civver_764
Deity
And Anonymous become ever more likeable.
There it is, folks. And this isn't unique to CFC, either. I see lots of web sites do this, and some, such as the forum at the Sins of a Solar Empire web site, go so far as to prohibit all political discussions in their Off Topic section (and seeing as how holding a civil political discussion online is almost impossible, they definitely have a point).Your rights to Freedom of Speech don't apply here.
Stop the press. I just had a revelation. A serious one. There was actual light in the sky.
It was right in front of our noses the whole time, and nobody ever saw it: the CFC forum rules.
http://forums.civfanatics.com/faq.php?faq=updated_rules_2011
There it is, folks. And this isn't unique to CFC, either. I see lots of web sites do this, and some, such as the forum at the Sins of a Solar Empire web site, go so far as to prohibit all political discussions in their Off Topic section (and seeing as how holding a civil political discussion online is almost impossible, they definitely have a point).
It's impossible for SOPA to take away something you never actually had.
Freedom of Speech doesn't apply to the web. That was never the point behind it. The idea behind Freedom of Speech is that governments should not arrest you for speaking your mind.
a networking tool called a "low orbit ion cannon.".
Protip: don't screw with Anonymous. They don't forgive and they don't forget.
I wonder how creepily authoritarian a government actually has to get before BasketCase finds his "tough beans" routine hard to maintain.
This is one reason why it's a Really Bad Idea for people to forget how to write on actual paper, with pens and pencils... or how to use a manual typewriter. I mean, we did things that way, in the Olden Days of the 1970s, and somehow managed to disseminate HUGE amounts of information around the world (granted, with the cooperation of various postal systems). The internet isn't the only way to get information out.Hardly. If you can destroy one form of data (digital data on the internet), why can't you destroy data printed on paper? There is no difference, even if you prefer to plug your ears.
This is one reason why it's a Really Bad Idea for people to forget how to write on actual paper, with pens and pencils... or how to use a manual typewriter. I mean, we did things that way, in the Olden Days of the 1970s, and somehow managed to disseminate HUGE amounts of information around the world (granted, with the cooperation of various postal systems). The internet isn't the only way to get information out.
Of course, we could always end up back in the days when just owning a printing press could get you tossed into prison...
Probably when the brownshirts are dragging him off to the concentration camp.....![]()
If you commit a crime on said property, they do. That's what this is really about. SOPA only allows the government to bust down a web site's door if an actual theft of intellectual property occurs.Freedom of speech doesn't apply on private property, e.g. someone's website, just like you can't walk into someone's house and start babbling.
The government, a public entity, still doesn't have the right to censor the <censored> out of you on someone else's private property.
I'd say about where Iran is right now. (the answer is no: the United States is nowhere near that point, nor is it so much as drifting in that direction)I wonder how creepily authoritarian a government actually has to get before BasketCase finds his "tough beans" routine hard to maintain.
If you commit a crime on said property, they do. That's what this is really about. SOPA only allows the government to bust down a web site's door if an actual theft of intellectual property occurs.
If you commit a crime on said property, they do. That's what this is really about. SOPA only allows the government to bust down a web site's door if an actual theft of intellectual property occurs.
Isn't it technically wrong to speak of a "group of hackers called Anonymus"? As far as I know (and please, do correct me if I'm wrong here), there is virtually no exclusivity and no leader or any kind of organization. I think something like "Individual hackers, who don't know each other, co-operating and coordinating their actions" would be closer to truth.
I don't approve of Anon's actions by any means. I'm just trying to set the terms straight. Then again, it wouldn't be the first or the last time when the media use inaccurate terms either to mislead or just because they didn't do the research.