3 July, 2015:
The director of this movie was murdered just before releasing it, along with his wife and 3 year old daughter. The local authorities declared it a murder/suicide and closed the case. Today, people post the move to Youtue and are answered by the censorship network using copyright claims under the DMCA to take it down. I was able to find ONE link:
http://www.disclose.tv/action/viewvideo/195971/Gray_State_The_Rise_Rough_Cut_Directed_by_David_Crowley/
Gray State: The Rise.
3 July, 2015:
I suppose in a world where people are competing for resources, an open network will eventually be used by those who want to always maximize their profits at the expense of others, figure out where to lower the signal-to-noise ratio on their political enemies, or even censor those who speak out.
Here's what one of the Internet founders thinks:
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2460894/sir-tim-berners-lee-internet-has-become-world-s-largest-surveillance-network
The problem isn't limited to just recording everything that comes across certain wires either. Companies like AT&T do their damndest to lock people out of changing their mobile devices' operating systems in order to keep their claws in (information gathering or just trying to own your eyeballs - I sincerely doubt is has that much to do with security). Every company wants to maintain a walled garden at the expense of their customers, which ultimately means the customer is / can be easily spied on.
In other news, the guy who lied to congress under oath about spying on the public, James Clapper, is involved in advising the government what they should do about the classified 28 pages from the 9/11 Commission, which may detail actions the Saudi government took to attack us. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/pressure-builds-on-obama-administration-to-declassify-911-report/
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So essentially, if we want to have information freedom and privacy, we need to escape from walled gardens and see to our own digital security as a community (or communities of communities).
I'm sure this already exists in some form, though I don't know the name of the projects that might be related.
What if instead of connecting to a service like Facebook, we instead contacted a friend and had them download a piece of software. That piece of software would essentially run a combination webserver and private dyndns. In order to instantiate the connection (which would afterward be maintained by the underlying software), each of the two friends would visit a page that told them their public-facing IP address. They would share their respective public IPs with each other. Then each would enter the other's public-facing IPs into their software.
In order to permanently maintain a connection with each other, you would want to be in a group of users that would be at least 20 or so people. When your public facing IP address changes, the software would know because it would stop getting any auto connection pings from the others in the group. So it would start querying down the list of other users, and after a sufficient number had replied with the same public-facing IP address they were contacted from, this new information would be propagated to everyone else's underlying software list.
As far as the interface, each person would have their own, possibly customized, frontend. It would allow chat, post/blog wall, and viewing everyone else's wall. Because the interface is perfectly customizable, WebGL with 3D would be possible to be shared, etc.
-- Cool - there appears to be a way to do P2P communication using a webpage and javascript only (Nodejs and Socket.io).
-- This is so awesome, soon I'll have access to the processor and general computing on the GPU at the same time from within the browser. That means that I can offload stuff to the GPU and speed up the webpage. With P2P comm, we won't need Facebook much longer
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20 March, 2016:
Another extremely weighty issue is that our politicians do NOT serve us. They work for people who are already wealthy, and their purpose is to deceive us whenever necessary and keep the balance weighted against us. Because of this, it becomes necessary to have a completely open source and distributed intelligence gathering network with capabilities which rival the most advanced nation state. In the face of this, no monopolized media network could fail to release important news when it is gathered by the open source network, because to do so would be to quickly lose followers. This offers us a way to finally keep them honest.
https://news.slashdot.org/story/16/03/20/0242204/building-a-global-network-of-open-source-sdr-receivers
Woah - some of the technical limitations of this implementation seem somewhat arbitrary, but this still could be an amazing tool. With it, you could download the spectrum from three different locations spaced around a given signal and localize the source. If there were receivers in the path of an instance like the airliner that disappeared in the Pacific, you may be able to do the same thing by focusing on engine radio transmissions and plot a path.
