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CYBER WARS
Protest targets US cyber intelligence legislation
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) April 16, 2012

"CIPSA would allow ISPs, social networking sites, and anyone else handling Internet communications to monitor users and pass information to the government without any judicial oversight," said EFF activism director Rainey Reitman. "The language of this bill is dangerously vague, so that personal online activity -- from the mundane to the intimate -- could be implicated."

Civil liberties groups on Monday launched protests targeting proposed US cyber intelligence law that they fear would let police freely dip into people's private online information.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and Reporters Without Borders were among organizations that signaled the start of a week of Internet protests against the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA).

"A blanket monitoring system is never an appropriate solution," Reporters Without Borders said in a release calling for Congress to reject the CISPA legislation introduced in November of last year.

"Freedom of expression and the protection of online privacy are increasingly under threat in democratic countries, where a series of bills and draft laws is sacrificing them in the interests of national security or copyright."

The EFF released an online tool for US residents to find Twitter accounts of their representatives in Congress to target messages about the threat CISPA poses to privacy in day-to-day lives.

"CIPSA would allow ISPs, social networking sites, and anyone else handling Internet communications to monitor users and pass information to the government without any judicial oversight," said EFF activism director Rainey Reitman.

"The language of this bill is dangerously vague, so that personal online activity -- from the mundane to the intimate -- could be implicated."

The Twitter portion of the online campaign included creating #CongressTMI (an acronym for Too Much Information) and #CISPA "hashtags" to be added to messages to make it easier to find "tweets" about the topic.

Organizations plan to augment the online campaign with old-fashioned ink-and-paper letters sent to legislators by post and articles detailing reasoning behind opposing the bill.

"We need cybersecurity legislation, not surveillance legislation," said Center for Democracy and Technology president Leslie Harris.

Groups involved in the protest include Constitution Project; Fight for the Future, and the American Civil Liberties Union.

"Some people believe that we have to sacrifice civil liberties in order to shore up cybersecurity, but that's misunderstanding both issues," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Lee Tien.

"Giving companies carte blanche to bypass federal law does not make us safer -- it puts us at more risk."

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Suspected Anonymous member charged with police hacks
San Francisco (AFP) April 16, 2012 - A man linked to notorious hacker collective Anonymous was charged on Monday with cyber attacks on police websites in the US state of Utah.

John Anthony Borell III, a 21-year-old resident of Ohio, faces a maximum prison sentence of 20 years and $500,000 in fines if convicted of the two counts of computer intrusion outlined in a federal indictment.

"Borell hacked into protected computers without authorization on two occasions in January and intentionally caused damage to servers hosting websites for two Utah law enforcement agencies," according to the federal indictment.

One target was a computer server hosting the Salt Lake City Police Department website and another was a website for the Utah Chiefs of Police Association, according to FBI agents that identified Borell as the hacker.

Borell was arrested after investigators linked him to Twitter messages taking credit for the cyber attacks, according to the FBI.

The criminal complaint described Borell as being associated with the "hacker-activist" network Anonymous, a loosely knit collective with no clearly defined leadership structure.



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CYBER WARS
China internet censorship futile: Ai Weiwei
London (AFP) April 16, 2012
Dissident artist Ai Weiwei warned the Chinese government that its attempts to censor the internet would inevitably fail, in an article published in Monday's Guardian newspaper. Ai, who was held for 81 days last year as police rounded up dissidents amid online calls for Arab-style protests in China, wrote in the British newspaper that new "real identity" rules to curb troublesome microblogger ... read more


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