First day hikes extended due to weather – The Herald Bulletin

ANDERSON Indiana State Parks offered a rain check of sorts, extending their New Year's Day First Day Hikes through Sunday.

The change was made due to the weather forecast for Friday that included freezing rain changing over to rain.

Several people,including Stacey Valentine, took advantage of a dry spell Friday afternoon to hike at the park .

Valentine said she has participated in the First Day Hikes over the last couple of years and enjoyed the opportunity to just get outside.

The hikes are popular at the park and normally draw a large crowd, but due to the pandemic the format was changed this year.

Instead of a large group, hikers could go on their own schedule with groups limited to members of the same household to maintain social distancing.

Stickers were available at the nature center that could be worn so hikers crossing paths could identify fellow participants and greet each other with a "Happy New Year."

First Day Hikes originated more than 20 years ago at Blue Hills Reservation, a state park in Milton, Mass. The program was launched to foster healthy lifestyles and promote year-round recreation at state parks.

Follow Don Knight on Twitter @donwknight, or call 765-622-1212 ext. 204567.

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First day hikes extended due to weather - The Herald Bulletin

Letter: Amendment needed to reverse campaign finance precedents – Eagle-Tribune

To the editor:

Christian Wade's recent article "Lawmakers spend big bucks" reveals the degree to which fundraising influences our state legislators.

The necessity of building up a campaign war chest forces them to ask themselves what policies their major donors might prefer, rather than asking themselves what policies might be best for the majority of their constituents.

Thus we end up with government of, by and for the wealthy.

This problem was created by a series of anti-democratic U.S. Supreme Court rulings, such as Citizens United v. Federal Electron Commission (2010), that have opened the floodgates to big money in politics.

The constitutionality of state limits on campaign fundraising and spending has also been called into question by a subsequent Supreme Court ruling, American Tradition Partnership Inc. v. Bullock (2012), which nullified a 100-year-old Montana law called the Corrupt Practices Act that had kept corporate money out of state politics for a century.

Only a constitutional amendment can overturn flawed Supreme Court decisions. Please ask your state representative and state senator to support the We the People Act (H.3208 and S.2163), which would have Massachusetts join five other states (Vermont, California, Illinois, New Jersey and Rhode Island) in proposing an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to overturn Citizens United v. FEC and other anti-democratic Supreme Court rulings based on the doctrines that political spending is a form of First Amendment speech and that artificial incorporated entities have inalienable rights, as if they were real people.

Paul Lauenstein

Sharon

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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Letter: Amendment needed to reverse campaign finance precedents - Eagle-Tribune

After Trumps drubbing in the courts, liberals fear a legal hangover – POLITICO

There is some risk that some of these decisions that have come in post-election litigation could be bad for progressive plaintiffs going forward if you have courts choose to extend some of these doctrines towards pre-election challenges, said Jon Greenbaum, chief counsel at the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. There is some danger in that.

Judges tossed out nearly all of the roughly 60 suits filed by the Trump campaign and its backers for a variety of reasons and, in many instances, individual cases were dismissed on many different grounds. Some judges said the Trump campaign lacked legal standing to challenge voting procedures. Others said Trump electors or individual voters lacked standing.

Many cases were thrown out for laches a legal principle barring untimely suits. Others were declared to be moot or precluded by ongoing litigation at the state level. At least two suits were deemed to violate the Eleventh Amendment the constitutional provision limiting federal-court litigation against states and state officials.

The Trump campaign and their allies werent working with the most skilled lawyers, said Loyola Law School professor Justin Levitt. They werent paying close attention because, all of a sudden, they found out to their surprise that the courthouse doors are quite narrow. Theyre only open a crack.

Nearly every decision now stands as precedent that Republicans or state officials can seek to wield against Democrats or civil rights groups in the endless legal wars that surround the U.S. electoral system. Lawyers who handle such cases have no doubt the turnabout is coming, although they differ over its significance.

The rulings on standing will be important down the road. They will make it harder for individual voters to have standing to bring these challenges, Republican election lawyer Jason Torchinsky said. Weve also seen the federal judiciary is really skeptical about challenges to duly-enacted laws. This is going to make it harder for the left or right to bring challenges to voting laws.

As a civil rights litigator constantly looking for creative ways to raise legal complaints in court, Greenbaum acknowledged that he doesnt typically celebrate judges ruling that litigants lack standing to have their cases heard.