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19 March, 2016:
https://www.expressvpn.com/blog/why-you-should-care-about-privacy/
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HAM radio is a good, slow means of transmitting/receiving information in emergencies. It could also serve as a foundation for learning more about radio before continually miniaturizing devices until we have a blanket system of retransmitting/autonomous devices which keep moving around and talking in spurts and are very hard to shut down. Here's a cheap/cruder setup:
http://www.disasterrecoverymanager.com/dirt-cheap-ham-radio-antenna-tuner/
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4 Mar, 2016:
The problem with having authorities whose decision making processes you do not trust is that anything they do to "help" comes frought with risks. If the FBI succeeds (they ultimately paid an Israeli company to do it) in cracking the iPhone of that dead terrorist, they will immediately use the technique to bypass due process in all of their other cases where it is possible:
http://www.npr.org/2016/03/03/469005657/rep-issa-criticizes-fbi-s-strategy-to-get-into-terrorist-s-iphone
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1 Mar, 2016:
More on that trust issue:
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/found-in-translation/
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28 Feb, 2016:
This is what it looks like when the police work for you and society instead of a corrupt, small, wealthy elite intent on sucking all the value out without putting any back in: https://bretigne.liberty.me/private-protection-co-puts-govt-police-to-shame/
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24 Feb, 2016:
Part of the overall process of reversing the information gulag (where government is opaque, the most valuable information is locked up tightly, and the wealthy keep the information close to their chest to maximize their investment and power is to ensure that money taxpayers pay into the educational process by way of grants leads to that work done under grant being released into the public domain in order to pay off the public's investment. This is a much different situation from locking up people for sharing this information, which the public arguably owns.
As of last month, National Science Foundation policy is open access: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2016/nsf16009/nsf16009.jsp#q3
Repository here - search bar up top: http://par.nsf.gov/
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20 Feb, 2016:
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28 January, 2016:
Here's what's wrong (well, one set of wrongness) with government backdoors (any backdoors) in encryption, in a nutshell:
https://www.wired.com/2015/12/researchers-solve-the-juniper-mystery-and-they-say-its-partially-the-nsas-fault/
The government is not one big homogenous entity. When one agency threatens the security of many other agencies by weakening security standards everyone relies on, everyone suffers (not just governments, but banks/pension funds, hospitals, power supply, etc).
Imagining that only one agency will have access to any backdoor is (to use a crude analogy) peeing in a wind that's coming right at your face. Holding security holes to use in the future also will inevitably backfire in the long run.
Bottom line, large breaches in data security like the OPM are likely to be caused by agencies like the NSA purposefully inserting vulnerabilities in core technologies like routers - downstream, various other agencies purchase the products. Years go by, and other countries find the holes, then use them to punch into their networks, compromising their private data and lurking inside their firewalls / on servers, watching network traffic and everything that's going on administratively.
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One way the stasis and balance (or imbalance, as our case may be) is kept constant is through the Federal Reserve.
Our federal government (USA) relies on it in order to run a massive deficit / spend far more than it takes in taxes.
Because of the above, congress does not question Federal Reserve decisions. Any attempt to audit the Fed results in voting down because they know we are in serious trouble.
http://truthinmedia.com/roll-call-us-senators-vote-audit-the-fed/
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The unaccountable and unconstitutional behavior of our current military intelligence / torture policy in war time will always ultimately end up being carried out back at home. First it will be used on the poor, and it will slowly move upward, the rotting culture festering like a corpse:
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/12/rahm-emanuel-chicago-police-homan-square-scandal
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Spies are ultimately accountable to someone. What they will report has entirely to do with who stands to lose or benefit from an action. Because they aren't accountable to the public, it stands to reason that we should next focus on our politicians who are also not accountable to us (they, and our entire system, is basically for sale - a turn-key police state):
http://www.10news.com/news/san-diegan-says-california-is-not-for-sale-110415
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26 Dec, 2015:
https://bananas.liberty.me/youre-a-criminal-in-a-mass-surveillance-world-how-to-not-get-caught/
Today, we have 25% of the world's population of prisoners from only 5% of the total world population. This means that people in the US are 5X more likely to be imprisoned in our police state. We have agreements between government and for-profit prisons that make the government responsible by contract to provide X number of prisoners. The politicians have found that they can produce prisoners by producing more laws with more penalties. This is a serious societal problem and lack of accountability in our politicians - they do not represent us. Further, the intelligence community breaks down our system of justice through parallel construction.
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1 Dec, 2015:
This technology will be needed for the visual aspect of the open source intelligence gathering system (which will be linked with AI). I know it seems hypocritical that I would advance the technology while angry about it. I think that the real reason I am angry is that the government is obviously lying about so many things in such a way that it hurts its citizens, while keeping the reality away from them. There is a power vaccuum caused by this imbalance that is terrible for the long term future of the nation and the citizens. The people in power are cynically draining the country, probably planning on stepping away once the country goes under. Bottom line, their decision making is oriented toward maximising return for a small number of people at the expense of the majority.
https://www.oreilly.com/ideas/how-to-analyze-100-million-images-for-624
Apparently, you can now scan pretty much all the photos taken of local restaurants and bars and score each location by its patrons. You could make a bunch of tags by group, then take a picture of your office coworkers, scoring them / placing them into a category. If you had this running constantly, you could show changing demographics by location in your city. I wonder how many photos are taken per city per day? A further filter would be how many go up on Twitter or other website after they are taken.
