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Thread: irish gov going block websites?

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  2. #2
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    Yup! And I have it on reasonably good authority that the first block of sites to be filtered will include those dealing in prostitution.

    ; )

    Anything's a dildo if you're brave enough.

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    I doubt this will happen, it'd be ridiculous. It'd be a clear attempt to prevent communication and freedom of speech.

    The establishment really hates the internet because it makes it so hard to cover up things anymore. It exposes corruption and makes people able to get their own information on things and purchase what they want themselves instead of relying on what the government-controlled media and outlets give to them.

    We all know it'd never work properly anyway. Civil rights groups would be (thankfully) up in arms about it. They get paid no matter what they do... might as well talk about controlling the internet as anything else.

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    Quote Originally Posted by nicegirlsarenice View Post
    I doubt this will happen, it'd be ridiculous. It'd be a clear attempt to prevent communication and freedom of speech.
    Oh, it's happening. France, Italy & Germany have already done it. Just last week a federal court in the states ruled that the FCC had no powers to stop Comcast from blocking bittorrent traffic on its network..
    Anything's a dildo if you're brave enough.

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    Quote Originally Posted by punterminator View Post
    Oh, it's happening. France, Italy & Germany have already done it. Just last week a federal court in the states ruled that the FCC had no powers to stop Comcast from blocking bittorrent traffic on its network..
    You can click "encyrpt" on your bittorrent client, no problems there. Many ISPs try to throttle torrent transfers to save bandwidth, that's why it's so popular to encrypt them. Vuze has many different levels of encryption.

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    Quote Originally Posted by nicegirlsarenice View Post
    You can click "encyrpt" on your bittorrent client, no problems there. Many ISPs try to throttle torrent transfers to save bandwidth, that's why it's so popular to encrypt them. Vuze has many different levels of encryption.
    Encryption would not have helped here. Comreg actually installed software that would monitor traffic to the trackers (which cannot be encrypted) and then they would spoof thousands of seeds on the tracker, so that anyone connecting a BT client through their network would not be talking to the real tracker but rather a virtual one that lived in Comreg's network and supplied the client with a ton of fake peers and seeds.
    I'm impressed with the ingenuity of it but horrified by the implications for net neutrality.
    Anything's a dildo if you're brave enough.

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    The Internet is the last bastion of free speech that the people of the world have. We should vigorously resist any attempts to regulate it. Far better to leave in all the bad stuff than regulate out all the good stuff along with it.

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    Quote Originally Posted by anonymouse View Post
    The Internet is the last bastion of free speech that the people of the world have. We should vigorously resist any attempts to regulate it. Far better to leave in all the bad stuff than regulate out all the good stuff along with it.
    Absolutely my mousey friend!!
    The thing that really really pisses me off about this is that the entire internet and the www (remember kids, they're not the same thing!) were founded on and could not have existed without a spirit of freedom and collaboration. TCP/IP and the DNS system which the internet is built on are open, freely available protocols developed in a massive international collaborative effort. When Tim Berners Lee developed the HTTP protocol (which the WWW is based upon) his first thought wasn't "wow, how can I monetise this", it was "right, let's get everyone hooked up to this schizzle".
    The internet trundled away quite happily for decades, big business took absolutely no notice of it. Now that they've finally cottoned on to it, what's their first contribution? Regulation, policing, filtering.
    Jeez, I remember in the 80's having to mow lawns and wash cars for 6 months to pay my dad back for a whopping phone bill because I was spending 12/13 hours a day connected to the UK's JANET network. There were of course no Irish numbers you could connect to so phone was permanently dialled into a UK number...
    Anything's a dildo if you're brave enough.

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    Imagine how skewed the perception of many people would be about escorting if it wasn't for this site and others like it.... according to the newspapers it's all criminality and suffering and exploitation and drugs etc.

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    Quote Originally Posted by nicegirlsarenice View Post
    Imagine how skewed the perception of many people would be about escorting if it wasn't for this site and others like it.... according to the newspapers it's all criminality and suffering and exploitation and drugs etc.
    Good point..
    Anything's a dildo if you're brave enough.

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