Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

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RyanThunder
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2201 Post by RyanThunder »

OBC?

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adr
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2202 Post by adr »

ye olde boyz club
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2203 Post by Oxymoron »

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2204 Post by Flagg »

RyanThunder wrote:OBC?
Old boys club. Basically everyone with a green name or who is so ingratiated with the mods that they can get away with anything and at most get a slap on the wrist.
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Aaron
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2205 Post by Aaron »

Keep in mind that there is no literal OBC, its just describing the practice of those in power covering for each other. They may not be aware they do it.

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2206 Post by Glass Fort MacLeod »

People like me they mean. LOL.

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2207 Post by Flagg »

Aaron wrote:Keep in mind that there is no literal OBC, its just describing the practice of those in power covering for each other. They may not be aware they do it.
Oh yeah, they are totally clueless, which makes it so much worse because they get hyper defensive when you point it out. Like in the thread where I got a warning for calling Shep a racist for being a racist.
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2208 Post by Gands »

Shep: Grand champion of SDN. He got everyone to cover him while he trolled to his heart's content. Then went of his own accord.

I once plugged "shep" "banned" and some other stuff into the SDN search, and it was always funny to see either the mods impotently posting, or DW basically going "meh".

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2209 Post by Aaron »

Glass Fort MacLeod wrote:People like me they mean. LOL.
You got better.

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2210 Post by Stofsk »

Gands wrote:Shep: Grand champion of SDN. He got everyone to cover him while he trolled to his heart's content. Then went of his own accord.

I once plugged "shep" "banned" and some other stuff into the SDN search, and it was always funny to see either the mods impotently posting, or DW basically going "meh".
I just cannot figure out the degree to which DW looked the other way with Shep. If it had been up to Rob he'd have been shitcanned ages ago.

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2211 Post by Losonti Tokash »

shit that reminds of mike's status yesterday
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Lessons learned from the Trayvon Martin case: if you're a young black man, do not travel alone at night, try to stay near well-lit areas with eyewitnesses nearby, and be careful what you wear.

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No actually, lessons learned from the Trayvon Martin case: don't assault people.

I mean, I've actually been accused by the police before of trying to smuggle cigarette smokes into a county jail in Virginia, with a carton of cigarettes in a bag, and standing just outside the fenceline of said jail's exercise yard. Reason I had a pair of smokes was because I was buying them for my Grandmother who smoked at that time -- VA tax was cheaper than MD tax.

I went home at the end of the day with nothing more than a cool story to tell because I was very cooperative, polite and showed my ID along with not running from the police.

I've also had people show up at swimming pools while I'm doing my job, due to me setting off burglar alarms while opening the gates to make Chlorine dumps (offseason, pool closed); and gotten told the secret codes to the burglar alarm; because I was polite and nice to the Pool association member who drove up to check out the alarm. Well, that and the fact my truck was clearly marked with the signage of the pool chemical company I worked for helped.

PS -- Gated communities are the worst to deliver pool chemicals for; you have to show up there during 'normal hours', while the people in the front office are there. Big pain.
cleaning pools during business hours: directly equivalent to being murdered

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2212 Post by Phantasee »

Let me know when you're done talking about sdn
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2213 Post by magic princess »

Kryten wrote:You get costs of $9,000 a year? We get that for a three year course, and still complain about it...

Yep, and the poor people get loans they have to repay, as the free federal subsidy is capped at $5,500.00. Federal work-study is capped at $3,000 (free money if you work some job around campus for it. So 'free'). The subsidized loans which don't start accruing interest while you're in school are also capped at $5,500.00 a year in one programme and then $500.00 a term (so 1,500 - 2,000 a year including summer school) for the other subsidized programme. Note that these values rapidly decrease if your parents make any money at all and you are younger than 25, or if you personally are anything other than dirt poor. Note that if you cannot find a job--and the vast majority of Americans without college degrees in the age of 17 - 21 cannot find a job, so that's you -- your living expenses, room and board, meal plans, etc, will drive the total costs to around 25k a year. This means you have 16k in subsidies if you are a completely impoverished kid coming straight out of the ghetto, 20k in cost, and no way to make more money to pay the other 9k. That means taking out unsubsidized loans that start accruing interest instantaneously, which you then "amortize" into the size of the loan since you can't pay it yet, increasing the size. Your school can't find you a work-study job? Too bad, your work study because an unsubsidized loan.

Lucky for you, you are so dirt poor that you can at least take those unsubsidized loans from the feds, who have a fixed interest rate and repayment plans at a fixed percentage of your income. Oh, except, to help "lower" the rates they're proposing changing that to make the rates variable over the life of the loan for future college graduates, so that anyone going to school starting next year would be even more fucked than people of my generation were, on the grounds that "tying them to the market" will lead to "savings".

