Imagine that you watched a police officer in your neighborhood stop ten completely ordinary people every day just to take a look inside their vehicle or backpack. Now imagine that nine of those people are never even accused of a crime. They just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Even the most law-abiding person would eventually protest this treatment. In fact—they have.1
Now replace police officers with the NSA. The scenario above is what the NSA is doing with our communications, under cover of its twisted interpretation of Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act. The Washington Post has revealed that “Nine of 10 account holders found in a large cache of intercepted conversations, which former NSA contractor Edward Snowden provided in full to The Post, were not the intended surveillance targets.” Additionally, “[n]early half of the surveillance files, a strikingly high proportion, contained names, e-mail addresses or other details that the NSA marked as belonging to U.S. citizens or residents.”
Month: July 2014
Austrian Economics for Kids by C.Jay Engel
Your Kickstarter Sucks said it best:
fuck you and the fantasy rearden metal alloy train you rode in on
Personal Handwritten Note From Me
So, this guy wants $12 to hand write a postcard translated by google translate.
Receive a handwritten note from me, in a language you choose, as long as it’s on Google Translate, which I will use for the translating
Corporate Spying On Non-Profits
In the age of innocence that was brought to an end by Edward Snowden’s revelations, we broadly knew of three kinds of surveillance: the classic kind, by countries against other countries; the industrial kind, by companies against companies; and – the most recent addition – the Google/Facebook kind, carried out by companies against their customers. Snowden made us aware that countries also carried out large-scale surveillance against huge numbers of their own citizens, the vast majority of whom had done nothing to warrant that invasion of their privacy. But there’s a fifth kind of surveillance that has largely escaped notice, even though it represents a serious danger for democracy and freedom: spying carried out by companies against non-profit organizations whose work threatens their profits in some way.
Soap free of chemicals?
What does this person think chemicals are, really?
I suggest anyone actually wondering what chemicals are, to head over to wikipedia.
Chemicals doesn’t have anything to do with synthetic substances.
Who needs chemicals?! Try hand-made soap from fresh, locally sourced ingredients like goats’ milk, honey, and herbs.
You need chemicals, in order to make it.
On How UK’s Political Elite Shoved Through A Data Retention Bill
Politicians are supposed to represent the will of the public. It rarely works that way in practice, but the strongest demonstration of that may be what’s happening in the UK with this new data retention bill. We wrote about it earlier, but MP Tom Watson has more details on how this is an “erosion of political trust,” in which leaders of multiple parties in Parliament worked together to do a deal that clearly goes against the will of the public, and then sought to shove it through with no debate at all.
Half Life 3
Valve is usually pretty benign when it comes to their fans, but I seriously doubt if they’d allow just anyone to create “Half Life 3”, with that name.
I really can’t see…
… why we should be paying for other peoples gaming computers.
Nancy would like to stream the game. Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft but her computer is unable to handle the game.
Nancy has just graduated from Boston University and now is unemployed. She is currently studying for the Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) but when stressed she plays Hearthstone on her old computer. The computer runs very slow and is barely successful at running the game. She enjoys the game so much that she wishes to stream the game on twitch.tv to show her enjoyment to others. However in order to do so she is required to get a more powerful computer that is able to run the game. She is currently unemployed (still searching for a job) therefore unable to afford a new computer herself.
If the goal were to be met, Nancy will celebrate by doing a full 12 hour non-stop stream.
The Jeffrey Baldwin case
I found two articles that tell the story of DC Comics refusing to license the Superman mark to be used on a Jeffrey Baldwin statue, and the different angles used highlight how a story almost always has two sides to it:
Techdirt: DC Comics Refuses To Let Superman Logo Adorn The Headstone Of A Young Child Who Was Starved To Death
The Gutters: The Truth Amongst The Outrage