Under New Proposed Internet Laws, We Will All Be Felons
Did
you know it is a misdemeanor to use your work computer to email your
friends? If you check the score of the ballgame from work, it is also a
misdemeanor. If you make reservations for dinner from your work computer
you have also committed a crime. If you check your Facebook account on
your lunch break from your work computer, you could be fined and could
go to jail. The law which criminalizes such behaviors is called the 1986
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and if the Department of Justice (DOJ)
gets its way, they want to make misusing your computer in any way a
felony under the “exceeds authorized use” of any computer including you
own personal computer. For all of the above offenses, you could be
prosecuted and most likely play a fine. However, if the DOJ gets its
way, you will go to jail because they will prosecute you as a felon if
they convince Congress to strengthen this 1986 law!
Facebook has joined in on the debate. You know Facebook, the company started up by the CIA so they could spy on us. Many on Facebook already refer to it as Fascistbook because they “punish” users for sending friends requests, despite the fact that Facebook sends these potential “friends” right to your page and invites you to do so. And if you send too many shared messages out at one time, they will suspend your account. Yet, nobody could tell you how many messages and shares can you send before you are in trouble as Facebook keeps this a secret. Technically, you have committed a misdemeanor by violating Facebook’s vague users agreement.
Now, the police state surveillance grid wants to interject themselves into the enforcement of Facebook policy and begin to prosecute violators of the fake name rules as written by the legal scholars at Facebook.
Around the first of the year, Facebook suspended the accounts of activists Michael Rivero and Jon Rappoport presumably because they did not follow some obscure Facebook editorial policy. And if that was not bad enough, now the DOJ wants to go after Facebook users who break Facebook rules and they want to prosecute violations of Facebook policy as a felony, especially if one uses a name other than their real name. The intent is obvious. The dossier being prepared and updated daily by the NSA on your personal threat matrix score will not be as accurate as they desire if you use aliases in the social media arena. Big Brother has to know where you are at all times and what you are up to or the police state surveillance grid will be compromised if you are allowed to use an alias.
Facebook Becomes Fascist Book
Facebook has joined in on the debate. You know Facebook, the company started up by the CIA so they could spy on us. Many on Facebook already refer to it as Fascistbook because they “punish” users for sending friends requests, despite the fact that Facebook sends these potential “friends” right to your page and invites you to do so. And if you send too many shared messages out at one time, they will suspend your account. Yet, nobody could tell you how many messages and shares can you send before you are in trouble as Facebook keeps this a secret. Technically, you have committed a misdemeanor by violating Facebook’s vague users agreement.
Now, the police state surveillance grid wants to interject themselves into the enforcement of Facebook policy and begin to prosecute violators of the fake name rules as written by the legal scholars at Facebook.
Around the first of the year, Facebook suspended the accounts of activists Michael Rivero and Jon Rappoport presumably because they did not follow some obscure Facebook editorial policy. And if that was not bad enough, now the DOJ wants to go after Facebook users who break Facebook rules and they want to prosecute violations of Facebook policy as a felony, especially if one uses a name other than their real name. The intent is obvious. The dossier being prepared and updated daily by the NSA on your personal threat matrix score will not be as accurate as they desire if you use aliases in the social media arena. Big Brother has to know where you are at all times and what you are up to or the police state surveillance grid will be compromised if you are allowed to use an alias.
The Tyranny Does Not End With Facebook
Have
you ever registered on an online dating website? Do you think anyone
has ever understated their weight on a dating website, or have shaved a
few years off of their age in an online profile?
If
you submitted a slightly embellished resume to a prospective employer,
via the internet, you could soon go to jail as a felon under the new
proposed DOJ rules.
Technically,
under this proposal, if a male lied to a female about loving her in an
email, solely for the accused purpose of having sexual relations, the
male could soon be guilty of a felony.
Under this new proposal, anyone lying on any website could go to jail no matter how innocent the “white” lie.
Richard
Downing, the DOJ’s deputy computer crime chief, delivered the request
to criminalize any kind of misrepresentation on the internet and to
criminalize, as a felony, any violation of the proposed new rules. The
DOJ argued that the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), which is an
amendment to the Counterfeit Access Device and Abuse Act generally used to prosecute
hacking and other serious cyber-crimes, and which went into effect in
1986, must give prosecutors the ability to charge people “based upon a
violation of terms of service or similar contractual agreement with an
employer or provider.” Not only that, how many of you have ever signed a
terms of service agreement before you could log in on a Wifi or access a
website? Did you really read the user’s agreement that you signed?
