Web server takedown called Internet speech threat

By Ellen Simon, The Associated Press Oct 26 2004 10:25AM

http://www.securityfocus.com/news/9805

Devin Theriot-Orr, a member a feisty group of reporter-activists called
Indymedia, was surprised when two FBI agents showed up at his Seattle law
office, saying the visit was a "courtesy call" on behalf of Swiss
authorities.

Theriot-Orr was even more surprised a week later when more than 20 Indymedia
Web sites were knocked offline as the computer servers that hosted them were
seized in Britain.

The Independent Media Center, more commonly known as Indymedia, says the
seizure is tantamount to censorship, and civil libertarians agree. The
Internet is a publishing medium just like a printing press, they argue, and
governments have no right to remove Web sites.

The case, which involves an Internet company based in Texas, photos of
undercover Swiss police officers and a request from an Italian prosecutor
investigating anarchists, raises questions about the circumstances under
which Internet companies can be compelled to turn over data.

"The implications are profound," said Barry Steinhardt of the American Civil
Liberties Union, calling the Indymedia activists "classic dissenters" and
likening the case to "seizing a printing press or shutting down a radio
transmitter."

"It smells to high heaven," he said.

Internet providers in the United States routinely remain silent when ordered
by authorities to turn over data, though actual seizures of their servers is
rare.

The Oct. 7 seizure involves a particularly vocal group -- Indymedia
activists work in 140 collectives around the world from the Czech Republic
to Uruguay to western Massachusetts and their sites get about 18 million
page views a month -- and generated intense interest in Europe, including
questioning in Britain's House of Commons.

The two computers were seized from the London office of Texas-based
Rackspace Managed Hosting, and while they were returned Oct. 12 and all the
sites are now back up, some that didn't have back up are missing posts and
photos.

The governments involved did not provide The Associated Press with a clear
picture of what was sought or which country initiated the action.

Richard Allan, a Liberal Democrat, asked in Britain's Parliament last week
whether the Home Office, which is responsible for domestic security, had
ordered the seizure.

Home Office spokeswoman Caroline Flint said, "I can confirm that no UK law
enforcement agendas were involved in the matter referred to."

On Friday, a motion was filed in San Antonio federal court to unseal the
original order in the case.

"The significance of this is that apparently, a foreign government, based on
a secret process, can have the U.S. government silence independent news
sources without ever having to answer to the American people about how that
kind of restraint could happen," said Keith Bankston, a lawyer for the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, which drafted the motion. "Every press
organization should be asking, 'Am I next?'"

The FBI issued a statement saying that, "at the request of a foreign law
enforcement agency," it assisted in serving Rackspace with a U.S. subpoena
for Indymedia records. "Rackspace located the Indymedia records on servers
in the United Kingdom. A brief interruption of Indymedia's Internet service
resulted when Rackspace copied the subpoenaed records from their servers.
There is no FBI or U.S. investigation into Indymedia."

Said one FBI source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, "There were two
different requests from two different countries that are in no way
connected, except that both pertain to Indymedia." The requests to handle
the cases came through the countries' embassies, to the Department of
Justice, then to the FBI, he said.

"The FBI does not have a dog in this fight," the official added.

Bologna prosecutor Marina Plazzi told the AP that she had requested
information about Indymedia-posted material from the United States. She
stressed that her request did not seek "the seizure of servers or hard
disks." Plazzi is investigating an anarchist group that has made bomb
threats against European Commission President Romano Prodi.

Bologna prosecutors said in a statement that they made a request to U.S.
authorities for "specific and targeted information about (the) Indymedia
provider. This request concerns neither the management nor the content of
the Web Site."

"There was no reply to this request," the statement said. "Any other
information is bound to secrecy."

Swiss federal justice authorities referred questions to officials at the
state level in Geneva but those authorities did not respond.

At the crux of the Swiss case are photos posted on a French Indymedia site
of two undercover police officers posing as protesters at an
anti-globalization rally. Comments posted under the photos said they were
taken because police had photographed protesters at past rallies. Swiss
police have also posted images of protesters on police Web sites, labeling
them "troublemakers" and asking the public for information about them.

In late September, Rackspace sent Indymedia an FBI notice about the photos,
which were on an Indymedia site operated out of Nantes, France.

Rackspace sent the note to Theriot-Orr, who passed on the request to the
Indymedia collective in Nantes. The Nantes collective then obscured the
faces of the two Swiss officers, covering them with photos of the characters
Mulder and Scully from the show "The X Files," he said.

Theriot-Orr said the F.B.I agents who later visited him asked about the
Nantes Indymedia operation that had posted the photos of the Swiss police
officers.

A statement on Indymedia sites attributed to Rackspace said the company had
complied with a "court order pursuant to a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty"
that lets countries assist each other "in investigations such as
international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering."

"Rackspace is acting as a good corporate citizen," the statement added. "The
court prohibits Rackspace from commenting further on this matter." Rackspace
spokeswoman Annalie Drusch refused further comment.

"If it was all about those photographs, whatever they tried to do
backfired," Indymedia volunteer David Meieran in Pittsburgh said of
authorities. "Now they're mirrored on 300 Web sites around the world."

"It's like trying to grab water," said Meieran. "The Internet is all over
the place. You can't reach in and try to grab a photograph and expect it's
not going to be put up anymore."

___

AP reporters Jonathan Fowler in Geneva, Marta Falconi in Rome and Ed Johnson
in London contributed to this report. 



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit 
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message 
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights 
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to