posted on Oct, 1 2004 @ 07:41 AM
Sorry I don't want to sound like the exact sort of people that I myself attack for being intolerant of others, but if you want to sound more credible
check your spelling & grammar to make sure it is reasonable.
I understand not everyone has been lucky enough to have a reasonable education (which is quite sad in this day and age) but even something as simple
as typing your post up in a word processor and then running spell check over it would make you sound alot more credible and make me (and I assume
others) less liable to loose interest halfway through the post.
Again, this isn't meant to be a malicious attack on you, just a word of advice, as this is the third thread in a row where the spelling and grammar
of the original poster has been hard to follow / interpret. If english is not your native language then my humblest apologies
As for my opinion on MIB's (Men In Beige? :lol
for a while I thought it was a possibility, but recently I've been thinking, how could they
possibly exist? I mean, maybe in the US they do and maybe they (or rather software) are able to monitor a certain percentage of all communications
within the US or coming into/out of the US, but most stories make out that they generally exist all over the world. I find that hard to believe.
How could you possibly monitor however many BILLION people there are living on this planet? Even when we're talking about purely internet traffic,
the amount of traffic is phenominal (sp?). You would need some VERY serious hardware & bandwidth. The machine(s) would need to basically be THE
central hub of the entire internet. In other words you're saying the 12 root servers keeping much of the internet on it's feet (well ok, keeping
much of the dns to ip translations) are secretly run by some ultra secret organisation that's monitoring all our traffic? An organisation that
somehow miraculously is able to track down your exact location, even though the ip sent in the packet headers will have been changed and modified (I
assume) tens of times before it even reaches the root servers? (And that's assuming that no dns servers in between are able to translate the
destination domain name to an ip)... or am I mistaken as to how ip addressing / domain resolution work?