• I am sorry, to go. But even in sharing others postings. There is no interaction here.

    If you join, you need to Click on the last icon, under your banner picture.

    It will open a different page, your settings are on the left.

    Click on Privacy. Change them all to the right.

    Click Update.

    Click on Notices

    Change them All to the right.

    Click update.

    YOU WILL NOW BE SEEN

    START POSTING
    I am sorry, to go. But even in sharing others postings. There is no interaction here. If you join, you need to Click on the last icon, under your banner picture. It will open a different page, your settings are on the left. Click on Privacy. Change them all to the right. Click Update. Click on Notices Change them All to the right. Click update. YOU WILL NOW BE SEEN START POSTING
    I'd like to invite the people here to another platform. https://cre8aplace.com/

    https://cre8aplace.com/about/


    «Admin №1»
    3 months ago (edited)
    Posted to their timeline
    HOW-TO: Adjust your user account privacy and notification settings.
    The default settings are all set to off, meaning you're essentially invisible to everyone until they open up their settings to see and be seen. Whether or not users can easily connect with each other is determined by the notices settings, including site Admins and group Moderators. You can reach Admins directly through the Support option in the user menu at the top right of the site header.
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  • How to choose an e-mail hosting service that works better for us and respects us?


    If you are using Google's Gmail or another free e-mail hosting service, then you already know that it is free of charge due to user data collection. They sell your data to anyone that is willing to pay for it. You could use a service like Protonmail which claims to be private and claims to be secure. I can't verify that but if you are happy with this, it could be the right choice for you.


    Another option is to self-host your e-mail. You need a fair amount of time, patience and linux server admin skills to self-host your e-mail on a linux server. There are many hosting providers out there who can offer you the barebones server, which you will then manage for your e-mail purpose ( or whatever you want ). I have used BuyVM in the past, but they were acquired by an arab company. This company looks interesting but i have never tried them. Incognet. https://incognet.io/kvm-vps


    If you're not a linux expert, consider contacting patriotic American citizens through your church, or at other local social occasions. If they are already working as a linux engineer or software engineer, they may be able to offer you e-mail hosting at a reasonable price by setting up a linux server on Incognet ( for example ) and managing it for you. I would expect to pay about $300 to $400 per year for this service, with support included.


    The last consideration that i would like to mention is the choice of e-mail client. Whether you are using Windows or Linux, always choose the Mozilla Thunderbird e-mail client. Don't use MS Outlook. Mozilla Thunderbird e-mail client is now also available on Android. With support, you should be able to set up end to end encryption with SSL. If you need more encouragement to take the next steps to being free of tyranny, contact me. I will always be here to give advice and offer support for you, if you are serious about your desire to take positive action for a better future. For this nation. For our young people. God bless you. I welcome technical questions in the comment replies. #freedom #linux #email #privacy #surveillance


    PS --- dont use Gab Social Solutions. They are just re-selling GoDaddy services -- don't use Titan E-mail --- they are outsourced to India
    How to choose an e-mail hosting service that works better for us and respects us? If you are using Google's Gmail or another free e-mail hosting service, then you already know that it is free of charge due to user data collection. They sell your data to anyone that is willing to pay for it. You could use a service like Protonmail which claims to be private and claims to be secure. I can't verify that but if you are happy with this, it could be the right choice for you. Another option is to self-host your e-mail. You need a fair amount of time, patience and linux server admin skills to self-host your e-mail on a linux server. There are many hosting providers out there who can offer you the barebones server, which you will then manage for your e-mail purpose ( or whatever you want ). I have used BuyVM in the past, but they were acquired by an arab company. This company looks interesting but i have never tried them. Incognet. https://incognet.io/kvm-vps If you're not a linux expert, consider contacting patriotic American citizens through your church, or at other local social occasions. If they are already working as a linux engineer or software engineer, they may be able to offer you e-mail hosting at a reasonable price by setting up a linux server on Incognet ( for example ) and managing it for you. I would expect to pay about $300 to $400 per year for this service, with support included. The last consideration that i would like to mention is the choice of e-mail client. Whether you are using Windows or Linux, always choose the Mozilla Thunderbird e-mail client. Don't use MS Outlook. Mozilla Thunderbird e-mail client is now also available on Android. With support, you should be able to set up end to end encryption with SSL. If you need more encouragement to take the next steps to being free of tyranny, contact me. I will always be here to give advice and offer support for you, if you are serious about your desire to take positive action for a better future. For this nation. For our young people. God bless you. I welcome technical questions in the comment replies. #freedom #linux #email #privacy #surveillance PS --- dont use Gab Social Solutions. They are just re-selling GoDaddy services -- don't use Titan E-mail --- they are outsourced to India
    INCOGNET.IO
    KVM Virtual Servers in the USA and Europe | IncogNET
    High-performance KVM VPS hosting powered by AMD Epyc CPUs with NVMe storage. Available in 6 locations across the USA and Europe. Privacy-focused, no personal information required. Accepts cryptocurrency payments.
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  • I'd like to invite the people here to another platform. https://cre8aplace.com/

