Pennsbury hit with second lawsuit in two weeks. This one challenges censorship of board meetings – Bucks County Courier Times

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James McGinnis, Bucks County Courier Times

First, it was the masking of children that triggered a recent parent-led lawsuit against Pennsbury.

This time, allegedfree speech censorship is at issue as theschool district faceslegal action for the second time in a matter of weeks.

Four Pennsbury taxpayers Doug Marshall, Simon Campbell, Robert Abrams and Tim Daly filed a lawsuit asking that Pennsbury School Boards speech policies be deemed unconstitutional.

The plaintiffs are suing the school district, school board and the districts solicitors, Michael Clarke and Peter Amuso.

Equity, diversity and education director Cherrissa Gibson is also named as a defendant in the federal lawsuit.

Filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the suit claims Pennsbury repeatedly violated the First Amendment through its previous censorship of public school board meetings.

Each individually named defendant has either perpetuated the censorship of plaintiffs speech, personally directed that censorshipor exhibited actual knowledge of and acquiescence in the censorship, the court document reads, claiming Gibson acted as a prime ringleader.

Last spring,Pennsbury came under fire for its restricting and editing of certain public comments from its school board meetings.

Comments from the plaintiffs were cut short and removed from recordings of the public meetings, with the school board citing a violation of Pennsbury School Board Policy 903. The edited videos were then posted on district social media.

(The defendants) have done everything from shouting down citizens who dare question the official narrative; conspired to silence and denounce dissenters; and even memory holed speech based on its viewpoint, deleting speech from public records as though it was never spoken, the document stated.

Related: Pennsbury cut public comments in BOE meeting videos. When a resident blasted the move, it went viral.

In March and May, the comments of Marshall, Abrams and Daly were cut from the uploaded versions of the school board meetings, with the comments in May alsocut short during their live comments.

Following the March meeting,Gibson calledMarshalls commentsoffensiveandabusive" via emails obtained via Right-to-Know requests.

She asked that the comments, focused on diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory,be removed frompublic record as a Policy 903 violation.

Campbells fiery speech at the June meeting denouncing Pennsburys editing of the meetings gained national attention and his video went viral.

CRT talks in Pennsbury: Pennsbury equity and diversity plan again bashed as critical race theory agenda

Read more: Three Pennsbury parents sue school district over COVID-19 masking requirements

The 65-page lawsuit documentreferences Policy 903, part of which says the presiding officer can interrupt or stop a public comment if thestatement "is personally directed, abusive, obscene or irrelevant.

Defendants have also interpreted Policy 903 to allow them to excise such speech from the official recordings of Pennsbury School Board meetings, according to the lawsuit.

The plaintiffs also called out the school board for editing the policy in June. Prior to that, speakers during both pre-vote and post-vote comment periods werent limited to discussing only agenda items.

At the June 17 meeting, the board updated the rule. Now, speakers during the first public comment period can only address agenda items and cant speak again during the second period about topics not on the agenda.

Thelawsuitalso claims the boards members dont believe public commenters have First Amendment protections, noting a March 2014 remark from Clarke to Abrams at a school board meeting.

The suit says Clarke had attempted to censor Abrams, speaking over him and declaring, you dont have First Amendment rights in here;this is public comment during a board meeting, and as Ive indicated before, if youre going to say things that are factually inaccurate, Im going to have to correct you.

The document cites several other instances where the plaintiffs felt Pennsbury was in violation of theFirst Amendment, including during the virtual meetings held during the pandemic.

The school board accepted written comments to be read at the online meetings during that period.

Daly asserts via the lawsuit that his criticism of the board for filling vacancies with controlled votes of members of their preferred political party was neither read or posted online at the Dec. 17, 2020 meeting.

Changes in Central Bucks: Divided Central Bucks School District board to choose new temporary member Tuesday

Abrams had also submitted a written comment that same meeting.

It accused the board of violating free speech and criticized Pennsburys academic and financial performance. The comment, like Dalys, was not read or posted online.

Pennsbury officials are trampling on the First Amendment rights of parents and residents to speak their mind about their schools, said Institute for Free Speechs vice president for litigation, Alan Gura, who is representing the plaintiffs.

Pennsbury'ssupervisor of public relations, Jennifer Neill, said as of Monday afternoon that the district had not yet been served with the lawsuit.

"We will respond appropriately through our solicitor if and when we are served," Neill said.

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Pennsbury hit with second lawsuit in two weeks. This one challenges censorship of board meetings - Bucks County Courier Times

The Sex Education Pamphlet That Sparked a Landmark Censorship Case – Smithsonian

Mary Ware Dennett wroteThe Sex Side of Life in 1915as a teaching tool for her teenage sons. Photo illustration by Meilan Solly / Photos courtesy of Sharon Spaulding and Newspapers.com

It only took 42 minutes for an all-male jury to convict Mary Ware Dennett. Her crime? Sending a sex education pamphlet through the mail.

Charged with violating the Comstock Act of 1873one of a series of so-called chastity lawsDennett, a reproductive rights activist, had written and illustrated the booklet in question for her own teenage sons, as well as for parents around the country looking for a new way to teach their children about sex.

Lawyer Morris Ernst filed an appeal, setting in motion a federal court case that signaled the beginning of the end of the countrys obscenity laws. The pairs victory marked the zenith of Dennetts life work, building on her previous efforts to publicize and increase access to contraception and sex education. (Prior to the trial, she was best known as the more conservative rival of Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood.) Today, however, United States v. Dennett and its defendant are relatively unknown.

One of the reasons the Dennett case hasnt gotten the attention that it deserves is simply because it was an incremental victory, but one that took the crucial first step, says Laura Weinrib, a constitutional historian and law scholar at Harvard University. First steps are often overlooked. We tend to look at the culmination and miss the progression that got us there.

Dennett wrote the pamphlet in question, The Sex Side of Life: An Explanation for Young People, in 1915. Illustrated with anatomically correct drawings, it provided factual information, offered a discussion of human physiology and celebrated sex as a natural human act.

