Monday, September 1, 2014

Jay Leiderman’s case in the New Yorker magazine:The Masked Avengers How Anonymous incited online vigilantism from Tunisia to Ferguson (The Life and Times of Commander X)

Jay Leiderman Ventura Defense Lawyer

… Three months later, Doyon’s pro-bono lawyer, Jay Leiderman, was in a federal court in San Jose. Leiderman had not heard from Doyon in a couple of weeks. “I’m inquiring as to whether there’s a reason for that,” the judge said. Leiderman had no answer. Doyon was absent from another hearing two weeks later. The prosecutor stated the obvious: “It appears as though the defendant has fled.”
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… Doyon is still in hiding. Even Jay Leiderman, his attorney, does not know where he is. Leiderman says that, in addition to the charges in Santa Cruz, Doyon may face indictment for his role in the PayPal and Orlando attacks. If he is arrested and convicted on all counts, he could spend the rest of his life in prison. Following the example of Edward Snowden, he hopes to apply for asylum with the Russians. When we spoke, he used a lit cigarette to gesture around his apartment. “How is this better than a fucking jail cell? I never go out,” he said. “I will never speak with my family again. . . . It’s an incredibly high price to pay to do everything you can to keep people alive and free and informed.”

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Saturday, August 30, 2014

Facebook tries to quell Messenger rumors

Facebook is going on the offensive, trying to do damage control for its Messenger app.

The social network is responding to a firestorm of user anger that erupted when it appeared that Facebook was forcing people to load its Messenger app in a veiled attempt to usurp their privacy.

Now Facebook is trying to set the record straight.  

Read more:
 http://www.computerworld.com/article/2600320/social-media/facebook-tries-to-quell-messenger-rumors.html

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Ventura Lawyer Who Defends Computer Crime Cases In Court
Jay Leiderman 
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Ventura, California 93003
 
 
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Facebook to let stalkers unearth buried posts with mobe search; Prepare to HAUNT your pal's back catalogue

Facebook is testing a search feature on its mobile application that will allow users to immerse themselves in forgotten old posts on the free content ad network.

At present, the Menlo Park, California-based company is only experimenting with the tool on a small group of people who use Facebook, according to a Bloomberg report.

Facebook is apparently touting it as "an improvement to search on mobile."

Read more:

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Ventura Lawyer Who Defends Computer Crime Cases In Court
Jay Leiderman 
Please visit my homepage 
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
 
 
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Thursday, August 28, 2014

HACKERLAWYER.US

Internet Crimes, Computer Crimes, Hacking and Cybercrime 

If you have been investigated, arrested or charged contact Defense Lawyer Jay Leiderman 

Please visit my homepage 
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003






"Tin foil as reality" - the tin foil age, where you are no longer crazy if you think your government is spying on you

Snowden, Assange and Greenwald live streaming at SXSW 

"Tin foil as reality," a phrase hacktivist lawyer Jay Leiderman whipped out during a panel for “The Hacker Wars,” permeated this year's South By Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin, Tex. This new reality, brought on in large part through the revelations of National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, created a situation where Snowden and two other major speakers - Wikileaks's Julian Assange and journalist Glenn Greenwald - were physically unable to attend and instead used webcams to appear. 

- See more at: 
http://www.occupy.com/article/snowden-assange-and-greenwald-live-streaming-sxsw#sthash.WdxR6lsT.dpuf

Internet Crimes, Computer Crimes, Hacking and Cybercrime 

If you have been investigated, arrested or charged contact Defense Lawyer Jay Leiderman 

Please visit my homepage 
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003


Ventura attorney represents high-profile hackers in a red-hot area of the law

Leiderman is one of the top attorneys in the country for people accused of violating the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, or the CFAA. It's a red-hot area of law, the subject of recent congressional hearings by lawmakers concerned with the prosecution of programmer and activist Aaron Swartz, who was facing CFAA charges when he committed suicide in January.

