By acting this way, the USA is showing that the terrorists are winning seeing that their job is to terrorize its citizens.
Akalabeth said:Did any of you actually read the flyer? The amount of misrepresentation and hyperbole in this thread is more than a little amusing. The flyer itself is just talking about common sense supsicious activity, but most of the people in this thread have taken it and blown it way out of proportion. You know, way out of proportion like the idiots on Fox news do.
Oh no, I did understand what the flyer is meant to do and I can somewhat see the implications and need for such awareness, thing is: at a time when they fail to put up a bill that'd censor the w.w.w. they start lashing out, first Megaupload, now this... If it had come at any other time, I probably wouldn't have cared, now I just played the obvious troll...Zachary Amaranth said:Not sure if literate.
Sorry, but they didn't brand internet privacy as terrorism. They indicated that in an internet cafe, overt concern about privacy (in this public setting) might be an indicator of suspicious activity.
Of course, if your intent was merely to rile people up, you succeeded. If you legitimately believe this, though, I am seriously concerned about your comprehension skills.
I always use cash and I use family phones, not just my own. This also screws anyone who has a separate work and personal phone! Woo!Are overly concerned about privacy, attempts to shield the screen from view of
others
 Always pay cash or use credit card(s) in different name(s)
 Apparently use tradecraft: lookout, blocker or someone to distract employees
 Act nervous or suspicious behavior inconsistent with activities
 Are observed switching SIM cards in cell phone or use of multiple cell phones
 Travel illogical distance to use Internet Café
Well, shielding IP address's is something I did for fun this year (computing student). Evidence of a residential based internet provider (signs on to Comcast, AOL,
etc.)
 Use of anonymizers, portals, or other means to shield IP address
 Suspicious or coded writings, use of code word sheets, cryptic ledgers, etc.
 Encryption or use of software to hide encrypted data in digital photos, etc.
 Suspicious communications using VOIP or communicating through a PC game
This should be a fun one. Download content of extreme/radical nature with violent themes
 Gather information about vulnerable infrastructure or obtain photos, maps or
diagrams of transportation, sporting venues, or populated locations
 Purchase chemicals, acids, hydrogen peroxide, acetone, fertilizer, etc.
 Download or transfer files with ?how-to? content such as:
- Content of extreme/radical nature with violent themes
- Anarchist Cookbook, explosives or weapons information
- Military tactics, equipment manuals, chemical or biological information
- Terrorist/revolutionary literature
- Preoccupation with press coverage of terrorist attacks
- Defensive tactics, police or government information
- Information about timers, electronics, or remote transmitters / receivers
Now I absolutely must ask... Does Warhammer 40K count as "Military Tactics" or "Revolutionary Material" or could it possibly be construed as such? If so, I'm definitely screwed. Or any tabletop war game, for that matter.Surpheal said:By far throughout the entirety of the article I find this statement the most, uhhhh, endearing. Viewing any content related to ?military tactics? including manuals or ?revolutionary literature? is also considered a potential indicator of terrorist activity. Next thing you know they just might start burning books to keep ideas out of peoples heads.
But as an American citizen one doesn't (and shouldn't) need to a reason to want privacy. And the government should not infringe upon our privacy without a strong reason.Richard Keohane said:I would like to point out that this is not what you do on your private computer. This is what you do on someone else's computer at an internet cafe, and this list is reasonable. Consider that there are good reasons for doing all of these on your own computer, but far, far fewer reasons to do them on a computer not associated with you unless you're doing something illegal and don't want to leave a trail.