RebelINK

August 31, 2007

Kenneth Foster Lives!

Filed under: Amnesty, Suggested Readingwinnietheblue @ 1:00 am

His sentence was commuted to life in prison!

From the New York Times:

The Texas pardons board, appointed by the governor, took the unusual action of voting 6 to 1 Wednesday to recommend commutation of Mr. Foster’s death sentence. The result was not released until Thursday morning and shortly afterward, Mr. Perry, a Republican, announced he had accepted the recommendation.

“After carefully considering the facts of this case, along with the recommendations from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, I believe the right and just decision is to commute Foster’s sentence from the death penalty to life imprisonment,” the governor said in a statement.

He said he was also concerned about the law that allowed Mr. Foster and the actual triggerman to be tried together and urged the Legislature to re-examine the issue. (more)

From Save Kenneth Foster on Blogspot:

Perry’s decision is historic. Not only has the Board of Pardons and Paroles rarely recommended clemency (by one count, 3 times since 1982), but Rick Perry has overseen more executions than any Governor of the State of Texas, including George Bush. (more)

I mentioned this case before. Even if you agree with the death penalty (I don’t), Perry’s decision to commute Foster’s sentence is important. His guilt and death sentence was largely based on the guilt of another person; he was not tried separately. Guilt by association should never be enough to have someone executed.

August 24, 2007

TALON Shut-Down

Filed under: ACLU, Suggested Readingwinnietheblue @ 4:29 pm

The Pentagon has said it will shut down its TALON program, which collected information on groups deemed a threat to the U.S. military. Quakers, churches, and student anti-war organizations were among the groups watched by TALON. According to the BCC:

A Pentagon review found that it had included reports on peaceful protesters and anti-war demonstrations which should have been deleted.

However, the report by the defense department’s inspector general said the Pentagon had acted legally in collecting information on US citizens because the reports were gathered for law enforcement rather than intelligence purposes. (read the entire article)

Honestly, that makes me feel so much better.

Kot Hordynski is a student that was involved in one of the groups watched by TALON. You can find out more about his experiences from the ACLU.

August 23, 2007

NIS director admits AT&T and Verizon help on warrantless wiretaps

Filed under: Suggested Readingdj4aces @ 2:10 pm

I am personally disgusted. I knew it was going on, but the part that disgusts me the most is where McConnell says these companies deserve immunity for violating our civil rights.

WASHINGTON - National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell pulled the curtain back on previously classified details of government surveillance and of a secretive court whose recent rulings created new hurdles for the Bush administration as it tries to prevent terrorism.

McConnell’s comments were made in an interview with the El Paso Times last week and posted as a transcript on the newspaper’s web site Wednesday.

The revelations raised eyebrows for their frank discussion of previously classified eavesdropping work conducted under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, known as FISA.

Among the disclosures:

  • McConnell confirmed for the first time that the private sector assisted with President Bush’s warrantless surveillance program. AT&T, Verizon and other telecommunications companies are being sued for their cooperation. “Now if you play out the suits at the value they’re claimed, it would bankrupt these companies,” McConnell said, arguing that they deserve immunity for their help.
  • He provided new details on court rulings handed down by the 11-member Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which approves classified eavesdropping operations and whose proceedings are almost always entirely secret. McConnell said a ruling that went into effect May 31 required the government to get court warrants to monitor communications between two foreigners if the conversation travels on a wire in the U.S. network. Millions of calls each day do, because of the robust nature of the U.S. systems.
  • McConnell said it takes 200 hours to assemble a FISA warrant on a single telephone number. “We’re going backwards,” he said. “We couldn’t keep up.”
  • Offering never-disclosed figures, McConnell also revealed that fewer than 100 people inside the United States are monitored under FISA warrants. However, he said, thousands of people overseas are monitored.
  • (continued)

    August 22, 2007

    Draw a Pig for Freedom!