There's a further speedup possibility here - using OpenCL to push computing off to GPU or FPGA. I don't see why Amazon is really necessary here - something like hadoop (more research necessary) can be installed across multiple computers at home to make for a cluster. The biggest challenge then is how you get the millions of images found and downloaded in any kind of reasonable time period/cost.
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25 Nov 2015:
When I went to DLI, Noam Chomsky was mentioned maybe once (though there may have been a picture of him in the library or something like that). However, he's very important when it comes to the study of language. The reason is that some of the theories he was working on are important in the automatic graphing and understanding language structure. The Saint Louis Papers We Love group has a guy who has made a talk about these grammars: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpbWoBG7_zw
It's still on my mind - I really would like to make some kind of chatbot that understands more about the conversation than just surface level detail, or matches words to phrases like pretty much all the chatbots created so far currently do.
Then there's that project my lead teacher had asked my class to do / that I couldn't get anyone interested in because we had more important things to tackle (studying to pass the end test). I feel like I let her down (though there wasn't much I could do without the support of the captain and therefore the rest of the class on that objective - they definitely didn't agree with her and weren't going to do it with the test coming up). She had wanted a mind-map of Chinese words/phrases/concepts mapped to a mind-map for English words/phrases/concepts.
It seems like you could use deep learning to create some kind of map like that, then use the grammar rules above to apply a conversational mapping / skeleton structure.
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1 Nov, 2015:
On the subject of information control by a small group of people for nefarious purposes (of which the heavy consolidation of media companies is a serious contributing factor), any open source intelligence gathering network will ultimately drive the news (with a very small group of companies employees ever fewer people, these people could never hope to provide the same quality or keep up).
In pursuit of ensuring that the information flow is not hampered, a watch must be kept on the DNS records, and they must be distributed as far as possible. Post follows.
I think that the best way to know when censorship is happening and defeat it is to have automatic DNS list comparisons. When sites are removed, it then becomes a task to figure out whether it's simply a technical matter (a question of how sites get to be in the server list) or who ordered the removal. Then, a master list of ordered removals can be created, as well as a tracking list of who is censoring what (we do not want child porn to flow for instance - we can keep people from profiting on that, at least on the public network through DNS record comparison and AI image filtering, but there are very few categories of information which should be kept from flowing, as most censorship is harmful to society).
Currently, changing the DNS server is the only way to try to get around censorship. I think we can do MUCH better through a system of auto comparisons for deletions.
http://www.zeropaid.com/news/94931/how-to-defeat-us-dns-censorship-changing-your-dns-server/
Bitcoin-like DNS systems could also provide relative anonymity while also providing unique identification.
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31 October, 2015:
This scenario must NEVER be allowed to play out, such that government fully controls acceptable speech entirely in its own interests, and the interest of the ruling party of the time:
https://www.aclu.org/blog/free-future/chinas-nightmarish-citizen-scores-are-warning-americans
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24 Sep, 2015:
It looks as if in the future, Google will be the prime suppressor of free speech through refusing ad revenue to small news organizations if they hold views that Google does not approve of:
This year, Google changed the terms of service on Youtube to make political speech much more difficult as it relates to war:
Specifically, added under "Content Youtube considers inappropriate for advertising includes...":
"Controversial or sensitive subjects and events, including subjects related to war, political conflicts, natural disasters and tragedies, even if graphical imagery is shown"
Effectively, this means that Youtube cannot be a medium for journalism. Further, if journalists (and I specifically include Youtubbers who report news of any kind in that category) report negatively on war in general, Google / Youtube will stop all advertising revenue.
In 2009, Google categorized Antiwar.com as satire. Earlier this year, Google stopped Antiwar.com's ad revenue.
Today, Google stopped StormCloudGathering's ad revenue.
