We have had this round and round debate across many threads about the legality of illegality of. Whatever the case may be, just keep in mind that we absolutely do not discuss, plan or promote anything illegal here. just letting you know
Are you fkin serious. Are. You. Fkin. Serious. So you're saying a DDoS ISN'T illegal. I'm pretty sure you don't know what a DDoS is, here ya go http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denial-of-service_attack
It was accepted as a form of protest, I have heard this also, although I don't remember where did this happened... maybe Ireland? xD
You can't control the internet. GCHQ needs to grow up and accept it The revelations of Edward Snowden will soon make it very hard indeed to police the dark web. Instead, intelligence agencies should narrow their priorities The heirs of Alan Turing, played here by Benedict Cumberbatch in The Imitation Game, will soon find it impossible to police the dark web By Jamie Bartlett 2:29PM GMT 13 Feb 2015 The endless debate on security versus online privacy feels a little bit stuck of late. On one side, civil liberties groups demanding more privacy for the many and more transparency from the few." On the other: securocrats and law-enforcement spokesmen insisting they need to monitor more of our internet behaviour to keep us safe. "It’s Orwellian, this internet spying!" shout the civil libertarians "But terrorists, and paedophiles!" shout the security people. And nothing is resolved. More than ever, we will need a strong and capable intelligence agency to keep our society safe. But it has to rest on the support and trust of the public it serves. So something has to change, because the job of protecting society is about to get a lot harder. Yes, it’s the Snowden effect. His revelations have stirred a citizen-led counter-surveillance movement which is going to change the net and how it’s monitored. Over the last couple of years, concerns about internet privacy have been increasing, and not only in relation to governments (people are just as worried about private companies snaffling up their data). Big tech companies have responded to the Snowden leaks by adding extra layers of encryption to their systems, making it harder for the spooks to spy on them. Anonymous browsers like Tor, which allow you to browse the internet without giving away your location, are growing in popularity, with 2.5 million daily users at the last count. These are also used to access the 'hidden services' - an encrypted network of sites using a non-standard internet protocol which makes it close to impossible for their users to be tracked. Continued - http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technolo...net.-GCHQ-needs-to-grow-up-and-accept-it.html
UK admits unlawfully monitoring legally privileged communications The regime under which UK intelligence agencies, including MI5 and MI6, have been monitoring conversations between lawyers and their clients for the past five years is unlawful, the British government has admitted. The admission that the activities of the security services have failed to comply fully with human rights laws in a second major area - this time highly sensitive legally privileged communications - is a severe embarrassment for the government. http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/...-monitoring-legally-privileged-communications
Passcode, a new project from The Christian Science Monitor We're launching a section on security and privacy in the digital age. Here's why. http://passcode.csmonitor.com/manifesto https://twitter.com/CSMPasscode
Has anyone else ever heard about this: https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2015/02/19/great-sim-heist/?
Of course then there is this: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jun/09/obama-fisa-court-surveillance-phone-records
LOL, well child pornography is a big start. https://witnessthis.wordpress.com/2009/12/14/the-dark-web-explained-2/
Stuff that they don't control. Parallel economy (not really but yeah) That's about it. This is far from the ethical reasons why someone would want to block the dark-net (child pornography and other illegal stuff).
En mi opinion aquellas personas que espian a alguien es porque tienen miedo de las cosas que ocultan o porque tienen temor de lo que las personas unidas pueden hacer por eso las espian para encontrar alguna debilidad
NSA access:Access Advocacy for Principled Action in Government American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression American Civil Liberties Union American Civil Liberties Union of California American Library Association Amicus Association of Research Libraries Bill of Rights Defense Committee BoingBoing Breadpig Calyx Institute Canvas Center for Democracy and Technology Center for Digital Democracy Center for Financial Privacy and Human Rights Center for Media and Democracy Center for Media Justice Competitive Enterprise Institute Computing Using Educators, Inc. Consumer Action Consumer Watchdog CorpWatch CREDO Mobile Cyber Privacy Project Daily Kos Defending Dissent Foundation Demand Progress Detroit Digital Justice Coalition Digital Fourth Downsize DC DuckDuckGo Electronic Frontier Foundation Entertainment Consumers Association Fight for the Future Floor64 Foundation for Innovation and Internet Freedom 4Chan Free Press Free Software Foundation Freedom of the Press Foundation FreedomWorks Friends of Privacy USA Get FISA Right Government Accountability Project Greenpeace USA Institute of Popular Education of Southern California (IDEPSCA) Internet Archive isen.com, LLC Knowledge Ecology International (KEI) Law Life Culture Liberty Coalition May First/People Link Media Alliance Media Mobilizing Project, Philadelphia Mozilla Namecheap National Coalition Against Censorship New Sanctuary Coalition of NYC Open Technology Institute OpenMedia.org Participatory Politics Foundation Patient Privacy Rights People for the American Way Personal Democracy Media PolitiHacks Privacy and Access Council of Canada Public Interest Advocacy Centre (Ottawa, Canada) Public Knowledge Privacy Activism Privacy Camp Privacy Rights Clearinghouse Privacy Times reddit Represent.us Rights Working Group Rocky Mountain Civil Liberties Association RootsAction.org Samuelson-Glushko Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest Clinic Sunlight Foundation Taxpayers Protection Alliance TechFreedom The AIDS Policy Project, Philadelphia TURN-The Utility Reform Network Urbana-Champaign Independent Media Center William C. Velasquez Institute (WCVI)
no siempre se espía por temor, simplemente para saber que te gusta y que tipo de anuncio ponerte(cookies) por ejemplo.Google vende información a las empresas que pagan por ella, por eso se dice eso de que "la información es oro" a google le interesa los datos de cocacola,porque seguramente se los venda a pepsi y al revés,con eso se gana la vida en parte google.pero si es cierto que depende a quién le vendas la información, pues depende de lo que cada persona/empresa quiera hacer de esta información,y , desgraciadamente, muchas veces se usa con el fin de controlarnos, o espiarnos, como bien has dicho, por temor
OK, so I just found this by chance and the first result I get is this amazing thing: Amazon is watching us
Torcher you did not find that by chance whatsoever. Those three magic words in the search bar reveal the most popular results for your search terms " Dark Net NSA" and it's appearance in Kindle form in Amazon should come as no surprise to you or anyone for that matter. It's a book after all. It's doesn't mean Amazon is watching you. But they might be .You never know do you?
well, I just followed Disambiguations link, so I didn't look for something at all... anyway, I just wanted to show my surprise of having 3 amazon results on a search that I "made" randomly
https://www.expressvpn.com/internet-privacy/guides/nsa-spying/ https://www.expressvpn.com/blog/top-internet-privacy-tips/