Blogetery Shutdown Due To al-Qaeda Info 330
Archness1 writes "Over the weekend we discussed news that blog host Blogetery.com had been shut down at the request of the US government. Now, it appears the site was shut down because some of the blogs it was hosting contained information on al-Qaeda hit lists and bomb making. According to the article, Burst.net shut down Blogetery of its own accord after the FBI made a request to the host for information on the people who made the posts. '[Burst.net CTO Joe Marr] said the FBI contacted Burst.net and sent a Voluntary Emergency Disclosure of Information request. The letter said terrorist material, which presented a threat to American lives, was found on a server hosted by Burst.net and asked for specific information about the people involved. In the FBI's letter, the agency included a clause that says Web hosts and Internet service providers may voluntarily elect to shut down the sites of customers involved in these kinds of situations.'"
US Hysterical (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:US Hysterical (Score:5, Insightful)
The 9-11 conspiracy theorists might be off their rocker, but they're right about one thing: The hysteria, paranoia, and nationalistic fervor created by 9-11 are a politician's wet dream. The amazing thing isn't how much our society has let our rights be destroyed over the past 9 years, it's how little the people in power have taken advantage of it. For all that it sucks, the average American would have swallowed much, much more under the guise of security and revenge than what has been pushed through. Don't get me wrong, too much was allowed to happen, too many rights shrugged off so that the paranoid could sleep more easily at night (paranoid about terrorists but oddly trusting of everyone else); I'm just saying that it could have been much worse.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it couldn't be any worse.
It's the boiling frog principle. You never start off with anything major, or you'll get an enormous backlash in response. But if you introduce the slippery slope, then it's only a matter of time before you end up at the bottom.
For example, instead of requiring real names off the bat, Blizzard could have started off mandating a valid credit card before being able to log into the forums. They could then continue to push towards the goal of requiring the use of the poster's real na
Re: (Score:2)
For example, instead of requiring real names off the bat, Blizzard could have started off mandating a valid credit card before being able to log into the forums. They could then continue to push towards the goal of requiring the use of the poster's real name for the next several years in small increments, and after a while, people will accept it.
Blizzard already does require that - it's the forums for a subscription based MMO game.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
There are no differences between the parties that aren't cosmetic. They pick a few polarizing issues (abortion, guns, gays) and then act substantially similar once in office. There is a greater variance between members of one of the parties than between the parties. Though they do polarize their votes,
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
While you're right, you should know that the whole frog boiling things is a myth, at least when it comes to frogs. Try it sometime. Even when you start with cold water, they jump out when it gets reasonably hot.
Which is what we ought to be doing.
Re:US Hysterical (Score:5, Funny)
Not if you hit it with a bat first or use a lid.
Re:US Hysterical (Score:4, Informative)
Fortunately, the US is a democracy
Unfortunately, it isn't. It's a plutocratic republic where corporations can bribe both major candidates with campaign cash and get any damned thing they want, and to hell with the average person.
That, and having a polarized two-party system, nobody's really able to do anything even in power.
There's little real difference between the two parties; the Democrats are tax and spend, the Republicans are borrow and spend. Both are beholden to corporations; the only difference is which corporations. Neither one gives a damn about the Constitution or your rights. Both are for increased copyright lengths and increased penalties for infringing copyright, even noncommercial infringement. You won't find but maybe one or two politicians from either party who would legalize marijuana, for instance, despite the fact that the only people who benefit from marijuana laws are the ones growing, importing, and selling marijuana; both major parties are in lockstep. It makes me wonder how much bribe money the drug cartels shovel to the Republican and Democratic parties.
And the corporate media has convinced everyone that if you vote Green or Libertarian you've wasted your vote. I say if you vote for a candidate who wants you in jail for smoking pot or sharing MP3s you're a fool.
Re:US Hysterical (Score:5, Insightful)
t's how little the people in power have taken advantage of it.
Wow. You missed the entire Bush administration. The USA Patriot Act. Pallets of cash shipped directly from the Mint to Iraq without any oversight. Coordinated domestic wiretapping. The Unitary President. Hundreds if not thousands of "signing statements." Etc., etc.
Shut your /. window and go dig through the archives of the major newspapers.
America got raped over the past 10 years because of 9/11.
