Showing posts with label #Whistleblowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Whistleblowers. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 6, 2021

What Congress learned from the Facebook whistleblower

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A whistleblower’s disclosures about Facebook’s impact on children may have finally given Congress something it has lacked: bipartisan resolve to tighten Washington’s grip on Silicon Valley.

Lawmakers have said this kind of thing before. But Tuesday brought an unusual show of unanimous support across party lines as lawmakers linked arms to hear former Facebook employee Frances Haugen detail the ways in which she says the social media giant knowingly pushes and profits off products that harm children.

She asked for their help, and they made a case for why this time will be different.

“There’s always reason for skepticism about Congress acting on any issue,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), who chairs the consumer protection panel that convened Tuesday’s session, said after the hearing. But at the same time, he said, “there are times when the dynamic is so powerful that something actually is done — and I think this issue may be one where the power of bipartisan outrage and support really enabled us to cross the finish line.”

“I have rarely — if ever — seen the kind of unanimity on display today,” he said.

Even some with ties to Facebook described this as a possible turning point. Katie Harbath, who until this year was a public policy director at Facebook, called Tuesday’s session “the most substantial hearing we’ve ever had on tech.”

“I don’t think this moment alone all of a sudden is like, ‘We’ve got legislation!’” she said in an interview. “But I put it on the level of milestones of crises — the Russian ads, Cambridge Analytica — for the company that I think is entering us into a new era.”

Here’s are POLITICO’s biggest takeaways from Haugen’s testimony, including new details about the way Facebook operates and her recommendations for how Congress can crack down on the company’s behavior.

Whistleblower torpedoes some of Congress’ tech agenda

The hearing was notable for its lack of the partisan sparring that has marked some recent tech blockbusters in Congress — even as Haugen shot down some of the top proposals lawmakers have offered for regulating the industry.

She advised lawmakers both against trying to separate Instagram from Facebook, as many Democrats have advocated, or narrowing the types of speech covered by an online liability shield known as Section 230.

“I’m actually against the breaking up of Facebook,” she told the senators, adding that such a split would not solve the problems that lawmakers care about.

“If you split Facebook and Instagram apart, it’s likely that most advertising dollars would go to Instagram, and Facebook will continue to be this Frankenstein that is endangering lives around the world,” Haugen said. In that situation, she added, the cash boost to Instagram would mean fewer resources for Facebook to address its problems.


Instead, she recommended the creation of a federal regulatory agency — an oversight board of sorts, authorized by Congress — that would help analyze tech companies’ research, activities and transparency and craft appropriate regulations.

“Finding collaborative solutions with Congress is going to be key because these systems are going to continue to exist and be dangerous, even if broken up,” she said.

Haugen also urged lawmakers to recast their approach to Section 230, the 1996 statute that shields internet platforms from legal liability for content that users post. The provision has sharply divided the parties, with many Democrats and Republicans at odds on whether the main problems with tech platforms involve hate speech and disinformation or censorship.

Rather than focus on the content of what users post online, Haugen urged the lawmakers to alter the statute to hold companies accountable for the algorithms that decide which content users see.

Tech companies have relatively little control over user-generated content, making it more difficult to alter Section 230 on that basis, Haugen said, but “they have 100 percent control over their algorithms, and Facebook should not get a free pass on choices it makes to prioritize growth and virality and reactiveness over public safety.”

Spokespeople for Facebook dismissed Haugen’s credentials after the hearing, emphasizing that she’d worked for Facebook for only a short time, never attended a meeting with top executives and did not work directly on some of the chief issues she testified about.

But Blumenthal described Haugen — a former debate team captain in her native Iowa, according to local news reports — as “eloquent and persuasive.” And he told reporters after the hearing that all of the changes Haugen proposed deserve “serious consideration.”

Blumenthal and Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, the top Republican on the consumer protection panel, said people can expect to see movement first on bipartisan legislation to boost children’s protections and update long-existing online children’s privacy laws.