Im normally not a big fan of attacking standing, given the context that were usually the ones trying to establish standing, he said.

The chief architect of the Democrats legal strategy, Marc Elias, said he doesnt think the Trump cases had much impact on election law because the suits were rather obviously meritless.

Those werent close calls, Elias said of the rulings shutting the cases down. They were not cases that represented difficult questions when the court had to draw a hard line.

Elias, a partner at law firm Perkins Coie, added that he was not overly worried that the cases had damaged the future ability of genuinely injured voters and groups to bring suits. Most of these cases were a caricature of a real voting-rights suit, he said. They werent plumbing the carefully drawn lines of standing doctrine. They were pretty much coloring outside the lines.

Some judges also used another basis to throw out the Trump lawsuits finding that the claims were too speculative to proceed. Those kinds of dismissals trouble many left-leaning lawyers because they deny court-ordered discovery like subpoenas and depositions in cases where litigants lack details about how they were defrauded or injured.

I have misgivings about the extent to which it has become harder to access the courts and I think some of these election decisions rested on doctrine that has been used to restrict access to the courts, said Alexander Reinert, a professor at Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University. But, he added, I dont think from a systemic perspective, there is any damage thats been done that isnt already being done in other areas. I dont think any of the cases stretched the law.

Some lawyers cautioned that its too soon to pass definitive judgment on the Trump-related suits because of signs the U.S. Supreme Court may still take up a dispute from Pennsylvania that arose before the election and involves the power of state courts to impose voting-related rules that arguably contradict or go beyond what a state legislature dictated. Trump is seeking to intervene in that case, which was brought by GOP state senators and could affect voting procedures across the country if the high court chooses to hear it.

The reservations among some voting-rights advocates over the bevy of Trump defeats highlight another curious aspect of this particular chapter in the voting wars: a role reversal that saw Democrats and their allies seeking to knock the GOP cases out of court, while Trumps legal team and its backers scrambled to adopt arguments that liberal civil-rights litigators have long pursued in the face of strident Republican opposition.

The head-spinning shift was on clear display last month during arguments before a federal judge in Atlanta over GOP efforts to force a more elaborate signature matching process for absentee ballots in the runoff Senate elections scheduled for Jan. 5.

In the lead-up to the November election, as Democrats and voting rights advocates were pushing courts to force more Covid-19-related accommodations in the voting process, Republicans urged strict enforcement of a legal theory called the Purcell principle a line of Supreme Court rulings that discourage federal judges from making changes to election rules in the days or weeks before the vote.

However, during the Dec. 17 Atlanta court session, lawyers for the GOP argued for a minimalist interpretation of Purcell, insisting it is not an insurmountable obstacle to changing signature verification procedures in an election where absentee and early voting is already underway.

The last time I checked, Purcell was not one of the first 14 amendments to the United States Constitution, said Michael Francisco of law firm McGuireWoods, contending that the interest in pre-election certainty shouldnt be allowed to trump the basic right to have the vote carried out fairly. It doesnt say you excuse constitutional violations just because youre two weeks out from an election.

And while civil rights lawyers and Democrats often advance lawsuits claiming that minority voters are suffering from vote dilution due to practices that give voters in one part of a state more influence or shift minority voters to districts where theyll have little impact, a lawyer representing Democratic Party groups urged the Atlanta federal judge to reject arguments that Republicans votes are being diluted when local officials count absentee ballots without carefully scrutinizing the signatures.

Amanda Callais, also with Perkins Coie, dismissed the notion of vote dilution the GOP was advancing in the case and argued it amounted to a generalized grievance that cannot support standing.

The judge in the suit, Obama appointee Eleanor Ross, dismissed it on standing grounds alone. The theory of future injury is too speculative," Ross said.

The rejection of the Trump and GOP-initiated cases is in line with a decades-long trend often advanced by lawyers and judges aligned with the conservative Federalist Society to push back against a perception during the 1960s and 1970s that federal judges were issuing sweeping decisions in cases that lacked a firm basis under the Constitution.

Those conservatives argue for a narrow view of standing they contend federal court lawsuits should only be brought by litigants who are directly injured by the governments conduct and should not be used to obtain advisory opinions on the legality of various government policies or actions.

For his part, Trump seems clueless about the legal principles involved and baffled by his loss.

The Supreme Court had ZERO interest in the merits of the greatest voter fraud ever perpetrated on the United States of America. All they were interested in is standing, which makes it very difficult for the President to present a case on the merits. 75,000,000 votes! Trump lamented on Twitter.

Trumps offhand dismissal of the standing issue the sort of slight that might set off a brawl at a Federalist Society convention indicates he lacks a basic grasp of the core principles extolled by the conservative judges he has nominated.

Obviously, Trump does not have a very deep understanding of many of the things he tweets about, and I think maybe standing doctrine least of all, said Jameel Jaffer of the Knight First Amendment Institute.

Jaffer, who was on the losing end of a standing ruling in 2013 from the Supreme Court over the National Security Agencys surveillance programs, was tempted to find some wisdom in Trumps tweet before reversing course.

"Theres a kernel of truth in what hes saying. No. What am I saying? Im giving him too much credit," Jaffer said. "All he cares about is that hes losing, and he has no idea what hes talking about."

The Trump election litigation also created some unusual ideological bedfellows, as liberal professors and litigators sometimes found themselves praising conservative jurists they rarely agree with.

One of the most significant rulings trouncing the Trump-related litigation was a federal appeals court opinion last month tossing out a lawsuit brought by well-known Georgia attorney Lin Wood. The ruling was authored by William Pryor, considered for many years to be the most conservative appointee on the federal bench.

Many who welcomed Trumps legal rout said the outpouring of joy in their circles reflected not so much an endorsement of the courts increasingly miserly approach to voting litigation as satisfaction at seeing that restrictive rubric applied evenhandedly and not altered to produce a particular political outcome.

The cheering was a little bit for the rule of law, but I dont think theyre actually cheering the substance, said Levitt.

Some people walked into this situation thinking judges are political actors and are going to vote according to their ideological priors, Reinert added. But judges, for the most part, have not. So, thats a refreshing reminder what is different about the judiciary.

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After Trumps drubbing in the courts, liberals fear a legal hangover - POLITICO

Julian Assange Faces Ruling on Extradition to U.S. – The New York Times

A judge in London plans to rule on Monday whether Britain should extradite Julian Assange to the United States, where the WikiLeaks founder faces charges of conspiring to hack government computers and violating the Espionage Act by obtaining and releasing confidential documents in 2010 and 2011.

A ruling in favor of the U.S. extradition request could pave the way for a high-stakes trial that Mr. Assange has sought to avoid for years, and which his supporters say poses a dangerous threat to press freedom. Mr. Assange faces up to 175 years in prison if found guilty of all charges.

If the judge, Vanessa Baraitser, rejects the extradition request, however, it would give Mr. Assange a major victory at a time when recent U.S. administrations have increasingly used the Espionage Act against journalists sources.

Here is what you need to know about the ruling.

Judge Baraitser will not rule on whether Mr. Assange is guilty of wrongdoing, but she will decide whether the U.S. extradition request meets requirements set out under a 2003 extradition treaty with Britain namely, that the alleged crime for which Mr. Assange is wanted could also lead to trial in Britain, had he done it there.

If Judge Baraitser rules in favor of the extradition, the case would go to Britains home secretary, who makes the final decision on extraditions. And it would be a politically delicate choice: Mr. Assange is such a high-profile figure, and the charges he faces in the United States so serious, that a decision by the British authorities will have long-lasting consequences.

Yet before moving to the home secretary, appeals are likely to keep the case in courts for months. And if Mr. Assange were to lose, his legal team could also attempt to take the case to the European Court of Human Rights. If he were to win on appeal, he could be freed.

President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. could play a critical role in determining the fate of Mr. Assange. If the British judge rules in favor of an extradition, and the U.S. is able to extradite, it will likely fall to the new president to make a decision as to whether the government should continue with the prosecution, said Carl Tobias, a professor of law at the University of Richmond.

As vice president, Mr. Biden called the WikiLeaks founder a high-tech terrorist in 2010, but it remains unclear what he would do as president. Mr. Biden could pardon Mr. Assange, or the Justice Department could drop the charges against him, or carry on with the prosecution.

Calls for President Trump to pardon Mr. Assange have also grown in recent weeks as Mr. Trump has issued a wave of pardons and commutations before his term ends.

