Tag Archives: privacy

On the matter of privacy and freedom…

by DAVID BROWN | CLEARNFO.com | May 09, 2020

If someone has never experienced something, how do you communicate this something to them using language?  This is a real struggle for me.  When you become a father for the first time, or the first time your child calls you “Daddy”, there are just no words to describe this feeling.  Over the years, I have mused at my younger, single coworkers who were childless only to get married and become a father. I muse because their life is about to change profoundly and forever in ways they can never imagine.

Now, the only reason I bring up the father example above is to prove my point to those who can understand — to broach the next topic– and that topic is a sense of privacy, and a sense of freedom all wrapped up in one emotion. Like the father example, there is no way to explain this human condition until you have experienced it, but I will try. Why? Because this is the flavor we have lost and subject we are in the process of losing forever.

I was raised in the dusty desert of West Texas which is sparsely populated with few if any real areas of concentrated people.  I was raised in what I call Big Sky country, where most of what I had was not  trees, buildings or people but sky.  When and if we had rain, it was a big event and it was wonderful and soulful renewing and healing of the dry, cracked earth. The big dark grey and purple clouds full of moisture would march across the desert from horizon to horizon in all their beauty and glory spreading cool, moist air that would make the hairs on my arms and neck stand end-wise.  I felt a sense of health, well-being and joy.

I had horses and in the areas I frequented, there were few if any telephone poles or fences… it was just wide open spaces as far as I could see; and with this vast expanse of openness and sky, I had a sense of privacy and of freedom.  I knew of people who had screwed up their lives so badly,  they moved far away to the Northwest US to start over and rebuild their broken reputation … Starting anew and fresh — a second chance.

So today, with our newly minted surveillance state, none of this is possible. There is no sense of privacy and there is no ability to start over with a second chance. And the feeling of privacy and freedom is gone. Future generations will have not a single clue of what they are missing.

Wyman Meinzer’s West Texas

Privacy & Surveillance / The Future of Freedom vs. The Architecture of Oppression

David Brown

David Brown

by DAVID BROWN | CLEARNFO.com | March 8, 2015

Great lengthy but enjoyable podcast of over 14 hours with an equally important and extensive reference map documenting the podcast.  I downloaded this to my computer and then uploaded it to my smartphone so that I could listen as time permitted.    The Reference Map provides many great ‘take-off points’ for additional study.  Though I have heard many of these ‘clips’ before like the Interview with NSA Whistleblower William Binney in its entirety, I learned more on the second listening to certain out-takes.  For example, Mr. Binney listed several CIA operations that I was not familiar with, so I took some time to look them up.  One in particular was Operation Amadeus, which eventually led me to an excellent article by David Guyatt entitled The Mafia, The CIA, & The Vatican’s Intelligence Apparatus which led me to David Guyatt’s website called DeepBlackLies.   You can take your own journey to increased knowledge about the world we live in by exploring  the excellent links below, but see if you can carve out some time between work and family to take a listen to the montage put together in Episode 087 below.  Enjoy.

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Is T0r Safe?

by DAVID BROWN | CLEARNFO.com | November 13, 2014

Is Tor Safe?

Tor: Onion routing

folks, I’ve used T0r a few times in the past just to check it out but I still have my reservations for using, even if it hadn’t been compromised (see link below). If you use T0r, then law officials automatically think you are doing something illegal; so this in and of itself, is a red flag. Also, T0r does not protect you at the entry point or the exit point of the onion routing scheme. Add to this, there are a lot of illegal activities going on within T0r, so you are rubbing up to and might be associating with criminal activity and thus get caught in an investigation by association; and in today’s world of criminal justice, you are more likely to have to prove your innocence to the state than the state prove your guilt. Based on this, I see T0r as a great idea –even if it was developed by the same state that seeks to compromise it—but I think there are way too many issues to use it or trust it. Bottom line in my opinion, there is no assurance of security or privacy on the net period; and if you assume you are safe, you do so at your own peril. So with this in mind, my basic theory is never do anything on line that you wouldn’t want published on the front page of Drudge or the NYT. This is unfortunate, but a reality. It is unfortunate because I believe that big part of being a free person is the expectation of privacy in our homes and in our online activities. Without privacy, free speech is attenuated, muted and restricted. This unfortunate condition we find our freedom in today represents just another example of the slow and steady creep of the state to subsume all individual rights and to eliminate any perceived threat to its power. The end point of this progression can only end with total control and ownership of the individual by the state and this is not a pretty picture. The individual rights the state takes are always under the guise of protecting you but don’t be their fool; the real purpose is to grow the scope, reach and power of the state over the individual.

Is Tor Safe? Anonymous Browser Hacked, With Suspects Keeping Quiet And Privacy Advocates Shaken

Exclusively Relying on Tor Risks |Detection and Exposure for Whistleblowers
By: Michael Best

Warning: Over 100 Tor Nodes Found Designed to Spy On Deep Web Users
Tuesday, July 26, 2016 by Swati Khandelwal