My laptop has been targeted since 2 November. We pay British Telecom £850 per year for broadband (WITH UPDATE - DAY 26 27/11/2018)
This is a splendid posting which in its moderate and modest tone should encourage many others to join you!!
http://churchandstate.org.uk/about/
-Don Collins, President of ISAF, an NGO dedicated to helping women
Our Church and State website has no less than 40 Nobel Prize winners on it; for details, see this blog's sidebar under "Church and State" (updated today).
Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms formulates what is the core of free speech. "Everyone has the right to freedom of expression." In an important interpretation of this article, the European Court of Human Rights in Handyside v. UK (1976) indicated that this "freedom of expression" should be construed as follows. It "is applicable not only to 'information' or 'ideas' that are favourably received, or regarded as inoffensive, or as a matter of indifference, but also to those that offend, shock or disturb the State or any sector of the population." Such are the demands of that pluralism, tolerance and broadmindedness without which there is no "democratic society" (see Cliteur, 2010).
British Telecom is one of the world's leading communications services companies. Declan pays BT £70 per month (£850 per year) for Superfast Fibre 2 Unlimited broadband (average speed 67Mb). We're well used to particular laptops being targeted with little or no internet speed, usually Declan's primary laptop; see my post of 9 August, British Telecom: Are drastically reduced internet speeds and 45-minute internet cuts to be the new norm? Now, since Facebook's 49th block against our Church and State website last Friday (see here), it is once again my primary laptop. Not for the first time, tonight my broadband speeds have hit rock bottom. Declan has had no such problem on either of his two laptops.
On my primary laptop, I have to wait several minutes for a page to fully load:
We usually have an internet speed of about 70Mb across four laptops.
British Telecom in bold
Paragraph 41 of Declan's updated complaint to the United Nations under Article 19 (freedom of expression) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
41. In October 2017, SiteGround's solicitors told the Applicant to remove a popular article from the Church and State website for alleged copyright infringement or the site would be disabled by SiteGround pending his legal challenge by counter notice. The Applicant removed the article even though it had a Creative Commons licence applied to it, as do all Addicting Info articles. The Applicant's wife's Church and State blog has been attacked in various ways over the years: links have been broken and images exchanged, deleted or temporarily removed. So too have the Applicant and his wife's computers. In December 2015, the Applicant's wife's laptop was rendered incapable of publishing material on the Church and State website. She could not create a WordPress post, add images, or click on most of the platform's buttons. She had posted a video of the attack on her blog before the laptop was returned to normal functioning the following afternoon. Since September 2017, the internet connection speed on any one of their four laptops has been reduced from anything between 70-74Mbps to 0Mbps, usually disabling the targeted laptop, and for up to three weeks to date. The laptop most targeted for this form of attack is the Applicant's main laptop that cost him £600 in January 2017. Their internet connection has been cut 184 times since 26 May 2017, most recently today on 8 May 2018 for a half an hour (the third cut of this duration). The Applicant pays British Telecom £850 per year for broadband. He has documented communication with BT Executive Level Complaints showing there has been no problem with his phone line. (Emphasis added.)
Paragraph 41 of Declan's updated complaint to the United Nations under Article 19 (freedom of expression) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
41. In October 2017, SiteGround's solicitors told the Applicant to remove a popular article from the Church and State website for alleged copyright infringement or the site would be disabled by SiteGround pending his legal challenge by counter notice. The Applicant removed the article even though it had a Creative Commons licence applied to it, as do all Addicting Info articles. The Applicant's wife's Church and State blog has been attacked in various ways over the years: links have been broken and images exchanged, deleted or temporarily removed. So too have the Applicant and his wife's computers. In December 2015, the Applicant's wife's laptop was rendered incapable of publishing material on the Church and State website. She could not create a WordPress post, add images, or click on most of the platform's buttons. She had posted a video of the attack on her blog before the laptop was returned to normal functioning the following afternoon. Since September 2017, the internet connection speed on any one of their four laptops has been reduced from anything between 70-74Mbps to 0Mbps, usually disabling the targeted laptop, and for up to three weeks to date. The laptop most targeted for this form of attack is the Applicant's main laptop that cost him £600 in January 2017. Their internet connection has been cut 184 times since 26 May 2017, most recently today on 8 May 2018 for a half an hour (the third cut of this duration). The Applicant pays British Telecom £850 per year for broadband. He has documented communication with BT Executive Level Complaints showing there has been no problem with his phone line. (Emphasis added.)
