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Daily Archives: January 31, 2015
zyXEL nsa 210 fakta – Video
Posted: January 31, 2015 at 4:48 am
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NSA – Siber Srlar – Video
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NSA - Siber Srlar
NSA nedir, kimdir, nasl alr, grev ve sorumluluklar nelerdir, neler yapar vb. konular hakkndaki detaylar bu videoyu izleyerek bilgi sahibi olacaksnz. http://h4cktimes.com/anali...
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NSA - Siber Srlar - Video
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Who’s Afraid of the NSA? | Learn Liberty – Video
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Who #39;s Afraid of the NSA? | Learn Liberty
Watch the full debate here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ORm4fSQNX8 Should we be scared of the NSA? Are they watching what we do online? Ronald Sievert...
By: Learn Liberty
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Who's Afraid of the NSA? | Learn Liberty - Video
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Legendary Hacker Reveals Regin Trojan as NSA Tool – Video
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Legendary Hacker Reveals Regin Trojan as NSA Tool
Alex talks with John Draper, the legendary hacker known as Captain Crunch for his phone phreaking antics, about the NSA #39;s capability of cracking PGP, the Snowden revelations, as well...
By: TheAlexJonesChannel
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Legendary Hacker Reveals Regin Trojan as NSA Tool - Video
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"NSA: The New Stasi Agency" – Video
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"NSA: The New Stasi Agency"
Interview with Bill Binney (long version) (sorry for the bad tape between 1:20 and 1:45) Binney was an NSA insider and turned whistle-blower because of his concerns for the direction this...
By: Hanz Heinrich
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"NSA: The New Stasi Agency" - Video
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Lt. Gov. Reeves on Second Amendment protections, recognizing military service – Video
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Lt. Gov. Reeves on Second Amendment protections, recognizing military service
Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves outlines his plans to reduce conceal carry permit fees and recognize military training for certain firearm permits in the 2015 session. ...
By: Tate Reeves
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Lt. Gov. Reeves on Second Amendment protections, recognizing military service - Video
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Comabt Arms Second Amendment + MSR gameplay by Syncronised- – Video
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Comabt Arms Second Amendment + MSR gameplay by Syncronised-
hey everyone, it has been awile as you might now. well i have some good news, my game PC has been fixed by Acer so its time to make some video #39;s again 😀 if ...
By: SyncronisedCAE
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Comabt Arms Second Amendment + MSR gameplay by Syncronised- - Video
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The First Amendment…(Historically Speaking) – Episode #12 – Video
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The First Amendment...(Historically Speaking) - Episode #12
A weekly program on UPTV hosted by Frederick Douglass Dixon.
By: UPTV6
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The First Amendment...(Historically Speaking) - Episode #12 - Video
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Volokh Conspiracy: The controversial punishment of Barrett Brown: A deep dive
Posted: at 4:47 am
Ive read a lot of criticism recently about the sentencing of Barrett Brown. The online commentary mostly portrays Browns sentence as a disturbing example of prosecutorial abuse, in which the Obama Administrations war on journalists and war on hackers came together to shred First Amendment freedoms. I wondered, is that true? What really happened in the case, and was Browns sentence troublesome or not?
I spent some time looking into this over the last few days. Trying to break down the sentencing issues in the Brown case is actually pretty hard, as a lot of the key documents have not yet been released. The guilty plea and sentencing memos are under seal, and the transcript of the sentencing hearing has not yet been made public. [UPDATE: The plea is not under seal; it's here, via Free Barrett Brown.] So any conclusion right now has to be tentative, as we dont yet know all the facts.
With that said, here are three tentative conclusions. First, the sentencing judge may have made some mistakes in calculating Browns sentence. Second, if the judge did make those mistakes, they may have led the judge to sentence Brown to an improperly long sentence but then, oddly, they may alternatively have led the judge to sentence Brown to an improperly light sentence. Third, if there were errors, they were pretty technical errors. They were errors in interpreting an esoteric provision of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, not anything relating to a war on hackers or a war on journalists.
In that sense, the Barrett Brown case is pretty different from the case of Andrew Auernheimer, aka weev (and my former client). From indictment to appeal, the weev prosecution involved a long list of plainly troubling prosecution theories that had broad implications for civil liberties online. The Brown case raised some interesting legal issues at the beginning. Ill touch on some of them here, but others Ill have to leave out just to keep this post from turning into a book. But at this late stage, at sentencing, the legal issues in the Brown case arent as grand as a lot of people seem to think.
With that enticing introduction, lets dive in.
Ill begin with some context. Barrett Brown pled guilty to three crimes. First, he helped some hackers evade detection by acting as an intermediary for them. That made him an accessory after the fact in violation of 18 U.S.C. 3, which punishes one who, knowing that an offense against the United States has been committed, receives, relieves, comforts or assists the offender in order to hinder or prevent his apprehension, trial or punishment[.] Second, when a search warrant was executed at his moms house as part of the hacking investigation, he tried to hide his computer from the agents in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1501. (His mom helped, too; she was charged and received probation.) Third, after the search, he posted a Youtube video threatening the agent investigating him.
