222 lines
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222 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1170
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Title: HPR1170: TGTM Newscast for 1/20/2013
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1170/hpr1170.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 20:55:26
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---
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You are listening to TGTM News number 88, recorded for two-stage January 22, 2013.
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You are listening to the Tech Only Hacker Public Radio Edition to get the full podcast
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including political, commentary, and other controversial topics.
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Please visit www.toolgeektme.us.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me.
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Please send your comments to dgatdeepgeek.us.
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The webpage for this program is www.toolgeektme.us.
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You can subscribe to me on Identica as the username DeepGeek or you could follow me on Twitter.
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My username there is dgtgtm, as in DeepGeek TalkGeek to me.
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Hello again, this is Bobobex and now for the Tech Roundup.
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From EFF.org dated the 11th of January 2013 by Honey for Corey.
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Free speech victory, court grants preliminally injunction in EFF's Prop 35 suit.
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Late Friday, a federal judge granted a preliminally injunction in the lawsuit EFF filed with
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the ACLU of Northern Carolina that challenges the unconstitutional provisions in Prop 35,
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a ballot measure passed by California voters in November that restricts the legal and constitutionally
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protected speech of all registered sex offenders in California.
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EFF and the ACLU NC filed the lawsuit the morning after election day, noting that although
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Prop 35 is ostensibly about increasing punishment for human traffickers, it's beset with
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problems.
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The biggest was its requirements that registrants turn over a list of all their internet identifiers
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and service providers to law enforcement.
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The court granted a temporary restraining order, hours after the lawsuit was filed.
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And today, the court granted the preliminary injunction, finding we were likely to succeed
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in showing that Prop 35 violated the first amendment.
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First, the court found that there was a clear chilling effect on speech because registrants
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would have to disclose their identity either before they speak or within 24 hours after
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speaking somewhere online.
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Plus, without any safeguards to prevent the public dissemination of this online identification
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information and the potential three-year prison term awaiting a registrant for failing
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to comply, the court was convinced that registrants would think twice before speaking.
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The court also found that Prop 35 applied both to more speakers and more speech than necessary
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to advance the government-interesting combating human trafficking.
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Prop 35 requires anyone who is a registered sex offender, even people with decades-old
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low-level offences like Mr. Meenia, Indicent Exposure and people whose offences were not
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related to the internet to report this information.
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That would cover more than 75,000 Californians, and it required a wide range of information
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including email addresses, user names and other identifiers used for online political
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discussion groups, book and restaurant review sites, forums about medical conditions and
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newspapers or blog comments to be turned over to the government.
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While the government claimed that to hearing last month they only intended to use the
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information, if it had a nexus to a criminal investigation, the court found that nexus
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to be missing from the text of Prop 35 at all.
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As a result, the court believed registrants right to speak anonymously will therefore be
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chilled.
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As a rest of this article, please follow the links in the show notes.
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A Canadian court has rejected a request from the United States to hand over 32 servers
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hosted by a local provider, instead of simply handing over all data, which may include personal
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files or users, the court decided to first determine what files are stored on the machines.
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Mega-upload lawyer, Ira Rothkin, is pleased with the ruling and hopes the United States
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will be more considerate of the privacy of cloud hosting users when requesting data
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seizures in the future.
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When Mega-upload was raided last year, the US government seized 1,103 servers at Kapathy
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as hosting facility in the United States.
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However, that was not the only hardware used by the file hosting site.
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Mega-upload also had machines elsewhere, including 32 servers at an Equinox data centre
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in Canada.
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Despite in that these machines may hold crucial data for the ongoing lawsuit, the US government
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asked Canada to hand them over for investigation.
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In their request to the court, the authorities back up their claim by citing an email from
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Mega-upload staff stating that the Canadian servers will serve as a database, stroke number
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crunching machines.
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Mega-upload protested this broad request, arguing that the servers may contain a lot of
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information that is simply irrelevant to the case.
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The company has asked the court to either deny the request or appoint an independent forensic
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examiner who can inform the court of what kind of files are stored on the 32 servers.
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The Ontario court agreed with this reservation and refused to send a service to the United
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States before the contents are confirmed.
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The appropriate balance of the state interest in gathering evidence and privacy interests
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in information can be struck by an order that the service be brought before the court,
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so that the court can make an order of finding what is to be sent to the order reads.
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For more information on this article, please follow the links in the show notes.
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The next tech story comes from EmptyWheel.net dated the 17th of January 2013 by EmptyWheel,
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what to do about computer crime laws.
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In a long piece published in alternate on Tuesday, I noted that air and sports' treatment
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was not at all that unusual.
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Quoted as saying,
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In some ways, what was happening to sports was not all that unusual.
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George Washington University Law Professor Orrin Kerr, a leading expert on computer crime
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law who is sympathetic to the issues that Swartz Trumpians explains that the government's
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charges fall within the norm for computer crimes.
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Moreover, the tactics used in this case are normal for the Department of Justice.
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The government often multiple charges in order to coerce defendants to plead guilty
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without trial.
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The law's governing computer crime criminalise all sorts of actions that don't seem like
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they should be crimes.
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The government inflates charges beyond all proportion to coerce plea deals.
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The government's prosecutorial powers are overwhelming.
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This administration and these prosecutors have aggressively used the law to shut off the
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free flow of information.
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So to the extent people are horrified by how Swartz was treated, they should also be horrified
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by the abuse of prosecutorial discretion more generally, whether it affects a genius
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like Swartz, nabbed on a computer crime charge, or a regular person brought on in drugs
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charges.
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End quote.
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That same day, I suggested would be far better off and far truer to air and Swartz's
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ethic trying to fix systemic problems than avenging him personally, though I also called for
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firing Lanny Brewer, the head of the Department of Justice's criminal division.
