Richard Dawkins Opposes UK Cinemas Censoring Church's Advert Before Star Wars (theguardian.com)
An anonymous reader writes: A controversy has erupted in the United Kingdom following the decision of the three theatre chains that control 80% of the movie screens in the country to refuse to show an advertisement for the Anglican church. The 60 second advertisement is for a new Church of England website, JustPray.uk, the purpose of which is to encourage people to pray. The Odeon, Cineworld and Vue chains refused to allow it to be shown due to a policy not allowing political or religious advertising. Richard Dawkins supported the Church on free speech grounds, stating, "I still strongly object to suppressing the ads on the grounds that they might 'offend' people. If anybody is 'offended' by something so trivial as a prayer, they deserve to be offended." Dawkins was joined by fellow atheist, Conservative MP Sarah Wollaston in backing the right of the Church to show the advertisement, stating "As a gentle atheist, I'm not offended by Church screening gentle cinema adverts; we shouldn't reject our deep cultural roots in Christianity." The assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain said he was "flabbergasted" by the decision to refuse to show it. The National Secular Society found it a "perfectly reasonable decision." The Anglican church had wanted to show the advert prior to the screening of the upcoming Star Wars movie given the expected large, multi-generational audiences.
If the cinemas really had a policy not to allow religious or political advertising in place before they were asked to run the ads, and if they've applied that policy consistently, then I don't think they should run the ads.
I wouldn't particularly be bothered by such an ad even though I'm a Dawkins-esque strong atheist. But if you're going to have a policy it has to be applied uniformly.
Free speech is only about governmental intrusion and obstacle to speech. This is not about private person (cinema) telling the church , "no we do not want your advertising". It is incredible how many people bring "free speech!" up in conversation where it is not warranted.
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
let us prey....
I watched the ad, and just like the Anglican Church itself, it's pretty wishy-washy and ineffective. I expect audiences are more likely to hoot with derision than get offended.
Not content with being reviled near-universally, Dawkins seeks the ire of the few crazy extremists who still take him seriously.
Required reading for internet skeptics
Oh Darth Vader-sama, I pray you do not alter the deal further.
...what really will happen is that in a few years the advertisements will be full of religious propaganda and proselytizing. Allowing _one_ advertisement is fine, but it opens the door to a whole slew of continually-worsening ads. And being "protected religious speech" they will contain other messages, such as anti-Israel, pro-Sharia, neo-Nazi, and anti-Muslim messages. The competition will be fierce!
Of course, the same could be said about any type of advertising. But by experience the religious nutcases' ads will be far worse than the for-profit corporations' ads.
It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
so what? we already have paid religious ads on TV, radio, newspapers in the USA. it doesn't matter
And even that doesn't mean that *I* (or any other entity) need to retransmit your speech. It's just a guess, but if this were an Islamic or Jewish religious message I'd bet Mr Dawkins wouldn't have much to say about it being blocked.
NO religious or political messages is a reasonable policy so long as they don't start picking and choosing.
Personally of rather see no f***ing ads at all. In a theatre where I paid money to see a show, 10-15m of ads is disgusting.
You can run whatever ads you want in the cinema and I don't give a rat's ass.
What I hate is the blatant insertion of ads IN THE FILMS. GAAH!
The difference is that you can change the channel on the TV, change the radio station or read a different article in the newspaper. In a movie theatre there is no option to turn the advertisement off. The audience is captive.
Isn't it also the right of the theater to show what they want to show? Its their establishment, free speech goes both ways.
If people feel that they are being biased than you can always just not go to those theater chains and withhold your cash from them.
For one, this is a private entity, and they are censoring on a fair grounds. But, probably more importantly, cinema is different that most other media in this regard in that you have a pseudo captive audience. You, as a movie watcher, can't change the channel, can't mute it, and even walking away is going to take you probably more time than the ad runs for. With religion being one of those things that can REALLY upset people, I think the chains are doing the only intelligent thing they can in the situation, avoid it entirely.
don't let it stink smelly buttt.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Most religions don't specifically use the Lord's Prayer.
As long as the Church of Satan can run their ad too..... yep, and that's why they have such a policy.
Pray for God to miraculously switch the advertising disks.
