Palestine Activism
Spammed
by Abby Aguirre
Within days of the April
incursion of the Israel Defense Forces into Jenin, pro-Palestine activist
Thomas Olson received first a trickle, then thousands, of e-mails with
menacing subject lines such as: "Mecca is for Muslims, Jerusalem
is for Jews," "Die Hitler Scum" and "I take it in
the ass from Arafat." What then became daily e-mail bombardments
of pro-Israel diatribes, racist cartoons and pornography soon progressed
into a much more sinister form of cyber-harassment: Olson became a victim
of a type of identity-theft dubbed a "joe job" by experts,
wherein someone using Olson's name and e-mail address sends out thousands
of messages that grossly misrepresent his position with respect to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. One such "job" had Olson declaring
"I love Hitler" to hundreds of his fellow activists. Welcome
to the concerted (and ongoing) cyber-campaign to frustrate and intimidate
US-based pro-Palestine activists who attempt to organize on the Internet.
While spammings continue
to crash servers and shut down inboxes, these joe jobs in particular
have been smearing identities and wasting countless hours valuable to
the activist community. University of Illinois law professor and pro-Palestine
organizer Francis Boyle, for example, returned from a summer vacation
to find 55,000 e-mails waiting in his inbox--most of them return-to-senders
from a mass e-mail he supposedly wrote saying, "When I see in the
newspapers that civilians in Afghanistan or the West Bank were killed
by American or Israeli troops, I don't really care." Boyle--a former
board member of Amnesty International USA and outspoken critic of the
war in Afghanistan--spent four days sorting through the e-mails, deleting
failed deliveries and apologizing to angry colleagues.
Similarly, Monica Tarazi,
director of the New York chapter of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee (ADC), discovered that her e-mail account had shut down after
someone using her address spammed some eighty Yahoo! groups. And Yale
medical school professor Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh has on three separate occasions
learned that e-mails he wrote to various activist lists were altered
and forwarded to 1,500 members of the Yale community. Qumsiyeh has also
been the victim of outright forgeries, many of which attempt to slander
him by alleging that he is a Muslim advocating terrorist acts. A recent
e-mail even had Qumsiyeh rallying for revolution: "Comrades and
friends, the only solution to the miseries of the world we live in today
is with revolutionary change that overthrows the US capitalist system
and its bourgeois supporters once and for all." Reading this aloud,
Qumsiyeh chuckled, "They discovered that I'm not a Muslim, so they
decided to make me a Communist."
All accounts of this cyber-harassment
point to the targeting of activists who subscribe to pro-Palestine e-mail
lists or belong to Palestine-related e-groups, as well as various academics,
news groups and human rights organizations that either support Palestinian
statehood or are simply critical of Israeli policy. Even celebrated
MIT linguistics professor Noam Chomsky, outspoken critic of Israeli
policies toward Palestine, has been hit. "There is an awful lot
of stuff going out in my name that's totally insane and that I haven't
written," the professor complained. For the last month or so, Chomsky's
personal inbox has been regularly inundated with return-to-senders,
which obviously constitute only a small fraction of the e-mails being
sent from his address. When asked to characterize the campaign, Chomsky
sighed, calling it "somewhere between infantile and Stalinist."
So who's responsible? Interestingly,
the bulk of the e-mails appear to be coming from within the United States,
specifically from a Kinko's or Internet cafe where the sender can remain
anonymous. They are then routed through various servers around the world.
Olson traced messages back through servers in Brazil, China and Mexico,
only to find they were sent from a Kinko's in Colorado; likewise, some
of the spam Boyle receives is sent from a Kinko's in the St. Louis area
and routed through open relays in Brazil, China, Taiwan and Dubai. Though
the campaign is no doubt elaborately sustained, and its architects determined,
it is not necessarily the work of sophisticated hackers. What many of
the victims are learning is that it is easy to change the "from"
line of an e-mail. As Nigel Parry, co-founder of the Electronic Intifada
website, told me, "This could have been done by 16-year-olds."
"It's a very organized,
tenacious campaign," explained Boyle, "and it's clearly designed
to knock me off the Internet." Indeed, the e-mails are intended
to cause enough confusion to ultimately prevent pro-Palestine activists
from organizing online. Thanks to a team of computer technicians at
his university, Boyle is standing his ground; the computer users' office
sifts through his e-mails and sets up blocks in an effort to keep spam
manageable. "I'm not going anywhere," Boyle assured me. But
for others like Olson (who have fewer resources), the resulting frustration
and fear have made it so they can barely communicate with other activists
electronically and have had to unsubscribe from politically oriented
e-mail lists like Al-Awda and Free Palestine. "It's an impossible
situation," explained Olson. "We're wasting hours of our time
trying to figure out what's going on; it's making all of us paranoid;
it's totally disabling the entire community and causing activists to
withdraw from the Internet."
