John Young: Challenging the governments’ self-serving secrecy by Peter B. Collins and Sibel Edmonds

Bookmark and    Share

https://dandelionsalad.wordpress.com/

by Peter B. Collins and Sibel Edmonds
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
originally published by Boiling Frogs Post
13 March, 2010

[tweetmeme source= “DandelionSalads” only_single=false]

John Young provides us with a brief overview of the history, purpose and mission of his well-known website Cryptome.Org. He talks about the recent controversy involving Microsoft Corporation’s attempted legal action against Cryptome, and the temporary shutdown of the site by the ISP Network Solutions. He speaks to the importance of the free flow of information and challenging the governments’ self-serving secrecy as prerequisites for an informed citizenry and a functioning democracy, the importance of whistleblowers and anonymous disclosures, the existence of various trap websites, impostors and false flag operators to manipulate information, trick whistleblowers, and or plant specific propaganda, and more.

John Young is a New York based architect and online archivist who owns and operates Cryptome.Org, a website that functions as a repository for information about freedom of speech, cryptography, spying, and surveillance. In February 2010, the ISP Network Solutions shut down Mr. Young’s website after he posted a document summarizing Microsoft’s dealings with law enforcement agencies. Shortly after initiating legal action to suppress a document on how to subpoena online user data Microsoft withdrew the complaint, and the website was restored.

Here is our guest John Young unplugged!

see

Sibel Edmonds Speaks Out on Whistleblower “Protections”

A Real American Hero, Mark Klein: Wiring Up The Big Brother Machine… and Fighting It

2 thoughts on “John Young: Challenging the governments’ self-serving secrecy by Peter B. Collins and Sibel Edmonds

  1. Pingback: NWC’s Stephen Kohn Takes on the Absentee White House interviewed by Peter B. Collins and Sibel Edmonds « Dandelion Salad

  2. Pingback: Beyond Orwell: The Electronic Police State, 2010 by Tom Burghardt « Dandelion Salad

Comments are closed.