    https://cre8aplace.com/about/


    «Admin №1»
    3 months ago (edited)
    Posted to their timeline
    HOW-TO: Adjust your user account privacy and notification settings.
    The default settings are all set to off, meaning you're essentially invisible to everyone until they open up their settings to see and be seen. Whether or not users can easily connect with each other is determined by the notices settings, including site Admins and group Moderators. You can reach Admins directly through the Support option in the user menu at the top right of the site header.
    I'd like to invite the people here to another platform. https://cre8aplace.com/ https://cre8aplace.com/about/ «Admin №1» 3 months ago (edited) Posted to their timeline HOW-TO: Adjust your user account privacy and notification settings. The default settings are all set to off, meaning you're essentially invisible to everyone until they open up their settings to see and be seen. Whether or not users can easily connect with each other is determined by the notices settings, including site Admins and group Moderators. You can reach Admins directly through the Support option in the user menu at the top right of the site header.
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  • SDSU police dispute privacy concerns over 1,300 AI-equipped campus cameras


    https://www.thecollegefix.com/sdsu-police-dispute-privacy-concerns-over-1300-ai-equipped-campus-cameras/
    SDSU police dispute privacy concerns over 1,300 AI-equipped campus cameras https://www.thecollegefix.com/sdsu-police-dispute-privacy-concerns-over-1300-ai-equipped-campus-cameras/
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  • My Father Made Me Promise to Never Sell the Back 40 — Said a Bigfoot Has Lived There For Generations
    76,377 views May 24, 2026 #Bigfoot #CryptidStories #BigfootLore
    In November 1991, a man and three companions set out on a whitetail hunt deep in the Selkirk Mountains of northern Idaho, carrying enough gear for six days in serious backcountry. On the second night, something large and two-legged circled their wall tent in the dark, and the tracks it left the following morning did not belong to any animal they had ever encountered. Despite one member of the group urging them to pack out, they stayed, and what followed over the next two days would cost one man his life and leave another unable to speak for the next three decades. The narrator describes, in careful detail, a creature unlike anything in a field guide, a being that moved without sound across fresh snow, absorbed gunfire, and seemed to understand far more about the men it stalked than they ever understood about it. Told thirty-four years after the fact by the sole survivor who came home intact, this account draws on Kootenai oral tradition, trapper journals, and a fellow hunter's long-buried memory of something he encountered in Vietnam, tracing the creature across decades and continents. What lingers longest is not the violence but the small, deliberate things the creature left behind, the kind of evidence that suggests it was never simply hunting.