Re:US Hysterical (Score:5, Insightful)
Domestic wiretapping had required a warrant since the original FISA act was passed in 1978. [wikipedia.org] It does not allow the widespread and wholesale tapping of phones and the internet that has happened since 9/11. If there is one thing that disgusts me about Obama, it's his utter and complete flip-flop on the domestic spying issue. As an early candidate for president, he was completely against it. Then when we had gotten the nomination, he voted to immunize telecoms for their part in the illegal wiretapping. Now as president, he completely defends the continued intrusion into all of our lives.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
I stand in a position to know, as I was a battalion staff officer in theater during the transition: Between 2003 and 2005 the money being given out for civilian aide and reconstruction came under *much* tighter scrutiny. I entered theater in the tail end of the "lawless" period, and the transition still wasn't totally complete when I left, but It was a very different system. For the first year or two of the Iraq war, we really were just pretty much shipping money over.
When we first got there our logistics
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sorry. Did the Democrats repeal the PATRIOT Act while I wasn't looking? Did they close Guantanamo Bay? Warrantless wiretapping?
Please tell me when I got my civil liberties back, because it still feels like they're missing.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Especially when you look at some of the declassified documents of what they have tried before. The US military once actually proposed attacking their own nation to blame it on others as a reason to attack, it was shot down by congress and such but they still proposed it.
http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/northwoods.html?q=northwoods.html [whatreallyhappened.com]
Operation Northwoods
US PLANNED FAKE TERROR ATTACKS ON CITIZENS TO CREATE SUPPORT FOR CUBAN WAR
According to secret and long-hidden documents obtained for Body of Secrets, the Joint Chiefs of Staff drew up and approved plans for what may be the most corrupt plan ever created by the U.S. government. In the name of antiCommunism, they proposed launching a secret and bloody war of terrorism against their own country in order to trick the American public into supporting an ill-conceived war they intended to launch against Cuba.
Is this what your thinking about???
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope you Americans reclaim your civil freedoms soon...
To state one must "reclaim" a freedom precludes its existence to begin with. Or put another way -- what Americans have been calling "rights" all these years were really privileges that the ruling party/authority could remove from an individual or group at will.
Re:US Hysterical (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:US Hysterical (Score:5, Insightful)
They are, though. As soon as you enter into a social contract that gives one class of people a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence, you give them the ability to remove lots of these "rights". The only thing stopping them from doing it is that same social contract -- the Constitution, etc. It's a "We'll give you the ability to violate our rights as long as you promise not to use it" sort of thing.
The trouble is that the only thing stopping the ruling group from breaching this contract is the fear that if they do anything egregious then they'll get voted out, and that if they try to not abide by the results of an election then they'll lose support of enough people (including some of the ones they rely on to execute their license to use violence) that they'll lose power anyway.
Unfortunately, they've gotten good at breaking their end of the social contract and still getting elected.
Re: (Score:2)
They are, though. As soon as you enter into a social contract that gives one class of people a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence, you give them the ability to remove lots of these "rights". The only thing stopping them from doing it is that same social contract -- the Constitution, etc. It's a "We'll give you the ability to violate our rights as long as you promise not to use it" sort of thing.
The trouble is that the only thing stopping the ruling group from breaching this contract is the fear that if they do anything egregious then they'll get voted out, and that if they try to not abide by the results of an election then they'll lose support of enough people (including some of the ones they rely on to execute their license to use violence) that they'll lose power anyway.
Unfortunately, they've gotten good at breaking their end of the social contract and still getting elected.
That's why a critically-important part of this contract should be that those who have not been given direct power to exercise violence, still have the means to do so in a critical situation. I am of course talking about retaining one's right to bear arms.
In the absence of this one right, all others are moot, since the only rights you have, are the ones you can defend.
In the absence of the right to self-defense and the means to do so, the criminals are the ones who have rights, since they can clearly defend
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
The issue with the right to bear arms is that it is meaningless until and unless one can get enough people armed well enough to exercise said violence in a critical situation, which presumably means outshooting the police.
This can only happen with demilitarized police *and* some sort of mechanism in place to stop them from calling for reinforcements from the National Guard. Not sure quite how we get there from here.
The times when a bunch of armed commoners can square off against military forces are over, at
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The issue with the right to bear arms is that it is meaningless until and unless one can get enough people armed well enough to exercise...
You could say the same about free speech, what's your point? It's an individual right, how is that meaningless?
This can only happen with demilitarized police *and* some sort of mechanism in place to stop them from calling for reinforcements from the National Guard. Not sure quite how we get there from here.
