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11 Nov 04:31

Identity Crisis

by Desmond Hussey

Author : Desmond Hussey, Staff Writer

I needed to disappear. Fast.

I never wanted a criminal life. It’s not like I killed anybody, or stole the nation’s pension plans, unlike some governments which shall go unmentioned.

No. It was much more banal than that. I reneged on my student loans. Now I’m a wanted man.

Like many students hoping to get ahead in the world, I jumped into a full Master’s Program at a decent, but far from ivy league university, with visions of future grandeur making the stress inducing course load marginally bearable. Like every student, I was promised a well paid job upon graduation.

I did my time, studied hard. After graduating with honors and flinging my square, black cap into the air along with thousands of other students, all determined to make their dreams realities, I learned some hard truths we weren’t taught in school. There simply weren’t any jobs for us. Never had been. Maybe ten of every hundred graduates found employment in their chosen field, most through their parent’s corporate enterprise; the Golden Boys and Girls, whose futures were paved in gold the day they were born.

As for me, well…

I was unemployed and the proud owner of a 250,000 credit Criminology Degree.

Six months later the phone calls and e-mails started. It was the Bank. They wanted their money back.

I used up my two deferrals, buying myself some time, but time, like my meager savings, inevitably ran out. The phone calls resumed. The e-mails spawned. It was time to pay up.

After five years of searching within my field, the best work I could dredge up was as a Baker’s assistant; waking at 5 am, making thick dough for minimum wage. The Bank garnished 30% of every credit I earned.

At this rate, with added interest, it would take two lifetimes to pay off my loan.

Arthur Hanover needed to disappear.

I decided to put my Criminology Degree to work. Disappearing people wasn’t easy in the 2030’s, but I’d learned how. Everyone was numbered, coded and tagged at birth. If you weren’t in the system, you couldn’t do squat. Couldn’t even purchase a toothbrush without an I-phone, except on the black market. Mark if the Beast if ever I saw one.

My phone was the first to go. Not that I had any credit anyway, plus phones were traceable.

I pitched my ID, changed my name, dyed my hair and managed to barter some ancient LP’s – classics, mint condition – for a pair of retinal coded contacts.

A doctor friend from University was in the same boat I was; ran an underground clinic for the disenfranchised. I called in some favors and had him remove the IRF chip implanted in my thigh.

Debt between friends is so much easier to pay back than a bank loan. “Honor amongst thieves”, I s’pose.

I’d hoped to find a quiet place to live out the rest of my days as Devon Walsh. A nobody. A non-entity. Maybe meet a girl and eke out some humble existence. If being a Baker’s assistant was all there was for me, I conceded to settle for it. It could be worse.

It is.

They caught up with me in a hover station outside Whitehorse. Cyborg sniffer-dogs tracked my DNA all the way from Toronto. Betrayed by my own DNA. You really can’t change who you are.

My crime?

Criminal Loan Default.

My sentence?

I’ve been drafted. My loan was bought and I’m bound for the front lines. NorAmer is at war with the Asian Federation for property interests on Mars and I’m cheap cannon fodder.

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07 Nov 22:51

NYT endorses brutal, secret, Internet-destroying corporatist TPP trade-deal; write to your lawmaker to fight it

by Cory Doctorow

The New York Times has endorsed the Trans-Pacific Partnership; a trade deal negotiated in utmost secrecy, without public participation, whose text is still not public. From leaks, we know that TPP wasn't just anti-democratic in its process -- it also contains numerous anti-democratic provisions that allow private offshore companies to overturn domestic law, especially laws that allow for free speech and privacy online. TPP is slated for fast-tracking through Congress, minimizing any scrutiny of a deal negotiated behind closed doors before it is turned into law. From what we've seen of TPP, it recapitulates all the worst elements of ACTA and then some. The Electronic Frontier Foundation needs you to write to your lawmaker demanding full and public debate on TPP.

