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Warning: Extremely angry rant below.

Fascist Sweden
Photo: Remixed by me, originals by MathewBlack, Maol and Shaz Pur on Flickr.

What I wrote about in the last post turned out to be true. Folkpartiet (the liberal party (yeah right), click here for english info) has chosen to wrap some silk lining around the FRA-law and OK it.

Then why the charade pretending that you really want to change the law? Why did you, the six MPs that initially opposed the law, say “Tear it, Do it again, and this time do it right”?

Populistic crap. My confidence in politicians has hit rock bottom.

Weak, uneducated, fascistic, control obsessive, technology frightened people.

You call yourselves “liberal”? Try “fascist” instead.

So you say this new version of the law would require the “go ahead” from a court? But why should an open society give a “go ahead” to any unwarranted wiretapping whatsoever? Wiretap criminals, not citizens!

The internet was born free and should stay that way, anything else is anti-democratic and limiting to freedom of speech.

Also, the presence of a surveillance system of this type raises the question of “What if I’m being monitored?” which prohibits habits which are extremely valuable to keep a society open. Motivating these kinds of laws with fear of terrorism and the good old fear of Russia is FUD tactics and is a low-level marketing or political tactic. From Wikipedia:

Fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD) is a “tactic” of rhetoric used in sales, marketing, public relations[1][2] and politics. FUD is generally a strategic attempt to influence public perception by disseminating negative (and vague) information. An individual firm, for example, might use FUD to invite unfavorable opinions and speculation about a competitor’s product; to increase the general estimation of switching costs among current customers; or to maintain leverage over a current business partner who could potentially become a rival.

The term originated to describe disinformation tactics in the computer hardware industry and has since been used more broadly.[3] FUD is a manifestation of the appeal to fear.

Ugly. Plain ugly. And we elected these politicians.

In their motivations they also draw references to the German wiretap laws that works in the same way. This law has been heavily critized by several organizations and the last reports showed that many citizens hesitate, or simply do not, call helplines or make other sensitive calls in fear of being monitored.

Neils C. Scorrel writes in “German Tap Lessons” (1 | 2):

“When it comes to keeping tabs on its own residents in the ongoing war on terror, there’s a lot the United States could learn from Germany. Interestingly, the lessons would not be from Nazi Germany, where average citizens were encouraged to report on their neighbors, or from East Germany, where hundreds of thousands of people provided damning evidence about their friends and families. Neither regime lived up to its popular reputation as an all-knowing spy state.”
[...]
“September 11 and revelations of a Hamburg cell’s involvement gave authorities added incentive to increase the surveillance. During the past decade, Germany has increased its use of wiretaps by 500 percent. In 2004 alone, more than 29,000 wiretaps were approved, seven times the number authorized by U.S. courts that same year. The bulk of these taps are focused on common criminals—money launderers, extortionists, and the like. But a small percentage is aimed at people who fit the profile of potential terrorists.

Yet German authorities cannot point to a single successful prosecution of a terror suspect identified from these blind wiretaps. The colossal volume of information produced from tens of thousands of these taps often obscures real threats, while dead ends are pursued. Authorities quite simply do not have the time to listen to and process it all.”
[...]
“So, why haven’t wiretaps yielded much information about terror operations? Part of the reason is that terrorists have become savvier. They’ve learned not to discuss sensitive matters by telephone. They use couriers and shared e-mail accounts to send messages instead. But, more important, there is simply far too much information for authorities to wade through. Key points are hidden by the reams of data that modern society generates. Increasing the number of wiretaps often just increases the size of the haystack, making the needle that much harder to find.”

Why are our politicians so god damned uneducated? Why are they creating laws that aim at closing down our open and democratic society? Why do I even have to make this connection? Shouldn’t it already have been considered?

Below are the six MPs that with their populistic campaigns made us believe in them and not pursue other avenues of possible countermeasures against our government. For contact details, follow the links.

Fascists...

Camilla Lindberg, Birgitta Ohlsson, Agneta Berliner. Maria Lundqvist-Brömster, Cecilia Wikström and Solveig Hellquist.

