I personally believe that the efforts individuals make to better understand things, like computer technology, then living in the "information age" will leave that individual with a greater sense of security--And wouldnt that individual be in a greater position to lead the rest of society toward whatever might be better? Like a security expert speaking out against TIA with a solid argument?
The problem with that arguement is that the only people that are more secure are the people that are in the know. And since we as citizens don't ave access to the info ala TIA we aren't in the know. ie.
Dude! Skateboarding is not a Crime!
Actual I would support getting rid of them as I ride street (bmx) and the the damn thrashers will hog a nice grind rail like nobody's business...
Fuck George Lucas. Fuck him up his his stupid ass.
With TPM and then Clones this man has systematically tore down a part of my childhood. So excuse me if I don't sysmpathize with his untelented lard ass.
I agree. While I'm not for the death of networks like Kaaza. If this forces us to use 'smarter' networks (freenet) then its a good thing. Just like what the death of Napster did.
The historians can't seem to settle whether to call this one "The Third Net War" (or the fourth), or whether "The First P2P War" fits better. We just call it "The **AA War." Everything up to then and still later were "incidents," "patrols" or "police actions."...
Dude! Skateboarding is not a Crime! Actual I would support getting rid of them as I ride street (bmx) and the the damn thrashers will hog a nice grind rail like nobody's business...
Fuck George Lucas. Fuck him up his his stupid ass. With TPM and then Clones this man has systematically tore down a part of my childhood. So excuse me if I don't sysmpathize with his untelented lard ass.
dude I'm going to put all these ideas in Fizzer the Twizzer, my shizzer.
I agree. While I'm not for the death of networks like Kaaza. If this forces us to use 'smarter' networks (freenet) then its a good thing. Just like what the death of Napster did.
The historians can't seem to settle whether to call this one "The Third Net War" (or the fourth), or whether "The First P2P War" fits better. We just call it "The **AA War." Everything up to then and still later were "incidents," "patrols" or "police actions."...