The advertising slot right before Star Wars has got to be just about the most valuable ad space in all of cinema. I'd guess it's more likely that the Anglican church did not want to or could not afford to (They're not exactly Catholic rich, after all.) pay the rate that the slot is worth; and the "don't want to offend people"is some PR flack's notion of trying to save face and make the theater chain look less capitalist.
Imagine all the people...
According to the post, we have the opinions of the Anglican church, Richard Dawkins, Sarah Wollaston, the Muslim Council of Britain and even the National Secular Society...but has anyone asked the Jedi?
"I still strongly object to suppressing the ads on the grounds that they might 'offend' people. If anybody is 'offended' by something so trivial as a prayer, they deserve to be offended."
How about the on the grounds that the ads might persuade more people to become theist? As an atheist, that is all the reason I need to suppress the ads.
From now on, after the C of E tripe we'll have the catholic one, evangelical, muslim, buddhist, etc. All before the movie kicks in. And you thought the movie experience was already painful.
...with worrying about possibly getting someone offended. I'm totally with Dawkins on this one.
I'm running AdBlock on my glasses.
#DeleteChrome
If the net is cast that wide and applies to religious and political potential ads, then I don't see Dawkins problem. It doesn't sound like they're taking a stance against that church, it sounds like they want to provide a certain experience to their costumers, and that ad didn't meet those requisites. There's nothing to agree or disagree with here other than whether their criteria for ads are beneficial for their bottom line or not.
That is how we get commercial broadcasts.
My money pays for the movie.
So I oppose ALL ads (trailers are not ads) shown before movies unless the ad means the movie is free.
If the theater wants t pay me my billing rate (2 hr min) I will view the ad before the movie.
As it is I quit going to theaters when they started showing ads for Jeep and Pepsi. I made an exception for teh first Star Wars movie and saw Jar Jar, I also made an exception the day my wife's dad dies and she needed cheering up (the Incredibles had no Jar Jar so it was a much better experience).
Everyone needs to stop going to movies if ads are shown, this double dipping and customer abuse is wrong. Just buy the Blu Ray/DVD when it comes out.
It's the Star Wars movie. They're just asking you to pray that it'll be better than the last three.
I'm a strong atheist, and I'd do that shit.
How about the on the grounds that the ads might persuade more people to become theist? As an atheist, that is all the reason I need to suppress the ads.
So ... you don't believe that atheism can adequately compete in the marketplace of ideas and thus the only way it can succeed is by forcefully silencing the competition?
It must be difficult for you...
Required reading for internet skeptics
"What Dawkins is talking about is the principle, the ideal of free speech. "
But even the most far out ideal of free speech DO NOT require private party to endorse and repeat your own opinion or speech. This is why free speech , freedom of expression , liberté d'expression and such like are always about governmental restriction. You and me and any other have no right to force other private party to carry our speech or get it heard. I repeat, the church, Dawkins, me aepervius or you nemyst have a right to express ourselves without governmental interference, but we have no right whatsoever to force a 3rd private party to carry our speech.
This is essentially why this is not a free speech issue no matter what you look at it. Private party may at any moment, or any time, chose what they publish or show (usually this become a bit more complicated when you look at communication lines and common carrier rule, but here with cinema it is clear cut).
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
Dawkins has been hard to pin down lately.
It's not true that you're in a captive audience. When I'm in a theater, a religious commercial presents me with an opportunity- to take a dump before the movie starts.
Free speech concerns do not apply to private companies, and in fact forcing a company to carry some speech it does not want to carry would be a violation of its rights too. But that is true only when there is competition and alternatives available for the patrons. When group of companies that collectively control a significant chunk of their market act in a discriminatory manner they can be compelled. This was the logic used in enforcing de segregation and civil rights laws on private companies all over Jim Crow south.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
Crom, I have never prayed to you before. I have no tongue for it. No one, not even you, will remember if we were good men or bad. Why we fought, or why we died. All that matters is that two stood against many. That's what's important! Valor pleases you, Crom... so grant me one request. Grant me revenge! And if you do not listen, then to HELL with you!
Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
If they can deny tho screen that ad, can a baker refuse to bake a gay cake?
How can one possibly be opposed to a church that was founded by someone that wanted to divorce and murder his wives? The church of England shows the true value of religion.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
I recall a controversy here in the US when an atheist group wanted to run some Superbowl/subway advertisements. Religious groups instantly began claiming persecution. I'm all for allowing one religious group to advertise, as long as they don't have a hissy fit whenever another group chooses to do so.
