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The enricks.angelfire site is from a video game ARG from several years ago and has absolutely nothing to do with the 8•3•11 group or sites.
Originally posted by NewAgeIrishman
Long time lurker and first time poster. I would like to point out something that may be of interest concerning the relation to this website. First thing I came across that might be connected is a meeting concerning a "National Enforcement Initiative". Also, the "Henricks" website I visited is creepy. The word "Gomex" was strange so I researched it and found something concerning "Global Security" and a "Gulf of Mexico Exercise (GOMEX)". Interesting to say the least. Cheers. Website 2Website 1
This memo specifies an optional interim mechanism for IPv6 sites to
communicate with each other over the IPv4 network without explicit
tunnel setup, and for them to communicate with native IPv6 domains
via relay routers. Effectively it treats the wide area IPv4 network
as a unicast point-to-point link layer. The mechanism is intended as
a start-up transition tool used during the period of co-existence of
IPv4 and IPv6. It is not intended as a permanent solution.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract:
Experience with the "Connection of IPv6 Domains via IPv4 Clouds (6to4)" IPv6 transitioning mechanism has shown that the mechanism is unsuitable for widespread deployment and use in the Internet. This document requests that RFC3056 and the companion document "An Anycast Prefix for 6to4 Relay Routers" RFC3068 are moved to historic status.
The Bell System was the American Bell Telephone Company and then, subsequently, AT&T led system which provided telephone services to much of the United States and Canada from 1877 to 1984, at various times as a monopoly. In 1984, the company was broken up into separate companies, by a U.S. Justice Department mandate.
The colloquial term Ma Bell (as in "Mother Bell") was often used by the general public in the United States to refer to any aspect of this conglomerate, as it held a near complete monopoly over all telephone service in most areas of the country, and is still used by many to refer to any telephone company. Ma Bell is also used to refer to the various female voices behind recordings for the Bell System: Mary Moore, Jane Barbe, and Pat Fleet (the current voice of AT&T).
AT&T has unveiled its latest cloud-based offering, which lets businesses grab more computing capacity when they need it.
The company announced on Monday its Synaptic Compute as a Service, designed to let IT staffers store and maintain internal applications and data via AT&T's cloud. Capacity and availability can be ramped up when needed, especially if a company's own data center resources become taxed, AT&T said.
Though cloud computing has grown in popularity among enterprise customers, concerns exist about both security and reliability. AT&T said that it has built security on top of its cloud layer, so that it is fully integrated. The company also expressed confidence in its track record of reliability, both in its own data centers and in its hosting and network businesses.
Sure, it's been just a few months since the National Security Agency asked for a $900 million supercomputing complex – you know, to help out with all that internet wiretapping. But concern about deficit spending will mean shuttering 800 other federal data centers in the US, or 40 percent of total government capacity. The closures are part of a larger push toward greater efficiency and consolidation, with an estimated savings of $3 billion a year; moving services to the cloud will mean more savings in licensing fees and infrastructure. Single-digit savings might sound like chump change when you realize the federal information technology budget runs around $80 billion a year, but hey, it's a start, right?
The data centers are located in 30 states and the District of Columbia, and are currently operated by federal Departments including Agriculture, Commerce, Defense (the majority, with 113), Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Justice, Labor, State, Interior, Treasury, Transportation, and Veterans Affairs. The Environmental Protection Agency, General Services Administration, NASA, the Small Business Administration, and the US Agency for International Development are also named as losing data centers.
AT&T may monitor Internet traffic for copyright infringement
In a move that legal experts said could present a major test of First Amendment rights in the Internet era, a federal judge in San Francisco on Friday ordered the disabling of a Web site devoted to disclosing confidential information.
The site, Wikileaks.org, invites people to post leaked materials with the goal of discouraging “unethical behavior” by corporations and governments. It has posted documents said to show the rules of engagement for American troops in Iraq, a military manual for the operation of the detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and other evidence of what it has called corporate waste and wrongdoing. ...
June 18, 2011
Categories:
Blogs
.
Gay group chief under pressure over AT&T issues
The president of the group Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation is under pressure to resign from within his own organization after aligning his group with AT&T's regulatory issues.
POLITICO's Eliza Krigman reported recently that GLAAD was among a number of progressive groups with no obvious institutional interest in telecom issues who received money from AT&T and subsequently issued public statements supporting AT&T's merger with T-Mobile. Another letter was sent from GLAAD to the FCC opposing possible net neutrality rules. GLAAD later rescinded the letter, claiming it was sent in error. The issue had created an uproar in the gay blogosphere.
Another big story at the FCC is apparently a very old story in the regulatory world. A competitive loser is seeking government help to overcome its market deficiencies. Sprint stopped investing in its wireless network: its investments going from $5.1 [billion] in 2007 down to $1.5 [billion] in 2010. It’s no wonder they’ve fallen off and are rumored to risk bankruptcy. AT&T went from $3.7 [billion] in 2007 to $8.4 [billion] now, while Verizon went from $6.5 [billion] in 2007 to a matching $8.4 [billion] now.
Pentagon Admits 24,000 Files Lost in Cyber Attack
Posted by Kara Reeder Jul 15, 2011 9:16:21 AM
Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn has admitted that foreign hackers accessed 24,000 U.S. military files in a single attack on a defense contractor earlier this year, reports Bloomberg Businessweek. The attack occurred in March, but Lynn did not say which contractor was targeted. The Washington Post quotes Lynn as saying:
It is a significant concern that over the past decade, terabytes of data have been extracted by foreign intruders from corporate networks of defense companies.
The admission was made during a speech in which Lynn announced the Pentagon’s new cyber strategy. Under the new strategy, cyberspace is considered a new warfare domain, says GMA News.
Originally posted by OleMB
Originally posted by Gseven
Anyone else think that Jesus is superimposed or hidden in Belle's picture? I immediately thought that when I looked at it.
If you are referring to the dark part with the one eye, I would think that is the other kind of christ.
Originally posted by Libertygal