Britain has turned down several extradition requests from the United States in recent years. In 2012, it refused to extradite Gary McKinnon, a British hacker who breached U.S. government computers in 2002, on the basis that he was too ill. In 2018, a high court ruling also blocked the extradition of Lauri Love, who was accused of breaking into U.S. government websites.

A ruling in favor of extradition could subject Mr. Assange to life in prison.

The U.S. government considers Mr. Assange an individual who has put lives at risk by revealing names of U.S. personnel and informants who provided valuable information in dangerous places like war zones.

Reporting or journalism is not an excuse for criminal activities or a license to break ordinary criminal laws, James Lewis, a lawyer representing the U.S. government, told the British court last year.

But news organizations and right groups say the charges Mr. Assange faces pose a serious threat to press freedom.

The future of journalism and press freedom is at stake here, said Rebecca Vincent, the London-based director of international campaigns at Reporters Without Borders.

If the U.S. government is successful in obtaining Mr. Assanges extradition and prosecuting him in the U.S., then it could prosecute any journalist and news organizations under similar charges, Ms. Vincent added.

Greg Barns, an Australian lawyer and adviser to Mr. Assange, said, The greatest risk for him in the U.S. is that he wont face a fair trial. Mr. Barns added: He could spend the rest of his life in solitary confinement, treated in a cruel and arbitrary fashion.

In 2012, Mr. Assange entered the Ecuadorean Embassy in London to escape an extradition request from Sweden, where he faced rape accusations. He spent seven years in the embassy, but was arrested by the British police in 2019, and later sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for skipping bail when he entered the embassy.

The charges in Sweden have been dropped, and Mr. Assange has completed his 50-week sentence. He is not accused of any crime outside the United States, but he remains at the Belmarsh prison in London as Britain decides on his extradition. His bail requests have been rejected.

Several doctors have said that Mr. Assange suffers from depression and memory loss and could attempt to commit suicide if he were extradited.

Nils Melzer, the United Nations special rapporteur on torture and ill treatment, who has examined Mr. Assange in prison, said last year that his incarceration amounted to psychological torture.

I can attest to the fact that his health has seriously deteriorated, to the point where his life is now in danger, Mr. Melzer said last month in urging Mr. Trump to pardon Mr. Assange.

Mr. Assange, 49, was indicted in 2019 on 17 counts of violating the Espionage Act for obtaining and publishing secret military and diplomatic documents. He was later charged with violating the Computers Fraud and Abuse Act.

Mr. Assanges promotion of government transparency has made him a hero to many, but he has also been criticized as a publicity seeker with an erratic personality.

The publication of the material exposed various crimes and wrongdoings committed by the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan, and rights groups have hailed their release as valuable information for the public. Right groups like Reporters Without Borders and Amnesty International have called for all charges to be dropped.

The activities that Julian Assange engaged in are activities that journalists engage in all the time, said Julia Hall, Amnesty Internationals expert on counterterrorism and criminal justice in Europe. We wouldnt have information without them.

The hearings were delayed by the coronavirus pandemic and technical glitches that rights groups said hampered their ability to monitor them.

In February, Mr. Assange appeared in a glass box, where he could not hear properly, according to observers. In September, after an outburst from Mr. Assange, the judge warned that he would be removed from the courtroom if he kept interrupting prosecutors. Mr. Lewis, acting for the U.S. government, argued that Mr. Assange faced extradition over the publication of informants names, not for handling leaked documents.

In their closing remarks, lawyers for Mr. Assange argued that accusations of espionage constituted a political offense, and that an extradition on the basis of a political offense was barred by the extradition treaty between the Britain and the United States.

Asked whether he would consent to extradition to the United States, Mr. Assange replied: No.

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Julian Assange Faces Ruling on Extradition to U.S. - The New York Times

British judge to hand down Julian Assange extradition decision – The Age

"If Assange is extradited, it will set a dangerous precedent for press freedom."

But the US government says they are prosecuting Assange, not for publishing the cables but for how they were obtained, alleging he conspired with Chelsea Manning, then an army intelligence officer, to hack into government systems to steal three-quarters of a million secret and classified cables.

He faces 17 charges and a total sentence of 175 years if convicted of all counts in the United States.

Judge Vanessa Baraitser will hand down her decision on whether Assange is to be extradited to the United States to face a grand jury. Assange, who attended every day of his hearing in September and October last year, is expected to attend the hearing in court two.

