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Thread: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

  1. #51

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by lardy View Post
    Of course I do, if I read something I don't agree with then I'm probably going to counter it (and there's every chance I'm wrong). But tell the truth, did you even look at the blog I posted? Were you just responding because it was posted by me, someone you've had run-ins with in the past? That would be ironic, the number of times you've whinged about " stalker' s "
    Yes I did look at the Blog you posted, I am very interested in Net Security and I have never been comfortable with censorship, when i first got on the net, i was using AOL as my ISP, i wanted to " burn " a "PSX cheat disk ", the link i had been sent, the page came back with HTTP status 404 ( it means page not found ) i asked for another link, the same link was sent, it turned out that AOL has blocked the page, since then it has always been a interest to me
    back to the blog, it looks very one-sided in its opinion, it is hardly balanced IMHO , the authors bit about the TSA made ma chuckle though

    you have posted all weekend, I am not sure i have replied to any of your posts, so not sure that makes me a good stalker, though i was out all day yesterday and got back fairly late

  2. #52
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    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    I'd go for the source. Cut off its head if you will. That means May returning to Saudi Arabia to tell them they must stop funding and arming ISIS & co, or else. What do you think of that idea?

    Where did the Saudi government buy the knives from?
    How much was the van rental and have they paid the congestion charge?

  3. #53

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    We need a national ID card scheme for everyone aged 16 and above. That card would have to be produced when demanded by a police officer or other state security agent. Failure to do so would result in a maximum £10,000 fine and/or mandatory two years clink. Citizens, their homes and business premises should be searched at the discretion of any authorised agent without the need for a warrant.

    Fill the skies with surveillance drones. Issue an Internet Licence. No-one without one will be able to legally access the web. Anyone who visits an unapproved site shall have that licence withdrawn for life and be summarily taken to a cell at their nearest police station to receive a jolly good kicking.
    If it saves innocent lives so be it

  4. #54

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by blue matt View Post
    Yes I did look at the Blog you posted, I am very interested in Net Security and I have never been comfortable with censorship, when i first got on the net, i was using AOL as my ISP, i wanted to " burn " a "PSX cheat disk ", the link i had been sent, the page came back with HTTP status 404 ( it means page not found ) i asked for another link, the same link was sent, it turned out that AOL has blocked the page, since then it has always been a interest to me
    back to the blog, it looks very one-sided in its opinion, it is hardly balanced IMHO , the authors bit about the TSA made ma chuckle though

    you have posted all weekend, I am not sure i have replied to any of your posts, so not sure that makes me a good stalker, though i was out all day yesterday and got back fairly late
    It's far from the only technology blog I've read where they've said backdoors in everything would be a disaster. The point that anyone could get round jurisdiction by simply using technology from abroad seems fairly significant to me, too.

  5. #55

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by lardy View Post
    It's far from the only technology blog I've read where they've said backdoors in everything would be a disaster. The point that anyone could get round jurisdiction by simply using technology from abroad seems fairly significant to me, too.
    of course from a tech point of view, they will always be against backdoors, they are the route of all evil, from the Hackers of games consoles / mobile phones to the system admins who are constantly trying to stop unauthorised access to the systems they manage, nothing good has ever come from backdoors

  6. #56

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by goslow View Post
    Where did the Saudi government buy the knives from?
    How much was the van rental and have they paid the congestion charge?
    The inspiration for the barbarity comes from Saudi money paying for arms, mercenaries, slick and professional propaganda and their funding for building Mosques in British towns and cities that enables them to spread their poisonous ideology.

  7. #57

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Kris View Post
    A completely false analogy.
    Why ?

  8. #58

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Surely this post is above politics and of interest to all internet users, including those who post their thoughts on online football message boards, as some of these thoughts could soon be criminalised.

  9. #59

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Another thing, all the Theresa May posts were moved off the main message board, yet the arm the police thread still remains. Somebody isn't playing politics by any chance are they?

  10. #60

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Wales-Bales View Post
    Another thing, all the Theresa May posts were moved off the main message board, yet the arm the police thread still remains. Somebody isn't playing politics by any chance are they?
    Is Arm the police a political thread then ? ? ?

    This thread even has Theresa May in the title

  11. #61

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by blue matt View Post
    Is Arm the police a political thread then ? ? ?

    This thread even has Theresa May in the title
    not rocket science is it

  12. #62

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Wales-Bales View Post
    Another thing, all the Theresa May posts were moved off the main message board, yet the arm the police thread still remains. Somebody isn't playing politics by any chance are they?
    Probably because threads about Theresa May are obviously political - unless it's about Theresa May flavour crisps or if you'd shag her or not.

    Arming the police is irrespective of political opinion.

    Either that or it's Blue Matt being dense as f**k again.

  13. #63
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    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by JDerrida View Post
    It is not the only solution to deal with terrorism, just one.
    Just because you don't think it will make people safe, does that make you right. It's just your opinion, which you're entitled. I will err on the side of our intelligence and security services to do their best to safeguard the country rather some people on a football forum, who are getting uppity because of the remotest chance their Internet freedom will be eroded.
    Uppity? I don't get uppity, I just say what I think is right for everyone, I doubt it will make the slightest bit of difference to me personally anyway but that is not the point, the fact that you don't get the point is what's worrying, just how far are you prepared to let them go before you feel safe? armed guards in your living room?

  14. #64

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Dr Lecter View Post
    Probably because threads about Theresa May are obviously political - unless it's about Theresa May flavour crisps or if you'd shag her or not.

    Arming the police is irrespective of political opinion.

    Either that or it's Blue Matt being dense as f**k again.
    I'd stick arming the police and censoring the internet into the same political/non-political basket.

  15. #65

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by JDerrida View Post
    Why ?
    Why do you think there are any similarities between installing a virus checker and complete regulation of the internet?

  16. #66

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by blue matt View Post
    Is Arm the police a political thread then ? ? ?

    This thread even has Theresa May in the title
    That thread is as political as this one, and this one is hardly party political.

    I was surprised to see it on here, it really is of general interest.

  17. #67

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    London attack: Tech firms fight back in extremism row

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-40149649

  18. #68

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    I predicted recently that the BBC would ignore this year's Bilderberg Meeting. I was wrong as they afforded the conflab one article. Here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-40125253

    Its search function indicates that that was the first time they'd mentioned the B word since June 2015. They meet annually so last year's bash wasn't in any way newsworthy to them. Then I selected a random celebrity to search for, Simon Cowell. There's at least 20 articles featuring him during that two-year span, no less than four are dedicated to his home being burgled.

    Anyway, top of the shop for discussion at Bilderberg was implementing an internet ID user scheme.

  19. #69

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    I predicted recently that the BBC would ignore this year's Bilderberg Meeting. I was wrong as they afforded the conflab one article. Here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-40125253

    Its search function indicates that that was the first time they'd mentioned the B word since June 2015. They meet annually so last year's bash wasn't in any way newsworthy to them. Then I selected a random celebrity to search for, Simon Cowell. There's at least 20 articles featuring him during that two-year span, no less than four are dedicated to his home being burgled.

    Anyway, top of the shop for discussion at Bilderberg was implementing an internet ID user scheme.
    How do you know that?

    I thought they kept it all secret?

  20. #70

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Bilderberg itself has its own site http://bilderbergmeetings.org/ where they publish a list of attendees each year and the topics discussed.

  21. #71

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Quote Originally Posted by Organ Morgan. View Post
    Bilderberg itself has its own site http://bilderbergmeetings.org/ where they publish a list of attendees each year and the topics discussed.
    George Osborne is there representing the world's press when he has only been an editor for 5 minutes, with no formal training in journalism

  22. #72

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    I think they came into the open with that site in 2009. The internet and the increased awareness it brought was responsible. They have had annual meetings since 1954. During Thatcher's tenure she was a regular and many of her ministers attended a meeting at least once. But aside from May so far, every UK Prime Minister has made an appearance during the past 60 years. It went unreported by the BBC et al, even when the gathering occurred on British soil. Now though the easily accessible info found on the internet has awoken so many to machinations behind the scenes that it is now a problem to the string-pullers.

  23. #73

    Re: Theresa May says the internet must now be regulated

    Here's an article about the recently concluded Bilderberg Meeting in the USA. https://dollarvigilante.com/blog/201...-bad-sign.html The video they produced is below. It should have been an enquiring journalist from the corporate media what with their huge resources asking the coy Bilderbergers questions. I know there's fans of the BBC hereabouts who believe that that Corporation is independent and unbiased. Perhaps one or more of them can provide a rational excuse for why one of their reporters wasn't asking the questions.

    Big Changes at Bilderberg This Year… A Good or Bad Sign?

    June 5, 2017 by Jeff Berwick

    I have just returned from my 3rd Bilderberg conference and… wow, that was different!

    The first Bilderberg I attended was in 2015 in Telfs, Austria and the entire town was turned into a military zone. You couldn’t walk five feet without out seeing a police van, humvee, tanks and black helicopters. And, we were tracked, detained and searched constantly.