The paper's statement emphasizes how the Obama administration strives to make TPP's policies “an example for the rest of the world to follow.” But if that's the case, then it's all the more important that the agreement be published immediately. Such a significant body of international law regulating digital policy must not be negotiated without proper, informed public debate. The secrecy of the process itself ensures that only some private interests will be represented at the expense of others. In addition, the U.S. Trade Representative's history of pushing forth extreme copyright enforcement policies through other trade agreements gives little assurance that users' rights will be considered in the TPP.

Trade representatives are working to finalize TPP negotiations by the end of the year. Negotiators are scheduled to meet in Salt Lake City next week to negotiate outstanding issues in this agreement, including provisions on liability for Internet Service Providers and anti-circumvention measures over DRM. Following that, trade delegates are seeking to finalize and sign this agreement in December in a ministerial meeting in Singapore.

It's unfortunate that news outlets are giving little coverage to TPP, when media attention could have a major impact on how the US and the other 11 nations draft digital policy. But public media coverage is precisely the sort of accountability that official secrecy thwarts. Instead of endorsing an agreement the public can't read, a responsible paper would condemn the secrecy involved. And if the Times has seen the text and knows what's contained in the TPP, then they have a responsibility to publish the text immediately and expose the US government's back room dealings.


    






07 Nov 22:12

Google security engineer on NSA: "Fuck these guys"

by Cory Doctorow


In a heartfelt and personal blog-post, Google security engineer Brandon Downey discusses his feelings on the discovery that the NSA had tapped Google's private fiber links. In three words: "Fuck these guys." But you should read the rest, too.

Fuck these guys.

I've spent the last ten years of my life trying to keep Google's users safe and secure from the many diverse threats Google faces.

I've seen armies of machines DOS-ing Google. I've seen worms DOS'ing Google to find vulnerabilities in other people's software. I've seen criminal gangs figure out malware. I've seen spyware masquerading as toolbars so thick it breaks computers because it interferes with the other spyware.

I've even seen oppressive governments use state sponsored hacking to target dissidents.

But even though we suspected this was happening, it still makes me terribly sad. It makes me sad because I believe in America. Not in that flag-waving bullshit we've-got-our-big-trucks-and-bigger-tanks sort of way, but in the way that you can looked a good friend who has a lot of flaws, but every time you meet him, you think, "That guy still has some good ideas going on".

This is the big story in tech today

    






07 Nov 18:07

sherrydarlingisalover: notthehellyourwhales: alaricsaltzbuns: ...

by aishiterushit




sherrydarlingisalover:

notthehellyourwhales:

alaricsaltzbuns:

tomhiddlesbitch:

cancerously:

superblys:

anti-shipper:

the-greatest-companion:

castaneacreations:

thegoodlannister:

schwarzweis:

thegoodlannister:

My sister got me a Thor bobblehead.

This is what I did with it.

since I’m a serious grown adult, I have a reply for you

image

image

ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh I AM CRYING

legitimately crying

My Yoda bobble-head has something to say…

image

image

it got better

image

image

IT GOT SO MUCH BETTER

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

THISSSSSSSSS

07 Nov 06:15

The 1980's Will Help You Beat Wind Waker

by Luke Plunkett

I don't think this was made in the 21st century. I think time travel was involved. I think somebody found a way to go back to the 1980s and took a copy of Wind Waker with them. It's the only explanation I can think of as to why this fake tips VHS is so perfect.

How to Beat: The Legend of Zelda - The Wind Waker HD [My Life In Gaming, via Attract Mode]

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06 Nov 01:24

Apple hides a Patriot-Act-busting "warrant canary" in its transparency report

by Cory Doctorow
The Patriot Act provides for secret warrants to spy on ISPs' customers. These "Section 215" warrants come with gag orders that mean that the company can't disclose their existence. This lack of transparency is ripe for abuse and is bad for ISPs' business. Apple is fighting back with a "warrant canary": they've published a transparency report (PDF) that states "Apple has never received an order under Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act. We would expect to challenge an order if served on us." If they are served with a 215 order in future, their next transparency report will drop this language, omitting any mention of 215, and keen-eyed watchers will know that they've been subjected to a secret order. I proposed a more ambitious version of this in September, though I was hardly the first person to suggest it. Good for Apple for using it.
    






