Subpoena Sought For Browsed News Articles 172
The Xoxo Reader writes "A new filing in the Autoadmit Internet defamation lawsuit (previously discussed here on two occasions) reveals how the plaintiffs' lawyers have attempted to discover the identities of the defendants, who posted under pseudonyms on a message board without IP logging. The defendants had posted links and excerpts of several Web pages that mention the plaintiffs, including a Washington Post article, a college scholarship announcement, and a federal court opinion. Now the plaintiffs are asking those Web sites for logs of everybody who accessed those articles in the hours before the allegedly defamatory content was posted. (All the more reason to read the web through Google cache!) The plantiff's motion for expedited discovery includes copies of the lawyers' letters to hosting providers, ISPs, and others. It also includes replies from the recipients, many of whom point out that the lawyers' requests are technically impossible to fulfill. No matter; the plaintiffs are asking the court to issue subpoenas anyway. This thread contains a summary of the letters in the filing."
Cyberbullying at its worst (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cyberbullying at its worst (Score:5, Insightful)
FTA:
"According to court documents, a user on the site named "STANFORDtroll" began a thread in 2005 seeking to warn Yale students about one of the women in the suit, entitled "Stupid Bitch to Enter Yale Law." Another threatened to rape and sodomize her, the documents said.
The plaintiff, a respected Stanford University graduate identified only as "Doe I" in the lawsuit, learned of the Internet attack in the summer of 2005 before moving to Yale in Connecticut. The posts gradually became more menacing.
Some posts made false claims about her academic record and urged users to warn law firms, or accused her of bribing Yale officials to gain admission and of forming a lesbian relationship with a Yale administrator, the court papers said."
Law Students? Anyone hiring these people needs to seriously check their own ethics.
Re:Cyberbullying at its worst (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cyberbullying at its worst (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey, welcome to the internet. Somebody just today threatened to hit me with a 2x4 because I accused him of making up a definition of "science".
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When he starts posting pics from the lumber yard near your house, I don't think you'll be thinking that it's "just the internet" anymore. That was the level these threats rose to - actual stalking of the individuals targeted.
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Grif: No! Like a 'Puma'! It's a big cat, like a lion.
Sarge: You're making that up!
Grif: I'm telling you, it's a real animal!
Sarge: Simmons! I want you to poison Grif's next meal!
Simmons: Yes, Sir!
Sarge: Look, see these two tow hooks? They look like tusks. And what kind of animal has tus
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named "STANFORDtroll" began a thread in 2005 seeking to warn Yale students about one of the women in the suit, entitled "Stupid Bitch to Enter Yale Law." Another threatened to rape and sodomize her
Hey, welcome to the internet. Somebody just today threatened to hit me with a 2x4 because I accused him of making up a definition of "science".
Before you go talking about how these women should toughen up and grow thicker skins, realize that not only were they threatened with battery and rape, they also had their class schedules posted, dorm numbers, even times that they went to the gym. Imagine if the anonymous person who threatened to hit you with a 2x4 also posted pictures of you through a sniper scope - be a little different, wouldn't it?
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In an interesting case of come uppance, at least one of the administrators of the board was rejected after an offer was made by a prestigious law firm. Someone let them know of the existence of the forums, they called him in for another interview, asked him about it. A day later, "We appreciate your speaking to us yesterday. Unfortunately, our discussions did not lead to any answers which satisfied us in regards to your inv
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Hmm, I didn't know you could sodomize a woman! I thought that was strictly a male activity. Do court documents have to be as specific as to what exact orifice the guy threatened to penetrate? Highly entertaining stuff.
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I feel the same is t
4th Amandment [was Re:Cyberbullying at its worst] (Score:3, Interesting)
This is something that has always confused me about American law. I've never lived in the USA, but I have lived in a few other places (Australia, several European countries),
Re:4th Amandment [was Re:Cyberbullying at its wors (Score:2, Interesting)
For example, a police officer doesn't need a search warrant to seize something which is in plain sight, such as a joint of a table. But if that joint is concealed then if it were to be seized then it would be inadmissible.
Another example is that statements made to the police
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There are two ways to deal with illegally obtained evidence; that way and the way U.S. courts handle it, which is to exclude it. The U.S. Supreme Court compared the two and decided to go with the latter way. It's about upholding the integrity of the system as a whole.
From Mapp v. Ohio:
There are those who say, as did Justice (then Judge) Cardozo, that under our constitutional exclusionary doctrine "[t]he criminal is to go free because the constable has blundered." People v. Defore, 242 N. Y., at 21, 150 N. E., at 587. In some cases this will undoubtedly be the result. 9 But, as was said in Elkins, "there is another consideration - the imperative of judicial integrity." 364 U.S., at 222 . The criminal goes free, if he must, but it is the law that sets him free. Nothing can destroy a government more quickly than its failure to observe its own laws, or worse, its disregard of the charter of its own existence. As Mr. Justice Brandeis, dissenting, said in Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438, 485 (1928): "Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. . . . If the Government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy."
