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Archive for the 'Internet' Category

 

Amping Up the Terror

With Christmas Day’s airliner “terror” incident in Detroit coming not that very long after the shootings at Ft. Hood in Texas, it is inevitable that myself and others will wonder if we are seeing the start of an orchestrated trend. I won’t get into semantics here, but I do want all of you to pay close attention to details in 2010. Do not be pulled in by emotion when hysteria flies across Twitter and Facebook, as it undoubtedly will eventually when the “next 9-11″ manifests.

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Google CEO Basically Admits You Have No Right to Privacy

This is just so insane, I had to post it. You won’t ever look at Google’s search engine the same way again:

A CNBC interview with Google CEO Eric Schmidt suggests the search giant Google shouldn’t get off easy, and users should be wary of what Google knows about them — and with whom they can share that information.

CNBC’s Mario Bartiromo asked CEO Schmidt in her December 3, 2009 interview: “People are treating Google like their most trusted friend. Should they?”

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Russian Hackers Deliver Proof that Al Gore is a Dirty Stinking Global Warming Liar

All I wanted for Christmas was proof that man-made Global Warming is rubbish. My thanks to the Russian Black Hats hacker group for apparently delivering:

The University of East Anglia’s Hadley Climatic Research Centre appears to have suffered a security breach earlier today, when an unknown hacker apparently downloaded 1079 e-mails and 72 documents of various types and published them to an anonymous FTP server. These files appear to contain highly sensitive information that, if genuine, could prove extremely embarrassing to the authors of the e-mails involved. Those authors include some of the most celebrated names among proponents of the theory of anthropogenic global warming (AGW).

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Muslim Google

Firefox 2

Still think that Islam isn’t going to take over the world or draw us all into a world war while trying?

I present to you: Muslim Google

Muslim Google

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Distractions

Digg vs AnvilI’m being pressed, pestered and bothered; a long few weeks of dealing with the results of censors and attempts to destroy the traffic flow to the Anvil. And still I am winning.

However, I am definitely being distracted by this useless waste of my energies.

It doesn’t look like such attempts are going to end anytime soon either. Today I noticed that my most harmless web presence of all, my music profile on MySpace, has been mysteriously deleted without warning. I just sent an inquiry to MySpace.

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Censorship Tools in the Hands of Fools, Money-Grubbers, Seditionists, Islamists and Traitors

SonicWALL re-rates AnvilAre you paying attention? Big Brother Lives.

Help put a stop to idiotic, negligent and often seditionist censorship activities that are dampening down an already beleaguered portion of the Blogosphere — the Anti-Jihad Movement.

See for yourself that “content filtering” is nothing more than privatized censorship.

Stop Blog Censorship!

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Cultivating ‘Spontaneous Jihad Syndrome’ from a website in Minnesota

MEMRI provides the disturbing details, including evidence that Islamic terrorists are more than willing to assassinate American political officials here and abroad:

On August 26, Islamist websites hosted in Minnesota [SiteGenie, LLC, Rochester, MN] posted an item titled “How to Join Al-Qaeda.” It is not clear when the item was written; it was produced by the website Al-Thabitoun ‘Ala Al-’Ahd, which is affiliated with Al-Qaeda in Egypt and is currently inactive.

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An Anvil Victory Against Censorship: a Victory for All

Digg vs AnvilIt appears official: SonicWALL Internet Security has re-rated Foehammer’s Anvil from pornography to web communications. This would not have happened without the efforts of Anvil readers and my fellow bloggers and 1389 deserves the greatest credit and thanks for discovering this particular censor in the first place and disseminating the needed information to so many people.

I feel that this is not only a Free Speech victory for the Anvil, but a victory for the entire Blogosphere and especially the Anti-Jihad portion of it.

10 Comments

 


 

Foehammer Podcast now available on iTunes

On the Air!That’s right: the new Foehammer’s Anvil podcast is now available on the world’s most popular mp3 download site, Apple’s iTunes! I just received verification an hour ago and I’ve checked the feed and updated the sidebar. iTune users just have to click on the iTunes button in the Anvil sidebar on the right or click here, and you will automatically be taken to the iTunes page.

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Cyberjihad: Coming to an American hosting company near you

Muslim HackerzFrom Hot Air via Allahpundit:

Nice work by McQ and MEMRI to shine a light on some of the rats running around in our basement. Yet another case of primitive ideology exploiting cutting-edge western technology, except this time they’re doing it from bases inside America. McQ gives the ISPs the benefit of the doubt by noting that most probably can’t read Arabic. In light of YouTube’s tolerance for jihadi snuff videos and the fact that it’s abundantly clear from the visual elements what the sites are about, I’m less charitable. I wonder if the feds don’t prefer to have them on American servers, though: it must make it a hell of a lot easier to find out who’s accessing the pages than it would if they were hosted in Saudi Arabia. That was the military’s stated rationale, in fact, for letting the insurgent satellite network in Iraq continue to operate. Bad for propaganda but good for intel.

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How to bury Digg.com

Digg vs AnvilYes, as you can tell by the title of this article, I’m still unhappy about getting banned by Digg for no reason that I can find other than overt censorship. I’m further annoyed because Digg administrators have chosen to ignore my emails and it’s now been almost two weeks of patiently waiting.

I’m out of patience. A few days ago I chose to remove all remnants of Digg buttons from this site, all Digg links except one, and I even had the audacity to pester at least one Digg stockholder, but he and his cronies refuse to debate me openly on an Ismaili website.

“We do not take open-ended questions, comments or contentious observations.”

Who could blame them, really; I wouldn’t want to debate me either.

So, how do I fight back against such a monolithic titan of a web presence like Digg.com? That’s easy: I find something better and then I tell you about it. I must resist the urge to get angry about all this, because after all, I still remember the old saying: “Don’t get mad — get even.”

Exhibit A:
The power of StumbleUpon

The above graphic details something quite interesting to me this morning: StumbleUpon gets results. I have the industrious blogger 1389 to thank for making this little bump in my traffic stats in just over one day on StumbleUpon, and that’s just mainly from one submitted article! The obviously big blip (+3367%!) that appears here as my strongest rising referral source, even overtaking Google, makes me a new believer in the power and the sheer fun that comes along with using StumbleUpon. And best of all, it’s easier to use and more productive than Digging, and you don’t have to worry about the “Bury Brigade” or censor-happy administrators with a slanted political agenda and low-brow taste.

So, if you’ve been in the dark all this time, much as I have been myself, as to what StumbleUpon is and how to utilize it, let me enlighten you today.

“Stumbleupon is a brilliant downloadable toolbar that beds into your browser and gives you the chance to surf through thousands of excellent pages that have been stumbled upon by other web-users.” - BBC World

“Next time you want to wander the Web, forget about Googling it. Stumble it.” - The Wall Street Journal

StumbleUpon helps you discover and share great blogs and websites. As you click the “thumbs up”, StumbleUpon delivers high-quality pages matched to your personal preferences. These pages are recommend by other websurfers and friends that you add to your StumbleUpon account over time. All in all, it’s the perfect way to recommend valuable and entertaining points on the Internet and others help you find more great websites as a result.

It’s really that simple, and that popular. I have loaded the bar into my Firefox browser and it works very well and I can hide it out of the way when I’m not using it by simply pressing CNTRL + F11 on my keyboard at the same time. Want it back? Press the same combination again.

You can also find StumbleUpon links here at the Anvil even if you do not use the toolbar. On individual articles (and most pages including the homepage) there’s a large StumbleUpon button on the right sidebar near the top that can’t be missed. And beneath every single article is the Share This icon that opens up more than 14 options for promoting something here that you deem worthy, including submitting to StumbleUpon, as well as emailing the article to friends.

So, help me thumb my nose at the Digg “Bury Brigade” today, won’t you? Just StumbleUpon some articles here at the Anvil and then surf off to other interests; you never know what other reading you might find as a result.

Sources of Note: Omidyar Network Leadership, Omidyar Network and relationship with Digg.com

Addendum: Why StumbleUpon ‘Owns’ Digg, Virtual Schrödinger’s Law

29 Comments

 


 

Sunni insurgents in Iraq guilty of cyber-jihad

Complimenting very well what 1389 just recently posted — Is the U.S. government finally ready to confront cyberjihadism? — comes an article fresh from The Washington Times:

Sunni insurgents in Iraq are spreading their message of violence to the Arab and Muslim world via underground videos, writings and songs on the Internet, according to a Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty report.

“There is rapt attention to the importance of media” among Sunni militant groups as they engage in sectarian violence with Shi’ites and oppose the U.S.-backed Iraqi government, said Daniel Kimmage, an RFE/RL analyst who co-authored the report “Iraqi Insurgent Media: The War of Images and Ideas.”

Individuals with computers and Internet connections are using simple software programs to compile videos of roadside bomb attacks and gunbattles, set them to songs promoting jihad, and share them with countless people, according to the report released in late June.

“It’s virtually impossible to tell” who is maintaining the Web sites and creating the content for them, Mr. Kimmage said Thursday. Some Web sites have existed for a few years, while others remain in operation for only a few months before they shut down for whatever reason.

One video compilation of bombings and attacks, called “Top 20,” is described as a “greatest hits” collection. “They say it’s to encourage healthy competition among insurgent groups,” Mr. Kimmage said.

Many videos start on Web sites with a small audience, but are quickly picked up by others until they become widely viewed. The report highlighted one example from a few months ago of a video depicting a sniper shooting U.S. soldiers in Baghdad, which was eventually aired on Al Jazeera television, a major Arab-world news channel.

“That really sends a message to the consumers of the media,” said Kathleen Ridolfo, who wrote the report with Mr. Kimmage. “It shows how channels like Al Jazeera do their part to support global jihad.”

The authors said that most Sunni insurgent videos and articles contain jihadist language — words like “crusaders” and “infidels” — to appeal to an audience beyond Iraq’s borders. This language was introduced to Iraqi insurgents by groups like al Qaeda, Ms. Ridolfo said.

Read the rest.

I have something to say here, very quickly: I think it is not necessarily a good thing for the American public to be so well-insulated from vivid images of our enemies killing our soldiers. In fact, I am going to start addressing that in slightly more visceral imagery here at the Anvil in the coming weeks. I am convinced that, just as we almost never see repeats of 9-11 footage on television, we are similarly being coddled like children by our government and media when it comes to the deaths of our soldiers, while our enemies use the images that should righteously incite us to further their own ends. This practice is wrong. We have every right to get pissed off; those are our people dying out there because of a death cult that should have stagnated back in the 7th century, but instead has festered like a never-healing open wound.

Insulating the public from the killing of our soldiers isn’t the answer, exposing the public to the evils of our Islamic enemies is. And point of fact, I think that’s the real motivation behind keeping the reality of the war from being presented more boldly to the American and Western public: to protect Muslims from an angry citizenry here in the States and abroad. The Bush Administration making stupid decisions again based primarily on Islamic appeasement policies.

What kind of soft, shallow and morally confused people have we become in the USA when we are willing to go watch ultra-violent movies like ‘The Hills Have Eyes’ or ‘Hostel’ for entertainment, but we aren’t willing to face the brutal realities of the very real ‘War on Terror’ for the good of ourselves?

No wonder we are losing the Long War.

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