for more, we go now to berkeley, california, where we're joined by nate cardozo, a senior staff attorney electronic frontier foundation. his group is assisting dreamhost in its opposition to the government's search warrant nate cardozo, welcome to democracy now! first, explain exactly what the government is demanding. >> thank you for having me. the government is demanding that dreamhost, which is a web hosting provider based in l.a., turn over literally every record that it has regarding one of its customers. the site disrupt j20.o.org. there would be all of the billing information, which the government already has via a subpoena issued back in january. it means all of that email that was ever sent or received from disrupt j20.org. most importantly, it means the ip addresses of everyone who ever visited the site, which apparently, according to dreamhost, is more than 1.3 million people, americans andnd people aroround the world, including, yours truly. amy: how unusual is this request? it quite inot seen this context before. we have seen the government make request this broad, for insta