When you gather a bunch of strangers in an enclosed space and you want everyone to sit quietly and enjoy the show, you don't throw out the suggestion that they start talking about a hot-button issue like religion or politics. People get defensive about that stuff, and it's common enough for people to talk about the ad that just played. I doubt many people would be offended by the ad itself, but it's easy enough to imagine some person in the audience seeing the ad, and in the quiet moment after the ad muttering something about religion X, or politician Y, when they didn't realize the guy sitting next to them is a die-hard X-worshipping Y-supporter.
maybe if java multicore designed the ad, it would b okay for everyone. java multicore has Object methods and can design ads to be nice. you need java, though, and like 3-cores. or more.
While I appreciate Richard's rational observations, about this matter of principle I'd rather not have to put up with any form of annoyance if I have to pay for it.
Then again perhaps religious advertising before a movie would help you suspend your sense of disbelief thereby making the cinematic fiction more immersive.
Well, just to start with, they could cut that short by limiting it to ads for the official state religion.
(Do please remember that we're discussing England here, not the US.)
With the attention this is getting in the media, they have reached a wider audience than even Star Wars would have given them.
And there's the miracle.
So why not?
Obligatory.
imagine the jedi jihad when they offend all those force users.
All the Church needs to do is turn this into a full-length film, then this can be the trailer.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
So what happens when there are three of these ads during the ad run? Are you going to save your dump for each time?
I'm all for it if the Pastafarian and Satanist commercials get accepted on equal footing. Though they might equally all get banned as 'non-violent extremism'. The Islamic commercials might also fall afoul of terrorism laws just because, in the present context there. The list goes on and on. Heaven's Gate? Those Solarishny groupieß in the Alps?
3D goggles that go dark when material offensive to you is displayed! No need to answer a lot of questions or make choices. You already have a preferences profile out there on the internet. Just like that credit card behavior tracking AI. Isn't this going to be fun?
If anybody is 'offended' by something so trivial as a prayer, they deserve to be offended.
I once read a story about a kid who fell into a sinkhole in the sand, which then filled up, burying him alive. Many people tried to dig the kid out, but the sand, being sand, kept filling back in. The mother basically just stood there praying that her kid be ok. Which sounds fine on the surface, until you start to think "gee.. maybe if she stopped praying and started trying to think up how to keep the sand from falling back into the hole, maybe she could actually save her kid." In otherwords, prayer hindered her ability to make a difference in saving her kid.
Then of course there are all the people who forgo modern medicine for their children in favor of prayer.
I'm sorry, Mr Dawkins, but prayer is not trivial, and we should absolutely call it out as the bullshit that it is.
anyone that knows advertisers (or publishers, in this case) know that the premium spot (which a 60s ad before the season block buster is) will never the turned down. Those are the bread winers for any ad publisher.
what those premium spots do have are extras. i bet this one has a "for 10% more you get the premium spot with some controversy!"
Rationalism has never been able to compete with the lunacy of the masses.
Original poster is probably a kid. Once he grows up and becomes more secure in his lack of belief he will realize that the peace of freedom from religion is much better than any religion. That's why freedom from religion is the fastest growing "belief" in the world even though their isn't an active dogma that says you must convert others to atheism. It happens because it does win in the marketplace of ideas. Once he grows up and becomes more secure he will realize that too.
Religion does not need to be advertised, it's already ruined enough lives.
In two years, my son will have a confirmation in a church. A Church is a wooden building with a big statue of skinny dead guy (generally believed to be white and British) dangling from a cross run by a man wearing a dress for those of you who didn't know. He will have a confirmation because drinking some wine, eating a cookie and getting paid large sums of money to put on a stage performance where no one sees anything but his back is not a bad gig for a kid if he/she can get it. I remember being in a school play where I pretended to be a great roman leader. I figure my kid can pretend to be a Christian for 10 minutes. Besides, it'll make his grandparents happy and they're very old an deserve to hope for at least one child who might believe in things like Santa Claus and invisible super-beings who can create entire universes in 7 days but can't make British comedy funny.
...."
I am forced to wonder however if the placement of these ads, while harmless in themselves are being rejected mainly for the same reasons the Anglican Church threw a tantrum over Harry Potter. I remember them being hell-bent against Harry Potter because it made witches seem to be good.
