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Catherina

(35,568 posts)
1. Former Internet Provider Gagged by National Security Letter Recounts How He Was Silenced For 6 Years
Tue Aug 13, 2013, 12:30 PM
Aug 2013

This is the next part, "Former Internet Provider Gagged by National Security Letter Recounts How He Was Silenced For 6 Years"


(video featuring candidate Obama speaking about National Security Letters in 2005)

We continue our discussion of government surveillance and internet privacy with someone who was under an FBI gag order for six years. In early 2004, Nicholas Merrill, who was running an internet service provider in New York called Calyx, was issued a national security letter that ordered him to hand over detailed private records about some of his customers. Under the law, recipients of the letters are barred from telling anyone about their encounter with the FBI. While Merrill was not the first American to be gagged after receiving a national security letter, he was the first to challenge the FBI’s secret tactics. Merrill went to the American Civil Liberties Union, which then filed the first lawsuit challenging the national security letter statute. In the lawsuit, Merrill was simply identified as John Doe. It was only in August 2010, after reaching a settlement with the FBI, that Merrill was able to reveal his identity. &quot The case) resulted in the National Security Letter Provision of the PATRIOT Act being ruled unconstitutional twice," Merrill says. "The problem was, though, we were never able to get to the Supreme Court to get a final, binding ruling that would affect the whole country.... The concern about cybersecurity and the concerns about privacy are really two sides of the same coin. There are a lot of really uncontroversial examples in which organizations and people need confidentiality: Medicine is one, journalism is another, human rights organizations is an obvious third. We’re trying to make the case that if the right of Americans to encrypt their data and to have private information is taken away, that it’s going to have grave, far-reaching effects on many kinds of industries, on our democracy as a whole, and our standing in the world."

Please check back later for full transcript.


http://www.democracynow.org/2013/8/13/former_internet_provider_gagged_by_national


Related from DemocracyNow!: Gagged for 6 Years, Nick Merrill Speaks Out on Landmark Court Struggle Against FBI’s National Security Letters - August 11, 2010

For six years, the FBI has barred a New York man from revealing that the agency had ordered him to hand over personal information about clients of his internet start-up. Finally allowed to speak, Nick Merrill joins us in his first broadcast interview to talk about how he challenged the FBI’s use of national security letters. We also speak with Connecticut librarian George Christian. He and three other librarians also sued the US government after receiving a national security letter demanding information about library patrons. (includes rush transcript)

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Former Internet Provider Gagged by National Security Letter Recounts How He Was Silenced For 6 Years Catherina Aug 2013 #1
INFORMATIN THAT HE IS BARRED FROM SHARING EVEN WITH HIS ATTORNEY? Th1onein Aug 2013 #2
+1 gvstn Aug 2013 #4
That jarred me too. Unbelievable. He estimates this fight will take him 10 years of his life Catherina Aug 2013 #9
you haven't read much about CALEA have you? snooper2 Aug 2013 #12
Trying to blame Bill Clinton for this now? Th1onein Aug 2013 #44
It's all about 'national security' Rex Aug 2013 #15
These actions cannot be defended. woo me with science Aug 2013 #21
Agreed. That is some extraordinary bullshit there. Waiting For Everyman Aug 2013 #29
Holy Shit Aerows Aug 2013 #32
Amy Goodman has the BEST interviews. I had no idea what a great resource she was prior... dkf Aug 2013 #3
She's a national treasure. Worth the entire MSM put together n/t Catherina Aug 2013 #10
Mr. Levison is correct. bemildred Aug 2013 #5
PS: I expect that an attempt will be made to outlaw what Mr. Levison just did. nt bemildred Aug 2013 #7
+1. I read he's not out of the woods. He can still be charged with obstruction of justice Catherina Aug 2013 #11
Yep, something like that. bemildred Aug 2013 #13
How is this not a dictatorship if you have no rights and no recourse? dkf Aug 2013 #16
We are an authoritarian state, not totalitarian, not a dictatorship, a "managed democracy". bemildred Aug 2013 #19
you can see how unbelievably pissed he is at the entire mess xiamiam Aug 2013 #45
The attempt to outlaw what he did already exists dickthegrouch Aug 2013 #17
I agree. I expect more laws because this is show business, not law, bemildred Aug 2013 #22
big REC. PowerToThePeople Aug 2013 #24
There are already laws on the books that require businesses to retain business records for varying Purveyor Aug 2013 #27
Right, but now your ISP can delete your emails as soon as you drop service. bemildred Aug 2013 #31
I'm not sure how record retention policies apply to a email service provider. I'm been out of Purveyor Aug 2013 #33
Me either, but I think these questions are now being forced into the discussion. bemildred Aug 2013 #35
LADAR LEVISON: I think you should assume any communication that is electronic is being monitored. PowerToThePeople Aug 2013 #6
I take issue with *is* dickthegrouch Aug 2013 #18
what the definition of is is? PowerToThePeople Aug 2013 #20
Always treat email as you would a postcard. SeattleVet Aug 2013 #28
More than email. ANY thing digitally transmitted. n/t PowerToThePeople Aug 2013 #30
+2^12 Agony Aug 2013 #8
+2^24 n/t Aerows Aug 2013 #39
k&r Puzzledtraveller Aug 2013 #14
Publicity stunt to launch new email service. MjolnirTime Aug 2013 #23
Huh. So Amy Goodman is now a shill? Bwahahahaha! Pholus Aug 2013 #26
You are discussing physics with someone Aerows Aug 2013 #38
I know. I know. But actually I was just trying out the new signature line! :) Pholus Aug 2013 #40
Are you going to be the first to explain to me Aerows Aug 2013 #36
OK, someone get the apologists who can explain how we aren't really spying on the American People. Savannahmann Aug 2013 #25
I'm waiting for the apologists Aerows Aug 2013 #34
Why can't we do security the way we used to? I still don't see the need for this Waiting For Everyman Aug 2013 #37
It was a really good powerpoint sales pitch I figure... Pholus Aug 2013 #41
You know, that is probably close to the truth of it. Waiting For Everyman Aug 2013 #42
This is really chilling. Very hard to recognize this as America at this stage. BlueStreak Aug 2013 #43
HUGE K & R !!! - Thank You !!! WillyT Aug 2013 #46
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