The Guardian November 3, 2004


Indymedia asks: "Who took our servers?"

Two weeks after the hard drives of two Indymedia servers were 
seized from the London office of a US-owned web hosting company 
called Rackspace, Caroline Flint, UK Home Office Under-Secretary, 
answered parlamentarian questions by stating that "no UK law 
enforcement agencies were involved".

The seizure shut down around 20 Indymedia websites, an internet 
radio station, and other projects. The servers were returned a 
week later because "the court order had been complied with", but 
still no information is available to Indymedia as to who seized 
them and who now might have copies of all the public and personal 
information they contained.

An FBI spokesperson originally suggested to Agence France-Presse 
that the FBI issued a subpoena to Rackspace, but that it was "on 
behalf of a third country". Later he denied that the FBI had any 
involvement whatsoever.

A few days after the seizure, a senior federal prosecutor for 
Geneva, Switzerland, also confirmed that she had opened a 
criminal investigation of Indymedia — but that she had not asked 
for the servers to be seized.

An Italian judge from Bologna confirmed that she issued a request 
to US authorities for the server's IP logs concerning certain 
posts published on Italy Indymedia — but she says that she did 
not request the seizure of the server hardware, either.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), who is representing the 
interests of Indymedia, has contacted all the likely suspects in 
the US — including the FBI, the State Department, and the 
Federal District Court in Texas — that could have issued the 
subpoena referenced in Rackspace's public October 8 statement 
concerning the Indymedia server. But none of them claimed 
responsibility for the seizure.

"Were our servers abducted by aliens?", asks Clara, an Indymedia 
volunteer from the Netherlands. "Two weeks have passed and we are 
no step closer to knowing who took our servers, why, or even on 
which continent they were."

The only thing that is known is what Rackspace volunteered in 
their statement: that they received a court order in the US. 
Efforts are now underway by the Electronic Frontier Foundation to 
unseal that court order.

Meanwhile, the international outcry continues. Five thousand 
individuals have signed on to Indymedia's solidarity declaration 
(http://solidarity.indymedia.org.uk), and numerous others 
continue to contact Indymedia offering their support to help 
ensure that secret court orders and mysterious government 
agencies don't shut down Indymedia's websites ever again.

Back to index page