Been a Bowie fan for a very long time. About 30 years I think. He isn’t very active the last few years. So I came across this pic a few moments ago. WTF this dude is getting old.
That means
I’m
Getting
old.

FTW

Been a Bowie fan for a very long time. About 30 years I think. He isn’t very active the last few years. So I came across this pic a few moments ago. WTF this dude is getting old.

That means

I’m

Getting

old.

FTW

anoncentral:

The most serious threat to freedom in our lifetime! The government is trying to shut down the internet! This is the governments attempt to stop the Occupy movement! Stop the Great Firewall of America !!!! This will end facebook completely, also you tube , sound cloud and any medium that might use any copyrighted item its users post even once!

https:// wfc2.wiredforchange.com/o/ 9042/p/dia/action/public/ ?action_KEY=8173

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=176995699059487

The Internet Blacklist Legislation - known as PROTECT IP Act in the Senate and Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the House - is a threatening sequel to last year’s COICA Internet censorship bill.  Like its predecessor, this legislation invites Internet security risks, threatens online speech, and hampers Internet innovation. Urge your members of Congress to reject this Internet blacklist campaign in both its forms!

Big media and its allies in Congress are billing the Internet Blacklist Legislation as a new way to prevent online infringement. But innovation and free speech advocates know that this initiative is nothing more than a dangerous wish list that will compromise Internet security while doing little or nothing to encourage creative expression.

As drafted, the legislation would grant the government and private parties unprecedented power to interfere with the Internet’s domain name system (DNS). The government would be able to force ISPs and search engines to redirect or dump users’ attempts to reach certain websites’ URLs. In response, third parties will woo average users to alternative servers that offer access to the entire Internet (not just the newly censored U.S. version), which will create new computer security vulnerabilities as the reliability and universality of the DNS evaporates.

It gets worse: Under SOPA’s provisions, service providers (including hosting services) would be under new pressure to monitor and police their users’ activities.  While PROTECT-IP targeted sites “dedicated to infringing activities,” SOPA targets websites that simply don’t do enough to track and police infringement (and it is not at all clear what would be enough).  And it creates new powers to shut down folks who provide tools to help users get access to the Internet the rest of the world sees (not just the “U.S. authorized version”). 

Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) has placed a hold on the Senate version of the bill, taking a principled stand against a very dangerous bill. But every Senator and Representative should be opposing the PROTECT IP Act and SOPA. Contact your members of Congress today to speak out!

Stop this act. Go here to write to your congressmen: http://americancensorship.org/

Source: anoncentral

Fuck ‘em: occupy the world
If you’re paying attention the last year or so. You’ll have heard about the struggle against money, greed, the powers that: The occupy movement. And the struggle against censorship, Anonymous. Freedom of information. 
But if you look more closely you will notice that these two combine. 
The powers that be, the money ppl are also the 1s that want to dominate the information stream. At the moment they are trying to bust the occupy movement and at the same time they’re trying to get a new copyright law passed that really reduces the freedom on the internet. It gives companies the power to shut down sites just ‘cause they say there is a violation. No judges nothing, take down at once. 
Just think a bit further and there will be take down demand on information.

Please stop the Great Firewall of America

Fuck ‘em: occupy the world

If you’re paying attention the last year or so. You’ll have heard about the struggle against money, greed, the powers that: The occupy movement. And the struggle against censorship, Anonymous. Freedom of information. 

But if you look more closely you will notice that these two combine.

The powers that be, the money ppl are also the 1s that want to dominate the information stream. At the moment they are trying to bust the occupy movement and at the same time they’re trying to get a new copyright law passed that really reduces the freedom on the internet. It gives companies the power to shut down sites just ‘cause they say there is a violation. No judges nothing, take down at once.

Just think a bit further and there will be take down demand on information.


Please stop the Great Firewall of America

Anonymous “dimnet” tries to create hedge against DNS censorship

With concern mounting over the potential impact of the Stop Online Piracy Act and claims that it could make the Domain Name Service more vulnerable, one group is looking to circumvent the threat of domain name blocking and censorship by essentially creating a new Internet top-level domain outside of ICANN control. Called Dot-BIT, the effort currently uses proxies, cryptography, and a small collection of DNS servers to create a section of the Internet’s domain address space where domains can be provisioned, moved, and traded anonymously.

