When President Joe Biden said “journalism is not a crime” last April, federal prosecutors in Tampa, Florida, apparently took that as a challenge. Not a crime yet.
The next month, FBI agents raided the home of journalist Tim Burke. He is scheduled to be arraigned in the coming weeks under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) and wiretap laws for finding and disseminating unaired Fox News footage of Kanye West’s antisemitic rant to Tucker Carlson. The indictment doesn’t accuse Burke of hacking or deceit. Instead, its theory is that he didn’t have permission to access the video, even though it was at a public, unencrypted URL that he found using publicly posted demo credentials.
But finding things that the powerful don’t want found is essentially the definition of investigative journalism—which, as Biden said, is not criminal in this country.
A recent court filing heightens concerns about whether prosecutors hid from the judge who authorized the raid that Burke was a journalist. By doing so, they may have avoided scrutiny of whether their investigation—and eventual indictment—of Burke complied with the First Amendment, federal law, and the Department of Justice’s own policies.
That is incorrect.
They were never actually aired or released to the public.
Fox News never released them. The service used by Fox (StreamCo) routinely has uploads that are never released, they upload them live so as to expedite streaming while people ax whatever doesn’t work for whatever reason.
Again, to use the luggage analogy, this would be like someone grabbing your luggage off the checked baggage carousel, plugging in the default password, copied addresses, whose doors were unlocked. It doesn’t matter that the doors are unlocked- those files are still private.
The files themselves were never intended to be publicly released. He bypassed security in the system by exploiting flaws and accessing data he was not authorized to access.
There is no gray area there. Is Kanye West a raging bigot? Yes. Did Burke break the law to reveal that? Also yes.
Freedom of the Press and first amendment protection doesn’t mean they can break the law. It’s unfortunate because he seems to be one of the good ones.
They were publicly available, without credentials, if you knew how to get to them.
The luggage analogy sucks. A better analogy is someone taking a stack of paperwork and putting it behind a chair in a coffee shop. You can’t see the papers and don’t know they are there unless someone tells you about them. The papers aren’t intended for public consumption but they’re being stored in a publicly available space.
Why are you acting like I don’t agree with you on this? You can read my other comments in here and see that I do.
He apparently accessed a system with credentials that he wasn’t authorized to use and that’s a crime. What may not be a crime is downloading the videos. If those were available to the public, no matter how obscured, without needing credentials to access them then they were in fact publicly available.
It’s two separate actions and one is likely criminal while the other may not be.
I don’t give a shit about Kanye and I addressed Burke in a previous comment.