Now, a new film which from the trailers leads me to feel like it's a film based heavily on reintroducing the Jedi "religion" to a new generation in a culture of heathens who seem somewhat similar to English pagans. While I'm far to lazy to Google it, I recall reading that the Jedi Church has quite a few members in England. While the majority of members joined it to simply list a religion as their association which wasn't an actual religion, this movie could seem very threatening to the Anglican Church.
To be fair though, watching an advertisement about what I still believe must be the absolute silliest and meaningless tradition of most religions... prayer that is, it's pretty harmless in itself.
I wonder however if we should worry about the next real issue which would be that this would in fact open the door for the English Church of the Jedi sponsored advertisement should be allowed to also remind people to vote... or donate money to charities like Make a Wish. Something like "If you were a member of the Church of the Jedi, instead of paying for wine and cookies and candles, you could direct your tax money to meaningful charities like
At the end maybe a silly joke like "You'll still have to pay for men in dresses"
Let me get this straight so I understand what you're talking about.
Free speech requires freedom from governmental restriction. That a private entity cannot create an environment/ideal of free speech by simply saying they will devote resources to anyone and anything that wants to be heard, because that would not be free speech.
Because if that's what you're saying, well, you can have your opinion. But it's still just plain wrong.
Nope, you don't get it. GP didn't claim that we had a right to force a third party to carry our speech. If Facebook or whatever ban certain topics or remove comments that they don't like, this is a restriction on freedom of speech on their platform. Of course it is their platform and they should be able to do this if they so wish, but it is restriction of free speech nonetheless and users can certainly complain and take their business elsewhere.
Freedom of speech means you can mostly say what you want free from legal reprisal provided it is not damaging or defaming someone. What it isn't is the right to force your way on to anyone's podium in order to present your message.
I 100% disagree with Dawkins on this one. There is no freedom of speech issue here.
BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
Of course. The slippery slope! This can only lead to infamy! Dogs and Cats living together!
...what really will happen is that in a few years the advertisements will be full of religious propaganda and proselytizing.
Only if they work.
Anyway, I'd rather have pro-sharia advertising than another ad for heartburn medicine. The entertainment factor would be higher.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Of course - wait a minute, which one was the lunacy again? I've forgotten.
What is surprising is the apparent support from the secular society. That should have been the headline.
How about the on the grounds that the ads might persuade more people to become theist? As an atheist, that is all the reason I need to suppress the ads.
So ... you don't believe that atheism can adequately compete in the marketplace of ideas and thus the only way it can succeed is by forcefully silencing the competition?
It must be difficult for you...
Strawman.
It's entirely obvious that
1) Ads convince people of things.
2) People are opposed to things with sufficient conviction that they would not want to see ads supporting that thing.
3) The "marketplace of ideas" is not a winner-takes-all, which is why for example there is more than one religion.
How would you feel about an ad supporting teen promiscuity, terrorism, a particular murder-for-hire business, etc? Or don't you believe that non-murder can adequately compete in the marketplace of ideas and thus the only way it can succeed is by forcefully silencing the competition?
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
Where to begin ...
Strawman.
Nonsense.
It's entirely obvious that
1) Ads convince people of things.
2) People are opposed to things with sufficient conviction that they would not want to see ads supporting that thing.
3) The "marketplace of ideas" is not a winner-takes-all, which is why for example there is more than one religion.
Yes, perfectly obvious to everyone. How this relates to my post is a mystery.
How would you feel about an ad supporting [...]
How I feel doesn't matter. That cannot be considered sufficient justification for denying others their rights. You're still free to personally oppose it, speak in opposition, produce your own ads offering a counterpoint -- just like they are. That's the nice thing about the freedom of speech. It protects everyone, not just those with which some authority happens to agree.
When you act to suppress speech with which you disagree, you're tacitly admitting that your own ideas aren't capable of competing adequately on equal footing. This is no different than the opposition to atheists ads you've seen before. One group is terrified that they'll end up marginalized if a competing viewpoint gains wide acceptance. It's cowardly, among other things.
A far more courageous, and reasonable, response to ads promoting ideas you dislike is to counter with your own ads. It's simply foolish to say "I'm justified in suppressing your speech because I disagree with your ideas" as the other side can offer the exact same justification. When you're the minority, doubly so!
Let's try this: What would your response be if there was opposition from CoE members to an atheist ad being shown at the same theater? Would you still agree that they're justified in suppressing that speech? Replace "atheism" in my post with "Christianity", "Judaism", "Islam", or whatever. Would your response to my post have been different? Why do you think that's the case?
