, blogged that the micro-messaging platform would extend the report tweet function, already available on its iPhone app, to Android
phones and desktops. Andy Trotter, chairman of the Association of Chief Police Officers' communications advisory group told BBC Radio 4's The World At One: They need to take responsibility as do the other
platforms to deal with this at source and make sure these things do not carry on. They need to make it easier for victims to report these matters and, from a police perspective, they need to know that they can report these things to us.
A Change.org petition calling for Twitter to add a report abuse button to its service has attracted more than 71,000 supporters. The question for Twitter is how, having made it easier for people to report abusive tweets, it will cope
with the expected flood of reports.
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Bradley Manning found guilty of most charges related to revelations published on Wikileaks
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| 31st July 2013
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| See article from
theguardian.com
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Bradley Manning , the source of the massive WikiLeaks trove of secret disclosures, has been convicted of most charges on which he stood trial. Colonel Denise Lind, the military judge presiding over the court martial of the US soldier, delivered
her verdict in curt and pointed language. Guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty, she repeated over and over, as the reality of a prolonged prison sentence for Manning dawned. The one ray of light in an otherwise bleak outcome for Manning was that
he was found not guilty of the single most serious charge against him, that he knowingly aided the enemy . the soldier was found guilty in their entirety of 17 out of the 22 counts against him, and of an amended version of four others. WikiLeaks and Julian Assange were mentioned repeatedly during the trial by the US government which tried to prove that the anti-secrecy organisation had directly steered Manning in his leaking activities, an allegation strongly denied by the accused. Prosecutors drew heavily on still classified web conversations between Manning and an individual going by the name of
Press Association , whom the government alleges was Assange. Update: 35 years 22nd August 2013. See
article from en.rsf.org Reporters Without
Borders condemned the 35-year prison sentence meted out today to U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning on charges including 10 counts of espionage and theft . Reporters Without Borders expressed the hope that the sentence
will be reversed on appeal. The press freedom organization said: Following the targeting of Edward Snowden , the disproportionate sentence for Manning hits hard at whistleblowers and shows how vulnerable they are. The Army is
sending a clear message to them and to all journalists who dare to report whistleblowers' disclosures: the United States will strike back severely at anyone who uncovers information of public interest concerning the exercise of official powers.
The sentence strikes a blow against American democracy, in which the press must be free to report government abuses.
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| 29th July 2013
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The political addiction to mere prohibitions (without even bothering to think through the consequences) by David Allen Green See
article from newstatesman.com |
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But Perry, Cameron and the Daily Mail will be happy
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| 28th July 2013
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| See article from telegraph.co.uk
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Microsoft has introduced a pop-up warning on its Bing search engine that tells UK users that they are searching for illegal child abuse images. Yahoo will also introduce them in the coming weeks, but Google has no plans to. Microsoft
announced that anyone using its search engine to look for material that shows the sexual abuse of children will trigger the Bing Notification Platform message warning that tells them the content they are looking for is against the law. The notification
will provide a link to a counselling service. A Microsoft spokesman said: If someone in the UK tries to use search terms on Bing which can only indicate they are looking for illegal child abuse content, they
will activate the Bing Notification Platform which will produce an on-screen notification telling them that child abuse content is illegal. The notification will also contain a link to Stopitnow.org who will be able to provide them with counselling.
The Bing Notification Platform is triggered by search terms on a list provided by the The Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP).
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Claire Perry seems to think that the Church of England should follow her pet morality concerns and disinvest from Google
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| 28th July 2013
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| See
article from
dailymail.co.uk
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Christian campaigner and Conservative MP Claire Perry has told the Church of England to pull its money out of Google in a bid to force the company to take a stronger line over pornographic and child abuse images she claims are widely available through
its search engine. She told The Daily Telegraph: It is quite clear that many companies, in particular British ISPs, are finally now taking a really responsible approach to this. They are seeing that we want a
level of social responsibility. There are others out there who have not got that attitude. They (the Church of England and other investors) have a role to play, they have questions to ask themselves. They are moral leaders.
Her demands follow the Archbishop of Canterbury's pledge to to review the Church's investment strategy, after very embarrassing revelations that it has holdings in firms that profit from payday lending. In the name of
pressurising organisations to do more about child abuse, then perhaps the church should also pull its investment from religious organisations too. And it's not as if political organisations are a paragon of virtue either. In fact it makes one wonder if
there is anything that passes muster as totally ethically correct.
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So how come Britain is allowing China to suffocate British internet businesses by letting Chinese censors take the decisions to err on the side of overblocking
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26th July 2013
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| See article from
bbc.co.uk
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The adult content blocking system championed by David Cameron is controlled by the controversial Chinese company Huawei, the BBC has learned. UK-based employees at the firm are able to decide which sites TalkTalk's service blocks. Politicians in both the UK and US have raised concerns about alleged close ties between Huawei and the Chinese government.