    Filed under: Randomnesswinnietheblue @ 11:08 pm

    I realize this is not the sort of thing we ususally post here, but I am a big fan of both fountain pens and Noodler’s Ink, and this just makes me love Noodler’s more. In the interest of promoting freedom of expression, they have a new ink called “Year of the Golden Pig.” It is just a basic highlighting ink, not the invisible ink Noodler’s sent to librarians in China, but the bottle is cute.

    The slogans printed on it:

    “Draw a Pig for Freedom!”
    “Liberty Over Communist Tyranny!!”
    “The Intolerance of Free Expression is ‘Politically Correct’”

    From Noodler’s Website:

    A “radical and disruptive ink company”?
    The Golden Year of the Pig was banned by the Chinese Communist party from any advertisements or mention on state controlled media. In response to this blatant restriction of free expression concerning an extremely popular holiday among the Chinese people, Noodler’s Ink sent three dozen bottles of a particular golden invisible ink to dissidents working at Chinese libraries and universities. Invisible inks are marvelous for free expression upon library texts, widely distributed and difficult for authorities to regulate - let alone find.
    This label artwork promotes free expression in defiance of the Chinese Communist Party dictatorship. Without freedom of expression, ink is not fully utilized!

    On The Fountain Pen Network’s Forums:

    The Communists vrs. the Fountain Pen:

    I think most of us would agree that it is a fundamental human right to draw, write, create and form new concepts and ideas freely upon the page… To an ink company - and to somebody who lives and breathes all things ink day after day….the thought of restricting the ability of other human beings to freely express themselves upon the page with pen and ink - is abhorrent!

    The “Year of the Golden Pig” (named due to the communist ban recently on displays or mention of the year of the golden pig on television or advertising! It was a type of invisible ink similar to the 20 bottle “Golden Ghost” - extremely light specific and next to impossible to know it is there unless you know exactly how to find it! continued…

    Once Again, the White House Ignores Subpoenas

    Filed under: ACLUwinnietheblue @ 9:33 pm

    For the second time, the White House let the deadline pass for providing Congress information on the NSA’s warrentless wiretapping program. From the ACLU press release:

    “The Bush administration’s persistent stonewalling represents a unique kind of arrogance,” said Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU. “Since this program’s disclosure, the Senate has asked for key documentation only to be repeatedly denied. After bulldozing broad reforms to FISA through both chambers two weeks ago, the administration believes it can push this Congress around. Congress has to stand up to this administration by holding it in contempt and by revisiting its rash reforms to FISA.”

    As you know, the House and Senate “modernized FISA” just a few weeks ago. The changes only last 6 months, and if we can learn what the warrentless wiretaps have been used for, there is hope that Congress will let the changes expire. The Senate Judiciary Committee must do everything in its power to get these records.

    Using Comcast and BitTorrent (part 2): The Denial

    Filed under: Uncategorizeddj4aces @ 9:21 am

    In the following article, Comcast denies “rumors” that they are throttling BitTorrent traffic. Time will tell whether the rumor is unfounded or true, but I somehow doubt that Comcast isn’t playing with traffic shaping technologies in a few test markets.

    Comcast on Tuesday denied rumors that the company is filtering BitTorrent traffic running over its network.

    BitTorrent is a peer-to-peer file sharing protocol used to distribute large data files such as video. The protocol has been used widely throughout the Internet to distribute pirated movies. And sites that use the protocol have been targeted by the movie industry to stop the illegal distribution of copyrighted video.

    Broadband providers have also not been big fans of BitTorrent because the use of the peer-to-peer protocol can clog networks with huge files. The blog TorrentFreak claims that several Internet Service Providers have been “throttling” or limiting BitTorrent traffic on their networks for the past two years. And last week, the blog accused Comcast of going even further to limit the use of BitTorrent on its network.

    The blog claimed that some Comcast users had noticed that their BitTorrent transfers were being cut off and that they experienced a significant decrease in download speeds.

    Over the past few days, these claims have been widely circulated throughout the Web. But when I spoke to Comcast spokesman Charlie Douglas earlier today, he flat-out denied that the company was filtering or “shaping” any traffic on its network. He said the company doesn’t actively look at the applications or content that its customers download over the network. But Comcast does reserve the right to cut off service to customers who abuse the network by using too much bandwidth.

