Then through the town the Hangman came and called in the empty streets my name – and I looked at the gallows soaring tall and thought: “There is no one left at all for hanging, and so he calls to me to help pull down the gallows-tree.” And I went out with right good hope to the Hangman’s tree and the Hangman’s rope.
He smiled at me as I came down to the courthouse square through the silent town, and supple and stretched in his busy hand was the yellow twist of the hempen strand.
And he whistled his tune as he tried the trap and it sprang down with a ready snap— and then with a smile of awful command he laid his hand upon my hand.
“You tricked me, Hangman!” I shouted then. “That your scaffold was built for other men. And I no henchman of yours,” I cried, “You lied to me, Hangman, foully lied!”
Then a twinkle grew in his buckshot eye: “Lied to you? Tricked you?” he said, “Not I. For I answered straight and I told you true: The scaffold was raised for none but you.
“For who has served me more faithfully than you with your coward’s hope?” said he, “And where are the others that might have stood side by your side in the common good?”
“Dead,” I whispered; and amiably “Murdered,” the Hangman corrected me; “First the alien, then the Jew… I did no more than you let me do.”
Beneath the beam that blocked the sky, none had stood so alone as I – and the Hangman strapped me, and no voice there cried “Stay” for me in the empty square. - The Hangman – Maurice Ogden
Google Report Shows ‘Disturbing Growth in Government Surveillance’
Most recent Transparency Report from web giant reveals 136% increase in user data requests from US since 2009
Google has released its newest semiannual Transparency Report on Wednesday, which shows a “steady increase in government requests” for user data and marks a “disturbing growth in government surveillance online.”

The US made 8,438 user data requests during the second half of 2012, a nearly 136% percent increase since 2009. (Photo: Carlos Luna)
The report from the web giant, which discloses the number of requests it receives from governments and courts worldwide, shows that user data requests are up 70 percent since 2009, with a total of over 21,000 user data requests from over 33,000 users or accounts in the second half of 2012.
The U.S. made the biggest number of requests by far—8,438 during this period, which marks a nearly 136 percent increase since 2009.
Of those U.S. requests, 68% were from subpoenas, as Richard Salgado writes on Google’s blog on the report, and “are requests for user-identifying information, issued under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), and are the easiest to get because they typically don’t involve judges.”
The Guardian‘s Dominic Rushe points out how the use of EPCA to get user data is dangerous:
The ECPA has been widely criticised by privacy advocates, and was passed in 1986, long before electronic communication became so common. Under the act, email stored on a third party’s server for more than 180 days is considered abandoned. To access that information, officials need only a written statement certifying that the information is relevant to an investigation.
But Holmes Wilson, co-founder of online advocacy group Fight For the Future, said the Justice Department had argued that emails are “abandoned” once they are opened. “Ironically, the emails that now have the most protection are the spam that you never open,” he said. “ECPA is under dire need of reform. Right now the government can access almost anything that you have online without a warrant and at anytime. Electronic communication should be afforded the same protection as your physical mail or files stores in a cabinet,” he said.
Berin Szoka, president of TechFreedom, says the report “reveals a disturbing growth in government surveillance online,” and adds:
On its own, the growth in number of requests for private information like emails should be alarming, especially after the Petreus case. Even more disturbing is that most requests have not been reviewed by a court to ensure that law enforcement has established probable cause to believe a crime has actually been committed, as the Fourth Amendment generally requires.
Today’s report doesn’t really tell us the full extent of unconstitutional privacy invasions. Law enforcement officials rightly note that they need subpoena access to subscriber information as the ‘building blocks’ for establishing probable case. They also insist they’re already getting warrants for content information, even when ECPA doesn’t require that. But we still don’t have hard data on either claim. Worse, while large companies like Google may rightly refuse to turn over user data without a warrant, smaller companies without legal staffs may feel compelled to turn over private data with only a subpoena, or perhaps even without one at all.









Eddie says:
I currently have three thick questionnaires, two from the census department and one from the department of agriculture that state on the outside of the envelope that my response is required by law by Feb. 14.
One is for the practice, and they want to know detailed info on where all my income came from from last year (broken down by procedure and whether it was private pay, insurance, or Medicaid), expenses, things that I don’t even keep up with myself…and certainly that I haven’t got at my fingertips this soon after the year end.
One wants to know how many people live at my lake house and what our ethnicity is and how much money we make…the typical census B.S. Of course nobody really lives there at all, except for weekends and holidays, but I still have to fill it out or…or what? They’ll prosecute me?
The one from the Dept. of Agriculture wants to know in great detail exactly what is going on out at the farm, how many animals I have, what kind of crops, how much money we make…etc, etc.
Since when did my job become being a book keeper for the government? Bad enough that I have to keep track of all the myriad of taxes we have to pay. I swear if I took the time to figure out everything they want to know, it’d take weeks of my time.
I don’t remember being hit with all this crap in years past. What a crock.
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24th January 2013 at 7:21 pm
taxSlave says:
Hey Eddie – it is called slavery.
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24th January 2013 at 8:32 pm
BUCKHED says:
Eddie..I’ve gotten those too….I’d tell them Nun” Yuh’ which is short for none of your FUCKING BUSINESS !
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24th January 2013 at 9:23 pm
anotherjuan says:
somewhere, there is a law against your failure to report complete and correct information, something to the effect of falsifying government documents. too bad, eddie, they got capone the same way – indirectly.
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24th January 2013 at 9:49 pm
AWD says:
Eddie:
Don’t feed the beast your information, for the love of God, man, starve ‘em. If the SWAT team shows up, tell ‘em your dog ate it.
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24th January 2013 at 10:12 pm
IndenturedServant says:
I have never nor will I ever fill out a census or community survey and any other fucking thing they send me except for a tax for.
I simply write a letter which states that I cannot, in good conscience, provide answers to questions which are designed to redistribute my hard earned money to anyone besides myself. I never hear back from them and no one knocks on my door.
The most recent one I received was a “community survey” which asked, among other things, what time do I leave for work? What time do I come home home? How many miles is it to my job and how long does it take for me to drive to work? My letter to that load of horseshit included a line asking them how it was any of their fucking business in all caps. I actually read every question in the survey and informed that that the answers to 90% of their questions was already contained in numerous govt owned databases already and that the entire thing was a waste of my time AND money!
Man! I really need to take a break from all this doom porn. This shit is starting to get on my last damn nerve!
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24th January 2013 at 11:25 pm
KaD says:
Thought TBP should see this: http://www.salem-news.com/articles/january082013/larissa-nearing-ts.php
The apartment next to hers caught fire. She got home, asked the cops if she could cover the speakers in her apartment, got arrested for ‘obstruction of justice’, CPS came for her son who gave him eight vaccine injections, revoked her license…A restraining order had been placed on her so she couldn’t see her baby, Larissa’s one-year-old son was being offered for adoption from the first day he was taken and placed into the system.
Larissa spent 5 days in jail. The arresting officer charged her with 5 counts. One of child endangerment, child neglect, etc. but when she was finally brought before the judge the only charge that stuck was a misdemeanor obstruction and she was released on her own recognizance.
Larissa lost her job, her home, her baby for a period of time, her good reputation, her dignity, her money and her family in a matter of minutes.
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24th January 2013 at 7:57 pm
AKAnon says:
KaD-That is an awful story-makes me ill. And glad I don’t live in SoCal, for so many reasons. I have had my share of negative interactions w/ child service agencies-it can be a nightmare, and it becomes very obvious, despite the mission statement of the agency, that the best interest of the children is often NOT the priority.
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24th January 2013 at 4:31 pm