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Very Hot Topic (More than 100 Replies) Cry freedom! (Read 165792 times)
b0b
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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #855 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 11:38am
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You don't seriously think the police department should be used as a revenue source, do you?

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #856 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 11:56am
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Not if that it's soul purpose...and the law agrees with me there.  Recently I read a judge doing away with traffic cams (I think in MA or around there) because it didn't provide "safety or protection primarily" but was just a source of revenue gain.  However, I think taking people's money is a proper punishment for small crimes and whatnot, and I think that money should go back into the criminal justice system or funding to keep people out of it.

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(Hopefully that clarified my position?)
  

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #857 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 1:27pm
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I can agree with that stance.  Thanks for the clarification!

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #858 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 2:19pm
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At one of the camera intersections (Union City Boulevard and Lowry Road), the number of citations plunged from 309 in September to 80 in December. Such a quick 58 percent drop


What am I missing? Isn't that a 74% drop?
  
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b0b
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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #859 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 3:00pm
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Ironman, please don't try to confuse the author with all that statistical hoohaw.

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(...made up a new word.)
  

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MediaMaster
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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #860 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 5:14pm
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071106/ap_on_go_co/congress_yahoo

Yahoo execs defend role in arrest
Quote:
Two top Yahoo Inc. officials on Tuesday defended their company's role in the jailing of a Chinese journalist but ran into withering criticism from lawmakers who accused them of complicity with an oppressive communist regime.


Pretty interesting considering the US govnt asks our corporations to hand over data on our citizens regarding anti-democratic movements. I wonder if a foreign company helping out the US government would be accused by their country of complicity with an oppressive democratic regime!
  

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #861 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 11:53am
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OMG, Pat Robertson just endorsed Rudy Giuliani!  What is this world coming to?  Rudy is pro-abortion, pro-gay rights, and anti-gun.  How can Pat Robertson endorse a man for president that stands for everything he claims to despise?

Many years ago, I had some modicum of respect for Robertson.  He's obviously gone over the deep end over the past decade.  Between his 9/11 comments and calling for hit on Chavez, I think he's completely lost his mind.

It seems quite obvious to me that social conservatives have thrown in the towel.  This is the last straw for me.  If Rudy gets the Republican nomination because people in this country have thrown their morals and values away, I will vote for a third party or write in my candidate of choice.  Screw Rudy and screw Robertson.  Rant over.


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(...#@$%#$^@!!!)
  

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #862 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 12:42pm
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is pro-abortion, pro-gay rights, and pro-gun


You mean anti-gun.  He might pay a visit to the NRA but he sure doesn't believe in what they do.

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(Rudy is a moron and not a true Republican)
  

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #863 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 1:13pm
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You're right, I fixed it.  I meant to say anti-gun.

Rudy is definitely a RINO (Republican in name only).

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #864 - Nov 8th, 2007 at 12:12pm
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I found this on Engadget today...

Quote:
SlySoft's latest AnyDVD beta cracks BD+

Posted Nov 7th 2007 9:28PM by Darren Murph
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Regardless of what those oh-so-knowledgeable analysts had to say, we all knew this day was coming. Yep, that highly-touted, totally "impenetrable" copy protection technology known as BD+ has officially been brought to its knees, and it's not at all surprising to hear that we have SlySoft to thank. The AnyDVD 6.1.9.6 beta has quite a comical change log too, and aside from noting that users now have the ability to backup their BD+ movies and watch titles sans the need for HDCP-compliant equipment, it also includes a candid note to Twentieth Century Fox informing the studio that its prior assumptions about BD+'s effectiveness were apparently incorrect.


Bahahaha, BluRay has been cracked!  So much for being "impenetrable!"

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(...said penetrate.  Ha!)
  

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #865 - Nov 8th, 2007 at 12:34pm
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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2004001159_spying08.html


AT&T gave feds access to all Web, phone traffic, ex-tech says

By Ellen Nakashima
The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — His first inkling that something was amiss came in summer 2002, when he opened the door to admit a visitor from the National Security Agency (NSA) to an AT&T office in San Francisco.

"What the heck is the NSA doing here?" Mark Klein, a former AT&T technician, said he asked himself.

A year or so later, he stumbled upon documents that, he said, show the agency gained access to massive amounts of e-mail, Web search and other Internet records of more than a dozen global and regional telecom providers. AT&T allowed the agency to hook into its network and, according to Klein, many of the other telecom companies probably knew nothing about it.

Klein will be on Capitol Hill today to share his story in the hope it will persuade Congress not to grant legal immunity to telecommunications firms that helped the government in its warrantless anti-terrorism efforts.

