Silk Road forums
Discussion => Security => Topic started by: gg on January 15, 2012, 07:27 am
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Homeland Security watches Twitter, social media - http://preview.tinyurl.com/7kj95y7
...News and gossip sites on the monitoring list include popular destinations such as the Drudge Report, Huffington Post and "NY Times Lede Blog", as well as more focused techie fare such as the Wired blogs "Threat Level" and "Danger Room."...
The Silk Road was featured in Wired's Threat Level, by the way...
What's up, g-men reading this?
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in other news, most males enjoy having sex
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And stay tuned after the break for a related story: swimming makes you wet.
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Does this mean that if I post my resume here they'll see it?
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Man, idk if anybody can waste their time nearly as well as the federal government.
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Oh where did I leave that tin foil hat..
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The government loves to go after low hanging fruit, but it does take time for them to chase after you. Hell, look how long JWH-018 was available in head shops!
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The government loves to go after low hanging fruit, but it does take time for them to chase after you. Hell, look how long JWH-018 was available in head shops!
The governments inherent hierarchial / command and control organizational structure ensures that they will be slow, inflexible and otherwise ineffective as compared to networked organizations where all nodes operate as their own command and control. This contrast between hierarchial and networked organizations is explained very well in the paper 'Netwar: the future of crime terror and militancy'.
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The government loves to go after low hanging fruit, but it does take time for them to chase after you. Hell, look how long JWH-018 was available in head shops!
The governments inherent hierarchial / command and control organizational structure ensures that they will be slow, inflexible and otherwise ineffective as compared to networked organizations where all nodes operate as their own command and control. This contrast between hierarchial and networked organizations is explained very well in the paper 'Netwar: the future of crime terror and militancy'.
Well said.