Not SOPA but looks same.
*Rages*
i hate when people claim stuffs like, this name is my property, you cannot write georges in your book; pay me 250,000$ now or go in court.
CISPA
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CISPA
Keep in mind that what i say is not static, it is dynamic.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
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- Former Server Admin
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Re: CISPA
People controlling everything, they say it's for us, for a safer place... like if they take care of the fake ads saying "DOWNLOAD", so when you download a thing you have 3 buttons... This would be atleast a good thing to shut down instead of making us pay, they just want more $.
Keep in mind that what i say is not static, it is dynamic.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
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- 100+ Posts
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Re: CISPA
Dude, we're only what Steve Jobs and his Apple shit made us to.Brotherhood Of Nod wrote:Got to love our world of today
Demon wrote:Comments
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Re: CISPA
I got an upgrade which gave me a corrupted file in the .exe, in the Alex/MacFag/AppData/Brain address.Stermy wrote:Dude, we're only what Steve Jobs and his Apple shit made us to.Brotherhood Of Nod wrote:Got to love our world of today
So I switched to Windows 7 and I got my new address, Alex/WindowsWinner/AppData/Brain/haxgoupinhurh
Spoiler
Show
Spoiler
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Re: CISPA
MacFags dun have .exe's, and for sure file structure is different. And computers on it are overpriced.Brotherhood Of Nod wrote:I got an upgrade which gave me a corrupted file in the .exe, in the Alex/MacFag/AppData/Brain address.
WindowsWinners aren't winners, because their systems get so fucking slow over time...
LinuxPros are the winners c: - no need to buy/pirate the OS, doesn't grow sluggish over time and if you don't agree, move yourself to /dev/null and don't come back.
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Re: CISPA
I don't even know what you're talking about.
If it's about companies making us paying more and more for useless things like a new gen of phones each year wich is a pound less of weight than the last one or a bigger screen, then screw 'em and do like me : A 90s TVT, basic channels, a 2008 hand-made computer with cracked windows XP and an Xbox.No phone, tablet, or useless crap like that.Internet information, TV news, or newspaper.I survived 14 years old yet.It's possible, yes.
Need a movie ? Download it or wait to see it on the TV.Quality is shitty so download an old film, so it fits the decade.You can't know the feeling of watching pulp fiction on dat old screen with that shitty quality.That's a real time travelling machine.
Need a game ? First finish the ones you already have (Trophies, achievemnts, etc...), and play it till you know it ver good (Im on HL² since a few years).And then buy a new one.
For exemple, I buy a game only once two years.(Long games, not shitty CoD).
Need a music ? You don't have a phone so you don't need to buy 'em.Just go on youtube and buy yourself good spokesmachines.
Or ask your grandpa a gramophone and some vinyls.
Mine had a 70s turntable with the red army choirs and presley on it.It was kinda good.
If it's about companies making us paying more and more for useless things like a new gen of phones each year wich is a pound less of weight than the last one or a bigger screen, then screw 'em and do like me : A 90s TVT, basic channels, a 2008 hand-made computer with cracked windows XP and an Xbox.No phone, tablet, or useless crap like that.Internet information, TV news, or newspaper.I survived 14 years old yet.It's possible, yes.
Need a movie ? Download it or wait to see it on the TV.Quality is shitty so download an old film, so it fits the decade.You can't know the feeling of watching pulp fiction on dat old screen with that shitty quality.That's a real time travelling machine.
Need a game ? First finish the ones you already have (Trophies, achievemnts, etc...), and play it till you know it ver good (Im on HL² since a few years).And then buy a new one.
For exemple, I buy a game only once two years.(Long games, not shitty CoD).
Need a music ? You don't have a phone so you don't need to buy 'em.Just go on youtube and buy yourself good spokesmachines.
Or ask your grandpa a gramophone and some vinyls.
Mine had a 70s turntable with the red army choirs and presley on it.It was kinda good.
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- Former Server Admin
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Re: CISPA
thing is; a morron posts copyrighted content on youtube = youtube shuts down, if i'm correct.
This can go this way in the future... And internet is not global, so fuck them and their country rules.
That's to the music developer to protect their shits better than they are + music is not a good thing to sell, we have freedom to do what we want, fuck the mind barriers.
Were we paying to listen for the radio? NO. So they shouldn't yell at us for playing sounds, which are fucking annoying nowaday.
This can go this way in the future... And internet is not global, so fuck them and their country rules.
That's to the music developer to protect their shits better than they are + music is not a good thing to sell, we have freedom to do what we want, fuck the mind barriers.
Were we paying to listen for the radio? NO. So they shouldn't yell at us for playing sounds, which are fucking annoying nowaday.
Keep in mind that what i say is not static, it is dynamic.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
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Re: CISPA
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyber_Inte ... ection_Act
oh idgafwikipedia wrote:(...) is a proposed law in the United States which (...)