Some might think that I’m attacking the wrong politicians and that these are the ones that has actually made an effort to change something. You might think that the guilty ones are those that say nothing and just vote as they’re told.

Other bloggers are referring information given to them by these people and saying that “There will be no automated information transfer to FRA, this is a Win!”. Woopedidoo. Internet got semi-filtered and we consider it a win? Give me a break.

I do not agree with any such comments. Neither do I trust anything that come out of these politicians mouths. These are the ones that has acted to divert the citizens criticism until it was too late.

These are the ones that stood in front of thousands of people that took the streets on the 16th of September and said that they would tear up the law, redo it, and do it right.

These are the ones that appeared on national television ensuring us that the law would be killed and that no one that was not suspected of a crime would not be susceptible to wiretaps.

Yet another silky pink bow… That’s all they’ve done. Weak.

If they really are going ahead with this (and it looks pretty much so) it’s a huge lose. No win. Just lose.

Another person that feels like that is Mark Klamberg, a leading Folkpartiet politician and FRA-opposition leader. When these plans were unveiled he immediately left the party and ended all of his responsibilities. Credit to him for putting his money where his mouth is.

The people’s last chance to reverse will soon be to wait for the next election, replace the government, and vote as many mandates as possible to the Pirate Party or (I do not like this) the left wing party.

For some strange reason, those are the only ones that really oppose mass surveillance in our society.

Why is that?

Others writing (swedish though, run them through translate.google.com) about this: HAX, Copyriot, Mark Klamberg, Christian Engström (PP), Rick Falkvinge (PP), Opassande, Rosetta Sten (Anna troberg), Deep.edition, Svensson, BrokeP (TPB).

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Ying & Yang
Photo original: grisei on Flickr. CC Attribution. Edited by me.

From TheLocal.se:

Sweden welcomes EU telecoms vote:

Sweden’s EU parliamentary delegation is rejoicing following a decision by the body to toss out a proposal that would have banned file sharers from the internet and forced internet service providers to filter content in the hunt for pirated material.

This is what I wrote about in yesterday’s post and it’s really great news for the european internet users.

Goverment getting closer to surveillance law compromise:

A proposal to introduce a special court to decide when Sweden can monitor cross-border communications traffic is expected to help unify the governing parties around a new version of the country’s controversial surveillance law.

This is not a good thing. We need to tear up the law, research what needs exist and then build a law that conforms to our actual needs and that has individuals integrity and human rights as a high priority. This is not something that has been done incedibly enough.

Instituting a special court is just like, as some sensibly put it, putting a pink silk bow around a piece of shit.

It’s still stinks but it looks nicer :/

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On my way home from Sävsjö now, this time in 2nd class :/ But i got some networking and that’s always something ;)

Got an e-mail from the Swedish socialdemocrats in the EU-parliament with good news on the Telecoms package, but it was kind of fuzzy. Turned to HAX‘s blog (Swedish) and during the vote on the Telecoms Package today some good things happened:

* The frech parlamentarian Toubon withdrew his amendment (132) which was going to make things even worse!

* Amendment 138 was accepted, making it impossible to disconnect european citizens from the internet without a fair trial!

* Amendment 166 was accepted (!!!!!!) which means no internet filtering in the european union!

The last one passed with 346 votes against 312. Frightening how many MEPs are for filtering of the internet. Really chilling.

But as HAX notes, no champagne yet. The package needs further analysis until we can be sure that no other strange/bad things are included.

The package also contained some good and market-liberal (good) things such as

* Shorter subscription times on cellular, broadband and other communication services.

* Shorter times for switching between providers (more competitive market) for these services.

* The right to be notified when a breach exposing personal or economical details has been detected.

All-in-all it seems like a good day in the European Union, but I’ll get back with more info if there’s an ugly frog somewhere.

Tomorrow it’s time for the handling of Marianne Mikko’s “Media-report”. This has been fixed up a bit now, so if it’s OK’d it will not mean that all bloggers and internet publicists need to be registered. Anonymous blogging is still OK in other words.