The times when a bunch of armed commoners can square off against military forces are over, at least unless ownership of IED-type devices and RPG's becomes common.
Oh, I didn't realize civil war never happen(ed | s). Or that armed militias with little training and improvisational warfare never present a threat to well trained, conventional forces. No evidence of THAT anywhere.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
This can only happen with demilitarized police *and* some sort of mechanism in place to stop them from calling for reinforcements from the National Guard. Not sure quite how we get there from here.
The times when a bunch of armed commoners can square off against military forces are over, at least unless ownership of IED-type devices and RPG's becomes common.
I used to subscribe to this theory, but then I started really thinking about it.
Small arms, even automatic small arms, are unbelievably easy to obtain in the U.S. - I once had a 15 year old kid offer to sell me an Uzi. Larger munitions are easily made if you understand the principles - there's tons of information on the web free for anyone interested. Much of it isn't even bunk.
I know how to create large explosives, jury-rig mortars, and take down tanks - and I have exactly 0 military training or inclinati
Hysteria indeed (Score:3, Informative)
I truly hope you and the folks who have thus far replied to your post will some day take the time to actually read some of the works that inspired our Constitution. Start with "Common Sense" - it was written so as to be understood by the commoners of the day; hopefully y'all have sufficient education as to be able to understand the work today...
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Wrong.
Rights, Natural Rights, are universal. They exist for all time, in all places and for all people.
They need not be granted, approved or enumerated by any government.
They can not be removed, except by the direct application of physical force.
Everyone has the right to free speech.
They can remove this right by cutting out your tongue, paralyzing you or even killing you.
Passing a law forbidding free speech does not remove that right, you can still speak freely.
A law forbidding speech does not remove that r
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
what Americans have been calling "rights" all these years were really privileges that the ruling party/authority could remove from an individual or group at will.
There are two things. One is Natural Rights. You have a right to your life, your body, your property, self-ownership, etc. People in funny costumes can do bad things to you, even kill you, but they can't take away your natural rights (only infringe them).
The other is what a State claims to recognize as checks on infringing your natural rights.
Re:US Hysterical (Score:5, Insightful)
This sounds more like a case of corporations eroding our civil rights, which has little to do with the war on terror, they're always quick to do that to avoid bad PR. That the FBI asked for information and suggested burstnet drop them is not ideal, yes, but let's not act like this is all the US government going paranoid: plenty of companies in whatever country you live in would screw your rights over too even if your government wouldn't ask them.
That and you're preaching to the choir.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not only in the USA (Score:2)
There have been several totally bungled [wikipedia.org] operations in other countries too.
Sadly, the conclusion must be that the terrorists are winning. They aimed to destroy the western way of life and they are certainly making progress at it.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Look, I know most of you think that it is only the right that wears Klan robes, rub their hands together with greedy intent and kick puppies but the bottom line is that both pa
One salient point. (Score:2)
CYA (Score:5, Insightful)
...the agency included a clause that says Web hosts and Internet service providers may voluntarily elect to shut down the sites of customers involved in these kinds of situations.
The word voluntary has a markedly different meaning when used by law enforcement and government than by the public. As a recent example, the kidnapping of an Iranian nuclear scientist was reported as having left the country "voluntarily". Businesses aren't stupid: If you get a letter from the authorities saying your computer might have terrorist information on it, it's probably best to launch it into space now instead of risking the public hysteria or government's heavy-handed tactics that could land you, your family, and your friends all in jail on "suspicion" of one thing or another.
Re: (Score:2)
it's probably best to launch it into space
That and even moreso if suits with gold badges pay a visit to discuss your "voluntary cooperation".
It's like Bruno suggesting you "volunteer" your lunch money.
Re: (Score:2)
Point taken. Sometimes one is volunteered. I learned early that it always looks better for you if you volunteer than get ordered when you still have to do the same thing anyway. But having said that, you don't need to whitewash it with hysteria. The Iranian scientist situation is very questionable.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Questionable? He was a mid-level scientist. He didn't know anything juicy. He offered to defect. He defected. He was debriefed. The US didn't care much for what he had to say, and relocated him to someplace boring and he had no friends, no family, and was without mastery of the language. His family may or may not have been threatened in Iran. He re-defected back for the "payment" of stating he never defected in the first place, but instead was k
Re: (Score:2)
Is there anything in my assessment of the situation that you find questionable? Anything in there you find to be probably untrue or greatly suspect? It seems pretty clear and straight forward.
