Military Prison Blocks Won't Let Chelsea Manning Read EFF Blog... To Protect EFF's Copyright
from the yeah,-that's-like-totally-believable dept
Officials at Ft. Leavenworth prison, where Chelsea Manning is confined has apparently become super interested in protecting EFF's copyright. Or so they claim. Manning has been blocked from reading printouts of EFF blog posts, and the US Disciplinary Barracks (USDB) insists it's just about the copyright and not because they might disapprove of the EFF's message.Manning was only allowed to have the Bureau of Prisons documents—an agency handbook and slide show on Facebook takedowns—but everything else was withheld. Instead, Manning received a notification that said the mail was rejected because it contained “printed Internet materials, including email, of a volume exceeding five pages per day or the distribution of which may violate U.S. copyright laws.”Needless to say, the USDB did not respond. And it seems like a patently ridiculous argument to use copyright as an excuse to block prisoners from reading content sent to them, when it's quite clear that the copyright claim is being used solely as an excuse not to give prisoners content that the prison likely disapproves of.
It is possible that the Army withheld the documents because they were longer than fives pages. However, we believe this to be unlikely since the documents it did deliver were far longer than any of the other materials and exceeded five pages. That means that it was potentially copyright concerns that resulted in Manning’s mail being censored.
EFF quickly sent USDB a letter explaining that all EFF content is available for reuse under a Creative Commons Attribution license that allows for the material to be freely shared and remixed. The Creative Commons license is indicated, and the full policy linked, at the bottom of every page of our website. As the copyright holder, we asked the prison to provide Manning with the documents immediately and not to block any further EFF material from the facility. We further pointed out that our comments to the FCC were also public records, not simply information printed out from the Internet. We asked for a response by Thursday, February 18, 2016.
And, again, this is the EFF we're talking about. Beyond the fact that the content is clearly licensed under Creative Commons to allow widespread sharing, perhaps no group has fought harder for things like fair use and the more widespread sharing of important information. To claim to be protecting EFF's copyright is basically spitting in the face of the EFF. An organization that wants to spread its information widely, and wants to make sure copyright law is amenable to that is now finding that it cannot distribute its own information... because of the very copyright law it fights against. And yet we're told again and again that copyright is for protecting the creators of content, yet here's it's being actively used against their wishes to block them from disseminating their own content. That's crazy.
Yet again (and this is all too common) we see copyright claims being used as a form of censorship (even as copyright system supporters still insist that's impossible). Yes, Manning is in prison and with that comes a loss of many freedoms. But using copyright as an excuse to deny EFF reading materials seems particularly ridiculous.
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Filed Under: chelsea manning, copyright, creative commons, free speech, ft. leavenworth, prison, us disciplinary barracks, usdb
Companies: eff
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Title should'a been...
Alternatively...
I don't have the intestinal fortitude to tell you that there is crap on the internet I don't want you to read!
Punks.
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Re: Title should'a been...
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political prisoners
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Re: political prisoners
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This is to be expected from this regime
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It could be one of those rules that they decide when to use.
You're OK with getting 500 pages of totally meaningless content (a fiction book, the complete collection of a random tabloid...,) but 6 pages of polemic content and you're out.. (EFF flyers, pirate party manifesto, the latest news about Snowden)
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Re: Rehabilitation
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Chelsea Manning for President
Unfortunately Chelsea Manning is going to suffer under the sophomoric and petty tyranny of the USDB commander and his lackeys.
Regardless of what the US government says or does Chelsea Manning is a person who stood tall and liberated the truth by releasing the Iraq War Logs which clearly show criminal acts perpetrated by all levels of the US government in the lead-up and prosecution of the Iraq War in 2003. (Where are you J. Edgar Comey here are more leads for your worthless self to follow).
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Re: Chelsea Manning for President
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I am not a big believer in prisoners rights, however. Bradley Manning is a criminal, convicted in due course, and who's rights and freedoms are abridged under the law. This does appear to be excessive, but if the same rules are applied to all prisoners, then it us up to the inmate to challenge it in a court of law if they feel it's not just.
EFF could very likely fix it, but I suspect they are too busy chasing wascally wabbits.
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And of course, classic Whatever can't resist a jab at EFF. Still can't get over Paul Duffy, can you?
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The quick jump to "censorship" is easy - but just as likely full of shit.
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It is censorship, even if a past copy protection lawsuit is the reason for the censorship. Perhaps not intentional censorship but still censorship nevertheless. This is an example of copy protection laws resulting in censorship which is the point of the article.
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Umm... you mean something like this? (Emphasis mine)
"EFF could very likely fix it, but I suspect they are too busy chasing wascally wabbits."
Or that may have already happened, as mentioned in the very article you are responding to?
"I am not a big believer in prisoners rights, however. Bradley Manning is a criminal, convicted in due course, and who's rights and freedoms are abridged under the law. This does appear to be excessive, but if the same rules are applied to all prisoners, then it us up to the inmate to challenge it in a court of law if they feel it's not just."
Bradley Manning? That there tells us more about you than you perhaps like.
Also, as a military prisoner, I don't believe Chelsea Manning has access to a court of law. Well, there are the military courts, but they hardly count as justice - more like revenge from those higher up that were thwarted. I thought concepts like human rights and the constitution should take precedence over lesser concepts like contract law or military law, but that's certainly not the case.
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It's no mystery why no one takes him seriously.
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BULLSHIT. Stop lying. Showing up in a thread weeks after a discussion and adding a question doesn't mean I don't respond to you - just that you speak to an empty room.
Stop trolling, you are way to f-ing obvious!
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I am not a big believer in prisoners rights, however.