    This story is inspired by real-world sightings, regional folklore, and eyewitness accounts. All names, locations, occupations, and identifying details have been altered to protect the privacy of those involved. Certain elements have been dramatized for narrative purposes. Any resemblance to specific individuals or events is purely coincidental.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFniQ8O0FCQ#Bigfoot #Sasquatch #BigfootSighting #OregonBigfoot #CryptidStories #BigfootEncounter #BigfootLore
    My Father Made Me Promise to Never Sell the Back 40 — Said a Bigfoot Has Lived There For Generations 76,377 views May 24, 2026 #Bigfoot #CryptidStories #BigfootLore In November 1991, a man and three companions set out on a whitetail hunt deep in the Selkirk Mountains of northern Idaho, carrying enough gear for six days in serious backcountry. On the second night, something large and two-legged circled their wall tent in the dark, and the tracks it left the following morning did not belong to any animal they had ever encountered. Despite one member of the group urging them to pack out, they stayed, and what followed over the next two days would cost one man his life and leave another unable to speak for the next three decades. The narrator describes, in careful detail, a creature unlike anything in a field guide, a being that moved without sound across fresh snow, absorbed gunfire, and seemed to understand far more about the men it stalked than they ever understood about it. Told thirty-four years after the fact by the sole survivor who came home intact, this account draws on Kootenai oral tradition, trapper journals, and a fellow hunter's long-buried memory of something he encountered in Vietnam, tracing the creature across decades and continents. What lingers longest is not the violence but the small, deliberate things the creature left behind, the kind of evidence that suggests it was never simply hunting. This story is inspired by real-world sightings, regional folklore, and eyewitness accounts. All names, locations, occupations, and identifying details have been altered to protect the privacy of those involved. Certain elements have been dramatized for narrative purposes. Any resemblance to specific individuals or events is purely coincidental. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFniQ8O0FCQ#Bigfoot #Sasquatch #BigfootSighting #OregonBigfoot #CryptidStories #BigfootEncounter #BigfootLore
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  • Warrantless Surveillance and the Fourth Amendment: A Legal and Constitutional Analysis


    Introduction


    The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution emerged from direct experience with government overreach. The founders had lived under British rule, where agents of the Crown searched homes without cause, intercepted correspondence, and tracked movements through colonial towns. That experience produced one of the most direct constitutional protections in American history: the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures.That protection is now under systematic pressure.


    In 2020, the Baltimore Police Department operated a program called the Aerial Investigation Research (AIR) initiative, run by Persistent Surveillance Systems. A small plane circled the city for up to twelve hours a day, capturing video of 32 square miles per second. Every vehicle, building, and corner was recorded and time-stamped. Police could rewind the footage and trace any person’s movements backward through the day. No warrant was issued. No judge authorized the program. No probable cause was required.Baltimore is not an isolated case. It is a useful entry point for understanding what warrantless surveillance in public spaces means in practice, and why the legal framework governing it remains dangerously incomplete.This analysis examines the constitutional foundations of privacy law, the erosion of those foundations through technological acceleration, the tools currently deployed without adequate judicial oversight, the civil rights consequences of biased systems, and the legal reforms necessary to restore coherent constitutional protection.


    https://open.substack.com/pub/mk3blog/p/the-sky-has-no-warrant-why-open-air?r=6ckwai&utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web
    Warrantless Surveillance and the Fourth Amendment: A Legal and Constitutional Analysis Introduction The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution emerged from direct experience with government overreach. The founders had lived under British rule, where agents of the Crown searched homes without cause, intercepted correspondence, and tracked movements through colonial towns. That experience produced one of the most direct constitutional protections in American history: the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures.That protection is now under systematic pressure. In 2020, the Baltimore Police Department operated a program called the Aerial Investigation Research (AIR) initiative, run by Persistent Surveillance Systems. A small plane circled the city for up to twelve hours a day, capturing video of 32 square miles per second. Every vehicle, building, and corner was recorded and time-stamped. Police could rewind the footage and trace any person’s movements backward through the day. No warrant was issued. No judge authorized the program. No probable cause was required.Baltimore is not an isolated case. It is a useful entry point for understanding what warrantless surveillance in public spaces means in practice, and why the legal framework governing it remains dangerously incomplete.This analysis examines the constitutional foundations of privacy law, the erosion of those foundations through technological acceleration, the tools currently deployed without adequate judicial oversight, the civil rights consequences of biased systems, and the legal reforms necessary to restore coherent constitutional protection. https://open.substack.com/pub/mk3blog/p/the-sky-has-no-warrant-why-open-air?r=6ckwai&utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web
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  • The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution emerged from direct experience with government overreach. The founders had lived under British rule, where agents of the Crown searched homes without cause, intercepted correspondence, and tracked movements through colonial towns. That experience produced one of the most direct constitutional protections in American history: the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures.That protection is now under systematic pressure.


    In 2020, the Baltimore Police Department operated a program called the Aerial Investigation Research (AIR) initiative, run by Persistent Surveillance Systems. A small plane circled the city for up to twelve hours a day, capturing video of 32 square miles per second. Every vehicle, building, and corner was recorded and time-stamped. Police could rewind the footage and trace any person’s movements backward through the day. No warrant was issued. No judge authorized the program. No probable cause was required.