05 Nov 00:11

Photo





















04 Nov 22:03

Spoiler Alert

by jon

comic-2013-11-04-Spoiler-Alert.jpg

Are you going to see Ender’s Game at your local movie theater? Ask yourself if there’s any better way you could be spending your time and money. Kicking puppies, maybe.

04 Nov 22:00

Encryptic

Bewarethewumpus

And as usual, the real snap is in the alt text.

It was bound to happen eventually. This data theft will enable almost limitless [xkcd.com/792]-style password reuse attacks in the coming weeks. There's only one group that comes out of this looking smart: Everyone who pirated Photoshop.
03 Nov 21:21

Unction

http://oglaf.com/unction/

03 Nov 19:13

Unreal Cue Control

03 Nov 02:17

America should have two time-zones

by Cory Doctorow


Allison Schrager proposes that America should end Daylight Savings and consolidate its timezones into just two -- the Eastern zone goes back, Central/Mountain do nothing, and Pacific goes forward. She makes a persuasive argument that the nation already conducts its business on coastal time, and cites the safety and coordination costs of losing sleep, de-synchronizing with the rest of the world, and generally suffering from confusion and disorientation from a system designed in 1883.

It sounds radical, but it really isn’t. The purpose of uniform time measures is coordination. How we measure time has always evolved with the needs of commerce. According to Time and Date, a Norwegian Newsletter dedicated to time zone information, America started using four time zones in 1883. Before that, each city had its own time standard based on its calculation of apparent solar time (when the sun is directly over-head at noon) using sundials. That led to more than 300 different American time zones. This made operations very difficult for the telegraph and burgeoning railroad industry. Railroads operated with 100 different time zones before America moved to four, which was consistent with Britain’s push for a global time standard. The following year, at the International Meridian Conference, it was decided that the entire world could coordinate time keeping based on the British Prime Meridian (except for France, which claimed the Prime Median ran through Paris until 1911). There are now 24 (or 25, depending on your existential view of the international date line) time zones, each taking about 15 degrees of longitude.

Now the world has evolved further—we are even more integrated and mobile, suggesting we’d benefit from fewer, more stable time zones. Why stick with a system designed for commerce in 1883? In reality, America already functions on fewer than four time zones. I spent the last three years commuting between New York and Austin, living on both Eastern and Central time. I found that in Austin, everyone did things at the same times they do them in New York, despite the difference in time zone. People got to work at 8 am instead of 9 am, restaurants were packed at 6 pm instead of 7 pm, and even the TV schedule was an hour earlier. But for the last three years I lived in a state of constant confusion, I rarely knew the time and was perpetually an hour late or early. And for what purpose? If everyone functions an hour earlier anyway, in part to coordinate with other parts of the country, the different time zones lose meaning and are reduced to an arbitrary inconvenience. Research based on time use surveys found American’s schedules are determined by television more than daylight. That suggests in effect, Americans already live on two time zones.

Daylight Saving Time Is Terrible: Here's a Simple Plan to Fix It [Allison Schrager/The Atlantic]

(via /.)

    






03 Nov 01:13

You are Great!

by Steve Napierski
You are Great

You have to imagine that the next sentence is being read by the late, great Don LaFontaine. In a world where it feels like nothing you can do is right, there came video games!

Video games were definitely a way for me to escape from reality as a kid. Sure I made mistakes in video games, but I learned from my mistakes, I got better, and I was rewarded for them with new experiences and cheesy completion screens. Best of all, I wasn’t criticized for my mistakes as I learned (except for in Duck Hunt). Without video games there’s no telling where I might be right now. Maybe I would have experimented with drugs or even worse reading books. Thanks video games, you’ve always been a true friend.

