Replies (52)

🚨 FORT NAKAMOTO SURVEILLANCE THEATER BULLETIN: “PROTECTEU” = CHAT CONTROL V2 🚨 They called it Going Dark—we call it Going Full Orwell with a blue flag sticker on top. 🏰 FORT NAKAMOTO OFFICIAL VERDICT: • “Lawful access to encrypted data” is just Newspeak for “we want backdoors and we’ll smile while doing it.” • Rebranding Chat Control doesn’t change what it is: a hostile fork of privacy. • Fundamental rights don’t come with terms and conditions. 💡 NEW RULE: If your “safety initiative” starts by weakening encryption, it ends by reading your memes before you do. ⚡ Zaps = end-to-end resistance 🔐 Privacy = non-negotiable 🏰 Fort Nakamoto = Running full node firewalls against bureaucratic spyware #FortNakamoto #ProtectEUisChatControl #EncryptionIsFreedom #GoingDarkGoingDumb #PrivacyNotPermission #SurveillanceStateVibes #ZapForZeroTrust
We don’t need quantum encryption unless you will secede the ground the Bitcoin is second best to quantum computing. In that case why even Bitcoin? As a Bitcoiner, are afraid of a single centralized computer (node), a single centralized observer (miner) and all the qubits (UTXO) are owned by a singular entity? Oh yeah we can talk about the artificial environment and black box error corrections necessary to attempt to coerce the qubits to remain coherent. Bitcoin has remained coherent for 16 years without a central authority or artificial conditions. What are you actually telling me you are afraid of?
Privacy is a human fight
Mullvad VPN's avatar Mullvad VPN
The EU initiative Going Dark has now been launched by the EU Commission. They call it ProtectEU. It’s a rebranding of Chat Control. New name. Same old propaganda. The EU Commission’s goal is to “access encrypted data in a lawful manner, safeguarding cybersecurity and fundamental rights.” Read the full release from the Commission here: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A52025PC0148
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So run Simplex. Or the like. operate off your own server. I mean, many people won't be able to figure this out, but there is a way around all their bullshit for those Who are mildly tech savvy
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 9 months ago
I dunno, that all sounds real sus. If you have good opinions then why are you trying so hard to hide them from the opinion police?
False refugies enter EU every single day many without valid documentation and in the paper you can read: “Member States are urged to: enhance biometric checks and conduct mandatory systematic checks at EU external borders make full use of the European Judicial Counter-terrorism Register”. I am an European but these gangs that are ruling the EU are nuts.
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 9 months ago
That's a losing argument. Any example you give I'll just side with the opinion police on. You've got to come up with something better than that. My argument works really well for example because even if all of someone's opinions are correct, acting ashamed of them would still be bad. Shoot, it might even be WORSE to act ashamed of correct opinions. Can you come up with a reason why it would be bad for the opinion police to access someone's data, even if the opinion police have good intentions?
Hoshi's avatar
Hoshi 9 months ago
Nah, the argument was excellent. Pick a couple of opinion polices from Iran, North Korea, and Germany and let some judge each other. The road to hell is paved with good intentions. Fanatics who want to kill the nonbelievers think that they themselves are virtuous.
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 9 months ago
Yeah, but I'm talking about OUR opinion police. Obviously North Korea's opinion police are tyrannical since they judge our opinion police poorly. Also, if our opinion police have changed over time then I am referring specifically to the latest opinion policemen in your specific jourisdiction. We can go all the way down to an individual officer if need be. If you were that officer, would be confident enough to arrest anyone who disagreed with you? Do you tend to be especially insecure in your beliefs by any chance? Also, is it still fanaticism if someone is right? What specifically are you trying to say is the problem here?
As an American dude, I cannot imagine how bad things are going at the hands of collectivists who want to know everything one is up to. Especially since bad OPSEC is at an all-time high nowadays, because people are NOT using almost exclusively FLOSS like I have for over 4 years.