[G]ive them the facts, noted Dennett in the text, ... but also give them some conception of sex life as a vivifying joy, as a vital art, as a thing to be studied and developed with reverence for its big meaning, with understanding of its far-reaching reactions, psychologically and spiritually.

After Dennetts 14-year-old son approved the booklet, she circulated it among friends who, in turn, shared it with others. Eventually, The Sex Side of Life landed on the desk of editor Victor Robinson, who published it in his Medical Review of Reviewsin 1918. Calling the pamphlet a splendid contribution, Robinson added, We know nothing that equals Mrs. Dennetts brochure. Dennett, for her part, received so many requests for copies that she had the booklet reprinted and began selling it for a quarter to anyone who wrote to her asking for one.

These transactions flew in the face of the Comstock Laws, federal and local anti-obscenity legislation that equated birth control with pornography and rendered all devices and information for the prevention of conception illegal. Doctors couldnt discuss contraception with their patients, nor could parents discuss it with their children.

The Sex Side of Life offered no actionable advice regarding birth control. As Dennett acknowledged in the brochure, At present, unfortunately, it is against the law to give people information as to how to manage their sex relations so that no baby will be created. But the Comstock Act also stated that any printed material deemed obscene, lewd or lasciviouslabels that could be applied to the illustrated pamphletwas non-mailable. First-time offenders faced up to five years in prison or a maximum fine of $5,000.

In the same year that Dennett first wrote the brochure, she co-founded the National Birth Control League (NBCL), the first organization of its kind. The groups goal was to change obscenity laws at a state level and unshackle the subject of sex from Victorian morality and misinformation.

By 1919, Dennett had adopted a new approach to the fight for womens rights. A former secretary for state and national suffrage associations, she borrowed a page from the suffrage movement, tackling the issue on the federal level rather than state-by-state. She resigned from the NBCL and founded the Voluntary Parenthood League, whose mission was to pass legislation in Congress that would remove the words preventing conception from federal statutes, thereby uncoupling birth control from pornography.

Dennett soon found that the topic of sex education and contraception was too controversial for elected officials. Her lobbying efforts proved unsuccessful, so in 1921, she again changed tactics. Though the Comstock Laws prohibited the dissemination of obscene materials through the mail, they granted the postmaster general the power to determine what constituted obscenity. Dennett reasoned that if the Post Office lifted its ban on birth control materials, activists would win a partial victory and be able to offer widespread access to information.

Postmaster General William Hays, who had publicly stated that the Post Office should not function as a censorship organization, emerged as a potential ally. But Hays resigned his post in January 1922 without taking action. (Ironically, Hays later established what became known as the Hays Code, a set of self-imposed restrictions on profanity, sex and morality in the motion picture industry.) Dennett had hoped that the incoming postmaster general, Hubert Work, would fulfill his predecessors commitments. Instead, one of Works first official actions was to order copies of the Comstock Laws prominently displayed in every post office across America. He then declared The Sex Side of Life unmailable and indecent.

Undaunted, Dennett redoubled her lobbying efforts in Congress and began pushing to have the postal ban on her booklet removed. She wrote to Work, pressing him to identify which section was obscene, but no response ever arrived. Dennett also asked Arthur Hays, chief counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), to challenge the ban in court. In letters preserved at Radcliffe Colleges Schlesinger Library, Dennett argued that her booklet provided scientific and factual information. Though sympathetic, Hays declined, believing that the ACLU couldnt win the case.

By 1925, Dennettdiscouraged, broke and in poor healthhad conceded defeat regarding her legislative efforts and semi-retired. But she couldnt let the issue go entirely. She continued to mail The Sex Side of Life to those who requested copies and, in 1926, published a book titledBirth Control Laws: Shall We Keep Them, Change Them, or Abolish Them?

Publicly, Dennetts mission was to make information about birth control legal; privately, however, her motivation was to protect other women from the physical and emotional suffering she had endured.

The activist wed in 1900 and gave birth to three children, two of whom survived, within five years. Although the specifics of her medical condition are unknown, she likely suffered from lacerations of the uterus or fistulas, which are sometimes caused by childbirth and can be life-threatening if one becomes pregnant again.

Without access to contraceptives, Dennett faced a terrible choice: refrain from sexual intercourse or risk death if she conceived. Within two years, her husband had left her for another woman.

Dennett obtained custody of her children, but her abandonment and lack of access to birth control continued to haunt her. Eventually, these experiences led her to conclude that winning the vote was only one step on the path to equality. Women, she believed, deserved more.

In 1928, Dennett again reached out to the ACLU, this time to lawyer Ernst, who agreed to challenge the postal ban on the Sex Side of Life in court. Dennett understood the risks and possible consequences to her reputation and privacy, but she declared herself ready to take the gamble and be game. As she knew from press coverage of her separation and divorce, newspaper headlines and stories could be sensational, even salacious. (The story was considered scandalous because Dennetts husband wanted to leave her to form a commune with another family.)

Dennett believed that anyone who needed contraception should get it without undue burden or expense, without moralizing or gatekeeping by the medical establishment, says Stephanie Gorton, author of Citizen Reporters: S.S. McClure, Ida Tarbell and the Magazine That Rewrote America. Though she wasn't fond of publicity, she was willing to endure a federal obscenity trial so the next generation could have accurate sex educationand learn the facts of life without connecting them with shame or disgust.

In January 1929, before Ernst had finalized his legal strategy, Dennett was indicted by the government. Almost overnight, the trial became national news, buoyed by The Sex Side of Lifes earlier endorsement by medical organizations, parents groups, colleges and churches. The case accomplished a significant piece of what Dennett had worked 15 years to achieve: Sex, censorship and reproductive rights were being debated across America.

During the trial, assistant U.S. attorney James E. Wilkinson called the Sex Side of Life pure and simple smut. Pointing at Dennett, he warned that she would lead our children not only into the gutter, but below the gutter and into the sewer.

