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Archive for the tag “CloudFlare”

AI ‘DeBoonkers’ Are Coming

What’s the latest form of censorship being pushed by the globalists? How about AI-powered “fact checking” of social media platforms?

Listen as Matthew Prince, the CEO of CloudFlare, advocates just such a form of censorship masquerading as cybersecurity. Prince is addressing an audience  at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland. And, of course, the smug WEF panelists concur.

We need to banish this organization and everyone involved in pushing its evil aims. Here’s more from Memology 101.

White House Pushed Censorship

Twitter Files 10 drop courtesy of David Zweig, revealing pressure from the White House to censor pandemic-related information. Twitter outsourced censorship campaigns using decision trees and banned Harvard medical doctors. More from Robert Gouveia, Esquire, on Watching the Watchers.

So much worse than you thought. That’s the title of a new video from The Quartering. Now we know: T he FBI and CIA didn’t limit themselves to Twitter, but have also been linked to YouTube, Twitch and Cloudflare thanks to Elon Musk. We already were also aware that the FBI and CIA leaned on Facebook, so this scandal will only grow in scale and size the more we learn.

DietPepsi Circles Assange

AntiLeaks, led by a shadowy hacker calling himself DietPepsi, is circling the wagons to thwart arch-nemesis — Julian Assange’s WikiLeaks. From August 3 through August 13, the WikiLeaks website was driven offline as a result of a massive denial  of service attack that DietPepsi claims to have coordinated. WikiLeaks remained out of commission until a US-based content delivery network, CloudFlare, agreed to disseminate the website. Saving Wikileaks’ hide won’t sit well in certain quarters, but CloudFlare has been embroiled in controversy before, having previously provided similar services for the hacking group LulzSec, as well as for the Turkish government.

Julian Assange at New Media Days, 2009, in Copenhagen, Denmark.

“We don’t discriminate against customers based on a political belief of what’s good or bad,” says CloudFlare’s CEO Matthew Prince, out of San Francisco. “We try hard not to play censor.”

With CloudFlare’s support, WikiLeaks re-emerged from Internet oblivion, but the US-based DietPepsi wrote the Des Moines Register vowing this wouldn’t be the end of the story. “WikiLeaks web server is now hidden behind five CloudFlare servers. CloudFlare isn’t actually hosting WikiLeaks content itself but acts as a reverse web proxy. This makes it especially difficult to attack WikiLeaks, as each CloudFlare server can handle 10gb/second,” DietPepsi said in an email to the Register. “”I am in the process of finding the actual IP address of WikiLeaks web server. I have a couple of leads and believe I will be able to do it, however it will take some time.”

To emphasize AntiLeaks’ resolve, DietPepsi claimed, via Twitter, that the group had taken down two other websites — one belonging to RT, the Russian global TV network, which has carried extensive favorable coverage of Assange, and a second website belonging to Bambuser, a Stockholm, Sweden-based firm that provides livestream video services for individuals to broadcast directly over Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr. The specific target in the Bambuser outage is believed to have been a “citizen-journalist” feed by a James Albury, who has been broadcasting from the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where Assange has been holed up since June, fighting extradition to Sweden.

Here’s some of the banter on Twitter today:

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Meanwhile, WikiLeaks ally Anonymous issued one of its patented YouTube threats against AntiLeaks, promising, “We do not forgive. We do not forget. Aunty Leaks we request you dessist (sic) in your activity or you will Expect us.” Unbending, DietPepsi shot back on Twitter, “Semper fi. Expect us.” Earlier, he denied any connection with the US government, although WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson from Iceland has implied that such a linkage exists.

For visitors wanting more on this geeky battlefront, here’s an appearance by CloudFlare’s Prince, last fall on Bloomberg Television, explaining how his company has improved its web security services by building a better paradigm to thwart DDoS attacks, drawing upon its experience of deflecting the barrage stirred up against LulzSec.

ARVE error: need id and provider

And here is RT’s broadcast report about its website going down in the DDoS attack claimed by AntiLeaks.

ARVE error: need id and provider

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