Wednesday, 25 January 2012

  • I Stand With Anonymous

    At first glance, this appears to be a matter of choice. After all, being Anonymous would seem to be a choice that a person would make simply of pure free will. To an extent, this may be true, but for me it was never a choice.

    Simply put, this is who I am. Not who I am now, but rather who I've always been, even though I may have failed to recognize it before.

    This is our world now, the world of the electron and the switch, the beaut of the baud. We make use of a service already existing without paying for what could be dirt-cheap if it wasn't run by profiteering gluttons, and you call us criminals. We explore...and you call us criminals. We seek after knowledge...and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color, without nationality, without religious bias...and you call us criminals. You build atomic bombs, you wage wars, you murder, cheat, and lie to us and try to make us believe that it's for our own good, yet we're the criminals. Yes, I am a criminal. My crime is that of curiosity. My crime is judging people by what they say and think, not by what they look like. My crime is that of outsmarting you...something that you will never forgive me for.
    -- The Mentor

    I've always believed in freedom of information, free-flow of thought between individuals for the betterment of society.
    I've always believed in a world where people are free to express their views and say what they believe, without fear of repercussion from some invisible power claiming to know what's best.
    I've always believed in self-education and the freedom to do so.

    Simply put, I've always believed in freedom. As one of our founding fathers, Patrick Henry, is attributed to saying, "give me liberty or give me death." We believe in justice, not just for the rich, but for all. We believe that democracy means that each individual should have a voice in their own government. In short, we believe in government of the people, by the people, and for the people.

    I believe that corporations hold too much power in today's society. The idea that the needs of a faceless business would override the needs of the starving individual is appalling to me.

    Words will always retain their power. Words are the means to meaning, and for those who will listen, the enunciation of truth. And the truth is, there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn't there? Cruelty and injustice, intolerance and oppression...and where once you had the freedom to object, to think and speak as you saw fit, you now have censors and systems of surveillance coercing your conformity and soliciting your submission. How did this happen? Who's to blame? Well certainly there are those more responsible than others, and they will be held accountable. But again, truth be told, if you're looking for the guilty, you need only look into a mirror. I know why you did it. I know you were afraid. Who wouldn't be? War, terror, disease, there were a myriad of problems which conspired...fear got the best of you...more than 400 years ago, a great citizen wished...to remind the world that fairness, justice, freedom...are more than just words, they are perspectives. So if you see nothing, if the crimes of this government remain unknown to you, then ... [let it pass] unmarked. But if you see as I see, if you feel as I feel, then I would ask that you stand beside me...
    -- V for Vendetta

    Yes, I know, that's a quote from a movie that may seem like pure science fiction, but the truth is that our world is slipping more and more into a similar state every day. NDAA, SOPA/PIPA, ACTA, PayPal's ban on WikiLeaks, large corporate bailouts, the so-called War on Terror, the list goes on and on...ambitious as can be.

    By now I'm sure that most (if not all) of you are aware of the Occupy movement that has spread across the glove. Time magazine named their 2011 person of the year as 'the protester,' and not without reason. People everywhere are slowly starting to find their voices, to open their eyes and realize that the world we live in is not okay, to recognize that if we don't stand up now, our children may live in a world that we wouldn't wish upon our worst enemies.

    Understand that Anonymous is not merely a group of hackers, or hacktivists, as we have been labeled by certain individuals and organizations. Certainly those with said talents are among us, but that applies no more than noting that certainly there are hackers on the internet, or certainly there are math teachers at a school. Certainly the kid living in their parents' basement is among us, but so is the kindergarten teacher down the street, so is the policeman directing traffic, so is the neighbor around the block. We are everyone and we are no-one. As such, we are Legion, for we are many. We are, in truth, an idea. "Ideas do not bleed, they do not feel pain, they do not love" (V for Vendetta). As an idea, we do not forgive the crimes against the people, and we do not forget the wrongs wrought upon them. It should be noted that you cannot kill an idea. Should one of us be struck down, ten more will rise up in his (or her) place.