Need to support anyone else on your money? Have medical conditions insurance won't cover? Well, you can take out more loans...

Fortunately Washington State has a separate huge grant problem that helped a lot when I was an undergrad, and I was able to work part time, though I still have about half the debt of a doctor or lawyer now, by the time I get my Master's. Oh well. The going wages for engineers with graduate degrees are 60 - 80k with 2% unemployment so I can deal. People who started fine arts? They get the same amount of debt, so have fun with it.

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2214 Post by Losonti Tokash »

Phantasee wrote:Let me know when you're done talking about sdn
literally never

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2215 Post by Flagg »

I honestly think Mike has a total blind spot when it comes to that piece of racist trash. Look at the thread about malt liquor and don't tell me he wasn't honestly perplexed as to why I was calling him a racist bastard.
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2216 Post by Gands »

I wonder if by that point he was just dug in on the issue, and wasn't going to yield as long as there was room for interpretation?

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2217 Post by Flagg »

I mean its possible, but he never needed to even comment. I think he honestly thought I was being unfair to him. I don't know if I just want to think of Mike as a genuine person or if that's actually the case though. I have a lot of respect for the man which is why I'm so perplexed on this issue.
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2218 Post by Darksi4190 »

Flagg wrote:I honestly think Mike has a total blind spot when it comes to that piece of racist trash. Look at the thread about malt liquor and don't tell me he wasn't honestly perplexed as to why I was calling him a racist bastard.
Could this have been a cultural thing? I mean there were a lot of other non-americans who didn't immediately make the "empty malt liquor bottles=black people" connection.

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2219 Post by Flagg »

Yeah part of it was cultural but all you had to do was google it.
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2220 Post by Oxymoron »

Isn't Stratfor supposed to be "neo-conservative" ?

Keeping the NSA in Perspective
Tuesday, July 16, 2013 - 04:01
By George Friedman

In June 1942, the bulk of the Japanese fleet sailed to seize the Island of Midway. Had Midway fallen, Pearl Harbor would have been at risk and U.S. submarines, unable to refuel at Midway, would have been much less effective. Most of all, the Japanese wanted to surprise the Americans and draw them into a naval battle they couldn't win.

The Japanese fleet was vast. The Americans had two carriers intact in addition to one that was badly damaged. The United States had only one advantage: It had broken Japan's naval code and thus knew a great deal of the country's battle plan. In large part because of this cryptologic advantage, a handful of American ships devastated the Japanese fleet and changed the balance of power in the Pacific permanently.

This -- and the advantage given to the allies by penetrating German codes -- taught the Americans about the centrality of communications code breaking. It is reasonable to argue that World War II would have ended much less satisfactorily for the United States had its military not broken German and Japanese codes. Where the Americans had previously been guided to a great extent by Henry Stimson's famous principle that "gentlemen do not read each other's mail," by the end of World War II they were obsessed with stealing and reading all relevant communications.

The National Security Agency evolved out of various post-war organizations charged with this task. In 1951, all of these disparate efforts were organized under the NSA to capture and decrypt communications of other governments around the world -- particularly those of the Soviet Union, which was ruled by Josef Stalin, and of China, which the United States was fighting in 1951. How far the NSA could go in pursuing this was governed only by the extent to which such communications were electronic and the extent to which the NSA could intercept and decrypt them.

The amount of communications other countries sent electronically surged after World War II yet represented only a fraction of their communications. Resources were limited, and given that the primary threat to the United States was posed by nation-states, the NSA focused on state communications. But the principle on which the NSA was founded has remained, and as the world has come to rely more heavily on electronic and digital communication, the scope of the NSA's commission has expanded.

What drove all of this was Pearl Harbor. The United States knew that the Japanese were going to attack. They did not know where or when. The result was disaster. All American strategic thinking during the Cold War was built around Pearl Harbor -- the deep fear that the Soviets would launch a first strike that the United States did not know about. The fear of an unforeseen nuclear attack gave the NSA leave to be as aggressive as possible in penetrating not only Soviet codes but also the codes of other nations. You don't know what you don't know, and given the stakes, the United States became obsessed with knowing everything it possibly could.

In order to collect data about nuclear attacks, you must also collect vast amounts of data that have nothing to do with nuclear attacks. The Cold War with the Soviet Union had to do with more than just nuclear exchanges, and the information on what the Soviets were doing -- what governments they had penetrated, who was working for them -- was a global issue. But you couldn't judge what was important and what was unimportant until after you read it. Thus the mechanics of assuaging fears about a "nuclear Pearl Harbor" rapidly devolved into a global collection system, whereby vast amounts of information were collected regardless of their pertinence to the Cold War.

