If you’re not familiar with the LEGO scandal, the tl;dw is that this YouTuber Reckless Ben (Ben Schneider) has been investigating a stolen set of LEGO worth ~$100-200k (depending on who you ask) and the local police dept and criminal justice system has been colluding with the criminals (all members of the local Mormon church) to get him to STFU. The long version is, very long. You can check his channel for more.

Previously the local police dept managed to get a warrant to raid Ben’s rental home with guns drawn and arrest him, based on what is clearly fabricated evidence. Here they appear to have done it again to get access to his Google account.

The linked video is mirrored on Peertube and timestamped to the relevant section.

Ben does also provide a copy of the subpoena in the video but I cannot vouch for its’ validity, and he has used placeholder evidence before, but that’s neither here nor there.

Anyway, the part that was relevant to this community was that in the course of their investigation they subpoenaed Google, and Google handed over basically his entire life to them. I’m sure this was very useful in their investigation.

I don’t necessarily blame Google here for complying with a subpoena, but the moral of the story is to stop giving Google your data, because everything you say and do can and will be used against you in a court of law, with or without legitimate justification, and the more stuff you give them, the more ammunition you’re providing the prosecutor.

This is also not exclusive to Google. Anything not local, self-hosted or encrypted a la Proton can be subpoenaed and the provider will have to comply. It just so happens that Google probably has more information about literally everyone in the world than any other particular entity.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    1 小时前

    Just as an fyi, if you’d self hosted your services, they would probably subpoena you, and you would be obligated to give them all your data from your own server, and if you’d refus, your be in deep, deep shit

    It doesn’t matter where you store data, if it’s stored, it can be used

    • TwistedTurtle@sh.itjust.works
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      35 分钟前

      I imagine it’d still be preferable to make them go through you and your lawyer for that info, where you could still have some measure of control.

    • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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      40 分钟前

      You’re half right, in that ultimately they can compel you to hand over your data, but there is a higher bar to clear for them to get your personal data stored locally.

      For one, they can’t compel you to turn over your data with a subpoena, they’d have to actually go in front of a judge and get a warrant.

    • shrek_is_love@lemmy.ml
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      53 分钟前

      I think the real takeaway is to not put all your eggs in one basket, so they would need separate subpoenas.

      Getting access to just his Google Account could contain Google Voice text messages, voicemails, and call history. Google search history, Google Maps location history, everything in Google Docs, Gmail, YouTube, and probably other stuff I’m forgetting. That’s all with a single subpoena, which includes a lot of things irrelevant to the case.

  • Starya67@lemmy.world
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    44 分钟前

    Not this again. Again without a proper explanation so you have to watch a whole bunch of videos. No.

  • ulkesh@piefed.social
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    40 分钟前

    the local police dept and criminal justice system has been colluding with the criminals (all members of the local Mormon church)

    Sounds about on par for the corrupt, death cult religionists. Quick! Someone steal their magic underwear and ransom it back to them for the LEGOs!

  • dasrael@lemmy.zip
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    45 分钟前

    Some jack off corrupt podunk cop shop can clearly ubpoena your entire life if you piss off the wrong person, then fabricate charges or create circumstances to fuck your life. This is here, now. Reclaim your digital sovereignty from big tech…

  • Meatwagon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 小时前

    I’ve been following this and he keeps making so many mistakes. Stop talking to the police, bro. Stop trying to get the shop owner on camera.

    File lawsuits against the company (I know he tried and the cop refused to issue the summons illegally, so you do it again after filing a complaint against the police), and file every lawsuit possible outside of that district.

    But that’s not good views for YouTube. He just keeps giving them more ammunition to go after him.

    • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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      1 小时前

      Lawsuits do no good when they are invisible. He’s exposed insane police and judge corruption that would be swept under the rug becuase of no exposure. If utah decides they dont like you or me, we would be fucked, in jail for made up lies, becuase we dont have millions of people watching.

      Yes he has also done some dumb shit for sure.

  • tempest@lemmy.ca
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    4 小时前

    Given the US is currently rotting from the top down and the bottom up I wonder if this guy will get lucky and find some help from the middle that isn’t yet so corrupt.

    • marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today
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      4 小时前

      He has a civil rights lawyer with a youtube channel helping him on the criminal charges and has hired some other lawyer to help with the civil charges (hence the move for those to federal court). So he’s getting there.

  • chunes@lemmy.world
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    2 小时前

    Even 10 years ago this would have caused a riot. People are so domesticated these days.

    • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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      39 分钟前

      This type of thing was definitely happening 10 years ago and people were actually less worried about it than they are today

      • Concetta@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        29 分钟前

        I mean how much has Steven Dongzinger alone shone a light on this? Way more eyes on this than there were ten years ago.

    • LastYearsIrritant@sopuli.xyz
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      1 小时前

      You either aren’t paying attention to what he’s doing, or you weren’t paying attention 10 years ago. This is absolutely normal behavior for the legal system.

      He does business using google services - they subpoenad his google account. That’s how this works.

  • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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    4 小时前

    Oh ive been following this. I said to myself from the get go he should not be using any big tech products at all. This is what happens.

    • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      1 小时前

      If you’d self hosted, it would still happen. Just in that case, on stead of Google handing over your data, you’d have to do it yourself at the risk of being jailed if you don’t.

      The point it: if its data, you can be forced to hand it over. The only way to not having to hand over emails is it not store any emails at all anywhere

    • TheCoralReefsAreDying69@lemmy.world
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      3 小时前

      This is the first I’ve heard of the situation so I could be wrong, but he was introduced as a youtuber. If YouTube (a big tech product) is the source of his fame and income, isn’t it silly to say he shouldn’t be using any big tech products at all?

      There is obviously room for compromise and nuance, like limiting the info he gives them, but I don’t think that’s what you’re advocating for

      • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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        1 小时前

        Youtube has also been being difficult with his videos, telling him to delete and reupload (thereby losing millions of views) to remove blurs that Ben never put there etc, its all very nefarious. I’m inclined to believe the Mormon Mafia textends into YouTube /google, but thats just a guess. Corruption runs deep.

        Yes he basically has to use YouTube, but that wouldn’t stop him from also being more secure in other ways, not using gmail, using secure phones, etc. In the end, theyve 100% been illegally using flock cameras to track him anywhere he goes. Scary man.

        Its too bad there is no other video platform normal folks can use.

        • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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          41 分钟前

          I’m inclined to believe the Mormon Mafia textends into YouTube /google, but thats just a guess.

          I think the simpler answer is a combination of two things: the Mormon Church and it’s top members have more money than God, and paying off Google to do your bidding is probably a lot cheaper than we expect.

  • koniluum@lemmy.world
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    8 小时前

    Yea I watched the video today and it was a good wake up for me to continue my process to move from google. I have started some time ago already but have been doing it in increments. I still have an android phone and moving away from it will be a pain.

  • ropatrick@lemmy.world
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    6 小时前

    The rules seem to be so loose and open to interpretation around privacy etc. What makes self hosted data different? Surely that’s not a major barrier to big tech, the government, the lawmakers etc.?

    If they really wanted to, I’m sure they could just decide, “as of today we can take your self hosted data, so we will swing by at 4pm to collect it”. 4pm comes, they are at your door, what are you gonna do? They come and take your data, you know it’s wrong, what are you gonna do?

    I just worry that even the holy grail of privacy, i.e. self hosted data, is going to be of little consequence to them. If people want your data bad enough, they will do wherever is needed to get it. Change laws? No problem. Reduce rights? Yep we’re in it. And so on.

    It seems like the only truly safe way to store your data is by not putting it anywhere other than in your head.

    • artyom@piefed.socialOP
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      5 小时前

      What makes self hosted data different?

      You can’t be compelled to testify against yourself.