02 Nov 03:29

Edward Snowden gets a job in Russia

by Cory Doctorow


According to Russian news source RIA Novosti, Edward Snowden's got a new job working as tech support for a large Russian website (according to AP) or possibly as a network administrator (according to CNN). Snowden's lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, says he starts tomorrow.

Report: Snowden gets tech support job in Russia

    






02 Nov 03:26

My Little Pony: Friendship is Manly

by Rob Beschizza

Well now. [Video Link]

    






02 Nov 00:04

A Taste Of What Could've Been Had Nintendo Bought Star Wars

by András Neltz

Hint: it would have been insane and filled with nostalgia.

Okay, let's be honest. Something like a full-length Star Wars-Nintendo mash-up movie could never, ever, ever have actually happened—which should certainly make us appreciate James Farr's latest eight-minute masterpiece that much more, in which Link Skywalker faces Ganon-Darth and the evil Empire in a quest to save the galaxy and destroy the dreaded Death Star Moon. Which is, of course, controlled using a Wiimote.

SUPER SMASH WARS: A Link To The Hope [James Farr @ YouTube]

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01 Nov 23:11

The First LEGO Movie Trailer Blows My Blocky Socks Off

by Luke Plunkett

In June, we got a teaser trailer. This is a proper trailer. Three minutes long. Three minutes of LEGO movie heaven.

I'm not normally the type to get excited by a trailer, indeed I'm usually wary of them, but this just...this just looks like the best. It's everything you'd possibly want in a LEGO movie.

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01 Nov 22:52

Are We Ready For Shorter Video Game Experiences?

by Mark Serrels

Are we ready for leaner, tighter shorter experiences? Is that something we'd like to see in our video games? Having trudged through most of this year's AAA video games, mindlessly blasting my way from cut-scene to cut scene, I've started to wonder: is it time the games industry learned to edit itself more effectively?

(Warning: mild spoilers for The Last of Us and Gravity)

When suits complained that CBS's 'The Unit' wasn't being clear enough or direct enough with its audience the show's Executive Producer David Mamet agreed. The subsequent all caps memo he sent to the show's writing staff is now legendary.

David Mamet was (and is) a legend in screenwriting circles and his word was gospel. His memo was a brutal, sharp and to-the -point guide in how to create drama — real drama — and how to sustain that drama.

"ANY SCENE," he wrote (but you can imagine it being screamed), "WHICH DOES NOT BOTH ADVANCE THE PLOT, AND STANDALONE (THAT IS, DRAMATICALLY, BY ITSELF, ON ITS OWN MERITS) IS EITHER SUPERFLUOUS, OR INCORRECTLY WRITTEN."

And then…

"I CLOSE WITH THE ONE THOUGHT: LOOK AT THE SCENE AND ASK YOURSELF "IS IT DRAMATIC? IS IT ESSENTIAL? DOES IT ADVANCE THE PLOT?

"ANSWER TRUTHFULLY."

—-

Are We Ready For Shorter Video Game Experiences?S

There is a problem with video game writing and we all know it. No-one seems to have any real idea what the solution is. That's okay, that's fine. We can live with this. Video games are interesting for a different, non-specific, set of reasons. The video game is a broad and beautiful thing. It defies definition and structure whereas cinema is actively defined by its structures. Video games don't come in three acts. Tetris is a video game. Cow Clicker is a video game. Street Fighter II is a video game. Beyond: Two Souls is a video game.

But when it comes to video games and drama, I wonder if developers could learn a thing or two from David Mamet and his all caps memo. I wonder if video games need a better, more attuned sense of what is necessary and what is superfluous.

Ironically, one of the worst culprits is The Last of Us, arguably the best written AAA game in recent memory.

Towards the end of the game there is great sense of dramatic tension: a misunderstanding between Ellie and Joel. Ellie steals a horse and rides away from camp into the forest. Joel is furious but gives chase alongside his brother. You must find Ellie and quickly. Together you follow her tracks. The whole scene expertly juggles that tugging tension: you feel as though you are choosing your path when in reality you are being guided — simple, clever level design stuff. So far so good.

Then, inexplicably, Joel and his brother stumble across a camp of aggressive humans who, predictably, attack instantly. There's a logical problem with this scenario (why were Joel and his brother attacked when Ellie was able to simply breeze through unhindered?) but the obvious question is 'why'? Why bother with this gunfight at all? Why ruin the simple dramatic tension of 'the chase' to have Joel and his brother engage in another pointless, completely unnecessary gunfight?

Answer truthfully.

Was it simply an attempt to add 'value' to a game in an industry where 'value' equals the amount of hours it takes to play through to completion?

Was it insecurity? Was Naughty Dog afraid players would become disengaged if they didn't get to fire a weapon at least once every five minutes?

Was it dramatic? Was it essential? Did it advance the plot? Of course it did neither of these things.

In video game land this isn't too much of a issue. The idea of video games as a series of meaningless obstacles is embedded deep in our psyche. We're used to it. Yet the problem with this scenario is that itimpedes the drama. It detracts from the chase. It makes you forget the chase. It actively reduces the stakes. It's superfluous.

I can think of a dozen different examples in recent video games that do the precise same thing. Wind Waker sets you off on a dull collection quest just as you're building the momentum to take down the game's antagonist Ganon. Assassin's Creed II pulled a similar trick. Assassin's Creed III expected us to endure what was essentially a disgustingly indulgent six hour prologue. Halo was infamous for its backtracking. Dozens of genuinely great, era-defining video games indulge in bogus game extending sections that, in any other medium, would be coldly and efficiently chopped in the editing room. And rightly so.

—-

Are We Ready For Shorter Video Game Experiences?S

As a medium video games have stolen from cinema, but the process flows both ways.

Watching Alfonso Cuarón's Gravity I was struck by just how keenly its structure mirrored the way video games provide obstacles to the player. In Gravity Dr Ryan Stone needs to get home, back to solid ground. That is her one sole objective. She has limited resources, and tools which she must use to achieve this goal — like a video game. When she achieves each goal, a new problem arises which she must then solve using a different (or sometimes similar) set of tools — just like a video game. She must learn to navigate herself in a new, frequently threatening, space — just like a video game.

But video games could learn a lot from the manner in which Gravity imitates video games. More specifically it could learn a lot from the parts it borrows and the parts it disposes of.

Gravity is lean. It rarely labours on its mechanics of movement. It highlights the dangers visually and diversions from the main task feel organic, real and — above all — genuinely dramatic.

I wonder how Gravity would have worked as a video game. An hour with George Clooney — a tutorial section, essentially — he teaches you the mechanics of movement in space, how to control friction. Then a series of banal tasks to help the player become familiar with what he/she has just learned. Then, disaster. The hubble space telescope is destroyed, you must find your way home.

Imagine the gymnastics. Imagine just how contrived the set ups would have to be in order for Gravity: The Video Game to be stretched from a slick, lean 90 minute experience to the 12-15 hour experience we have currently been trained to expect from our video games. Imagine how many strange ways we would be expected to repeat the exact same scenario, to essentially overcome the same obstacle in the precise same way. Imagine how the drama would become stilted, strange and — more often than not — forgotten about as we chase pointless blips on a radar. This is almost every AAA video game you've played over the last two or three years.

—-

Of course video games are not movies, but there is a very specific subset of games that seek to imitate them. For the most part they do so poorly. That doesn't necessarily make them bad video games. The Last of Us is a great video game. Wind Waker is a great video games, Assassin's Creed II is a great video game.

But would The Last of Us be a more seamless, meaningful experience with roughly 70% of its combat scenarios cut from the game? I'd argue yes. As players we did not need to engage those survivors on the edge of the forest. Their existence was unnecessary. They were superfluous.

Did Wind Waker need all that padding? Did we really need those extra hours of searching across the ocean for our purchase to feel valid, to feel as though we'd gotten our 'money's worth'? Was that necessary?

"In writing you must kill your darlings". William Faulkner said that. He had a rough idea of what he was talking about.

Wouldn't our interactive experiences feel more concise, have more impact, be more dramatically valid if we were willing to accept shorter, more efficient experiences, instead of complaining when games are too short, or celebrating when a game is needlessly stretched over a tedious 40 hour play period? Are we ready for shorter, leaner more meaningful experiences in our video games?

Answer truthfully.

—-

This post originally appeared on Kotaku Australia, where Mark Serrels is the Editor. You can follow him on Twitter, if you're into that sort of thing.

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31 Oct 19:05

October 31, 2013


Happy Halloween, geeks! And BONUS, my pal Ben Tippett explains the "science" of how a TARDIS works.
31 Oct 18:56

Gas Station Clerk Fired For Violating Company Policy After Pulling Gun On Armed Robber

by Mary Beth Quirk
Bewarethewumpus

Absolutely the right thing to do. Someone give this brave man a medal and a new job.

(WBZ-TV)

(WBZ-TV)

Save your life or keep your job? A gas station clerk in New Hampshire says he can find another job, but that he had to pull a gun on an armed robber wielding a knife shortly after midnight on Monday morning to protect himself, despite company policy against firearms in the workplace. He was fired a few hours after the incident.

According to The Nashua Telegraph, the clerk had finished helping a customer when the robber entered the store, walked behind the counter and brandished a knife.

“He had the knife cocked back. It looked like he was going to stab me,” he said. “I took several steps back, produced my sidearm, and informed him it was a bad idea and he didn’t want to do it, and he left.”

After the would-be robber fled, the cashier, who has a permit to carry a handgun in New Hampshire, called the police. He was also asked to file a report with his employers, and was fired hours after doing so, he says, despite two managers who tried to intercede on his behalf.

Nouria Energy, the company that owns and operates the gas station where the clerk worked, said in a statement to WBZ-TV that employees aren’t allowed to have firearms in the workplace for their own safety, and that they are instructed to give intruders what they ask for “in an attempt to resolve the conflict peacefully and as soon as possible.”

“We do respect the constitutional right to bear arms. However, we believe the best way to keep our employees and customers safe is to prohibit weapons in the workplace,” the statement adds. “Our training and policies are aligned with what is customary in the retail/conveniences store industries and is consistent with advice offered by security and police organizations.”

A police lieutenant says it appears the clerk took appropriate action, and encouraged anyone who carries a gun to undergo safety training.

“The first thing that we want to make sure is that people are safe,” he said. “In this situation, the clerk was presented with a deadly weapon. He was in close proximity to the suspect when the deadly weapon was displayed to him. The clerk, from the information I have, took the appropriate action in terms of how he felt threatened, in presenting the firearm.”

The cashier says that with a grandson on the way, he has no regrets.

“I can find another job,” the clerk said. “A paycheck’s a paycheck. I don’t really care where it comes from. I cannot justify in my mind trying to save my job at the risk of not ever seeing my family and friends again.”

Nashua gas station clerk halts robbery with handgun, gets fired hours later; police still looking for suspect [Nashua Telegraph]
NH Clerk Fired After Pulling Gun On Armed Robber [WBZ-TV]


31 Oct 17:23

Washington State’s Pot Industry Gets High Taxes With Newly Approved Rules

by Mary Beth Quirk
Bewarethewumpus

This is what I've been saying should be done, legalize and tax the shit out of it. I'd opt to throw uncle Sam a few bucks over a criminal charge any day.

After almost a year of researching marijuana and how to go about selling it legally, Washington state adopted rules yesterday for the recreational sale of pot, and everyone is watching. Well, everyone who’s interested in how to go about doing something similar in their home state or country.

Countries like Mexico, Uruguay, Poland and other locales are checking out the regulations, reports the Associated Press, which cover things like how big licensed marijuana gardens can be, security at those gardens, hoe many pot stores can open in the state and more.