UPDATE 27 November (11.47am): My primary laptop has been messed about for almost a month now (26 days), i.e., with the exception of three days when my internet speed exceeded 70Mb. At the moment my broadband speed is a wipe-out (0.90Mb). Declan has no such problem on his primary laptop. Also, we have been denied access to the internet within this period. Our TV is a constant reminder that non-stop internet cuts can kick off at any time, with cuts that can last for hours (the longest being 3 1/4 hours on 16 August):
Internet cuts (since 26 May 2017)
173 cuts 2017
118 cuts 2018
Since May 2018*
- May 2018: 22 cuts
- June 2018 40 cuts
- July 2018 26 cuts
- August 2018: 16 cuts
- September 2018: 0 cuts
- October 2018: 3 cut
- November 2018: 1 cut
* All cuts on old BT Hub - new BT Hub delivered on 19 August 2018 yet to be installed. The bandwidth on our 2nd BT YouView box is seldom enough to watch TV channels (and because of this, our TV usually operates off our TV aerial or our TV viewing restricted to the BBC iPlayer). This has been, and remains, a constant reminder with respect to whatever BT Hub we use for our laptops.
7 July 2018: INTERNET CUTS: Are 45-minute Internet cuts to be the new norm? We pay British Telecom £850 per year for broadband (WITH UPDATE 22/11/2018: re 291st Internet cut since 26 May 2017).
173 cuts 2017
118 cuts 2018
Since May 2018*
- May 2018: 22 cuts
- June 2018 40 cuts
- July 2018 26 cuts
- August 2018: 16 cuts
- September 2018: 0 cuts
- October 2018: 3 cut
- November 2018: 1 cut
* All cuts on old BT Hub - new BT Hub delivered on 19 August 2018 yet to be installed. The bandwidth on our 2nd BT YouView box is seldom enough to watch TV channels (and because of this, our TV usually operates off our TV aerial or our TV viewing restricted to the BBC iPlayer). This has been, and remains, a constant reminder with respect to whatever BT Hub we use for our laptops.
7 July 2018: INTERNET CUTS: Are 45-minute Internet cuts to be the new norm? We pay British Telecom £850 per year for broadband (WITH UPDATE 22/11/2018: re 291st Internet cut since 26 May 2017).
On another front, Declan still does not know where he stands with the Mayor of London's St Mungo's Tenancy Sustainment Team (TST); see my newer post of 16 November, St Mungo's: Declan reverts to data protection law in his dealings with the Mayor of London's St Mungo's TST for the accurate recording of his complaint of unfair treatment against Newham Council (WITH UPDATE - DAY 12 27/11/2018). Only three months ago, this Greater London Authority-commissioned charity took Declan to the brink of his second court action against them in two years; see my post of 28 August, St Mungo's: Discrimination; Declan's claim against the Mayor of London's service for the Central London County Court. Still no response from St Mungo's CEO Howard Sinclair to Declan's pre-action letter (WITH UPDATE 30/8/2018).
Is Edward Snowden a Hero or Criminal? This is a solid documentary called #Citizenfour that may influence your thinking either way:
JOIN THE CONVERSATION #CITIZENFOUR
From My Picks:
8 May 2018: Threat to life: Updated complaint to the United Nations under Article 19 (freedom of expression) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Today we are cut off the internet for a half an hour
http://churchandstate.org.uk/honorary-associates/