And if we charge their IC hackers, it's ultimately a foreign policy, not a criminal justice action, even if we like to pretend it's not.
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Karim Baratov finds that a really quaint claim, as he's in custody in SF right now, being treated as a criminal.
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POWs may live in camps with guards and barbed wire perimeters, but that doesn't make them morally equivalent to criminals either.
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Which is entirely unrelated to this thread. I get you want to make a moral distinction. Talk to DOJ NSD, which broke that distinction.
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If Russia starts arresting TAO hackers and we start prisoner exchanges, maybe then the distinction will be more obvious.
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Pretty sure if Russia starts arresting TAO hackers the squawking will drown out everything else, as asymmetry in discussions of hacking do.
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Replying to @emptywheel @pwnallthethings and
Adding that Iran HAS arrested people it claimed to be hackers that looked ... like hackers. And they were in Iran. There was much squawking
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Replying to @emptywheel @pwnallthethings and
What I really want RU to do is arrest Erik Prince, only to have Vlad Putin offer him in exchange for Viktor Bout. I'd pop popcorn for that.
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Replying to @AGLLegal @pwnallthethings and
Maybe we can put it to a vote? Call it the Boaty McPr
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Ahem. Call it the Boatie McPrince pardon.
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