Archive | October, 2004

Wired News provides a smidgen more clarity on the Indymedia Hard Drive Seizure

From a story today in Wired News:

According to Devin Theriot-Orr, a Seattle-based IndyMedia volunteer and an attorney with Edwards, Sieh, Smith, and Goodfriend, around Sept. 22 IndyMedia volunteers received e-mail from Rackspace requesting the removal of the posting and alleging that it contained personal information about and threats against the two officers. The posting was edited to remove a comment about revenge being a dish best served cold and to blank out the officers’ faces.

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The Sinclair Situation: It’s a Matter of Ownership and Exploitation of Resource

Due to crazy ISP connection problems, I couldn’t post to the blog Monday and Tuesday, so I didn’t have a chance to comment on the whole Sinclair anti-Kerry documentary thing in a more timely manner.

A reporter from the daily U of I newspaper called me today for a comment and his first question was, “Is it illegal?” Of course, my answer was “I don’t know, it depends on what laws your talking about.” It’s not illegal under the “equal time” law, and I don’t know enough about federal election law to say anything useful. Though, I understand that the DNC intends to file a complaint with the FEC charging Sinclair with making an “illegal in-kind contribution” to Bush.

(I went on to try and give a more nuanced perspective on the situation and Sinclair in general — I’ll be curious to see the article and if any of this sunk in, or if I’ll just come off like a typical left-wing “Sinclair is bad” pundit. Ah, well, that’s the risk of talking to the mainstream press.)

What I do know is that the management of Sinclair Broadcast Group is a bunch of greedy, right-wing whackos that have no particular respect for broadcasting or journalism. While those qualities don’t quite set them apart in the broadcast industry (though it does put them at the far end of the spectrum), what does set them apart is the depth of their clueless ideological furor, and the extent to which they’ll allow it to undercut their profit motive.

According to USA Today, Sinclair’s plan to air the anti-Kerry doc isn’t making investors happy, sending Sinclair stock down to the lowest point since 1995. Further, Sinclair is apparently “barely profitable and laden with debt.”

I’ve been watching Sinclair closely for about two years, when they started to consolidate their power in the TV industry and announced their NewsCentral program, replacing local news with a nationalized broadcast. I admit it can be hard to get incensed about the loss of local TV news, since it tends to be pretty piss poor to begin with. But Sinclair leads the pack in both obliterating any service to local communities while force-feeding reactionary right-wing content as its replacement.

Personally, I’m glad to see people get wise to Sinclair and put them under the microscope (especially if the sun is shining through it). I don’t particularly care about the anti-Kerry documentary, per se — it’s all just political theater to me.

In certain respects, I agree with what Siva Vaidhyanathan writes on Eric Alterman’s blog:

There have been many calls for the FCC or FEC to step up and investigate whether this proposed broadcast is an “in-kind” contribution to the Bush campaign or some violation of communication law. I think such calls are inappropriate and unwise. I think it’s important to distinguish between consumer/citizen uproar — which I applaud cautiously — and FCC or FEC intervention, which I oppose.

Except for the fact that the likes of Sinclair are always glad to use government regulatory power whenever it suits its purpose, and so I’m glad to see it used against them, I generally concur. The problem is not Sinclair, the problem is the system that allows Sinclair to amass 60+ stations and operate them without regard to the needs of their local communities.

Vaidhyanathan comes from a more liberal viewpoint that is more tolerant of our corporate media. Nevertheless, I can agree with the principle behind his statement:

Let’s encourage rich, loud, messy engagement with politics, even if it means allowing shallow, dishonest propaganda once in a while. We should just answer back with better information and more attractive answers. Sorry folks. This is what democracy is all about.

The major problem is that corporate media like Sinclair have a dispropotionate access to and monopoly on the public airwaves that others lack, making it difficult to “just answer back” with an equivalently loud and pervasive voice.

In the end it’s not a question of narrow political ideology, republican vs. democrat or right vs. left. It’s a question of ownership and the exploitation of the power that it confers. Sinclair owns the stations, which allows them to do what they want, and they have the balls to baldly take advantage of it. To answer back we (not the DNC and not Kerry) need a voice of equivalent or stronger power — or we need to strip them of their illgotten influence.

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EFF Sheds a Little Light on IMC Hard Drive Seizure, Promises Action

The Electronic Frontier Foundationhas a press release on the return of the global Indymedia hard drives. They note that the FBI has denied involvement, tracing the seizure back to a court order asked for by the United States Attorney’s Office in San Antonio.

The EFF vows to get to the bottom of the situation:

EFF will take legal action to find out what really happened to Indymedia’s servers and ensure that Internet media are protected from egregious First Amendment violations like this in the future.

It is amazing the number of just plain good things the EFF has done, such as fighting the RIAA, opposing the Patriot Act, and, now, defending Indymedia. They have gone to the top of my donation list, and can expect a check from me as soon as my next paycheck arrives.

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Indymedia Hard Drives Returned, but still more questions than answers

According to the Urbana-Champaign IMC’s Sascha Meinrath, hard drives seized from global Indymedia web servers by the FBI last week were returned this morning to Rackspace, Indymedia’s ISP.

Indymedia still has received no official word about why the hard drives were seized, though we do know that at least four countries were involved–Switzerland, Italy, the U.K. and the US–and

an FBI spokesperson, Joe Parris, confirmed to Agence France-Presse that the FBI issued a subpoena to the provider who hosted the Indymedia servers in the U.K., but that it was “on behalf of a third country.”

Just as no explanation has been given for the seizure, neither has any been given for the return. One might be able to infer from an e-mail from Rackspace that the hard drives’ return is in response to a court order, but that’s just a guess. Judge for yourself:

I know that you have gone through more than I can possibly understand. I was just told that the court order is being complied with and your servers in London will be online at 5pm GMT.

I will pass along anymore information that becomes available and that I am allowed to.

Again, I do not have the words to understand nor express the feelings and emotions you have endured since this began.

Regards,

Jason Carter

Business Development Consultant

jcarter (at) rackspace.com

Clearly, all these governments do not want Indymedia to know why the drives were seized, nor by whom. Whether this is due to typical governmental hyper-secrecy, or it’s a tactic to instill fear about when and why they’ll strike next, we can only guess. I do think it’s an indication that Indymedia is making an impact many places around the globe, and that’s why we do it.

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