View Full Version : Posting Conspiricy Theories Now a Crime?
Linkster
10-18-2006, 02:10 AM
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/october2006/171006enemypropagandists.htm
Unusual take on the state of affairs but with the arrest of the filmmaker in New Orleans recently on terrorism charges, I guess this new bill will give the government some teeth
"Bush's own strategy document for "winning the war on terror" identifies "conspiracy theorists," meaning anyone who exposes government corruption and lies about major domestic and world events, as "terrorists recruiters," and vows to eliminate their influence in society.
In a speech given Monday, Homeland Security director Michael Chertoff identified the web as a "terror training camp," through which "disaffected people living in the United States" are developing "radical ideologies and potentially violent skills."
stefan segal
10-18-2006, 10:46 AM
What now...? If our elections prove meaningless again, what remains between us and slavery...being "good" sheeple?
I wonder how extensive is their list of 'trigger' words that set their spiders hopping through one's post...spitting out names and locales for their lists.
What is needed here is "wind walkers" to post in Navaho...or some actively reconfiguring street slang to keep ahead of the spiders.
What is also needed is a shadow network...a web that recieves compressed untranslated packets to a different system before making the copy intelligable to spiders...(wouldn't work:(
But this could work...
There exists software that links up tens of thousands of computers that operate in the "shadows" of one's normal operation and could be set up to operate as an amorphic server ( that couldn't be identifiied and attacked, as it would be fractionalized among tens of thousands of computers in concert), for web transmission...interesting thought:)
Strefan
stefan segal
10-18-2006, 12:22 PM
Check this out...
http://www.rense.com/general73/crtic.htm
Here's a couple of paragraphs from it:
Stefan
snippets:
The Cornell and Rutgers groups are two of four "University Affiliate Centers" thus far established by Homeland Security. All of the consortiums are geared toward the amassing, storing and analysis of unimaginably vast amounts of information, gathered relentlessly from a multitude of sources and formats. They are in turn just part of a still-larger panorama of "data mining" programs being developed - or already in use - by the security organs.
These include the "Analysis, Dissemination, Visualization, Insight and Semantic Enhancement" (ADVISE) program, which can rip and read mountains of open source data - such as web sites and databases, as analyst Michael Hampton reports. Two Democratic Congressmen, David Obey of Wisconsin and Martin Slabo of Minnesota, have asked the General Accounting Office to investigate the program for possible intrusions on privacy rights, Hampton notes.
You don't need a machine-learning algorithm or $2.4 million worth of Ivy League software to connect the dots here. The Bush administration already has spyware devouring reams of private information in every direction. It is now paying top universities millions of dollars to refine this data into actionable intelligence - including the automated discernment and tracking of dissent against administration policies and criticism of the president. Bush has openly declared that he has no intention of obeying privacy laws - or any other laws safeguarding the Constitutional rights of American citizens - if he doesn't want to.
And if that's not sinister enough for you, consider this: on Tuesday George W. Bush signed the "Military Commissions Act," which states that he can arbitrarily declare anyone - yes, American citizens included - an "unlawful enemy combatant" for any action that he arbitrarily decides constitutes "material support" to terrorists. He can imprison these "UECs" without charge or trial, for the duration of the "War on Terror," which he and Dick Cheney have already assured us will not end "in our lifetime." He can subject these captives to "strenuous interrogation techniques" that by any sane reckoning constitute torture - but this same Act allows Bush himself to determine what is legally torture and what is not, except in the most extreme cases, such as rape and deliberate murder.
A regime openly committed to wielding arbitrary power over the life and liberty of every person on earth is now equipping itself with intrusive technology beyond the wildest dreams of the most totalitarian states in history. And some of the nation's most respected educational institutions - proud bastions of civilization and enlightenment - are helping them do it. It is simply impossible that such a system will not be mightily abused.
Linkster
10-18-2006, 02:13 PM
Actually that Univ project has as one of its primary topics to figure a way to scan the contents of private emails for detrimental keywords/phrases while transferring between ISPs or within an ISPs mail server - although the software already exists to open and store the data - they just need the intelligent parsing software part
As far as the database thats being built - its been known about sine the 1980s and most former security analysts have confirmed its existence - the only thing they didnt have was the amount of private data they wanted - have you noticed the recent amazing loss of private data contained on laptops and portable drives thats been occuring on almost a daily basis at huge organizations - from the Va. Administration to just about every medical center in the country - they have been reporting losses
Heres a chart thats been tracking these losses by a former NSA security analyst:
http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/Datathefts.php
Jesse Hemingway
10-18-2006, 08:41 PM
It's a good day to die
CatsEye
10-18-2006, 11:00 PM
It's a good day to die
Not for me. It is, however, looking like a good day to move to another country for a few years and continue to vote, just as an expat.
:reading:
Jesse Hemingway
10-19-2006, 03:39 AM
Not for me. It is, however, looking like a good day to move to another country for a few years and continue to vote, just as an expat.
:reading:
It's the same thing
CatsEye
10-19-2006, 03:54 AM
Whatever, Jesse; shouting still doesn't make me agree with your opinion.
Jesse Hemingway
10-19-2006, 10:44 AM
I could careless if anyone agrees
Abnormalia
10-19-2006, 11:18 PM
I could careless if anyone agrees
I love you Jesse Hemingway let's have buttsex!!
Jesse Hemingway
10-20-2006, 01:12 AM
I love you Jesse Hemingway let's have buttsex!!
Sorry not my thing keep trolling I am sure you will find someone to pack your shitter:lmao2: :lmao2: :lmao2:
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