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You Can Be Prosecuted for Clearing Your Browser History
The Nation ^ | June 2, 2015 | Juliana DeVries

Posted on 06/07/2015 9:46:26 AM PDT by TaxPayer2000

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To: TaxPayer2000
Interesting.

I have Firefox configured to forget everything: passwords, history, cache, etc. when it shuts down.

I also use the "secure" option when emptying my trash. It overwrites the file with random data.

A defrag is run automatically every night.

About once a week, a task automatically runs to overwrite all the empty space on my disk drive.

This is all basic security measures, to prevent private information from lurking on my computer in places I don't know about, and to keep it running in top performance.

21 posted on 06/07/2015 10:14:40 AM PDT by justlurking (tagline removed, as demanded by Admin Moderators)
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To: kennedy
evidence of a crime in there that you want to get rid of.

What's the penalty for not knowing a preposition is something to never end a sentence with?

22 posted on 06/07/2015 10:14:50 AM PDT by ASA Vet (Mossberg 930 SPX)
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To: zeestephen

Heard that erasing your Google search history merely flags Google to archive it. Yea, you think it’s off your machine but they have preserved it.


23 posted on 06/07/2015 10:18:22 AM PDT by alpo
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To: TaxPayer2000

One of these days...One of these days they are going to hit the too much button..


24 posted on 06/07/2015 10:28:28 AM PDT by hadaclueonce (It is not heaven, it is Iowa. Everyone gets a "Corn Check")
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To: TaxPayer2000

Once again, the idiocy of nondiscrimination is demonstrated.

One: “Khairullozhon Matanov is a 24-year-old former cab driver from Quincy, Massachusetts”. No, he’s not “from Quincy, Massachusetts”. He’s FROM Kyrgyzstan. He came on a “student” visa in 2010, dropped out, and later received asylum, I presume by committing perjury. He happens to be living in the United States and consorting with enemy soldiers.

Two: This fact ALONE is sufficient to return him to Bishkek, where there are plenty of mosques for him to pray at. Dropping him from a helicopter hovering over the Gogol Street mosque would provide a salutary lesson.

Three: If the idiot Bush had concentrated on removing Muslims who do not belong here and preventing more from arriving, none of this would be happening. But, because he is an idiot, he took at face value the lying complaints that Muslims living in the US (and taking advantage of our generosity) were a persecuted minority in need of special protection and special favors.

Four: Since it is presumably provable that his asylum case was fraudulent, the whole expensive legal process could be short-circuited by his immediate removal to Guantanamo.


25 posted on 06/07/2015 10:34:21 AM PDT by Jim Noble (If you can't discriminate, you are not free)
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To: Nachum
"So, theoretically if you set your browser to clear it’s history every time you close it, you may be committing a felony over and over again."

Sure, if you've committed a crime, like lying to the FBI, and your history contains evidence of that crime and you are clearing it to hide that evidence.

26 posted on 06/07/2015 10:38:56 AM PDT by mlo
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To: TaxPayer2000
Here's a little more information about this poor man "from Quincy, Massachusetts".

Of course, it's in the British press, since the US media simply reprints or broadcasts press releases from his lawyer.

While dropping out of Quincy College (an "open admission commuter school" with an "international students program") and driving a cab, he managed to accumulate (or was given) $71 000 which he wired to various overseas locations.

I bet you anything that a proper investigation of this "international students program" and this open admissions junior college would turn up MANY persons of interest.

27 posted on 06/07/2015 10:42:28 AM PDT by Jim Noble (If you can't discriminate, you are not free)
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To: TaxPayer2000
"There were three counts for making false statements based on the aforementioned lies and—remarkably—one count for destroying “any record, document or tangible object” with intent to obstruct a federal investigation. This last charge was for deleting videos on his computer"

Anyone unclear on the double standards existing these days?

28 posted on 06/07/2015 10:42:51 AM PDT by blackdog (There is no such thing as healing, only a balance between destructive and constructive forces.)
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To: Nachum
So, theoretically if you set your browser to clear it’s history every time you close it, you may be committing a felony over and over again.

Only if you're gullible enough to believe the title of the article and the writer's assertions.

You can only be held legally liable/accountable if you're under a court order to preserve and present data. The fact he was charged with the "crime" of deleting data that was not under a court order or subpoena will quickly get thrown out of court.