In all cases, it has been because the channels or web sites were critical of war and showed imagery or highlighted issues which could reduce funding for wars in Syria and Iraq, etc. Because of this, I can only assume that the people who run Google are also war profiteers on the side.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqkIr-rUNpg&feature=youtu.be
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20 Sep, 2015:
I love Tor - makes it really hard for advertisers. Now we just need browsers that completely randomize all information that is given out (advertisers use every bit of information they can pull in order to generate a unique ID for you, track you and make a profile in order to advertise more effectively). If I want something, I'll just go to a search engine and start searching. I don't want an ever increasing stream of information coming at me due to having made a purchase in the past.
http://www.businessinsider.com/this-is-how-facebook-is-tracking-your-internet-activity-2012-9
From the comments: The models that the advertisers fit onto people they track are ultimately very limiting and not very accurate as far as that person's needs. The advertiser can only look at the past to predict the future. This is essentially a filter bubble. Sometimes filter bubbles become too strong, and your internet experience is greatly constrained.
I made another comment following this about Tor/Tails (a Linux distro that runs Tor to connect to the internet): One really hard thing about running Tails is that it's definitely not built for doing things like I am now - social media. Once you log into a site under a profile on which you've built up a history, you've broken the model. The model is supposed to be based on non-persistent storage and anonymity. I've been meaning to install a very basic Linux distro, put several VirtualBox installations on top of that, and run multiple OSs, depending on what I'm doing - but have been procrastinating because it's such a mundane / mind-numbing task.
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20 Sep, 2015:
Part of the reason our government is so out of touch with the people is that top politicians are taking millions from other countries, especially those with values which directly contradict those of our society, such as Saudi Arabia. This alliance, though in our general interest for availability of fuel, will only cost us in the long run.
http://www.thenewamerican.com/world-news/asia/item/21600-u-s-military-trained-top-isis-commander?utm_content=fpelteson%40cox.net&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=U.S.+Military+Trained+Top+ISIS+Commander&utm_campaign=U.S.+Military+Trained+Top+ISIS+Commandercontent
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/anger-after-saudi-arabia-chosen-to-head-key-un-human-rights-panel-10509716.html
Since taking the role of lead on the UN Human Rights Panel, Saudi Arabia has continued to punish homosexuals, has threated Kofi Anan, the UN Secretary General, when he was about to place their country on a list of shame for killing so many innocent civilians in Yemen, and has threatened our government concerning release of information regarding its role in the 9/11 attack.
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4 Sep, 2015:
More on the oathbreaker front:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/09/fbi-dea-and-others-will-now-have-to-get-a-warrant-to-use-stingrays/
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12 Aug, 2015:
Telecom companies and the media networks are basically compromised institutions. Any company that regularly receives NSLs and does not take measures to make it extremely difficult for government agencies to continue that behavior with a warrant from a judge (especially habitually and long term) does not deserve to remain in business and should be shut down by any means necessary. Also, any company that takes news directly from a news generating government agency and placces it as if it were a real news story has done their customers a disservice and weakened the country.
http://www.breitbart.com/big-journalism/2015/08/12/revealed-how-to-destroy-cnn-msnbc-with-just-one-phone-call/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social
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1 Aug, 2015:
http://arstechnica.com/security/2015/07/how-the-way-you-type-can-shatter-anonymity-even-on-tor/
Reminds me of the stories I've read about morse code operators who could recognize each other on the wires simply by the signature tempo of their keystrokes.
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29 July, 2015:
The bill being proposed to congress concerning data sharing from Facebook and Google with the NSA with no warrant is nothing more than pissing on the graves of dead veterans and spitting in the face of those who sacrificed their all to maintain freedoms.
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23 Jul, 2015:
So this is what they were doing at the NIST instead of investigating the building collapse after 9/11:
Explosion at the NIST today, looks like someone had tried to set up a meth lab....The Spokesman for NIST, when announcing it right after coming from a dentist appointment, and his mouth was numb, said "The asplosion made a real meth of the place".
https://news.slashdot.org/story/15/07/23/1831215/breaking-bad-at-the-national-institute-of-standards-and-technology
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June, 2015:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/06/25/how-the-feds-asked-me-to-rat-out-commenters.html
http://reason.com/blog/2015/06/19/government-stifles-speech
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25 May, 2015:
There was nothing patriotic in this act. It was nothing but an attempt to impose control on citizens by a government which is failing in its duties, with no sense of responsiblity or accountability. We need to clone Rand Paul and print 50 more.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/katherinemiller/in-a-box-with-a-fox?utm_term=.fl775LWxj#.rvXjwvx8p
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25 May, 2015:
There was nothing patriotic in this act. It was nothing but an attempt to impose control on citizens by a government which is failing in its duties, with no sense of responsiblity or accountability. We need to clone Rand Paul and print 50 more.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/katherinemiller/in-a-box-with-a-fox?utm_term=.fl775LWxj#.rvXjwvx8p
If they were so concerned about terrorism, then perhaps they could dig up the records from the destroyed investigation on BCCI. The investigation was done in by the 9/11 attack, and no one in the FBI or elsewhere even tried to start it again. Such a farce the war on terror is.