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Quote.
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One of the most ethical suggestions I've seen, and I'm not even sure if there is a white
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house petition for it, is to fix the computer fraud and abuse act.
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Update.
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Thanks to Saul Tanenbaum, here it is.
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The government should never throw the book at Aaron for accessing MIT's network and downloading
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scholarly research.
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However, some extremely problematic elements of the law made it impossible.
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We can trace some of those issues to the US criminal justice system as an institution,
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and I suspect others will write about that in the coming days.
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But Aaron's tragedy also signs a spotlight on the couple of profound flaws in the computer
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fraud and abuse act, in particular, and it gives us an opportunity to think about how
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to address them.
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I didn't know Aaron personally, but he doesn't strike me as the kind of guy who would seek
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individualized solutions to systemic problems, and one of the problems with the system that
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destroyed him is a law that badly criminalises actions that don't present much harm.
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To read the rest of this post, please follow the links in the show notes.
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Our next article comes from torrentfreep.com dated the 15th of January 2013 by Ben Jones.
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Copyright strike systems are modern witch trials.
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Our final text story is from EFF.org dated the 12th of January 2013 by Peter Eckersley,
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farewell to Aaron Schwartz, an extraordinary hacker and activist.
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Yesterday, Aaron Schwartz, a close friend and collaborator of ours, committed suicide.
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This is a tragic end to a brief and extraordinary life.
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Aaron did more than almost anyone to make the internet a thriving ecosystem for open
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knowledge and to keep it that way.
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His contributions were numerous and some of them were indispensable.
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When we asked him in late 2010 for help in stopping COICA, the predecessor to the SOPA and
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PEPA internet blacklist bills, he founded an organisation called Demand Progress, which
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mobilised over a million online activists and proved to be an invaluable ally in winning
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that campaign.
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Other projects Aaron worked on included the RSS specifications, web.pi, tortuweb, the
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open library and the chrome port of HTTPS everywhere.
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Aaron helped launch the creative commons.
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He was a former co-founder at Reddit and a member of the team that made the site successful.
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His blog was often a delight.
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Aaron's eloquent brilliance was mixed with a complicated introversion.
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He communicated on his own schedule and needed a lot of space to himself, which frustrated
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some of his collaborators.
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He was fascinated by the social world around him but often found it torch was to deal with.
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For a long time, Aaron was more comfortable reading books than talking to humans.
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He once told me something like, even talking to very smart people is hard, but if I just
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sit down and read their books, I get their most considered and insightful thoughts condensed
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in a beautiful and efficient form.
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I can learn from books faster than I can from talking to the authors.
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His passion for the written word for open knowledge and his flair for self-promotion sometimes
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produce spectacular results, even before the events that proved to be his undoing.
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In 2011, Aaron used the MIT campus network to download millions of journal articles from
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the JSTOR database, allegedly changing his laptop's IP and MAC addresses when necessary
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to get around the blocks put in place by JSTOR and MIT and sneaking into a closet to get
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a faster connection to the MIT network.
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For this purported crime, Aaron was facing criminal charges with penalties up to 35 years
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in prison, most seriously for unauthorized access to computers under the computer fraud
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and abuse act.
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If we believe the prosecutors allegations against him, Aaron had hoped to liberate the millions
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of scientific and scholarly articles he had downloaded from JSTOR, releasing them so
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that anyone could read them or analyse them as a single, giant data set, something that
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Aaron had done before.
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While his methods were provocative, the goal that Aaron died fighting for, freeing the publicly
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funded scientific literature from a publishing system that makes it inaccessible to most
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of those who paid for it, is one that we should all support.
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Moreover, the situation Aaron found himself in highlights the injustice of US computer
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crime laws and particularly their punishment regimes.
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Aaron's act was undoubtedly political activism and taking such an act in the physical world
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would at most have meant that he faced light penalties akin to trespassing as part of
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a political protest.
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Because he used a computer, he instead faced long-term incarceration.
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This is a disparity that EFF has fought against for years.
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Yesterday it had tragic consequences.
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Lawrence Lessig has called for this tragedy to be a basis for reform on computer crime laws
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and the over-zealous prosecutors who use them.
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We agree.
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Aaron, we sorely miss your friendship and your help in building a better world.
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May you rest in peace.
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Other tech headlines in the news that you may wish to read are, Aaron Schwartz's lawyer
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Prosecutor Stephen Heyman wanted juicy case for publicity.
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Law Professor James Grimmelman explains how he probably violated the same laws as Aaron
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Schwartz.
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EFF's initial improvements to Aaron's law for computer crime reform.
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To read these articles, please follow the links in the show notes.
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This week's edition has been staffed and produced by the TGTM news team, editorial
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selection by DeepGeek, views of the story authors reflect their own opinions and not
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necessarily those of TGTM news.
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News from EmptyWill.net, TheStand.org and AllGov.com are used under a range permission.
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News from torrentfreak.com and EFF.org is used under permission of the Creative Commons
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by Attribution License.
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News from Venezuela and analysis.com and democracynow.org is used under permission of the Creative
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Commons by Attribution Noncommercial No Derivatives License.
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News from the RealityCheck.org used under permission of the Creative Commons by Attribution
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share a like license.
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News sources retain their respective copyrights.
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Thank you.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me.
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Please send your comments to DG at deepgeek.us.
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The webpage for this program is at www.talkgeektoMe.us.
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You can subscribe to me on Identica as the user name DeepGeek or you could follow me
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on Twitter.
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My user name there is DGTGM as in DeepGeek Talk Geek To Me.
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This episode of Talk Geek To Me is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution
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share like 3.0 on Port License.
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This license allows commercial reuse of the work as well as allowing you to modify the
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work so long as you share a like the same rights you have received under this license.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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