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Showing posts with label Internet freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet freedom. Show all posts

NSA Nightmare Scenario Comes True: Agency Planned To Use Spy Technology To Smear 'Radicalizers' - Logged Online 'Sex Activity'


Whistleblower Edward Snowden
Whistleblower Edward Snowden: Revelations from documents
leaked by the former NSA contractor continues to shock and
amaze. (Illustration: DonkeyHotey)
"It's exactly this kind of activity that has so many people concerned about the NSA. They're clearly not just spying on terrorist communications for the sake of preventing an attack. Now they're directly talking about using private information, like the fact that someone surfs porn or is 'attracted to fame' to do character assassinations of people they dislike."


NSA Spied On Porn Habits Of 'Radicalizers,' Planned To Use Details To Embarrass Them (via Techdirt)
The latest report on leaked Snowden docs from Glenn Greenwald (along with Ryan Gallagher and Ryan Grim at the Huffington Post) shows how the NSA had a plan to use the porn surfing habits of certain people they didn't like to discredit them. If this…






Free Expression, Surveillance, and the Fight Against Impunity

Internet Surveillance. (Illustration: Mike Licht)
Internet Surveillance. (Illustration: Mike Licht)
By Danny O'Brien
Journalists, bloggers and others who speak out against the powerful risk terrible repercussions for their work. Around the world, they face physical intimidation, violent attacks, and even murder for speaking out.

When such crimes are committed against those who exercise their right to free speech, the perpetrators all too often go unpunished. Those who are meant to enforce the law turn a blind eye. The oppressors can act with absolute impunity.

Every November 23rd, free speech organizations around the world draw attention to these travesties of justice in a Day To End Impunity. The number of uninvestigated crimes and unsolved murders of journalists makes for depressing reading—as does the slow but inexorable increase in victims who are targeted for their online work. Since 1993, the Committee to Protect Journalists have recorded the deaths of twenty-nine online reporters who were murdered for their work. Seventeen of those crimes went unsolved and unpunished.


But in a digital world, it's not just crimes of physical violence that can chill speech. The spread of surveillance technology means that crimes against privacy can be used to intimidate or limit the work of free speech, too.

Investigative reporter Khadija Ismayilova has been a constant irritant to the ruling cliques of Azerbaijan, exposing corruption and graft in the very highest levels of government. Shortly after CNBC reported on her investigations into the wealth of the family of President Ilham Aliyev, intimate videos recorded by a surveillance camera hidden in her bedroom were distributed online. It was a clear attempt to discredit her.

Those who planted that camera were never punished. Instead, Ismayilova herself has forced by a local court to sweep the streets of her country, completing a 220 hour community service punishment for attending a peaceful protest in Baku.

In Venezuela and Russia, opposition reporters' private phone conversations are selectively played on the state media. In Russia, lawyer and blogger Alexei Navalny found a surveillance device in his home.

In the United States, PEN American Center has documented the effect of apparently uncontrolled surveillance on reporters and writers in the United States. Elsewhere, agents of the "Five Eyes" governments are apparently spying on the internet traffic of users in other countries, in direct contravention of local laws, and with complete impunity.

Surveillance Center: Rouen, France.
Surveillance Center: Rouen, France. (Photo: Frédéric BISSON)
Crimes against privacy are a small but growing part of the selective lawlessness that is deployed against writers and creators in order to silence them. Surveillance is a more shadowy form of lawlessness than, for instance, the vicious and unresolved mass murder of 32 journalists in Sri Lanka in 2009, which the Day against Impunity memorializes. But, in a century where governments have conspired to weaken privacy protections online, and have chosen to diminish the illegality and immorality of ubiquitous surveillance, its specter will only grow in power and importance.

Free speech needs privacy. Unlawful surveillance against writers and speakers must be investigated and punished, and never excused or ignored. We cannot let a culture of impunity grow around crimes of surveillance.

To find out how you can help in the fight against impunity, see the Day Against Impunity website.

Is BP 'trolling' its Facebook Critics?: Critics Using BP America's Facebook Page Allege They Have Been Harassed

Has BP hired internet "trolls" to threaten critics of its handling of the 2010 oil disaster? 
Trolls at The Hobbit World Premiere in Wellington, NZ.
Trolls at The Hobbit World Premiere in Wellington, NZ.
(Photo: Tristan Schmurr)
| 20 Nov 2013 18:20
BP has been accused of hiring internet "trolls" to purposefully attack, harass, and sometimes threaten people who have been critical of how the oil giant has handled its disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. The oil firm hired the international PR company Ogilvy & Mather to run the BP America Facebook page during the oil disaster, which released at least 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf in what is to date the single largest environmental disaster in US history.

The page was meant to encourage interaction with BP, but when people posted comments that were critical of how BP was handling the crisis, they were often attacked, bullied, and sometimes directly threatened.

"Marie" was deeply concerned by the oil spill, and began posting comments on the BP America Facebook page. Today, she asks that she remain anonymous out of what she described to Al Jazeera as "fear for my personal safety should the BP trolls find out that I am the whistleblower in this case".

READ MORE...

China: New Press Crackdown - Reuters, Bloomberg Reporters Banned, NY TImes Website Blocked

Things are about to get tougher in China for the NY Times (via GlobalPost)
HONG KONG — If you’re a reporter covering China, you quickly learn that there are a few big red buttons that you aren’t supposed to push. Three of them start with “T” — Tibet, Taiwan, and Tiananman. Another one, slightly smaller, says “…

Internet Freedom to Be Limited and Copyright Laws Re-written By Secret Trade Deal

"The Trans-Pacific Partnership would extend the monopoly rights of companies like Monsanto, which has genetic patents over wheat and corn; extend the ability of Disney to criminally prosecute people for downloading films, and prosecute Internet service providers."  -Julian Assange

By Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzales, DemocracyNow!
WikiLeaks has published the secret text to part of the biggest U.S. trade deal in history, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). For the past several years, the United States and 12 Pacific Rim nations have been negotiating behind closed doors on the sweeping agreement. A 95-page draft of a TPP chapter released by WikiLeaks on Wednesday details agreements relating to patents, copyright, trademarks and industrial design — showing their wide-reaching implications for Internet services, civil liberties, publishing rights and medicine accessibility. DemocracyNow! hosts a debate on the TPP between Bill Watson, a trade policy analyst at the Cato Institute, and Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch.

Full Transcript