176: NSL
7/7/20261 hr 7 min
One day Nick got a visit from the FBI demanding he give them data on one of his customers. They asked for it in the form of a National Security Letter or NSL. Something wasn’t right about this letter. It seemed to violate the constitution. So he set out to change the law.
Learn more about Nicks work at calyxinstitute.org and phreeli.com.
Check out Cindy’s book Privacy’s Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance (https://amzn.to/4gXuK2J).
Sponsors
Support for this show comes from ThreatLocker®. ThreatLocker® is a Zero Trust Endpoint Protection Platform that strengthens your infrastructure from the ground up. With ThreatLocker® Allowlisting and Ringfencing™, you gain a more secure approach to blocking exploits of known and unknown vulnerabilities. ThreatLocker® provides Zero Trust control at the kernel level that enables you to allow everything you need and block everything else, including ransomware! Learn more at www.threatlocker.com.
Support for this episode comes from NetSuite. NetSuite gives you visibility and control of your financials, planning, budgeting, and of course - inventory - so you can manage risk, get reliable forecasts, and improve margins. NetSuite helps you identify rising costs, automate your manual business processes, and see where to save money. KNOW your numbers. KNOW your business. And get to KNOW how NetSuite can be the source of truth for your entire company. Visit www.netsuite.com/darknet to learn more.
This show is sponsored by Maze. Maze uses AI agents to triage and remediate cloud vulnerabilities by figuring out what’s actually exploitable, not just what’s theoretically risky. They remove the noise, prioritize vulns that matter, and manage remediation, so your team stops wasting time on meaningless vulns. Visit MazeHQ.com/darknet for more information.
Sources
- https://www.democracynow.org/2010/8/11/gagged_for_6_years_nick_merrill
- https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/cases/u-s-nicholas-merrill-v-loretta-e-lynch-14-cv-9763-vm/
- https://clearinghouse.net/case/12966/
- https://www.theguardian.com/law/2015/dec/06/fbi-national-security-letter-gag-order-nick-merrill
- https://www.aclu.org/documents/national-security-letters
- https://www.eff.org/cases/re-matter-2011-national-security-letter
- Cindy’s Book: Privacy’s Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsJack Rhysider· Host0:00
[music] This episode is brought to you by Black Hat USA. Every story on this show comes back to people, the researcher who found the flaw, the defender who caught it, the ones who can't afford to be wrong. Once a year, those people gather in one place, and that place is Black Hat. For nearly three decades, it's been where the security community comes to share what it's learned the hard way. Join them in Las Vegas August 1st to 6th. Take your pick up from 100 hands-on training and hundreds of peer-reviewed briefings across the threats actually keeping people up at night. AI, cyber conflict, systematic resilience, and identity. If the stories on this show pull you in, Black Hat is where the people behind them go to stay one step ahead of what's coming next. Prices go up July 17th. Use code DARKNET for $200 off your briefing pass at blackhat.com. That's blackhat.com, code DARKNET. There's a funny story that happened back in 198- no, 1888. There was this undertaker guy named Stroger, and when someone died, he would get a telephone call to come take care of the body. And business was doing well for him, but then suddenly he started receiving fewer calls. Business stopped. But he knew people were dying, so it's like, "What's going on?" See, back then, when you called someone on the phone, you would tell the operator who you wanted to call, and they had a patch panel where they would connect a physical

