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@sisfreak2017 | 10 June 17 | |
it will be better if these cuunts carnt access the ''ali akbar'' content from overseas. I dont givr a fk it will probably be a good thing unless you have something to hide. |
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@newt182 | 10 June 17 | |
@ sisfreak2017 - 10.06.17 - 08:55pm it will be better if these cuunts carnt access the ''ali akbar'' content from overseas. I dont givr a fk it will probably be a good thing unless you have something to hide. That will be impossible to stop |
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@newt182 | 10 June 17 | |
It's a fact this will only affect legitimate Internet users
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@wakeup4 | 10 June 17 | |
@ newt182 - 10.06.17 - 07:48pm THERESA MAY TO LAUNCH WIDE-RANGING INTERNET REGULATION AND SECURITY CHANGES DESPITE NOT WINNING MAJORITY Theresa May looks set to launch wide-ranging internet regulation and plans to fundamentally change how technology works despite not having won a majority. In the speech in which she committed to keep governing despite calls to stand down, the prime minister made reference to extending powers for the security services. Those powers which include regulation of the internet and forcing internet companies to let spies read everyone's private communications were a key part of the Conservative campaign, which failed to score a majority in the House of Commons. In the speech, given in Downing Street after losing her majority but still looking to form a government, she laid out a series of plans that she hopes to carry out at what she called a critical time for our country. One of those will be cracking down on the ideology of Islamist extremism and all those who support it, she said in the short speech. And she will also give the police and the authorities the powers they need to keep our country safe. That statement one of few policy proposals in the speech seems to be a reference to new powers to regulate what is said and read on the internet, as set out in the Conservative manifesto. Theresa May had already promised in the final days of the campaign to launch a worldwide plan to get international agreements to regulate cyberspace. Her manifesto had laid out wide-ranging plans to regulate the internet, which included a commitment to become the global leader in the regulation of the use of personal data and the internet. During the election campaign, the prime minister refused to rule out Chinese-style internet censorship as part of that regulation plan, suggesting that she might look to shut down or ban companies that didn't comply with her controversial proposals. Well you lot bring this sh*t about by cheerleading jihadis ffs. |
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@xxlee | 10 June 17 | |
Has she gone back to been the home secretary, I thought security was home office responsibility.
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@prattle | 10 June 17 | |
The real terrorists and smart criminals will just communicate like its the 1700's, youll just weed out the semi harmless dopes from looking at Facebook messages and what not
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@prattle | 10 June 17 | |
I hope spies like memes
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@crail | 10 June 17 | |
There will still be tor. Gay
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@piggle | 10 June 17 | |
Target the part of the internet that nobody that's worth catching uses amazin
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@shadow27 | 10 June 17 | |
Sucks to be you guys. Great time to get into the spy business though, right? |
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