Regardless of her ruling, it will almost certainly be appealed as both sides have said they will appeal if the decision does not go their way.

Stella Moris-Smith Robertson, Assange's fiancee and mother of their two children, Max and Gabriel, has begun directly pleading with US President Donald Trump, via his favoured medium Twitter, for a pardon for Assange, before Trump leaves the White House.

The Obama administration did not bring charges against Assange they were only brought by the Department of Justice under the Trump Administration. Trump, who benefited politically from WikiLeaks' publication of the emails obtained by Russians who hacked into the Democratic National Committee's servers, has held views in favour and also critical of WikiLeaks.

Britain's National Union of Journalists (NUJ) said if Assange was extradited to the United States, it would "chill the media worldwide".

"Whatever you think of Assange, he clearly brought important information to wide attention," the NUJ's general secretary Michelle Stainstreet said.

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"Now he faces prosecution for actions that are commonplace for investigative journalists.

"If this prosecution is successful, it will chill the media worldwide."

Monday's ruling is a major development in the 10-year saga involving the Australian who spent nearly seven years holed up at the Ecuadorian embassy in London to escape being extradited to Sweden to face allegations of sexual assault.

He was kicked out by his hosts in dramatic scenes in April 2019 when they invited Scotland Yard to enter the embassy and arrest their long-term resident.

Assange has been held in custody ever since.

Latika Bourke is a journalist for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, based in London.

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British judge to hand down Julian Assange extradition decision - The Age

Who is Julian Assange, and why is the world agitated over him? The Manila Times – The Manila Times

For Tagalogs, just drop the ge in the name, add an S sound at the end and you get to have a more or less correct pronunciation of the surname of Julian.

At any rate, December 29 was the day a group from the Filipino intellectual community sought to contribute to the worldwide campaign of preventing the extradition of Julian Assange from the United Kingdom to the United States.

As it turned out, the event at the gate of the US Embassy on Roxas Boulevard became a lesson on how not to conduct a lightning rally. This kind of attack is done, as the name suggests, lightning-quick, with barely a minute or two allowed for the participants to voice out all that needs to be said, then disperse just as quickly to avoid apprehension by authorities.

From the coffee shop where we assembled on the east side, we had to walk over to the pedestrian lane northward, cross over to the west side and walk long again to reach the southernmost gate of the embassy where we expected to do our heroics.

Well, for the opportunity of doing bravura at such a growing twilight of our years, why not?It had been half a century ago when in another rally at the embassy on a rainy morning, our hundreds were blocked by a big contingent of policemen led by Western Police District Commander Col. James Barbers at the intersection of the boulevard and T.M. Kalaw Street.

A girl comrade, Ka Estrel, from Makibaka surreptitiously sidled up to me, slung on my shoulder a cloth bag containing something, which she described in this wise: Ganyan ang pinasabog sa Plaza Miranda. Pagbunot mo ng pin, ihagis mo. Four seconds, sasabog yan (Thats the kind that had been blasted in Plaza Miranda. Once you have pulled out the pin, throw it. Four seconds, it will explode.) Moments later, the police made a determined charge to dispel the rally. Pillbox blasts from activists rent the air as the rallying crowd withdrew to the Luneta grounds. That was a signal to unleash my bravado. But impelled by some sudden quick decision, I kept the grenade untouched in the bag, which I lugged on nonetheless as, rushing with the escaping crowd, I found myself leaping into the hallowed base of the Rizal Monument, which was guarded 24/7 by two Marines soldiers. At the mad approach of the pursuing policemen, the Marines guards eye-signaled me to stay put where I was crouching low, unnoticed by the pursuers. I did as signaled and by that, averted what would have been a more gruesome episode than Plaza Miranda. The Marines soldiers did right by themselves in any case. Had they told me to the police, I would have thrown the grenade then and there and would have gone down in history as the boy who blasted Rizal the second time around.