Although he didn't work on Swartz's defense, Leiderman seems to have had a piece of almost every other headline-grabbing hacking case. This month, when Reuters social media editor Matthew Keys was indicted on charges of enabling a hack of a newspaper website owned by his former employer, Tribune Company, he hired Leiderman as one half of his defense team.


Read more:

http://www.vcstar.com/news/ventura-attorney-represents-high-profile-hackers


Internet Crimes, Computer Crimes, Hacking and Cybercrime 

If you have been investigated, arrested or charged contact Defense Lawyer Jay Leiderman 


Please visit my homepage 

JayLeiderman.com

5740 Ralston St 300

Ventura, California 93003

805-654-0200


FBI Examining Whether Russia Is Tied to JPMorgan Hacking, cybercrime

Russian hackers attacked the U.S. financial system in mid-August, infiltrating and stealing data fromJPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and at least one other bank, an incident the FBI is investigating as a possible retaliation for government-sponsored sanctions, according to two people familiar with the probe.

Read more:

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Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Netflix releases home-grown DDOS dectectors

NetFlix's security team has given the open source treatment to three tools it uses to monitor the internet and gather evidence of planned attacks against its infrastructure.



Read more:



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5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura California 93003

California finally banning warrantless drone surveillance

California Senate approves measure banning warrantless drone surveillance ("The California State Senate passed legislation on Tuesday imposing strict regulations on how law enforcement and other government agencies can use drones, a move supporters said will protect privacy and prevent warrantless surveillance.")

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Ventura, California 93003

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Ridley Scott says 'Blade Runner' sequel script is finished and 'damn good'

The script brings back Harrison Ford


Ridley Scott has been working on a sequel to Blade Runner for at least a couple years, and it now appears that the script is ready to roll. "It’s written and it’s damn good," he tellsEntertainment Weekly. The story will bring back Harrison Ford, who starred in the 1982 film as one of the eponymous replicant hunters. Scott says that Ford's character is "a survivor after all these years," which, certainly, is a curious fact in and of itself given the ambiguous ending of certain cuts of the film.

Read more:
http://www.theverge.com/2014/8/26/6069545/blade-runner-sequel-script-is-finished-and-damn-good-ridley-scott-says 

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5740 Ralston St 300
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805-654-0200

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Hack skirmish also grounded Sony exec's flight XBox and Battle.net networks also targeted

While distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks hosed not only Playstation Network but also XBox and Battle.net networks, it's emerged that a fake bomb threat also grounded US flight 362, while Sony executive John Smedley was aboard.

A group (@LizardSquad was tweeting threats and invective in the vernacular of the since scuttled LulzSec hacker outfit, laughing as the PlayStation online gaming network went offline.

Read more: http://www.readability.com/m?url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/08/25/hack_skirmish_also_grounded_sony_execs_flight/ 

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Is Burning Man Now Just a Tech Conference in the Sand?

Is Burning Man Now Just a Tech Conference in the Sand? Re/code Heads to Black Rock to Find Out.

Hawaii Savvy via Flickr The past few days — and no doubt increasingly in the coming week — some are bemoaning the fact that Burning Man is too much of a tech hotspot, that it has become big business, that there’s money flowing. This year, the event is…

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Please visit the Jay Leiderman Law Homepage
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
805-654-0200

PlayStation Network goes down following cyberattacks

PlayStation Network goes down following cyberattacks

faviconEngadget By John Fingas
Sony may be experiencing a few unpleasant flashbacks this weekend. Both the PlayStation Network and Sony Online Entertainment (SOE) are slowly recovering from a denial of service attack that flooded their server connections, kicking many gamers...