Even customers who do not want filtering still have their traffic routed through the system, but matches to Huawei's database are dismissed rather than acted upon. One expert insisted that private companies should not hold power over
blacklists, and that the responsibility should lie with an independent group. Dr Martyn Thomas, chair of the IT policy panel at the Institution of Engineering and Technology, told the BBC: It needs to be run by
an organisation accountable to a minister so it can be challenged in Parliament, There's certainly a concern about the process of how a web address gets added to a blacklist - who knows about it, and who has an opportunity to
appeal against it. You could easily imagine a commercial organisation finding itself on that blacklist wrongly, and where they actually lost a lot of web traffic completely silently and suffered commercial damage. The issue is who
gets to choose who's on that blocking list, and what accountability do they have? 'Policing themselves'
Huawei's position was recently the subject of an Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) report. It criticised the lack of
ministerial oversight over the firm's rapid expansion in the UK. The committee said: The alleged links between Huawei and the Chinese State are concerning, as they generate suspicion as to whether Huawei's intentions
are strictly commercial or are more political.
In the US, intelligence committees have gone further, branding Huawei a threat to national security. Initially, TalkTalk told the BBC that it was US security firm Symantec that was
responsible for maintaining its blacklist, and that Huawei only provided the hardware, as previously reported. However, Symantec said that while it had been in a joint venture with Huawei to run Homesafe in its early stages, it had not been involved for
over a year. TalkTalk later confirmed it is Huawei that monitors activity, checking requests against its blacklist of over 65 million web addresses, and denying access if there is a match. The contents of this list are largely determined by
an automated process, but both Huawei and TalkTalk employees are able to add or remove sites independently.
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How are the advert censors meant to do their jobs if the kids don't own up to their age?
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| 26th July 2013
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| See
article from asa.org.uk See
survey report [pdf] from
asa.org.uk
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A new ASA survey commissioned to find out what ads young people see and engage with online, and whether those ads stick to the UK advertising rules, suggests that the majority of young people are registering on sites using false
ages. Our research set out to help us understand better what ads children see when they use social media. It shows that advertisers are acting in good faith by taking account of the registered age of social media
account holders when delivering their ads. However, as a result of registering under a false age, many of the children in our survey were presented with ads for age-restricted products including for gambling, alcohol, slimming aids and overtly sexual
dating services. In summary, our survey reveals that:
- All but four of the 24 children aged between 11 and 15 who participated registered on a social media site using a false age.
- 10 participants (42% of children) were falsely registered as aged
18 or over
- Of the 218 ads served to those registered as over 18, 24 (11%) were for products that must not be directed at people under 18 through the selection of media or the context in which they appear
- Nine participants were aged below the permitted age of registration on at least one social media site
- Of the 427 ads the children saw in total, 420, or 98.4%, stuck to the rules
- None of the age-restricted ads contained content that set out to appeal particularly to children.
We'll be presenting these findings to our Council with a view to exploring whether we need to take a tighter line on age-restricted ads in social media or if further research in this area would be helpful. We're also drawing this
to the attention of the Advertising Code writing body, the Committee of Advertising Practice, and asking whether new guidance for advertisers on targeting ads online is needed. Our report clearly asks questions of
social media owners around the effectiveness of age-verification and whether enough is being done to prevent children from accessing age-restricted content on social media sites. We will be raising these issues with social media companies.
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| 25th July 2013
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Letter to David Cameron, a YouTube rap by Dan Bull See video from YouTube |
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David Cameron admits that he has not thought his internet censorship policy through
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| 23rd
July 2013
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| See
article from
independent.co.uk
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Daily Mail Dave is facing criticisms and serious questions over how his plan for automatic internet porn filters in every British home would work. The former head of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection centre (CEOP), Jim Gamble,
said Cameron's plan to tackle child abuse images by removing results from search engines like Google would be laughed at by paedophiles: There are 50,000 predators...downloading abusive images on peer-to-peer,
not from Google. Yet from CEOP intelligence only 192 were arrested last year. That's simply not good enough. We've got to attack the root cause, invest with new money, real investment in child protection teams, victim support and
policing on the ground. Let's create a real deterrent. Not a pop-up that paedophiles will laugh at.
In interviews after his speech, Cameron seemed unclear of exactly which legal sites should be banned by the new filters - and accepted
that the technology still had weaknesses. Speaking on the BBC's Jeremy Vine programme, Cameron said what would be included in the filters would evolve over time: The companies themselves are going to design what is
automatically blocked, but the assumption is they will start with blocking pornographic sites and also perhaps self-harming sites It will depend on how the companies choose how to do it. It doesn't mean, for instance, it will
block access to a newspaper like The Sun, it wouldn't block that - but it would block pornography.
Cameron said he did not believe written pornography, such as erotic novel Fifty Shades of Grey, would be blocked under the
plans. But he added: It will depend on how the filters work. He also admitted it could lead to some interesting conversations in families. Asked if the opt in system meant a husband would have to fess up to his partner if he
wanted to look at porn, he finally said: Yes, it does. He then added: I'm not saying we've thought of everything and there will be many problems down the line as we deal with this, but we're trying to crunch
through these problems and work out what you can do and can't do.