What would happen, for example, if in the aftermath of a well-publiciz
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Where did condemning innocent people come into it? I don't see the connection to illegally obtained evidence. I don't see why it should encourage people to behave illegally either - the only way a cop would get away with it is if they lied about how they obtained the evidence. But in that case, the exclusionary principle wouldn't even come into effect - since according to the (false) story of the cops, the evidence was legal! in other words, the exclusionary principle makes no difference as to whether
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Google Cache doesn't help (Score:5, Informative)
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HTTP-Referer (Score:3, Insightful)
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If you access Google's cache, at what point do you foresee it accessing the original page?
Presuming use of a typical web browser in default configuration, nearly immediately. As soon as the first page specifies any image, your browser will dutifully go request that image from the original site. Note that use of text-only non-script browsers like lynx (or having the equivalent plug-ins) means your browser will refuse to load images, scripts, and so forth, so of course that avoids this issue. Further
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Not necessarily; &strip=1 (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Google Cache doesn't help (Score:4, Informative)
From a privacy perspective, it's a lot better if the information that the lawyers are looking for is physically scattered over many websites, each owned by a separate legal entity with different hardware capabilities, different backup strategies, different technical expertise, and different political beliefs.
Remember, the company Google has enough information already to reconstruct your email conversations (if you use gmail or you exchange emails with someone who uses gmail), your searches terms on Google and partner search engines (agreements to pass along complete search histories to Google in exchange for help with searching), and the actual pages on third party web sites that you visit (world wide text ad tracking by Google/Doubleclick is enough for browsing history reconstruction).
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Even if you strip away all the links that make your browser contact the original web page, then that website won't know about you, but Google will know about you: IP address, browser user agent, cookies, etc. and which cached page you looked at. A judge can order Google to hand over that kind of information, if the lawyer gets advice from a techie who knows what to ask for.
Don't be silly (Score:3, Funny)
You can download the toolkit from Google yourself (Apache license). Do a search for friv.ol.ous.js.
Proxies? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Proxies? (Score:4, Informative)
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Then the lawyers should submit a FOIA request to the NSA to get the IPs.
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Subpoena for non-existent materials (Score:5, Interesting)
An enterprising divorce attorney then took it upon himself to subpoena records from the Toll Authority, in spite of their PR campaign and very public statements to the effect that such records simply did not exist. The attorney was awarded the records and I believe it was material the divorce proceeding.
Shortly after that, detailed records were made available in billing information to customers. I guess there wasn't any point in denying that the information existed any longer.
Everyone can be surprised by what can be found when a court orders it to be turned over.
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My presumption was, from the very beginning, that they were keeping such records. That's why I refused to get an I-Pass, because I don't like being tracked, just as a matter of general principle. I wasn't surprised to find out that I was right.
As a matter of fact, adoption rates for I-Pass transponders were not what they were hoping to get (maybe a lot of other people felt the same way I do, I don't know) so about a year ago they just
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For those holding off on getting the toll tags, the license plate readers are already tracking you. There is no point, privacy is a thing of the past.
Illinois is a state I plan to keep avoiding, but if I ever go, I would hope the toll road authorities around the country could event
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Well, that was certainly a fringe benefit.
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Interesting story (Score:2)
critical flaws (Score:2)
Google cache? (Score:2, Insightful)
Impossible? (Score:5, Funny)
And they make no mistakes too.
Duh. We all know that.
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They are just really efficient at taking a blatantly silly/careless instruction from the programmer and faithfully obeying it.
Ten.
Million.
Times.
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Could have saved a lot of hassle... (Score:3, Funny)
Text of some of the letters (Score:5, Informative)
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grep "/doc/1P2-915261.html" access.2007march.txt >> results_for_subpoena.txt
Barring a typo, wouldn't something like that give them the result they are seeking? Why is it so difficult? And if it's difficult because they don't have the logs, then why is it so difficult to explain that?
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P.S.
If you do not have a technology consultant working with you, the reason we can't give you the information is because it's all tangled up in the tubes.
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Right... (Score:3, Insightful)
Right...because centralizing the record-keeping of all your online activity is going to protect your privacy...
Do you vote? We're doomed.
first thing we should do (Score:2)
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First, kill all the lawyers. Second, we don't need to kill the lawyers, when the Judges we have refuse to do their jobs.
I seroiusly doubt that the judges "refuse" to do their job. What I think happened instead is that the number of judges per capita has grown significantly lower and that has had the effect of lengthening the time it takes to have a case heard. I am assuming, of course, that the number of disagreements or crimes that require court access to be resolved has stayed the same per capita (or at least on the same order of magnitude per capita -- 20% rise is insignificant when you realize that the population has
I don't understand... (Score:2)
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Surely people smarter than I have dealt with this?
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another way is to require cookies to use the site and log the cookie serial number, obviously users can defeat that but both meet the need for short term tracking without creating a searchable log.
