Occupy blogger fighting subpoena
The American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts is fighting on behalf of a blogger with apparent Occupy Boston ties who has been subjected to a subpoena that authorities filed through a social media site.
Peter Krupp, an attorney from Lurie and Krupp LLC, who is working on behalf of the ACLU, said the ACLU has moved to have the subpoena, sent to Twitter, quashed on First Amendment grounds. A hearing has been continued to today in Suffolk Superior Court.
http://tinyurl.com/cpchr7k
Suffolk court is occupied by Twitter
A judge is expected to decide today whether to unseal court documents involving prosecutors’ attempts to obtain Twitter user information – including from an account linked to Occupy Boston – as part of a probe into the alleged hacking of Boston police email.
Suffolk Superior Court Judge Carol S. Ball temporarily sealed the case yesterday during a brief conference requested by Suffolk Assistant District Attorney Benjamin A. Goldberger.
http://tinyurl.com/cahke6p
Twitter Subpoena Reveals Boston PD Is After User Information
It appears as though Twitter has ignored request from the Boston Police Department and the Suffolk Massachusetts District Attorney’s office that a subpoena for user information be kept under wraps.
http://tinyurl.com/cab8ncs
Occupy the future – As it evolves, the movement is building on a network laid down in the encampments
After barreling straight ahead for more than three months, Occupy is at its first fundamental turning point. Encampments in city after city have been eviscerated and plowed under. In Boston, after a judge ruled that the Dewey Square Occupation wasn’t protected as free speech, protesters – with the help of police – broke camp and dispersed. All this while critics say the movement has to either take a new form or perish.
But in fact, Occupy has been moving toward that new form for months. Since early October, hundreds of activists from Occupations nationwide have been building connections by phone, e-mail, and Internet relay chats. Now, despite lower public visibility, this network is metamorphosing into something stronger and more sustainable – approaching what renowned group dynamics guru Clay Shirky calls “movement nirvana.”
http://tinyurl.com/bq3poal
Continue reading “The OB Media Roundup 12/29/11” »