There was nothing that was not potentially important, and a highly focused collection strategy could miss vital things. So the focus grew, the technology advanced and the penetration of private communications logically followed. This was not confined to the United States. The Soviet Union, China, the United Kingdom, France, Israel, India and any country with foreign policy interests spent a great deal on collecting electronic information. Much of what was collected on all sides was not read because far more was collected than could possibly be absorbed by the staff. Still, it was collected. It became a vast intrusion mitigated only by inherent inefficiency or the strength of the target's encryption.

Justified Fear

The Pearl Harbor dread declined with the end of the Cold War -- until Sept. 11, 2001. In order to understand 9/11's impact, a clear memory of our own fears must be recalled. As individuals, Americans were stunned by 9/11 not only because of its size and daring but also because it was unexpected. Terrorist attacks were not uncommon, but this one raised another question: What comes next? Unlike Timothy McVeigh, it appeared that al Qaeda was capable of other, perhaps greater acts of terrorism. Fear gripped the land. It was a justified fear, and while it resonated across the world, it struck the United States particularly hard.

Part of the fear was that U.S. intelligence had failed again to predict the attack. The public did not know what would come next, nor did it believe that U.S. intelligence had any idea. A federal commission on 9/11 was created to study the defense failure. It charged that the president had ignored warnings. The focus in those days was on intelligence failure. The CIA admitted it lacked the human sources inside al Qaeda. By default the only way to track al Qaeda was via their communications. It was to be the NSA's job.

As we have written, al Qaeda was a global, sparse and dispersed network. It appeared to be tied together by burying itself in a vast new communications network: the Internet. At one point, al Qaeda had communicated by embedding messages in pictures transmitted via the Internet. They appeared to be using free and anonymous Hotmail accounts. To find Japanese communications, you looked in the electronic ether. To find al Qaeda's message, you looked on the Internet.

But with a global, sparse and dispersed network you are looking for at most a few hundred men in the midst of billions of people, and a few dozen messages among hundreds of billions. And given the architecture of the Internet, the messages did not have to originate where the sender was located or be read where the reader was located. It was like looking for a needle in a haystack. The needle can be found only if you are willing to sift the entire haystack. That led to PRISM and other NSA programs.

The mission was to stop any further al Qaeda attacks. The means was to break into their communications and read their plans and orders. To find their plans and orders, it was necessary to examine all communications. The anonymity of the Internet and the uncertainties built into its system meant that any message could be one of a tiny handful of messages. Nothing could be ruled out. Everything was suspect. This was reality, not paranoia.

It also meant that the NSA could not exclude the communications of American citizens because some al Qaeda members were citizens. This was an attack on the civil rights of Americans, but it was not an unprecedented attack. During World War II, the United States imposed postal censorship on military personnel, and the FBI intercepted selected letters sent in the United States and from overseas. The government created a system of voluntary media censorship that was less than voluntary in many ways. Most famously, the United States abrogated the civil rights of citizens of Japanese origin by seizing property and transporting them to other locations. Members of pro-German organizations were harassed and arrested even prior to Pearl Harbor. Decades earlier, Abraham Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus during the Civil War, effectively allowing the arrest and isolation of citizens without due process.

There are two major differences between the war on terror and the aforementioned wars. First, there was a declaration of war in World War II. Second, there is a provision in the Constitution that allows the president to suspend habeas corpus in the event of a rebellion. The declaration of war imbues the president with certain powers as commander in chief -- as does rebellion. Neither of these conditions was put in place to justify NSA programs such as PRISM.

Moreover, partly because of the constitutional basis of the actions and partly because of the nature of the conflicts, World War II and the Civil War had a clear end, a point at which civil rights had to be restored or a process had to be created for their restoration. No such terminal point exists for the war on terror. As was witnessed at the Boston Marathon -- and in many instances over the past several centuries -- the ease with which improvised explosive devices can be assembled makes it possible for simple terrorist acts to be carried out cheaply and effectively. Some plots might be detectable by intercepting all communications, but obviously the Boston Marathon attack could not be predicted.

The problem with the war on terror is that it has no criteria of success that is potentially obtainable. It defines no level of terrorism that is tolerable but has as its goal the elimination of all terrorism, not just from Islamic sources but from all sources. That is simply never going to happen and therefore, PRISM and its attendant programs will never end. These intrusions, unlike all prior ones, have set a condition for success that is unattainable, and therefore the suspension of civil rights is permanent. Without a constitutional amendment, formal declaration of war or declaration of a state of emergency, the executive branch has overridden fundamental limits on its powers and protections for citizens.