Instead of being truly concerned with terror, we (senior admin of the US) are causing it and are allies with some of the most problematic countries:
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/07/30/congressman-massie-there-will-be-anger-frustration-and-embarrassment-when-redacted-pages-of-911-report-come-out/
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26 Mar, 2015:
I don't watch mainstream news media because they are worthless. Did anyone see anything about this on the news today?
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-03-26/saudi-arabia-imposes-naval-blockade-red-sea-strait-deploys-150000-troops-iran-condem
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21 Feb, 2015:
Everybody makes a huge deal about ISIS, ebola, measles, etc. If anything is going to throw a major stick in our bike tire, it's going to be our completely unsustainable national debt. We should downgrade priority on every other problem and focus on fixing that. Even if there's no one size fix all measure that fixes it, we can take a massive series of half steps all focusing on the one problem and get mostly there.
Comments:
Sam: Here is an interesting relevant site: http://www.justfacts.com/nationaldebt.asp
Me: http://dailysignal.com/2014/08/06/think-national-debt-large-well-entitlements-deficit-even-bigger/
Me: http://peoplespension.infoshop.org/blogs-mu/2010/09/20/has-social-security-ever-been-%E2%80%9Craided%E2%80%9D/
Me: What it really comes down to is this: government raises money by taxing. When the interest rate on the total debt becomes a certain percentage of the total amount the government is able to raise in taxes, continuing to fund government obligations will become impossible. At that point, bankruptcy is a foregone conclusion.
Sam: The Fed will just print more money if it comes to that, then we have to deal with the consequences of inflation. I don’t think bankruptcy is ever going to happen to the government as long as the Fed is in control of the Dollar.
>
Me: Yes, I am well aware of how the money supply works. Just note that they have the interest rate pegged at 0% for a reason. If they try to raise it, it raises the interest that the federal government has to pay on the debt, and therefore brings closer the bankrupty of the federal government (and therefore many of the states, which are dependant on fedgov taxes).
Me: Being able to print more money does not create more resources. It is not a magic ticket out of all of our problems.
Me: You have written an article for a financial journal before - check this out, you might find it interesting: http://danielamerman.com/va/Conflict.html
Sam: I follow his line of thinking and tend to agree with his prediction of future inflation. One aspect that was missing in his article is the stock market. While bond interest rates are at an all time low the stock market is at all time high. So while conservative investors that tend to only invest in bonds or mortgage backed securities have not done well and will not do well because of the low interest rates, more aggressive investors in stocks have done exceptionally well. He seems to intentionally left that fact out of his article.
This thread reminds me of many years ago when I was watching Alan Greenspan testify to the congress on the current tax allocation. Congress and Bush were pushing to cut U. S. taxes because the economy was doing so well (which they did), but Alan was say that that is the wrong course of action you should use the surplus to pay down the national debt. He testified for several hours and it went in one ear of the congress people and out the other.
Me: The reason why the article only included bonds is that government does not directly invest in the stock market. When we're discussing the possibility of government bankruptcy, we're talking about tax rates and the interest rates set by the Fed, and the effect of the Fed interest rates on government bonds. When stocks are doing so well, you have to remember that corporations have many ways to cut their taxes, from buying politicians to keeping assets off books or in other countries.
Me: http://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2014/01/17/you-think-the-deficit-is-bad-federal-unfunded-liabilities-exceed-127-trillion/#75f619b710d3
Tyler: I was under the impression that money and debt are basically just a magical concepts with no real basis. I didn't read all the articles above. Do they explain what happens when we get too much debt? Also, if we were going to have too much debt, wouldn't that have already happened at 18 trillion?
Me: No, it's not just magical concepts. Some really bad shit can happen when the system stops working. For instance, how many people do we have on goverment welfare? They stop eating.
Tyler: But when?
(I did not answer - no crystal ball, though I am almost absolutely sure it will happen in our lfetime, and I think it will happen in the next 20 years, with a distinct possibility it could happen earlier).