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Please visit the Jay Leiderman Law Homepage
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
805-654-0200

Friday, August 22, 2014

The Sabu Effect: An Interview with Jay Leiderman



The Sabu Effect: An Interview with Jay Leiderman

Jay Leiderman
Jay Leiderman
The knock at the door. The blinding lights, the shouted orders, the helmets, the uniforms, the guns, the confusion, the melee.
The raid.
When it’s all over, and the FBI is sifting through everything from your Friends list to your Playstation, who do you call? If you’re a hacker or a member of Anonymous, California criminal defense lawyer Jay Leiderman is going to be somewhere on that list.

Read more: HTTP://THECRYPTOSPHERE.COM/2014/08/22/THE-SABU-EFFECT-AN-INTERVIEW-WITH-JAY-LEIDERMAN/


Please visit the Jay Leiderman Law Homepage
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003

805-654-0200

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Jay Leiderman on Anonymous' Role in Ferguson MO Protests



 CRIME

What Anonymous is Doing In Ferguson

Ferguson Anonymous
Missouri State Highway Patrol Captain Ron Johnson speaks to a protester wearing a "Guy Fawkes" mask while he walks through a peaceful demonstration in Ferguson, Mo. on Aug. 14, 2014.Lucas Jackson—Reuters

What the "hacktavist" group does, how it dealt with the affiliated member who misidentified Michael Brown's killer and how many members are involved in Operation Ferguson