Klein, 62, said he may be the only person in a position to discuss firsthand knowledge of an important aspect of the Bush administration's domestic surveillance. He is retired, so he isn't worried about losing his job. He carried no security clearance, and the documents in his possession were not classified, he said. He has no qualms about "turning in," as he put it, the company where he worked for 22 years until he retired in 2004.

"If they've done something massively illegal and unconstitutional — well, they should suffer the consequences," Klein said.

In an interview this week, he alleged that the NSA set up a system that vacuumed up Internet and phone-call data from ordinary Americans with the help of AT&T and without obtaining a court order. Contrary to the government's depiction of its surveillance program as aimed at overseas terrorists, Klein said, much of the data sent through AT&T to the NSA was purely domestic. Klein said he thinks the NSA was analyzing the records for usage patterns and for content.

He said the NSA built a special room in San Francisco to receive data streamed through an AT&T Internet room containing "peering links," or major connections to other telecom providers. Other so-called secret rooms reportedly were constructed at AT&T sites in Seattle, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Jose, Calif.

Klein's documents and his account form the basis of one of the first lawsuits filed against the telecom companies after the government's warrantless-surveillance program was disclosed by The New York Times in December 2005.

Claudia Jones, an AT&T spokeswoman, said she had no comment on Klein's allegations. "AT&T is fully committed to protecting our customers' privacy. We do not comment on matters of national security," she said.

The NSA and the White House also declined to comment.

Klein is urging Congress not to block Hepting v. AT&T, a class-action suit pending in federal court in San Francisco, and 37 other lawsuits charging carriers with illegally collaborating with the NSA program. He and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which filed Hepting v. AT&T in 2006, are urging key lawmakers to oppose a pending White House-endorsed immunity provision that effectively would wipe out the lawsuits. The Senate Judiciary Committee is expected to take up the measure today.

In summer 2002, Klein was working in an office responsible for Internet equipment when an NSA representative arrived to interview a management-level technician for a special, secret job.

The job entailed building a "secret room" in another AT&T office 10 blocks away, he said. By coincidence, in October 2003, Klein was transferred to that office. He asked a technician about the secret room on the sixth floor, and the technician told him it was connected to the Internet room a floor above. The technician handed him wiring diagrams.

"That was my 'aha' moment," Klein said. "They're sending the entire Internet to the secret room."

The diagram showed splitters glass prisms that split signals from each network into two identical copies. One copy fed into the secret room. The other proceeded to its destination, he said.

"This splitter was sweeping up everything, vacuum-cleaner-style," he said. "The NSA is getting everything. These are major pipes that carry not just AT&T's customers but everybody's."

One of Klein's documents listed links to 16 entities, including Global Crossing, a large provider of voice and data services in the United States and abroad; UUNet, a large Internet provider now owned by Verizon; Level 3 Communications, which provides local, long-distance and data transmission in the United States and overseas; and more familiar names, such as Sprint and Qwest. It also included data exchanges MAE-West and PAIX, or Palo Alto Internet Exchange, facilities where telecom carriers hand off Internet traffic to each other.

"I flipped out," he said. "They're copying the whole Internet. There's no selection going on here. Maybe they select out later, but at the point of handoff to the government, they get everything."

Qwest has not been sued because of media reports last year that said the company declined to participate in an NSA program to build a database of domestic phone-call records out of concern that it may have been illegal. What the documents show, Klein said, is that the NSA apparently was collecting several carriers' communications, probably without their consent.

Another document showed that the NSA installed in the room a Narus semantic traffic analyzer, which Klein said indicated the NSA was doing content analysis.

Steve Bannerman, Narus' marketing vice president, said the NarusInsight system can track a communication's origin and destination, as well as its content. He declined to comment on AT&T's use of the system.

Klein said he went public after President Bush defended the NSA's surveillance program as limited to collecting phone calls between suspected terrorists overseas and people in the United States. Klein said the documents show that the scope was much broader.


It's nice to see that Carnivore is alive and well with the complicity of nearly every major telecommunications company in America and nobody even cares.

As long as it stops one terrorist, everything is peachy, right?

That's alright, there is always PGP if you want "The Man" to work for it.

-b0b
(...roffled at "copying the whole Internet.")
  

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #866 - Nov 9th, 2007 at 11:27am
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Friday November 9, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
Michael Doyle, McClatchy Newspapers


The US supreme court will today consider gun control in a private session that could soon explode publicly.

Behind closed doors, the high court's nine judges will consider taking a case that challenges Washington DC's handgun ban. Their decision will shape how far other US cities and states can go with their own gun restrictions.

"If the court decides to take this up, it's very likely it will end up being the most important second amendment case in history," said Dennis Henigan, the legal director for the Brady Campaign to prevent gun violence.