    (continued)

    See more here.

    August 20, 2007

    Are You Being Watched?

    Filed under: ACLUwinnietheblue @ 9:37 pm

    According to the ACLU:

    California cities are moving quickly to install video surveillance cameras on public streets and plazas without regulations, with little or no public debate, and without an evaluation of their effectiveness, according to an American Civil Liberties Union report released today.

    continued…

    Surveillance cameras are an extremely controversial issue. Although cameras may be appropriate in some situations, the benefits of such cameras must be very carefully weighed against the threat to civil liberties. In addition, alternatives to surveillance cameras must be looked into. However, many local governments across the nation are rushing to install these cameras as an ‘easy solution.’

    Surveillance cameras have many flaws. Although they may assist in solving crimes, they are not capable of stopping a crime in progress, as a police officer would be. In addition, surveillance cameras have the potential to interfere with privacy. Do you really want a video of you kissing your SO showing up on You Tube? There is no guarantee that the video will remain in the sole custody of the city, or that it will be destroyed if not needed for a criminal investigation.

    How Much Authority Does the Government Have to Wiretap YOU?

    Filed under: ACLUwinnietheblue @ 8:17 pm

    The ACLU wants to find out. They have requested information on the legal scope of the government’s authority to wiretap its own citizens, and the FISA Court has asked the government to respond to the request by August 31. It will be interesting to see if the government agrees to the request.

    ACLU Press Release

    White House Not Willing to Challenge 1st Amendment in Court

    Filed under: ACLUwinnietheblue @ 8:07 pm

    The West Virgina have reached a settlement in an important 1st Amendment case. Jeff and Nicole Rank were arrested at a 4th of July speech by President Bush in 2004 for wearing anti-bush t-shirts. From the Charleston Gazette article about the settlement:

    The federal government has agreed to pay $80,000 to a Texas couple arrested for wearing anti-President Bush T-shirts at a 2004 event with the president in Charleston.

    Jeff and Nicole Rank went to Bush’s Fourth of July speech at the state Capitol wearing homemade T-shirts with a red circle with a bar through it over the word “Bush.”

    On the back, hers read “Love America, Hate Bush” and his read “Regime Change Starts At Home.”

    When the couple refused to cover up their shirts, they were arrested and charged with trespassing. Those charges were later dropped by the city of Charleston, and city officials later apologized.

    The American Civil Liberties Union subsequently filed a lawsuit on the Ranks’ behalf in federal court in Charleston, alleging that the Ranks’ First Amendment right to free political speech had been violated.

    continued…

    ACLU Lawsuit

    ACLU Press Release

    August 18, 2007

    Using Comcast and BitTorrent? I’ve got some bad news.

    Filed under: Suggested Readingdj4aces @ 11:36 am

    I’d suggest everyone experiencing this sort of problem with Comcast phone them up and demand answers. The way I see it, this is deceptive marketing practices and a breach of contract. I pay them for service, and I expect that service in return. I’m sure some of you will disagree, but if I’m trying to obtain linux distributions for my customers or legally purchased games over STEAM, I take a performance hit. I would also suggest contacting the Electronic Frontier Foundation about these practices, and see if they’d be willing to take a case. If enough of us do so, maybe we can get somewhere against Comcast and similar ISPs.

    Over the past weeks more and more Comcast users started to notice that their BitTorrent transfers were cut off. Most users report a significant decrease in download speeds, and even worse, they are unable to seed their downloads. A nightmare for people who want to keep up a positive ratio at private trackers and for the speed of BitTorrent transfers in general.

    ISPs have been throttling BitTorrent traffic for almost two years now. Most ISPs simply limit the available bandwidth for BitTorrent traffic, but Comcast takes it one step further, and prevents their customers from seeding. And Comcast is not alone in this, Canadian ISPs Cogeco and Rogers use similar methods on a smaller scale.

    (continued)

    Also, you might want to check out this Slashdot discussion of the article linked above.

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