Trevor profile picture

Trevor

I am here for Friends

About Me

src="http://img71.imageshack.us/img71/6356/support6ec.gif" alt="Myspace Layouts" style="position:absolute; left:0px; top: 0px;" border="0"I always read "human nature" as "my nature". A limp excuse to justify one's bad nature and an arrogant one in that it attempts to lay on the rest of society the failings of those who utter it.

My Interests

Socialism,worker's rights,human rights,world and
national politics,protests,anti-war movement,boycotting large fascist corporations,limiting consumption,universal health care,International Socialist Organization,Youth For International Socialism,Not In Our Name,worker's solidarity,desegregating the working classes,independent media,May Day,Russia,Germany,Chicago,NYC,vodka,cranberry juice,black coffee,gas masks,ciggs,clubs,shows...99 Kriegsminister Streichholz und Benzinkanister Hielten sich fuer schlaue Leute Witterten schon fette Beute Riefen: Krieg und wollten Macht Mann, wer haette das gedacht Dass es einmal soweit kommt Wegen 99 ballonswww.eve-online.com
Your Domain web
SCROOGLE DOESN"T TRACK AND LOG YOU GOOGLE DOES. WHO WOULD YOU TRUST? TRY IT NOW. SAME RESULTS AS GOOGLE MINUS THE ADS NOT YOUR PRIVACY.Presumably you have a Gmail account, and do not object to Google's policiesBut many of us will not send mail to gmail.com ...Problem 1: Gmail is nearly immortalGoogle offers more storage for your email than other Internet service providers that we know about. The powerful searching encourages account holders to never delete anything. It's easier to just leave it in the inbox and let the powerful searching keep track of it. Google admits that deleted messages will remain on their system, and may be accessible internally at Google, for an indefinite period of time.A new California law, the Online Privacy Protection Act, went into effect on July 1, 2004. Google changed their main privacy policy that same day because the previous version sidestepped important issues and might have been illegal. For the first time in Google's history, the language in their new policy made it clear that they will be pooling all the information they collect on you from all of their various services. Moreover, they may keep this information indefinitely, and give this information to whomever they wish. All that's required is for Google to "have a good faith belief that access, preservation or disclosure of such information is reasonably necessary to protect the rights, property or safety of Google, its users or the public." Google, you may recall, already believes that as a corporation they are utterly incapable of bad faith. Their corporate motto is "Don't be evil," and they even made sure that the Securities and Exchange Commission got this message in Google's IPO filing.Google's policies are essentially no different than the policies of Microsoft, Yahoo, Alexa and Amazon. However, these others have been spelling out their nasty policies in detail for years now. By way of contrast, we've had email from indignant Google fans who defended Google by using the old privacy language — but while doing so they arrived at exactly the wrong interpretation of Google's actual position! Now those emails will stop, because Google's position is clear at last. It's amazing how a vague privacy policy, a minimalist browser interface, and an unconventional corporate culture have convinced so many that Google is different on issues that matter.After 180 days in the U.S., email messages lose their status as a protected communication under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, and become just another database record. This means that a subpoena instead of a warrant is all that's needed to force Google to produce a copy. Other countries may even lack this basic protection, and Google's databases are distributed all over the world. Since the Patriot Act was passed, it's unclear whether this ECPA protection is worth much anymore in the U.S., or whether it even applies to email that originates from non-citizens in other countries.Google's relationships with government officials in all of the dozens of countries where they operate are a mystery, because Google never makes any statements about this. But here's a clue: Google uses the term "governmental request" three times on their terms-of-use page and once on their privacy page. Google's language means that all Gmail account holders have consented to allow Google to show any and all email in their Gmail accounts to any official from any government whatsoever, even when the request is informal or extralegal, at Google's sole discretion. Why should we send email to Gmail accounts under such draconian conditions?Problem 2: Google's policies do not applyThe phrasing and qualifiers in the Gmail privacy policy are creepy enough, but nothing in any of Google's policies or public statements applies to those of us who don't have Gmail accounts. Google has not even formally stated in their privacy policy that they will not keep a list of keywords scanned from incoming email, and associate these with the incoming email address in their database. They've said that their advertisers won't get personally identifiable information from email, but that doesn't mean that Google won't keep this information for possible future use. Google has never been known to delete any of the data they've collected, since day one. For example, their cookie with the unique ID in it, which expires in 2038, has been tracking all of the search terms you've ever used while searching their main index.Matt Cutts, a software engineer at Google since January 2000, used to work for the National Security Agency.Keyhole, the satellite imaging company that Google acquired in October 2004, was funded by the CIA."We are moving to a Google that knows more about you." — Google CEO Eric Schmidt, February 9, 2005You can hotlink to me ! You can use Scroogle to get Google's results without the tracking!no ads · 28 languages · also scrapes YahooProblem 3: A massive potential for abuseIf Google builds a database of keywords associated with email addresses, the potential for abuse is staggering. Google could grow a database that spits out the email addresses of those who used those keywords. How about words such as "box cutters" in the same email as "airline schedules"? Can you think of anyone who might be interested in obtaining a