Required reading for internet skeptics
given the state of the political landscape in the UK, perhaps prayer is the only thing that might help.
And yes, IAAA (I Am An Atheist)
When you act to suppress speech with which you disagree, you're tacitly admitting that your own ideas aren't capable of competing adequately on equal footing.
That's the point where your post becomes a strawman. When you act to suppress speech with which you disagree, you're deciding that the negative effects of that speech outweigh the negative effects of suppressing that speech. Not some nonsense about losing in the marketplace of ideas, and definitely not some nonsense about "the only way it can succeed is by forcefully silencing the competition".
Incidentally, there is no country where you can speak freely without your speech being forcefully suppressed.
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
These were already suggested in the late 70s -- peril sensitive sunglasses.
At the time it was a reflection on the (then revolutionary and new) photosensitive lenses
What does God need with an advertising campaign?
When you act to suppress speech with which you disagree, you're [...]
Abandoning the same principles upon which you yourself depend. Acting directly against your own best interests. All because of ...
the negative effects of that speech
I see. Fear. Pure and simple fear. Fear of ideas is very dangerous, which is why protected speech is so important. You depend on it greatly, yet you'd deny others the same liberty -- because all the what-if's have you terrified.
Not some nonsense about losing in the marketplace of ideas
Don't be foolish. If you thought ideas with which you disagree couldn't out-compete your own, you wouldn't be so damn terrified of other peoples thoughts, opinions, and ideas. Certainly not so afraid that you'd act against your own best interest, abandon important principles, and actively suppress the rights of others.
You don't worry about the content of the mad ravings of a crazy man on a street corner, nor something more wide-spread like a serial killers manifesto published in the newspaper, because you know that no one will take their ideas seriously. Their ideas simply can't compete. You do, however, care a great deal about the mad ravings of public figures as they are seriously considered by a large number of people.
Incidentally, there is no country where you can speak freely without your speech being forcefully suppressed.
That's dishonest at best. There are limitations on speech here. None of which, you'll note, have anything to do with ideology. Competing ideologies, after all, are what are under discussion. I'm free to write and publish all sorts of vile nonsense promoting the legalization of murder-for-hire services, pro-terrorism propaganda, and, yes, even pro teen promiscuity pamphlets.
Presumably, you'd actively suppress those ideas as well. You certainly seem to think I would. The difference between you and I, obviously, is that I'm not terrified by the ideas and viewpoints of others. So, no, I would not act to suppress those ideas.
I'm also aware of the dangers that comes from suppressing speech. How much have you, and this modern atheist resurgence in general, benefited from that liberty? What do you think the consequences would have been had the politically powerful majority been able to take forceful action to suppress those ideas? Don't you think they strongly believe that "the negative effects of that speech outweigh the negative effects of suppressing that speech" and would thus be justified by your own reasoning?
You're afraid of competing ideas, by your own admission. Assuming that you don't also fear ideas that have no chance of success, you clearly don't believe your ideas can compete favorably in the marketplace of ideas as evidenced by that same fear.
Required reading for internet skeptics
Pray to Allah!
Durkadurkadurka!
(If that were the case, you'd see christian heads exploding in ragefear)
And what about those adverts telling people that it's true, there is no god, so get over it? The christians didn't like THAT advert. Apparently only SOME things should be in adverts, and if you ask them, they will tell you what you're allowed to show.
And that's what religion has done. Indoctrinate the children so that when they grow up, they indoctrinate THEIR children.
If the religions can't wait until the mind is able to browse the marketplace of ideas and insists on getting in there before critical reasoning arrives AND STILL REFUSES to let any competing theory in (try teaching god doesn't exist in school and see how much the christians like the free marketplace of ideas), then why the hell do they think they have an omnipotent being on their side?
Religion forcefully silences the competition.
But that's FINE, because you were indoctrinated to think so as a child.
THEN you'd have a point. As it is, they claim it's fact. I don't think christians'd let the advert on if it said "the following is about a fictional character", would they.
Agreed: the Audience Is Captive.
My solution to this several years ago was to bring my MP3 player, a set of bud headphone and crank it. I close my eyes once the commercials start. 15 minutes later, glance to see if they're done. Not Done? Take another 1 minute nap.
Sometimes the commercials are so LOUD that it bleeds past my ear buds. Not enough to understand, but enough to know that the hollywood hype machine is still running. Once that stops, I can safely resume watching the show.
My 2c.
The only thing offensive about any of this, is that they show any ads at all. I paid to see the movie, not your ads. Now, if you want to show ads at the beginning and that lets me in for free, then I'm all for it. Otherwise, bugger off.
give a shit what Dawkins' opinion is.
Plenty of people will have moral or philosophical or religious objection to other kinds of products/services/careers advertised in theatre ads. For example, the armed forces advertise. products that cause the massive increase in diabetes in the US advertise. bankruptcy mill lawyers advertise. etc. etc.
tough shit, suck it up and endure, then enjoy your movie.
Nice goalpost change. The theatre has a right to not make their customers "suck it up". I belong to a group where religion and politics are forbidden subjects. It is quite pleasant.
I do not think customers should expect to pay for any advertising.
It is bad when they show previews for other movies well into the posted starting time of the movie should be a violation of the contract of sale. But showing advertising for unrelated companies and services while I wait for the delivery of service I paid for... that very unethical.
This is the primary reason I stopped going to theatres and cancelled cable television:
Anyone who still pays for their own advertising is lost in the past.
And any company that extracts profit from both advertisers and consumers will die under this model.
what right? theatre has right to sell advertisement space; don't like it don't go there.
I support banning showing ANY ads before a movie if I have to pay for the movie. If watching the movie is free, then go ahead and show me ads.
theatre has right to sell advertisement space
The theater also had a right to not advertisement space to any segment that chose as long as they do not discriminate within that segment. For example they could not take Anglican advertisements but refuse Catholic advertisements.
You missed the point of this whole discussion. This theater chain does not sell advertising time to any religious/political organization. Some say they should be forced to as it is censorship while I, and many others, say they should have the choice. If they chose to sell to religious advertisers then your "suck it up" argument would be valid. That is not the case here. This is a discussion as to whether or not the theaters should be forced to sell to religious/political advertisers. I say no.
"secretary at MalwareBytes took a look at his source code & said it looked all good" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
Mr. Steven Burn of Malwarebytes
"yes I've seen the code & yes it is safe." FROM http://forum.hosts-file.net/vi...
---
"we should avoid your crap it looks like malware." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Monday November 02, 2015 @03:52PM (#50850445)
60++ reputable sources say different:
64-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
+
32-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
&
Installer-> http://f.virscan.org/APKHostsF...
MalwareBytes' hpHosts Admin (MalwareBytes employee) hosts & recommends it -> http://hosts-file.net/?s=Downl...
---
"privilege escalation's a bad thing" - by Coren22 on Tuesday September 22, 2015
How else programmatically update it?
"requires elevation to write hosts" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday September 23, 2015
Hypocrite later admits it - hosts do vs. WFP/SFP not my ware. Users set it not programmatic impersonation. Security wares need it.
Coren22 IMPERSONATES RESPECTED MEMBERS OF THE SECURITY COMMUNITY http://slashdot.org/comments.p...
---
"MiTM... his software provides" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
Hardcoded favs users provide = REVERSE DNS verified & my ware filters 5,500++ false positives - security site hosts data = false positives filtered.
---
"Apk doesn't think DNS servers are worth running & believes Microsoft Active Directory can run w/out DNS." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday October 27, 2015
Show us where I say it? Not illogic logic but where I say it. I say AD needs internal DNS far back as 2007
http://forums.tweaktown.com/wi...
See "To warn users who have ActiveDirectory/AD LAN-WAN setups to NOT use external DNS servers" there.
APK
P.S.=>
"modding you down for trolling in your signature" - by Dog-Cow (21281) on Wednesday November 25, 2015
Dog-Cow's (old acc't. no new sockpuppet from you) thoughts of your signatures about me
... apk
Coren22 IMPERSONATES RESPECTED MEMBERS OF THE SECURITY COMMUNITY http://slashdot.org/comments.p...
---
"privilege escalation's a bad thing" - by Coren22 on Tuesday September 22, 2015
How else programmatically update it?
"requires elevation to write hosts" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday September 23, 2015
Hypocrite later admits it - hosts do vs. WFP/SFP not my ware. Users set it not programmatic impersonation. Security wares need it.
