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Play Nice Random Chat Thread IV

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With growing fears of a ‘second wave’ of coronavirus in Melbourne, the Victorian Government has reached out to its NSW colleagues for tips on how to empty the streets and shut down any unauthorised fun.

“Sydney’s been doing this for years,” a spokesperson for the Victorian Government said.
“We need to get people off the streets, out of bars and locked down at home. Who better than the Gladys Berejiklian to show us the ropes?”

He said it was now well documented that the coronavirus is most likely spread in social situations.

“It’s when people are out together enjoying ourselves, having a good time, having a laugh. That hasn’t happened in Sydney since 2011.

“The only way we’re going to beat this is if we can get to a point where the central part of the city is totally devoid of life and human activity. We’re looking forward to hearing Gladys’s tips on how to take the first step”.
 
No it wasn't. You ran unwitting node in a repetition network.



?

Don't bother replying. Learn about what you are on about instead. For example. Actually study critical theory. Without the academic indoctrination. Spend six months reading about it, understanding how it works and what it is. Make up your own mind.



(And don't say that's what you've already done. That's not the point, you've made your mind up before you know what you are talking about.)
As a recovering victim myself, My mind doesn't view the world as conspiring to keep me down.
I make my own world
 
As a recovering victim myself, My mind doesn't view the world as conspiring to keep me down.
I make my own world

Critical theory is victim indoctrination.

It's actually counter productive to the people it claims to liberate.
 
Surely this can’t be true....

Merivale CEO Justin Hemmes, accused of $126 million in wage theft, has been drafted by the NSW Government (and the Federal Government) to provide economic and workplace advice in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic...
 
IT'S BEEN THE better part of a decade since the hacktivist group Anonymousrampaged across the internet, stealing and leaking millions of secret files from dozens of US organizations. Now, amid the global protests following the killing of George Floyd, Anonymous is back—and it's returned with a dump of hundreds of gigabytes of law enforcement files and internal communications.

On Friday of last week, the Juneteenth holiday, a leak-focused activist group known as Distributed Denial of Secrets published a 269-gigabyte collection of police data that includes emails, audio, video, and intelligence documents, with more than a million files in total. DDOSecrets founder Emma Best tells WIRED that the hacked files came from Anonymous—or at least a source self-representing as part of that group, given that under Anonymous' loose, leaderless structure anyone can declare themselves a member. Over the weekend, supporters of DDOSecrets, Anonymous, and protesters worldwide began digging through the files to pull out frank internal memos about police efforts to track the activities of protesters. The documents also reveal how law enforcement has described groups like the antifascist movement Antifa.

"It's the largest published hack of American law enforcement agencies," Emma Best, cofounder of DDOSecrets, wrote in a series of text messages. "It provides the closest inside look at the state, local, and federal agencies tasked with protecting the public, including [the] government response to COVID and the BLM protests."

The Hack
The massive internal data trove that DDOSecrets published was originally taken from a web development firm called Netsential, according to a law enforcement memo obtained by Kreb On Security. That memo, issued by the National Fusion Center Association, says that much of the data belonged to law enforcement "fusion centers" across the US that act as information-sharing hubs for federal, state, and local agencies. Netsential did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Best declined to comment on whether the information was taken from Netsential, but noted that "some Twitter users accurately pointed out that a lot of the data corresponded to Netsential systems." As for their source, Best would say only that the person self-represented as "capital A Anonymous," but added cryptically that "people may wind up seeing a familiar name down the line."
"Part of what a lot of the current protests are about is what police do and have done legally."
EMMA BEST, DDOSECRETS
DDOSecrets has published the files in a searchable format on its website, and supporters quickly created the #blueleaks hashtag to collect their findings from the hacked files on social media. Some of the initial discoveries among the documents showed, for instance, that the FBI monitored the social accounts of protesters and sent alerts to local law enforcement about anti-police messages. Other documents detail the FBI tracking bitcoin donations to protest groups, and internal memos warning that white supremacist groups have posed as Antifa to incite violence.

read more..

 
Looking at joining an online betting agency. I know legally they cannot offer incentives to join as a victorian but was wondering if anyone knew of one of the betting agencies that have provided a sign up bonus bet?
 

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Did you see which Serena Williams it was?

CGAF, if she means what she states, then it's better than most of what I read.

Are you winding up to press gang me again? Have I made some political social media faux pas?
 
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