Race for the Times

 

Los Angeles, Ca.

Word outta LA besides Ice Cube has a new album, is Myspace is putting out all your personal info to 3rd parties. Yes here we go yall... Now to get real info out of these social websites, is like getting info about Cointelpro 2010. Myspace admitted to at the least, providing your user id and the last page you checked before viewing an ad. This revelation was put out in a Wall Street Journal article.  Thing is WSJ and Myspace are owned by NewsCorp; so do we really expect some type of truth? It is known however, that apps on Myspace as well as Facebook DO share your user id and information. Recent lawsuits with game companies, and the social websites support the the pimping of your info. Where does this compromised info go? There are 3rd party companies that do advertising and monitor the internet. No matter what your privacy settings are on Facebook, even if set at the highest setting, this issue is affecting millions of users.  User ids,a number that appears in your home page url that uniquely identifies you, are being widely disseminated to 3rd party developers, who are able to track the id directly back to you.  This week Facebook announced it would encrypt user id's in their media spin to make you believe they will stop giving out your info.

If your info out there wasn't enough, the FBI is getting more and more tech savy on yo ass.  "The FBI is tapping my telephone" ... is nothing new, but the cel companies are providing the method for FBI to wiretap.  Fake terror emergencies are allowing phone companies to break communications laws by allowing government agencies to tape your conversations and text messages.  It is reported that 2,000 U.S. telephone call records between 2002 and 2006 "by invoking terrorism emergencies that did not exist." That data has been disseminated and give to the NSA wholesale without a court order , then the Senate give AT&T and Verizon immunity for that action. The government is putting in place practices, policies, and penalties for telecommunications companies, sites and the like to give up this info, and not produce roadblocks on their wiretap highway. So now it is upon us that a step to expand wiretaps to VoIP companies like Skype, social networking websites like Facebook, and P2P software applications. They can do this by expanding CALEA.  What is CALEA...

Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) is a United States wiretapping law passed in 1994, by Bill Clinton.

To amend title 18, United States Code, to make clear a telecommunications carrier's duty to cooperate in the interception of communications for Law Enforcement purposes, and for other purposes.

Yes they hear, see, and monitor u..

 

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