Daily Archives: September 18, 2014

Congress Knew NSA was Spying on BJP – Dr Subramanian Swamy – Video

Posted: September 18, 2014 at 8:48 am


Congress Knew NSA was Spying on BJP - Dr Subramanian Swamy
Congress Knew NSA was Spying on BJP - Dr Subramanian Swamy Video Courtesy: Connect: http://www.facebook.com/dubramanianswamy http://twitter.com/Swamy39 Chann...

By: Dr. Subramanian Swamy

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Congress Knew NSA was Spying on BJP - Dr Subramanian Swamy - Video

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Snowden Denuncia a la NSA – Video

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Snowden Denuncia a la NSA
Edward Snowden Denuncia NSA Se que este video cae mal o bien. Se que las agencias del imperio lo ven. Se que puede traer consecuencias nefastas para mi vida. Se que lucho en esta red social...

By: BustaFilms1

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DANCEHALL WORKSHOP JR BLACK EAGLES NSA HUMAN DANCE SCHOOL WITH MYLANA – Video

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DANCEHALL WORKSHOP JR BLACK EAGLES NSA HUMAN DANCE SCHOOL WITH MYLANA
Samedi 11 octobre 2014 de 13h 14h retrouvez JR et Mylana pour un stage dancehall solidaire en faveur du danseur Mundo:) Prix: 30 reservations obligatoires au 06 20 10 55 62 http://www.nsahuma...

By: Mylana Nsa Humandance

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The Fifth Amendment Eminent Domain – Video

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The Fifth Amendment Eminent Domain
For Mr. Carter #39;s Government class Idaho.

By: Justin Myler

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The Fifth Amendment Eminent Domain - Video

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Top 5 Constitution-Related Searches at FindLaw.com

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You probably already knew this, but we have a pretty good idea of what our users are searching for. Sure, it's a little creepy when Google knows your question before you even type it into the box. We don't get that personal, but we do pay attention to frequently searched terms in order to better understand -- and serve -- your needs.

Since today is Constitution Day, we thought we'd share the Top 5 FindLaw.com search terms related to the U.S. Constitution. You'll also find valuable resources for each topic listed below, but feel free to search for more:

1. "Gun Laws" (2nd Amendment) -- Regardless of your personal beliefs, we can all agree that an epidemic of gun-related tragedies has kept this issue on the front burner of our collective conscience. Although the right to bear arms is a federal guarantee, many state laws provide varying restrictions on gun ownership and use. You can learn more about these laws here:

2. "Miranda Rights" (5th Amendment and 6th Amendment) -- Nearly every crime show on TV will have an utterance of the words, "You have the right to remain silent..." Those are referred to as our Miranda rights, named for the U.S. Supreme Court case (Miranda v. Arizona) that requires police to inform arrestees of their constitutional rights. Check out these resources to learn more:

3. "Supreme Court Cases" -- The U.S. Supreme Court is where the constitutionality of laws is tested. Quite a few of our users simply typed "Supreme Court cases" into the search box, but there's a much easier way to find High Court opinions, news, and analysis of both recent and historical cases:

4. "Search and Seizure" (4th Amendment) -- Few constitutional provisions have been challenged and clarified as often as the Fourth Amendment, which protects citizens from unreasonable search and seizure by the police. Searches and seizures have a broad impact on criminal rights and procedures, such as the admissibility of evidence and the legality of arrests.

5. "Due Process" (5th Amendment and 14th Amendment) -- To honor "due process" is to follow the proper course of formal legal proceedings, carried out consistently, fairly, and in line with current laws and regulations. While the Fifth Amendment prohibits the arbitrary denial of life, liberty, or property by the federal government, the Fourteenth Amendment extends these protections to all U.S. citizens under all jurisdictions within the country.

It's hard to believe that a document signed exactly 227 years ago today is not only still valid, but continues to serve as the cornerstone of this great experiment we call the United States of America. FindLaw may not have been around as long as the U.S. Constitution, but we're always here to serve you.

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Top 5 Constitution-Related Searches at FindLaw.com

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Young Guns – Video

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Young Guns
In honor of Christopher Bizilj, Charlie Vacca, Michelle Ferguson-Montgomery, the Idaho and Missouri legislatures, and the Second Amendment.

