Author Topic: Strange year for the internets  (Read 1228 times)

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Offline SBTlauien

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Strange year for the internets
« on: November 07, 2014, 06:43:33 am »
True Crypt's strange end, Zoklet shutting down quickly, SilkRoad 2.0 busted.

Fucking Operation Onymous.  >:(

Offline stdio.h

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #1 on: November 07, 2014, 08:20:12 am »
Not to mention at least 3 critical security vulnerabilities 'discovered' in core FOSS programs, and the attempted attack on Tor earlier this year.

Offline LiquidIce

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #2 on: November 08, 2014, 03:47:01 pm »
I think it'll get only more and more interesting as there are more and more Internet enabled devices and services depending on them.

10 years ago used to be 1 computer at home, maybe 2 if we were talking richer people. Now you can easily count in things like smartphones and tablets, so you usually have 2-3 computers per person per household. All of them are used for day to day services like paying bills and checking out movies, or at least checking out emails, and theyre all running different operating systems, different versions of them, people dont care shit about updating their shit, so it's all a cesspool of mostly cheap and weak devices like tablets or shitty ass black friday laptops just sitting there.

On the good side, it's nice to see that things like heartbleed or poodle are gaining exposure in the mass media. People are starting to wake up to the fact that that computer and internet thing isnt just a fad and theyre beginning to realize how computers are integral to their everyday lives - maybe that'll spur them on to learn a thing or two.

Offline Saint Hubertus

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #3 on: November 08, 2014, 04:08:08 pm »
I don't think strange is the right word, ironic would suit it better
Das ist des Jägers Ehrenschild,
daß er beschützt und hegt sein Wild,
weidmännisch jagt, wie sich’s gehört,
den Schöpfer im Geschöpfe ehrt.

Offline stdio.h

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #4 on: November 08, 2014, 10:01:44 pm »
10 years ago used to be 1 computer at home, maybe 2 if we were talking richer people. Now you can easily count in things like smartphones and tablets, so you usually have 2-3 computers per person per household. All of them are used for day to day services like paying bills and checking out movies, or at least checking out emails, and theyre all running different operating systems, different versions of them, people dont care shit about updating their shit, so it's all a cesspool of mostly cheap and weak devices like tablets or shitty ass black friday laptops just sitting there.

Yep, and this is exactly why the internet is shit now. Too many god damn retards and lazy fucks who 10 years ago wouldn't have bothered with the online world.

Quote
On the good side, it's nice to see that things like heartbleed or poodle are gaining exposure in the mass media. People are starting to wake up to the fact that that computer and internet thing isnt just a fad and theyre beginning to realize how computers are integral to their everyday lives - maybe that'll spur them on to learn a thing or two.

It won't, though. 90+% of the population simply doesn't care about tech and only wants access to their FB newsfeed as quickly as possible. The nitty-gritty of how this happens and the security/privacy implications mean absolutely nothing to them, and always will.

Offline SBTlauien

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #5 on: November 20, 2014, 02:40:46 am »
I remember around 12-13 years ago, when I first started posting on forums, people actually didn't know what a forum was or how they worked or even why people post online comments.  Crazy how it's taken over everyday life.

I don't think strange is the right word, ironic would suit it better

I don't view it as ironic.  It all seems link.  I think the government has been taking more interest in cracking down on cyber crime lately, and are investigation/busting people as well as trying to shut down/disturb any services that can help them.

A couple of years ago you could buy a moneyPak card, create a PP account, load the money into the PP account, and spend/send it online.  Now you have to provide a SSN.  I was actually told by an employee at an electronic store that it's their policy to see a state ID when buying a cell phone.  I wouldn't doubt it if they begin to require ID for all prepaid purchases including gift cards.  Fake ID time.

Offline theKit

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #6 on: November 20, 2014, 04:00:31 am »
Internet service prices.

Remember when internet was as free as as many free AOL hours discs you could amass and hoard?

Offline SBTlauien

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #7 on: November 20, 2014, 05:33:35 pm »
Internet service prices.

Remember when internet was as free as as many free AOL hours discs you could amass and hoard?

There's still a lot of free Wifi.

Offline Tokolosh

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #8 on: November 20, 2014, 07:31:48 pm »
It's only the beginning...

http://jointhefastlane.com/



Offline reject

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Re: Strange year for the internets
« Reply #9 on: November 20, 2014, 07:45:04 pm »

Yep, and this is exactly why the internet is shit now. Too many god damn retards and lazy fucks who 10 years ago wouldn't have bothered with the online world.


"Back in the old, dark days of the internet when men were men, women were men and children were FBI agents, no one cared what people thought of them. This was when the internet was still merely a bright spark of newly discovered freedom burning bright against the darkened backdrop of a world half enslaved by totalitarian freedom-hating governments, unscrupulous money grabbing corporations, backward millenia-old religions and millions upon millions of dead-eyed sheeple. The internet burned brightly as an escape, a way to show who you were to a wider audience, a way of discovering and sharing things you never knew existed, a way of forcing back the ever encroaching shadows of the real world to keep your internal flame burning just that little bit longer.

The internet burned brighter and stronger as the rush of people to it acted as fuel to the fire, and the rush of companies to it was the oxygen it needed to sustain itself, and to grow. The Napster and Kazaa era came and went as the dark lords of the world attempted to wrestle back their power from this bastard child of technology and freedom that we know as the web. People pushed each other by finding, creating and sharing things that would have people in the old world hung, drawn and quartered but in this new space, this virtual plane of existence it did not solicit the fiery condemnation of preachers and politicians alike. We laughed. We saw these examples of hate, of destruction and of evil and we laughed and encouraged them; for it was not the same evil as that which ravaged the lands of the physical world, but an evil unsullied by power, money, dogma or time. This was new evil, strong evil, and pure evil. It shaped a generation and a way of life was born. The internet was no longer an escape from life, it was a mirror of it; a dark and distorting mirror in which our reflections are not always what we wanted, hoped or indeed expected to see. "