Cameron was even attacked by one of his former female MPs, Louise Mensch, for attempting to ban video containing rape simulation. She suggested such fantasies were
common in more than half of all women. She wrote on Twitter: It is not for our government to police consensual simulation, between adults, of one of women's most common fantasies,
Padraig Reidy, of
the Index on Censorship, said people should not have to opt out of the filters: If we have, as the Prime Minister is suggesting, an opt-out filter we have a kind of default censorship in place. Families should be able to choose if they want to opt in to censorship. If a filter is set up as a default then it can really restrict what people can see legitimately. Sites about sexual health, about sexuality and so on, will get caught up in the same filters as pornography. It will really restrict people's experience on the web, including children's.
Dr Paul Bernal, from the University of East Anglia's law school, suggested Cameron's crackdown on child abuse images was also inadequate: Plans like these, worthy though they may appear, do not, to
me, seem likely to be in any way effective. The real 'bad guys' will find ways around them, the material will still exist, will keep being created, and we'll pretend to have solved the problem -- and at the same time put in a structure to allow
censorship, create a deeply vulnerable database of 'untrustworthy people', and potentially alienate many of the most important companies on the internet. I'm not convinced it's a good idea.
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Pakistan's internet censors come to blows over the continued blocking of YouTube
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| 23rd July 2013
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| See article from
thenews.com.pk
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A meeting to discuss supposedly blasphemous material and the ban on YouTube turned into an exchange of abuse as the Pakistan Telecom Authority lobbed the issue in the court of parliament, asking legislators to pass a new law and create a new set-up to
decide what is blasphemous. After witnessing nasty scenes in the official meeting, the PTA proposed to the government to enact new laws through parliament for establishing an independent department having the mandate as well as the authority to
block access of such links on the internet. The PTA feel pressure from all sides as the Government pushes for an end to the ban even though supposed blasphemy continues to be available. They clearly do not like being asked to make the decisions
about the impasse and would rather someone else did it. Official sources explained: No one is ready to take responsibility for opening up of YouTube as the PTA is just executing the orders of the Inter-Ministerial
Committee and orders of other top officials. We have proposed to the government to table a bill in parliament and establish an independent forum having the authority to define the blasphemy material and then impose ban on it.
There is
nothing in the PTA act authorising a ban on YouTube and it has been done so far on the directives of the inter-ministerial committee or the court orders. Without introducing a dedicated censor, the issue of blasphemous material on the internet cannot be
resolved, they added. Official sources who attended the meeting told The News that representatives of an NGO, Bytes for All, accused the top officials of the PTA in the presence of several stakeholders saying you are a liar and threatened
to fix them. I have never seen such a disgusting attitude during an official meeting in my whole life, a participant of the meeting said. Update: Referred to the Lahore High Court 26th September 2013.
See article from
techcrunch.com The year-long saga of the Pakistan government's YouTube ban has just taken another twist, as a case to unblock the website has been referred to a panel of Lahore
High Court justices who will now decide whether the country's haphazard internet censorship regime is unconstitutional. It's another reprieve for the government's IT minister Anusha Rehman , who has overseen an increasingly oppressive online censorship
regime in Pakistan.
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We're being governed by someone who believes what he reads in the Daily Mail
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22nd July 2013
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| See article from
guardian.co.uk See
article from
dailymail.co.uk See also full text of
David cameron's speech from indexoncensorship.org
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Back on May, following up the conviction of Stuart Hazell for the murder of 12 year old Tia Sharp, Amanda Platell of the Daily Mail wrote a
piece claiming that child porn could be readily
found using Google search terms that were noted in the trial. Of course it was all bollox and the 'child porn' noted by Platell was
found to be a commercial adult video. The supposed 'child' was either 18 or 19 depending on which month
her birthday fell. Her age was properly recorded and is available for checking as required by US law. But the damage was already done and Daily Mail readers and campaigners were easily convinced by Platell's bollox piece. And so a new evil was
born, easy to find child porn just waiting to be revealed by a few search terms in Google. And now it appears that David Cameron was one of those who believes everything he reads in the Daily Mail. In a press release David Cameron announced
a series of censorship measures to placate the Daily Mail and its readers.
- All internet users will be contacted by their service providers and given an unavoidable choice on whether to use website blocking. The changes will be introduced by the end of next year. As a first step, the system will be mandated for new
customers by the end of 2013. The subscriber making the choices will be subject to age verification and further updates to the blocking options may only be made by the account holder.
- Website blocking to be applied to all new mobile
phones
- Prohibited possession of extreme pornography will be extended to scenes of simulated rape.
- The Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) is to draw up a blacklist of 'abhorrent' internet
search terms to supposedly prevent paedophiles searching for illegal material.
- All police forces will work with a single secure database of illegal images of children.
- Videos streamed online are to be subject to
the same R18 censorship rules as those sold in shops.
- There will be stronger powers for watchdogs to investigate the hidden internet -- heavily encrypted forums and pages that allow abusers to cover their tracks
- Adult content will be banned on public WiFi
- Ofcom to oversee this implementation of these measures.