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Re: CISPA
loledSupporters
CISPA is supported by several trade groups containing more than eight hundred private companies, including the Business Software Alliance, CTIA – The Wireless Association, Information Technology Industry Council, Internet Security Alliance, National Cable & Telecommunications Association, National Defense Industrial Association, TechAmerica and United States Chamber of Commerce, in addition to individual major telecommunications and information technology companies like AT&T, IBM, Intel, Oracle Corporation, Symantec, and Verizon.[26][27] Google has not taken a public position on the bill [28] but has shown previous support for it, and now says they support the idea but believe the bill needs some work. [29]
[edit] Opposition
U.S. Representative Ron Paul (R-TX) has publicly opposed the bill calling it "Big Brother writ large."[30][31][32][33]
36 groups currently oppose CISPA[34] with an addition of 6 groups as of April 21.[35] The Electronic Frontier Foundation lists a growing list of opposition [36] as well as a list of security experts, academics, and engineers in opposition of the bill.[37] They also published the statement Don’t Let Congress Use "Cybersecurity" Fears to Erode Digital Rights.[38]
Opposition to CISPA includes more than 762,000 online petitioners who have signed global civic organization Avaaz.org's petition to members of the US Congress entitled "Save the Internet from the US".[39] Avaaz also has a petition to Facebook, Microsoft, and IBM entitled "The end of Internet privacy", signed by more than 730,000 people.[40]
The Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) published a statement titled "Cybersecurity's 7-Step Plan for Internet Freedom". The CDT openly opposes the Mike Rogers bill based on these 7-step criteria.[41] The CDT has also openly supported a competing bill in the house sponsored by U.S. Representative Dan Lungren (R-CA)[42] that has yet to be reported by the committee.[43]
The Constitution Project (TCP) "believes cybersecurity legislation currently pending before Congress possess major risks to civil liberties that must be addressed before any bill is enacted into law." [44]
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has also issued a statement opposing the bill stating, "The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act would create a cybersecurity exception to all privacy laws and allow companies to share the private and personal data they hold on their American customers with the government for cybersecurity purposes." As the statement continues, "Beyond the potential for massive data collection authorization, the bill would provide no meaningful oversight of, or accountability for, the use of these new information-sharing authorities."[45]
The Sunlight Foundation states, "The new cybersecurity bill, CISPA, or HR 3523, is terrible on transparency. The bill proposes broad new information collection and sharing powers (which many other organizations are covering at length). Even as the bill proposes those powers, it proposes to limit public oversight of this work."[46]
Cenk Uygur, from Current TV, opposed the bill and did a piece where he highlights one of Mike Rogers' speech about the bill to the business community. He also summarized the bill to his audience.[47]
Demand Progress opposes CISPA, stating "The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, or CISPA, would obliterate any semblance of online privacy in the United States." [48]
Competitive Enterprise Institute joins with TechFreedom, FreedomWorks, Americans for Limited Government, Liberty Coalition, Al Cardenas, and American Conservative Union to write a letter to Congress.[49] Competitive Enterprise Institute states, "Despite the bill's noble intentions, however, it risks unduly expanding federal power, undermining freedom of contract, and harming U.S. competitiveness in the technology sector." The Competitive Enterprise Institute lists 6 problems within the bill itself and how to fix those problems.[35]
Reporters Without Borders states, "Reporters Without Borders is deeply concerned with the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011 (CISPA), the cyber security bill now before the US Congress. In the name of the war on cyber crime, it would allow the government and private companies to deploy draconian measures to monitor, even censor, the Web. It might even be used to close down sites that publish classified files or information."[50]
testPAC opposes CISPA stating "CISPA would effectively take the door off the hinge of every household in America, but lacks the tools necessary to distinguish whether there is a criminal hiding in the attic. Why surrender the core of our privacy for the sake of corporate and governmental convenience?"[51]
Mozilla, the makers of the Firefox Web-Browser, opposes CISPA stating, "While we wholeheartedly support a more secure Internet, CISPA has a broad and alarming reach that goes far beyond Internet security."[52]
The Association of Computing Machinery believes that "More effective information sharing in support of cybersecurity is a laudable goal, but CISPA is seriously flawed in its approach to PII. Better approaches to information sharing are certainly possible if privacy goals are also considered."[53]
IGDA, the International Game Developers Association is against this bill, urging Congress and the President to reject it saying, in part, "The version of CISPA which just emerged from the House Intelligence Committee does not address the privacy failings in the previous version, which the White House wisely rejected. The bill still retains its dangerously over-broad language, still lacks civilian control, still lacks judicial oversight, and still lacks clear limits on government monitoring of our Internet browsing information. The House should vote against it." [54]
Russia Today, a Russian state-owned broadcast medium, was one of the first organizations to oppose CISPA, and was the first known source to use the phrase "Worse than SOPA".[55]
Well if governement will be able to look at our internet and search for threats, that will make an open door for hackers to imitate government ways to spy your computer... that's like creating a secret road created by government, you find it by driving around (hacking around), and you enter the road, leading you to easy-to-steal-houses... That's dumb.
Keep in mind that what i say is not static, it is dynamic.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
Years, months, weeks, and days after i say something, i can say the opposite.
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- Former Server Admin
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- Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2013 12:37 pm
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Re: CISPA
Meh.
Shut down internet --> Problem solved.
If ya want music, then go buy a vinly and put the gramophone on.
Otherwise...
Well...
Y'ar right.
I'll try to go into that government later and make a law being voted.
Shut down internet --> Problem solved.
If ya want music, then go buy a vinly and put the gramophone on.
Otherwise...
Well...
Y'ar right.
I'll try to go into that government later and make a law being voted.