ACTA of War: Cyber attacks & street protests over censorship bill
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- Dagum
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What is ACTA?
ACTA was first developed by Japan and the United States in 2006. Canada, the European Union and Switzerland joined the preliminary talks throughout 2006 and 2007. Official negotiations began in June 2008, with Australia, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea and Singapore joining the talks.
Apart from the participating governments, an advisory committee of large US-based multinational corporations was consulted on the content of the draft treaty,[11] including the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America[12] and the International Intellectual Property Alliance[13] (which includes the Business Software Alliance, Motion Picture Association of America, and Recording Industry Association of America).[14]
The treaty calls for the creation of an "ACTA committee" to make amendments, for which public or judicial review are not required. Industry representatives may have "consultatory input" to amendments.[15] A 2009 Freedom of Information request showed that the following companies also received copies of the draft under a nondisclosure agreement: Google, eBay, Intel, Dell, News Corporation, Sony Pictures, Time Warner, and Verizon.[16]
ACTA first came to public attention in May 2008 after a discussion paper was uploaded to Wikileaks.[17] After more leaks in 2009 and 2010 and denied requests for disclosure by groups such as Doctors without Borders, IP Justice, the Canadian Library Association, and the Consumers Union of Japan,[18][2][19] the negotiating parties published an official version of the then current draft on 20 April 2010.[20]
In June 2010, a conference with "over 90 academics, practitioners and public interest organizations from six continents"[21] concluded "that the terms of the publicly released draft of ACTA threaten numerous public interests, including every concern specifically disclaimed by negotiators." A group of 75+ law professors signed a letter to President Obama demanding that ACTA be halted and changed.[22]
Continued at:
http://www.redicecreations.com/article.php?id=18332
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- Vierotchka
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Truthitswhatsfordinner
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Ugly legislation.
- 4 months ago
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Truthitswhatsfordinner
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LivingPong
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Why the Hell isn't Murdoch and his News Corp ilk not in jail? Not only did he not police his little pet projects, there was active encouragement from the top down to get hold of private data by any means possible, then publish it for profit. Emails confirm these practices were known about by management years before the story broke but nothing was done about it and no amount of lying will cover that up.
MegaUpload very actively took down illegal or inappropriate material as fast as possible as part their of their policy, News Corps papers however prayed upon their targets, often victims of horrendous crimes who deserved support, not their private data to be stolen and for them to be ruthlessly tracked for maximum commercial exploitation.
Publishing details of the murder of civilians in regions blighted by war is in the public interest, but hacking a dead girls phone to obtain a news story and deleting messages to cover the trail is interfering with evidence and a callus and shameful act. It seems their is little interest in protecting the publics' interests at times, but plenty of interest in pandering to the interests of very wealthy and cashed up corporations to further one's political career. Utterly disgusting IHMO!
- 4 months ago
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LivingPong
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Vierotchka
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http://www.avaaz.org/en/eu_save_the_internet_spread/?fuElKab&pv=270
ACTA - a global treaty - could allow corporations to censor the Internet. Negotiated in secret by a small number of rich countries and corporate powers, it would set up a shadowy new anti-counterfeiting body to allow private interests to police everything that we do online and impose massive penalties -- even prison sentences -- against people they say have harmed their business.
Europe is deciding right now whether to ratify ACTA -- and without them, this global attack on Internet freedom will collapse. We know they have opposed ACTA before, but some members of Parliament are wavering -- let's give them the push they need to reject the treaty. Sign the petition -- we'll do a spectacular delivery in Brussels when we reach 500,000 signatures.
- 4 months ago
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Vierotchka
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LivingPong
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A group of at least 5 shitty Australian ISPs signed up to voluntarily keeping all user tracking data for two years a while back. I guess stupid arse government has probably already sneaked it through pinned to some other Bill before parliament. I uploaded my exploit code over two years ago just in case (my spies told me this shit was going down). My zombie botnet lies in wait, it's only mission - to kill, crush and destroy all enemy servers and databases!
#Evil Laughter#
- 4 months ago
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LivingPong
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LivingPong
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LivingPong:
Oh shit, I just took down my databases and servers!
#Pitiful Weeping#
- 4 months ago
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LivingPong
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Dagum
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This is how the long arm of the U.S. Justice Department shut down Megauploads and had Kim Dotcom arrested in a foreign country a million miles away. (New Zealand's a party to ACTA.)
The thing is, the U.S. Senate never ratified the treaty. Obama signed ACTA on October 1, 2011. But since the Senate hasn't ratified the treaty yet, it's not law. So the U.S. Justice Department is enforcing provisions of a proposed treaty, before the provisions have even become law.
- 4 months ago
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Dagum
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MotherForTruth
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When will American citizens be allowed to protest the same way citizens in Poland are allowed?
- 4 months ago
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MotherForTruth