    Baltimore is not an isolated case. It is a useful entry point for understanding what warrantless surveillance in public spaces means in practice, and why the legal framework governing it remains dangerously incomplete.


    This analysis examines the constitutional foundations of privacy law, the erosion of those foundations through technological acceleration, the tools currently deployed without adequate judicial oversight, the civil rights consequences of biased systems, and the legal reforms necessary to restore coherent constitutional protection.


    https://marginofthelaw.com/the-sky-has-no-warrant-why-open-air-surveillance-is-unconstitutional-dangerous-and-morally-wrong/
    The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution emerged from direct experience with government overreach. The founders had lived under British rule, where agents of the Crown searched homes without cause, intercepted correspondence, and tracked movements through colonial towns. That experience produced one of the most direct constitutional protections in American history: the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures.That protection is now under systematic pressure. In 2020, the Baltimore Police Department operated a program called the Aerial Investigation Research (AIR) initiative, run by Persistent Surveillance Systems. A small plane circled the city for up to twelve hours a day, capturing video of 32 square miles per second. Every vehicle, building, and corner was recorded and time-stamped. Police could rewind the footage and trace any person’s movements backward through the day. No warrant was issued. No judge authorized the program. No probable cause was required. Baltimore is not an isolated case. It is a useful entry point for understanding what warrantless surveillance in public spaces means in practice, and why the legal framework governing it remains dangerously incomplete. This analysis examines the constitutional foundations of privacy law, the erosion of those foundations through technological acceleration, the tools currently deployed without adequate judicial oversight, the civil rights consequences of biased systems, and the legal reforms necessary to restore coherent constitutional protection. https://marginofthelaw.com/the-sky-has-no-warrant-why-open-air-surveillance-is-unconstitutional-dangerous-and-morally-wrong/
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  • The United States is not sliding toward a surveillance state. It has already built one. The infrastructure is operational, the legal frameworks are in place, and the funding continues to flow. What remains is the public’s willingness to see the system for what it is, rather than what it claims to be.This is not a document about theoretical risks or future dangers. It is an account of what has already been constructed, how it functions, and what it costs the people living inside it. The data points to a system where monitoring is the default, privacy is the exception, and the institutions responsible for protecting individual rights are the same ones dismantling them.

    https://marginofthelaw.com/wired-against-you-the-architecture-of-the-american-control-state/