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16 Feb 2015: (update 3 Jul, 2015 - I am placing my post from FB on this thread because Microsoft Windows has a lot to do with the current state of internet surveillance because it is purposefully full of vulnerabilties, Microsoft gives their code to governments and no one else (creating an imbalance favoring governments over the gov's civilians), and their OSs now constantly send telemetry back to the mothership (MS HQ) and who knows where else, compromising the security and privacy of their users. Linux distros do not do this (other than certain very commercial versions)):
Linux is so much better than Windows (all versions of Windows) that there is simply no comparison. I can't imagine running without apt-get (installs programs directly from the internet with one command, an install usually takes just seconds) and the fail safe package managers that enable you to get rid of everything a program puts on your computer (again, one command, no garbage still on your system like with the Windows registry issues, etc).
Usually, Linux installs last an extremely long time for the above reasons, even as I'm installing and uninstalling programs like mad. A typical Windows install would last me only a few months before it becomes unusable.
Lately, there have been a rash of games developed for Linux as well, so it's no longer the case that Linux does not have first rate games. If Valve continues its push, then Linux may yet pass Windows as the OS of choice for gamers, and then it'll be time to bury Windows for good.
If I had to choose among all the Windows versions, I'd say that XP was MS's best and it's gone downhill pretty fast from there. Having Linux is like having the XP 64 bit Pro version plus being a developer at Microsoft / being able to change everything about the OS, along with having full admin control over everything on your system (the way it should be). There's simply no comparison.
I couldn't say this just a year or so ago. Linux still had severe user friendliness issues and the games for it were complete garbage. Today, I can say that Linux is ready and a lot better than Windows (though it still hasn't caught up in terms of how may games are coming out / available for it).
Comments:
Me: http://linux.about.com/od/commands/tp/11-Linux-Terminal-Commands-That-Will-Rock-Your-World.htm
Me: https://www.linux.com/learn/get-your-data-back-linux-based-data-recovery-tools
James Crutchfield: James Crutchfield: The distro names are all live links:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Linux_Distribution_Timeline.svg
James Crutchfield: Running Linux Mint with Cinnamon here, started with Slackware and Red Hat way back in 1996. My home networks have morphed over time from OpenBSD servers/firewalls with MS and Linux desktops, to now include FreeBSD's pfSense and FreeNAS, OS X, and no MS whatsoever. I do give MS a nod, though, for enterprise-level policy controls that help maintain environments of thousands of workstations with a dozen or more user roles. That's the last frontier for *Nix OSs to take over, I believe
Pat: My husband installed Linux on mine. I'm a 66 year old Grandmother who loves Linux!
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16 Feb, 2015:
This is more of what happens when people in government have all the information, and the people they supposedly serve have very little, or none other than controlled information (by six major media companies which are all controlled by the same board):
http://www.infowars.com/42-admitted-false-flag-attacks/
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8 Feb, 2015:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s976iyaO39A
In my opinion, what has been going on in our intelligence community constitutes treason. They are carrying out actions against the American people which only an enemy would do. To continue the work for them after knowledge of their policies and activities is to break your oath to protect and defend the constitution of the United States. They continue to pursue actions which blind the citizens, compromise their privacy and security, and ultimately represent a dangerous and unfree future.
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8 Feb, 2015: Of course they would say this - the highest elected politicians work for the bankers, not the people:
http://thehill.com/policy/finance/232337-wh-official-audit-the-fed-bill-is-dangerous
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8 Feb, 2015:
Arduino cell phone:
http://www.geeetech.com/wiki/index.php/Arduino_GPRS_Shield
https://www.amazon.com/Geeetech-SIMCOM-Quad-band-Development-Arduino/dp/B00A8DDYB6?ie=UTF8&keywords=gprs%20shield&qid=1423378535&ref_=sr_1_1&sr=8-1
You can never be sure that the devices you use do not have backdoors inside them. However, by using a combination of different sources, it may be possible to eliminate the backdoors that you know exist (like AT&T controlled devices, etc).
This might not be the exact same piece of hardware used, but the only differences would be whether a camera has been connected / data combined in the stream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwVgMdtKpYU
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7 Feb, 2015:
So would Facebook stand up to unlawful requests for information without a warrant (which completely ignores the rubber stamp FISA judges)? I doubt it.
We can completely replace Facebook with something like the following:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twister_%28software%29
http://namecoin.info/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zooko's_triangle
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