Despite the controversy surrounding the Brown case, it seems to be common ground that Brown did in fact commit these three crimes. He admitted as much at the sentencing hearing, and there werent any stretches of the law involved in the three counts to which Brown pled guilty. [UPDATE: More stipulated facts are here.] There are harsh criticisms of a different count from an earlier indictment that was later dismissed, which Ill get to later. And there are a lot of objections that Brown wasnt really the biggest criminal in the world. He helped the hackers, many have pointed out, but he isnt a hacker himself. But at least as a legal matter, the factual basis of the three guilty pleas seems pretty uncontroversial.
In this post, Ill focus mostly on the controversy over the sentence Brown received following his guilty plea. By way of background, federal judges calculate sentences in federal criminal cases using a complicated framework set out in the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. The Guidelines work by calculating an offense level for every crime that tries to gauge the seriousness of the offense. It starts with a base offense level that applies to all such crimes, then considers specific offense characteristics that add or subtract points baed on the specific circumstances of that case. Judges then take the resulting offense level, calculate the defendants criminal history, and then go to this chart to figure out what the sentencing range should be. The resulting range isnt legally binding on the judge, but its the usual ballpark range for the sentence.
In the sentencing in Browns case, the defense attorneys started off with a significant victory. Although Brown pled guilty to three crimes, his defense attorneys persuaded the judge to punish him as if he had only pled guilty to one of the three crimes. The Federal Sentencing Guidelines have some pretty arcane and complicated rules for how to calculate sentences when a person commits several offenses, and in this case the judge decided to calculate the sentence based on the most serious offense, helping the hackers as an accessory after the fact. The other offenses played a minor role that well get to later on, but the bulk of the sentencing was based on being an accessory after the fact to the hackers.
To calculate Browns sentence, the judge started with the guideline for being an accessory after the fact, Section 2X3.1. You can read that here. At first it seems pretty simple. You calculate the offense level for an accessory after the fact, it explains, by starting 6 levels lower than the offense level for the underlying offense. In other words, this guideline is derivative. To figure out how serious it is to be an accessory after the fact for a hacking offense, you have to first figure out how serious the underlying hack was and then deduct six levels.
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Volokh Conspiracy: The controversial punishment of Barrett Brown: A deep dive
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Feds Caught the Silk Road Mastermind With… A Google Search
Posted: at 4:47 am
"Dread Pirate Roberts," the mastermind behind the online drug market Silk Road, seemed like a smart dude. He amassed a multimillion dollar fortune in drug money in just a few years! And he did it using the deep web and cryptocurrency usually associated with sophisticated cybercrime. But if 30-year-old self-styled "Robert Pattinson lookalike" Ross Ulbricht is found guilty of being the Dread Pirate Roberts, he will have revealed his identity in a remarkably unsophisticated way. A federal agent says he pinned the Silk Road on Ulbricht with a simple Google search.
In court on Thursday, special agent Gary Alford described how he googled the Silk Road's original Tor browser address and looked at the earliest results, Motherboard reported today. You can't access Tor websites through Google, but you can see when people discussed their URLs. This led him to a post in a Bitcoin forum by someone called "altoid" trying to attract people to the Silk Road back when it was starting out. Alford looked through the posts by "altoid" and saw that rossulbricht@gmail.com, Ulbricht's personal email address, turned up in his posts. He took screenshots of the damning search.
If the prosecution's evidence is true, Ulbricht sucked SO BAD at keeping his identity a secret. He got tied to the site using literally the most basic Google search imaginable. And he left a veritable treasure trove of evidence, including a friggin diary of his internal turmoil regarding his burgeoning drug empire, on his computer.
The Silk Road trial has covered a broad swath of internet culture, with the Tor Browser, emoticons, Bitcoin, and now Google search playing significant roles in the proceedings.
And screenshots could have an important legacy in this case. Alford presented the screenshots of his Google search as evidence, which is noteworthy because screenshots are on shaky ground as legitimate evidencesomething Ulbricht's defense will surely pounce on. In United States v. Vayner last year, a court ruled that screenshots couldn't be used as evidence, since it's so easy to alter images or just outright fake them. Unless Alford and the prosecution have a way to verify that they're unaltered, the defense may try to invalidate this connection in the eyes of the jury.
If the screenshots are taken as legitimate and Ulbricht gets convicted partly because of the screenshot evidence, it'll a precedent for how screenshots are treated in courtrooms in the future. So this Google search isn't just a potential smoking gun; it could have lasting repercussions on the legal system. [Motherboard]
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Feds Caught the Silk Road Mastermind With... A Google Search
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