Memories were seizing me as I flowed with the very few Assange advocates crossing the pedestrian lane to the US Embassy grounds. No Ka Estrel was around to provide me with ordnance (next I heard about her was that she died in Cebu in an encounter with government forces); what I wielded, as did the others in the group, was a tarpaulin signage that read Free Assange. We were supposed to spread the tarps the minute we positioned across the southernmost gate of the embassy, which was proximate to the Philippine Navy Club. But even as we were only just approaching the spot, policemen in battle fatigue uniforms blocked our move. They were not as belligerent as the troops that chased us away in that 1971 rally. Mild mannered and even sounding apologetic for their interference in our moves, they reminded us that we had no permit and that we could not conduct the action in the vicinity of the gates. Two among us, leaders of the once-militant National Association of Free Labor Unions, flashed their signs nonetheless and began their agit-prop.The policemen, more than a platoon in number by military reckoning, were betraying increasing belligerence in preventing our move, even indicating an intent to arrest us if the event came to a head.

For one steeled in mass actions in the pre-martial law era, the move we were doing was a lost cause. It had been decades since I last stepped on the US Embassy environs, and only at that time did I realize that the area is on police watch around the clock. I flashed my Free Assange sign one last time and then folded it up for good upon being admonished by the troops that I was not supposed to do it there: Nandito po kayo sa US Embassy. Bawal po mag-rally dito (You are in the US Embassy. You cannot rally here).

But of course!

Does not the Philippines, in fact, continue to be under the umbrage of America? The Military Defense Treaty (MDT) of 1951 continues in full force together with the military alliance treaties it has mothered through the years, i.e., the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) of 1998 and the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) crafted by the Benigno Aquino 3rd administration to allow America to use Philippine military bases as if they were USown, not subject to inspection by Philippine authorities!

I shouted with joy to the heavens when President Duterte abrogated the VFA last year, only to swallow my glee when Duterte suspended the abrogation indefinitely actually restoring its full effectivity to this day.

A year ago, I proposed the creation of a movement called SCRAMDT for Scrap the MDT, seeing the treaty as, indeed, the mother of all United States machinations to keep the Philippines in tow of American geopolitics. The MDT has become the benchmark for how a Philippine president is independent of America.

And so, with the faltering gait of an octogenarian, I toed the line of the Free Assange move that morning of December 29 entertaining no idea whatsoever that we will get what we wanted. If we cannot break our own chains from America, how could we ever gain freedom for somebody not our own.

But surely Assange, the renowned founder of Wikileaks, has become a worldwide cause clbre for having exposed American atrocities in Afghanistan and Iraq. For criminal charges not necessarily connected with his internet escapades, he earned a prison term in the United Kingdom but avoided imprisonment by seeking asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in Britain. However, with the change in administration in Ecuador, Assange lost his asylum status and fell back into British custody. Advocates of press freedom the world over fear the Australian cybertechnology expert would be expatriated by Britain to the US to face criminal charges there and meet with possible capital punishment.

Assange, therefore, stands today as an icon whose death punishment would amount to the death sentence for universal freedom of expression.A worthy cause indeed.

As we say in Tagalog, Ang sakit ng kalingkingan ay kirot ng buong katawan (Thepain of the small toe is the ache of the whole body).

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Who is Julian Assange, and why is the world agitated over him? The Manila Times - The Manila Times

Global Open Source Software Market 2020 by Type, Size, Share, Cost, Revenue, Products and Production Information Analysis and Forecast to 2026 -…

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Global Open Source Software Market 2020 by Type, Size, Share, Cost, Revenue, Products and Production Information Analysis and Forecast to 2026 -...

Farmers Fight For Right To Repair Their Own Equipment – Food Tank

The Right to Repair (R2R) movement is helping farmers protect their right to fix their own farm equipment without facing legal repercussions.

The R2R movement lobbies for repair-friendly legislation, standards, and regulations through organizations like the Repair Association. The Association advocates for guaranteeing property rights, obtaining equal access to information, non-discriminatory pricing of parts and tools, and unlocking software.

Were trying to maintain our consumer rights which means wed still like to be able to repair and modify our tractors just like our dad, grandfather, and great grandfather did years ago, says Kevin Kenney, an Alternative Fuel Systems Engineer at Grassroots Energy LLC, and a member of the R2R movement, tells Food Tank President Danielle Nierenberg on Food Talk Live.

The R2R movement is confronting corporations like John Deere who control machinery that farmers use. These companies prevent farmers from repairing equipment such as tractors and instead force farmers to hire outside contractors. According to Kenney, this can cost farmers up to US$150 an hour.

Kenney explains that corporations are able to do this through tactics such as lengthy Extended Use License Agreements (EULAs). Companies argue that farmers who sign these EULAs do not own their tractors, but receive alicense to operate the vehicle. This forces farmers to comply with the manufacturers instructions and prevents them from repairing either the equipment or the software on their own.