None of Dennetts expert witnesses were allowed to testify. The all-male jury took just 45 minutes to convict. Ernst filed an appeal.

In May, following Dennetts conviction but prior to the appellate courts ruling, an investigative reporter for the New York Telegram uncovered the source of the indictment. A postal inspector named C.E. Dunbar had been ordered to investigate a complaint about the pamphlet filed by an official with the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR). Using the pseudonym Mrs. Carl Miles, Dunbar sent a decoy letter to Dennett requesting a copy of the pamphlet. Unsuspecting, Dennett mailed the copy, thereby setting in motion her indictment, arrest and trial. (Writing about the trial later, Dennett noted that the DAR official who allegedly made the complaint was never called as a witness or identified. The activist speculated, Is she, perhaps, as mythical as Mrs. Miles?)

Dennetts is a name that deserves to be known.

When news of the undercover operation broke, Dennett wrote to her family that support for the case is rolling up till it looks like a mountain range. Leaders from the academic, religious, social and political sectors formed a national committee to raise money and awareness in support of Dennett; her name became synonymous with free speech and sex education.

In March 1930, an appellate court reversed Dennetts conviction, setting a landmark precedent. It wasnt the full victory Dennett had devoted much of her life to achieving, but it cracked the legal armor of censorship.

Even though Mary Ware Dennett wasnt a lawyer, she became an expert in obscenity law, says constitutional historian Weinrib. U.S. v. Dennett was influential in that it generated both public enthusiasm and money for the anti-censorship movement. It also had a tangible effect on the ACLUs organizational policies, and it led the ACLU to enter the fight against all forms of what we call morality-based censorship.

Ernst was back in court the following year. Citing U.S. v. Dennett, he won two lawsuits on behalf of British sex educator Marie Stopes and her previously banned books, Married Love and Contraception. Then, in 1933, Ernst expanded on arguments made in the Dennett case to encompass literature and the arts. He challenged the governments ban on James Joyces Ulysses and won, in part because of the precedent set by Dennetts case. Other important legal victories followed, each successively loosening the legal definition of obscenity. But it was only in 1970 that the Comstock Laws were fully struck down.

Ninety-two years after Dennetts arrest, titles dealing with sex continue to top the list of the American Library Associations most frequently challenged books. Sex education hasnt fared much better. As of September 2021, only 18 states require sex education to be medically accurate, and only 30 states mandate sex education at all. The U.S. has one of the highestteen pregnancy rates of all developed nations.

What might Dennett think or do if she were alive today? Lauren MacIvor Thompson, a historian of early 20th-century womens rights and public health at Kennesaw State University, takes the long view:

While its disheartening that we are fighting the same battles over sex and sex education today, I think that if Dennett were still alive, shed be fighting with school boards to include medically and scientifically accurate, inclusive, and appropriate information in schools. ... Shed [also] be fighting to ensure fair contraceptive and abortion access, knowing that the three pillars of education, access and necessary medical care all go hand in hand.

At the time of Dennetts death in 1947, The Sex Side of Life had been translated into 15 languages and printed in 23 editions. Until 1964, the activists family continued to mail the pamphlet to anyone who requested a copy.

As a lodestar in the history of marginalized Americans claiming bodily autonomy and exercising their right to free speech in a cultural moment hostile to both principles, says Gorton, Dennetts is a name that deserves to be known.

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The Sex Education Pamphlet That Sparked a Landmark Censorship Case - Smithsonian

Censorship and the Possibility of Great Art – The Wall Street Journal

Sept. 30, 2021 4:27 pm ET

In Great Art Doesnt Care About Fairness, Equality or Identity (op-ed, Sept. 25), James Campbell writes, It is surely one of the strangest of recent cultural phenomena that, whereas it was traditionally young radicals who fought to throw off the shackles of censorship, it is their radical heirs who lead the campaign to fasten them on again.

There is nothing strange about it. Those young radicals of the 1960s to whom Mr. Campbell refers were not fighting for free speech. They were exploiting Americas commitment to free speech to spread their own radical leftist beliefs. Now that they have completed their long march through the institutions, giving them near-monopoly control of the propagation of ideas in the U.S., they find that freedom of speech has become something of an inconvenience. That pesky thing called truth keeps rearing its head. Better to stifle the opposition altogether. Welcome to the revolution.

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Censorship and the Possibility of Great Art - The Wall Street Journal

Stop the vaccine censorship to gain our trust (letter to the editor) – silive.com

The COVID-19 Pandemic has served the Democrats well. With a Karl Marx mentality, they agree with censorship of medical and legal professionals who disagree with the vaccine or how it should be administered. Seniors and those with other health issues should take the chance and get vaccinated. They are the ones dying in great numbers.

The vaccine proponents ignore those that are exempt, including congress, the senate, Hollywood actors, and Illegal immigrants, including millions in our sanctuary cities. We are not told all the ingredients in the vaccine or the side effects and not told why the manufacturers cannot be sued. Its the reason people like Bill Gates and now eight more new billionaires exist because Moderna, Pfizer and J&J are sure investments for them.

Tell us all the facts and dont censor anyone with the medical, scientific and legal credentials that dont agree with the likes of Biden, Fauci and their minions. With true transparency, we can choose to get our families vaccinated or not. Proponents claim the vaccine is safe. If true, make them liable, like with all other drugs. Then the distrust might dissipate. A simple solution that we should all agree on: Stop the censorship.

(Donald Siracusa is a Bay Terrace resident.)

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Stop the vaccine censorship to gain our trust (letter to the editor) - silive.com

MGM Accused Of Censorship After Burying Johnny Depp’s Latest Movie – We Got This Covered

By most accounts, Minamata is a pretty good movie. Its a dramatization of the story of real-life photojournalist W. Eugene Smith, who in 1971 was dispatched to the Japanese fishing village of Minamata to chronicle the impact of mercury poisoning by the Chisso Chemical Company.

