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Economically — Challenged & illiterate .. CIA website forced offline (11th February 2012) …item 3.. A time for charitable laziness (Nov. 3, 2013) …
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It is a great month to be a spectator. Whether it’s my roommate, mutual friends, my boss or a Canadian astronaut, the month of November puts a bonanza of facial hair glory on display. The full beard may come back to bite its growers when it comes time to shovel in food on Thanksgiving, but it has practical uses too. A beard looks good and, so I’m told, keeps your face warm when the weather is cold. I can definitely speak from experience and say a clean-shaven face is a cold face when the wind picks up.
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…….***** All images are copyrighted by their respective authors ……..
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… message header for item 1. CIA website forced offline as hacking group Anonymous admits it has stolen personal information of 46,000 people …

Members of hacking group Anonymous have claimed they were behind an attack that closed down the website cia.gov for nine hours on Friday.

The hackers said they broke into several Alabama law enforcement and government websites to steal Social Security numbers, license plate numbers, phone numbers, addresses and criminal records.
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…..item 1)…. CIA website forced offline as hacking group Anonymous admits it has stolen personal information of 46,000 people

… Mail Online … www.dailymail.co.uk/news

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Last updated at 7:09 AM on 11th February 2012

www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2099696/CIA-website-forc…

The CIA’s website has been targetted by computer hackers believed to have stolen the personal information of more than 46,000 people.

Members of hacking group Anonymous have claimed they were behind an attack that closed down the website cia.gov for nine hours on Friday.

The hackers said they broke into several Alabama law enforcement and government websites to steal Social Security numbers, license plate numbers, phone numbers, addresses and criminal records.
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img code photo … Tech savvy:

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/02/11/article-2099696-11A194…

Tech savvy: Members of the computer hacking group Anonymous have taken credit for forcing the CIA’s website offline for nine hours on Friday

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The group claimed the attack was prompted by what it called Alabama’s ‘racist legislation’ targeting illegal immigrants.

‘You complain about immigrants costing the state money, however, you do not care about spending the same money to protect your own legal citizens,’ a news release said.

More…

…..Russia jails CIA mole for passing information on missile systems to the U.S.
The group says it will not use the personal information to do damage.

‘Because of the possible cost of lives and money to regular citizens, we are deleting this data and are seeking to make it known that you not only have shown zero regard for immigrants, but for the very citizens that live in the great state of Alabama.’
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img code photo … Claim:

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/02/11/article-2099696-11AD7E…

Claim: The group said it took thousands of people’s personal data to highlight how little Alabama looked after its own citizens – putting immigrants first instead

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Mobile city spokeswoman Barbara Drummond said Utah authorities alerted officials Thursday night that hackers may be targeting the city.

She told The Associated Press that the city shut down its computers to avoid the attack and that the hackers did not gain access to Mobile’s servers.

However, hackers did breach the website of the city webmaster, and took data from a recent program offering amnesty to people with outstanding warrants for municipal offenses.

Hackers claiming to be affiliated with Anonymous have launched a spate of attacks on law enforcement websites in recent weeks, hitting such cities as Salt Lake City, Boston, Syracuse, N.Y. and Greece.
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img code photo … CIA … Central Intelligence Agency … United States of America ..

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/02/11/article-2099696-11AD7F…

Target: Hackers claiming to be affiliated with Anonymous have targeted agencies in New York, Boston and Salt Lake City in recent weeks

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The collective of activists, pranksters and hackers have also targeted financial institutions such as Visa and MasterCard, as well as the Church of Scientology.

The warrant amnesty information from Mobile had already been made public by the city to encourage people to participate in the amnesty program, Drummond said.

She said city technicians are still trying to determine whether some personal information required to log on to that website may have been stolen.

Officials in other Alabama cities have said they are not aware of being attacked.
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…..item 2)… Digital Trends … upgrade your lifestyle …

Anonymous turns its attention to the U.S. Senate over controversial bill
DECEMBER 8, 2011BY RYAN FLEMING
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img code photo … hacktivist group Anonymous …

cdn3.digitaltrends.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/Anonymo…

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www.digitaltrends.com/web/anonymous-turns-its-attention-t…

A controversial bill that recently cleared the Senate has enraged many—including the hacktivist group Anonymous.

Last week, the Senate quietly voted in favor of the bill H.R. 1540, the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2012. The bill includes controversial new language that could in theory allow the military to detain and arrest anyone in the world, including American citizens on American soil, and then be indefinitely detained without trial. Now Anonymous has warned the Senate that it can “expect us.”

Although the United States Congress has made far more headlines this year through what it hasn’t done rather than what it has, there is a new controversy brewing in Washington over the NDAA’s new provision. The NDAA is a bill that comes up for review annually, and is generally passed without much issue to make sure that the military continues to receive necessary funds. It is occasionally debated in the House and Senate, but rarely faces much serious opposition before being approved at the end of each year, as it has been for the last 48 years. This year’s act was no different, and it was pushed through the Senate, passing with bi-partisan support and a 93-7 vote tally.

Included in the bill though was a controversial new amendment found in Section 1031 of the bill, which increases the military’s scope in combating terrorism.

The changes allow the military to arrest and indefinitely detain anyone, anywhere that is deemed a potential terror suspect. Many terror suspects are already subject to this provision and make up the Guantanamo Bay residents, but the troubling issue is with the language, which allows arrests anywhere in the world—including the United States.