    As an idea, we are the voice of the people, unrestrained. Concealed by the anonymity of the Internet, we speak without fear of oppression. Hidden by our masks, we are free to tell the truth. We do not all wish to be hidden, but today this seems almost necessary in order to let the truth out. Just as brave individuals blew a proverbial whistle when Enron pulled their scandal, we blow the whistle on the wrongs of world leaders.

    I did not become Anonymous...it's not a club to sign up for or a group to 'like' on Facebook. (Sure, said groups are likely to exist, and those among us may even be within said groups, but we are so much more than that constraint.) By definition, with my beliefs in freedom, my desire to stand for that which is right, and my will to be heard...I simply AM Anonymous. Quoting that movie again, "if you see what I see, if you feel what I feel, then I would ask that you stand with [us]." Don't close your eyes and hope that everything will get better...if people do not rise up...the problems will not fix themselves. Be heard.

    We are Anonymous.
    We are Legion.
    We do not forgive.
    We do not forget.
    Expect us.

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

  • SOPA/PIPA

    Here's the thing. These bills, while they have good intentions, go about inappropriate means to reach their ends. Basically we're talking about the equivalent of dropping a nuclear bomb to take out a single person.

    If passed, the bills allow for the government to shut down any site which posts so much as a LINK to offending material. This includes social media and search engines. (Can you say goodbye to Xanga, Facebook, Twitter, Google, Yahoo, Ask, etc.?)

    I highly recommend that you contact your representatives in both houses of Congress immediately regarding this.

    That said, I understand that not all of you may be tech-savvy, and as such, I'm going to give you a link to make this very easy for you. Simply put your name, e-mail, and address into the form on this link (provided by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, one of the top organizations in defending internet freedom) and click 'take action now.'

    Link: https://blacklist.eff.org/?action_KEY=8173

    Again, please voice your support (or, if you disagree, you can use this to voice that opinion as well). Thank you, and may freedom prevail.
  • SOPA and How it Breaks the Internet

    For the original article, go here: http://sites.lafayette.edu/itsblog/2012/01/13/sopa-and-protect-ip-or-how-lawmakers-broke-the-internet/

    (Note: The following is not my own work, but rather the work of the author linked above. This is merely reposted to raise awareness. I have, however, added emphasis on some important points.)


    "So, first let me say that I’m no law expert. I am however something of an IT Pro. IT’s been my career, well, since I graduated High School. IT’s been my hobby, and I guess you could say Passion since long before that. I’ve worked for ISP’s, Web Hosts, and now I’m a member of the IT staff here at Lafayette. I’m respected for my skills, opinions, and abilities. I say all of this so that you’ll know who I am and what I know. Which may, or may not, add credibility to what I’m about to write in this blog entry.

    I’ve done a bit of reading about the Stop Online Piracy and PROTECT IP Acts today. I’d learned of both of these bills a few weeks ago, and since then I’ve been pretty interested in their progress. I’d like to say that I’m going to give you an unbiased account of this bill and what it proposes, but after what I’ve read today, that’s impossible.

    DNS

    So, let me start by explaining something… DNS. DNS is, essentially, what makes the internet usable by all of us humans that use it. DNS is the Domain Name System. Every end-user on the internet depends on DNS in order to do, well, anything. And most of you probably dont even know it (that is, unless you do know it, in which case, you probably don’t need to read this section of the blog post). Check your e-mail? You’re using DNS. Update your Facebook status, you’re using DNS, read this blog post? You’re using DNS. The web site address here is www.undrground.org, that domain name is just a pointer, to an IP address. See, computers, and in this case, servers, don’t talk to each other using names, they use these IP addresses. Every computer connected to the internet has an IP address, and in almost all cases, a DNS resolvable name as well.

    So, your computer needs to know how to translate those names to their corresponding IP addresses. It does this with the assistance of a Domain Name Server. Nameservers are essentially servers which house databases which correlate DNS Names to IP addresses. DNS is distributed across all of these DNS servers, and at the heart of it all are Root Servers. Root servers contain lists of what domain names are served by what nameservers. So, if I ask my nameserver for the ip address of my own domain, it is the autoritative nameserver for my domain, so it just returns the address I’ve told it to return. If I ask it for a domain other than one of mine, it references the root servers, to find out where it can find out the address for the name I’ve asked for. Then it asks that server for the IP address, and then returns it to me. This is exactly how the process works for every single web site you attempt to view. Your computer asks your ISP’s nameserver for the IP address of the server you’re looking for, and then it asks the root servers for the authoritative host for that domain, and gets the IP address. Your computer then connects to the web site by its IP address.

    Without DNS, you’d need to remember the IP address of every site you wanted to view. Not to mention some of the more advanced uses of DNS. It all comes back to name resolution, and some of the tricks that it allows. So if I’ve been successful in describing to you how all of this works, you might be able to picture how important DNS is to how the Internet functions. Without solid DNS, things get all confusing. There are also a number of ways that DNS can be used against you, if someone manages to get in between you and your DNS server, they can take all of your requests and send them somewhere else. Say I wanted to get your Facebook password. I could forward your facebook traffic to my own server, and fake a facebook login page. Then just capture what you enter. You see the facebook domain, and assume you’re on facebook.

    Why did I just give you a crash course in DNS? (See the Wikipedia entry for lots more information) Because that is exactly what SOPA and PROTECT IP aim to foul up.

    Why?

    The purpose of these bills is to provide a legal way of blocking sites which are deemed illegal. I’m not going to get into who gets to decide they’re illegal right now, I bay delve into that in a bit. This seems well intentioned enough. Basically, if I’m serving pirated software, or more likely copyrighted material, like TV Shows, Movies, or Music, my site can be blocked. The problem here is, blocking sites at this level just isn’t something that the current infrastructure is built to accommodate. The most logical way to do this is to cut off the site at its source. Which would be the provider hosting the site. This is easy enough to do if the site is hosted here in the US. The problem is that many of these sorts of sites are hosted outside of US jurisdiction. US law has no power of them. So the next best method would be to cut off DNS resolution for these sites to US citizens.

    How?

    According to the bill, blocking “rogue” sites will be done at a DNS level. Here’s the problem with DNS. There isn’t necessarily a central authority. What makes DNS so robust is that there’s no single point of failure. That means that its very redundant, and independent. If you want to block a foreign site, by disabling its dns, you pretty much have your hands tied. You cant tell the registrar to drop it because they’re not bound by US law, and chances are whoever’s hosting DNS for that site isn’t either. So how do you do it? You tell all of the _law abiding_ US DNS servers to stop serving that domain.

    So, let’s say The Pirate Bay is to be blocked. US law says that all US NameServers are to stop resolving thepiratebay.org to the proper IP address. So this means that the majority of US citizens cant get to The Pirate Bay. So, you have a legally registered domain, which it’s registrar publishes to the Root servers. The root servers point queries to the authoritative (non-us) name servers, and the rest of the US… Ignores it. Yes, this will work. It’s a horrible idea though! DNS works because every DNS server is supposed to respond with the same, PROPER record for each and every domain. There’s some cases where that’s not the case, but for the majority of external, internet based, sites, thats the case. This legislation wants us to break that. Just trample all over the very framework of the internet.

    Why don’t I like it?

    Some may claim that anyone opposing this bill, does so simply because they like to pirate software, or movies, or music, and don’t want to see that go away. That’s not necessarily the case. I mean, sure, there are probably people out there fighting it for just that reason, but they don’t really have a case imho. They’re breaking the law, and they’re upset because that will become harder to do. The case for me, and most, isn’t that we feel that online piracy shouldn’t be combated, rather that this bill is NOT the right answer. There simply has to be a better way.

    Let me point out a few major flaws here. Some of these I’ve deduced on my own, others have been pointed out by other articles I’ve read.

    1. The people voting on this bill… Have NO CLUE what they’re voting to do, and they seem to be proud of that fact. They’ve even opted OUT of assembling a panel of experts to review the bill.