Mr Henigan predicted "it's more likely than not" that the necessary four judges will vote to consider the case. The court will announce its decision on Tuesday, and oral arguments could be heard next year.

Lawyers already are swarming from every angle
Texas, Florida and 11 other states weighed in earlier on behalf of gun owners who are challenging the District of Columbia's strict gun laws. New York and three other states want the restrictions upheld.

Tom Palmer, one of six plaintiffs named in the original lawsuit challenging the Washington, DC ban, considers the case a matter of life and death. An openly gay scholar in international relations at the rightwing Cato Institute, he thinks that a handgun saved him years ago in San Jose, California, when a gang threatened him.
"A group of young men started yelling at us, 'faggot', 'homo', 'queer', 'we're going to kill you' and 'they'll never find your bodies'," Mr Palmer said in a March 2003 declaration.

"Fortunately, I was able to pull my handgun out of my backpack, and our assailants backed off."
Their broader challenge is to the fundamental meaning of the second amendment to the US constitution. Here, commas, clauses and constitutional history all matter.
The full text of the second amendment says, "A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

Gun-control supporters say this means that the government can limit firearms ownership as part of its power to regulate the militia. Gun ownership is cast as a collective right, with the government organising armed citizens to protect homeland security.
"The second amendment permits reasonable regulation of firearms to protect public safety and does not guarantee individuals the absolute right to own the weapons of their choice," New York and the three other states declared in court papers.

Gun control critics contend that the well-regulated militia business is beside the point, and say the constitution protects an individual's right to possess guns.
"The right to keep and bear arms should be understood in light of the many reasons that the founding generation of Americans valued that right, including hunting and self-defence," Texas, Florida and the 11 other states declared in a competing brief.
Last March, a divided appellate court panel sided with the individual-rights interpretation and threw out the US capital's handgun ban.

"The right to keep and bear arms was not created by the government, but rather preserved by it," said Judge Laurence Silberman. "The amendment does not protect the right of militiamen to keep and bear arms, but rather the right of the people."
The ruling clashed with other courts, creating the kind of split that the supreme court resolves. The Silberman ruling obviously stung District of Columbia officials, but it perplexed gun-control supporters.

If District of Columbia officials tried to salvage their gun-control law by appealing to the supreme court - as they then did - they could give the court's conservative majority a chance to undermine guncontrol laws across the US.


The moment of truth is upon us!

-b0b
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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #867 - Nov 9th, 2007 at 5:56pm
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Cities Eliminate Right to Contest Parking Tickets
Boston, Massachusetts and Washington, DC effectively eliminate the right to contest parking tickets.

DC DMV logoIn an attempt to stem the loss of revenue from motorists contesting parking tickets, cities are effectively eliminating the traditional due process rights of motorists to defend themselves at an impartial hearing. By the end of next year, Washington, DC's Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) will not allow anyone who believes he unfairly received a citation to have his day in an administrative hearing.

"DMV will complete the phase-out of in-person adjudication of parking tickets in favor of mail-in and e-mail adjudication by December 2008," the Fiscal Year 2008 DMV plan states.

The move is intended to allow automated street sweeper parking ticket machines to boost the number of infractions cited well beyond the 1.6 million currently handed out by meter maids. As one-third of those who contest citations in the city are successful, the hearings cut significantly into the $100 million in revenue tickets generate each year.

Under the DMV's plan, motorists will only be able to object to a ticket by email or letter where city employees can ignore or reject letters in bulk without affected motorists having any realistic recourse. That's not good enough for residents like Emily Miller, who told us that being able to present her case in person was essential. The Sunday school teacher was found not guilty at an administrative DMV hearing in June of driving with an open container of coffee. She was so thrilled with her victory that she decided to fight a parking ticket issued to her in a location where the parking signs were contradictory.

Motorists in many cities besides DC complain about unfair citations. So far, Baltimore, Maryland's Inspector General has uncovered 10,000 bogus parking tickets issued to innocent motorists. In Boston and other cities in Massachusetts, motorists cannot challenge a $100 parking ticket in court without first paying a $275 court fee. If found innocent, the motorist does not receive a refund of the $275.


I say you wait until they arrest you and then you have your trial.  That is...if these "policies" aren't overturned faster than Wes' mom eats pancakes.

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #868 - Nov 10th, 2007 at 9:02am
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If you ask me, this should be covered under the heading of "Taxation without Representation."  We all know that parking tickets are just another form of tax to generate revenue for those cities.

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Re: Cry freedom!
Reply #869 - Nov 10th, 2007 at 11:43am
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I know how I will resolve my parking ticket problem, murder!

See, now that just doesn't work out for anyone...slippery slope
  
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