Yeah, I do have a question. How do you know this?
Look... I agree with most of your take on the situation (I suspect he knew a bit more than you give credit for - and far more than he now claims). But at the same time, the US does have a recent history of operations that would fall in line with this guy's claims. So there is room for doubt. Although I should probably point out to you that my statement was questioning the validity of the kidnapping claim. Even if I accept that there is a possibility that
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
>Yeah, I do have a question. How do you know this?
Exactly! The government has shown time and again that it will lie whenever it is convenient. I'm not saying I necessarily believe the Iranian either, but to accept the government's version of things without question is always a mistake.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Ask Maher Arar [wikipedia.org] about that.
"Arar was detained during a layover at John F. Kennedy International Airport in September 2002 on his way home to Canada from a family vacation in Tunis. He was held in solitary confinement in the United States for nearly two weeks, questioned, and denied meaningful access to a lawyer. The US government suspected him of being a member of Al Qaeda and deported him, not to Canada, his current home, but to his native Syria, even though its government is known to use torture. He was de
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:CYA (Score:5, Insightful)
Businesses aren't stupid: If you get a letter from the authorities saying your computer might have terrorist information on it, it's probably best to launch it into space now instead of risking the public hysteria or government's heavy-handed tactics that could land you, your family, and your friends all in jail on "suspicion" of one thing or another.
Or perhaps the business thinks that complying with the request is the right thing to do under the circumstances. I know I would likely do the same thing under those conditions -- look at the content and decide whether I want to be hosting it. I would just as surely fight a court order if the content was legit as I would pull the plug if it wasn't.
It is not beyond possibility that a business owner might decide that, even if were legal to do so (and in this case it's probably not, although we'll never find out for sure) he's not going to offer his services to further the cause of something he finds abhorrent. It's not inconceivable that the government actually convinced him they were factually correct that the site was used by Al Qaeda. The conclusion that he must have been threatened is absurd on its face because it does not account for the many ways that a reasonable person might chose to cooperate.
Re:CYA (Score:4, Insightful)
- "Extraordinary Rendition" victims who were released never found themselves in the U.S.
- the U.S. has shown itself fully willing to imprison people reliable without charge or trial
- the U.S. has shown itself willing to pay quite well for defectors in the past
If he were kidnapped he'd be rotting in Kyrgyzstan where laws on torture don't apply, not walking casually into a New York Embassy.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Both Verizon and QWEST have at different times
Sounds right. (Score:5, Insightful)
If the FBI came to me and told me one of my hosts had bomb making info on it, I'd shut it down too regardless if it was foreign or domestic host, or just even a p0wn.
I can't see any reason to have that info on a web site. It's not like you're going to make a bigger bomb than the US has. You're just going to get some dumb-ass to blow his hand off.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Information should never be illegal.
Here, let me help you out a bit, I'll bold the key points since your reading comprehension sucks balls.
If the FBI came to me and told me one of my hosts had bomb making info on it, I'd shut it down too regardless if it was foreign or domestic host, or just even a p0wn.
I can't see any reason to have that info on a web site. It's not like you're going to make a bigger bomb than the US has. You're just going to get some dumb-ass to blow his hand off.
There is no such thing as illegal information in the US. You can be held responsible if certain things happen directly because you posted certain types of information, but there very specific rules about what kinds of information this applies to - generally it must relate to causing direct harm to US soldiers or other similar personnel. If the people cannot be harmed by the information, though, there is
Re:Sounds right. (Score:5, Insightful)
What the GP described and Burst.Net demonstrated was the individual right of the host to not display information they do not approve of. This is individuals censoring their own equipment.
Nonsense. What Burst.Net demonstrated was their NON-right to shut down a whole boatload of legitimate paying customers, apparently because law enforcement alleged (at the time) that some accounts might have contained terrorist material. That's not the same thing at all.
They voluntarily shut them ALL down, without so much as a warrant or National Security Letter regarding the alleged terrorist accounts, much less the vast majority who were guiltless. That's not patriotic, or responsible citizenship, or anything of the sort. What that is, is ball-less wimps getting on their knees in front of government goons, and cheating their customers in the process, because they were afraid.
The IT guy might try to claim that he was doing his patriotic duty, but that's BS. His patriotic duty was to demand a warrant or at least an NSL before turning over private information or closing accounts.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
The Second Amendment even says: "A well-regulated militia [i.e., a "standing army"] being necessary to the security of a free State..."
