Forums › Life › Politics, Media & Current Events › Indymedia hard disks seized
Indymedia hard disks seized
Press Release
7 October 2004
FBI Seizes IMC Servers in the UK
US authorities issued a federal order to Rackspace’s office in the US ordering them to provide Indymedia’s hardware located in London to the requesting agency. Rackspace is one of Indymedia’s web hosting providers with offices in the US and London. Rackspace complied, without first notifying Indymedia, and turned over Indymedia’s server in the UK. This affects some 20+ Indymedia sites worldwide.
Since the subpoena was issued to Rackspace and not to Indymedia, the reasons for this action are still unknown to Indymedia. Talking to Indymedia volunteers, Rackspace stated that “they cannot provide Indymedia with any information regarding the order.” ISPs have received gag orders in similar situations which prevent them from updating the concerned parties on what is happening.
It is unclear to Indymedia how and why a server that is outside the US jurisdiction can be seized by US authorities.
At the same time a second server was taken down at Rackspace which provided streaming radio to several radio stations, BLAG (linux distro), and a handful of miscellanous things.
The last few months have seen numerous attacks on independent media by the US Federal Government. In August the Secret Service used a subpoena in an attempt to disrupt the NYC IMC before the RNC by trying to get IP logs from an ISP in the US and the Netherlands. Last month the FCC shut down community radio stations around the US. Two weeks ago the FBI requested that ndymedia takes down a post on the Nantes IMC that had a photo of some undercover Swiss police and IMC volunteers in Seattle were visited by the FBI on the same issue. On the other hand, Indymedia and other independent media organisations were successfull with their victories for example against Diebold and the Patroit Act. Today however, the US authorities shut down IMCs around the world.
The list of affected local media collectives includes Ambazonia, Uruguay, Andorra, Poland, Western Massachusetts, Nice, Nantes, Lilles, Marseille (all France), Euskal Herria (Basque Country), Liege, East and West Vlaanderen, Antwerpen (all Belgium), Belgrade, Portugal, Prague, Galiza, Italy, Brazil, UK, part of the Germany site, and the global Indymedia Radio site.
TBH I’m amazed indymedia lasted this long without something like this happening… and I don’t think there’s any real legal case for the FBIs actions but its more an attempt to spread FUD amongst the progressive movement, and to look for (or plant?) information “linking progressive activist movements with trrrsm” as Dubya would say..
BTW the FBI have been doing ops like this for some time; albeit mostly to disrupt hacker/warez groups which operate across national borders, and more recently to shut down “al-quaeda” friendly websites.
At least a lot of indymedia still appears to be up and all this does is show America’s true colours – so much for the 1st Amendment…
On a similar note I reckon we are increasingly heading towards a regulated and censored internet if hosting companies and ISPs can be leaned on in this way; although the net can be made up of small interconnected nodes (the original idea) nowadays much of its power is consolidated in the resources of a few large telecoms and infrastructure companies who are fairly likely to cave into the demands of Uncle Sam if the FCC threaten to revoke their licenses!
Let’s look at the stark facts; the same companies which stop people looking at pr0n or rinsing MP3s from peoples work internet links are hapilly working with less than democratic governments such as China and Singapore to provide filtered broadband connections to the home. It would in fact be fairly trivial (from a technical POV) to apply content filtering at ISP level on some ISPs ….
Perhaps its time to “reclaim the internet?”
Certainly worrying, but indeed predictable fare (the US forcibly extradited an australian warez group leader earlier this year, despite the fact he’d commited no crime in his country). Hopefully though indimedia took precautions against something like it and dispersed off site backups about the place…
… makes a mental note to do the same!
Shame though, I remember when the internet was a nice place 🙁
we aren’t in danger
are we?
It seems unlikely, but I won’t tempt fate
I don’t really think the sites serving the rave scene are going to be that heavily targeted – its not as politically active as many think!
Cops also know that closing down party sites would not stop parties; (otherwise they would have tried it years ago) and they are perhaps “better alive than dead” for intelligence gathering purposes. Even though people are careful about locations I’ve seen other info being given away as people try to “score points” in the heat an acrimonious debate…
Although there is a crossover and most ravers (not all though!) support progresssive political movements, much of the energy on this scene is dissipated through the after-effects of drug use.
IME about 70% of people at parties couldn’t care less about the political issues (until parties in their areas get violently shut down by the police) and often avoid both conventional and alternative news media as its “too depressing”, particularly on comedowns.
That said its worth having these backups anyway in case of technical problems and other events that may lead to this sites data having to be restored or swiftly moved elsewhere.
this is some scary gubbins- the first hard evidence i’ve seen about policing the net – which should NEVER be allowed…i am in favour of free speech in all forms… so long as everyone has equal power- at the end of the day how offended can some one be? check sj, theres loads of heads on there Just there to piss people off, and no one cares.
but its worse than freedom of speech – it control of the media and there fore peoples minds – what you know is what you go by and if indymedia is scared out of working, or even if new organisations are put off settin up…
heavyness. official heavyness. boooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Originally posted by USE
this is some scary gubbins- the first hard evidence i’ve seen about policing the net – which should NEVER be allowed…i am in favour of free speech in all forms… so long as everyone has equal power-
thats a big problem – everyone does not have equal power on the net. I’ve been using it since the very early days and it was an idealistic vision in the early 1990s that this would the case – 10 years later the reality is very different.
Despite attempts to change things, it is clear to anyone who has spent a lot of time on the net that it the so-called “net community” is male-dominated with a rather large proportion of sociopathic types; the net is used as much (if not more) for spreading racism, misogyny and other hate and anger as anything positive, as well as a myriad of other crimes and other incitements to violence.
There is no need for the level of heavy handed enforcement against indymedia – OTOH there does need to be some monitoring of this common resource for public safety. I’ve known friends to have received serious personal threats following internet arguments… its also easy enough for an angry or sociopathic person to flood a message board or even crash its servers if they are that determined, thus stifling any “debate”.
Incidentally both SJ and PV have been attacked on occasions, when PV got turned over a lot of party crews websites were destroyed. To this day I can’t work out why people would do this, there was a time when hackers had a code of conduct..
Consider the road system as an analogy; like it or not we need traffic lights, markings, signs, and traffic cops to stop people being killed to often.
But we do not need checkpoints which stop all people in red cars or green mountain bikes from proceeding..
0
Voices
6
Replies
Tags
This topic has no tags
Forums › Life › Politics, Media & Current Events › Indymedia hard disks seized