From the article:
“I’ve always sort of believed it’s important for Americans to have private conversations with other Americans,” Mr. Levison said in a telephone interview Monday, “and not fear that their conversations were being monitored by the government.”
More:
Lavabit’s mysterious legal drama began six weeks ago. One of its more than 400,000 users was Edward J. Snowden, the leaker who had worked as a National Security Agency contractor. Mr. Levison has not said whether or what kind of government order he was served with, or how it might have been served.His lawyer, Jesse Binnall, made it clear that Lavabit had complied with “narrowly tailored” court orders for user information on at least two dozen occasions in the past.
Mr. Levison, now 32 and living in Dallas, added: “What I’m opposed to are blanket court orders granting government access to everything.
Read the whole interview: bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/12/lavabit-founder-says-he-had-obligation-to-shut-service/
More scary stuff from the surveillance state. Or should I say the police state? This is what a police state looks like. We’re still a Police State Lite, but the fact that the USG feels the need to collect data on all of us means that we’re all potential criminals, which is, by definition I believe, a police state.
Luckily, no one is getting arrested for what they say or write, that we know of. In a country where the government lies and obfuscates to it’s people and the country’s news media largely plays along, how can we know for sure that it won’t come to that, or isn’t there already?
via thepete.com http://thepete.com/nytimes-interviews-the-founder-of-lavabit-com-and-explains-why-he-committed-business-suicide/
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