By: LooseMeatz

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Young Guns - Video

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Ways To Memorize The First Amendment – Video

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Ways To Memorize The First Amendment

By: College Courses

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Ways To Memorize The First Amendment - Video

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Episode 20- Clip 1- Hartford Shooting and the First Amendment – Video

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Episode 20- Clip 1- Hartford Shooting and the First Amendment

By: Summary Judgment Talk Show

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Episode 20- Clip 1- Hartford Shooting and the First Amendment - Video

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Volokh Conspiracy: Texas highest criminal court strikes down improper photography statute

Posted: at 8:46 am

Im delighted to report that yesterday the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals handed down Ex parte Thompson (Tex. Ct. Crim. App. Sept. 17, 2014) (8-to-1, with Judge Meyers dissenting without opinion). This was a UCLA First Amendment Amicus Brief Clinic case, in which my student Samantha Booth and I wrote an amicus brief on behalf of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. (Many thanks again, by the way, to Cam Barker (YetterColeman LLP) for all his help as local counsel.)

The courts opinion is a victory for the right to take photographs in public even when a statute barring such photograph is limited to photography of people without their consent and with intent to arouse or gratify sexual desire, but of course equally when the photographs lack such an intention. The court struck down the Texas improper photography statute, which read,

A person commits an offense if the person:

(1) photographs or by videotape or other electronic means records a visual image of another at a location that is not a bathroom or private dressing room:

(A) without the other persons consent; and

(B) with intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person.

Heres a quick summary of the courts reasoning:

1. Taking photographs in public places is generally constitutionally protected, because photographs regardless of their artistic merits are generally protected expression, and the act that creates the end product is likewise protected:

The camera is essentially the photographers pen or paintbrush. Using a camera to create a photograph or video is like applying pen to paper to create a writing or applying brush to canvas to create a painting. In all of these situations, the process of creating the end product cannot reasonably be separated from the end product for First Amendment purposes. This is a situation where the regulation of a medium inevitably affects communication itself. We conclude that a persons purposeful creation of photographs and visual recordings is entitled to the same First Amendment protection as the photographs and visual recordings themselves.

2. This First-Amendment-protected conduct doesnt lose its protection even when the photographer is intending to arouse or gratify sexual desires:

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Volokh Conspiracy: Texas highest criminal court strikes down improper photography statute

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Guns, drugs and freedom: the great dark net debate

Posted: at 8:46 am

As modest as they appeared, these three men have become known as the people who in that darkened conference room in 2004 unleashed the Tor anonymity network, one of the most controversial phenomena in the history of the internet.

An acronym for The Onion Router, Tor bounces data and messages through as many as 5,000 other computers, known as nodes or relays, adding layers of encryption to the data like skins on an onion, until it is virtually impossible to discern the original users location and identity.

And although it has positive applications, especially in repressive regimes such as Iran and China, where pro-democracy activists use it to publicise human rights abuses and foment dissent, it is also used by many thousands of people to trade guns, drugs, stolen goods and child pornography. It has been implicated in hundreds of cases of fraud, identity theft and paedophilia. Remarkably, though, the US Navy continues to provide most of its funding.

When we started working on Tor, we didnt sit back and think too much about the implications of privacy, security and anonymity, says Sylverson, on the phone from the US Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, DC. The reason for our research was to allow US government employees to go to public websites to gather information, without anybody knowing that there was somebody from the Navy looking for this stuff.

To guarantee anonymity, Tor had to have mass appeal and so the software was designed to be open-source, meaning that the source code could be distributed and developed by anybody. It had to be picked up by the public and used. This was fundamental, says Sylverson. If we created an anonymous network that was only being used by the Navy, then it would be obvious that anything popping out or going in was going to and from the Navy.

Weapons for sale on the Tor-accessed site Armory (Flickr)

Every additional ordinary user, he says, enhances the security and protection that the network is designed to offer to Navy employees, and is, in a way, their payment.

Fast-forward to 2014, and that attitude seems at best naive, at worst willfully negligent. Sites that are blocked by most internet service providers, including those peddling hardcore child pornography, are accessible using Tor and available to browse following some simple steps well within the grasp of most computer-users.

Each page can take up to 30 seconds to load, but that aside, when I log on to the network on a Monday afternoon after downloading the Tor browser, I find it easy to access a wealth of illegal goods and services, ranging from the appalling to the ridiculous.

Gun Grave, for instance, offers a selection of weapons including a mint condition M4 semi-automatic rifle that can be shipped worldwide. Chances are if you are looking for it we can find it, the vendor writes. Evidently, there is a history here. Further down the listing, he elaborates: "We have had 2 orders for 3 items seized recently and rather then work with us according to our partial refund policy the buyers decided to leave negative feedback and try to extort us with threats of negative forum comments.... WE WILL NOT BE EXTORTED!!!!!! Thank you."

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Guns, drugs and freedom: the great dark net debate

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