Cheers,

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From wiretappingsweden.com(/blog):

In January 2009 Swedish authorities will start wiretapping all Internet traffic (plus telephone connections) in and out of Sweden. This means that they will not only listen in to all Swedish citizens communication but also sometimes the rest of the world since Internet traffic travels without borders.

There has already been an uprising among young Swedish Internet users, but the whole world needs to see what is going on. That is why we at Urban Lifestyle decided to make a web documentary about this, and this is the blog where we will keep you updated and we invite you to be a part of it. Give us your point of view and let us know which people we should interview for the documentary.

And here’s the video:

The people behind this initiative is Urban Lifestyle.

Great stuff and a “must see”, in particular for people from other countries…

Got the inital tip from a fellow pirate’s swedish blog, Christian Engström (PP).

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Carl Bildt, Minister for Foreign Affairs
Photo: Bertelsmann Stiftung on Flickr.

The Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Carl Bildt, today confirmed in a documentary interview (Swedish link) that we are selling and buying intelligence data with dictatorships.

As you might have guessed the documentary was about the FRA-law and in part on how information gathered by the Radio Defense Agency is being or might be used.

It also discussed the methods used by the Government to push the Parliament into accepting the law and voting yes. How it was done can easiest be described as bullying. Individual MPs were threatened into voting yes, even by the Prime Minister himself.

This is starting to look less and less democratic for each report that becomes public… So maybe it isn’t such a weird thing that we deal surveillance data about our own citizens and our neighbours to dictators.

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NOTE: This is the first “quick post”. These are posts written on the fly and often when I’m mobile. They will have more thoughts and general subjects and will not have any nice pictures like most of my other posts. All posts like this one will have their title marked with Q.P. In them.

During the summer the parliament has been closed and it officially re-opens on the 16th of September.

During this day the politicians visit certain sites in Stockholm according to traditions, and they’ll do the same this year. With one “minor” detail this year.

People will not be cheering for them. Instead they’ll be chanting anti-FRA-law slogans and showing up in thousands at the different sites.

There are two major demonstrations/manifestations that day and they’ll grow together into one around mid-day and speeches will be held by different oppositional politicians and civil liberties groups.

The discussions has been intense from the time the law took the first step into becoming a part of our legislation, and now even the parties (liberals and green liberals) that took part in pushing the law through parliament is taking a step back in the discussion and either request that the law be remade or totally dropped.

My private wish is that the law is dropped and that a truth commission be deployed to the FRA offices to find out exactly what they’ve been monitoring so far when they did not have positive juridical support, which is required for their type of business.

A secondary wish is that the FRA is demoted and maybe even dropped as a whole. If we need military singal-intelligence gathering, this can be done by the military intelligence force (MUST) as they are the one’s doing the in-battle SIGINT’s today. The people no longer trust the FRA with our secrets. Too much has leaked and politicians looking to using or supporting FRA are commiting political suicide.

In Sweden, we have never had the same disrespect and lack of faith in for our elected officials as we have right now. The coalition (Alliansen) that is the ruling force in Sweden right now will not be able to keep that position after the next election which will be held in 2010.

I do not think this is a good thing. In other aspects they are running the country in much better ways than the socialist government that was at power the previous mandate period. Corporate finances and the job market has not looked as good as it has done the last couple of years and we have been somewhat shielded from the economic failures of the United States.

It is a shame that our liberal and conservative parties are going about ruining the traditional Swedish ideas of a free and open society. They are destroying a lot of their credebility for years to come.

You might even take me as an example. Before they started this farse I was a member of the liberal party (Folkpartiet) but when they kept pushing this integrity-hostile law I left. I wonder how many others have done the same.

We’ll see what happens on the 16th… See you on the barricades ;)

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Bruno Girin on Flickr - http://flickr.com/photos/brunogirin/
Photo: Bruno Girin on Flickr.

Monica Horten at IPTegrity.com on the “Data retention directive”:

The proponents were the British Presidency and EU justice ministers, who argued that retained data was needed in the fight against terrorism. The directive was opposed by the Internet industry, who found themselves on the same side as privacy campaigners. The industry raised many technical, business and legal issues, highlighting the high cost of implementation and flaws in the directive’s content – it is written from a voice telephony standpoint and ill-fitting for the Internet industry.