What resulted was a shocking series of photographs that exposed the crime to the world, despite the company trying to block Smith at every turn. Ordinarily, this would be classic Oscar bait: a sober prestige picture about corporate greed with a heavyweight actor at the helm.

But, unfortunately for Minamata, that heavyweight actor is Johnny Depp. Depps reputation has crumbled over the last few years, particularly after the UK High Court ruled that it wasnt libelous to call him a wife-beater, promptly followed by him losing his appeal against the decision.

Minamatawas soon removed from festival schedules and director Andrew Levitas says MGM went out of their way to bury the movie in the US. Heres his letter to the studio:

In re-exposing their pain in the sharing of their story, this long marginalised community hoped for only one thing to lift history from the shadows so that other innocents would never be afflicted as they have and it seemed in that moment, with MGMs partnership, a decades-long wish was finally coming true. Now, imagine the devastation when they learned this past week, that despite an already successful global roll out, MGM had decided to bury the film (acquisitions head Mr. Sam Wollmans words) because MGM was concerned about the possibility that the personal issues of an actor in the film could reflect negatively upon them and that from MGMs perspective the victims and their families were secondary to this.

Australian photojournalist Stephen Dupont feels its particularly insulting that this story wont get the audience it deserves, saying that he enjoyed the movie, that the pain of the real-life victims of the poisoning has been ignored, and that MGM is engaged in censorship:

MGM is not just punishing Depp but everyone else, the other actors, the director, the cinematographer, writers, all those involved. Even if the allegations were true, I wouldnt change my opinion. With Depp what were talking about is a marriage breakdown, something that lots of people go through all around the world, the only difference is that theyre not celebrities. Its a sad state of censorship in a far too critical world where, god forbid, if you say or do anything the wrong way, or make a mistake, and youre crucified every which way. Lets get these things into perspective.

Its a fair point, though in my eyes theres a difference between saying something the wrong way and beating the crap out of your wife.

Anyway, theres a chance Minamata might one day get its moment in the spotlight. Depp is pinning his hopes on a titanic clash with ex-wife Amber Heard in 2022. Depp is suing Heard for $50M over a Washington Post op-ed she wrote about her experience as a victim of domestic violence. Shes filed a $100 million counterclaim, also alleging defamation and that Johnny was responsible for a social media effort to tarnish her career by getting her booted offAquaman 2.

Perhaps if Depp is vindicated in a domestic court he can begin rebuilding his reputation and Minamata will be reappraised by audiences. Though, honestly, I wouldnt get your hopes up too much.

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MGM Accused Of Censorship After Burying Johnny Depp's Latest Movie - We Got This Covered

What have been the biggest revelations to come from WikiLeaks? – Yahoo News UK

Julian Assange founded WikiLeaks on this day in 2006.

This article is part of Yahoo's 'On This Day' series.

Julian Assange founded WikiLeaks, an international nonprofit organisation that openly published news leaks and classified information, 15 years ago.

The move shook the media industry, changing the nature of whistleblowing and giving a whole new meaning to the phrase "freedom of information".

WikiLeaks describes its goal as to bring important news and information to the public.

One of our most important activities is to publish original source material alongside our news stories so readers and historians alike can see evidence of the truth, its website says.

The website, which is not associated with Wikipedia, features an anonymous "drop box", with a goal of ensuring that whistleblowers can submit classified information to the site without fear of prosecution.

On this day in 2006, the wikileaks.org domain name was registered.

A series of controversial leaks soon made their way to the site.

In November 2007, operating procedures for Guantanamo Bay were published on the site, showing that the US army were keeping prisoners from Red Cross inspectors and holding new prisoners in isolation for two weeks to make them more compliant.

In 2008, sensitive information from the Church of Scientology was featured on the site, including secret Bibles and notes from founder L Ron Hubbard. The church threatened legal action following the leak.

In 2009, more than 500,000 confidential messages regarding the 9/11 terrorist attacks made their way to the site, including exchanges from the Pentagon, the FBI, FEMA and the NYPD, showing their response to the disaster.

In 2010 WikiLeaks released leaked video from a US helicopter showing an airstrike that killed civilians in Baghdad, including two Reuters news staff.

Later that same year saw half a million documents relating to the US Iraq and Afghanistan wars being published, including information about civilian deaths and sensitive data pertaining to the hunt for Osama Bin Laden.

Story continues

Famously, a 2016 leak also saw 20,000 Democratic National Committee emails make their way to WikiLeaks, which US intelligence later determined had been stolen by Russian hackers.

The emails showed that Democratic representatives favoured Hillary Clinton over opponent Bernie Sanders, and had provided her with debate questions in advance.

Assange, born in Townsville, Australia, had long been interested in computers and hacking.

In 1987, at the age of 16, Assange began hacking under the name Mendax, which would put him on the polices radar.

By 1993, Assange was using his computing skills to help the Victoria Police Child Exploitation Unit to track down individuals responsible for the publishing and distribution of child pornography.

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Assange was inspired by Daniel Ellsbergs 1971 release of the Pentagon Papers, but noted that two years had passed between Ellsbergs "leak" and media coverage.

Seeking to streamline the whistle-blowing process, Assange built a design for WikiLeaks in Australia, but quickly moved servers to Sweden, before expanding to several other countries in response to press-protection laws.

On October 4, 2006 Assange registered the wikileaks.org domain name and by December, WikiLeaks had published its first document a decision to assassinate government officials, signed by a prominent Somali political figure.

The International Federation of Journalists has called WikiLeaks a new breed of media organisation that offers important opportunities for media organisations".

Even now, 15 years since its inception, WikiLeaks still remains a point of contention with many who cannot agree whether Assange is a champion of the press, or a dangerous threat to national security.

Regardless, Julian Assange has been subject to a number of investigations since the site's inception, and has recently been the target of an alleged kidnapping plot.

Following two sexual assault accusations in Sweden, Assange sought political asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London in 2012.

In April 2019 he left the embassy and was arrested by UK authorities for skipping bail.

