Tag Archives: privacy

Siri , Cortana, and Google Now are Always Listening to you and Even Storing Your Conversations

FK – If you have a Google + account or an Android device check the crap they’ve saved about you.

SPECTRE MOVIE SECRETS REVEALED!

FK – And what law was the bad guy arrested under at the end? The old system is still in control…

The movie is entertaining, though I felt the action was a little toned down from the other blonde Bond versions, with plenty of breaks and time for some actual plot development/story whatever, unlike the latest Star Wars flick which was balls to the wall blurred out to the point of being game like. There are many good points made about surveillance but at the end I felt it was a fake out, exchanging one evil system for another.

I noticed the lead actor was listed as a producer and was quoted the other day as saying he didn’t want to make another Bond film. It all makes me wonder about funding and control.

Don’t know a lot about MI6’s record but if they’re like the FBI, which had a hand in most to all ‘terrorist’ events over the last few decades, or the CIA which deals drugs to pay for their playtime, then they need to be abolished or at least watched over by a citizens militia with the power to arrest, try for treason and execute those who play a part in this evil.

Is Microsoft reading YOUR emails? Windows 10 may threaten your privacy, watchdogs warn

It’s estimated that more than 14 million devices are running Windows 10 after Microsoft rolled out its new operating system last week.

But an updated privacy statement released shortly afterwards says Microsoft can collect users’ information from private emails, address books and other files.

The move has angered watchdogs which say it is ‘bad news for privacy,’ but Microsoft says it does not collect data without users’ consent.

FK – Can’t trust the corporates, can’t trust the govt., can’t trust the religions… Welcome to reality.

Can we get our legislators to end this crap once and for all and force them all to respect us as human beings and not as tools or jackasses? Not as long as the average dumbass doesn’t care…

Microsoft Privacy Statement

Windows 10 Is Spying On You: Here’s How To Stop It

Hillview man arrested for shooting down drone; cites right to privacy

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — A Hillview man has been arrested after he shot down a drone flying over his property — but he’s not making any apologies for it.

It happened Sunday night at a home on Earlywood Way, just south of the intersection between Smith Lane and Mud Lane in Bullitt County, according to an arrest report.

Hillview Police say they were called to the home of 47-year-old William H. Merideth after someone complained about a firearm.

When they arrived, police say Merideth told them he had shot down a drone that was flying over his house. The drone was hit in mid-air and crashed in a field near Merideth’s home.

Police say the owner of the drone claimed he was flying it to get pictures of a friend’s house — and that the cost of the drone was over $1,800.

Merideth was arrested and charged with first degree criminal mischief and first degree wanton endangerment. He was booked into the Bullitt County Detention Center, and released on Monday.

WDRB News spoke with Merideth Tuesday afternoon, and he gave his side of the story.

“Sunday afternoon, the kids – my girls – were out on the back deck, and the neighbors were out in their yard,” Merideth said. “And they come in and said, ‘Dad, there’s a drone out here, flying over everybody’s yard.'”

Merideth’s neighbors saw it too.

“It was just hovering above our house and it stayed for a few moments and then she finally waved and it took off,” said neighbor Kim VanMeter.

FK – Historically there is no real ‘right to privacy’ from the air. He did a very stupid thing, even if he did use a shotgun:

Is It OK to Shoot Down Your Neighbor’s Drone?

 

On This Day: James Madison introduces the Bill of Rights

On June 8, 1789, James Madison addressed the House of Representatives and introduced a proposed Bill of Rights to the Constitution. More than three months later, Congress would finally agree on a final list of Rights to present to the states..

James_Madisonnew640

Some of Madison’s opening list of amendments didn’t make the final cut in September. The House agreed on a version of the Bill of Rights that had 17 amendments, and later, the Senate consolidated the list to 12 amendments. In the end, the states approved 10 of the 12 amendments in December 1791.

One of two amendments rejected by the states was eventually ratified in 1992 as the 27th Amendment; it restricted the ability of Congress to change its pay while in session. (The other proposed amendment dealt with the number of representatives in Congress, based on the 1789 population.)

But if Madison had his original way, our Constitution would have a two-part Preamble that includes part of Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence before the current preamble.

FK – Should be our second biggest holiday, after the day they shot back.

Rand Paul: “I’d put Clapper and Snowden in the same jail cell”

FK – Oh for leaders with some courage. Until we throw away the PC crap completely and start hanging the bastards nothing will change. No, not Snowden, the other guy, et al.

FBI Report Adds Fuel to Fire Over Expiring Patriot Act Snooping Powers

Earlier this month, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the USA Freedom Act, which would renew some of the “less controversial” expiring portions of the Patriot Act, but also would end the government’s bulk collection of phone data. That bill is now facing resistance in the Senate, where Republican leaders assert that a full extension on the Patriot Act provisions should be granted without any changes. However, an FBI report admitting that no major cases have been cracked with surveillance powers authorized by the Patriot Act provides fodder to fuel the fight against extending the Patriot Act’s bulk data collection.

Section 215 of the Patriot Act, slated to expire on June 1, authorizes the government to collect “any tangible things” that the government proves are “relevant to” an investigation into suspected terrorists. It permits government agents to compel businesses to turn over records and documents of Americans who have no official ties to terrorist organizations.

The NSA’s unconstitutional, warrantless phone snooping program operates under Section 215. Supporters of the program claim it is critical in the fight against terror.

In a surprising bipartisan vote of 338-88, members of the House approved the USA Freedom Act, which would extend most of the powers except for the bulk collection of data. Under the USA Freedom Act, the government would have to ask phone companies to store the data, and agents would have to apply for a particular number if they believed it was associated with terrorism.

FK – How much longer? Will all of amerika dig the ditch it’s told to dig then wet its pants when the machine bun bolts slam home and die stupidly wondering “How did this ever happen to me?”

FBI admits Patriot Act snooping powers didn’t crack any major terrorism cases

Watch McConnell Try To Extend Patriot Act To June 8, June 5, June 3, June 2… And Rand Paul Object

News release from Sen. Rand Paul:

Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act

Security News This Week: If the Patriot Act Expires It Won’t Spell Doom

#ifthepatriotactexpires

FK – Gee, even the young tyrants have a clue about some things. What’s the world coming to?

This is why Paul should probably stay in the Senate for a while. If the elites allow him into the now red house they’ll either kill him if he actually does anything or stage a massive false flag in order to install one of their own again, discredit the Liberty movement and start WWIII over 3000 year-old tribal propaganda…

McConnell Struggling Against Tide in Support of Patriot Act

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell wants to reauthorize surveillance powers under the Patriot Act, but hopes are dimming after the House overwhelmingly voted this week to end the National Security Agency’s (NSA’s) bulk data collection program.

According to The Hill, McConnell is in a tight spot as he tries to pursue a renewal of the Patriot Act by the June 1 deadline. He already filed legislation to try to push back the deadline by two months to buy more time.

“He’s really in a box,” Connecticut Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal said Wednesday before the House vote, according to The Hill. “With all due respect, he’s in a box that the courts have made for him, so to speak, by correctly interpreting the law,” he said, referring to a ruling by a federal court recently that the program is illegal.

In voting for the USA Freedom Act, the House will force the agency to obtain a narrower set of records from private phone companies, a move that McConnell has said would land the NSA with “an untested, untried, and more cumbersome system.”

McConnell is committed to passing a “clean” reauthorization bill that would extend part of the Patriot Act for 5 1/2 years.

FK – Mccommie needs to be in a box, with bars on the windows, along with every other bastard that voted for that evil law without even reading it. That kind of garbage must end.

Take Back Kentucky plans to discuss this evil at their meeting today.