    Last year was in Dresden, Germany and while they did not shut down the entire town, the area surrounding the Bilderberg hotel was clearly a militarized zone and we really couldn’t walk a block without being stopped, searched, photographed and threatened by the police. They even searched our room while telling us when no cameras were near that they were going to physically hurt us.

    So, when I found out two weeks ago that Bilderberg was going to be held in Washington, District of Criminals (or just outside it in Virginia) I was not looking forward to going.

    That, though, was the first change. Normally, Bilderberg announces the location of its meetings months in advance. This year we found out about it from a tip from Charlie Skelton of The Guardian who had somehow heard from an insider.

    The agenda, too, is normally released weeks in advance. This time it was released just a few days prior detailing the attendees and discussion points.

    It was held at the Marriot hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, and as per tradition I booked a room for the night before lockdown for myself, Luke Rudkowski of We Are Change and Dan Dicks of Press For Truth.

    There wasn’t too much to note the day before lockdown. There certainly wasn’t 16,000 military and police in the vicinity as it was in Austria. But, as we sat down at the bar a man who introduced himself as Patrick, Head of Security, welcomed us, “Hello Dan, Luke and Jeff, I just want to make sure we don’t have any problems here.” he said.
    He then went on to tell us that his kids are big fans of ours and even as Dan and I finished a live stream, which he sat watching live at the bar, he proclaimed, “Great show!” to us.

    “This is really, really weird,” I said to Dan and Luke.

    They looked around suspiciously and nodded.

    As we were escorted out, with security even coming up to our room to make sure we had everything, there wasn’t too much out of the ordinary.

    As we walked out they were putting up the barricades and fences as security detail from numerous different companies all poured in.

    It turned out it wasn’t much needed though!

    While thousands came to protest in Austria and hundreds in Germany, this year there were… well, that guy.
    Even InfoWars, which has been renamed InfoWhores by most people I know now, barely had any presence.

    Luke Rudkowski smirked, “This is normally their Super Bowl! Where are they?”

    They did end up sending one or two lackeys down… but not to protest Bilderberg per se. It was to hold a Donald Trump rally, showing just how far down the toilet bowl they have gone as shills.

    Apparently, they didn’t notice yet that Trump is an insider just like Obama and Bush, nor did they notice at least four of Trump’s chosen people were happily attending the meeting including his 25-year Rothschild buddy Wilbur Ross.

    One thing stayed mostly the same though. And that was the secrecy of the attendees. Luke Rudkowski put together a perfect montage of some of the world’s most powerful people walking as fast as they can while trying not to make eye contact with the 3 or 4 independent media people who were there to ask questions.

    As usual, the mainstream Fake News media made no mention of Bilderberg. That’s mostly because they were actually inside the meeting getting their marching orders for the year.

    The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Bloomberg and others were all there but will never tell you they went. Interestingly, mostly financial media, likely getting ready for the great planned collapse likely due this or next year.

    Bilderberg’s old guard are all passing or about to pass, including recently gone to hell David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski. And soon to be turning into dust with a scent of sulfur, Henry Kissinger.

    The new guard seems much more technocratic. Eric Schmidt, Peter Thiel, and even CERN attending for the first time this year. Commence conspiracy theories on that!

    So, what’s my take on all the changes at Bilderberg?

    I think it is all the result of technological change.

    As for there being no protestors… why physically protest in today’s day and age? What does more damage to their agenda? A man getting sunburned and pepper sprayed while holding a “F*ck You Kissinger!” sign? Or a dank meme on the internet that might get seen by millions?

    On that note, one of the main topics at Bilderberg was, “The War on Information,” so expect continued censorship and AI removal of more anti-system memes, articles, and videos in the future. In fact, it’s already well underway.

    What about the dramatic lack of security? Well, as I pointed out, there weren’t any protesters and there weren’t even more than a handful of independent media. And InfoWhores was just there to throw a Trump party.

    And, if they’ve done any research into Dan, Luke and I, anytime they attack us it makes them look really bad… so I think they decided to play nice this year. In the internet age the more you try to attack and censor people the bigger their audience will get.

    And, as for the meeting itself… even it is fairly outdated. People like Eric Schmidt probably have access to the world’s best cryptographic security. And, we saw when we snuck into the actual meeting room in Austria, on stage there weren’t any podiums. It is a giant, bigger than we’ve ever seen, flat screen television… where key players likely teleconference in under the most secure channels to give the 120 or so attendees their agenda for the year.

    You couldn’t do that 20 years ago… which created the need for a Bilderberg conference.

    Now, everything can be done virtually. Including enslaving the entire planet under a one world government, currency, religion, and tax system.

    And that was surely the overarching topic of those in attendance this year.


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