Read the full text, which is an abstract of Monica Horten’s masters dissertation, over at IPTegrity.com.

The “Data retention directive” was passed very quickly in 2006 after 7th July bombings in London. This is a directive that forces ISP’s to store traffic data for future analysis by Governments and others that have that privilege.

This is not part of anything I’ve written about lately but it’s still very actual here in Sweden. The Government is preparing to put it into our legislation soon, as they are required to do so by the European Union.

This is the next fight for us in Sweden after the FRA-law and the Telecoms package so it’s worth mentioning and raising some awareness about.

Update: More information here!

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Random J on Flickr - http://flickr.com/photos/random_j/
Photo: Random J on Flickr.

In my fight to keep up on what is being written about the integrity and freedom impairing EU-regulations and laws, I seem to have mixed up some crucial facts.

When reading HAX’s blog I’ve mixed the news about the Telecoms Package and Marianne Mikko’s media-report which suggests registration of bloggers and their motives (impairing free speech etc. etc.).

So, in regards to my last post, the status of our core issues are the following…

M.M.’s media report which will ban anonymous blogging: This is what EPP-ED will vote No to. Still might need some pushing on the Green, ALDE and InDem groups!

Telecoms Package: Still needs a lot of action from Europe’s population in order to make all of our MEPs realise that it is a bad idea to engage in arbitrary, commercially controlled, punishing of citizens by internet disconnection and performing filtering and control over information that really just wants to be free.

Henrik Alexandersson writes on his blog (in regards to EU Telecom/Media-Report/FRA surveillance etc.):

“Skall vi lyckas stoppa galenskaperna, då måste vi veta vad vi talar om..”
English:
“If we are going to make this madness, then we must know what we are speaking about”

And I could agree more. Facts set straight now!

Previous post will not be edited to “correctness”. What is published is published and should stay that way, but I might add in overstrikes with a new reference in some.

I seriously need to stop posting when I almost can’t hold my eyes open.. sigh…

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adamblang on Flickr - http://flickr.com/photos/adamblang/
Photo: adamblang on Flickr.

A lot of good progress has been made in the European Parlament in this issue.

First off, it seems like the work of the MEPs Fjellner and Hökmark has paid off.

The largest group in the parliament, the EPP-ED (rightwing), has decided to vote NO to the Telecoms Package the media report which suggest the banning of anonymous blogging!

But as HAX notes (swedish link), the fight is not over and we now need to contact the MEPs that are a part of the ALDE-, Green- and InDem-group in order to show them our engagement in this issue. See my previous posts for details.

This is unique and shows that the blogosphere and citizen engagement is a force to be reckoned with. You as a citizen of Europe can change the direction that we are headed!

I’ve also started getting responses
from our Swedish MEPs and I’m posting them without modification below:



Subject: RE: Stoppa Telecom Paketet !
Date: Thu, 4 Sep 2008 08:30:01 +0200
From: SEGELSTRÖM Inger
To:

Hej Daniel
TAck för mail och synpunkter
Vi ska votera nästa plenum
JAg mailar vidare till Robert som är den hos oss som bevakar förslagen,för
svar
Mvh
Inger S
Inger Segelström
Europaparlamentariker (s)
Delegationsledare för de svenska socialdemokraterna
Vice ordförande PES Women

Telefon till Brysselkontoret +32 2 2845199
Mobil: +46 70 312 40 03
E-mail: inger.segelstrom@europarl.europa.eu
Hemsida: www.sap.se/eu


Subject: RE: Stoppa Telecom Paketet !
Date: Thu, 4 Sep 2008 08:33:34 +0200
From: “HOLM Jens”
To:

Hej Daniel
Jag instämmer fullt ut i din kritik. Vänsterpartiet är motståndare till
Telekompaketet. Se bla Eva-Britts pressmeddelande:

http://www.vguengl.org/showPage.php?ID=1577

mvh jens (v)


Subject: RE: Stoppa Telecom Paketet !
Date: Thu, 4 Sep 2008 09:46:33 +0200
From: GOUDIN Hélène
To:

Hej,

Tack för ditt brev och dess information!
Jag är av princip mot integritetskränkande åtgärder och kommer därför
inte att stödja förslaget.