In a separate move, Twitter is to use Microsoft's PhotoDNA system to check all uploaded pictures against a database of known child abuse images. Cameron will say: There are certain types of pornography that
can only be described as 'extreme' ... that is violent, and that depicts simulated rape. These images normalise sexual violence against women -- and they are quite simply poisonous to the young people who see them. The government
today has made a significant step forward in preventing rapists using rape pornography to legitimise and strategise their crimes and, more broadly, in challenging the eroticisation of violence against women and girls. I have a
very clear message for Google, Bing, Yahoo and the rest. You have a duty to act on this -- and it is a moral duty. If there are technical obstacles to acting on [search engines], don't just stand by and say nothing can be done; use your great brains to
help overcome them. You're the people who have worked out how to map almost every inch of the Earth from space; who have developed algorithms that make sense of vast quantities of information. Set your greatest brains to work on
this. You are not separate from our society, you are part of our society, and you must play a responsible role in it. We are already looking at the legislative options we have. This is quite simply about obliterating this
disgusting material from the net -- and we will do whatever it takes.'
Offsite Comment: Cameron becomes a bit of an embarrassment on the world stage 22nd July 2013. See
article from
forbes.com
Cameron's Bizarre Warning To Google, Bing and Yahoo Over Child Pornography There are times when I'm not sure that the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, actually understands this technology stuff. An example is this
threat in a TV interview in England today. He's huffing and puffing that if the search engine companies don't do what they're told then they'll be forced to by law.
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Norway is preparing a law to ban internet advertising for sexual services
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| 22nd July 2013
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| See article from
tnp.no
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The Norwegian 'Justice' Ministry is preparing to ban all forms of advertising of sexual services on websites. The ministry is working on the censorship law with the aim to promote a bill to the Parliament in the autumn. Police inspector
Vegard Munthe Ommdal claimed on TV2: We primarily want to prevent human trafficking and pimping. And online advertising is a very important part of the business,
Ommdal thinks advertising on the
internet must be seen as promoting someone else's prostitution.
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The Internet Service Provider's Association Awards
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| 21st
July 2013
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| Missed news from a week ago. See article
from ispa.org.uk
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Dr Julian Huppert MP saw off his party leader and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg MP to win the Internet Hero Award at the 15th ISPA Awards. The winner was decided by ISPA Council, who wanted to commend Dr Huppert for his tireless
campaigning against the Communications Data Bill and for being one of the few MPs who truly understands the internet. As well as the Deputy Prime Minister, he beat PRISM whistle-blower Edward Snowden and cyber-security experts Spamhaus to claim the
prize. This year's Internet Villain is Recep Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minister . In recent unrest he called social media a menace to society and has an extensive record of censorship, online surveillance and blocking. ISPA Council
recognised many states do this, however Turkey should set an example in the region. Both the Hero and Villain shortlists were dominated by state surveillance, a huge issue for the internet industry and society over the last year. The Home
Secretary Rt Hon Theresa May MP was nominated for the overly broad draft Communications Data Bill, also known as the snooper's charter and the American PRISM programme also featuring. Bluecoat who have been selling surveillance software to
unfavourable regimes were also nominated. ISPA Secretary General Nicholas Lansman said: The Hero & Villain Awards have been part of the ISPAs since the first awards in 1999, and Julian Huppert is a worthy
Hero, being sometimes a lone voice advocating the importance of the internet in parliament. Recep Erdogan also deserves his award for the way he has prevented his citizens expressing themselves online he continued.
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Open Rights Group are the first to ask serious questions about how ISP website blocking will be implemented, and who will be responsible for getting it right, and who will publish the rules?
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20th July 2013
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| See article from
openrightsgroup.org See
letter to ISPs from openrightsgroup.org
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Over the past few weeks the Government has held meetings with Internet companies about child protection online. These are designed to prompt more more action to protect children, on the assumption that these companies could and should be doing more.
Sadly the Government has seemed keen to appear as if they are taking tough action, and not so keen on thinking carefully about what their action should be. Policy makers who are pushing for more Internet
filtering for child protection do not take the related practical and technical questions seriously. They tend to throw about ideas for technical interventions such as internet filtering without considering how these would work, or what unintended
consequences they might have. They simply want more done. What that more is, or what it will achieve, seems to be an irrelevant detail. This is despite the Government having run a consultation last year, after which
they settled on a fairly reasonable policy of helping parents make the right choices about filtering. They seem determined to edge towards a stricter default on regime. We have seen no evidence that during the meetings with
internet companies the Government has taken account of any of the broader public policy questions related to the implementation of Internet filtering systems. Along with Index on Censorship, English PEN and Big Brother Watch, we wrote to the Culture
Secretary Maria Miller asking her to invite us to the discussions so these issues could be raised. The Department has subsequently set up a meeting between us and the Minister Ed Vaizey MP. The details are very important. Internet
filtering can easily block more content than it is designed to -- for example, if people do not understand what is being blocked and why, or if sites are incorrectly categorised. People may also easily get around blocking. It can give people a false
sense of security. Making Internet filtering fit multiple devices, ages or beliefs within a household or other setting is almost impossible. And there are other consequences, such as the speed of access or an impact on privacy where traffic or blocking
events are logged. That's why we are putting these questions to ISPs. We will be sending the questions and replies to the relevant policy makers, and will hope to explain to them why we think these are important questions.
