Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Privacy

Justice Dept. Asked For Broad Swath of IndyMedia's Visitor Records 244

DesScorp writes "In a case that tests whether online and independent journalism has the same protections as mainstream journalism, the Justice Department sent Indymedia a grand jury subpoena. It requires a list of all visitors on a day, and further, a gag order to Indymedia 'not to disclose the existence of this request.' CBS reports that 'Kristina Clair, a 34-year-old Linux administrator living in Philadelphia who provides free server space for Indymedia.us, said she was shocked to receive the Justice Department's subpoena,' and that 'The subpoena from US Attorney Tim Morrison in Indianapolis demanded "all IP traffic to and from www.indymedia.us" on June 25, 2008. It instructed Clair to "include IP addresses, times, and any other identifying information," including e-mail addresses, physical addresses, registered accounts, and Indymedia readers' Social Security Numbers, bank account numbers, credit card numbers, and so on.' Clair is being defended by the Electronic Frontier Foundation."
Privacy

NH Supreme Court Hears Case On Protections For Anonymous Sources Online 47

fulldecent writes "The New Hampshire Supreme Court heard oral arguments Wednesday in a lawsuit that calls into question the legal protections available to independent Web sites that cover news. The case involves mortgage lender Implode-Explode, a Las Vegas-based site launched in 2007 that publishes stories about the meltdown of the mortgage industry. Associate Justice Carol Ann Conboy pressed the point with [defense lawyer Jeremy Eggleton], questioning, 'Can anyone who posts a blog be considered a reporter,' for the purposes of claiming protection of anonymous sources? Eggleton answered yes, within limits: 'The test is whether the person has an intention to gather, analyze and disseminate.'"

Comment Re:ajax can't do it; server bills; forking code (Score 1) 156

I subscribe to this $3/month hosting since a few months, and the only badness is that about two times so far something "hanged" and I had to contact support so they reboot, and they fixed it within a few hours of notifying with their ticketing system. So I would say that the support is very good, unless its a really critical system when a few-hour outage once a month or two is a problem.

I also subscribe to another hosting account since 2 years, on Xen, for 7 EUR/month, which is $11/month, for 48 MB RAM, 5 GB disk, 10 GB transfer/month, and there the only problem I had was about 1 reboot per year, so the level of service of the $11/month hosting is significanlty better then the $3/month hosting, and I can't imagine that it could be better. So your quotes of prices like $20-$100 a month are like several times overpaying.

Of course I only use these accounts myself, to host an SMTP server for my MX for one e-mail account on one domain and some other small private stuff like that, instead of using a service like Gmail and I don't share the account with any "other people", because that would be too much hassle with negotiating everything with the "other people". By having only myseft on the machine I can configure everything exactly the way I like, and don't have to worry if anybody else likes myconfiguration of the SMTP server, spam-killing methods etc. One of the reasons I don't like to use something like Gmail for SMTP is because I don't know what exactly is the SMTP server configuration, for example the full configuration of the algorithm used to kill spam. So I cannot trust it not to kill a mail which is important for me.

Slashdot Top Deals

The reward for working hard is more hard work.

Working...