On Aug. 12, Ferguson City Hall’s website went black, its phone lines died and officials had to communicate by text, according to the St. LouisDispatch and the New YorkTimes. Self-identified members of the amorphous, hard-to-define hacker community Anonymous had struck again, according to the papers, this time in response to the shooting of a black teenager, Michael Brown, by a white police officer. A Twitter account allegedly associated with Anonymous—@TheAnonMessage—threatened Jon Belmar, the St. Louis County police chief, with publicly releasing his daughter’s information “in one hour” unless he released the name of the officer who killed Brown. While Belmar didn’t give in, and @TheAnonMessage dropped the ultimatum, the account and other self-identified Anonymous members would post two days later the home address, social security number and phone number of Belmar, telling him to “run, Jon, run.” While that practice, known as “doxing,” is a common Anonymous cyber attack, @TheAnonMessage would go on to wrongly accuse a citizen of killing Brown. Twitter subsequently shut down the @TheAnonMessage without much uproar from the Anonymous community, which prides itself on fighting censorship.
A week later, Anonymous is still at work, marking Thursday as a nation-wide “Day of Rage” to protest police brutality. To better understand why Anonymous, whose targets have been varied (including MasterCard, a Tunisia dictator and Kiss singer Gene Simmons), is interested in the Michael Brown shooting, TIME spoke with Jay Leiderman, an attorney who includes among his clients Anonymous hackers, and Gabriella Coleman, a McGill University anthropology professor who is writing a book on the loose-knit community. We also spoke about how many people were involved in Operation Ferguson and how the organization dealt with one of its own after falsely accusing someone of murder.
Why is Anonymous involved in the Ferguson protests?
Anonymous’ “main demand” is “justice” for Michael Brown and his family, Leiderman says. They can grab the attention of the Ferguson police and “let them know that they’re serious,” he says. Operation Ferguson falls in line with previous Anonymous efforts to unmask alleged perpetrators, such as the 2012 Operation Red Roll, which released private information about people allegedly complicit in the rape of a 16 year-old girl in Steubenville, Ohio.
The “whole reason why” Anonymous got involved was a local rap artist—Tef Po—who called out for help on Twitter, according to Coleman, and the affiliated members responded. A day after the Brown shooting, Anonymous, through Operation Ferguson, released a statement asking Congress to pass a bill to set “strict national standards for police conduct.” It also warned the Ferguson government and police department of cyber counterattacks if the protesters were abused, harassed or otherwise harmed.
“If you attack the protesters, we will attack every server and computer you have,” wrote the Operation Ferguson author. “We will dox [document trace] and release the personal information on every single member of the Ferguson Police Department, as well as any other jurisdiction that participates in the abuse. We will seize all your databases and e-mail spools and dump them on the Internet. This is your only warning.”
Coleman says that there isn’t unanimous support within the hacker community nor Anonymous on shutting down websites. “It’s a big contentious debate between hackers who have a purist, free speech view, and others who have a more contextual one,” says Coleman. “There’s also a debate within Anonymous itself where a lot of hackers who really do the work of intrusion are not fans of doxing for two reasons: A) it’s technically uninteresting and B) sometimes they’re actually trying to gain access to those sites to hack them.”
“Really the main point is to gain media attention,” she says. “That’s kind of why that’s done more than anything else.”
How many Anonymous members are involved in Ferguson?
Anonymous is by definition a secretive group, one without leaders, an agenda or a set list of members. “No one has any idea” how many people are involved in Operation Ferguson, according to Leiderman, who called Anonymous a “nebulous and decentralized collective.”
“It’s impossible to say who is and who isn’t a member of Anonymous,” says Leiderman. “There is now way to disprove it.”
But Coleman says you can see which causes are more popular than others.
After the arrest of WikiLeaks’ founder Julian Assange in 2010, and Anonymous disrupted the websites of MasterCard, Visa and Paypal for declining to serve WikiLeaks, around 7,000 people logged onto the Anonymous chat channel and downloaded hacking tools, according to Coleman. That ad hoc association was “probably the largest ever,” according to Coleman, and by her estimates, much more than the current Operation in Ferguson. (Anonymous distanced itself from Assange in October 2012 after he asked supporters to pay money for access to documents.) The Ferguson channel is used by up to 160 people, Coleman says, although “thousands and thousands” are “within the orbit” supporting the cause through Twitter.
“It is really hard to tell in terms of the numbers,” says Coleman. “You do get a sense of which ones are bigger and smaller and I would probably put this in the definitely not small, [but] definitely not as big as something like WikiLeaks. Probably in between.”
How is the Anonymous community dealing with the member who misidentified the officer who shot Michael Brown?
The @TheAnonMessage account was not a very well respected one within the Anonymous community, according to Coleman and Leiderman, despite the fact that it had been around for awhile.
“People had suspicions but because he was being really active and contributing a lot to the operation,” says Coleman. “They kind of put their skepticism aside in some ways until it was too late…This is something that in some ways is perennially a problem and just has to do with the kind of architecture of Anonymous where you can’t really control what people are doing. There are norms and rules and ethics that definitely push behavior towards certain areas and not others, but by no means [are they] fool proof.”
After Twitter took down the account, an Anonymous memberwrote a post to show a detailed tick-tock “that this was the work of an Anon who was acting against the advice of others.” Other Twitter accounts associated with the group, like Operation Ferguson’s account, declined to name the Brown shooter as it looked for additional sources.
Coleman says that with the exception of a few cases, Anonymous has “generally been correct” in uncovering the right information. She calls @TheAnonMessage a “loose cannon” that had earned “skepticism” because of erratic actions in the past. Coleman says there “was no outcry” when Twitter shut down @TheAnonMessage despite Anonymous being “so famous for hating censorship.”
“Anonymous attracts people who are willing to push the envelope,” she says. “But there is always a hope that people who are doing it are getting the right names and information… I think that there was this expectation that people are doing that work carefully so when they’re not, people in Anonymous get really pissed off.”
When asked if Anonymous’ reputation was hurt after @TheAnonMessage released inaccurate information, Leiderman first blamed the media for going with an untrusted source before saying that Anonymous usually does a better job of establishing a correct verdict.
“Really you can’t pin that all on Anonymous,” he says. “The media that ran with it [failed] to confirm or deny the veracity of the statement… If the older and larger accounts run with something, it usually has a better chance of being more accurate.”
“You really want to see more consensus in the collective before you run with something like that,” he adds. “People that identify with Anonymous are really good at asking ‘Are you sure?’, ‘How do you know?’ ‘Can you share the data with us in a secure way?’…and I’m not sure that happened in this case.”