Twenty questions for ISPs on Internet filtering systems A. On how the technology works Under the Internet filtering system set up following discussions with the Government
about online safety and child protection: 1. Is any traffic of users who are not opted in to filtering inspected and / or logged? If so, is it logged in a way that links the traffic to a subscriber? What logging will there be of
blocking events? How does this work? 2. Is filtering applied to all forms of connection offered by the ISP (dialup, ADSL, cable, fast fibre connections etc)? 3. Have you estimated the impact of the
through-put of filtering technology on the speed of users' internet access (both for those who are opted in and opted out)? 4. We are concerned about the impact on Internet applications in general as well as web traffic. Does
filtering take place only of HTTP traffic on port 80, or will other traffic be affected? What steps will be taken to avoid interfering with non-HTTP traffic on port 80, for example non-HTTP applications that use this port in order to bypass firewall
restrictions? 5. What impact does the filtering have on end-to-end security measures such as SSL or DNSSEC? 6. Can you guarantee that your networks will not be susceptible to mistaken blocking as a result
of using specific IP addresses for forwarding filtered traffic, for example as seemed to happen in a case involving Wikipedia ? 7. Have you made any estimates on the impact of filtering systems on infrastructure upgrades?
B. On setting up the filtering 8. Are users faced with pre-ticked boxes when choosing to activate filtering? What is the impact on customers who do not have access to or who do not use a web browsers on
a network such as a home broadband connection that is only used for Smart TV video on demand applications? (ie who will not be presented with a web-based set up screen?) 9. How granular are the available choices? Will a household
be able to cater for: a. Multiple ages or a variety of beliefs? b. Can specific sites be unblocked by a user? 10. Have you done user-testing for your opt-in systems? 11. What
information about the filtering is available at the point of sign up? Does it include: a. Detailed information about what types of content are blocked, with examples? b. The providers of their filtering tools, if a third party is
involved? c. Information about the possible problems with and limitations of blocking, with information about how to report problems? 12. What age-verification processes will be in place? How will this work?
13. Is a customer's decision not to activate filtering a one-off decision, or will it have to be periodically repeated? C. On managing problems and mistakes 14. When a site is
blocked, what information is supplied to the end-user about why and how it has been blocked? 15. Are there easy ways to report mistaken blocks, either over-blocking or under-blocking? Are these clear when users encounter a block?
16. Are there easy ways for people to check if URLs are blocked, and will this include a reporting tool for requesting corrections and reclassifications? 17. How will complaints, from both your subscribers
and from owners of sites that are blocked, be dealt with? a. Are there plans in place to train customer service staff for dealing with these reports? b. Are there targets for dealing with mistakes in a timely manner, or estimates
of how long responding to and correcting mistakes will take? c. Will you share error reports and corrections with other ISPs? 18. Have you specified acceptable error rates to suppliers of filtering services? If so, what are they?
19. Have you sought legal opinions relating to liability for incorrect blocks, including both false positives and false negatives? Do you have plans to offer compensation for businesses harmed by blocking errors, for example when
potential customers are unable to access the site? 20. Are there or will there be systematic reviews of the effectiveness and quality of filtering, including reporting on problems and complaints? Is there a process for review and
improvement? Is there or will there be an ombudsman or other oversight body to handle disputes and review performance?
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UK's blocking of file sharing websites descends into a dark secretive world
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| 20th July 2013
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| See article from
torrentfreak.com See also article from
openrightsgroup.org
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The UK High Court has been handing out website blocking injunctions regularly in recent months but despite the supposed transparency of the legal system, obtaining copies of the injunctions has proved impossible. Now the Open Rights Group is
putting pressure on the Court in the hope of being able to publish the content of injunctions for open analysis. Although controversial, the reasons why sites such as The Pirate Bay, KickassTorrents and Movie2K are being blocked are now clear.
Once ISPs have actual knowledge that their services are being used by their subscribers to infringe copyright, they are put on notice by the High Court to block the sites in question. However, it has become somewhat tiresome to learn that
when injunctions are handed down by the High Court to ISPs, they appear to fall into some kind of informational black hole -- fitting perhaps for a document authorizing censorship. To try and find out what these injunctions contain TorrentFreak
previously spoke with one of the leading ISPs who assured us that the documents aren't actually secret. However, when we requested a copy we were told that they couldn't send us one and we would have to go to the Court instead. No luck there -- and the
BPI weren't exactly forthcoming either. Now the Open Rights Group is reporting that it too has been trying to get to the bottom of the website injunction blackout. ORG's Jim Killock says everyone could benefit from their publication. Accountability, fewer errors and less confusion about what is happening should be the result,
he says. Killock reveals that ORG has also asked ISPs to cooperate but they too have been met with reluctance. Possibly [the ISPs] feel that copyright owners asking for the orders may find publication by an ISP provocative. This means we
are obliged to ask the courts for the documents, in order that we can publish and analyse their contents, he explains. But ORG found that the courts didn't want to help either, turning down the group's requests to view the injunctions. They
have done this because, they say, 'judgement has not been entered' or 'service has not been acknowledged'. At present the rules governing access to court documents only permit access to these orders as of right once the litigation has finished, Killock explains.
