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The Winslow
09-13-2009, 08:19 AM
According to Boston College campus police.
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/04/boston-college-prompt-commands-are-suspicious

On Friday, EFF and the law firm of Fish and Richardson filed an emergency motion to quash [pdf] and for the return of seized property on behalf of a Boston College computer science student whose computers, cell phone, and other property were seized as part of an investigation into who sent an e-mail to a school mailing list identifying another student as gay. The problem? Not only is there no indication that any crime was committed, the investigating officer argued that the computer expertise of the student itself supported a finding of probable cause to seize the student's property.

The warrant application cites the following allegedly suspicious behavior:
... Mr Calixte is a computer science major who is considered a master of the trade amongst his peers.

... it is not uncommon for Mr. Calixte to appear with unknown laptop computers which he says are given to him by Boston College for field testing or he is "fixing" for other students.

... Mr. Calixte uses two different operating systems to hide his illegal activities. One is the regular B.C. operating system and the other is a black screen with white font which he uses prompt commands on.

Should Boston College Linux users be looking over their shoulders?

In his application, the investigating officer asked that he be permitted to seize the student's computers and other personal effects because they might yield evidence of the crimes of "Obtaining computer services by Fraud or Misrepresentation" and "Unauthorized access to a computer system." Aside from the remarkable overreach by campus and state police in trying to paint a student as suspicious in part because he can navigate a non-Windows computer environment, nothing cited in the warrant application could possibly constitute the cited criminal offenses. There are no assertions that a commercial (i.e. for pay) commercial service was defrauded, a necessary element of any "Obtaining computer services by Fraud or Misrepresentation" allegation. Similarly, the investigating officer doesn't explain how sending an e-mail to a campus mailing list might constitute "unauthorized access to a computer system."

During its March 30th search, police seized (among other things) the computer science major's computers, storage drives, cell phone, iPod Touch, flash drives, digital camera, and Ubuntu Linux CD. None of these items have been returned. He has been suspended from his job pending the investigation. His personal documents and information are in the hands of the state police who continue to examine it without probable cause, searching for evidence to support unsupportable criminal allegations.

Next up? An emergency court hearing as soon as the court will hear us in which we will ask that the search warrant be voided and the student's property returned. Stay tuned...

Update I: A hearing on EFF's motion is scheduled for 11:00 a.m. ET on Tuesday, April 21, in Newton District Court.

Update II: Some commentators have disputed the conclusion that the student's use of an operating system other than the "regular B.C. operating system" was unfairly cited in the investigating officer's affidavit, arguing for example that the "use of Linux ... [is] simply evidence that connects Calixte to the emails at issue." With all due respect, I think that's missing the point.

To begin with, no "connection" is provided by the operating systems. Instead, according to the affidavit, (a) the student allegedly used a different operating system than the one used "regularly" at Boston College, and (b) the e-mails at issue were allegedly sent from a computer running Ubuntu Linux, also (apparently) "an uncommon operating system on the BC network." There is no indication of what the informant previously saw the student using: Ubuntu Linux, some other "flavor" of Linux, or even a terminal application on a Macintosh or Windows operating system. More to the point, however, the baseless assertion that a computer science major's use of "two different operating systems" must be "to hide his illegal activities" is absurd and was included as part of a laundry list of other unsupported accusations irrelevant to the alleged "crimes" for which the officer sought the warrant: sending e-mails to a Boston College mailing list. These claims do nothing to help establish probable cause that sending such e-mails could possibly constitute those crimes. As we argued in our brief, they can't. (An unsupported, contextless allegation of a separate incident of "hacking the grading system," for example, doesn't help the police meet their burden.) The unwarranted implication -- that because the student used an "uncommon" operating system and/or is technically sophisticated, he is more likely to be engaged in criminal activity -- should give one considerable pause.

DarwinOfMind
09-13-2009, 08:31 AM
After fallowing the link and reading the whole thing not only is it insane, the entire charge is based on hearsay and conjecture. The entire idea there that there is a crime to charge is based on hearsay and conjecture....

How did this guy not get a half-decent, no, a shitty lawyer to fix it for him like *snap*

Varaj
09-13-2009, 08:44 AM
Because the courts don't know/understand technology. What people don't know/understand they fear. When they fear something they are going to tend to respond with a stronger hate/destroy/protect(self/family/community) reaction.

Harry
09-13-2009, 11:51 AM
The original "crime" is itself kind of bizarre. The whole thing is gay.

Name Lips
09-13-2009, 12:14 PM
If they know for a fact that the email in question was sent from a computer running Ubuntu Linux, and they have a relitively small list of Ubuntu computers which access their network, then it's good detective work to investigate those leads.

But that doesn't sound like what they're doing...

Scarbonac
09-13-2009, 03:29 PM
He's a suspect cos...he...knows his way around a computer...?


I wonder if the informant so helpfully redacted isn't a rival computer nerd trying to sabotage the dude out of jealousy or something...

Name Lips
09-13-2009, 05:28 PM
Clearly there are lots of criminals at Boston College.

I went to their website and did a search for linux.

There were many matches, including this [url=http://www.cs.bc.edu/~alvarez/CS127/linuxnotes.html]Linux Guide[/quote].

They also have Linux-only computer labs. Many of the Computer Science courses do their programming on Linux machines exclusively.

Unless they have something else on this guy... I can't imagine this going anywhere. There's an entire Linux community there. In fact, it looks like a lot of their CS classes are taught in a unix or linux environment, not Windows or Mac.