Bipartisan legislation dealing with protections for children and teens is “likely the only issue which Congress can immediately rally around,” said Jeff Chester, executive director of the nonprofit Center for Digital Democracy.

Lawmakers blame tech lobbyists for Congress’ inaction

Members of the panel agreed about the need to push ahead with tech regulations and consumer protections — showing a consensus and hunger not seen across the board at any other major tech hearing in recent memory.

But some vented frustrations about how it has been hard to achieve any of their shared goals. And for that, they blamed tech lobbyists.

Congress has “done nothing” to meaningfully tackle the problems surrounding Facebook, like children’s privacy and safety, due to the intense lobbying efforts of the tech industry, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) said during the hearing.

“We have not done anything to update our privacy laws in this country — our federal privacy laws — nothing, zilch, in any major way,” said Klobuchar, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee’s antitrust panel. “Why? Because there are lobbyists around every single corner of this building that have been hired by the tech industry.”

But both Republicans and Democrats said the whistleblower’s testimony would be a catalyst for action.

“The conversation so far reminds me that you and I ought to resolve our differences and introduce legislation,” Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) told Blumenthal during the hearing.

“Our differences seem very minor in the face of the revelations that we’ve now seen,” Blumenthal responded.

Blumenthal later told reporters the testimony had provided an impetus for Congress to move on a national privacy bill and children’s protections under the KIDS Act, which places guardrails on features that amplify certain kinds of content.

Facebook’s hiring struggles give new meaning to ‘big is bad’

One reason Facebook struggles to tackle harmful content and online threats is that it has trouble recruiting and retaining enough employees, Haugen said, suggesting that the size of the company leaves staffers spread thin and makes oversight and action more challenging.

It was a stunning claim given that Facebook, one of the world’s wealthiest companies, is staffed with tens of thousands of workers and the company has touted additional hires around high-stakes events like the 2020 U.S. elections and the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Facebook has struggled for a long time to recruit and retain the number of employees it needs to tackle the large scope of projects that is chosen to take on,” she said. “Facebook is stuck in a cycle where it struggles to hire — that causes it to understaff projects, which causes scandals, which then makes it harder to hire.”

Asked about her remarks, Facebook spokesperson Andy Stone said only that Facebook has more than 63,000 employees.

‘We’re only at the tip of the iceberg’

Harbath said complaints that the whistleblower has filed with federal securities regulators “are just a little drop” hinting at what may be coming for Facebook. And given the enormous volume of documents she turned over to Congress, “we’re only at the tip of the iceberg.”

Haugen’s lawyers filed at least eight complaints with the Securities and Exchange Commission, alleging that discrepancies between Facebook’s internal research and public statements may have misled investors. Those accusations could lead to shareholder suits and SEC enforcement action against the tech giant.

“There’s a lot more to come from this,” Harbath said in an interview after the hearing. “This is sort of like halftime [that] we’re in right now, in terms of this cycle around the questions people are going to have. And my hope is, at bare minimum, it forces the company to be more transparent.”

Blumenthal posited that other tech whistleblowers exist, and that current Facebook employees could soon emerge as a result of Haugen’s testimony.

“She’s provided encouragement to other whistleblowers,” he said after the hearing, “and I’m convinced there are others out there who will come forward.”

Blumenthal also demanded that CEO Mark Zuckerberg testify before Congress about the internal research Haugen has made public, and he has also said the subcommittee may subpoena Facebook for additional records. Haugen said Tuesday that she is “speaking to other parts of Congress” about concerns raised in the documents.

“Whatever happens, Facebook has lost credibility in a way it won’t be able to recover from easily,” said Center for Digital Democracy’s Chester. “Frances Haugen has exposed the failures of Facebook management to protect the public, unleashing what will be an unbridled wave of regulatory investigations and litigation.”

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2021/10/05/children-facebook-whistleblower-congress-515203
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Alexandra S. Levine



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Saturday, March 20, 2021

‘United States vs. Reality Winner’ is sympathetic, but not essential

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‘United States vs. Reality Winner’ is sympathetic whisteblower documentary that could go a lot deeper.