Kenney tells Food Tank, with major equipment manufacturersthey make us sign these [EULA]s; and its just like your cell phone where you have the right to use your cell phone but you dont really own it.

One of the main concerns of the R2R movement is aging farm equipment, often called legacy equipment. When manufacturers introduce new software, they often stop supporting the old version, making it nearly impossible for farmers to repair existing equipment.

The problem that we are having is if [manufacturers] decide to quit supporting [equipment] with software, we cant get it fixed, Kenney tells Food Tank.

This practice forces farmers to buy new software and equipment, which can reach up to US$600,000 dollars.

The cost does not only force current farmers to invest in costly new equipment or repairs to continue their work. Kenney explains that it also acts as a barrier for young farmers who lack access to capital to acquire these technologies when starting their farms.

But while the R2R movement fights for the right to own and repair farm equipment, companies are pushing back. John Deere argues that the R2R movement puts farmers safety at risk and violates intellectual property rights.

In response to this criticism, many farmers are using the auto industrys Memorandum of Understanding to show that the right to repair is possible. In 2014, car manufacturers voluntarily agreed to make the same information and tools they provide to franchised dealers available to independent repair shops.

Kenney asks, If you can fix your car or truck, why not your tractor?

Kenney and other members of the R2R movement are also advocating for open source software, which gives users freedom to share, study, and modify software. Kenney is currently working with the Free Software Foundation to create open source resources for farmers.

To date, 35 states have proposed R2R legislation, demonstrating that farmers want to learn how to fix their own equipment and build on-farm ingenuity, according to Kenney.

Kenney is urging both urban and rural communities to come together to support farmers in this movement and distribute power from large companies to the many. Were tired of this urban versus rural split, Kenney tells Food Tank.

The fact that you are taking business away from the very very few and offering up assistance to 50-60,000 farmers [in Nebraska]How could that be a bad thing?

Photo courtesy of Unsplash.com

Original post:
Farmers Fight For Right To Repair Their Own Equipment - Food Tank

Section 215 Expired: Year in Review 2020 – EFF

On March 15, 2020, Section 215 of the PATRIOT Acta surveillance lawwith a rich history of government overreach and abuseexpired due to its sunset clause. Along with two other PATRIOT Act provisions, Section 215 lapsed after lawmakers failed to reach an agreement on a broader set of reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

In the week before the law expired, the House of Representatives passed theUSA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act, without committee markup or floor amendments, which would have extended Section 215 for three more years, along with some modest reforms.

As any cartoon viewer knows, in order for any bill tobecome law, the House and Senate must pass an identical bill, and the President must sign it. That didnt happen with the USA FREEDOM Reauthorization Act. Knowing that Houses bill would fail in the Senate, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell brought a bill to the floor that would extend all the expiring provisions for another 77 days, without any reforms at all. Senator McConnell's extension passed the Senate without debate.

But the House of Representatives left town without passing Senator McConnells bill. That meant that Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act, along with the so-called lone wolf and the roving wiretap provisions expired. Section 215 is best known as the law the intelligence community relied on to conduct mass surveillance of Americans telephone records, a program held to be likely illegal by two federal courts of appeals. It has other, largely secret uses as well.

Although Section 215 and the two other provisions have expired, that doesnt mean theyre gone forever. For example, in 2015, during the debate over the USA FREEDOM Act, these same provisions were also allowed to expire for a short period of time, and then Congress reauthorized them for another four years. While transparency is still lacking in how these programs operate, the intelligence community did not report a disruption in any of these critical programs at that time. If Congress chooses to reauthorize these programs early in the new Congress, this lapse in 2020 may not have much of an overall impact.

In addition, theNew York Timesand others have noted that Section 215s expiration clause contains an exception permitting the intelligence community to use the law for investigations that were ongoing at the time of expiration or to investigate offenses or potential offenses that occurred before the sunset. Broad reliance on this exception would subvert Congresss will when it repeatedly included sunset provisions to cause Section 215 to expire, and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court should carefullyand publiclycircumscribe any attempt to rely on it.