He has remained in Belmarsh maximum security prison in London ever since.

The investigation into the sexual assault allegations has now been dropped by Swedish authorities.

In June 2019, the US Justice Department formally asked Britain to extradite Assange to the US to face charges that he conspired to hack government computers and violated an espionage law.

Watch: Julian Assange's partner seeks an end to 'nightmare'

In April 2010, when Julian Assange appeared at the National Press Club to release a classified video depicting a U.S. military helicopter killing 18 people, he was hailed in some circles as a hero.

More than a decade later, new reporting revealed the depths of the CIAs war against Assange and WikiLeaks during the Trump administration.

Read more: Kidnapping, assassination and a London shoot-out: Inside the CIA's secret war plans against WikiLeaks

In January 2021, a UK court concluded it would be oppressive to extradite him to the US because of his frail mental health, saying there was a real risk he would take his own life.

The US has since appealed this ruling and the court case continues and a full appeal hearing is scheduled for 27 October.

In spite of the controversy, the WikiLeaks site is still live, and continues to be accessed by millions of people around the world.

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What have been the biggest revelations to come from WikiLeaks? - Yahoo News UK

Banksy’s Spy Booth Brick + NFT Auction Crashes Servers with Overwhelmingly Heavy Web Traffic – WSAZ-TV

Cosmic Wire has Rescheduled this Exclusive Auction for Friday, October 8, 12PM-5PM, PST

Published: Oct. 4, 2021 at 9:03 PM EDT|Updated: 18 hours ago

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 4, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Because of torrential web traffic overloading and crashing its website and auction servers, Cosmic Wire has rescheduled its auction of the only remaining remnants of the original Banksy Spy Booth wall mural as a hybrid NFT to Friday, October 8 from 12pm PST 5pm PST. For more information, or to make a bid, please visit http://www.banksyspyboothnft.com.

"The crash was equal parts exhilarating and anxiety-inducing to live through in real time," says Cosmic Wire CEO Jerad Finck. "We knew there was a lot of interest surrounding the piece, we felt the energy, but had no idea it would be like this. Our server CPU hit 98% within two minutes of starting the auction causing the site to go down, followed by intermitten

t blips of life over the next several hours with hundreds of millions of hits steadily rolling in. So, we had to call it off because we didn't want legitimate bidders to miss out on this opportunity. We're back up on a designated server and look forward to the auction."

All week, Finck will be joined by "The Queen of Clubhouse" and digital marketing guru Swan Swit in various Clubhouse rooms to discuss the auction. You can follow them both on the app, or the Cosmic Wire Clubhouse here for updates and scheduled events: https://www.clubhouse.com/club/cosmic-wire

Banksy's famed Spy Booth mural appeared overnight on a wall in Cheltenham, England in 2014. The street art featured three spies with listening devices on either side of an actual telephone booth, and mysteriously vanished two years later in 2016. Two of the three eavesdropping spies are thought to be representations of Edward Snowden and Julian Assange.

In 2016, worldwide art platform Artnet published in an article by Naomi Rea, "Spy Booth was a demonstrably political work, appearing just a stone's throw away from the British Government Communications Headquarters a year after former NSA contractor and notorious whistle-blower Edward Snowden exposed the British intelligence and security organization for mining online and telephone data."Artnet also noted that the Cheltenham Borough Council had "granted the artwork retrospective planning permission and elevated the building to listed status."

Long suspected to have been destroyed, the heads of the three Spy Booth spies have been found and are included in Cosmic Wire's unique and exclusive auction. The winning bidder will receive nine original brick pieces of the wall depicting all three spies' heads, along with the provenance documents of ownership, authenticity, and chain of custody, as well as a brand new original one-of-one NFT made from a photogrammetry file created from the remaining bricks.

Cosmic Wirehas announced a partnership with Raiinmaker on the release of six additional Spy Booth inspired NFTs in support of climate change charities. 100% of the NFT royalty downstream proceeds from this partnership will be donated to Laudato Tree,American Forests, and the Coalition for Rainforest Nations whose mission is to Reduce Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD+) to stop deforestation.

"Right now, it's critical that we all step up and do our part to help turn the tide at this important moment with climate change," said Raiinmaker founder J.D. Seraphine. "We're honored to support all the important work of the Coalition for Rainforest Nations, Laudato Tree, and American Forests."

Finck says, "Banksy is one of the most infamous and provocative artists of our generation. The fact that Cosmic Wire is involved in this at all is profoundly humbling. We wanted to pay homage to the original Spy Booth, so we created a new piece of digital art based on what remains of the wall. We are genuinely excited to play a small part in time capsuling this historic moment in human culture and bringing it back to the people."

For more information, please visit http://www.banksyspyboothnft.com or http://www.cosmicwire.com.

View a mini documentary on the mural and auction here: https://youtu.be/I2Pf5JApuw4

Images (courtesy of Cosmic Wire): https://www.dropbox.com/sh/qwdgo2x1c847nfg/AAC9sn0yyjJfRP-v-rwBaSLRa?dl=0

About Cosmic Wire:Cosmic Wire is a full-service entertainment company combining a marketplace, creative space and multi-platform media stage to connect artists with their fan base."Best-in-Class, Kick-Ass IP and the Iconic Artists who Create It."

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SOURCE Cosmic Wire

The above press release was provided courtesy of PRNewswire. The views, opinions and statements in the press release are not endorsed by Gray Media Group nor do they necessarily state or reflect those of Gray Media Group, Inc.

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Banksy's Spy Booth Brick + NFT Auction Crashes Servers with Overwhelmingly Heavy Web Traffic - WSAZ-TV

It happened today – this day in history – October 4 – Yellow Advertiser

1539: Henry VIII marries Anne of Cleves.

1669: Death of Dutch painter Rembrandt van Rijn aged 66.

1777: General George Washingtons troops attack and are defeated by the British at Germantown, Pennsylvania.

1809: Spencer Perceval becomes Prime Minister after William Cavendish Bentinck, Duke of Portland, retires due to ill health.