Source: https://www.engadget.com/united-states-reality-winner-sxsw-review-130012069.html
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Saturday, February 13, 2021

Biden administration signals it will continue to pursue extradition of Julian Assange from U.K.

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The Biden administration has indicated that it will continue to press for the extradition of Julian Assange from the United Kingdom and prosecute the WikiLeaks founder in the United States, according to the New York Times.

Driving the news: The Justice Department filed a brief on Thursday asking a British court to overturn a ruling that blocked Assange’s extradition to the U.S., as human rights and civil liberties groups urged acting attorney general Monty Wilkinson to abandon the prosecution.


Context: A British court judge blocked Assange’s extradition in January because of the high risk of suicide in U.S. custody.

  • Assange faces up to 175 years in prison if he is sent to the U.S. and found guilty of all 18 counts in the indictment filed against him.

Why it matters: Human rights and civil liberties groups argued to Wilkinson that the case the Trump administration brought against Assange could establish a precedent that would threaten press freedoms.

  • The case has raised significant questions about First Amendment protections for publishers of classified information. Assange says he was acting as a journalist when he published leaked documents on U.S. actions in Iraq and Afghanistan.
  • The U.S. government has argued he should not be protected under press freedoms, saying in court that his actions went beyond the work of journalism.

What they’re saying: “Journalists have no constitutional right to break into a government office, or hack into a government computer, or bribe a government employee, to get information,” President Biden said in a written statement to the Times in 2019.

  • “We should be hesitant to prosecute a journalist who has done nothing more than receive and publish confidential information and has not otherwise broken the law.”

Source: https://www.axios.com/biden-administration-julian-assange-extradition-da4c4257-c9ff-4f9c-903f-3fb75b7ceb2f.html
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Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Teen who told the FBI on his father for breaking into Capitol is now in hiding

Jackson Reffitt, the 18-year-old who tipped off the FBI after his father had taken part in breaking into the Capitol, “is now in hiding,” according to ABC, and has no communication with his family.

While his father was participating in the Capitol riot on January 6, he was texting his family in real time with updates. — Read the rest

Source: https://boingboing.net/2021/01/26/teen-who-told-the-fbi-on-his-father-for-breaking-into-capitol-is-now-in-hiding.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Carla Sinclair



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Monday, January 4, 2021

Julian Assange cannot be extradited to the U.S., U.K. judge rules

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Assange is likely to commit suicide in U.S. prison, judge says

Source: https://www.politico.eu/article/julian-assange-cannot-be-extradited-to-the-us-uk-judge-rules/
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Friday, December 18, 2020

FAA punished whistleblowers, protected industry and covered up flaws, Senate report says

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The FAA has stymied congressional investigators, allowed Boeing to coach pilots so they performed better on simulator tests of the Boeing 737 MAX, and continued a decades-long pattern of punishing whistleblowers — all at the expense of the safety of millions of passengers, a damning Senate report released Friday found.

There are “numerous systemic deficiencies in FAA oversight,” that could put the flying public at risk, the report from the Senate Commerce Committee read. And in some cases, it appears that agency supervisors have been aware of and sometimes complicit in efforts to impede that oversight, according to the report.

It is a scathing indictment of the FAA’s management, which the report suggests presided over a safety culture that allowed line inspectors to be overruled in favor of the companies the agency oversees and detailing a lack of understanding of whistleblower complaints or how to handle them. The report also accuses FAA “senior leaders” of possibly obstructing a DOT Inspector General investigation into the MAX crashes.

The FAA said it’s reviewing the report.

The 20-month investigation originally stemmed from two fatal Boeing 737 MAX crashes that led to the fleet being grounded, but encompasses far more than that, including findings that the agency allowed Southwest Airlines to operate dozens of aircraft that “were later discovered to have had major repairs done which did not conform to FAA standards,” the report read.

“Unfortunately, much of what has been detailed in this report has been well known and reported on for decades,” it reads. “Despite this awareness, the FAA has failed to correct course and solidify an effective safety culture.”