29 posted on 06/07/2015 10:48:19 AM PDT by usconservative (When The Ballot Box No Longer Counts, The Ammunition Box Does. (What's In Your Ammo Box?))
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To: mlo

I agree that digital records should be treated much the same as formerly-used paper records. It is now and always has been a crime to burn evidence of criminal activity.

Why should records with the exact same information be treated differently simply because they’re in a computer instead of a file drawer?

I think a simple way around this would be to set your browser to simply not keep a history, even in a single session. That would be the digital equivalent of not writing anything down. If there’s never a record, you can’t be charged with destroying it.


30 posted on 06/07/2015 10:50:27 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: blam

“If the Democrat Communists who run the US government knew how much time I spend on Free Republic....well....”

IF they knew? They already know. I think that all FReepers are on the administration’s ‘enemies list’.


31 posted on 06/07/2015 10:50:58 AM PDT by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Why does every totalitarian, political hack think that he knows h to run my life better than I do?)
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To: TaxPayer2000

This guy must have had a terrible lawyer who failed to inform him that he cannot be prosecuted as long as he claims he was only deleting items about yoga and wedding dresses.


32 posted on 06/07/2015 10:52:18 AM PDT by Meet the New Boss
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To: null and void

And in saying so in public, confessed to a felony! Shhhhh Power Surge! Yeah that’s the ticket. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it!


33 posted on 06/07/2015 10:52:26 AM PDT by gtwizard
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To: zeestephen

You are correct on both points.

However, destroying the whole hard drive is not essential. Opening the case and destroying only the disks is all that is required but the fire has to be REALLY hot to burn the disks. They are metal.

A data recovery company somewhere in the DC area recovered data from a hard drive that had been severely burned in an office fire.


34 posted on 06/07/2015 10:54:04 AM PDT by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Why does every totalitarian, political hack think that he knows h to run my life better than I do?)
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To: TaxPayer2000

This is the Nation, a hardcore Marxist magazine.

Do people not know that anything it publishes is distorted propaganda.


35 posted on 06/07/2015 10:56:13 AM PDT by ifinnegan
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To: discostu
Well yeah, there’s lots of normal every day stuff that if you do it KNOWING you’re destroying criminal evidence becomes illegal.

I would invite to read an interesting article posted yesterday that states that "60 percent of new nonviolent, non-drug offenses lacked a criminal-intent requirement adequate to protect Americans who engaged in conduct that they did not know was illegal or otherwise wrongful from unjust criminal punishment."

It also indicated that "There are at least 5,000 federal criminal laws, with 10,000-300,000 regulations that can be enforced criminally."

36 posted on 06/07/2015 10:58:47 AM PDT by FoxInSocks ("Hope is not a course of action." -- M. O'Neal, USMC)
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To: ASA Vet; kennedy

“What’s the penalty for not knowing a preposition is something to never end a sentence with?”

Well, I do not know what the penalty is but whatever penalty Kennedy gets, YOU GET IT, TOO!

“What’s the penalty for not knowing a preposition is something with which to never end a sentence?”

ROFL Sorry, just doing my job! ;-)


37 posted on 06/07/2015 10:59:34 AM PDT by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Why does every totalitarian, political hack think that he knows h to run my life better than I do?)
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To: FoxInSocks

You can’t get busted for destroying what you didn’t know what evidence. If you could we wouldn’t need trash collectors because nobody would ever get to get rid of anything.


38 posted on 06/07/2015 11:00:48 AM PDT by discostu (In fact funk's as old as dirt)
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To: spel_grammer_an_punct_polise
Opening the case and destroying only the disks is all that is required but the fire has to be REALLY hot to burn the disks. They are metal.

When I replace my hard drives I take apart the old ones and remove the actual metal disks. I then use a pair of long handle needle nose pliers to hold each disk and melt it with a MAP gas torch.

39 posted on 06/07/2015 11:02:55 AM PDT by OldMissileer (Atlas, Titan, Minuteman, PK. Winners of the Cold War)
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To: OldMissileer

“When I replace my hard drives I take apart the old ones and remove the actual metal disks. I then use a pair of long handle needle nose pliers to hold each disk and melt it with a MAP gas torch.”

That’ll do it. MAPP gas gets hot enough.


40 posted on 06/07/2015 11:05:16 AM PDT by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Why does every totalitarian, political hack think that he knows h to run my life better than I do?)
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