The courts seem to be treating blocking injunctions as if they were like temporary injunctions made while proceedings are still going on. In fact the injunctions are the end of the section 97A process. Nothing more is intended to happen. With this in mind, ORG have applied to have a procedural judge review the group's requests in order to gain access, at least in the first instance, to the injunctions issued to the ISPs against Fenopy, H33t and KickassTorrents.
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Tumblr introduces site ratings and will hide adult sites from searches
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| 20th July 2013
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| 19th July 2013. See article from tumblr.com
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Is adult-oriented content allowed on Tumblr? Yes, but there are a few things we need you to consider. Tumblr welcomes and encourages all forms of expression. However, we have to be sensitive to the millions of readers and
bloggers from different locations, cultures, and backgrounds with different points of view concerning mature or adult-oriented content. There are a lot of people in our community who would rather not see this stuff and could even get in trouble if they
did! What should I do if my blog contains adult-oriented content? Please respect the choices of people in our community and flag your blog as NSFW or Adult from your blog Settings page.
If you're not sure how you should flag your blog you can leave it unflagged, but keep in mind that it may be flagged automatically. Adult sites will be hidden from Tumblr search and 3rd party searches
Update: Disastrous censorship and PR 20th July 2013. See article from
staff.tumblr.com , thanks to David Well the idea of totally ejecting adult sites from searches, both internal to Tumblir and on Google, is a disaster for bloggers and they soon
let Tumblr know. Tumblr, seemingly admitting to woeful foresight of their announcement have rapidly backtracked. The answer seems to be to scrap the 'adult' option (except for spammy sites designated by Tumblr). So all adult sites can now be
designated as NSFW. Searches are then blocked only to those using 'safe' search. Of course given two rapid policy changes already, then nothing can be taken for sure.
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Ireland will not follow Britain's lead in imposing cheapo automated website blocking
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| 19th July 2013
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| See article from
independent.ie
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Ireland's overnment will not ask local ISPs to block pornography on home broadband connections, Communications Minister Pat Rabbitte has said. This is despite support for the British position from some child-welfare campaigners in Ireland. Rabbitte
said: This isn't something that's being prioritised by the Government here. Illegality is different and if we see an effective strategy against that on our neighbouring island then we might look
at that. But as it is, it's not something we're focusing on as a priority.
His view has been welcomed by Irish Internet Service Provider (ISP) firms and their representatives.
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Malaysian couple in dire trouble after trivial Facebook joke about pork and Ramadan
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| 19th July 2013
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| See article from
huffingtonpost.com
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| Happy Breaking Fast with Bak Kut Teh (a pork dish), aromatic, tasty and appetizing |
Bloggers Alvin Tan and Vivian Lee have been charged and imprisoned without bail in Malaysia after they posted a photo joke for ramadan on their Facebook page. They face up to eight years in prison. The photo in question featured the duo eating
pork stew, bah kuh teh, while greeting fasting Muslims for Ramadan. Inevitably easy offence was taken and the might of the state was invoked to exact retribution. The couple have a bit of history of hassles as they run an erotic blog and a
Youtube channel called Sexcussions with Alvivi . Malaysian authorities have thrown the book at Tan and Lee who have been charged under: a) Section 5 of the Film Censorship Act 2002 for publishing indecent photographs
online. b) 298A Penal Code for promoting enmity between different groups of religion or race and doing acts prejudicial to maintaining harmony by publishing an offensive Ramadan greeting. c) Section 4(1) (c) of the 1948 Sedition Act for
posting seditious material through the offensive greeting.
Tan and Lee pleaded not guilty to the charges, but will be jailed without bail until their next court date on August 23. Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said:
The insolent and impudent act by the young couple who insulted Islam showed that freedom of expression and irresponsible opinion can jeopardise the community.
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Paypal appears to ban sales of products with 'Iranian' in the name
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| 18th July 2013
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| See article from
gigaom.com
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PayPal has apologized for blocking sales of a photojournalism book because it had the word Iranian in the title, saying its sanctions compliance mechanisms aren't supposed to pick up on written materials. The book, entitled Iranian Living Room
, is a product of the Benetton Group's Italian Fabrica facility. A project there saw 15 young Iranian photographers document domestic life at the time of the recent Iranian elections, in order to provide a counterpoint to the street imagery used
by most international media organizations. Fabrica's Dan Hill posted an irate account of Fabrica's abortive efforts to sell the book online. Orders appeared blocked, and it turned out that this was a result of PayPal's internal blacklist --
the word Iranian is on that list, due to the U.S. economic embargo against Iran, so sales couldn't go through. The book has now been whitelisted so that it is not picked up by a somewhat less than sophisticated censorship system based on
banned product names. The Fabrica episode is, it must be said, a fairly minor incident as these things go, and quickly rectified at that. However, it does serve as a reminder of of the various choke points that can be activated in everyday online
activity, whether deliberately or not, in the name of automated compliance.