1824: Mexico becomes a republic.

1854: Abraham Lincoln makes his first political speech at the Illinois State Fair.

1883: The Orient Express departs on its first official journey from Paris to Istanbul.

1910: Portugal becomes a republic and King Manuel II flees to England.

1911: The first escalator installed on the London Underground at Earls Court Station.

1914: French & British fleet bombards Turkish forts in the Dardanelles.

1921: The League of Nations refuses to assist starving Russians.

1922: Austria gains independence.

1927: Gutzon Borglum begins sculpting Mt. Rushmore.

1933: Esquire magazine is first published.

1940: Hitler and Mussolini confer at the Brenner Pass in the Alps.

1943: Corsica is freed by the Free French.

1944: British troops land on the Greek mainland.

1953: Briton Jim Peters sets a world marathon record of 2:18:34.8 in the Turku Marathon in Finland.

1955: Rev Sun Young Moon leaves prison in Seoul.

1957: Russian satellite Sputnik is launched into space the first man-made object ever to leave the Earths atmosphere.

1958: The French Fifth Republic is established.

1959: Soviet space probe Luna 3 sends back the first pictures of the dark side of the moon.

1962: Singles chart:

1963: The Beatles make their first appearance on the ITV show Ready Steady Go.

1965: Pope Paul VI becomes the first pope to visit the western hemisphere.

1966: Lesotho (Basutoland) gains independence from Britain.

1970: Singer Janis Joplin is found dead at the Landmark Hotel, Hollywood, after an accidental heroin overdose.

1976: British Rail begins its new 125mph High Speed Train (HST) service, the Intercity 125.

1978: Country singer Tammy Wynette is abducted, beaten and held in her car for two hours by a kidnapper wearing a ski mask.

1982: Helmut Kohl is confirmed as the new chancellor of West Germany. On the same day, The Smiths make their live debut at the Ritz in Manchester, supporting Blue Rondo A La Turk.

1983: Richard Noble driving Thrust2 reaches new land speed record of 650.88mph at Black Rock Desert, Nevada.

1989: Monty Python comic Graham Chapman, dies from cancer aged 48.

1992: An Israeli Boeing 747 cargo plane crashes in the outskirts of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, setting two blocks of flats on fire and killing dozens of people.

1994: Guitarist Danny Gatton commits suicide aged 48.

2001: A Siberian Sibir Airlines Tupolev TU-154 crashes into the Black Sea after being struck by an errant Ukrainian S-200 missile. 78 people are killed.

2006: WikiLeaks is launched, created by internet activist Julian Assange.

2009: Album chart:

2010: Death of comedy actor Norman Wisdom aged 95.

2011: The US State Department lists the leader of Islamic State, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist with a $10 million reward for information leading to his capture.

2012: Michael Schumacher announces his retirement from motor racing at the end of the season.

2014: Jean-Claude Baby Doc Duvalier, former president of Haiti, dies of a heart attack aged 63.

2017: Prime minister Theresa May suffers a nightmare speech at the Conservative Party Conference as her voice fails, a prankster interrupts and the set collapses.

BIRTHDAYS: Anne Rice, author, 80; Susan Sarandon, actress, 75; Jim Fielder, bassist, (Blood Sweat and Tears) 74; Ann Widdecombe, politician, 74; Christoph Waltz, actor, 65; Anneka Rice, TV presenter, 63; Chris Lowe, musician (Pet Shop Boys) 62; Liev Schreiber, actor, 54; Reggie Lee, actor, 46; Alicia Silverstone, actress, 45; Richard Reed Parry, multi-instrumentalist, 44; Caitriona Balfe, actress, 42; Tom Rosick, footballer, 41; Ryan Shawcross, footballer, 37; Melissa Benoist, actress, 33; Dakota Johnson, actress, 32.; Stacey Soloman, singer/TV personality, 32.

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ACLU Advocate Reining in Government Use of Face Surveillance, Champion of Privacy Rights Research, and Data Security Trainer Protecting Black…

San FranciscoThe Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is honored to announce that Kade Crockford, Director of the Technology for Liberty Program at the ACLU of Massachusetts, Pam Dixon, executive director and founder of World Privacy Forum, and Matt Mitchell, founder of CryptoHarlem, are recipients of the 2021 Pioneer Award for their work, in the U.S. and across the globe, uncovering and challenging government and corporate surveillance on communities.

The awards will be presented at a virtual ceremony on September 16 starting at 5 pm PT. The keynote speakers this year will be science fiction authors Annalee Newitz and Charlie Jane Anders, hosts of the award-winning podcast Our Opinions Are Correct. The ceremony will stream live and free on Twitch, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter. Audience members are encouraged to give a $10 suggested donation. EFF is supported by small donors around the world and you can become an official member at https://eff.org/PAC-join. To register for the ceremony: https://www.eff.org/PAC-register

Activist Kade Crockford is a leader in educating the public about and campaigning against mass electronic surveillance. At the ACLU of Massachusetts, they direct the Technology for Liberty Project, which focuses on ensuring that technology strengthens rights to free speech and expression and is not used to impede our civil liberties, especially privacy rights. Crockford focuses on how surveillance systems harm vulnerable populations targeted by law enforcementpeople of color, Muslims, immigrants, and dissidents. Under Crockfords leadership, the Technology for Liberty Project has used public record requests to shine a light on how state and local law enforcement agencies use technology to surveil communities. Crockford oversaw the filing of over 400 public record requests in 2019 and 2020 seeking information about the use of facial recognition across the state, collecting over 1,400 government documents. They led successful efforts in Massachusetts to organize local support for bans on government use of face surveillance, convincing local police chiefs that the technology endangered privacy in their communities. Crockford worked with seven Massachusetts cities to enact preemptive bans against the technology and, in June 2020, working with youth immigrants rights organizers, succeeded in getting facial recognition banned in Boston, the second largest city in the world to do so at the time. Massachusetts lawmakers have credited Crockford for shepherding efforts to pass a police reform bill that reins on how police in the state can use facial recognition. They also led a project to file public record requests with every Massachusetts District Attorney and the state Attorney General to reveal how local prosecutors were using administrative subpoena, secretly and with no judicial review or oversight, to obtain peoples cell phone and internet records. Kade has written forThe Nation,The Guardian,The Boston Globe, WBUR, and many other publications, and runs the dedicated privacy websitewww.PrivacySOS.org.