      4pm comes, they are at your door, what are you gonna do?

      If they have a warrant, they can have it. It’s encrypted anyway. If they don’t have a warrant, it’s not admissible in court anyway. Let em have it.

      I just worry that even the holy grail of privacy, i.e. self hosted data, is going to be of little consequence to them.

      It’s outside of their control. Nothing they can do. Encryption is legal.

        • Imaginary_Stand4909@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          2 小时前

          Passwords are protected under the 5th Amendment, as it’s something “from your mind” that would fall under self-incriminating. Hence why people say if you’re at a protest with your phone put it into lockdown mode so you have to input a code/password to open it as they can legally force you to use your thumb/face to unlock it.

          We’re pretty fucked up as a nation right now, but in order to repeal or nullify a previous amendment you’d have to get a fuckton of states or representatives to agree and we literally can’t agree on shit, so it’ll never happen (Hell, Prohibition is literally the only amendment we’ve ever repealed in 250 years).

          No law can revoke that and you’d have an easy case if someone did force you to give passwords.

          • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            47 分钟前

            Passwords are protected under the 5th Amendment, as it’s something “from your mind” that would fall under self-incriminating

            That argument falls apart quickly if you use a password manager and have it generate your passwords though.

            Edit: and it assumes due process in the justice system, something that seems to be eroding.

          • PantaloonMonsoon@sh.itjust.works
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            50 分钟前

            This is hilariously wrong. The reality is they can use biometrics to open it without a warrant. They can and will force you to unlock it with a warrant.

            Any lawyers reading this post are either cackling or bashing their head into a brick wall.

        • PantaloonMonsoon@sh.itjust.works
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          2 小时前

          It’s not. This reply is incredibly naive. They can compel you to give the password to your phone, why wouldn’t they be able to compel you to give the password to your encryption? There’s a reason so many cases are solved via phone contents even though that’s “testifying against yourself”. If they have a warrant and you refuse you’ll definitely be charged with obstruction. Also in court there’s a concept where if you refuse to provide evidence the court/jury is instructed to assume that it’s as bad as it can possibly be, making sure you’re going to lose.

          • ropatrick@lemmy.world
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            1 小时前

            That’s what I thought, hence the “I hope…”. I wasn’t hopeful with the “I hope…” 😁.

            I just don’t trust nowadays that there are enough or sufficient safeguards for people, regardless of what way their data is stored. OK you might hold out and not give them your encryption key from your head, and on that singular point you technically win, but at what cost with the litany of other things you will be nailed for, as you have outlined. You can think about that win from your prison cell I guess?

            Loss is almost predetermined in situations like this.

            Most of this seems to relate mainly to the US, and I dont live there, but this shit is still frightening.

            • PantaloonMonsoon@sh.itjust.works
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              52 分钟前

              I would guess this is the case everywhere. If there was, “I don’t want to give you evidence” loophole so many people would walk away no problem. I mean, this literally how Alex Jones lost. They refused to comply with discovery so the judge said you lose, let’s go to the judgement phase. There was no trial.

    • chunkystyles@sopuli.xyz
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      5 小时前

      You have rights, kinda. You can refuse to hand over data if they have no warrant.

      If you are compelled to hand over data, it can be fully encrypted. You cannot be compelled to give them the key as long as the only place it’s stored is in your head.

      • ropatrick@lemmy.world
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        5 小时前

        Thanks.

        If I found myself in a situation where I had a key in my head and it was what they were looking for, I’d worry about what other ways they might screw me if I didnt give it up. They would find a way.

        It’s all really bleak at the moment. First time in my 46 years of life that I’ve genuinely worried about how the world is evolving.

        • chunkystyles@sopuli.xyz
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          5 小时前

          It is bleak, but if you’re at the stage if being tortured for an encryption key, you’re already fucked.

          It’s a good idea to keep data local. It’s an even better idea to encrypt it. But it’s not going to completely protect you from a fascist government.