---
"secretary at MalwareBytes took a look at his source code & said it looked all good" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
Mr. Steven Burn of Malwarebytes
"yes I've seen the code & yes it is safe." FROM http://forum.hosts-file.net/vi...
---
"we should avoid your crap it looks like malware." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Monday November 02, 2015 @03:52PM (#50850445)
60++ reputable sources say different:
64-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
+
32-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
&
Installer-> http://f.virscan.org/APKHostsF...
MalwareBytes' hpHosts Admin (MalwareBytes employee) hosts & recommends it -> http://hosts-file.net/?s=Downl...
---
"MiTM... his software provides" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
Hardcoded favs users provide = REVERSE DNS verified & my ware filters 5,500++ false positives - security site hosts data = false positives filtered.
---
"Apk doesn't think DNS servers are worth running & believes Microsoft Active Directory can run w/out DNS." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday October 27, 2015
Show us where I say it? Not illogic logic but where I say it. I say AD needs internal DNS far back as 2007
http://forums.tweaktown.com/wi...
See "To warn users who have ActiveDirectory/AD LAN-WAN setups to NOT use external DNS servers" there.
APK
P.S.=>
"modding you down for trolling in your signature" - by Dog-Cow (21281) on Wednesday November 25, 2015
Dog-Cow's (old acc't. no new sockpuppet from you) thoughts of your signatures about me
... apk
So then you'd have no problem with me going around saying, "I'll pay $1000 to anyone who would murder narcc" and wouldn't want me arrested if I did that? That is, after all, speech, and you don't believe the government should suppress speech, right? Or do you, perhaps, think the negative consequences of suppressing that sort of speech are less than the negative consequences of allowing it?
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
"I'll pay $1000 to anyone who would murder narcc" and wouldn't want me arrested if I did that?
That is, as you are already well aware, a completely different issue. An issue, I might add, that is completely unrelated to the one under discussion.
I'm not surprised, as you hinted at this earlier. I even took the time to preemptively address this in hopes that you wouldn't bother wasting everyone's time with pointless sophomoric nonsense. As I believe you already know this, I'm now very interested in seeing you respond to my earlier challenge, repeated below.
Getting back on topic: What would your response be if there was opposition from CoE members to an atheist ad being shown at the same theater? Would you still agree that they're justified in suppressing that speech? Replace "atheism" in my post with "Christianity", "Judaism", "Islam", or whatever. Would your response to my post have been different? Why do you think that's the case?
We can safely assume your response would have been different. I can tell you why, if you're interested. First, however, I'd like to see your honest response.
Required reading for internet skeptics
How would you feel about an ad supporting a particular murder-for-hire business?
How I feel doesn't matter. That cannot be considered sufficient justification for denying others their rights. You're still free to personally oppose it, speak in opposition, produce your own ads offering a counterpoint -- just like they are. That's the nice thing about the freedom of speech. It protects everyone, not just those with which some authority happens to agree.
So then you'd have no problem with me going around saying, "I'll pay $1000 to anyone who would murder narcc" and wouldn't want me arrested if I did that?
That is, as you are already well aware, a completely different issue. An issue, I might add, that is completely unrelated to the one under discussion.
Nope, I'm not seeing it. If you had been consistent and supported freedom of speech for all speech no matter the content, I would have respected you. Disagreed, but respected you. Just to be clear: I do believe that some speech is harmful and it would be beneficial to suppress, eg murder for hire offers, and as such I can't resent Mr Anonymous Coward his opinion that a similar thing holds true of commercial religious advertizing. That said, I do not trust any authority figure to make the distinction. In particular, people must be free to speak in support of illegal activities because otherwise bad laws can't be opposed.
I also consider media and communications companies to be a worse threat to free speech than government -- government can't stop you from speaking, can merely punish you afterwards, but the media and communications companies can directly censor your speech.
Going back to the first posts, all I have to say is "So ... you don't believe that narcc's life being worth more than $1000 can adequately compete in the marketplace of ideas and thus the only way it can succeed is by forcefully silencing the competition?"
Would your response to my post have been different [if it were an atheist ad being blocked instead]? We can safely assume your response would have been different. I can tell you why, if you're interested.
Is the reason because your post would have been different and therefore a different reply would have been appropriate?
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
Nope, I'm not seeing it
I think you do.
In particular, people must be free to speak in support of illegal activities because otherwise bad laws can't be opposed.