list of email addresses for that particular combination? Or how about "mp3" with "download"? Since the RIAA has sent subpoenas to Internet service providers and universities in an effort to identify copyright abusers, why should we expect Gmail to be off-limits?Intelligence agencies would love to play with this information. Diagrams that show social networks of people who are inclined toward certain thoughts could be generated. This is one form of "data mining," which is very lucrative now for high-tech firms, such as Google, that contract with federal agencies. Email addresses tied to keywords would be perfect for this. The fact that Google offers so much storage turns Gmail into something that is uniquely dangerous and creepy.Problem 4: Inappropriate ad matchingWe don't use Gmail, but it is safe to assume that the ad matching is no better in Gmail, than it is in news articles that use contextual ad feeds from Google. Here's a screen shot that shows an inappropriate placement of Google ads in a news article. We also read about a lawyer who is experimenting with Gmail. He sent himself a message, and discovered that the law practice footer he uses at the bottom of all of his email triggered an ad for a competing law firm.Another example is seen in the Google ads at the bottom of this story about Brandon Mayfield. There are two ads. One mentions sexual assault charges (sex has nothing to do with the story), and the other is about anti-terrorism. The entire point of this article, as well as a New York Times piece on May 8, 2004, is that a lawyer has had his career ruined due to overreaction by the FBI, based on disputed evidence. He was arrested as a material witness and his home and office were searched. The NYT (page A12) says that "Mr. Mayfield was arrested before investigators had fully examined his phone records, before they knew if he had ever met with any of the bombing suspects, before they knew if he had ever traveled to Spain or elsewhere overseas. His relatives said he had not been out of the United States for 10 years." The only evidence is a single fingerprint on a plastic bag, and some FBI officials have raised questions about whether this print is a match. While Mr. Mayfield will get his day in court, it appears that Google's ads have already convicted him, and for good measure added some bogus sexual assault charges as well. Would Mr. Mayfield be well-advised to send email to Gmail account holders to plead his case?The Wichita Eagle is pleased to present Google's recommendation for an alarm company that can "protect your home and family." One tiny problem is that the trigger for this ad is an article about an alarm installer who worked for this company for 14 years, while moonlighting as a serial killer.Our last example shows three ads fed by Google at the bottom of a Washington Post column titled "Gmail leads way in making ads relevant." The columnist argues that Google's relevant ads improve the web, and therefore she finds nothing objectionable about Gmail. These Google-approved ads offer PageRank for sale, something which only a year ago, Google would have considered high treason. Yes, these ads are "relevant" — the column is about Google, and the ads are about PageRank. But here's the point: A relevant ad that shows poor judgment is much worse than an irrelevant ad that shows poor judgment. The ads at the bottom of her column disprove her pro-Google arguments. She has no control over this, and is probably not even aware that it happened.Most writers, even if they are only writing an email message instead of a column in a major newspaper, have more respect for their words than Google does. Don't expect these writers to answer their Gmail.Esther Dyson, queen of the digerati, gets it wrong"We're not going to have any choice but to send mail to people at Gmail just to function in the e-mail world," says Daniel Brandt, founder of the Google-Watch.org Web site. "And what guarantees do we have that all this won't end up on some bureaucrat's desk at some intelligence agency someday?" But those who support Gmail say such privacy concerns are not Google issues so much as constitutional ones, best addressed to Congress and law-enforcement agencies. "They've got a beef with the wrong person. The problem there is the FBI, not Google," says Dyson. "And in the scheme of things, I'd rather have Google than my employer have access to my personal mail." — Baltimore Sun, 20 May 2004The point is this: Some two-thirds of all Google searches come in from outside the U.S., and Gmail will also have a global reach. We're not dealing with only the FBI (and yes, the same privacy advocates who oppose Gmail are dealing with the FBI), but potentially with hundreds of agencies in dozens of countries. Google has no data retention policies, and never comments on their relationships with governments. The problem must be addressed at the source, which is Google. Elitist digerati do a disservice to the entire world when they assume such narrow points of view.Privacy: Not enough, and too much!While there's no privacy for non-Gmail users who receive mail from a Gmail account and might want to reply, there is too much privacy for those who use Gmail to send spammy, abusive, or threatening messages. Unlike Hotmail, Yahoo mail, and most other web mail services, browser-based Gmail does not show the originating IP address in the header. This means that system administrators who are trying to stop abuse cannot identify a Gmail abuser without asking Google for assistance. And normal users, assuming they can read headers, cannot check the identity of someone sending from Gmail. (With an IP address, you can at least do a quick check on the country or city of origin by looking it up at dnsstuff.com or some similiar service.) Since Google always seems to be too busy making billions to bother with complaints, many decide it's easier to just say "no" to all Gmail.For more informationYour cookie tastes better with your email addressThirty-one organizations ask Google to suspend GmailPrivacy? Who cares about privacy?Gmail and the privacy issue: a FAQ with more linksMark Rasch: "Google's Gmail: spook heaven?"This is for your copy-and-paste convenience: Dear Gmail user: Due to privacy considerations, we cannot respond unless you resend your email from a different account. For more information, please visit www.gmail-is-too-creepy.com