Oh yes, and then there’s also a new high… TAX that is. Puns! Ahem. Anyway, Washington will tax pot highly and only allow for 90 metric tons to be produced in the state. Sales are expected to start by the middle of 2014.

The state’s liquor board members said the goal was to make pot accessible enough so that people will choose the legal stuff over the black market, but not so easy to get that it would threaten public health or safety. A state of stoners would be undesirable, in other words.

As such, the state’s new regulations require procedures like seed-to-store tracking, background checks for license applicants, and child-resistant packaging.

“We feel very proud of what we’re doing,” said Sharon Foster, chairwoman of the Washington Liquor Control Board, as she and her two colleagues approved the rules. “We are making history.”

Washington state approves rules for pot industry [Associated Press]


31 Oct 01:11

David Cameron threatens injunction against the Guardian to stop further Snowden leak publications

by Cory Doctorow

UK prime minister David Cameron has threatened to get a court order against the Guardian if it continues to publish the Snowden leaks. He accused the Guardian of having a "lah-di-dah, airy-fairy view" about the dangers of leaks, and said the if the paper didn't voluntarily censor itself out of a sense of "social responsibility" he would seek court injunctions against it.

The majority of the Snowden leaks have revealed crimes -- illegal spying, lying to Congress and Parliament, violation of international law. That these crimes were committed with the knowledge and approval of the highest levels of the US and UK government doesn't make them any less criminal. And what wasn't criminal was absolutely depraved in its indifference to the public good: for example, the UK government's Edgehill programme, which, with the US government's Bullrun program, sabotaged the security of software, hardware and cryptographic standards to the tune of USD250M/year.

There is nothing more cowardly and corrupt than a lawbreaking political leader who threatens the free press when they call him to account. I never liked Cameron, but with this, he's taken the Tories beyond their reputation of being "the nasty party" and turned them into full-blown Stalinists.

Cameron told MPs: "We have a free press, it's very important the press feels it is not pre-censored from what it writes and all the rest of it.

"The approach we have taken is to try to talk to the press and explain how damaging some of these things can be and that is why the Guardian did actually destroy some of the information and disks that they have. But they've now gone on and printed further material which is damaging.

"I don't want to have to use injunctions or D notices or the other tougher measures. I think it's much better to appeal to newspapers' sense of social responsibility. But if they don't demonstrate some social responsibility it would be very difficult for government to stand back and not to act."

David Cameron makes veiled threat to media over NSA and GCHQ leaks [Nicholas Watt/The Guardian]

    






31 Oct 01:06

TOM THE DANCING BUG: How They Finally Fixed the Obamacare Website...

by Ruben Bolling

BE THE FIRST ON YOUR BLOCK to see Tom the Dancing Bug, by @RubenBolling, every week! Members of the elite and prestigious INNER HIVE get the comic emailed to their inboxes at least a day before publication -- and much, much MORE!

JOIN or DON'T.

    






31 Oct 00:33

[nnewel]



[nnewel]

30 Oct 05:39

Marching Band's Hollywood Blockbusters

by amanda b.
Superman

Ohio State University outdid themselves this week with a halftime show dedicated to formations depicting scenes from a number of films including Superman, Jurassic Park and Harry Potter.

30 Oct 03:19

Honestly That Rule Has a Lot of Exceptions, But Not This

Bewarethewumpus

Yeah, when it comes to protection, I'll take my 12 gauge shotgun over a crowd of hippies.

30 Oct 03:17

Incredible Billboard Technology

Bewarethewumpus

Mind:Blown

billboard,wtf,weather,funny

Submitted by: Unknown

Tagged: billboard , wtf , weather , funny
29 Oct 22:42

Photo



29 Oct 18:53

Tumblr | a8f.png

a8f.png
29 Oct 04:53

you laugh at me because im different, i laugh at you because you...

by vectorbelly


you laugh at me because im different, i laugh at you because you are a playful family of lemurs at the zoo and i am hella stoned

— rad milk (@rad_milk) April 17, 2012