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by sneak 2312 days ago
You’d go to jail like weev did.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weev

AT&T put hundreds of thousands of subscriber emails on the web with no password or firewall or meaningful authentication of any kind. (They were server-sent autocompleted values in the username field of a login form that had a sequential integer URL argument.) He and a conspirator downloaded them all and sent them to the media to run stories about AT&T’s negligence (instead of, say, selling or publishing the list, or emailing them malware, et c).

He did a few years in federal, mostly in solitary.

I witnessed the terrible effects it had on his health and psyche. He was never the same person again after he got out. Solitary confinement is torture.

sophocles is right. There are two sets of laws in America, and the bigger one applies to you and not them. If you don’t show sufficient respect for their authority and the more restrictive set of rules they apply to your lower-status group, they will stretch their own rules to the point where you will be railroaded and subsequently tortured.

5 comments

Is there a better example of this than Epstein? To get away with one of the worst crimes for decades and once caught, to get a penalty that would be considered a slap on the wrist for tax evasion or drug possession, much less what he did.

There are teenagers who were dating someone with a slightly too large age gap who spent far more time in prison than Epstein did.

Please let's not use weev as a cautionary tale.

The guy had been baiting people to clock him in the face for his anti-social behavior on the internet since forever. I don't think it was what he did to AT&T that got him sent up, he'd been on the feds' radar since at least the Sarah Palin email hack.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Nacchio

Perfect example of a guy just a little bit too far outside of the circle to get away with ignoring the inner party’s mandates.

They cooked up some insider trading to throw him in federal, too. He’s out now, I understand.

If the government doesn't have enough evidence to convict you they shouldn't be allowed to trump up some other bogus charge and defend their unfair treatment by saying "well we wanted to get him on this other charge..."
It's pretty clear the crime here was unauthorized access to the server, not the sending of the information on to the media.
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weev

> It's pretty clear the crime here was unauthorized access to the server, not the sending of the information on to the media.

I think this is a good place as any to reassert that the CFAA is irrepairable and irredeemable at this point and MUST be scrapped with no replacement.

Why should you be allowed to muck around on my computers without authorization from me?
Auernheimer was sentenced to 41 months in federal prison, of which he served approximately 13 months before the conviction was vacated by a higher court. That’s not several years.
He was in jail (holding in Essex County jail in NJ) for the second ~half of the trial as well, as even before he was convicted, he was stripped of many rights and due to FBI harassment of all potential employers was unable to support himself to their standards.
The Wiki article makes it hard to feel bad for this guy.
If someone becomes a NAZI after being tossed in jail for no good reason, well hey, fuck em'.

How about we stop justifying hurting people because of their (in this case retroactive) violations of social/political norms and worry more about if our society itself is tolerable and is, in fact, sometimes perfectly deserving of extreme reactions.

Agreed, especially because the jail is the psychological harm that triggers a lot of follow up awfulness for people.
No. Society doesn't need to worry about whether it's tolerant enough of "nazis" (or any hateful, violent, extremist ideologues), nor do we all need to realize that our collective failure to be adequately sympathetic towards "nazis" justifies their extremism. The "nazis" are not the real victims here. They deserve the social and political punishment they get.
>They deserve the social and political punishment they get.

If the "they" are the people supporting the punishment and torture of someone for reporting on corporate incompetence, and the manner of punishment is extremism, then your rationale leads to the extremism you want to punish. By this rationale, society deserves the extremism it gives rise to through its treatment of individuals who were not extremist before the treatment.

> By this rationale, society deserves the extremism it gives rise to through its treatment of individuals who were not extremist before the treatment.

It's a terrible rationale. The extremist ideology, itself, is unjustifiable regardless of the means by which it's acquired.

This is all just supposed to be self-evident? What even are you talking about? Be specific.
If you're truly baffled as to the context in which the term "nazis" is employed in reference to weev's political views as an exemplar, and don't understand how it can possibly be the case that such views and their advocacy deserve to be opposed by civilized society, I'm not going to be the one to hold your hand and gently teach you how the lessons of the last hundred years have led most of humanity to reach that obvious conclusion.

But really you're not confused at all, you're just trying to bait me into a tedious semantic argument in which you'll suddenly forget how English works and what words even mean, and I'm not wasting my time with that.