A test case fought by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has shown the extent to which the US government is willing to bend the law in its quest for data it wants. Indymedia is a news aggregator for left-wing and libertarian writers and on 30 January one of its volunteer administrators Kristina Clair received a grand jury subpoena from the Southern District of Indiana federal court.. The subpoena demanded all IP traffic to and from the site for a particular date, including "IP addresses, times, and any other identifying information". It also included a gagging order to prevent Indymedia from discussing the request. The subpoena was made under the Stored Communications Act (SCA) but after Indymedia went to the EFF for help it discovered that the SCA does not allow such broad searches, or the gagging order that accompanied the request.. The American Civil Liberties Union exposes state intrusion on privacy through a lawsuit aimed at Twitter.. government data collection, privacy issues, Indymedia subpoena, EFF legal fight. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Without required approval, U.S. prosecutors sent a subpoena to MSNBC demanding a reporter's notes, e-mails and other information as part of an investigation into a nomadic young hacker who acknowledged breaking into computers at The New York Times earlier this year.. . .. Without required approval, U.S. prosecutors sent a subpoena to MSNBC demanding a reporter's notes, e-mails and other information as part of an investigation into a nomadic young hacker who acknowledged breaking into computers at The New York Times earlier this year. The subpoena, which was withdrawn weeks later, also demanded any similar material from MSNBC involving another journalist who contacted the Times on behalf of the newspaper hacker after the break-in, then wrote about it for an online publication. Under guidelines from the Justice Department, Attorney General John Ashcroft or his deputy must personally approve any subpoenas sent to journalists, and Barbara Comstock, director of the Office of Public Affairs, must review such requests. But senior Justice officials on Ashcroft's staff at headquarters said they were unfamiliar with the MSNBC subpoena, and Ms. Comstock said she did not review it, officials said. The link for this article located at digitalMASS is no longer available. . Without required approval, U.S. prosecutors sent a subpoena to MSNBC demanding a reporter's notes, e. without, required, approval, prosecutors, subpoena, msnbc, demanding, reporter's, notes. . Anthony Pell
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.