Boycott Clearwire
gary
lists at lazygranch.com
Sun Dec 24 15:32:20 PST 2006
"Tor" fore sure. It is easy to use, though the latency increases a bit.
Throughput seems to be relatively unaltered. Occasionally google smells
something funny and won't let you search with Tor enabled. My only
complaint about the program (and it could be pilot error) is that I
can't keep the "hosts" in the US. A few websites, mostly US military,
can't be viewed by foreign ISPs. I just change my identity until one
pops up in the US.
Orion wrote:
> *On Sat, 23 Dec 2006 21:51:05 -0800, Todd Boyle wrote*
> >
> > McCaw is so heavily tied to his Republican business network
> > that consumers' privacy and security on his Clearwire internet
> > service may be compromised. They know every bit of your
> > communications, who you're connecting with, and exactly where
> > you're located, and it's all in easily analyzed data formats,
> > rather than voice or video. That is a lot of power and the Republicans
> > have every intention to exploit that to the max.
> >
> > Todd
>
> It is rare that I get into these discussion, but I feel compelled to
> speak up with a does of reality here.
>
> Do you honestly think for a moment that all of your communications via
> any other Internet Service Provider can't be easily monitored,
> concatenated, analyzed and presented in a nice easy to read format to
> quite a number of government agencies? If you think that, I got a
> bridge in Brooklyn I can make you a great deal on. Ultimately they
> don't have to monitor the ISP itself, they just have to grab it at the
> upstream carrier. A recent scandal regarding AT&T and the NSA that was
> brought to light earlier this year seems to come to mind.........
>
> Oh, and before I forget, your Internet Service has been subject to CALEA
> for a few years too, btw, so true privacy on the Internet via your ISP
> really is a moot point.
>
> Also, there is not a single sizeable communications carrier out there
> (or sizeable company for that matter) that does not make contributions
> to the political party flavor of the current administration to better
> position themselves for legislation that would beneift their company's
> bottom line.
>
> You want to make a difference and protect your privacy and security on
> the Internet? Look at things like TOR, FreeNet, their variants and the
> many other projects out there that are starting to create private
> encrypted overlay networks on the Internet.
>
> -Alex K.
>
> --
> Open WebMail Project (http://openwebmail.org <http://openwebmail.org/>)
>
>
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