at&t has servers that copy every text message, every IM, every conversation you have on the internetmove to the US, at least here you have a chance to be a citizen versus a subject
ya, never said i dont like that shit eitherat&t has servers that copy every text message, every IM, every conversation you have on the internet
i believe they are based in san francisco
dude, that may be the funniest thing i have ever read on riu. fucking hilariousas soon as i broke up with my girlfriend, i got ads for single christian bitches (like wtf they dont put out, why am i interested in that)
youre funnyThis is also on the horizon for USA as well.
The US is trying to take over the world with this new world order bull shit
we are all fucked, check out these threads
https://www.rollitup.org/toke-n-talk/269046-make-these-last-holidays-count.html
https://www.rollitup.org/politics/269376-codex-plans-make-vitimin-c.html
https://www.rollitup.org/politics/270132-coming-nutricide.html
Hows your night goin Bud¿youre funny
while big brother set up shop long ago in the u.k., the u.s. isn't far behind. it seems i'm hearing more and more often that privacy isn't a right and that the necessities of national security and public safety trump any rights that the individual may have. the good of society is being taken out of the hands of the people and placed under the control of an elite at an ever increasingly global level. hidden behind the rhetoric of fairness and humaneness, there is the shadow of authoritarian control and the rise of global dominion. wherever the individual is free of the probing eye of authority, there is the possibility of sedition against the state and this will not be tolerated for much longer. every conversation we have (over whatever means of conveyance), every place we go, every site we visit and word we post can be scrutinized and traced back to its point of origin. stored away for future use, all but our most personal thoughts and private face to face conversations can be used against us if the state finds that it has that need.That's pretty much the end of privacy.
I agree. The U.S. isn't far behind at all. Where I live they are already putting up those surveillance cameras in high crime areas. We are at the threshold of computers being able to do the monitoring and decision making for us. Before it was a matter of not being able to effectively put enough eyes behind those cameras to watch everything that goes on. We are almost there. George Orwell was off by a couple of decades but he was pretty correct with his assessment of what was to come. A warning in the guise of fiction goes unheeded by the masses.while big brother set up shop long ago in the u.k., the u.s. isn't far behind. it seems i'm hearing more and more often that privacy isn't a right and that the necessities of national security and public safety trump any rights that the individual may have. the good of society is being taken out of the hands of the people and placed under the control of an elite at an ever increasingly global level. hidden behind the rhetoric of fairness and humaneness, there is the shadow of authoritarian control and the rise of global dominion. wherever the individual is free of the probing eye of authority, there is the possibility of sedition against the state and this will not be tolerated for much longer. every conversation we have (over whatever means of conveyance), every place we go, every site we visit and word we post can be scrutinized and traced back to its point of origin. stored away for future use, all but our most personal thoughts and private face to face conversations can be used against us if the state finds that it has that need.
we have not only allowed this, we have demanded it. we wanted safety and our governments have provided its illusion. we wanted plenty and our governments have provided that illusion as well. we have asked for too much from others and the price we pay is the inability to fend for ourselves. we have been willing to sacrifice the individual for security and comfort and are in danger of losing what makes humanity so special. bees exist in hives and cattle in herds, but people have the capacity to survive and thrive as individuals within the society. we are giving that up for the illusions offered by our would-be masters.
What does Nasa got to do with it? lol! The U.K. has made a policy to spy on every communication it's citizens make. And they are telling the people that they are doing it! The U.S. is spying on it's citizens but probably not absolutely everything. Case in point, the whack job who just shot up Ft. Hood. If they were watching all of us they should've been able to catch this asshole.the U.S. government already spies on citizens without a warrant or anything...
it became commonplace practice under the Bush administration.... yeah, BUSH approved of spying on citizens, without any regards to what the constitution says... he essentially read the constitution, laughed, wiped his ass with it, then said, FUCK THIS, spy on any abzullah, mohammed, etc. etc. etc. until you catch me a terrorist...
this isn't coming to the US, it's already here.... it's called the NSA.
i realize that blaming baby bush for all the problems of the world is the cool thing to do, but enough is enough. that doofus has been and will continue to be the scapegoat for anyone with an axe to grind, but our dilemma started long before he was even born. since shortly after the constitution was written, the powerful have been finding ways around it and attempting to pervert its meaning and no one person or party has been any more to blame than the people themselves. we have deluded ourselves into believing that our security is more important than our freedom, our comfort worth the loss of our independence.the U.S. government already spies on citizens without a warrant or anything...
it became commonplace practice under the Bush administration....
I know. I was being a smartass. Oh well it wasn't that funny of a joke anyway.NSA is not NASA, it stands for National Security Agency. http://www.nsa.gov/