Med vänlig hälsning,

Hélène Goudin
EU- parlamentariker
vice- ordförande Junilistan

Mobil: +46 703 91 75 26
Bryssel: +32 2 284 56 74
Strasbourg: +33 3 881 756 74

E-post: helene.goudin@junilistan.se
helene.goudin@europarl.europa.eu
helene.goudin@telia.com

www.junilistan.se


Subject: RE: Stoppa Telecom Paketet !
Date: Thu, 4 Sep 2008 10:35:01 +0200
From: “FALK Roger”
To:

Hej Daniel!

Eva-Britt bad mig skicka info om vad hon gjort i ärendet och hälsa till dig.

Pressmeddelande: http://www.vguengl.org/showPage.php?ID=1577

Tal i parlamentet: http://www.vguengl.org/showPage.php?ID=1579

Med vänlig hälsning
Roger Falk

Press officer for Eva-Britt Svensson and Jens Holm
GUE/NGL Group, European Parliament
Phone +32 2 283 75 63
Mobile: +32 473 80 45 79
roger.falk@europarl.europa.eu
www.vguengl.org


In short, the answers that I’ve recieved paints the picture of resistance and hesitation from our Swedish representatives.

Inger Segelström (inger.segelstrom@europarl.europa.eu) seems to be the one that’s hesitating but she has in Swedish media communicated that she at least will try to remove the registration of bloggers from the package. However, there is not a word of the “three-strikes” and commercially controlled internet disconnections.

We need to keep this up until the vote, so if you have not sent your concerns to the MEPs do so now!

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Me with my dogs in Smögen, Sweden, 2008. CC ATT-SA 2.5 SE

Hello!

My name is Daniel Nyström and I’m a Swedish citizen.

Many integrity violating, non-democratic and in general dangerous laws are being prepared and handled both in the European Union (Telecom Package and ACTA) and in individual member states and I’m honestly very worried over the overall impact of these laws (that is, the impact of all of these laws together).

I’m sending this e-mail to you in regards to the upcoming vote on the new “Telecoms Package” that (if it passes) will force the EU member states to do registration of political affilation, religious views, sexual preference and other personal aspects of those expressing themselves online in blogs and discussion forums. It will also encourage the european internet service providers to do arbitrary disconnection of alleged file-sharers based on information provided by commercial interests.

This is something that would damage the freedom of speech and the European Unions democratic order in a devestating way.

Please also note that if this law/package was to pass, then you (the MEPs) would be outlawing and criminalizing millions of citizens that will refuse to give up their anonymity online when publishing information.

When it comes to the arbitrary disconnection from the internet, there are some serious juridical problems. First off, this will be based on statements from organizations that hold an interest and no juridical process or trial will be involved. This is an extreme violation of human rights (according to me) as everyone has the right to a fair trial before being punished.

Second, there is no chance for an appeal of this “decision”. This is also a breach of human rights.

More information on the Telecoms package and the dangerous parts in it:

http://www.iptegrity.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=blogcategory&id=35&Itemid=62

http://www.laquadrature.net/en/the-%E2%80%9Ctelecoms-package%E2%80%9D-out-shadows-light

http://action.ffii.org/telecom_package

It is very important that you stand up for the european citizens rights in this vote and also encourage your colleagues to do the same.

Vote NO!

Thank you for your time,

Daniel Nyström, daniel.nystrom [A T] icmpecho.com, [phone number]


This has been sent to all Swedish (but in Swedish), Scandinavian and Baltic countries so far. Sending to the rest of Europe tomorrow.

I know that my english is not all that great, in particular when it comes to legal words and strong definitions but I hope it’ll suffice.

Feel free to borrow parts, but again, write in your own words so that it does not get disregarded as a massmail campaign.

You can find the MEPs e-mail add’s HERE!

UPDATE: Links to other blogs writing about the EU Telecoms Package (in english)
- http://this-is-sparta.blogspot.com
- http://nhw.livejournal.com
- http://www.laquadrature.net
- http://www.libertysecurity.org

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