Following some discussions on the Hacktivism mailing list, October 21st, 1999 was named "Jam Echelon Day". This was significant because it marks both the first large scale grass-roots effort to "jam up" the works of the global surveillance system operated by the US/UK/Australian/New Zealand Governments known as "Echelon" and because it co-incides with Stop Police Brutality Day. While the goal of "jamming up" Echelon is a lofty one, is it not better to signal displeasure at being monitored than passively allow it to happen? We believe so. Privacy should not be something that's considered only after it's been breached.

This website was created with a dual purpose. The first is obviously to assist people in "jamming up" the works of Echelon either by using widely-known "trigger words" or simply by not being passive targets of the system by using encryption of a strength not able to be easily decrypted for all possible network-based communication, whether it be standard email, file transfers, point-to-point voice conversations etc.

View the original release about "Jam Echelon Day" here

The relevent part:



On October 21, 1999 , netizens around the globe are implored to send out at least one email with at least 50 keyword words. You need not be privy to knowing exactly what words Echelon uses. It is safe to assume that words such as "revolution" and "manifesto" and "revolt" [etc.] will work. Just be sure to sound as subversive as possible. [Try this]

The links of relevence to Jam Echelon Day are listed below, split into two sections: