United Kingdom in
Bristol, United Kingdom, advertising the local chapter of Indymedia with the slogan "Read it, write it, your site, your news" Police seized servers in the UK in June 2005. An
anonymous post on the Bristol Indymedia server came to police attention for suggesting an "action" against a freight train carrying new cars as part of a protest against cars and climate change in the run up to that year's Gleneagles G8 summit. A member of the Bristol Indymedia group was arrested. Indymedia was supported in this matter by the
National Union of Journalists and
Liberty. In August 2014, Bristol Indymedia's servers were again seized by police after a string of attacks in the Bristol area were claimed on the Indymedia service, including a communique signed by
Informal Anarchist Federation claiming the successful arson of a police firearms training centre. Bristol Indymedia stated that they would not cooperate with the authorities and that they "do not intend to voluntarily hand over information to the police as they have requested". covering protests at the
2005 G8 summit London Indymedia became inactive in July 2016.
United States On October 7, 2004, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation took possession of several
server hard drives used by a number of IMCs and hosted by U.S.-based
Rackspace Managed Hosting. The servers in question were located in the United Kingdom and managed by the British arm of Rackspace, but some 20 mainly European IMC websites were affected, and several unrelated websites were affected, including the website of a
Linux distribution. Some, but not all, of the legal documents relating to the confiscation of the servers were unsealed by a Texas district court in August 2005, following legal action by the
Electronic Frontier Foundation. The documents revealed that the only action requested by the government was to surrender server log files. The move was condemned by the
International Federation of Journalists, who stated that, "The way this has been done smacks more of intimidation of legitimate journalistic inquiry than crime-busting" and called for an investigation. European civil liberties organization
Statewatch and the
World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC) also voiced criticism. EFF attorney Kurt Opsahl compared the case with
Steve Jackson Games, Inc. v. United States Secret Service. shootings in the
Netherlands New York–based journalist and Indymedia volunteer
Bradley Roland Will was killed in October 2006 along with two Mexican protesters in the city of
Oaxaca. People had been demonstrating in the city since May as part of an
uprising prompted by a teachers strike. Reporters Without Borders condemned the actions of the Mexican government in allowing the accused gunmen to go free. On January 30, 2009, one of the system administrators of the server that hosts indymedia.us received a grand jury subpoena from the
Southern District of Indiana federal court. The subpoena asked the administrator to provide all "
IP addresses, times, and any other identifying information" for every visitor to the site on June 25, 2008. The subpoena also included a
gag order that stated that the recipient is "not to disclose the existence of this request unless authorized by the Assistant U.S. Attorney." On February 25, 2009, a United States Attorney sent a letter to an attorney with the
Electronic Frontier Foundation stating that the subpoena had been withdrawn. In the aftermath of the
2017 G20 Hamburg summit protests, the German
Federal Ministry of the Interior, Building and Community banned a chapter of the network called Linksunten. This had been set up in 2008, in southwestern Germany. The ministry described the network as "the central communications platform among far-left extremists prone to violence" and stated that it was used to spread information about violent protest tactics. German
internet service providers were ordered to block communication to the website, on which police were referred to as "pigs" and "murderers" and instructions for making
Molotov cocktails could be found. The German police also raided the home addresses of several activists in the
Baden-Württemberg region, seizing computers and weapons. ==See also==