Monthly Archives: May 2014

Snowdens First Move Against the NSA Was a Party in Hawaii

Posted: May 21, 2014 at 8:47 am

Edward Snowden. Photo: Barton Gellman for The Washington Post, via Getty

It was December 11, 2012, and in a small art space behind a furniture store in Honolulu, NSA contractor Edward Snowden was working to subvert the machinery of global surveillance.

Snowden was not yet famous. His blockbuster leaks were still six months away, but the man destined to confront world leaders on a global stage was addressing a much smaller audience that Sunday evening. He was leading a local Crypto Party, teaching less than two dozen Hawaii residents how to encrypt their hard drives and use the internet anonymously.

He introduced himself as Ed, says technologist and writer Runa Sandvik, who co-presented with Snowden at the event, and spoke about the experience for the first time with WIRED. We talked for a bit before everything started. And I remember asking where he worked or what he did, and he didnt really want to tell.

The grassroots crypto party movement began in 2011 with a Melbourne, Australia-based activist who goes by Asher Wolf. The idea was for technologists versed in software like Tor and PGP to get together with activists, journalists, and anyone else with a real-life need for those tools and show them the ropes. By the end of 2012, thered been more than 1,000 such parties in countries around the world, by Wolfs count. They were non-political and open to anyone.

Dont exclude anybody, Wolf says. Invite politicians. Invite people you wouldnt necessarily expect. It was about being practical. By the end of the session, they should have Tor installed and be able to use OTR and PGP.

The site of Edward Snowdens December, 2012 Crypto Party. Image: Google Street View

That Snowden organized such an event himself while still an NSA contract worker speaks volumes about his motives. Since the Snowden revelations began in June 2013, the whistleblower has been accused in editorial pages, and even the halls of Congress, of being a spy for China or Russia. A recent Wall Street Journal column argues that Snowden might have been working for the Russians and Chinese at the same time. [O]nly a handful of the secrets had anything to do with domestic surveillance by the government and most were of primary value to an espionage operation.

For the most part, these attacks have bounced harmlessly off Snowden, deflected by the Teflon of his well-managed public appearances and the self-evident risk and sacrifice he took on. One notable exception came last month, when Snowden submitted a video question to a televised town hall with Russian president Vladamir Putin; his question to Putin about Russias surveillance apparatus came across as a softball, and for a moment Snowden looked like a prop in Putins stage show.

But regardless of what you think of his actions, Snowdens intentions are harder to doubt when you know that even before he leaked hundreds of thousands of documents to expose the surveillance world, he spent two hours calmly teaching 20 of his neighbors how to protect themselves from it. Even as he was thinking globally, he was acting locally. Its like coming home to find the director of Greenpeace starting a mulch pit in your backyard.

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Snowdens First Move Against the NSA Was a Party in Hawaii

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Christie: I knew nothing about plot – Video

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Christie: I knew nothing about plot
David Wildstein invokes his Fifth amendment rights in response questions about the New Jersey bridge scandal. David Wildstein invokes his Fifth amendment rights in response to questions...

By: Alexandria Foster

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Christie: I knew nothing about plot - Video

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Judge Says NSA Phone Surveillance Likely Unconstitutional – Video

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Judge Says NSA Phone Surveillance Likely Unconstitutional
A federal judge says the NSA #39;s practice of collecting phone records en masse violates the Fourth Amendment.

By: Devran Hakan

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Judge Says NSA Phone Surveillance Likely Unconstitutional - Video

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Trevor Stewart – V18 – AUDIO – THE RACIAL-NETWORK & THE SECOND AMENDMENT – Video

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Trevor Stewart - V18 - AUDIO - THE RACIAL-NETWORK THE SECOND AMENDMENT

By: Trevor Stewart

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Trevor Stewart - V18 - AUDIO - THE RACIAL-NETWORK & THE SECOND AMENDMENT - Video

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February 28, 2013 Rally in Defense of the Second Amendment, Albany, NY 6 – Video

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February 28, 2013 Rally in Defense of the Second Amendment, Albany, NY 6
In this video WeAreChange visits Connecticut #39;s capitol building to speak with Americans rallying in support of the 2nd amendment. CT Gun Rally April 5th, 201...