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| 16th July
2013
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The scourge of the web? See article from edition.cnn.com |
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Indian parliamentary committee looks to banning internet porn
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| 12th July 2013
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| See article
from indiatoday.intoday.in
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An Indian parliamentary committee has decided to look into banning cyber porn amid complaints that it is supposedly distorting and distressing the society. The Committee on Petitions is seeking a ban on cyber pornography by amending the IT
Act, 2000. The committee has sought opinion from stakeholders and public to help formulate its view. Jain priest Vijayratna Sunder Suri and MP Vijay J Darda petitioned that the free sex culture through cyber pornography is distorting and
distressing society: More than two-third of India's population is below 35 years. This large section of the population, which is the hope for the country's future, is getting digressed, distorted and distressed due
to the growing free sex culture through cyber pornography.
The petitioners have blamed cyber porn for what they claim growing problems of psycho-physical nature, including sexually transmitted diseases and sexual deformities among
others. The petition has demanded an amendment to the IT Act so as to make pornography on computer or mobile a crime, attracting severe punishment to the producers, distributors and viewers of such sites.
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Blackberry gives Indian authorities the ability to snoop on mail, chat, messages and website visits
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| 12th July 2013
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| Thanks to Nick See article from
bbc.co.uk
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Blackberry is ready to provide the Indian authorities with a way to intercept consumers' messages sent and received on its platform. The news was revealed by the Times of India, which published part of a leaked government document. It said
officials appeared to have dropped demands that the firm also made it possible to access business emails sent over Blackberry Enterprise Server. The authorities will then be able to:
- track email and email attachments sent over the consumer-version of Blackberry Internet Service (BIS)
- see when chats sent over Blackberry Messenger (BBM) were delivered and read
- monitor which websites were visited
Blackberry has issued a statement confirming its co-operation. This would bring an end to a long-running dispute between the two sides.
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| 12th July 2013
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How Microsoft handed the NSA access to encrypted messages See article from guardian.co.uk |
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European parliament to hold an inquiry into US internet spying
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| 6th
July 2013
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| See article from
indexoncensorship.org
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The European Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee is to hold an inquiry into claims that the United States has been engaged in surveillance of European citizens and diplomats. The inquiry is to report by the end of 2013. The parliament also
passed a resolution expressing serious concern over US surveillance programmes, and condemned spying on EU representations. The parliament also declared its support for the rights of whistleblowers.
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France has already established mass surveillance of phones and internet
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| 5th July 2013
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| See article from
bbc.co.uk
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France's foreign intelligence service intercepts computer and telephone data on a vast scale, like the controversial US Prism programme, according to the French daily Le Monde. It is not clear however whether the DGSE surveillance goes as far as
Prism. So far French officials have not commented on Le Monde's allegations. The DGSE allegedly analyses the metadata - not the contents of e-mails and other communications, but the data revealing who is speaking to whom, when and where.
Other French intelligence agencies allegedly access the data secretly. Connections inside France and between France and other countries are all monitored, Le Monde reports. The operation is outside the law, and beyond any proper supervision
, Le Monde says.
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Daily Mail and YouTube recommend topless music video by Justin Timberlake
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| 5th July 2013
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| See
article from
dailymail.co.uk See video from YouTube
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Justin Timberlake's new video was yanked from YouTube for violating no nudity policies. The singer earlier posted a message on Twitter announcing the debut of the video for his single Tunnel Vision and warned of its nature:
Check out the new video for Tunnel Vision and be ready...it's explicit. -teamJT
The sparsely shot video featured Justin dressed head to toe in sober grey and black outfits from British brand AllSaints.
Justin and long-term collaborator Timbaland are seen ogling a trio of models prancing around topless in nude-coloured thongs. The Daily Mail printed plenty of not quite nudes to get in on the act...And of course you can see the
video for yourself on... er...YouTube.
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Visa and Mastercard deny payment facilities to VPN and anonymising services
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| 4th July 2013
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| See article from
torrentfreak.com
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Following the introduction of restrictions against file-sharing services, Mastercard and Visa have now started to take action against VPN providers. This week, Swedish payment provider Payson cut access to anonymizing services after being ordered
to do so by the credit card companies. VPN provider iPredator is one of the affected customers and founder Peter Sunde says that they are considering legal action to get the service unblocked. Payment providers are increasingly taking
action against sites and services that are linked to copyright infringement. There's an unwritten rule that Mastercard and Visa don't accept file-hosting sites that have an affiliate program and PayPal has thrown out nearly all cyberlockers in recent
months. It now turns out that these policies have carried over to VPN providers and other anonymizing services. Before the weekend customers of the popular Swedish payment service provider Payson received an email stating that VPN services are no
longer allowed to accept Visa and Mastercard payments due to a recent policy change: Payson has restrictions against anonymization (including VPN services). As a result Payson can unfortunately no longer give your
customers the option to finance payments via their cards (VISA or MasterCard).
The new policy went into effect on Monday, leaving customers with a two-day window to find a solution.
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Iran's president elect signals a softer line on web censorship and Islamic dress code
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| 3rd July 2013
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| See article from
guardian.co.uk
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Iran's president-elect Hassan Rouhani has expressed relatively progressive views about civil liberties, freedom of expression and the internet . In an interview in the Iranian media, Rouhani told youth magazine Chelcheragh that he is opposed to
segregation of sexes in society, would work to minimise censorship and believes internet filtering is futile. In the age of digital revolution, one cannot live or govern in a quarantine, he said as he made clear he is opposed to the
authorities' harsh crackdown on Iranians owning satellite dishes. Of internet filtering, Rouhani said some of the measures taken by the authorities to restrict users' access online was not done in good faith and was instead politically motivated:
There are political reasons. They have fears of the freedom people have in online atmosphere, this is why they seek to restrict information. But filtering is incapable of producing any [useful] results.