Would you even know if you had ever violated a terms of service or
user’s agreement form? The answer for nearly all of us is a resounding
no.
If
Congress were to ever give in to the demands of the DOJ and criminalize
every inaccuracy on the internet, then the legal question of ex post
facto laws comes into play. Ex post facto means that the government
cannot criminalize a behavior for what happened on Monday by passing a
law outlawing the behavior on Tuesday. Because the vast majority of
postings on the internet are in perpetuity, something that you posted
five years ago, way before any law was passed, could still come back to
haunt you because the “crime” was still in progress because the posting
was still active on the internet today. This could represent an entire
undoing of due process procedures in court.
Good News, Bad News and Very Bad News
The DOJ lost their bid to criminalize every internet inaccuracy in December of 2012. This is the temporary good news.
The
bad news is that both the DOJ and the FBI have been back up on Capitol
Hill with similar proposals since that time. Congress may have extended
the illegal surveillance powers of the NSA, but they have not had the
guts to pass laws that would make it a virtual certainty that one day,
intentionally or not, every web-surfing American will violate some type
of a “terms of service agreement”, thus, rendering you vulnerable to
prosecution as a felon. At least they have not until now. This is the
bad news.
Assume
you were a dissenter and becoming an annoyance to the administration.
To get you out of the way, all they would need to do is to assign a
small team of internet forensics investigators who would investigate
your behavior for every site you have ever visited. And one day, voila,
they discover that you used a copyright protected downloaded Google
image for an article you wrote and you are busted. This is the very bad
news.
Subsequently,
the selective prosecution team of the DOJ knocks down your door in a
swat team raid, seizes all of your computers and takes you to prison
after running you through a kangaroo trial. Federal trials end up in
over 90% conviction rates. During the time you are railroaded through
the legal process, additional charges of domestic terrorism are added
for what you have written on the internet, thus increasing your prison
time served. This is the very, very bad news and it will have a chilling
effect on all citizen journalism on the internet.
How
pervasive could this DOJ approach to selectively persecuting
journalists, just ask yourself how many times you have read an article
by a popular journalist regarding government corruption and their
Youtube video has been taken down for a violation of copyright or for
some other specified reason that is listed as a dead link within the
article? Under this new approach, that event just made a felon out of
the journalist. And if you as a website operator, who routinely runs
articles related to government corruption, publishes an article from a
contributor who knowingly, or unknowingly, has violated some service
agreement somewhere along the line, you have become an accomplice to a
felony and you would be charged with facilitation of a felony and you
would be facing up to five years in a federal prison. These are the
goals of the DOJ
There
is another compelling reason that the DOJ wants to push this draconian
legislation through. In the aftermath of the Snowden affair, the
government is scrambling to severely inhibit ANY form of whistleblowing.
You can bet your bottom dollar that future service agreements are going
to more specific, with more hard to understand legal terms, in an
attempt to stay out of trouble with the government. This will
undoubtedly lead to even more violations of service agreements and more
prosecution of “undesirables.”
There Is Always An Opposite and Equal Effect.
The
DOJ is very shortsighted and is only focused on the short-term goal of
more successful prosecutions and furthering the agenda of the police
state surveillance grid. However, the internet is actually a safety
valve for the globalist agenda. As long as people feel that they have a
voice and an outlet for that voice, they are unlikely to go to the next
level of protest which is civil disobedience.
Once
a significant number of the population reaches the level of civil
disobedience, that society is only a trigger event away from a civil
war, whether it open civil war or guerrilla warfare.
As
the DOJ and the FBI move to lock down the internet protest articles
through selective prosecution, they will funnel people in the direction
of civil disobedience and worse. I am left wondering if the globalists
don’t know this already and have that as a goal. Time will tell. In the
meantime, always make sure you accurately report your age, weight,
height, professional accomplishments in a resume and never misrepresent
your romantic intentions, because they FEDS, or as I lovingly call them,
the new American breed of the Federales, are waiting to take you down.
And when the FEDS show up at your door, invoke your Fifth Amendment
right to not answer their questions until you have a lawyer present.
Martha Stewart went to prison for lying to the FEDS, not for what they
said she did. Most people in these situations, go to prison for lying to
the FEDS and not the crime that they are being investigated for. So
keep your mouth shut and your Bible near your computer as we move one
step closer to the inevitable bifurcation of American society. http://thecommonsenseshow.com/2013/07/27/under-new-proposed-internet-laws-we-will-all-be-felons/
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