We were guaranteed the righ
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
This is why you are not in the business of selling hosting to other people.
Re: (Score:2)
And this is why Burst.net is? You don't know how many AUPs I've written nor how many ISPs I've worked for. Or that matter, how many hosts I've pulled down for illegal content.
Re: (Score:2)
No, I don't. But I wouldn't buy hosting from you, and I imagine that many customers wouldn't either if they knew that their stuff was at risk of being taken down for merely being controversial.
I tend to hire reliable people to perform services for me.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
TFA: Sources close to the investigation say that included in those materials were the names of American citizens targeted for assassination by al-Qaeda. Messages from Osama bin Laden and other leaders of the terrorist organization, as well as bomb-making tips, were also allegedly found on the server.
That goes a bit beyond "merely being controversial."
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not like you're going to make a bigger bomb than the US has. You're just going to get some dumb-ass to blow his hand off.
If said dumb-ass is an aspiring suicide bomber, that would sound like a win all around.
I would have thought that unless there was an immediate threat, the FBI would have much preferred to monitor the blog and find out who was posting and reading so they could arrest the bad guys, rather than shutting it down and letting them know they've been rumbled.
Re:Sounds right. (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't see any reason why people should speak out against their government. it's not like you're going to have more money to spend than the US on court costs and advertising. You're just going to go broke and put on a watchlist.
Re: (Score:2)
TFA: Sources close to the investigation say that included in those materials were the names of American citizens targeted for assassination by al-Qaeda.
How are hit-lists by foreign terrorists "speak[ing] out against their government"?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
That is absolutely stupid !
If the FBI came to me and told me that one of my hosts had bomb making info, I'd give them access to the server, so that they can monitor who are accessing the site, in order to locate them.
If people go to this site, this means that they are interested by its content.
Closing the site just sends an alert to the terrorists, and allows them to flee or enter dormant mode, with no way to track them later.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I live on an Indian reservation that has lots of fireworks. The aid crew gets tired of combing the beach for missing fingers.
So when Burst.net said they could not disclose the (Score:2)
... reason for the shutdown, they were being "economical with the truth"?
I can accept that, perhaps they had a reason to shut down their client (although the reason seems very weak), but to lie about it? They deserve to have their clients move elsewhere and be forced into bankruptcy.
And what does this tell us ? (Score:2)
Oh great (Score:2)
Yet another potential source of useful intelligence shut down.
DHS alert level (Score:3, Interesting)
Cool, so that means the current Department of Homeland Security alert level of yellow/orange actually means there's information out there regarding an actual threat, and not just a constant elevated paranoia to cover their asses if something bad actually goes down?
http://www.dhs.gov/files/programs/Copy_of_press_release_0046.shtm [dhs.gov]
When the threat is mitigated, do we finally get to reduce the threat level to blue or green? What are the criteria for actually reaching that? :P
Once In A Lifetime People! (Score:5, Insightful)
Why stop there? (Score:5, Insightful)
I assume DHS will be raiding libraries nationwide, removing books on bomb making, explosives, etc?
And of course many chemistry texts, especially those which focus on such experiments?
Then they can go and visit our colleges, universities, and technical schools, so that these institutions can discontinue any teaching of such dangerous and unacceptable subjects?
This is unfortunate and sad, that our Administration would stoop to such an infringement on our First Amendment. Ignore the futility of the act.
Let me repeat. This is a First Amendment violation.
Now the al-Qaeda stuff, if they were posting contact info and such, well, darn. Gotta stop that. No point in aiding and abetting.
But bomb-making by itself isn't a crime is it? I have a few friends that still live in the woods, and they have a bit of fun with blowing stuff up occasionally, like stumps and old cars. It's their property.
We're in trouble.
Re:Why stop there? (Score:4, Informative)
I assume DHS will be raiding libraries nationwide, removing books on bomb making, explosives, etc?
And of course many chemistry texts, especially those which focus on such experiments?
Then they can go and visit our colleges, universities, and technical schools, so that these institutions can discontinue any teaching of such dangerous and unacceptable subjects?
It's already happening. So many new organisms have made it onto "select agent lists" that I am surprised any decent virology is still being done in the US. Soon we'll be left with no human pathogens outside the list that can be used for research.
And to do work on something that's on the list, you have to go through a process that takes so long that the student or post-doc would want to be leaving by the time they are cleared to do the work.
