Buy Needles And Syringes With No Prescription
M4B Store Banner
juicemasters
Riptropin Store banner
Generation X Bodybuilding Forum
Buy Needles And Syringes With No Prescription
Buy Needles And Syringes With No Prescription
Mysupps Store Banner
UGFREAK-banner-PM
PM-Ace-Labs
Ganabol Store Banner
Spend $100 and get bonus needles free at sterile syringes
Professional Muscle Store open now
sunrise2
pharmahgh
kinglab
ganabol2
Professional Muscle Store open now
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
savage
granabolic1
peptidex1
PCT-Banner-210x65
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
wuhan
azteca
STADAPM
dpharma
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
advertise1x
atech
advertise1x
advertise1x
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store
over 5000 supplements on sale at professional muscle store

All your internet activities to be monitored

Tom

Featured Member / Kilo Klub
Featured Member
Kilo Klub Member
Registered
Joined
Aug 19, 2004
Messages
3,573
US drafting plan to allow government access to any email or Web search RAW STORY
Published: Monday January 14, 2008







National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell is drawing up plans for cyberspace spying that would make the current debate on warrantless wiretaps look like a "walk in the park," according to an interview published in the New Yorker's print edition today.

Debate on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act “will be a walk in the park compared to this,” McConnell said. “this is going to be a goat rope on the Hill. My prediction is that we’re going to screw around with this until something horrendous happens.”

The article, which profiles the 65-year-old former admiral appointed by President George W. Bush in January 2007 to oversee all of America's intelligence agencies, was not published on the New Yorker's Web site.

McConnell is developing a Cyber-Security Policy, still in the draft stage, which will closely police Internet activity.

"Ed Giorgio, who is working with McConnell on the plan, said that would mean giving the government the autority to examine the content of any e-mail, file transfer or Web search," author Lawrence Wright pens.

“Google has records that could help in a cyber-investigation, he said," Wright adds. "Giorgio warned me, 'We have a saying in this business: ‘Privacy and security are a zero-sum game.'"

A zero-sum game is one in which gains by one side come at the expense of the other. In other words -- McConnell's aide believes greater security can only come at privacy's expense.

McConnell has been an advocate for computer-network defense, which has previously not been the province of any intelligence agency.

According to a 2007 conversation in the Oval Office, McConnell told President Bush, “If the 9/11 perpetrators had focused on a single US bank through cyber-attack and it had been successful, it would have an order of magnitude greater impact on the US economy.”

Bush turned to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, asking him if it was true; Paulson said that it was. Bush then asked to McConnell to come up with a network security strategy.

"One proposal of McConnell’s Cyber-Security Policy, which is still in the draft stage, is to reduce the access points between government computers and the Internet from two thousand to fifty," Wright notes. "He claimed that cyber-theft account for as much as a hundred billion dollars in annual losses to the American economy. 'The real problem is the perpetrator who doesn’t care about stealing—he just wants to destroy.'"

The infrastructure to tap into Americans' email and web search history may already be in place.

In November, a former technician at AT&T alleged that the telecom forwarded virtually all of its Internet traffic into a "secret room" to facilitate government spying.

Whistleblower Mark Klein said that a copy of all Internet traffic passing over AT&T lines was copied into a locked room at the company's San Francisco office -- to which only employees with National Security Agency clearance had access -- via a cable splitting device.

"My job was to connect circuits into the splitter device which was hard-wired to the secret room," Klein. said "And effectively, the splitter copied the entire data stream of those Internet cables into the secret room -- and we're talking about phone conversations, email web browsing, everything that goes across the Internet."

"As a technician, I had the engineering wiring documents, which told me how the splitter was wired to the secret room," Klein continued. "And so I know that whatever went across those cables was copied and the entire data stream was copied."

According to Klein, that information included Internet activity about Americans.

"We're talking about domestic traffic as well as international traffic," Klein said. Previous Bush administration claims that only international communications were being intercepted aren't accurate, he added.

"I know the physical equipment, and I know that statement is not true," he added. "It involves millions of communications, a lot of it domestic communications that they're copying wholesale."
 
i thought they can do that anyways im sure the cia/fbi has plenty of hackers working for em
 
if you dont have domestic connections, better secure them now.

for hay bales of course. :)
 
i am glad i dont use AAS anymore. i stopped simply because i felt the risk of doing so was beginning to outweigh the benefits. i urge you other young guys to reconsider your actions. i know a few guys who have felonies and they are not happy. job wise it makes it very difficult for them, which causes a lot of fights between them and thier spouses because of finances. think longterm here fellas!
 
THe more I read about government crackdowns in the U.S the more I am glad that I live in Europe.

No AAS witch-hunts over here and hopefully it stays that way.
 
?

Our goverment just won't stop will they. I bet i live to see a day that all our actions are monitored and controlled just as many other countries do. What r u turning into the next China or north Korea? We need to stand up for our rights as americans. It is starting to get ridiculous!
 
This sounds ludicrious! Surely/hopefully this thing will never come to fruition. What are lawmakers thinking about all of this? I'm sure they don't want the government knowing about their internet activities!

This law sounds like something China would do!
 
You may not care about your right to privacy as an American citizen, but if you do it's being stripped away at an alarming pace. Once the ability to spy on each and every private citizen's every move is in place we will cease to be truly free. Imagine what the Soviets under Stalin would have done with such technology. Think about this when you go to the polls.
 
Ironkey

If you're worried, try something like the Ironkey. Rock solid and can't be monitored. All traffic while using it is encrypted, therefore it can be intercepted all they wish and it won't do any good.

Also protects against keyloggers grabbing your userid and passwd. Just a kick ass tool all around.

https://www.ironkey.com/

-A
 
they can do anything they want anyways
 
This article is terrifying when you think about the scale of data processing involved. I work with high-performance hardware, like servers running Xeon 18 Core processors at 2.6GHz with 10.4GT UPI. It takes massive computing power like that to analyze the kind of traffic volume mentioned here. If the government really wants to scan every email and search in real-time, they must be building data centers filled with thousands of these high-core chips. It makes you realize that the same technology I use for business efficiency can be used for massive surveillance. Privacy really does feel like a zero-sum game against that kind of processing power.
 

Forum statistics

Total page views
629,183,601
Threads
141,848
Messages
2,927,933
Members
163,930
Latest member
somanytoes
HGH Power Store email banner
PCT-Banner-210x131
Prowrist straps store banner
FLASHING-BOTTOM-BANNER-210x131
3
raws
Syntherol Site Enhancing Oil Synthol
revoltpeptides
PM-Ace-Labs-bottom
AASraw-co
MA Research Chem store banner
MA Supps Store Banner
volartek
Keytech banner
dp210-X131
Godbullraw-bottom-banner
Injection Instructions for beginners
finest-gears
Back
Top