Supporters of internet filtering should explain whether they've successfully restricted access to information? Which important piece of news has filtering been able to black out in recent years? Filtering has
not even stopped people from accessing unethical [a reference to pornographic] websites. Widespread online filtering will only increase distrust between people and the state.
Rouhani also pledged to minimise censorship of artistic and
cultural works. In his interview, Rouhani said he opposed segregation of men and women, including at universities, and criticised the politicians who are against allowing women to enter stadiums to watch football matches along with men. He also explained
that he opposed the religious police acting as fashion police by enforcing islamic dress codes. He also said that a women without a hijab is not necessarily without virtue.
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Judge Issues Temporary Restraining Order Blocking Enforcement of Dangerous New Jersey Law
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2nd July 2013
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| See article
from eff.org
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A judge has issued a temporary restraining order blocking a dangerous a provision of a recently-passed New Jersey statute that would have left online service providers legally on the hook for user-generated content. The restraining order blocks
enforcement of the new law until the court hears additional arguments in support of a permanent injunction in early August. EFF represents the Internet Archive in this legal challenge to the law, which aims to make online service providers
criminally liable for publishing or disseminating certain third party materials. Backpage.com separately filed suit against the law. The New Jersey law is the latest in well-intentioned but shortsighted attempts to combat online ads for child
prostitution with overbroad and vague laws that could seriously constrict the free flow of information online. This statue of the Human Trafficking Prevention, Protection, and Treatment Act ) could impose stiff penalties, up to 20 years in prison
and steep fines, on ISPs, Internet cafes, and libraries that indirectly cause the publication, dissemination, or display of content that contains even an implicit offer of a commercial sex act if the content includes an image of a minor.
One consequence of such vague language is that service providers would feel enormous pressure to block access to broad swaths of otherwise protected material in order to minimize the risk of such harsh penalties. The Internet Archive, which
currently maintains an archive of over 300 billion documents in support of its mission is to archive the World Wide Web and other digital materials, has particular reason to be concerned if online providers could be pressured in this way.
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We demand the U.S. Congress reveal the full extent of the NSA's spying programs.
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| 1st July 2013
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| See Petition: Stop Watching Us from
optin.stopwatching.us
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Stop Watching Us. The revelations about the National Security Agency's surveillance apparatus, if true, represent a stunning abuse of our basic rights. We demand the U.S. Congress reveal the full extent of the NSA's spying
programs. Sign the Petition: Stop Watching Us Dear Members of Congress, We write to express our concern
about recent reports published in the Guardian and the Washington Post, and acknowledged by the Obama Administration, which reveal secret spying by the National Security Agency (NSA) on phone records and Internet activity of people in the United States.
The Washington Post and the Guardian recently published reports based on information provided by an intelligence contractor showing how the NSA and the FBI are gaining broad access to data collected by nine of the
leading U.S. Internet companies and sharing this information with foreign governments. As reported, the U.S. government is extracting audio, video, photographs, e-mails, documents, and connection logs that enable analysts to track a person's movements
and contacts over time. As a result, the contents of communications of people both abroad and in the U.S. can be swept in without any suspicion of crime or association with a terrorist organization. Leaked reports also
published by the Guardian and confirmed by the Administration reveal that the NSA is also abusing a controversial section of the PATRIOT Act to collect the call records of millions of Verizon customers. The data collected by the NSA includes every call
made, the time of the call, the duration of the call, and other "identifying information" for millions of Verizon customers, including entirely domestic calls, regardless of whether those customers have ever been suspected of a crime. The Wall
Street Journal has reported that other major carriers, including AT&T and Sprint, are subject to similar secret orders. This type of blanket data collection by the government strikes at bedrock American values of
freedom and privacy. This dragnet surveillance violates the First and Fourth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, which protect citizens' right to speak and associate anonymously, guard against unreasonable searches and seizures, and protect their right
to privacy. We are calling on Congress to take immediate action to halt this surveillance and provide a full public accounting of the NSA's and the FBI's data collection programs. We call on Congress to immediately and
publicly:
- Enact reform this Congress to Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act, the state secrets privilege, and the FISA Amendments Act to make clear that blanket surveillance of the Internet activity and phone records of any person residing
in the U.S. is prohibited by law and that violations can be reviewed in adversarial proceedings before a public court;
- Create a special committee to investigate, report, and reveal to the public the extent of this
domestic spying. This committee should create specific recommendations for legal and regulatory reform to end unconstitutional surveillance;
- Hold accountable those public officials who are found to be responsible for
this unconstitutional surveillance.
Thank you for your attention to this matter. Sign the Petition: Stop Watching Us
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| 1st July
2013
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BBC follow up the latest research and find that much quoted estimates of 30-37% of all websites being porn are bollox. 4% looks closer to the mark See article
from bbc.co.uk |
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