Re:Why stop there? (Score:5, Interesting)
But bomb-making by itself isn't a crime is it? I have a few friends that still live in the woods, and they have a bit of fun with blowing stuff up occasionally, like stumps and old cars. It's their property.
Ask F-troop.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and (recently added) Explosives seems to think it is, if you didn't get the right certifications and licenses and pay the right taxes.
Your state may think so, too.
Explosives are a very useful tool for, among other things, farming. You can remove a stump quickly with a little dynamite, girdle or fell a tree in seconds, dig a ditch in an hour or so with a string of small charges detonated simultaneously. rather than weeks of work with earthmoving equipment or months of backbreaking labor, and I could go on. (There was one guy who got the snow off his sidewalks and driveways in a couple minutes with a little primacord, too.)
But our federal government has injected its jackboots into this, as well as firearms, since about 1934.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
You can ... dig a ditch in an hour or so with a string of small charges detonated simultaneously. rather than weeks of work with earthmoving equipment or months of backbreaking labor ...
The simultaneous detonations cause the displaced dirt to end up in two banks beside a trench, rather than making a string of discrete holes.
Interestingly, during the "nuclear plowshare" period just after WWII, when the government was trying to find nonmilitary uses for nuclear technology, one of the plans examined was to mak
Why shutdown the whole blog hosting site? (Score:2, Insightful)
Panopticon-driven self censorship? (Score:2)
Burst.net have NOT handled this well (Score:5, Interesting)
So, the Burst.net guys get a request for information about a machine they host which has ~70k users, give or take. Instead of asking the box's sysadmin (who's their CLIENT), they pull the pin, then go on to mutter vague conspiracy-minded commentary such as "getting a refund is the least of his (the site owner/sysadmin) problems" on fora such as WHT (see http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?s=05a61aabdfcacdb369e1582aff4686a1&t=964013 [webhostingtalk.com] ) Apparently the fact that he _received_ abuse complaints in the past was grounds to terminate his service; never mind the fact that he had SEVENTY THOUSAND USERS and acted on DMCA notifications and other abuse requests in a timely fashion, which is better than can be said about a lot of sites.
Had burst.net forwarded the request to the site owner (or even simply given the feds his name, and explained how he fit in) instead of disconnecting the machine, making borderline slanderous statements (such as 'he'll never get his data back' and 'a refund is the least of his worries right now',) they would have come out of this looking reasonably good. As it stands, you'd have to be completely brain-dead retarded to even think about giving them money.
We will never beat out al-Qaeda because... (Score:2)
...al-Qaeda is not a single organized group but rather what ever any government wants to claim it is at any given moment. Be it a group of drug runners, arms dealers, mothers (if the giovernment so choses to call the group such... and the public will associate bad, as in organized single group to them. This way government drug runners, arms dealers and mothers can have a never ending war.
Magic word "al-Qaeda" to get public approval.
Pretty please! (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe one day /. editor's could like do their job? (Score:5, Informative)
The Burst.net employee who handled the request erroneously believed that the FBI would want to seize the customer's server and thus the employee cut off service to Blogetery. Marr said the FBI, however, never asked for the server.
Well, that could clear up some of the shitty posts here.
Also FFTA:
Sources close to the investigation say that included in those materials were the names of American citizens targeted for assassination by al-Qaeda. Messages from Osama bin Laden and other leaders of the terrorist organization, as well as bomb-making tips, were also allegedly found on the server.
Now, just my speculation here, but obviously there's a lot of "terrorist" crap all over American servers that the Gov doesn't give two shits about. So maybe in this case the FBI concluded that the information was actual communication from the organization, etc, and not just drivel. If so, good for them for removing it. Removing a "hit list" doesn't violate free speech that I care for. Either way, burstnet made a mistake and one that is probably an honest mistake. Shit happens.
What next, shutting down Google? (Score:3, Informative)
Search "how to make a bomb" [google.com] with Google. Not only do you get videos and diagrams, Google is very helpful in coming up with additional information:
Searches related to "how to make a bomb":
It's not like it's difficult information to find. A Justice Department report says [justice.gov] "the DOJ committee has determined that anyone interested in manufacturing a bomb, dangerous weapon, or a weapon of mass destruction can easily obtain detailed instructions from readily accessible sources, such as legitimate reference books, the so-called underground press, and the Internet."
publicizing a gag order (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe the guys at Burst.net are neither villains nor tools.
