According to WikiLeaks, this civil action "issued by the Superior Court, County of Santa Clara, as part of a 'libel tourism' action taken by non-US property developers, demands detailed information about the operators of 'tcijournal @ gmail.com.' The account is the main email address of the TCI Journal, the most influential journal covering the Turks & Caicos Islands.. "A trail of evidence dug up by the TCI Journal, a UK commission of inquiry, and others, showed that foreign property developers were giving millions in secret loans and payments to senior Islander politicians, including an alleged $500,000 cash payment to the Island's now former Premier, Michael Misick. The link for this article located at IT Wire is no longer available. . 'A trail of evidence dug up by the TCI Journal, a UK commission of inquiry, and others, showed that . according, wikileaks, civil, action, 'issued, superior, court, county, santa, clara. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The High Court has ordered 10 ISPs to hand over the customer details of 150 individuals accused of illegally sharing and downloading desktop software on the web. The illegal file-sharers were identified after a 12-month covert investigation by the Federation Against Software Theft (Fast), called Operation Tracker. . The individuals all use false names but Fast has now secured the court orders that will force the internet service providers to hand over the full personal details - including names, addresses and dates of birth - of the 150 individuals. The link for this article located at Silicon.com is no longer available. . The individuals all use false names but Fast has now secured the court orders that will force the in. court, ordered, customer, details, individuals, accused. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
There has been a lot of talk of late about how the Federal Government is going to step in and make us all conform to computer security standards as a matter of law. Yet, it is hard to escape the creeping feeling that this same Federal Government has very little understanding of computer security. If CERT is the Federal idea of a central security clearinghouse, then the security community already largely sees it as a humorless joke. But perhaps even more frightening is how incompetant they are at securing their own networks. Perhaps its comes from the fact that their own money isn't involved -- but Federal legislation will have the same problem. . . .. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia late yesterday ordered the Interior Department to sever Internet connections at nine agencies, again finding fault with the department's systems security. Judge Royce C. Lamberth included this latest disconnection mandate in a preliminary injunction order in the case of Cobell v. Norton. The decision followed a determination in a linked opinion Lamberth issued yesterday that concluded Interior's system security upgrades, procedures and plans fail to protect American Indian trust data. Interior spokesman Dan Dubray said late yesterday that department officials still must review the court's latest order and have no comment yet. Meanwhile, senior Interior officials were at a hearing yesterday afternoon at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit attempting to get Lamberth removed from the case, arguing he is biased, Dubray said. Lamberth barred Interior from reconnecting any systems still down since the court's December 2001 order shuttering virtually all Interior Internet links (Click for GCN story). He also specifically ordered Interior to immediately disconnect Net links for systems at: # Bureau of Indian Affairs # Bureau of Land Management # Bureau of Reclamation # Fish and Wildlife Service # Minerals Management Service # National Business Center # Office of the Inspector General # Office of the Special Trustee # Office of Surface Mining. The link for this article located at gcn.com is no longer available. . The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia late yesterday ordered the Interior Department . there, about, federal, government, going. . Anthony Pell
Privacy advocates have won another round in their fight to gain access to more information about the FBI's Carnivore e-mail surveillance system. A federal judge this week ordered the FBI to expand its search for records about Carnivore, also known as . . . . Privacy advocates have won another round in their fight to gain access to more information about the FBI's Carnivore e-mail surveillance system. A federal judge this week ordered the FBI to expand its search for records about Carnivore, also known as DCS1000, technology that is installed at Internet service providers to monitor e-mail from criminal suspects. The court denied a motion for summary judgment and ordered the FBI to produce within 60 days "a further search" of its records pertaining to Carnivore as well as a device called EtherPeek, which manages network traffic. The FBI has defended Carnivore by assuring the public that it only captures e-mail and other online information authorized for seizure in a court order, but the Electronic Privacy Information Center ( EPIC) has voiced concerns over potential abuse. EPIC sued the FBI, the investigative arm of the Justice Department, in July 2000 under the Freedom of Information Act so it could examine Carnivore-related documents. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Privacy advocates have won another round in their fight to gain access to more information about the. privacy, advocates, another, round, their, fight, information, about. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A federal judge has ordered the FBI to set a timetable for responding to a privacy group's request for details of Carnivore, a tool designed to capture e-mail messages in a criminal investigation. . A federal judge has ordered the FBI to set a timetable for responding to a privacy group's request for details of Carnivore, a tool designed to capture e-mail messages in a criminal investigation. The link for this article located at PCWorld.com is no longer available. . A federal judge has ordered the FBI to set a timetable for responding to a privacy group's request f. federal, judge, ordered, timetable, responding, privacy, group's, request. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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