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EFFector - Volume 27, Issue 8 - weev beats aggressive CFAA prosecution

EFFECTOR

EFFector - Volume 27, Issue 8 - weev beats aggressive CFAA prosecution

 
 
EFFector! Electronic Frontier Foundation
 
 

In our 660th issue:

Court Win: Appeals Court Overturns Andrew "weev" Auernheimer Conviction

A federal appeals court overturned the conviction of computer researcher Andrew "weev" Auernheimer, making it clear that even in the Internet age, the location of a criminal defendant remains an important constitutional limitation. Aurnheimer was charged with violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act for exposing a massive flaw in AT&T's online infrastructure. Auernheimer's appeal team—made up of EFF, Professor Orin Kerr, Marcia Hofmann, and Tor Ekeland—argued that accessing a publicly available website does not constitute unauthorized access to a computer. They also argued that Auernheimer should not have been charged in New Jersey, a jurisdiction with no connection to the defendants or the allegations. He has been released from prison following the court's decision.

Tell Congress to Put an End to the NSA's Mass Spying

We keep learning more disturbing details about the true extent of NSA's mission to spy on millions of innocent people, but Congress hasn't done anything about it—yet. Contact your members of Congress and tell them that you want to see an end to the NSA's mass surveillance now.

EFF Updates

In Aereo, Supreme Court Rightly Skeptical About Becoming Technology Regulators

The Supreme Court expressed a healthy skepticism about its role in regulating new technologies in this week's oral argument in ABC v. Aereo, a case in which broadcasters are suing a company that has provided an innovative new way to watch TV.

EFF FOIA Litigation Reveals: FBI Plans to Have 52 Million Photos in its NGI Face Recognition Database by Next Year

The FBI's massive "Next Generation Initiative" database, which contains biometric data such as fingerprints and iris scans, will include 4.3 million images taken for non-criminal purposes among its 52 million photos.

Making Sure NSA Reform Survives the Gears of the DC Machine

After months of revelations about the NSA's rampant privacy and human rights abuses, there are still some hurdles for real change: legislation masquerading as reform that entrenches some of the NSA's worst practices, Obama's failure to produce actual legislative proposals, and powerful House Judiciary chair Rep. Bob Goodlatte. But these aren’t insurmountable for the USA FREEDOM Act, a bill which has the broadest support of any proposal to reform the surveillance state.

Australian Attorney General Picks Surveillance Over Fair Use on U.S. Visit

Despite recommendations from the Australian Law Reform Commission and hard evidence from copyright scholars that emphasized the benefits of meaningful fair use policies, Australia's Attorney General George Brandis used his recent trip to the United States to instead meet with enemies of fair use and NSA defenders.

EFF Asks Court To Allow Human Rights Case Against Cisco to Proceed

Cisco is being sued for its alleged role in creating highly tailored tools that allow the Chinese government to target and politically repress religious minority group Falun Gong. EFF filed a brief in the case, Doe v. Cisco Systems, in which we argued that the allegations that Cisco intentionally customized its tools to repress Falun Gong should be enough to allow the case to go forward.

LGBTQ Communities in the Arab World Face Unique Digital Threats

Members of the LGBTQ community in the Arab World use the Internet to connect with each other—often as their only choice—but they regularly face filtering, censoring, and covert online operations designed to entrap them. Fortunately, there are tools available to help them be safer online.

Answers and Questions About Military, Law Enforcement, and Intelligence Agency Chatbots

We used a Freedom of Information Act request to get information about the Army's creepy recruitment chatbot, Sgt. Star. What we learned about how the government uses artificial intelligence may prove to be a chilling preview of the future of intelligence gathering.

miniLinks

Internet freedom in Myanmar: A curse or an opportunity?

Myanmar has shifted from a heavily restricted Internet to free access, but this shift has also led to a burst of hate speech about the Rohingya, a Muslim ethnic group.

NSA Said to Exploit Heartbleed Bug for Intelligence for Years

Two anonymous individuals told Bloomberg that the NSA knew about the Heartbleed flaw and exploited it for years, although the Office of the Director of National Intelligence flatly denied such a claim was true.

The mentality of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI undergirds today's surveillance state

The FBI deserves far more scrutiny than it receives, not only because it makes NSA surveillance possible, but also because what the domestic intelligence agency does has a far greater impact on most Americans than the NSA.

Supported by Members

Our members make it possible for EFF to bring legal and technological expertise into crucial battles about online rights. Whether defending free speech online or challenging unconstitutional surveillance, your participation makes a difference. Every donation gives technology users who value freedom online a stronger voice and more formidable advocate.

If you aren't already, please consider becoming an EFF member today.

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Administrivia

Editor: Nadia Kayyali, Activist
editor@eff.org

EFFector is a publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
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General EFF, legal, policy, or online resources queries: info@eff.org

Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged. MiniLinks do not necessarily represent the views of EFF.

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Announcements

Towards a Free Media in Vietnam

Global Policy Analyst Eva Galperin will speak at this EFF co-sponsored event alongside bloggers from Vietnam as part of a series of events to mark 2014 World Press Freedom Day.
May 1, 2014
Washington, DC

International Journalism Festival

EFF's Jillian York will speak on several panels at this year's International Journalism Festival. Entry to the festival is free of charge.
April 30-May 4, 2014
Perugia, Italy

re:publica 2014

EFF's Parker Higgins and Jillian York will both speak at this year's re:publica festival in Berlin.
May 6-9, 2014
Berlin, Germany

Scraping Content: the CFAA, DMCA, and Terms of Use

EFF Staff Attorney Hanni Fakhoury will speak on a panel at the Media Law Resource Center's 2014 Legal Frontiers in Digital Media conference, talking about the use of the CFAA to go after data scrapers.
May 15, 2014
Mountain View, CA

Techno-Activism Third Mondays (TA3M)

Techno-Activism Third Mondays (TA3M) are informal meetups that occur on the same date in many cities worldwide. It is designed to connect techno-activists and hacktivists who work on or with circumvention tools, and/or are interested in anti-censorship and anti-surveillance technology. Currently, TA3M are held in New York, Washington, DC, Amsterdam, Portland, Tokyo, and more.
May 19, 2014
San Francisco, CA

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