As I understand it, when the Stasi want something removed from the net, they typically send a National Security Letter demanding said removal, and forbidding disclosure of their demand. One convenient way to bring light to a secret removal order is for the hosting company to comply with it in a way that maximizes inconvenience to the internet community at large. It's a nice alternative to quietly silencing a blog without due process in open court -- who does that anymore? -- that probably (probably...) won't get anyone from Burst.net thrown into the Gulag, sued into destitution, or disappeared off to Guantanamo for some "enhanced interrogation".
Re:Brilliant.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hah, it's even better than that. Pretend you're a terrorist, using that blog to communicate somehow - apparently in this case it was to disseminate bomb making information and target lists.
All of a sudden, the blog you're visiting every day or so gets shut down. What does that tell you? If you're a paranoid terrorist cell, it most likely means that the government has noticed you use the blog to communicate and ordered the hosting provider to shut it down.
So now you know that the government knows about that communications channel. The government doesn't really know anything besides your IP address, which is pretty useless if you've been using Tor or something similar. Who comes out ahead here?
Troll? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not sure why the above is considered trollish, though the tone might be snippy. It's true that US policymakers didn't shut down the blog themselves, but what are you supposed to think if you're a website owner and you get a letter from FBI advising you that material on your website threatens American lives and that you "may voluntarily elect to shut down the sites of customers involved in these kinds of situations." If anything the feds should be doing the opposite -- advise the blog owner to keep open a potentially useful source of information so it could be watched. The guys who want to blow things up are going to find a way to connect with each other and find whatever info they need to build bombs elsewhere; the question is whether they do it with or without their enemies watching.
Re:Troll? (Score:5, Insightful)
*sigh*
A long time ago, there was a journalist that was anti-KKK.
Instead of avoiding any mention of the KKK, he revealed their secrets. All the mumbo jumbo, the secret signs, what they believed, etc. He even joined them in order to find out their secrets.
He probably lead to more ridicule of the KKK than any other journalists.
Today, he'd probably be labeled a terrorist sympathizer, spreading their information.
We should reveal what terrorists believe in. As someone once said, freedom of speech is why David Duke is considered a laughing stock in most of the country, while Hitler (in a far more repressive environment) went on to murder millions of the "undesirables". (Not only Jews, the Romani suffered greatly as well).
Lets here it for freedom of information. Yes, it might inspire a few wingnuts, but the harsh light of day will make it eventually wither and die.
If you look at how the religious schools that contribute to suicide bombings are run, they have a very tight control of information. They make sure would-be-"martyrs" only hear one version of the truth.
In the real world, the "truth" is more complex. Most people, when exposed to information, are decent at picking out the chaff.
We need more freedom of expression in the war against terror.
Just my $.02.
Re: (Score:3)
seems to demonstrate that that commentator hasn's spent much time around the general populace.
Re:Troll? (Score:4, Insightful)
Look - The people that want to kill other people - they will continue to try and do so. Taking down instructions for making a bomb, or any other information, won't stop them from trying. What is does accomplish is to allow the Government to control information "To keep us safe". But, we have no data to indicate we are any safer, more secure. I don't trust that they will have my best interests at heart. The nature of bureaucracy tells me that if there is any conflict between my best interest and a faceless bureaucrat covering their ass, my freedoms and rights will get trampled.
To me, it is more acceptable that the information be left online. It doesn't harm anyone. Sticks and stones...
Re:Troll? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the terrorists should totally have a "share this" button on the blog. You know, social media and all ;)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Who are these investors that back this company? I'm sure they'll be real thrilled to hear "Even though we didn't have to, we decided to stop conducting business for awhile for PR reasons, but almost all of our customers are outraged and leaving us."
Re:Brilliant.... (Score:4, Informative)
I don't think you really understand what happened. Burst.net is a hosting provider. They found out that one of their thousands of customers was blatantly violating TOS, and shut it down. Bloggetry was that one customer, but they happened to resell what they bought to 70,000 other people, so when one Blogetery user violated Burst.net's TOS, all 70,000 got shutdown. Blggetery is clearly pathetic here, as they relied entirely on someone else's infrastructure, made no attempt to monitor what they were hosting, and had no backup. They had no "investors", Blogetery is one twenty something year old retard who had no idea what he was doing, and was just offering free blog hosting and collecting Adsense dollars. Burst.net has investors, and made the right and obvious call.