So far, over 4,000 domains have been registered within Dot-BIT’s .bit virtual top level domain (TLD). Those domains are visible only to people who use a proxy service that draws address information from the project’s distributed database, or to those using one of the project’s two public DNS servers. 

While it’s not exactly a “darknet” like the Tor anonymizing network’s .onion domain, .bit isn’t exactly part of the open Internet, either—call it a “dimnet.” Just how effective a virtual top-level domain will be in preventing censorship by ISPs and governments—or even handling a rapidly growing set of registered domains—is unclear at best.

How it works

Dot-BIT is derived from a peer-to-peer network technology called Namecoin, derived from the Bitcoin digital currency technology. Just as with Bitcoin, the system is driven by cryptographic tokens, called namecoins. Tobuy an address in that space, you either have to “mine” namecoins by providing compute time (running client software that uses the computer’s CPU or graphics processing unit) to handle the processing of transactions within the network, or buy them through an exchange with cash or Bitcoins. All of those approaches essentially provide support to the Namecoin distributed name system’s infrastructure. 

You can also get an initial payout of free namecoins from a “faucet” site designed to help bootstrap the network. The cost of entry is pretty low: currently, registering a new domain costs about 1.6 namecoins, which can be had for about five cents.

Your registration isn’t associated with your name, address, and phone number—instead, it’s linked to your cryptographic identity, preserving anonymity. Once you’ve registered a domain, you can assign it by sending out a JSON-formatted update request, mapping the domain to a DNS or providing IP addresses and host names to be distributed through Dot-BIT’s proxies and public DNS servers. That information is then spread across all of the network’s peer systems.

Simple, right?

Namecoin’s approach heavily favors early adopters, since once you’ve registered a domain, you can transfer it to someone else—or squat on it until someone pays you for it. That seems to be what a lot of early .bit adopters are counting on. For example, using Firefox and the FoxyProxy add-on to surf .bit-land to audi.bit lands you on a “this domain for sale” page.

But while Dot-BIT may allow for an anonymous and relatively secure exchange of DNS information, it won’t necessarily prevent censorship by ISPs. If the .bit top-level domain becomes the target of laws like SOPA, it can be shut down pretty quickly by cutting off the head—its own internal DNS—either through port blocking or other filtering. And since it lacks the anonymizing routing abilities of “hidden” networks like Tor’s .onion domain, it won’t protect the identities of publishers and users who visit sites that use a .bit name.

At the moment, then, it’s not certain what purpose .bit will actually serve, other than as an experiment in novel ways to create a DNS—or someplace for hackers to spend their illicitly earned Bitcoins.

Source: Arstechnica

Love my 4s

Love my 4s

Ladies and gentlemen I got him

Ladies and gentlemen I got him

11-11-11

11-11-11

tatsukii:

Hubble Detects Mysterious Spaceship-Shaped Object Traveling at 11,000MPH - P/2010 a2 - Gizmodo

tatsukii:

Hubble Detects Mysterious Spaceship-Shaped Object Traveling at 11,000MPH - P/2010 a2 - Gizmodo

Source: tatsukii

My personal record

My personal record

Base rape

In an online game, the act of killing spawning enemies before they leave the base.

The act of attacking or laying seige to a base without attempting to capture it. This is often done in a way that the other team cannot fight back before being killed after spawning, usually in a vehicle or sometimes with a sniper rifle from a distance. It is usually done in a deathmatch style First Person Shooter

Battlefield 3

Played a lot of Battlefield over the years. 1942, Vietnam, BF2, Bad Company and 2142. I’d especially liked flying the Huey in Vietnam. Last BF I played was Bad Company. First BF on the PS3 for me. Still prefer playing it on the PC. Now there is BF 3. Base raping with a sniper rifle always fun. Using a gunship to destroy men and vehicles. 

Think it’t ‘bout time to gear up again an get me some.

BF 3

iME is now live. Posting will start when my iPhone 4s arrives

iME is now live. Posting will start when my iPhone 4s arrives

About

Me,Elementalboy

eLEmENTal pArTIcLEs

Astronaut (went to the moon before Neil Armstrong), Nerdfighter, time traveler and Atheist.

Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing.

Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist.

It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper and set the universe going."

Blogging since Friday, May 27, 2005 9:49 PM

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