Among the report’s new findings are that in at least one incident, Boeing coached a test pilot who was being evaluated on how well he could react to various conditions involving a flight control feature called MCAS, whose faulty activation was implicated in the MAX crashes. And, according to the report, the FAA test pilot appears to have been complicit in that coaching, the report said.

Boeing officials gave verbal reminders to the pilot about a certain part of the exercise, which was part of tests conducted while the MAX was grounded and the FAA was figuring out what went wrong and how to respond. Based on interviews with whistleblowers and FAA staff, “FAA and Boeing officials involved in the conduct of this test had established a pre-determined outcome to reaffirm a long-held human factor assumption related to pilot reaction time,” the committee found, saying that it amounts to an attempt by both Boeing and the FAA to “cover up” important information related to the crashes.

The report also says that an FAA employee, the division manager for the agency’s regulatory standards training division, was not allowed by FAA senior leaders to participate in the DOT inspector general’s review of the MAX crashes. “He believes he was excluded purposefully to shield the FAA from the criticism he would likely have provided in an IG interview,” the committee wrote.

The panel also said that the FAA has so far failed to fully comply with a congressional mandate to establish an aviation safety and whistleblower investigations office, and that some managers and even human resources professionals don’t seem to understand what a whistleblower is or how to treat their complaints. In its interviews with FAA investigators responsible for probing whistleblower retaliation, the report said, FAA employees “were not sure what constituted whistleblowing or which FAA office was responsible for investigating such matters.”

In addition, the report unearthed what it called “serious concerns related to credibility,” citing documents the committee reviewed showing that in 2014, a whistleblower investigator “admitted to a colleague that they had been going after whistleblowers and boasted about how many had been fired as a result.” That person, according to the committee, remains employed as a manager at FAA.

Additionally, the committee said the agency’s former number two official, Dan Elwell, supplied misleading responses, including about whistleblower allegations that safety inspectors for the Boeing 737 MAX were inadequately trained.

“Assertions made in letters by then Acting Administrator Elwell were contradicted by internal FAA reports of investigation he included with his response.” the committee wrote.

Boeing said it is taking the committee’s findings seriously and is continuing to review the report in full, saying it has learned “many hard lessons” from the MAX crashes that have “reshaped our company and further focused our attention on our core values of safety, quality, and integrity.”

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/18/faa-punished-whistelblowers-boeing-senate-report-448550
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Friday, December 11, 2020

FBI issues subpoena for Texas AG records after whistleblower allegations: report

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The FBI has reportedly issued at least one federal subpoena for records from the office of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) amid an investigation over allegations of bribery and abuse of office….

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/529782-fbi-issues-subpoena-for-texas-ag-records-after-whistleblower-allegations
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Morgan Gstalter



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Monday, December 7, 2020

Florida police raid home of Rebekah Jones, former health employee who said she was fired for refusing to manipulate COVID-19 data

Florida police have raided the home of Rebekah Jones, the former health department employee who said she was fired for refusing to manipulate coronavirus case data. Jones documented the raid in a series of tweets published Monday, December 7.

They seized her computer, and all other electronic devices. — Read the rest

Source: https://boingboing.net/2020/12/07/florida-police-raided-home-of-rebekah-jones-former-health-employee-who-said-she-was-fired-for-refusing-to-manipulate-covid-19-data.html
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Saturday, November 14, 2020

Texas AG whistleblowers sue for wrongful firing, retaliation

Former deputies to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton are suing him for wrongful firing and retaliating against them for reporting him for alleged bribery and abuse of office

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/texas-ag-whistleblowers-sue-for-wrongful-firing-retaliation-ken-paxton-whistleblowers-office-staff-lawyers-b1722587.html
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Monday, November 2, 2020

Snowden and his wife seek to be Russian-US dual nationals

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Former U.S. security contractor Edward Snowden says he and his wife plan to apply for Russian citizenship without renouncing their U.S. nationality

Source: https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/snowden-wife-seek-russian-us-dual-nationals-73967151
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Thursday, October 22, 2020

Russia gives Snowden permanent residency

U.S. whistleblower Edward Snowden (37), who has been in exile in Russia since 2013, has been granted permanent residency in Russia. He’s now on the path to Russian citizenship if he desires it.

