Friday, December 7, 2007

checking unusual web activity

if you've noticecd some change at a website and find it suspicious that the information has changed, particularly relating to aliens, mayan calander and tectonic plates (continental drift) here is the site to monitor such changes -

http://www.archive.org/web/web.php

note!! any site run on microsoft servers and server software is VUNERABLE!! only unix servers and unix/linux server software is safe.

Exercising our "right to remember": Without paper libraries, it would be hard to exercise our "right to remember" our political history or hold government accountable. With much of the public's business now moving from paper to digital media, Internet libraries are certain to become essential in maintaining that right. Imagine, for instance, how news coverage of an election campaign might suffer if journalists had only limited access to previous statements that candidates had made in the media.

"The Internet Archive is a service so essential that its founding is bound to be looked back on with the fondness and respect that people now have for the public libraries seeded by Andrew Carnegie a century ago.... Digitized information, especially on the Internet, has such rapid turnover these days that total loss is the norm. Civilization is developing severe amnesia as a result; indeed it may have become too amnesiac already to notice the problem properly. The Internet Archive is the beginning of a cure - the beginning of complete, detailed, accessible, searchable memory for society, and not just scholars this time, but everyone."

Stewart Brand, president, The Long Now Foundation


27 dec 2007
UNFORTUNATELY this site is on microsoft servers and i have captured screen shots which showed (and this is late coming because i found this on dec 10) that their server has already been interfered with. therefore any suspicions must be saved on your computer first, before further investigation.

About Me

Australia
a thinker (i hope) and i hope to make other people think as well. nothing should be assumed as rote just because everyone else says it too.