Since World War II, the constitutional requirements for waging war have fallen by the wayside. President Harry S. Truman used a U.N resolution to justify the Korean War. President Lyndon Johnson justified an extended large-scale war with the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, equating it to a declaration of war. The conceptual chaos of the war on terror left out any declaration, and it also included North Korea in the axis of evil the United States was fighting against. Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden is charged with aiding an enemy that has never been legally designated. Anyone who might contemplate terrorism is therefore an enemy. The enemy in this case was clear. It was the organization of al Qaeda but since that was not a rigid nation but an evolving group, the definition spread well beyond them to include any person contemplating an infinite number of actions. After all, how do you define terrorism, and how do you distinguish it from crime?

Three thousand people died in the 9/11 attacks, and we know that al Qaeda wished to kill more because it has said that it intended to do so. Al Qaeda and other jihadist movements -- and indeed those unaffiliated with Islamic movements -- pose threats. Some of their members are American citizens, others are citizens of foreign nations. Preventing these attacks, rather than prosecuting in the aftermath, is important. I do not know enough about PRISM to even try to guess how useful it is.

At the same time, the threat that PRISM is fighting must be kept in perspective. Some terrorist threats are dangerous, but you simply cannot stop every nut who wants to pop off a pipe bomb for a political cause. So the critical question is whether the danger posed by terrorism is sufficient to justify indifference to the spirit of the Constitution, despite the current state of the law. If it is, then formally declare war or declare a state of emergency. The danger of PRISM and other programs is that the decision to build it was not made after the Congress and the president were required to make a clear finding on war and peace. That was the point where they undermined the Constitution, and the American public is responsible for allowing them to do so.

Defensible Origins, Dangerous Futures

The emergence of programs such as PRISM was not the result of despots seeking to control the world. It had a much more clear, logical and defensible origin in our experiences of war and in legitimate fears of real dangers. The NSA was charged with stopping terrorism, and it devised a plan that was not nearly as secret as some claim. Obviously it was not as effective as hoped, or the Boston Marathon attack wouldn't have happened. If the program was meant to suppress dissent it has certainly failed, as the polls and the media of the past weeks show.

The revelations about PRISM are far from new or interesting in themselves. The NSA was created with a charter to do these things, and given the state of technology it was inevitable that the NSA would be capturing communications around the world. Many leaks prior to Snowden's showed that the NSA was doing this. It would have been more newsworthy if the leak revealed the NSA had not been capturing all communications. But this does give us an opportunity to consider what has happened and to consider whether it is tolerable.

The threat posed by PRISM and other programs is not what has been done with them but rather what could happen if they are permitted to survive. But this is not simply about the United States ending this program. The United States certainly is not the only country with such a program. But a reasonable start is for the country that claims to be most dedicated to its Constitution to adhere to it meticulously above and beyond the narrowest interpretation. This is not a path without danger. As Benjamin Franklin said, "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."

Read more: Keeping the NSA in Perspective | Stratfor
Follow us: @stratfor on Twitter | Stratfor on Facebook

Keeping the NSA in Perspective is republished with permission of Stratfor.
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2221 Post by Bounty »

I have signed the contract, new job is GO

also discovered the building where I'll be working has a restaurant, dry cleaner and ironing service
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2222 Post by RogueIce »

Aaron wrote:This why I tried to avoid people with green names or friends of them. All you'll get is grief.
:(

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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2223 Post by adr »

i only like rougeice
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2224 Post by adr »

lol aim:

(08:01:14) redacted <AUTO-REPLY> : I'm not here right now
(08:01:14) destructionator4 <AUTO-REPLY> : babies
(08:12:29) redacted <AUTO-REPLY> : I'm not here right now
(08:12:29) destructionator4 <AUTO-REPLY> : babies
(08:23:43) redacted <AUTO-REPLY> : I'm not here right now
(08:23:43) destructionator4 <AUTO-REPLY> : babies
(08:37:46) redacted <AUTO-REPLY> : I'm not here right now
(08:37:46) destructionator4 <AUTO-REPLY> : babies

(i was actually sending him messages from another computer, but was still logged in on my desktop)
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Re: Testing Chat IV: A New Hope

#2225 Post by Big Orangutan »

Stofsk wrote:
Gands wrote:Shep: Grand champion of SDN. He got everyone to cover him while he trolled to his heart's content. Then went of his own accord.

I once plugged "shep" "banned" and some other stuff into the SDN search, and it was always funny to see either the mods impotently posting, or DW basically going "meh".
I just cannot figure out the degree to which DW looked the other way with Shep. If it had been up to Rob he'd have been shitcanned ages ago.
Anyway what did set Shep off and compel him to leave in a huff?
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