O fuck sarah harrison and jacob ????? Fuck them On Dec 5, 2015 10:00 PM, "Cecilia Tanaka" <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Dec 5, 2015 8:08 PM, "Cari Machet" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > I am not affiliated in any way - seems like a nice project > > > > Heres aarons moms tweet > > > > Only 3 days left to fund Kickstarter for "From DeadDrop to SecureDrop" > https://t.co/ez7TA06XyV Link to Trailer: https://t.co/py6W00LmWs > ---- > > From my friend Lisa, sent few days ago... <3 > > **** > > Hope you are well! Been a long time :-) > > I'm making movies to teach the world more about Aaron Swartz and to help > the public better understand whistleblowers and whistleblower upload > systems. > > I wanted to let you know about my little Kickstarter campaign for a movie > I am producing independently, "From DeadDrop to SecureDrop" - it's about > "SecureDrop," an anonymous upload system for whistleblowers that Aaron > prototyped with Kevin Poulsen, one month before his death, that connects > directly to news organizations (such as the Washington Post, Forbes, and > The New Yorker): > > https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/261957173/from-deaddrop-to-securedrop > > Here's a Tweet about it, if you're short on time: > > Please help fund "From DeadDrop to SecureDrop" and help more potential > Whistleblowers learn about @SecureDrop http://bit.ly/SDrop > > I'm including a description of the project below! It's only going on for 4 > more days, and I only have about $5,000 of the $20,000 I'm trying to raise, > so any help -- or also Tweets and social media love would be greatly > appreciated! > > Thanks! :) > > Much love, > > lisa > > The film is entitled "From DeadDrop to SecureDrop," and provides a > historical account of how the "SecureDrop" open source anonymous > whistleblowing submission platform was originally prototyped by Kevin > Poulsen and Aaron Swartz, and later, after Aaron's death, how it made its > way its current home at the Freedom of the Press Foundation. > > People in the film (so far) include: Wired's Kevin Poulsen (how he was > inspired by WikiLeaks and then convinced Aaron to work with him on the > project), Trevor Timm and John Perry Barlow (of the Freedom of the Press > Foundation), who sought out the DeadDrop prototype, Garrett Robinson > (SecureDrop's current Development Lead) and Bill Budington (an EFF engineer > who worked directly on the early codebase), and some influential figures > familiar with the issues, such as Brewster Kahle (Founder of the Internet > Archive and co-founder, with myself, of Aaron Swartz Day) and Cindy Cohn > (Executive Director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation). I also > interviewed Virgil Griffith (Tor2Web and Wikiscanner), as he and Aaron were > good friends and worked on Tor2Web together. > > Jacob Applebaum has agreed to be interviewed for the film. (Besides being > a WikiLeaks volunteer, he was good friends with Aaron.) Also, Sarah > Harrison, who stood by Edward Snowden's side in Hong Kong and the Moscow > airport, and assisted with getting him safe asylum in Russia, has agreed to > be in the film! > > After learning more about whistleblower Chelsea Manning (in the course of > my preparing to read her statement during my live Aaron Swartz Day event) > video: https://youtu.be/qle9UvJGdYg?t=1h23m33s statement: > http://www.aaronswartzday.org/chelsea-manning-2015/)... > > I came to realize that the film really needs to expand beyond the subject > of the SecureDrop technology itself, to attempt to explain *why* these > whistleblowers might decide to use WikiLeaks or SecureDrop to expose > corruption in the first place: To inform the public and make the world a > better place. I realize this sounds simple and obvious, but I don't think > that most people are actually aware of this. Here's a post explaining how > Ed Snowden chose the Constitution over a Non-Disclosure agreement, when he > decided to blow the whistle: http://www.aaronswartzday.org/snowden-oath/ > > A third theme of the movie deals directly with an observation made by more > than one of the people I interviewed for the film, about how SecureDrop > will "help the next Ed Snowden" communicate with Journalists safely (so no > one will have to go through what he went through, just to get a story out). > > The film suggests that SecureDrop could potentially usher in a new > generation of whistleblower: One that won't necessarily have to put their > whole life at risk, in order to "do the right thing." > > Lisa Rein > > http://www.aaronswartzday.org >