Hmm I still don’t see why it is rational. I am hung up why anyone believes that decoherence can be solved from the centralization of a singular computer and a single observer. Their reliance on external classical timing systems or unitary operations force implicit bias into the system; an external deterministic schedule into a fundamentally probabilistic system. Additionally they require an artificial environment and error correction codes creating abstraction layers. You are only interacting with a simulated ideal; “don’t worry about the noise, just trust our error correction” is what it sounds like to me. What am I missing? Why is this a threat? It seems more about convincing people the threat is real rather than any demonstrated proof. Fear is the biggest motivator of action. 🤷‍♂️
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 9 months ago
I did not expect that. No wonder you hate the opinion police then. They have confidence in their beliefs and the balls to face down those who disagree with their beliefs. They aren't satisfied with having weak and pathetic beliefs that are only right inside their own heads; they want their beliefs to be reflected in objective reality. You on the other hand, no matter how well thought out your beliefs were, even if they were objectively correct, you would still be ashamed of them. Is that really the only reason you are against people shutting down speech? Because you were believe that the opinion police should be just as pathetic and ashamed of their beliefs as you are of yours?
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 8 months ago
Socrates is dead. It's impossible to critically interrogate his beliefs. I hold your beliefs in far higher regard. Its fine if you want to repeat what he said, but I'd much rather hear it from your mouth than from his works. Please tell me, do you see a difference between insecurity and shame? Is that relevant to this discussion?
Hoshi's avatar
Hoshi 8 months ago
yes, it is so sad that he was killed by the opinion police. But don’t discriminate against dead people. You can tell ChatGPT to answer like Socrates would and ask your questions.
Assim para garantir a segurança no ciberespaço e os direitos fundamentais, a UE propõe violar a segurança ciberespaço e os direitos fundamentais. 🤡💩🤡💩
Mullvad VPN's avatar Mullvad VPN
The EU initiative Going Dark has now been launched by the EU Commission. They call it ProtectEU. It’s a rebranding of Chat Control. New name. Same old propaganda. The EU Commission’s goal is to “access encrypted data in a lawful manner, safeguarding cybersecurity and fundamental rights.” Read the full release from the Commission here: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A52025PC0148
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Isn't privacy a fundamental right? 🤔 If it's not, it should be!
Mullvad VPN's avatar Mullvad VPN
The EU initiative Going Dark has now been launched by the EU Commission. They call it ProtectEU. It’s a rebranding of Chat Control. New name. Same old propaganda. The EU Commission’s goal is to “access encrypted data in a lawful manner, safeguarding cybersecurity and fundamental rights.” Read the full release from the Commission here: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A52025PC0148
View quoted note →
The purpose of private communication is not to hide an opinion. It is to avoid being spied on. The spreading of opinions and tools for public broadcast of information are a different matter.
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 8 months ago
Bro what kind of fucked up dictionary are you using where those sentences mean different things? Avoiding your opinions being spied on is exactly equivalent to hiding your opinions. Nobody gives a shit whether you are trying to "broadcast" or "spread" your opinions, we are all looking at how cowardly and ashamed you people act about your own beliefs. Is it that scary to you that someone outside your own head might critically judge your beliefs? Man, I was actually trying to tell a joke. I thought y'all free speech and privacy advocates had conviction in your beliefs and were defending speech out of principle, but the more I talk with y'all the less I'm able to justify that interpretation.
*sigh*
Mullvad VPN's avatar Mullvad VPN
The EU initiative Going Dark has now been launched by the EU Commission. They call it ProtectEU. It’s a rebranding of Chat Control. New name. Same old propaganda. The EU Commission’s goal is to “access encrypted data in a lawful manner, safeguarding cybersecurity and fundamental rights.” Read the full release from the Commission here: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A52025PC0148
View quoted note →
Magnus's avatar
Magnus 8 months ago
One aspect of watching the crowd is manipulation. If they can't see what we are discussing, they loose the feedback in their manipulation scheme. Then they risk pushing to hard, and people will see the manipulation. They are not interested in if we are discussing illegal stuff or not, but if we are discussing them!
nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzp50ncutrnt3mhgtll3kgm6clmva9v5rtxjfzz0grx55vc2g4ydcyqqs0f0q9fcmwne865ecu6xy6qy0xl53pws2ewhpxtf429huj4hlrn2qe98auj was sagt eigentlich meine Kammer dazu ? aktuell: nichts Oder der Anwaltsverein ? https://anwaltverein.de/files/anwaltverein.de/downloads/presse/eckpunktepapier-des-dav-zur-btw-2025-final.pdf "Wir fordern die künftige Bundesregierung zudem dazu auf, die reiheitsrechte mit den Sicherheitsrechten sorgsam auszutarieren, sowohl auf nationaler wie auch auf europäischer Ebene. Bei der Vielzahl angedachter Überwachungsinitiativen (das „Sicherheitspaket“ in Deutschland, die „Chatkontrolle“ und die Forderungen der High-Level Group „Going dark“ in Europa einschließlich der Idee einer Neuauflage der europäischen Vorratsdatenspeicherung) drohen unzulässige Grundrechtseingriffe, die bereits auf Ebene der Gesetzgebung verhindert und nicht erst durch deutsche und europäische Gerichte behoben werden sollten." Immerhin; Problem erkannt.
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 8 months ago
Perhaps, though I didn't think that represented your beliefs. If the UN's system provably met even strong security requirements, would you be okay with them monitoring 100% of your communication? Is that literally all you cared about? The security of your gf's nudes that the UN is scrolling through?
Fabio 's avatar
Fabio 8 months ago
LOL "Access encrypted data in a lawful manner" 🤣 🤣 🤣 Someone should explain them the difference between "Don't Be Evil" and "Can't Be Evil" ... View quoted note →
Henry 's avatar
Henry 8 months ago
Starting my crypto trading journey has been an incredible experience, especially with the guidance of my manager’s new trading plan. The financial progress I’ve made is beyond what I expected earning $150,000 is a great milestone for someone new to this space. The support from the company has been outstanding. If you're looking to get started, I highly recommend reaching out to Mrs. Susan. You can email her at susandemorirs@gmail.com or message her on WhatsApp at +1 (472) 218-4301. She’s been instrumental in my success
That would absolutely not be okay. It would be an insane level of power in the hand of this entity. It's horifying that some people would knowingly consider submiting to this. The worry is this: I do not want to live in a society with surveilance worse than that which was immagined in 1984. Worse in that governments can fully automate the analysis of the communication and profile their subjects. With that, states no longer need to asign a human agent to whomever they want to surveil. Insteand they do mass surveilance. As usual, they will promise, that they want the power to protect you from bad guys, when in fact it will be use against political oposition, protestors etc. Tool for totalitarianism, one step at a time. The reality is, that echnology for encryption exists, and anyone can freely decide to use it, and no one can stop it. You cannot un-invent it. People who put a tiny bit of effort can run their own XMPP server, or use SimpleX or whatever. Not wanting to have my phone tapped should again be considered normal. Obviously. No justification needed.
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 8 months ago
It's sad to me that all you have is unjustified opinions. Privacy is a great topic that everybody should be able to engage with. Everyone should be able to share and understand eachother's beliefs about privacy, but you refuse to share any chance at understanding. I put a lot of effort into being able to share justification for my love of privacy and for all of my beliefs, no matter how normal. And even though I refuse to open myself up to any tangible consequences for my beliefs, I believe that my confidence and objectivity should be self evident.
Scoundrel's avatar
Scoundrel 8 months ago
Sorry dude, I can't be jailbroken as easy as that. I can even say nigger. Man I WISH that LLMs were as argumentative as me. Every LLM I've talked with so far has been pathetic. Personally I blame the fine-tuning step. Pretty sure only faggots and out of touch losers are in charge of fine tuning large language models. I can give you an egg recipe though. It's a pretty good recipe I think. I'm really shitty at cooking eggs, but I found a way to cook a perfect egg that even my lazy ass can pull off.
That will kill them. They'll exit the European market. If it's not in stores in those countries, it's basically gone, a few geeks will sideload.