Author and researcher Pam Dixon has championed privacy for more than two decades and is a pioneer in examining, documenting, and analyzing how data is utilized in ways that impact multiple aspects of our lives, from finances and health information to identity, among other areas. Dixon founded the World Privacy Forum in 2003, a leading public interest group researching consumer privacy and data, with a focus on documenting and analyzing how individuals data interacts within complex data ecosystems and the consequences of those interactions. She has worked extensively on privacy and data governance in the U.S., EU, India, Africa, and Asia. Dixon worked in India for a year researching and publishing peer-reviewed research on Indias Aadhaar identity system, which was cited twice in the Supreme Court of Indias landmark Aadhaar decision. She works with the UN and WHO on data governance, and with OECD in its One AI Expert Group. She was named a global leader in digital identity, which included her work in Africa on identity ecosystems. She is co-chair of the Data for Development Workgroup at the Center for Global Development, where she is working to bring attention to inequities faced by less wealthy countries with fragile data infrastructures when dealing with data privacy standards created by, and reflecting the priorities of, wealthy countries. Dixon co-authored a report in 2021 calling for a more inclusive approach to data governance and privacy standards in low- and middle-income countries. Her ongoing work in the area of health privacy is extensive, including her work bringing medical identity theft to public attention for the first time, which led to the creation of new protections for patients. She has presented her work on privacy and complex data ecosystems to the Royal Society, and most recently to the National Academy of Sciences.

Matt Mitchell is the founder of CryptoHarlem and a tech fellow for the BUILD program at the Ford Foundation. He is recognized as a leading voice in protecting Black communities from surveillance. Under his leadership, CryptoHarlem provides workshops on digital surveillance and a space for Black people in Harlem, who are over policed and heavily surveilled, to learn about digital security, encryption, privacy, cryptology tools, and more. He is a well-known security researcher, operational security trainer, and data journalist whose work raising awareness about privacy, providing tools for digital security, and mobilizing people to turn information into action has broken new ground. His work, Mitchell says, is informed by the recognition that theres a digital version of stop and frisk which can be more dangerous for people of color than the physical version, and that using social media has unique risks for the Black community, which is subject to many forms of street level and online surveillance. Cryptoharlem has worked with the Movement for Black Lives to create a guide for protestors, organizers, and activists during the 2020 protests against police brutality following the murder of George Floyd. Last year he was selected as a WIRED 25, a list of scientists, technologists, and artists working to make things better. In 2017 he was selected as a Vice Motherboard Human of The Year for his work protecting marginalized groups. As a technology fellow at the Ford Foundation, Mitchell develops digital security training, technical assistance offerings, and safety and security measures for the foundations grantee partners. Mitchell has also worked as an independent digital security/countersurveillance trainer for media and humanitarian-focused private security firms. His personal work focuses on marginalized, aggressively monitored, over-policed populations in the United States. Previously, Mitchell worked as a data journalist at The New York Times and a developer at CNN, Time Inc, NewsOne/InteractiveOne/TVOne/RadioOne, AOL/Huffington Post, and Essence Magazine.

EFF has been fighting mass surveillance since its founding 31 years ago, and weve seen the stakes rise as corporations, governments, and law enforcement increasingly use technology to gather personal information, pinpoint our locations, secretly track our online activities, and target marginalized communities, said EFF Executive Director Cindy Cohn. Our honorees are working across the globe and on the ground in local communities to defend online privacy and provide information, research, and training to empower people to defend themselves. Technology is a double-edged swordit helps us build community, and can also be used to violate our rights to free speech and to freely associate with each other without government spying. We are honoring Kade Crockford, Pam Dixon, and Matt Mitchell for their vision and dedication to the idea that we can challenge and disrupt technology-enabled surveillance.

Awarded every year since 1992, EFFs Pioneer Award Ceremony recognize the leaders who are extending freedom and innovation on the electronic frontier. Previous honorees have included Malkia Cyril, William Gibson, danah boyd, Aaron Swartz, and Chelsea Manning.

For past Pioneer Award Winners: https://www.eff.org/pioneer/past-winners

To register for this event: https://www.eff.org/PAC-register

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ACLU Advocate Reining in Government Use of Face Surveillance, Champion of Privacy Rights Research, and Data Security Trainer Protecting Black...

The 11 Most Promising Cryptocurrencies to Buy [2021]

As of now, there are over 5,000 cryptocurrencies listed on Coinmarketcap, and probably twice as many that youll never know about.

Thats a lot. So, what is the best cryptocurrency to buy in 2021?

In this article, I will share my 11 best cryptocurrencies to invest in for a strong, diversified portfolio.

Whether you are looking for the next big cryptocurrency, or for which altcoins to buy to diversify, read on.

There isnt only one best cryptocurrency to buy.

Lots of cryptocurrencies have various use cases and promise to disrupt various industries.

Investing in cryptocurrency is risky, but investing in only one is way riskier.

So make sure to diversify your crypto portfolio.

Diversification is a great way to hedge your risk and increase your chances of being involved in the next hot cryptocurrency.

Since I love diversification, my list of the best cryptocurrencies to invest in includes coins that:

As all cryptocurrencies presented are so different, make sure to think about which ones make the most sense for your portfolio and your investment strategy.

Going forward, I will describe each coin, its purpose, team, liquidity, price volatility, and other metrics.

In the end, you will have a solid understanding, so that you can decide for yourself which is the best cryptocurrency to buy in 2021.

I will start with popular, well-known cryptocurrencies. Ideal for beginners.

