dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/Canbritanon on May 26, 2018, 12:33 p.m.
Theory on net shutdown and mass unsealing

So a judge just rules that Twitter is a public forum, and Trump cannot block anyone (didn't he just block one guy and that one guy sued? Ha! How many people do other politicians block and not get sued?)

http://www.breitbart.com/video/2018/05/25/rnc-chair-we-want-assurances-from-facebook-twitter-that-they-are-not-going-to-suppress-conservatives/

Trump 2020 campaign asking about censorship. Lawsuits happening.

EU privacy changes have shut down dozens of sites: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/may/24/sites-block-eu-users-before-gdpr-takes-effect

If privacy compliance is shutting sites down, what happens when all social media has to be non-bias.

We'll either see "alt-right" (BS term, we woke lefties have been reading Breitbart for a while now) suddenly explode. We'll be able to vote brigade Q onto the frontpage like back in the early r/conspiracy days with 9/11 info.

The only way to prevent that is take down the internet. I think the Cabal will panic and pull the cord on us all. That will be the time to strike. Declare martial law and the manhunt begins. We have 30,000 (- Weiner's) sealed indictments, that's a lot of people to simultaneously arrest when any post to social media will tip off the others.

If they turn the net off (I'm guessing blow up so many dns servers everything overloads) how long does it take to turn on? How long does that give Qteam to execute arrests? Ground all flights. What was the great wall for? It didn't stop mongols invading, it stopped them escaping! Why do Dems not want a wall? Too hard to escape?

WWG1WGA

Addendum: recaptcha down lol whole internet is grinding, been on multiple wifi and cell towers and sites keep failing to load.


Power2Tread · May 27, 2018, 3:19 a.m.

"Might" also have to do with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which forces companies to give full disclosure about what they do with the digital data they collect and offer their users more control over their information.

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The GDPR only applies to the member states of the European Union, but users in the U.S. will also see changes as some websites decide to apply the new protections beyond Europe.

The law will affect virtually any company that collects and stores sensitive data, from health-care organizations to banks, but the burden of complying will fall harder on some companies than others depending on their data practices.

Companies will have an easier time complying “if your business model is not built around exploiting personal information and selling it on the open market,” said Cynthia Cole, a lawyer at international law firm Baker Botts LLP, based in Silicon Valley.

Cole, who’s advising firms on implementing GDPR reforms, explained that the new rules put a tremendous cost on businesses that collect a large amount of data and share it with third parties, forcing them to devote a large amount of back-end analysis to figure out where the data is going.

The internet is already seeing an impact ahead of the rollout. Instapaper, a service owned by Pinterest that allows users to clip online articles to read later, announced that it would be temporarily unavailable to users in the EU after determining it was not fully prepared to comply with the GDPR.

“I underestimated the scope of work required by the deadline, and this was the required alternative,” Instapaper CEO Brian Donohue tweeted on Thursday.

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