the way it is


April 8th, 2008

Some men see things as they are and ask why. Others dream things that never were and ask why not.

George Bernard Shaw

As children, all of us passed through a “why?” stage. In the brain’s pursuit of adjusting to the world, our parents were bombarded with inquiries into the most mundane of things, so that we would learn and understand. They might have hated our incessant questioning, but we grew, listening intensely to their answers, and the world started to make sense.

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wikileaks dns entries from hackd.net


February 18th, 2008

In the wake and more and more unpleasant things being hosted by WikiLeaks, more and more censorship is attempted and judicial action has ruled that wikileaks.org be removed from DNS. But, thanks to the forethought of the admin, the site already has an extensive list of alternative names. To that list I now add the following redirects:

http://wl.hackd.net
http://wikileaks.hackd.net

The direct address is http://88.80.13.160/
There also exists a comprehensive list of alternate names.

The most recent WikiLeaks content archive is available at The Pirate Bay.

On another note, is there a possibility that the recent fire at PRQ (the hosting company of WikiLeaks and under ownership of Pirate Bay administrators) wasn’t all that accidental?

Information wants to be free, bitches =)


these are your guardians, america


February 13th, 2008

brought to my attention by a very special someone:

Florida Police Officers Dump Man from Wheelchair

Woman Strip-Searched and Jailed Naked over a Misunderstanding

no further comments


school threats (fear tactics)


February 5th, 2008

It is the second time in a week’s span that a threat has been made on the UBC Vancouver campus1:

For the second time in a week, our Vancouver campus community has received a threatening message.

In this second case, an unspecific threat has been made for Wednesday. The threat does not specify a time, a location within the UBC Point Grey campus or the method of doing harm.

Neither the Police nor the President’s office give details about the nature of the threat, however considering last week’s steps in handling the issue - as taken by the RCMP - one can only speculate that someone might have hinted at bringing a gun to school. Both of these threats have been made in advance, which merits a few thoughts.

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  1. Yes, this is where I study []

passcode your iphone


January 24th, 2008

iphone-passwd

While it may be a bit of a nuisance to enter it as often as you unlock the device, the iPhone passcode might become more than just a guard against the prying eyes of one’s curious-for-gossip friends - lately, there seems to be indication that sooner or later policemen may be able to simply take a look in your smartphones and similar devices if they so deem appropriate. As Ars Technica puts it:

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zuckerberg wants all of your info, gives you none of his


December 5th, 2007

What some lawyers and some companies learned a long time ago is that if you want to keep something private in the age of the Internet, you shouldn’t be coming up with ridiculous legal threats to protect its privacy. It will just blow over and get in the mainstream, generating crazy page hits. Push hard to get some documents kept out of a magazine, and you will get a lot of attention. Try hard to hide code you’ve leaked, and it will multiply.

Take your customers and their friends for idiots and you will get buried. Wow, I hope Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg is not what Harvard hopes all of its students turn out to be like. «Continue Reading»


we are all criminals


December 3rd, 2007

Zune maker Microsoft pays royalties to the RIAA for every unit sold in the idea that all these devices may be used for copyright infringement.The RIAA, in turn, has continued to sue its customers under the pretext of bringing criminals to justice, although so far it managed only to alienate people. They are also generally assuming that because they don’t make as much money as they want to, somebody must be stealing from them. So who else but their own customers are the criminals. Screw evidence.Entering the US means you have to prove, somehow, you are not a criminal. Apparently, at some point it was decided that only terrorists and thieves1 want to visit the US to do bad things to its people and/or its economy. So even if you are not being interrogated by customs officers, you are treated like a common criminal: fingerprints, possibly retina scans, background checks and data retention and mining to asses your danger levels. But of course, why should it be different? A country must protect its assets. Security and economy. Freedom. Freedom for corporations to strengthen their share prices and get a better grasp on their target demographics. Unfortunately, there are signs that the US is not a democracy anymore. It is not a free country. Certainly, there aren’t many “free” and “brave” people making house here. The foolishly brave fight wars to serve the puppet government of multinational corporate conglomerates. Those that want to be free quickly become terrorists, radical and dangerous activists, nuts, crazies, freaks. I sound like a broken record because I don’t have the strength or the indifference to change the track.

  1. Of music and movies, I am sure []

the brief


December 2nd, 2007

Time for a little weekend-end ramble session. Today we’re focusing on Facebook’s follies, Department of Homeland Security’s new massive profiling campaign and The Pirate Bay’s support of artists.

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encryption is no good anymore


November 14th, 2007

When most of us begin using encryption, the intended goal is to be able to protect certain types of data from certain types of individuals. You might be interested in saving your trade secrets from would-be industrial spies and I may be interested in hiding unfinished novels from prying eyes. But the strength of commonly-available encryption aims at giving governments some trouble in getting to that data. Well, the technology is available, but now they’ll just force us to hand over the keys or face jail time.
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