Then, I will move on to some more advanced coins.

These coins may generate more profits, but they require you to know a bit more about them.

Plus, they are likely more volatile than the first coins on my list.

If youve already invested in top cryptocurrencies offered on platforms like Coinbase and want to expand your portfolio, then the coins at the bottom of my list might be best for you.

Bitcoin is the most widely used cryptocurrency to date. It is often referred to as the king of cryptocurrencies, and its primary goal is to act as global, peer to peer, digital cash.

Best Exchanges To Buy Bitcoin

Simply put, Bitcoin is still the best cryptocurrency to buy today, if not the best. I would not recommend anyone invest in cryptocurrency without investing in Bitcoin.

If youre still not convinced, check out why Bitcoin is a good investment.

Litecoin is one of the first cryptocurrencies to come after Bitcoin, and one of the hottest cryptocurrencies of the last decade.

Using Bitcoins source-code, Litecoin is a fork of Bitcoin with some technical changes to the code, making it much faster than Bitcoin. Its mission is also to be a global, peer to peer currency.

Despite its competition, Litecoin is still one of the most trusted and used cryptocurrencies these days.

Ethereum was the first major project to introduce smart contracts.

Smart contracts allow developers to launch mobile and desktop decentralized applications (dApps) on top of the blockchain.

Thousands of tokens run on the Ethereum network, and these tokens were what spurred the initial coin offering (ICO) movement.

Is Ethereum a good investment? Check out the full guide on why Ethereum is worth buying.

Unlike Bitcoin and Litecoin, which aim to be used as currencies, the Binance coin is a utility token.

This means its value comes from how useful it is (and how much demand there is for its utility) within the Binance ecosystem.

Binance is one of the worlds fastest-growing exchanges. Because Binance Coin is used to pay for transactions on the exchange and many other purposes, BNB is one of the fastest-growing cryptocurrencies in 2021 in terms of trade volume.

If youre looking to diversify your cryptocurrency portfolio by adding a utility token issued by a company with a solid business history and an experienced team, think Binance coin.

Basic Attention Token is another utility token most commonly utilized in the Brave Browser.

The BAT token is used to tip content creators, or virtually anyone that you find helpful on the internet. You can tip content creators monthly, or choose to send one time payments to specific people.

Additionally, users who watch ads can get rewarded in BAT. Using smart contracts, advertisers can lock up BAT, and as their ad is viewed, their funds are released to both the Brave Browser and the end viewer.

Monero is a privacy-focused project. The coin utilizes fancy cryptography and privacy logic to hide the participants' identities.

It is widely used on the dark web for this reason and is the most popular privacy coin today.

NEO is often known as the China-based Ethereum. Founded in China, NEO is another smart contract platform enabling developers to launch dApps on the blockchain.

They are slightly more centralized than Ethereum: instead of relying on hundreds of nodes like on Ethereum, there are only a few (less than 10) that make up NEOs decision making.

Beam is another privacy-focused cryptocurrency making waves in the industry.

Unlike Monero, which is a more traditional blockchain project, Beam uses a new blockchain protocol called Mimblewimble.

Without getting into detail, Mimblewimble is known to help significantly with scaling the blockchain and transaction speed, all while maintaining a high level of privacy and anonymity.

Nexo has been gaining some attention recently. Nexo as a software is a wallet that allows users to borrow money using their coins as collateral.

On the other hand, users can also easily and instantly lend crypto and gain interest from lending.

Nexo also offers a free credit card for users and has a unique business model.

The NEXO token is one of the first security tokens to be offered (STO) in the industry.

Cardano, which is competing with Ethereum and NEO, is touted to be more scalable and easier for developers to use.

It aims to be more scalable by introducing two layers of technology: one responsible for tracking balances of the ledger, and the other for transferring value.

Cardano uses two programming languages called Haskell and Plutus.

Haskell has been around since the 1980s, and is Cardanos attempt at making it easier for developers to create decentralized applications. Plutus is the functional language built in-house by Cardanos development team.

Enjin is a fascinating use case for blockchain technology. The company's entire goal is to bring gaming (esports, VR, social, etc.) to blockchain.

This means that gamers can own assets from their games.

Imagine playing games and, when the game is over, you can sell those assets to other players.

You can also buy and collect in-game items from your favorite players and top Twitch champions. Wait for them to increase in value or sell them right away. The choice is yours.

Another amazing feature of Enjin is their Multiverse. The concept is incredible: players will be able to play one game and then transfer their character, assets, winnings, and other items to an entirely different game made by a whole different game developer!

You made it to the end of my list! I hope you enjoyed my top 11 cryptocurrencies to buy for 2021, and that you found the information I provided useful.

If youre looking for more great cryptocurrencies to invest in, or to find out which coin is going to be the next big cryptocurrency, here is what you can do:

An excellent community to explore new cryptocurrencies is the BitcoinTalk forum, specifically the altcoin threads.

You can interact with people deeply involved in this niche, explore opinions, and search for the announcement threads (ANN).

This forum is also helpful to discover projects early on, before they become the next big cryptocurrency.

More great communities can be found on Facebook -- and one of them is our own Facebook group. Feel free to join and ask other members about their favorite cryptocurrencies.

The best crypto exchanges perform a significant number of checks before listing new coins for trading.

You can use these verifications as some kind of quality label to find some of the best cryptocurrencies to invest in which arent listed on this page.

eToro andBinanceare some of the biggest crypto exchanges and offerdozensof the best cryptocurrencies for trading -- I definitely recommend you check themout.

Buying the best cryptocurrencies is not enough to be a successful crypto investor.

Countless promising investors saw their crypto journey end brutally because they did not pay attention to security.

If youre serious about investing in cryptocurrencies, put some effort into reinforcing your security.

I hope you enjoyed this article.

Let me know in the comments which coins you invest in, and which top cryptocurrencies you think are missing from my top 11!

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The 11 Most Promising Cryptocurrencies to Buy [2021]