Indeed. It tells a lot about his rotten self. Nothing that we already don't know for a while now. But then again he lives in his own protected bubble and it seems it was never disturbed by Government overreach so there is that.
Also, as a military prisoner, I don't believe Chelsea Manning has access to a court of law.
This must be emphasized. He's a political prisoner. Just look at other countries (like Venezuela and Chine) to see how much justice these prisoners have. "But we are talking about the US!". Same thing, different place.
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Here the use of military courts seems intent on undermining its logical use. Instead of providing protection from harsh punishment it seems intent on delivering harsh punishment compared to a civilian court.
The military exists to serve civilians. The accused should always have the option of being tried in civil court among a jury of civil peers so that they can decide which court they think will provide justice.
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Likewise the military should enforce laws within the interests of civilians, not the military. This is why military accused should also have the option of being tried in civilian court. To resist a separate military system of law that is intent on serving military interests over civilian interests.
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Perhaps the use of military court should only be accessible when all the victims involved are military subjects. To resist a military that can get away with crimes against civilians.
So to summarize civilian courts should always be accessible to the accused. Military courts should sometimes be accessible to the accused but even when they are accessible civilian courts should also be accessible.
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In that way a military court may be expected to be harsher than a civilian court - say a soldier abandoned his duty to help a local family in some way; a civilian court may be expected to be lenient because of the benevolent nature of the soldier's actions, and because nothing bad came about from the dereliction. A military court would probably be expected to be very harsh in this instance, and to punish the dereliction as if the worst case happened as a result.
Back to my first point, I think that specialisation in military courts has the same problems as specialisation in IP courts - cronyism, and a tendency to self-reinforcement of incumbent position through an echo chamber effect.
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The argument that specialized courts are necessary in specialized situations as an excuse to deny a civilian trial is exactly the position intended to be rejected by the principles intent on providing access to civilian courts. This is exactly what many corrupt and tyrannical governments will argue / have argued in an attempt to evade the interests of civil society and this argument is the exact position intended to be rejected by providing for the right to a civilian trial.
That IP laws need a separate court to avoid this indicates an admission that they are not worthy of our democracy because they will be democratically rejected if they were ruled upon by civilians.
Further evidence of their social rejection is the fact that I don't ever remember seeing large numbers of people protesting in their favor before they got extended and expanded. It's mostly industry interests pushing for these laws with backdoor dealings. I do, however, remember seeing large groups of people protesting against bills like SOPA.
Further evidence of their social rejection is the fact that they often get negotiated in secret with industry interests invited. If they were so socially acceptable the government should be glad to invite the public. Politicians know these laws do not represent the public that the politicians are supposed to represent.
Further evidence of their rejection is the fact that I don't remember seeing many successful politicians running for office with the claim that they are going to extend and expand IP laws. In fact I remember Obama claiming he was considering reducing pharmaceutical patent extensions early in his presidency until it was the pharmaceutical industry that protested. I do remember Hillary Clinton supporting the TPP before running for president and now that she is running for president she opposes it. I do see other politicians running for office/president opposing it while those in office in a position to do anything supporting it. Politicians know these laws are publicly unfavorable yet they continue with them anyways.
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Bradley Manning is the soldier that was convicted. If he like others which to play dress up games and try the other gender, I have nothing against it. However, just like Bruce Jenner, no matter what he does, he's still just a "boy with boobs". The reality is still there genetically that cannot be altered. You can change the wrapper but the content remains the same.
So he may want us to call him Chelsea, but the soldier in question was named Bradley Manning.
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I think the main point of prison should be rehabilitation and to contain potentially dangerous prisoners that might be a future threat to society. Punishment should only be secondary. Denying prisoners access to certain types of content does not serve to rehabilitate them. If anything it prevents them from being informed which can harm the extent that they are educated in something which can harm their prospects of catching up and blending into society when they get out (ie: getting a job and participating in the political and democratic process). and denying people access to this type of information is not an acceptable form of punishment and it does nothing to prevent the criminal from harming anyone. If the criminal is dangerous they should remain in jail until they are no longer dangerous. If they are free to be let out then it is because they are no longer considered a danger to society even with access to said information.
Having said that much of what gets discussed around here is what makes a criminal a criminal. What constitutes a good law that, if violated, is deserving of punishment, retribution, containment, or rehabilitation. An important aspect of answering that question is democracy. We should, democratically, decide on these things. Being informed is an important aspect of democracy and denying a criminal the same rights as anyone else when it comes to being informed and voting denies them a democratic voice in what constitutes a good law worthy of our democracy. This could result in a nation of criminals who have broken bad laws that shouldn't exist but because they have no say in the law having their rights violated by it they have no power to vote the law changed. Politicians, consequently, ignore the rights of criminals in their vote which creates more criminals and perpetuates the problem.
If the law makes everyone a criminal (or if it is designed to indirectly discriminate against a certain class or race of people) the problem is likely not with everyone but with the law. To help guard against this everyone should have open access to information and they should have a vote.
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Not Just Another Form of Psychological Torture
No more, these people revel in psychological torture for no purpose other than torture. I do hope however they track down the military industrial complex contractor that supplied Manning with expired tooth paste for which Manning was punished.
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Weeeelll....
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EFF, terrorist
The First Amendment doesn't permit the publications to be banned from the public, but the military can sure ban it inside a military prison.
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Re: EFF, terrorist
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That's what I get from this.
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This is why Assange is smart to stay in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London.
This is why Snowden is smart to stay hidden in Russia.
Our government has become vindictive and petty towards those that expose its misdeeds.
"For every one that doeth evil hateth the light" (John 3:20)
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