    https://marginofthelaw.com/the-american-control-state/
    The United States is not sliding toward a surveillance state. It has already built one. The infrastructure is operational, the legal frameworks are in place, and the funding continues to flow. What remains is the public’s willingness to see the system for what it is, rather than what it claims to be.This is not a document about theoretical risks or future dangers. It is an account of what has already been constructed, how it functions, and what it costs the people living inside it. The data points to a system where monitoring is the default, privacy is the exception, and the institutions responsible for protecting individual rights are the same ones dismantling them. https://marginofthelaw.com/wired-against-you-the-architecture-of-the-american-control-state/ https://marginofthelaw.com/the-american-control-state/
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  • The Data Broker Market: Surveillance, Commodification, and the Collapse of Privacy
    The Architecture of a Surveillance Economy
    The Federal Trade Commission’s 2024 enforcement action against X-Mode Social, and its successor entity Outlogic, provided a rare moment of institutional transparency regarding the mechanics of the commercial surveillance industry.
    The order exposed how a single data broker had systematically harvested precise geolocation records from millions of Americans and sold them to military contractors, defense firms, and government-adjacent clients, including records tied to sensitive locations such as abortion clinics, addiction treatment centers, and places of worship.
    The action was, in narrow terms, a regulatory success. In broader terms, it was a footnote.
    https://marginofthelaw.com/the-data-broker-market-surveillance-commodification-and-the-collapse-of-privacy/
    The Data Broker Market: Surveillance, Commodification, and the Collapse of Privacy The Architecture of a Surveillance Economy The Federal Trade Commission’s 2024 enforcement action against X-Mode Social, and its successor entity Outlogic, provided a rare moment of institutional transparency regarding the mechanics of the commercial surveillance industry. The order exposed how a single data broker had systematically harvested precise geolocation records from millions of Americans and sold them to military contractors, defense firms, and government-adjacent clients, including records tied to sensitive locations such as abortion clinics, addiction treatment centers, and places of worship. The action was, in narrow terms, a regulatory success. In broader terms, it was a footnote. https://marginofthelaw.com/the-data-broker-market-surveillance-commodification-and-the-collapse-of-privacy/
    MARGINOFTHELAW.COM
    The Data Broker Market: Surveillance, Commodification, and the Collapse of Privacy
    The data broker industry does not operate as a collection of rogue actors. It operates as infrastructure. Brokers function as the logistical backbone connec ...
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  • Sinister in-car spy tech that can kill your engine will be mandatory next year under Biden policy — sparking major privacy fears
    https://nypost.com/2026/04/30/us-news/sinister-in-car-spy-tech-that-can-kill-your-engine-mandatory-next-year-under-biden-policy-sparking-major-privacy-fears/
    Sinister in-car spy tech that can kill your engine will be mandatory next year under Biden policy — sparking major privacy fears https://nypost.com/2026/04/30/us-news/sinister-in-car-spy-tech-that-can-kill-your-engine-mandatory-next-year-under-biden-policy-sparking-major-privacy-fears/
    NYPOST.COM
    Sinister in-car spy tech that can kill your engine will be mandatory next year under Biden policy — sparking major privacy fears
    A source told The Post, “A handful of large automakers … are actively selling [data] to companies that create an automotive risk score on an individual and sell that to insurance agencies.&#8…
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  • Surveillance pricing requires data. Enormous, continuous, granular data collected from sources most consumers have never thought about and never explicitly agreed to provide.The process begins with device fingerprinting. Before you've entered a search term or clicked a single link, the website you've loaded has already gathered a detailed technical profile of the machine you're using: your operating system, your browser version, the resolution of your screen, the fonts installed on your device, the plugins running in your browser, and in some implementations, the current battery level of your phone or laptop. That last point is not incidental. Research and reporting from privacy analysts have confirmed that a low battery level is read by certain pricing algorithms as a behavioral signal. A device running low on power suggests a user who is mobile, likely in transit, potentially time-pressured, and less likely to comparison shop. The algorithm responds by presenting higher prices to that profile.https://marginofthelaw.com/the-architecture-of-extraction-how-surveillance-pricing-works-and-why-it-matters/
    Surveillance pricing requires data. Enormous, continuous, granular data collected from sources most consumers have never thought about and never explicitly agreed to provide.The process begins with device fingerprinting. Before you've entered a search term or clicked a single link, the website you've loaded has already gathered a detailed technical profile of the machine you're using: your operating system, your browser version, the resolution of your screen, the fonts installed on your device, the plugins running in your browser, and in some implementations, the current battery level of your phone or laptop. That last point is not incidental. Research and reporting from privacy analysts have confirmed that a low battery level is read by certain pricing algorithms as a behavioral signal. A device running low on power suggests a user who is mobile, likely in transit, potentially time-pressured, and less likely to comparison shop. The algorithm responds by presenting higher prices to that profile.https://marginofthelaw.com/the-architecture-of-extraction-how-surveillance-pricing-works-and-why-it-matters/
    MARGINOFTHELAW.COM
    What is Surveillance Pricing
    Economic freedom in a surveillance pricing environment requires deliberate action at the individual level. It requires understanding the data layer beneath the transaction, deploying tools that degrade the quality of the data collected, and making conscious decisions about which systems...
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  • Do you find it egregious that the government fines the corporations for violating OUR privacy yet the government gets the money and the victim gets nothing?

    https://www.revealedeye.com/p/your-car-is-spying-on-you-the-auto-data-privacy-and-autonomy-act-explained
    Do you find it egregious that the government fines the corporations for violating OUR privacy yet the government gets the money and the victim gets nothing? https://www.revealedeye.com/p/your-car-is-spying-on-you-the-auto-data-privacy-and-autonomy-act-explained
    WWW.REVEALEDEYE.COM
    Your Car is Spying on You: The Auto Data Privacy and Autonomy Act Explained
    Modern cars are quietly spying on drivers. This investigation exposes automotive data harvesting, insurance scoring, cybersecurity risks, and a new law fighting back.
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