Bitware (OP)
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November 27, 2012, 06:01:11 PM |
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Agenda 21 is the action plan of the United Nations 1992 Earth Summit Biodiversity Agenda to circumvent national and state/regional sovereignty, governments and legislation to take control of everything you value on the local level for the greater good of the collective. Its taxing everything you do with fees and fines and use local police to enforce it. The ultimate goal is to end property rights and take control of the worlds land and its limited resources ... which is all thats needed to survive on a rock flying through space by the way. Whoever controls them controls the world and its people. Rich entitled land owners, bankers, royalty, and multi-national corporate stooges are dividing up the world between them, then telling you its for your own good. They use wealth as a weapon, making us feel bad for busting ass and working hard and doing good, when all they really want is to increase their own while turning you into a slave.
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"With e-currency based on cryptographic proof, without the need to
trust a third party middleman, money can be secure and transactions
effortless." -- Satoshi
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Advertised sites are not endorsed by the Bitcoin Forum. They may be unsafe, untrustworthy, or illegal in your jurisdiction.
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grantbdev
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November 28, 2012, 12:53:35 AM |
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And? You probably haven't checked much about Agenda 21 elsewhere. And? No one who did not think Agenda 21 is a crazy conspiracy theory should be convinced by a misleading advertisement from an idiot trying to sell a book. I'm only commenting on the misleading OP, not the existence of Agenda 21.
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Don't use BIPS!
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Bitware (OP)
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November 28, 2012, 01:06:37 AM |
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And? You probably haven't checked much about Agenda 21 elsewhere. And? No one who did not think Agenda 21 is a crazy conspiracy theory should be convinced by a misleading advertisement from an idiot trying to sell a book. I'm only commenting on the misleading OP, not the existence of Agenda 21. The commercial is intended to provoke outrage. Look at the world around you. Take a look at your local municipal code/ordinance/zoning.
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myrkul
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November 28, 2012, 05:43:34 AM |
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The commercial is intended to provoke outrage.
The commercial is intended to sell books. And, like other Beck products, it trades on paranoia and fear. Not saying it is a crazy conspiracy theory, not saying it isn't. Just that the commercial probably isn't your best source of data.
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Bitware (OP)
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November 28, 2012, 07:15:31 AM |
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The commercial is intended to provoke outrage.
The commercial is intended to sell books. And, like other Beck products, it trades on paranoia and fear. Not saying it is a crazy conspiracy theory, not saying it isn't. Just that the commercial probably isn't your best source of data. This is not my first bitcointalk Agenda 21 rodeo. The issue has received enormous coverage here with sourced data. No need to reinvent the wheel, son... or get into an endless irrational debate with lefties. The commercial is intended to provoke outrage. I could care less if someone sells books with it. Beck has an enormous audience the issue is reaching that can only be addressed at the state or local level, because the feds are ramming it down our throats and so are our municipalities with their foreign fund money driven ordinances and planning. Its going to take municipalities, counties, and states fighting for their sovereignty to beat it. Its educating people. Its helping to wake them up, and I am ALL for that.
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Bitware (OP)
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December 07, 2012, 07:44:38 AM |
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"At a conference in Dubai this week, the ITU members decided to adopt the Y.2770 standard for deep packet inspection, a top-secret proposal by way of China that will allow telecom companies across the world to more easily dig through data passed across the Web. According to the UN, implementing deep-packet inspection, or DPI, on such a global scale will allow authorities to more easily detect the transferring and sharing of copyrighted materials and other protected files by finding a way for administrators to analyze the payload of online transmissions, not just the header data that is normally identified and interpreted." http://rt.com/usa/news/un-internet-itu-packet-385/time to encrypt everything
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Richy_T
Legendary
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Activity: 2436
Merit: 2121
1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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December 07, 2012, 04:08:55 PM |
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"At a conference in Dubai this week, the ITU members decided to adopt the Y.2770 standard for deep packet inspection, a top-secret proposal by way of China that will allow telecom companies across the world to more easily dig through data passed across the Web. According to the UN, implementing deep-packet inspection, or DPI, on such a global scale will allow authorities to more easily detect the transferring and sharing of copyrighted materials and other protected files by finding a way for administrators to analyze the payload of online transmissions, not just the header data that is normally identified and interpreted." http://rt.com/usa/news/un-internet-itu-packet-385/time to encrypt everything It always has been, really. This may actually be a good thing in a roundabout way.
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1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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Rudd-O
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Activity: 56
Merit: 0
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December 07, 2012, 06:18:12 PM |
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Encryption does not help if it uses X.509 certificates (SSL). They are broken because various issuing authorities that come in browsers by default are actually government authorities, and they issue certificates to tap SSL traffic like candy. There's even specialized DPI hardware that will decrypt the original traffic to your computer, read and inspect it, then re-encrypt using these phony certificates, while the user is none the wiser.
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Richy_T
Legendary
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Activity: 2436
Merit: 2121
1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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December 07, 2012, 07:56:07 PM |
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Encryption does not help if it uses X.509 certificates (SSL). They are broken because various issuing authorities that come in browsers by default are actually government authorities, and they issue certificates to tap SSL traffic like candy. There's even specialized DPI hardware that will decrypt the original traffic to your computer, read and inspect it, then re-encrypt using these phony certificates, while the user is none the wiser.
Yes, the model for encryption for HTTPS is very broken and wrongheaded. But I was also referring to things like email and IM. Everything should be end-to-end encrypted except that expressly designated for public consumption.
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1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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Richy_T
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2436
Merit: 2121
1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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December 07, 2012, 09:17:22 PM |
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Encryption does not help if it uses X.509 certificates (SSL). They are broken because various issuing authorities that come in browsers by default are actually government authorities, and they issue certificates to tap SSL traffic like candy. There's even specialized DPI hardware that will decrypt the original traffic to your computer, read and inspect it, then re-encrypt using these phony certificates, while the user is none the wiser.
Moreover, they can easily block all encrypted traffic but allow it just for connections inbetween IPs they whitelist. That's when it's time to go to side-channel or steganography.
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1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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