Opponents of the new language claim that this is the first step towards tyranny as—in theory—the president could potentially deem anyone a possible terrorist, and have them arrested and held without a trial for the rest of their lives. Senator Mark Udall (D-Co.) attempted to introduce an amendment that would have changed the wording and allowed for a Congressional review of the detention power, but the amendment was voted down before the bill was passed.

Now, it might seem paranoid to think that a President would abuse that power to send soldiers into American homes to arrest people, then hold them without trial, but many point to the poisonous atmosphere in Washington and claim that some of the more recent heated vitriol on both sides of the political spectrum, from the Occupy protesters to the Tea Party members has grown to the point that the potential for abuse far outweighs the merits of the plan, and that is a chilling prospect.

There is also the legal question of whether or not this bill would supersede the Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibits U.S. soldiers being used to enforce laws on American soil, but that law has provisions for exceptions to be made in order to maintain standards of law and order–as long as the orders come from the United States Congress. AS this law is also a work of the Congress, it creates a gray areas that would almost certainly be challenged in court, but not before it was first enacted and arrests on American soils were made.

Add in the massive vocal opposition to the plan, from both constituents and top security officials that denounced the bill including: Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, CIA Director David Petraeus, FBI Director Robert Mueller, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and many more, all of which the Senate ignored, and it is hard to not be at least understand peoples’ concern for this new provision.

The President has discussed vetoing the bill unless the language is changed, and it is now in a closed door session before it will head to the White House. Anonymous, however, is not taking the matter lightly. Earlier this week, the hacktivist group released the video “Anonymous – Message to the American People” on YouTube, in which a fabricated voice went over the group’s objections to the bill, then signed off by stating “U.S. Senate, expect us.”

This is far from the first time Anonymous has issued political messages, but it is the biggest target the group has focused on. Earlier this year the group released a similar message for the Federal Reserve, a group Anonymous has also had issue with.

Of course, when it comes to Anonymous, it is difficult to know what is part of the concerted effort, and what is simply a person or people attempting to utilize the group’s notoriety to put out their own message. And if it is a group that can claim ties to the original—or just a group that can effectively act in the same way—taking on the U.S. Senate is at best a risky proposition.

No details on what or how Anonymous planned to go after the Senate, but in 2008 the group made headlines for hacking, then releasing many of Sarah Palin’s email. With election year coming up, perhaps it is time for Senators to change their passwords.
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….youtube video…. Anonymous – Message to the American People …. 5:09 minutes ….

www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrXyLrTRXso&feature=player_em…

Music by: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Requiem

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In Case You Missed It:

Anonymous publishes email exchange with Symantec over K payoff
Anonymous shuts down federal and music industry sites as vengeance for MegaUpload; UPDATE: FBI.gov taken down
Anonymous exposes data from neo-Nazi hunt on new ‘Nazi-Leaks’ site
Anonymous releases credit card, email data stolen from Stratfor
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…..item 3)…. A time for charitable laziness …

… FSU News … www.fsunews.com/
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img code photo … Duck Dynasty’s Jase and Willie Robertson

cmsimg.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=CD&D…

If you’re thinking about growing a beard like Duck Dynasty’s Jase and Willie Robertson, November is the month to do so. / Theo Wargo / FSView

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Nov. 3, 2013 |

Written by
Adrian Chamberlin
Senior Staff Writer

FILED UNDER
FSU News
FSU News Adrian Chamberlin

www.fsunews.com/article/20131103/FSVIEW0303/131103015/A-t…

No Shave November is both the best of times, and the worst of times. I say it is the best of times because it is best taken advantage of by college students and has a variant that brings tangible good to the world, and I say the worst of times because anyone who knows me well knows a few days of stubble make my face look like a Chia Pet that lost a fight with a chainsaw.

The variant of No Shave November that I am talking about is called Movember, and it specifically has to do with mustaches. In fact, there is a charity called Movember that works to bring about the tangible good I mentioned earlier.

Movember encourages men to register on their website and spend the 30 days of November growing and grooming their moustaches and asking their friends and family to support their efforts by donating to their profile on the Movember website.

Over 80 percent of the funds raised are then donated to different men’s health programs like the Prostate Cancer Foundation, and the rest of the funds are used to ensure the group has the capital to fundraise for the next year as well.

The movement’s reach is literally out of this world, since Canadian Astronaut and social media rock-star Colonel Chris Hadfield has dedicated his trademark moustache to the cause of Movember this year.

Even if the average college student doesn’t participate in Movember, No Shave November is still a fun tradition to get in on, and college is the perfect time to do that. That’s because in college your job is less likely to require a clean-shaven face, and your significant other is also probably more likely to be accepting of your beard.

Granted, I’m disqualified for not being able to grow a respectable moustache, let alone a beard. Even so, I consider myself a big supporter of the movement, whether it’s Movember or just No Shave month in general.

It is a great month to be a spectator. Whether it’s my roommate, mutual friends, my boss or a Canadian astronaut, the month of November puts a bonanza of facial hair glory on display. The full beard may come back to bite its growers when it comes time to shovel in food on Thanksgiving, but it has practical uses too. A beard looks good and, so I’m told, keeps your face warm when the weather is cold. I can definitely speak from experience and say a clean-shaven face is a cold face when the wind picks up.

So pick a reason, but whether it’s Movember, the visual fiesta that is a full beard, or the practical aspect of it, a beard in November is a beard at home. Winter is coming for all of us, and the best time to grow a beard is before it gets here. My facial hair may be hopeless, but I urge my fellow men to join Movember and save themselves, not shave themselves, while they still can.
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