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May 13, 2008 7:38:58 PM CDT



Facing Suit, FBI Drops Secret Order  

Posted May 8, 08 8:56 AM CDT in US Technology    Most Covered

(newser) – Facing a lawsuit, the FBI has withdrawn a secret order demanding that an Internet library turn over a user's records—only the third time the bureau has backed down from such a demand, known as a "national security letter." The San Francisco-based Internet Archive, which stores old versions of websites, challenged the order on the grounds that the Patriot Act provision that protects libraries from similar requests should apply online as well.

The FBI uses those letters to force communications companies to divulge their users' activities, and it forbids the companies from disclosing the order, explains the Washington Post. The FBI dropped the request and, as part of the settlement, ended the gag order this Monday. "We see this as an unqualified success," said the archive's founder.

Source Washington Post

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Background from the nonprofit that fought the case
Electronic Frontier Foundation | May 7, 08

Facing Suit, FBI Drops Secret Order
Brewster Kahle, the founder of the Internet Archive. The site successfully fought an FBI order to divulge a user's activity.   ((c) allaboutgeorge)
Facing Suit, FBI Drops Secret Order
FBI Director Robert Mueller on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, April 23, 2008. The FBI withdrew an order to divulge the activity of a user of the Internet Archive.   (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson)
Facing Suit, FBI Drops Secret Order
The servers of the Internet Archive. The FBI withdrew an order to divulge the activity of a user of the site.   ((c) MysteryBee)
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