Which, ironically, brings us full circle. Every nickle you perceive that you loose, you deserve to loose.
The only idiots causing problems are vengeful idiots.
Those dipshit pirates, the pirate people, are showing you lot something, something important... that you positively suck at your jobs and you should loose them.
And here we have but one very small example of just why the copyright regime of today is abysmally inappropriate and disconcertingly skewed to the benefit of a few. The self-appointed champions of copyright are, quite simply, a bunch of greedy bastards.
Hm. You're essentially saying that Congress, the people's portion of government, has been marginalized by the executive and we have an executive branch, inclusive of military and police thus prison and war industrial complexes, coup in progress? Did I forget something? Oh, corporate, I forgot corporate.
I'd say we're pretty much fucked right about now unless A LOT of people can do A LOT of moving and shaking.
Now about those mass bullet purchases and assault arms and capacity magazine restrictions. Talk about a nutter.
I think the folks in charge, you know, dumb asses, the people, you and me, do not demand we right this ship right now we risk a much more difficult confrontation, one with rocks that bite.
Step 1. Issue subpoenas and commence the hearings.
Step 2. Draft, immediately, a digital bill of rights
Step 3. Fix that into law
Step 4. Address Mr. Snowden and the breakdown of security protocol.
(personal step 5. Forever hope that there will always be a Mr. Snowden, dedicated from a people's perspective, to the founding documents, he too swore to protect it and from my view at 100k feet, I'll be damned if he didn't keep it)
And then address health, military, and corporate vacuums and multiple wars that bleed the well being of the people.
Well, it's a good plan anyway, so I'm sticking to it, Congress should too.
Pro Tips:
Heave ho on those reigns you've got there Congress. Them're big horses you've got under those straps. I reckon that there are handful of barred rooms that should have new occupants. Maybe swap places with some non-violent drug offenders and such.
Oh and the Judicial can now feel free to stop throwing down on secrecy. It appears they now have a bit of reality to deal with. Fantastic. Every little bit helps.\r
I appreciate the content of this blog and I appreciate, especially right now, being kept relatively informed without myriad sites and formats involved until I choose to drill into something else. That and I can read interesting posts in a community that isn't horrid or hostile and throw down some free speech once in a while. This post, the one I'm responding to, looks threatening and that makes me uncomfortable in a general sense. Reads like harassment. You have some stuff to figure out.
You wonder why? Looks to me like you know exactly why - because you behave like a pathetic twat ad nauseam. You are, as it were, an undesirable element and your actions do nothing but reinforce that reality.
Re: "Low Level" or "Junior" IT Professionals aren't normally paid $200k salary
I'm not sure where the 200k was derived from but I believe that B&A, his now former employer, said he was paid approximately 120k. Perhaps that 120 was fluffed up with vacation, health&dental, 401K, training, comfy chair on the total compensation package page. You know the one, the one that says "we know your gross is X but we actually pay Y for you".
metadata builds an entire communications mapping consisting of locations, connections, devices, date/times, numbers and contacts. Overlay just about anything over that metadata (google+/facebook/banking/driving etc) and you, quite literally, succeed in mapping the activities, habits, travels and writings of any individual with cellular & Internet access. It's not hard to envision a web of connectivity that directly results in official and legal targeting of persons of interest that were derived and deemed interesting solely from metadata.
It's not hard to make the leap that all involved have gone, far and away, above what is legal, reasonable, appropriate and, above all, expected.
Many will refrain from speaking freely henceforth. Revelation was the first domino. Revolution will be the last.
On the post: Previous NSA Leakers, Thomas Drake And Mark Klein, Speak Out In Defense Of Ed Snowden
Sharing *is* caring.
On the post: How The MPAA Fought To Keep Audiovisual Materials Out Of WIPO Treaty For The Blind/Deaf; And How That's A Disaster For Education
Re: Re:
The only idiots causing problems are vengeful idiots.
Those dipshit pirates, the pirate people, are showing you lot something, something important... that you positively suck at your jobs and you should loose them.