From Reuters:

U.S. authorities have for years wanted Snowden returned to the United States to face a criminal trial on espionage charges brought in 2013.

Read the rest

Source: https://boingboing.net/2020/10/22/russia-gives-snowden-permanent-residency.html
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Tuesday, September 15, 2020

U.S. Concentration Camp Sent Undocumented Women to Be Sterilized, According to Whistleblower

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Why have the terms “Nazi Germany” and “Mengele” become trending topics on Twitter? The words dominated the social media platform on Monday after it was revealed that a whistleblower has alleged “high numbers” of immigrant women at a U.S. concentration camp in Georgia were sent to be given unnecessary hysterectomies.…

Read more…

Source: https://gizmodo.com/u-s-concentration-camp-sent-undocumented-women-to-be-s-1845059997
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Friday, September 11, 2020

Schiff asks to interview DHS officials over whistleblower complaint

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House Intelligence Chair Adam Schiff has asked the Department of Homeland Security to make available a slew of high-level officials to testify about a recent whistleblower complaint alleging that DHS leaders sought to censor and water down evidence of Russian meddling in the United States’ election and of white supremacist violence.

In a three-page letter to DHS’ counsel, Schiff asked that attorneys for the whistleblower, Brian Murphy, be granted expedited security clearances so that Murphy may discuss concerns related to classified information about Russia when he appears before the panel for a deposition on Sept. 21.

Among the other officials Schiff intends to interview: Matthew Hanna, chief of staff in Murphy’s former post at DHS’ Office of Intelligence and Analysis; the office’s top official, Horace Jen; DHS chief of staff John Gountanis; and his deputy, Tyler Houlton.

Schiff’s request comes as the Senate Intelligence Committee, also in receipt of Murphy’s complaint, has asked the department to produce all of the intelligence analyses that Murphy referenced in his complaint, as well as any notes and materials that fed into them. That letter, a bipartisan request from the panel’s acting chair Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and vice chairman, Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), seeks the documents by Sept. 18.

White House and DHS officials have vehemently denied Murphy’s account, which alleges that acting Secretary Chad Wolf and acting deputy Ken Cuccinelli pressured him to ignore or downplay evidence of Russia’s malign activity in the United States and play up evidence pertaining to Iran and China.

Murphy described more than a dozen attempts to reach out to senior DHS, National Security Council and national intelligence officials with his concerns, providing a road map of sorts for the intelligence committees to vet his claims.

Murphy’s complaint, delivered to the intelligence committees earlier this week, alleges that he was demoted from his position leading DHS’ intelligence office as a result of raising his concerns internally. Top White House and Homeland Security officials have sharply denied his allegations and suggested Democrats are raising them for politically motivated reasons.

Democrats previously had Murphy in their crosshairs over allegations that he misused powerful intelligence tools to track journalists covering unrest in Portland, Ore. — allegations that prompted the House Intelligence Committee to open its investigation.

In August, Schiff questioned whether Murphy had misled the committee during its initial examination of the allegations against his actions related to Portland.

“In light of recent public reports, we are concerned that Murphy may have provided incomplete and potentially misleading information to Committee staff during our recent oversight engagement,” Schiff said on Aug. 1 in a statement, “and that the Department of Homeland Security and I&A are now delaying or withholding underlying intelligence products, legal memoranda, and other records requested by the Committee that could shed light on these actions.”

Schiff has also requested testimony from seven other officials involved in preparing intelligence reports. He added that two officials already expected to testify on the initial journalist-tracking allegations deputy general counsel Ian Brekke and the official leading DHS’ Counterterrorism Mission Center should be expected to take questions on Murphy’s broader allegations.

Andrew Desiderio contributed to this report.