I'd like to meet:

Anyone involved in direct action,protesting, demonstrations etc. My PookyIF WE MUST DIEby Claude McKayIf we must die, let it not be like hogs Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot, While round us bark the mad and hungry dogs, Making their mock at our accursed lot. If we must die, O let us nobly die, So that our precious blood may not be shed In vain; then even the monsters we defy Shall be constrained to honor us though dead! O kinsmen! we must meet the common foe! Though far outnumbered let us show us brave, And for their thousand blows deal one deathblow! What though before us lies the open grave? Like men we'll face the murderous, cowardly pack, Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!ATTENTION HUMANS!!! Stop breathing. I repeat stop breathing. Any further continuous action there of may result in carbon dioxide pollution. One of the worst pollutants in the world. It causes global warming folks. That's right don't everyone freak out all at once. Might let too much carbon dioxide into the air. One doesn't have to reflect on this long to know that some rich asshole woke up one morning and was pissed off because he didn't get laid the night before and said "Hey I have a great idea. Why don't we tell everyone that breathing is bad. That'll really fuck 'em up.

Music:

Die Krupps,Spahn Ranch,Skinny Puppy,Ohgr,1000 Homo DJs,Front Line Assembly,Front 242,Seraphim Shock,Ministry,Laibach,Leather Strip,Razed In Black,X Marks The Pedwalk,Pig,KMFDM,My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult,Electric Hellfire Club,Joy Division,Sisters Of Mercy,Rosetta Stone,Gene Loves Jezebel,Virgin Prunes,Switchblade Symphony,Rasputina,Dead Can Dance,The Cruxshadows,Depeche Mode,Men Without Hats,Psychedelic Furs,Billy Idol,Concrete Blonde,New Order,Type O Negative,Nightwish..... width="425" height="350" ..This is my brother. Let there be no mistake...Tim you're the man...

Movies:


Last House On The Left,Natural Born Killers, House Of 1000 Corpses,Heathers,Suicide Kings,Private Parts,Gone In 60 Seconds,Mating Habits Of The Earth Bound Human,I Married A Strange Person,Wishmaster,Puppet Master,Evil Dead,The Doom Generation,Pulp Fiction,Ghost In The Shell,Ninja Scroll,3x3 Eyes,Akira,Urotsukidoji,Bio Hunter

Television:

Witch Hunter Robin,Space Ghost Coast
To Coast,Courage The Cowardly Dog,Aqua Teen Hunger Force,Myth Busters,Happy Tree Friends,C-Span...

Books:

In the past I've read quite a bit...we're going back
6yrs here so I really don't remember any titles...damn internet.

Heroes:

Yeah right...

My Blog

Hacker Manifesto

The Hacker Manifesto by +++The Mentor+++ Written January 8, 1986 Another one got caught today, it's all over the papers. "Teenager Arrested in Computer Crime Scandal", "Hacker Arrested after ...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

KMFDM Show

I went down to NYC November 2 to see KMFDM at BB Kings. It was an insane show to say the least. I ended up getting punch in the mouth for my first 5 pics i took but it was well worth it. There was alo...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

Mexican Communication

"A lot of Mexican communication is in hand signals. One is to touch an eyeball with a finger. Means "Be aware", "Note this", "Look behind the apparent", etc. I tap my eyeball when someone comes in the...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

American Dream

"When it's this time of the night and you know you need your under pants cleaned, this product will wash away all the stains right here in the middle of the american dream." -Raymond Watts-...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

Touche

to quote their messiah Trent Lott "If you can't tell the difference between China and Cuba.." to which a reporter piped up "What IS the difference, Senator Lott?" and Trent stormed away.
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

Fair And Balanced

I took my friend to the emergency room yesterday so we decided to watch faux news for kicks until he was admitted. He was sent to radiology so i continued to watch. Just as he comes back some reporter...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

How To Go Shopping For Industrial Music

------------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- How to go shopping for Industrial Music ------------------------------------------------------------ -----------...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

Lip Gloss And Electricity

------------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- LIP GLOSS & ELECTRICITY A Rivethead Girl's Guide to Making Them All Lick Your Boots! -------------------------...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

How To Date A Non Rivethead

------------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- How to Date A Non Rivethead (Without resorting to murder or celibacy) ----------------------------------------...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST

Bitch Of The Day...

Don't Rock The Vote. Don't even bother voting at all. It's just a stupid ploy to get you to feel as if you've done something important when infact your vote doesn't even count. It's the electoral coll...
Posted by Trevor on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST