Lavabit: An Email Service That Didn't Cave To Government And Sell Out Its Users' Privacy
Nicole Perlroth and Scott Shane write in The New York Times about Ladar Levison, the man who closed the business he spent decades building when the government, in pursuit of Edward Snowden, wanted access to the protected messages of all his customers:
Mr. Levison was willing to allow investigators with a court order to tap Mr. Snowden's e-mail account; he had complied with similar narrowly targeted requests involving other customers about two dozen times.But they wanted more, he said: the passwords, encryption keys and computer code that would essentially allow the government untrammeled access to the protected messages of all his customers. That, he said, was too much.
"You don't need to bug an entire city to bug one guy's phone calls," Mr. Levison, 32, said in a recent interview. "In my case, they wanted to break open the entire box just to get to one connection."
On Aug. 8, Mr. Levison closed Lavabit rather than, in his view, betray his promise of secure e-mail to his customers. The move, which he explained in a letter on his Web site, drew fervent support from civil libertarians but was seen by prosecutors as an act of defiance that fell just short of a crime.
The full story of what happened to Mr. Levison since May has not previously been told, in part because he was subject to a court's gag order. But on Wednesday, a federal judge unsealed documents in the case, allowing the tech entrepreneur to speak candidly for the first time about his experiences. He had been summoned to testify to a grand jury in Virginia; forbidden to discuss his case; held in contempt of court and fined $10,000 for handing over his private encryption keys on paper and not in digital form; and, finally, threatened with arrest for saying too much when he shuttered his business.
Spokesmen for the Justice Department and the F.B.I. said they had no comment beyond what was in the documents.
I particularly love the notion that we should trust the government -- simply because they say we should. Scout's honor!
Prosecutors said they had no intention of collecting any information on Lavabit's 400,000 other customers. "There's no agents looking through the 400,000 other bits of information, customers, whatever," Jim Trump, one of the prosecutors, said at a closed Aug. 1 hearing.
None until they come up with a reason.








I wonder what the NSA thinks of the Libertea.us mail.
Jim P. at October 6, 2013 1:21 AM
Too bad for them that the government has been caught lying so recently and so often. Otherwise, some deluded fools might actually believe them.
MarkD at October 6, 2013 6:32 AM
Giving them the key in paper (hopefully some hand written, or other way to make ocrs less useful) not digital form, I love it.
Joe J at October 6, 2013 8:09 AM
"There's no agents looking through the 400,000 other bits of information, customers, whatever,"
With the one exception being agents spying on their lovers!
Charles at October 6, 2013 8:32 AM
So do, regardless of the known lies
lujlp at October 6, 2013 9:47 AM
Some do
lujlp at October 6, 2013 10:37 AM
IIRC the key was in 6 point type.
Janet C at October 6, 2013 10:44 AM
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