    2. It wont work. At least, not as they picture it. Blocking DNS may limit the number of people getting to, as in my example earlier, thepiratebay.org. The problem is, it’s easily worked around. They’re not taking the pirate bay offline, they’re just making it harder to find. The site will still be just as accessible by its IP address, just not by its name. It’s like taking down all of the street signs and house addresses, and making people remember latitude and longitude to find peoples houses. Its still possible, its just a little more difficult. On top of that, nothing would stop you from accessing a different DNS server, that still serves dns for the site you’re trying to access. I could setup a DNS server on a cloud provider outside of the US, and use it for all of my queries, and it would be completely exempt from this law. The problem there is, not everyone knows how to run a dns server. So you’ll see rogue dns servers pop up, and the people who run these rogue sites will tell their users to use these rogue DNS servers. The problem is, how can you trust such a server? How do you know they’re not going to muck about and make facebook.com point to some malicious facebook clone that harvests all of your login information?

    3. Motivation. They’ll try to tell you that they’re doing this to protect US jobs, and US citizens. It’s bs. They’re doing this because lobbyists from major media companies are pushing them to, but lining their pockets with lots of green paper.

    4. Freedom. The internet, for the most part, is free. Its the playground for the tech savvy, and technically inept alike. From Farmville addicts, to lisp coders. Mechanics to electricians. You’re free to say what you like, do what you like, make enemies or friends with who you like, and you can do it anywhere in the world. Start letting the government tell you where you’re allowed to play…. I’m not sure I want to know where that leads.

    5. Unintended consequences. Get out your tinfoil hat. This one starts to sound a little more like a conspiracy theory. Imagine that the US government had the power to take down web sites. Imagine that it had the same legal fairness as the rest of our legal system. You know, the system that lets the guy with the deeper pockets walk off of his murder charge. The internet is full of hobbyist bloggers, like me, and huge news outlets. If a takedown order came in for my domain, because of something i blogged about. I’d fight it, but to be honest, I don’t have the money to _really_ fight it. I’ve got a family, a house payment, and all the other obligations that go along with being a citizen. I also DONT have the protection that journalists have. This means that stubborn ideals or not. I just couldn’t fight something like that. MOST bloggers would say the same. I’ve read that there’s wording in this bill that says that any tool designed to circumvent the measures put in place by SOPA, violates SOPA. So, if I wrote a blog entry about some nifty tool that lets you get around SOPA, MY SITE could be considered a tool that helps users get around SOPA. This means that suddenly I have to start censoring what I blog about. Now imagine sites with a community of content creators. Something like reddit, or anything with a message forum. If one of the users, not even affiliated with the sites management, posts a link to a tool that circumvents SOPA, now the site’s violating SOPA! That’s rediculous!


    Closing

    I think I’ve said all I can to make my point. Let me just close with this:
    Piracy is Illegal. Illegal mean’s it’s against the law…
    Laws intended to stop piracy aren’t necesarily bad. They’re trying to uphold the law.
    Laws which ignorantly break the internet just because Sony complained that it’s not rich enough, are mindnumbingly stupid."

    Author: $nate[0], Lafeyette ITS Staff

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

  • Police Brutality, San Francisco



    Not saying I agree with the mother's actions, but the officer's actions are definitely uncalled for. Would appreciate if anybody has any further information or a clearer video.

    Reach me at cycl0p5 [at] tormail [dot] net, send a message on here, or comment any information below.

    ***PRIVACY NOTICE:
    Warning--any person and/or institution and/or Agent and/or Agency of any governmental structure including but not limited to the United States Federal Government also using or monitoring/using this website or any of its associated websites, you do NOT have my permission to utilize any of my profile information nor any of the content contained herein including, but not limited to my photos, and/ or the comments made about my photo's or any other "picture" art posted on my profile, friends, activities, notes or any postings whatsoever. You are hereby notified that you are strictly prohibited from disclosing, copying, distributing, disseminating, or taking any other action against me with regard to this profile and the contents herein. The foregoing prohibitions ...also apply to your employee(s), agent(s), student(s) or any personnel under your direction or control. The contents of this profile are private and legally privileged and confidential information, and the violation of my personal privacy is punishable by law.

Monday, 09 January 2012

  • Visit Cycl0p5's Xanga Site
    • Name: Cycl0p5
    • Location: New York City, New York, United States
    • Member Since: 11/26/2004
    • True Lifetime

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