3 Apr
2016
3 Apr
'16
7:35 a.m.
On 4/3/16, Zenaan Harkness <zen@freedbms.net> wrote:
Today, Reddit deleted wording in its transparency report that would normally indicate that they had not received any "national security letters" or "other classified requests for user information." Such "national security...
Some blogs say NSL's are unconstitutional violating: - the Fourth (are not warrants/subpoenas/orders reviewed signed by judge). - the First (being extralegal as such, there is no legal prior restraint). [As if "legal" PR is constitutional in itself.]
From tens of thousands of NSL's, only maybe three cases have followed that with courage to fight it. Probably none have conscientiously object, ie: ignoring and speaking first instead of asking permission.