Re:Brilliant.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, US so much better than China.
Seriously? Will you please just shut up? I cannot believe you persist in this after Burst.net's CTO explained the situation in the article.
... not to see great stuff but to understand just how unfettered stuff is in the United States. Yeah, things like bomb making and child porn get you in trouble. But it's a hell of a lot better than the large compendium of what may or may not get you in trouble in China.
So because a private company operating under its own volition shuts down its server, that's the United States government's fault and equates them to China?
The amount of ignorance you demonstrate is downright impressive. The fact that the company had the choice given what the government reported to them shows that the US is not on the same level as China. Tell me, do you need a government approved license to host content in the United States [slashdot.org]? Go spend sometime on four chan and something awful
Get a clue.
Re: (Score:2)
...that's the United States government's fault and equates them to China?
US haters aside, it does show the complete moronic ineptitude of a huge, unwieldy bureaucracy like the US Gov., and Al Qaeda's one Ace down their collective holes; especially after the Wash. Post's story about all the spy agencies the US has set up as a reaction to 9/11 and how bloated and ineffective they are. If I were an intelligent spy hunter I'd encourage Al F*cknut to post all the information they wanted. And read. Its takes a real pack of idiots not to see the value in that.
Re:Brilliant.... (Score:5, Funny)
So because a private company operating under its own volition shuts down its server, that's the United States government's fault and equates them to China?
China. It's the new Nazi. :-) Reductio egg fu yung.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
You don't know that. Given the secrecy we allow the government to operate under, there could be a gag order in place. The patriot act permits that kind of thing. Just like China's "state secrets" act that keeps Google from publishing the number of government takedown requests. The US government will most certainly shut down anything if it feels that a speech, web site, etc might actually produce results. So what if it allows people to vent juvenile angst? Th
Re:Brilliant.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The only thing really diffrent between the USA and China on issues like this is one of attitude displayed.
China: You will shut this down. You have no choice.
USA: You should shut this down or we'll make your life a legal hell.
The end result is the same in either case.
Here's a clue... (Score:3, Insightful)
When a government "suggests" you do something to avoid an unpleasant government intervention upon you (or your company) and you cave to that suggestion to avoid the response of the suggester; you become an agent of the government in censorship. A private company of its own volition, without any notice from the government turns off a site that violates TOS? Fine, that's barely acceptable C2P censorship, but as soon as the government makes a suggestion? No. Sorry. Unacceptable.
See the fine distinction?
Clues c
guess it means FBI has enough data now (Score:4, Interesting)
on those guys. or they wouldn't have made the request, including the little line at the end that basically said, "you have a pistol. you know what to do for esprit de corps. we will be back in 15 minutes."
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
How to make a bomb out of child porn in three easy moves: 1. obtain some child porn; 2. email it to your local police; 3. watch your house blow up as you refuse to answer the door.
Re:Brilliant.... (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't know if that's allowed in China, but in the UK people have been convicted under terrorism legislation for possession of documents that may be of use to a terrorist. In one case recently, someone was convicted for owning copies of the anarchists handbook. Not for making anything from it, just for having it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You know, the same thing could have happened in Canada, or Europe, or South America, Or Australia, or... anywhere really.
Perhaps you are confused by thinking the US is somehow completely different from the rest of the world in that regard.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
This has already been addressed above. [slashdot.org]. eldavojohn, care to comment on this post now?
Sure, why not? The post you linked to I find quite humorous because if you actually read section 2702 [cornell.edu] it says nothing about voluntarily shutting down your server. It's talking about voluntary disclosure of communications. That's assuming that whoever sent them the notice had already found the messages in question.
Tell me, where in that code did you find the information that they should voluntarily shut down their server or face life threatening consequences?
The reason the server was shut down -
Re: (Score:2)
The reason the server was shut down -- I assume -- is because they were notified that they were serving such information and they had two choices A) read every single blog posting and verify that no more of that information is on that server or B) shut it down and be safe.
You're forgetting the third option:
C) The owners love their country and are pissed off that someone is using their service to host anti-American content.
Companies are owned by people, and people have opinions and the right to act on them. I would not be surprised if this were part of the decision making process (though money can get people to turn a blind eye to things they find distasteful).
Re: (Score:2)
In other news, both google.com and bing.com and 10s of thousands of servers behind those domains are scheduled to be voluntarily shut down later today due to the fact that they may have indexed and cached some of the offensive content.
What am I missing?