Time on their hands (Score:3, Insightful)
Even assuming that someone insanely keeps logs that long, what are the legal requirements for accurate time of day on the server (none, as far as I know)? If page entries are manually timestamped or timestamped by a javascript on the poster's machine, there's no particular reason to have an accurate clock. Was the clock on your machine accurate a year ago? How do you know? How do you prove that in this case the accesses didn't occur after the URLs were posted by people reading the posts? This isn't just one machine, but multiple machines. How do you perform a time correlation with data that has no requirement for validity?
Quote the president's actions on deletion... (Score:3, Funny)
Well, if its legal for the president to do so, then it must be OK for me...
If the judge asks them why they were so asinine, they can respond saying the judges did not nothing to prevent the president to do so, and hence by condoing a public action, the judges deemed it legal.
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If the legal system could standby and watch one person commit a commit, then it has no right or basis to convict another person of the same crime.
Keeping data is a liabitily (Score:2)
Google Me (Score:2)
Until they subpoena Google. Or we find out that Google secretly turns over its data already.
Yuck. (Score:2)
well, they can (Score:4, Insightful)
Seems to me that they can, both legally and practically. Anonymous speech is protected in the US. It's unfortunate that that also permits anonymous defamation, but that's the price we pay. If it hadn't been defaming speech on a web site, people might also have spread around anonymous pamphlets or sent anonymous mail.
Besides, even if this lawsuit were to succeed and even if they found the posters, the result will simply be that people will be more careful about anonymizing their IP addresses. For example, if you connect from Starbuck's, your name isn't linked to your IP.
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Seeing as how there was a crime, how is it wrong for this girl to do what she can to find out who it was and have her day in court? She has a lead, let her follow it. If the providers don't have the logs, sucks to be her, but if they do, they should cou
Quit Saving IP Information! (Score:2)
Re:How can you subpeona (Score:5, Insightful)
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The defence rests.
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The point here isn't that archaic times in our history was the norm, it was that with experts in power, you often don't get the real opinion. It should be up to the parties involved in the case to offer evidence in a way the judge can understand it. The judge should then be able to associated that with what
Re:How can you subpeona (Score:5, Funny)
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Everything else is a variation on the theme.
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Except here on Slashdot. Here, everything's a variation on a meme.
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Exactly! (Score:3, Funny)
After all things added, it should all fit on a single truck.
... or was it a series of tubes?
They can have my old copy of 1.0 (Score:2)
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Google cache, only via an ISP's proxy server, best not to put all your secrets in one spot, for some whacked out, arrest quota filling, promotion seeking, professio
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Re:hmm (Score:4, Informative)
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45 an attorney can sign and issue subpoenas for third parties, as an officer of the court. I know it's the same for my state, and considering most states base their rules to a large extent on the Federal ones, I'm assuming it's the same for most jurisdictions.
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You forgot to add on "IANAL".
C//
Can't issue subpoenas until discovery begins (Score:3, Informative)
Plaintiffs can't issue a subpoena without the court's permission since discovery hasn't began. That's the whole nature of the motion for expedited discovery.
http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=753317&mc=167&forum_id=2#9222459 [autoadmit.com]
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Seriously, Autoadmit reads like the law school version of jocks in the shower talking each other up.
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The problem isn't that people can remain anonymous. It's that they can remain anonymous after commiting a crime.
It's a question of rule of law.
I'm completely against not giving private records without a subpeona or warant but to claim that there should never be a mechanism by which a court and or jury of our peers can't decide that you've commited a crime and should stand for it is much akin to saying that we shouldn't be able to e
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I'm completely against not giving private records without a subpeona or warant but to claim that there should never be a mechanism by which a court and or jury of our peers can't decide that you've commited a crime and should stand for it is much akin to saying that we shouldn't be able to enter a convicted murderer's home to arrest him once convicted.
I'm not trying to sound like a grammar Nazi here, but I read this sentence about 5 times and still could not understand what you were trying to say.
As long as there is a court order and a legal and just system in place I fully support the ability to subpeona documents to catch criminals.
So do I, as long as both of those conditions are in place. My support evaporates when either the court order or the legal and just system ceases to exist. My primary objection to the original post was that the poster made it sound like it should be easy for anyone to personally identify other people online, regardless as to whether or not they did something
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I think we're in agreement.
I just take objection to some who believe that they're entitled to some sort of unequivicable privacy in the digital realm. It seems to be a growing movement that there should be no mechanism to ever find out who is who online. It shouldn't be easy and it shouldn't be available without a court order but I think the p
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What legal basis do you have for a privacy right contained in someone else's property? In the U.S. you should have no standing to contest this action. The case could take an interesting turn if the libeler wrote from a foreign computer or through a foreign proxy.
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What person expects privacy between themselves and a corporation these days? Your records are (and always have been) just a warrant/subpoena away.
That's a baseless accusation.