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/09/11/schiff-dhs-officials-whistleblower-complaint-412617
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Sunday, August 16, 2020

‘Seems to be a split decision’: Trump says he’ll take ‘a very good look’ at idea of pardoning Snowden

For the second time in a week, US President Donald Trump has indicated that he might be considering pardoning former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, noting that the issue has long transcended party lines.

Asked if he wants to pardon Snowden at a press conference in Bedminster, New Jersey on Saturday, Trump responded that while he was “not that aware of the Snowden situation,” he would “start looking at it.”

Trump, who once labelled the former CIA contractor turned-whistleblower a “traitor,” argued that there is no consensus within the American political establishment on the matter.

“There are many people… it seems to be a split decision,” he said.

Many people think that he, somehow, should be treated differently, other people think he did very bad things… I’m going to take a very good look at it

People’s attitude towards Snowden is not something that depends on party affiliation, Trump said, adding that he has seen “many people that are very conservative and very liberal that agree on the same issue, and they agree both ways.”

It was not long before those who have been clamoring for Snowden’s pardon flocked to Twitter, calling on Trump to clear the charges against the former contractor. Among them were Republican Senator Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) and Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky). 

I’m one of them. ⁦@Snowden⁩ revealed that Trump-haters Clapper and Comey among others were illegally spying on Americans.

Clapper lied to Congress about it.

@realDonaldTrump⁩ should pardon Snowden! https://t.co/bRr9f2ETru

— Senator Rand Paul (@RandPaul) August 15, 2020

Thank you @realDonaldTrump for considering a pardon of Edward @Snowden. Also, Congress needs reform whistleblower statutes. The laws are ambiguous at best with respect to contractors. https://t.co/DTHVq85a4W

— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) August 16, 2020

Some called on Trump to pardon WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange along with Snowden, saying they are both “truth tellers who were prosecuted for sharing the truth.”

Pardon both Julian Assange and Edward Snowden.

The deep state establishment was spying on our citizens and doing unconstitutional and illegal surveillance on a massive scale.

Both truth tellers who were prosecuted for sharing the truth.

— Mike Coudrey (@MichaelCoudrey) August 16, 2020

Snowden was charged with espionage and vilified by the US government for leaking a trove of documents exposing the warrantless surveillance of American citizens in 2013. On the run from justice, Snowden has been living in exile in Moscow for all these years, after he ended up stranded in the Russian capital when his US passport was revoked.

Also on rt.com

RT‘Not treated fairly’? Trump appears to soften on ‘Snowden a traitor’ stance, as supporters renew calls for pardon

The push for Snowden to be pardoned gained momentum after Trump appeared to have softened his stance on the issue, telling the New York Post earlier this week that many people believe the whistleblower has not been treated fairly.

Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!

Source: https://www.rt.com/usa/498130-edward-snowden-pardon-trump/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS
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The Article Was Written/Published By: RT



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Monday, July 20, 2020

Mike Pompeo accused of 'questionable activities' in new whistleblower complaint

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A heavily-redacted four-page document, the complaint accuses the Secretary of State of engaging in concerning activities throughout Washington, overseas and in New York and Florida

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/mike-pompeo-whistleblower-complaint-questionable-activities-state-department-investigation-a9628471.html
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Sunday, June 28, 2020

An embattled group of leakers picks up the WikiLeaks mantle

An embattled group of leakers picks up the WikiLeaks mantle

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

For the past year, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has sat in a London jail awaiting extradition to the US. This week, the US Justice Department piled on yet more hacking conspiracy allegations against him, all related to his decade-plus at the helm of an organization that exposed reams of government and corporate secrets to the public. But in Assange’s absence, another group has picked up where WikiLeaks left off—and is also picking new fights.

For roughly the past year and a half, a small group of activists known as Distributed Denial of Secrets, or DDoSecrets, has quietly but steadily released a stream of hacked and leaked documents, from Russian oligarchs’ emails to the stolen communications of Chilean military leaders to shell company databases. Late last week, the group unleashed its most high-profile leak yet: BlueLeaks, a 269-gigabyte collection of more than a million police filesprovided to DDoSecrets by a source aligned with the hacktivist group Anonymous, spanning emails, audio files, and interagency memos largely pulled from law enforcement “fusion centers,” which serve as intelligence-sharing hubs. According to DDoSecrets, it represents the largest-ever release of hacked US police data. It may put DDoSecrets on the map as the heir to WikiLeaks’ mission—or at least the one it adhered to in its earlier, more idealistic years—and the inheritor of its never-ending battles against critics and censors.