Adding to the activists'
frustration is a sense that all this comes at a time when communication
within the international pro-Palestine movement is more dependent than
ever on cyber-communication. The strongest connection between pro-Palestine
activists in the States and the people living in Palestinian camps and
settlements exists online, where chat-rooms and warblogs (politically
oriented web-logs) constitute a crucial component of the discourse.
As one Palestinian blogger recently put it to the Jerusalem Post, "It
comes down to the permission to narrate one's experiences, thoughts,
and expressions. Basically, it is a way to communicate with the outside
world." Moreover, as Edward Said noted in these pages (May 6, 2002),
what does not make it through Israel's restricted coverage of the West
Bank, the Internet provides in the form of hundreds of verbal and pictorial
eyewitness reports. These accounts and reports are crucial to US-based
pro-Palestine activism, where the struggle is for accurate reporting
in the media rather than for homes and lives. "In Palestine they're
fighting for their lives; here we're fighting for the truth," explained
Olson. Numerous pro-Palestine activists in the United States feel it
is this crucial communication the cyber-harassment is meant to stifle,
which is why many share Nigel Parry's feeling that the campaign is an
assault on freedom of speech.
Ironically, if the campaign
as a whole constitutes an assault on freedom of speech, so too might
efforts to prevent it. (Aside from being difficult and expensive to
enforce, antispam laws are often challenged in court on constitutional
grounds as violations of the First Amendment.) The clearer issue is
that a majority of these e-mails are threatening and should seemingly
qualify as harassment, intimidation and, in some cases, character assassination.
But even along these lines, activists have encountered a slippery slope.
After receiving a message that said "maybe one day I will kill
your children," Monica Tarazi contacted the FBI. In a conference
call with the Cyber Crimes and Civil Rights Section, Tarazi, along with
Nigel Parry, were told that as frustrating as the e-mails may be, there
was nothing illegal about them. The message "maybe one day I will
kill your children" was not specific enough to qualify as a real
threat. "There haven't been threats that rise to the level of hate
crime," Tarazi told Wired News. "No money has been stolen,
public safety has not been endangered and, as far as we can tell, our
computers have not been hacked or 'technically intruded' into, as one
agent put it."
When Olson received an e-mail
containing a window shot of his personal c-drive, signed "thank
you for sharing the contents of your c-drive with us," he too alerted
the FBI. In his case, the Anti-Terrorism Task Force did concede that
someone had gained partial access to his computer. But in order to help
him, the federal agents claimed they would need to take his computer
and make a copy of the hard drive. Olson did not feel comfortable handing
his computer over to the FBI. (Under a provision of Ashcroft's USA Patriot
Act, if it is determined that you are a supporter of terror, the FBI
can plant in your computer the Magic Lantern, a device that records
every activity performed on your computer.) When ultimately he opted
not to give his computer to the agents, they accused him of hiding kiddy
porn and left.
Subsequently, two organizations,
the March for Justice (a Miami-based human rights organization) and
Palestine Media Watch (a Philadelphia-based media watch group), are
trying to foster more of a response from the FBI. Tired of finding their
websites hacked, their servers shut down and thousands of incriminating
e-mails written in their names, these organizations (in alliance with
Palestinian Justice, Citizens for Fair Legislation, Essays and Commentary
on Contemporary Middle Eastern Issues, Jewish Friends of Palestine and
The American League for Justice and Peace) have put together an action
coalition to get to the bottom of the cyber-harassment campaign. According
to Ahmed Bouzid of Palestine Media Watch, the aim of the National Coalition
Against Cyber Terrorism is "to gather as many victimized organizations
and individuals under one umbrella so that we can collectively put pressure
on the authorities." They are demanding that law enforcement and
government agencies immediately respond to the repeated waves of cyber-harassment
by pro-Israeli hackers, and enforcement of the law to the fullest.
The question looms as to
how much of this disruptive activity is actually illegal. Because antispam
laws have proven difficult and expensive to enforce, state and federal
legislation have defined cyber-harassment statutes in different ways,
and identity theft must involve financial loss to qualify as illegal,
the outlook has seemed murky at best.
But there may be hope on
the horizon. Since Monica Tarazi's initial conference call with federal
agents, the ADC's legal advisers and one particularly helpful agent
from the Civil Rights Section have dug up the relevant harassment statute
of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and brought it to the attention
of the FBI, which, in turn, agreed to launch a formal investigation
next week.