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February 28, 2013 Rally in Defense of the Second Amendment, Albany, NY 6 - Video

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Chipotle Gun Ban Irks Second Amendment Activists – Video

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Chipotle Gun Ban Irks Second Amendment Activists
Chipotle will ban guns after open carry activists met at one of their Texas restaurants this past weekend raising concern amongst gun control groups. These groups have responded to the incident...

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Chipotle Gun Ban Irks Second Amendment Activists - Video

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First Amendment Radio Judea and Samaria – Video

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First Amendment Radio Judea and Samaria
Ezra Ridgley appears on the show "Barry Chamish Presents" on "First Amendment Radio" Ezra talks about the new Documentary by the Jewish Heritage Project. htt...

By: Ezra Ridgley

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First Amendment Radio Judea and Samaria - Video

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Kids speak at OAS – Video

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Kids speak at OAS
Child comments on his other friends being afraid to come down and exercise their first amendment rights.

By: ZFG Street-Art

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Kids speak at OAS - Video

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Copeland's rights They were not violated

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Dear readers, we need to review this First Amendment thing again.

Since former Wolfeboro Police Commissioner Bob Copeland admitted calling President Barack Obama the n-word in public (Copeland resigned under pressure this week), some have claimed that demanding his resignation violates his right to free speech. Thats not how the First Amendment works.

Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, the amendment states. The 14th Amendment then applied that restriction to the states as well. Copeland was an elected government official who said something awful (he called President Obama the n-word), stuck by it, and doubled down on it. The Founding Fathers would hardly have objected to the idea that the people should hold elected officials accountable for what they say.

The First Amendment is not a shield to deflect all barbs tossed in response to ones words. It protects against government censorship and punishment, not the reproach of the people. Copeland remains free to call people names as often as he wishes. And the people of Wolfeboro remain free to hold their elected officials to higher standards of behavior.

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Copeland's rights They were not violated

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Food Labeling Laws Could Be Undermined By First Amendment Court Challenge

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If the court sides with the meat industry, the fallout could have far-reaching consequences, as it would potentially undermine a wide range of labeling laws, particularly COOL regulations, which require companies to disclose where their products and ingredients are produced and manufactured through the display of packaging labels. Most American consumers are familiar with common COOL labels like "Made in China" or "product of the United States" from everything from sneakers to frozen hamburger patties, even if they are not aware of how exactly they are regulated.

The meat industry made its case during Mondays en banc review -- an uncommon type of proceeding conducted before all 11 judges on the court rather than the typical three-judge panel --that the COOL laws as revised in 2013 infringe on companies First Amendment rights by compelling speech.

Chief Judge Merrick Garland said that in order to decide that First Amendment rights were being violated under the regulations, the court would have to strike down at least half a dozen statutes on the books since the 1930s, according to Politico. He also pointed out that many products far beyond the scope of the meat industry, including the razor he shaved with Monday morning, are required to display COOL labels, Politico reported.

As such, a decision by the court that the COOL labels infringe on companies free speech rights could mean changes for industries that rest far beyond the food realm.

A three-judge panel of the court handed down a decision on March 28 suggesting that the en banc hearing on just the First Amendment issues be held at a future date, but otherwise affirming a district courts decision not to allow a preliminary injunction against the 2013 COOL laws. The case is known as American Meat Institute vs. U.S. Department of Agriculture.

We suggest that the full court hear this case en banc to resolve for the circuit whether, under Zauderer, government interests in addition to correcting deception can sustain a commercial speech mandate that compels firms to disclose purely factual and non-controversial information, the three-judge panel wrote in the March 28 decision.

The National Farmers Union and other American farmers and food production industry groups like the U.S. Cattlemens Association and the Consumer Federation of America continue to support the laws, which provide clarity about food origins.

The information required by the regulation to be provided is factual and noncontroversial, NFU President Roger Johnson said, according to the Ohios Country Journal agricultural publication. I am hopeful that the full Circuit will affirm the panels prior decision and continue to deny the preliminary injunction requested by appellants.

But the American Meat Institute has consistently argued that the laws will have serious negative impacts on the meat industry.

It is incomprehensible that USDA would finalize a controversial rule that stands to harm American agriculture, when comments on the proposal made clear how deeply and negatively it will impact U.S. meat companies and livestock producers, AMI Senior Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and General Counsel Mark Dopp said last year. This rubber stamping of the proposal begs the question of the integrity of the process: many people spoke, but no one at USDA listened.

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Food Labeling Laws Could Be Undermined By First Amendment Court Challenge

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