“Our role is to archive and publish leaked and hacked data of potential public interest,” writes the group’s cofounder, Emma Best, a longtime transparency activist, in a text message interview with WIRED. “We want to inspire people to come forward, and release accurate information regardless of its source.”

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Source: https://arstechnica.com/?p=1687754
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The Article Was Written/Published By: WIRED



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Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Two whistleblowers to testify against Attorney General Barr's 'unprecedented politicization' of Trump's Justice Department

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‘Again and again, [Barr] has demonstrated that he will cater to President Trump’s private political interests,’ House Judiciary Chairman Nadler says

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/attorney-general-william-barr-whistleblowers-testify-trump-doj-a9569256.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Griffin Connolly



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Thursday, May 14, 2020

Coronavirus whistleblower says 'lives were lost' after Trump administration removed him from meetings where he raised alarms

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Dr Rick Bright claims he was removed from his federal government position after challenging superviors over their pandemic response

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/coronavirus-whistleblower-rick-bright-trump-white-house-a9514821.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Danielle Zoellner



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Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Kushner's task force of inexperienced volunteers 'prioritised Trump associates', coronavirus whistleblower report claims

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President’s son-in-law has been under fire for his unduly prominent role in administration’s response to pandemic

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/jared-kushner-coronavirus-trump-task-force-whistleblower-white-house-a9501821.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Andrew Naughtie



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Thursday, March 12, 2020

Judge orders Chelsea Manning released from jail

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FALLS CHURCH, Va. — A federal judge on Thursday ordered the release of former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning, who has been incarcerated since May for refusing to testify to a grand jury.

U.S. District Judge Anthony Trenga ordered Manning’s release from jail after prosecutors reported that the grand jury that subpoenaed her has disbanded.

The judge left in place more than $256,000 in fines he imposed for her refusal to testify to the grand jury, which is investigating WikiLeaks. The fines had been accumulating at a rate of $1,000 a day.

A hearing in the case that had been scheduled for Friday has now been canceled. Manning had argued that she had shown through her prolonged stay at the Alexandria jail that she proved she could not be coerced into testifying and therefore should be released.

On Wednesday, her lawyers said she attempted suicide while at the jail.

Manning was held since May for refusing to testify before a grand jury investigating Wikileaks. She spent an additional two months in jail earlier in 2019 for refusing to testify to a separate grand jury.

She could have faced nearly six more months of jail time if the grand jury had continued its work. The civil contempt citation was designed to coerce her testimony.

Federal prosecutors had maintained that Manning can easily effect her own release by complying with the grand jury subpoena. They said she had the same duty to provide testimony that all citizens face.

Under federal law, a recalcitrant witness can only be jailed for civil contempt if there is a reasonable belief that incarceration will coerce the witness into testifying. If the jail time has no coercive effect and is purely punitive, the recalcitrant witness is supposed to be released.

Manning has said she believes grand juries in general are an abuse of power and that she would rather starve to death than testify. Judge Trenga, in sending Manning to jail, said there was no dishonor in testifying to grand juries, which are referenced specifically in the U.S. Constitution, and that he hoped time in jail would allow Manning to reflect on that.

Manning had previously spent seven years in a military prison for delivering a trove of classified information to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who is under indictment at the Alexandria courthouse and is fighting extradition to the U.S.. Manning’s 35-year sentence was then commuted by then-President Barack Obama.

It is possible that prosecutors could convene another grand jury and again subpoena Manning and she could again be jailed for refusing to testify. But there is no clear indication from prosecutors that they would do so.

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/12/chelsea-manning-released-from-jail-127734
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Associated Press



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