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BitTorrent Developers Introduce Comcast Busting Encryption


you didn't really think they'd win, did you?

Several BitTorrent developers have joined forces to propose a new protocol extension with the ability to bypass the BitTorrent interfering techniques used by Comcast and other ISPs. This new form of encryption will be implemented in BitTorrent clients including uTorrent, so Comcast subscribers are free to share again. [link]

This is our world now... the world of the electron and the switch, the beauty of the baud. We make use of a service already existing without paying for what could be dirt-cheap if it wasn't run by profiteering gluttons, and you call us criminals. We explore... and you call us criminals. We seek after knowledge... and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color, without nationality, without religious bias... and you call us criminals. You build atomic bombs, you wage wars, you murder, cheat, and lie to us and try to make us believe it's for our own good, yet we're the criminals.

Yes, I am a criminal. My crime is that of curiosity. My crime is that of judging people by what they say and think, not what they look like. My crime is that of outsmarting you, something that you will never forgive me for.

I am a hacker, and this is my manifesto. You may stop this individual, but you can't stop us all... after all, we're all alike.

Penny Arcade aptly describe Itunes Rentals for what they are: DIVX!


this movie rental may self destruct

I don't want to "rent" any media. If I'm gonna pay for media, I want to own the media. I don't want anybody telling me when I can watch said media. Even Jobs himself can go fuck himself.

DRM on that shit will be broken in a week anyway.

But still. The concept of "renting" a digital object while your hard drive contains all the bits, but does not have the magical key to fit in a magical lock is just ridiculous. If I have all the bits, why do I need your key or your lock?

How about this. You sell me all the bits, I pay once, and then I watch them, edit them, lend them to friends, etc, etc, basically whatever I want/can do with that media. In exchange, I'll let you keep whatever I paid you in the first place... forever. Yes that's right, forever. I get to keep the media. You get to keep my 5-10 bucks, and we never speak again.

I am a hacker, and this is my manifesto. You may stop this individual, but you can't stop us all... after all, we're all alike.

Pirate's Dilemma - the video

New Hampshire Primary Vote Fraud - It's the Machines, Stupid!

As the breathless sports coverage of the presidential primaries bursts around me this morning, I’m doing my best to resist surrendering to the contrived drama about “comeback kids” and the flying shrapnel of numbers and hold onto my troubled skepticism about the electoral process, or at least most of it.

First of all, before we get too enthusiastic about feminist solidarity or wax knowingly about New Hampshire Democrats’ traditional soft-heartedness toward the Clinton family, let’s ponder yet again the possibility of tainted results, which is such an unfun prospect most of the media can’t bear to remember that all the problems we’ve had with electronic voting machines — and Diebold machines in particular, which dominate New Hampshire polling places — remain unsolved.

Did the Hillary campaign really defy the pollsters? She had been trailing Barack Obama by 13 percentage points, 42 to 29, in a recent Zogby poll, as election watchdog Brad Friedman pointed out. And the weekend’s “rapturous packed rallies for Mr. Obama,” as the New York Times put it, “suggested Mrs. Clinton was in dire shape.”

So when she emerged from the Tuesday primary with an 8,000-vote and 3-percentage-point victory over Obama, perhaps — considering the notorious unreliability, not to mention hackability, of Diebold machines — the media might have hoisted a few red flags in the coverage, rather than immediately chalk the results up to Clinton’s tears and voter unpredictability. (Oh, if only more reporters considered red flags patriotic.)

The fact is, whatever actually happened in New Hampshire voting booths on Tuesday, our elections are horrifically insecure. For instance, Bev Harris, of the highly respected voting watchdog organization Black Box Voting, recently wrote that the Diebold 1.94w optical scan machines used in some 55 percent of New Hampshire precincts (representing more than 80 percent of the state’s voters) are “the exact same make, model and version hacked in the Black Box Voting project in Leon County (Florida)” a few years ago. They haven’t been upgraded; the security problems haven’t been fixed.

National, or at least media, denial about this situation doesn’t say much for the strength of our democracy. [link]

Reichmarshal Apple settles lawsuit with Think Secret -- by shutting them down

Free Speech isn't free, when you talk about Reichmarshall Apple and their top secret products.

PRESS RELEASE: Apple and Think Secret have settled their lawsuit, reaching an agreement that results in a positive solution for both sides. As part of the confidential settlement, no sources were revealed and Think Secret will no longer be published. Nick Ciarelli, Think Secret's publisher, said "I'm pleased to have reached this amicable settlement, and will now be able to move forward with my college studies and broader journalistic pursuits." [link]

I can imagine how this conversation went...

Apple: We'd like you to stop publishing and not talk about our products any more.

ThinkSecret: No, I have the right to continue publishing rumors and news about apple products on my website.

Apple: If you don't do what we tell you, we'll sue you.

ThinkSecret: So.

Apple: We are a huge corporation, you are just one person.

ThinkSecret: So.

Apple: We'll sue you, and your children and your grandchildren's children. We'll destroy your family and make you rue the day that you decided to publish rumors and news about our future products. (Products that we will one day pay people to promote, but then we'll call it advertising and it'll be okay.)

ThinkSecret: So.

Apple: Don't you get it kid? We're not the nice gadgets company you've read about. We're cold hard capitalists. We don't give a fuck about you and your life and your family. We'll fucking destroy you for talking about our products. (Before we release them, after we release them we call it evangelizing and then it's okay.)

ThinkSecret: I'm scared.

Apple: You should be. You think just because our logo used to be a smiling computer that we're some kinda "nice" computer company. You must be fucking dreaming. We'll rip out your throat, shit down your neck and turn your asshole inside out. We believe in nothing but profits. Nothing. Do you get me?


Just cause I'm smiling doesn't mean I won't Skullfuck you later

ThinkSecret: I think I'll stop publishing.

Apple: Good. Now say what we want you to say.

ThinkSecret: "I'm pleased to have reached this amicable settlement, and will now be able to move forward with my college studies and broader journalistic pursuits."


How bouts we close your website and calls it even?

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