As I've already said, there is no issue with speaking in support of illegal activities. I took great pains to explain this to you, in anticipation of the nonsense in your previous post.
Is the reason because your post would have been different and therefore a different reply would have been appropriate?
My response would have been identical. Now, are you going to answer or not?
Required reading for internet skeptics
So ... you don't believe that narcc's life being worth more than $1000 can adequately compete in the marketplace of ideas and thus the only way it can succeed is by forcefully silencing the competition?
It must be difficult for you...
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
As I've said before, if you think murder for hire is acceptable, you're free to speak out in it's defense, form groups of like-minded people, and even lobby for its legality.
However, until such time as it is legal, acting on that belief will remain illegal. You can't legally offer or otherwise engage in those services. That is obviously not a free speech issue.
You know this already, yet despite my admonitions, you persist. Why? What could possibly motivate you here? Embarrassment?
Now, are you going to answer my question? I suspect not, as you know that you wouldn't have objected to my post at all. I bet you would have even nodded your head in agreement. The reason is obvious -- your post was not motivated by reason, as you imply, but by ideology.
Reason needs to be applied uniformly. It's useless otherwise.
Required reading for internet skeptics
Coren22 IMPERSONATES RESPECTED MEMBERS OF THE SECURITY COMMUNITY http://slashdot.org/comments.p...
---
"privilege escalation's a bad thing" - by Coren22 on Tuesday September 22, 2015
How else programmatically update it?
"requires elevation to write hosts" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday September 23, 2015
Hypocrite later admits it - hosts do vs. WFP/SFP not my ware. Users set it not programmatic impersonation. Security wares need it.
---
"secretary at MalwareBytes took a look at his source code & said it looked all good" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
Mr. Steven Burn of Malwarebytes
"yes I've seen the code & yes it is safe." FROM http://forum.hosts-file.net/vi...
---
"we should avoid your crap it looks like malware." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Monday November 02, 2015 @03:52PM (#50850445)
60++ reputable sources say different:
64-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
+
32-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
&
Installer-> http://f.virscan.org/APKHostsF...
MalwareBytes' hpHosts Admin (MalwareBytes employee) hosts & recommends it -> http://hosts-file.net/?s=Downl...
---
"MiTM... his software provides" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
Hardcoded favs users provide = REVERSE DNS verified & my ware filters 5,500++ false positives - security site hosts data = false positives filtered.
---
"Apk doesn't think DNS servers are worth running & believes Microsoft Active Directory can run w/out DNS." - by Coren22 (1625475) on Tuesday October 27, 2015
Show us where I say it? Not illogic logic but where I say it. I say AD needs internal DNS far back as 2007
http://forums.tweaktown.com/wi...
See "To warn users who have ActiveDirectory/AD LAN-WAN setups to NOT use external DNS servers" there.
APK
P.S.=>
"modding you down for trolling in your signature" - by Dog-Cow (21281) on Wednesday November 25, 2015
Dog-Cow's (old acc't. no new sockpuppet from you) thoughts of your signatures about me
... apk
This should be covered my legislation. Apparently, you can't mislead by, "including false or deceptive messages". https://www.gov.uk/marketing-a...
See subject stupid rookie noob: The word bridge is involved but I never said a BRIDGE specifically (& there's more ways than that that are less complex + faster - you're just TOO STUPID to FIGURE THEM OUT)... lol!
It's your assburgers outism literal readings that do you in every single time (damaged goods brain).
AlmostALLAdsBlocked is crippled by default & adblock doesn't do a FRACTION of what hosts do for FAR LESS no less -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p... from a higher cpu serviced level of operations MINUS addons detectability (& blockability easily by ClarityRAY) in kernelmode vs. less cpu serviced usermode (slower).
DNS has security issues hosts overcome & do better locally resolving for more speed than remote DNS provides (with less complexity by far as well as power & resources consumption) -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p...
APK
P.S.=> Keep trying your "phantasyland" THEORETICALS Coren22 - I'll stick to reality, & the reality is that ADS SERVED FROM THE SAME SITE DON'T PAY (which is why you don't see many IF ANY of them) since advertisers rightfully don't trust webmasters ALLEGED clickcounts - admen want to have control of that themselves & I don't blame them from THEIR SIDE on THEIR servers... apk/b
Is to bore everyone to tears with Unitarian Universalist ads until we can all agree that religious advertising is a terrible idea.