EFF has repeatedly argued that if Congress cant agree on real reforms to these problematic laws, they should beallowed to expire and stay that way. While we are pleased thatCongress didn't mechanically reauthorize Section 215, it is only one of a number of largely overlapping surveillance authorities. And with a new Congress and a new Administration, the House and the Senate should take this unique opportunity to learn more about these provisions and create additional oversight into the surveillance programs that rely on them. The expired provisions should remain expired until Congress enacts the additional, meaningful reforms weve been seeking.

To be clear, even the permanent loss of the current version of the law will still leave the governmentwith a range of toolsthat are still incredibly powerful. These include other provisions of FISA as well as surveillance authorities used in criminal investigations, many of which can include gag orders to protect sensitive information.

But allowing Section 215 and the other provisions to expire in 2020 means that Congress has the opportunity to discuss whether these authorities are actually needed, without the pressure of a ticking clock.

You can read more about what EFF is calling for when it comes toreining in NSA spying,reforming FISA, and restoring Americans privacyhere.

This article is part of our Year in Review series. Read other articles about the fight for digital rights in 2020.

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Section 215 Expired: Year in Review 2020 - EFF

What is Wikileaks and where is Assange? – The Independent

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is due in court at the Old Bailey in London on 4 January, where a judge will decide whether to extradite him to the US to face espionage charges.

Assange, 49, from Townsville, Australia, has been charged by the US with several counts of conspiracy and espionage after he obtained and published thousands of classified documents.

He was arrested in London in April 2019 after seeking asylum at the Ecuadorian embassy in the English capital for more than six years.

Assange had been granted asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy since 2012 after losing his battle against extradition to Sweden on charges of rape and sexual assault.

In May 2019, Assange was charged under the US Espionage Act of 1917 on 17 counts for publishing classified material provided to him by then US army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning in 2010.

Assange is the first publisher to be charged under the act, according to AlJazeera.

He has also been charged with one count of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion, after he was alleged to have hacked into a government computer. He could face a maximum of five years in prison related to that charge.

A decision on Assanges extradition to the US to face the 18 charges is expected on 4 January. If convicted in the US, Assange could face up to 175 years in prison.

Wikileaks is a whistleblower news site that publishes classified material and media that is provided to them by anonymous sources.

Assange founded Wikileaks in 2006, but the whistleblower site rose to prominence in 2010 when it released sensitive military material passed to them by Ms Manning.

The material included a 39-minute video of a US military helicopter firing and killing more than a dozen Iraqis. Two Reuters journalists were killed as part of the incident.

The video led to a global outcry about the US actions in Iraq and its overall military presence in the Middle East.

In July 2010, Wikileaks, alongside other news organisations, leaked close to 100,000 documents related to the US military actions in Afghanistan.

The whistleblower site then leaked close to 400,000 documents related to the Iraq war a few months later. Both leaks were praised as they exposed a high number of civilian casualties in the Middle East that were not previously reported.

Wikileaks also published more than 250,000 diplomatic cables dated between 1996 and 2010, that provided insights into more than 270 US embassies around the world.

The site has continued to leak classified documents, material and communications over the years since, but caused controversy after leaking materials related to then Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

The organisation has also been criticised for failing to protect the privacy of individuals, after leaks revealed social security numbers and other private information not related to the leaks.

Julian Assange has been held in Belmarsh prison, located in Thamesmead, London, since April 2019.

Assange was arrested in April 2019 after the Ecuadorian government reached an agreement to expel him from the embassy and into the custody of the UK authorities.

The countrys president Lenn Moreno said that Assanges asylum was withdrawn after he violated international conventions on domestic interference during his time at the location.

He was arrested inside the embassy on 11 April 2019 by the Metropolitan Police, in connection to his refusal to surrender to the court for extradition to Sweden in 2012 to face two allegations of rape. Sweden dropped the charges and ended its investigation in November 2019.

On 1 May, Assange was sentenced to 50 weeks imprisonment in Belmarsh prison for violating the conditions of his bail in 2012, and has been held there ever since.

Assange initially appealed the sentence, but subsequently dropped his appeal in July 2019. He has been kept in prison following his initial sentence, as he awaits to find out if he will be extradited to the US to face the espionage charges.

His hearings related to his possible extradition to the US were delayed as the defence asked for more time to prepare its case, due to complications surrounding the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Assange has only left Belmarsh prison to attend court hearings related to his extradition case, but could leave on 4 January after the judge decides on his fate.

See the article here:
What is Wikileaks and where is Assange? - The Independent