On the post: How The MPAA Fought To Keep Audiovisual Materials Out Of WIPO Treaty For The Blind/Deaf; And How That's A Disaster For Education
On the post: Google Opens Up Some More: The 'Secret' Computer System It Uses To Give Info To NSA Is Secure FTP
c'mon
Meanwhile my fiber taps and telecom rooms would be feeding my programs.
Maybe use the letters and strong-arming to fill some historical gaps.
What? It's not classified if I'm just guessing. Go away.
On the post: Daily Show Takes On NSA Surveillance: It's A Little Weird That Feds Didn't Have To Break Any Laws To Spy On Everyone
Re: Re:
On the post: USTR Nominee Confuses Transparency With Listening
Re: Mike describes Mike on copyright:
I think OOB has been hijacked by clown face.
On the post: USTR Nominee Confuses Transparency With Listening
On the post: Senator Wyden Calls For Hearings Over Intelligence Officials Lying To Congress
Re:
I'd say we're pretty much fucked right about now unless A LOT of people can do A LOT of moving and shaking.
Now about those mass bullet purchases and assault arms and capacity magazine restrictions. Talk about a nutter.
I think the folks in charge, you know, dumb asses, the people, you and me, do not demand we right this ship right now we risk a much more difficult confrontation, one with rocks that bite.
Step 1. Issue subpoenas and commence the hearings.
Step 2. Draft, immediately, a digital bill of rights
Step 3. Fix that into law
Step 4. Address Mr. Snowden and the breakdown of security protocol.
(personal step 5. Forever hope that there will always be a Mr. Snowden, dedicated from a people's perspective, to the founding documents, he too swore to protect it and from my view at 100k feet, I'll be damned if he didn't keep it)
And then address health, military, and corporate vacuums and multiple wars that bleed the well being of the people.
Well, it's a good plan anyway, so I'm sticking to it, Congress should too.
Pro Tips:
Heave ho on those reigns you've got there Congress. Them're big horses you've got under those straps. I reckon that there are handful of barred rooms that should have new occupants. Maybe swap places with some non-violent drug offenders and such.
Oh and the Judicial can now feel free to stop throwing down on secrecy. It appears they now have a bit of reality to deal with. Fantastic. Every little bit helps.\r
On the post: Senator Wyden Calls For Hearings Over Intelligence Officials Lying To Congress
Re:
On the post: Senators Introduce Bill To End Secret Law That Enabled NSA Surveillance
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Senators Introduce Bill To End Secret Law That Enabled NSA Surveillance
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
What?... Are you not entertained!?
On the post: Senators Introduce Bill To End Secret Law That Enabled NSA Surveillance
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Perhaps The NSA Should Figure Out How To Keep Its Own Stuff Secret Before Building A Giant Database
Re: "Low Level" or "Junior" IT Professionals aren't normally paid $200k salary
On the post: Perhaps The NSA Should Figure Out How To Keep Its Own Stuff Secret Before Building A Giant Database
Re: Re:
It's not hard to make the leap that all involved have gone, far and away, above what is legal, reasonable, appropriate and, above all, expected.
Many will refrain from speaking freely henceforth. Revelation was the first domino. Revolution will be the last.
On the post: 86 Companies And Groups Ask Congress To Put An End To Abusive NSA Spying
Re:
On the post: Majority Of Americans Okay With NSA Dragnet... Or, Wait, Not Okay With It; Depending On How You Ask
Re: Re: Re:
In there there is some allusion to "you search ours and we'll search yours" which would certainly facilitate "legal speak peep shows"
On the post: Mississippi Attorney General Says Its Google's Fault He Can Find Infringing & Counterfeit Items
Re:
Actually, at this point, I would really rather appreciate it if you would hold your breath.
On the post: Former NSA Boss: This Leak Teaches The World That America Can't Keep Secrets
Secrets?
On the post: Senator Russ Feingold Correctly Predicted How The Patriot Act Would Be Abused; Too Bad He Got Voted Out Of Office
Re:
On the post: Extradition Trial For Kim Dotcom Pushed Back Again
troll paper
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