We all know the popular concept of "Net Neutrality" is bullshit designed to keep the commie stagnant version of the internet commie and stagnant. That's why US citizens pay out the ass for service and countries like Ukraine get internet cheap as fuck and with much better service.
First it was Daily Stormer and now Jones are being denied platforms. Facebook can boot who they want off their shitty platform but don't forget Stormer was blocked at a DNS level by Cloudflare and the like. That's deep-level internet infrastructure.
Skycoin's building a new internet free of censorship by governments or corporations. Get in this thread and ask me whatever you want about it. Pic related is dedicated hardware that forwards traffic. Eventually it will connect to a wifi antenna on top of my roof.
So if your neighbor is fapping to anime tiddies next door, when you request those files, they just send from his encrypted Skyminer to your computer, much faster than request out to Google datacenters or wherever.
Joseph Davis
I hope you learn from the elders and don't hand your new internet box to a woman.
I uh, I'll keep an eye on my gf, what the fuck is that?
Hudson Foster
>run your own Skyminer >inevitably, CP is stored to your Skyminer >get vanned
Luke Kelly
It's the internet!
Caleb Sanders
This is actually a great point. You'll be able to choose if you want to be an exit node or not.
You're getting paid to forward traffic, so if you want to be an exit node to the regular internet you're going to make bank while you use a corporate VPN that is used to dealing with whatever legal issues there are like CP.
And then of course you'll have sites and services on the Skywire network itself, so when you're downloading that 3TB of anime porn you can do it on the new internet rather than ending up on the old.
Hunter Ramirez
>being worried about a woman
Carter Torres
What is your cat's name?
Carson Roberts
Lagooshka, it means 'frog' in Russian.
Kevin Johnson
She doesn't understand why I built a box and set it next to the router, kek.
A bunch of darknet guys. Some of them worked on Bitcoin and other under the radar stuff. Their PR/dev/public face guy, Synth rubs elbows with government officials and corporations across Europe and Asia.
Brayden Thompson
american JD waiting on bar results here. let me know if i can help. large IT background too. email my id at mailinator :-)
I asked a direct question - why is storage(possession) of any information is a crime? In many places(russia included) only spreading of CP is a crime, possession of any kind of information is not
You should be less worried about storing CP and more about every freedom you enjoy being slowlu squeezed to nothing See:
Angel Nelson
I agree with you, storage of information should not be a crime, no matter what I think of the information.
On the other hand, most civilizations start to fail or continue to fail when they choose to allow the abuse of children. Pedophilia marked the decline of Rome. Aboriginal Australians aboriginals raped and ate their second born for thousands of years and they have shit to show for it. I don't know how to reconcile the production of pedo information with its storage.
Logan Cook
i completely agree with this point, and would apply it to any information including the hot button 3d gun debate going on in the US right now. storage of information should never be a crime. i mean, how many people have the 11yo nudie pic of brooke shields and its "allowed" because it was in a magazine lol.
information is not a sin, and a binary arrangement is included in this concept of information.
3d guns as well.
but yes, hosting for public download or facilitating the spread in any way, even by having it on a "removable device," should be illegal.
John Reyes
Shut up you greedy corporate shill.
Brody Cooper
It's an organization of developers on a cryptocurrency project, not a corporation. You can call me a crypto shill or a anti-censorship shill, or a free speech shill.
Andrew Kelly
bump for interest
Nicholas Diaz
And it's so easy to abuse that power to frame people for CP.
what is going to happen soon is that Congress will be forced to define "Internet" as universal human right just like "bathroom" and gender/race acceptance and those who denied will be sued retroactively.
How can "corporations" have the right to silence anyone when at the same time reserve the right to track and sell my data to 3rd parties without my explicit agreement and permission?
Maybe, but look at China or Sweden. Seems like they're already hopeless to me.
That and the NSA collects everything that comes to the US from other countries, so you can imagine even if the US fixes the problem, other countries will fragment.
Carson Martinez
look like a 6 core cat, 2.8 meaw.
Zachary Myers
That a bunch of Pi? Going to use radio to go node to node? Decentralized, or using a "friendly country" to host? How is name-services, if even used, going to work?
Owen Hernandez
>pi Yep, single board ARMs are cheap and aren't affected by Intel's spy jewery. The official ones are a variant of Orange Pis
>radio node to node It's pretty much anything you want to use to get data from point to point. Radio antennas can reach 200km without licensing now. I live in the midwest so I plan on providing data to a nearby suburb that has shitty service. It's the purest form of free market operation, so it's up to the individual to figure out where they can set up nodes and antennas to make the most money.
>friendly country I don't think even that's required, you'll be able to use it as a closed-loop meshnet, I believe. Even if they try to run signal jammers you can always bury cat5 cables from house to house. It's pretty much the second amendment militia vs government for data.
>nameservices Pretty similar to the way it currently does, the network uses MPLS for pushing data around rather than TCP/IP. Might be something like sky://bustyanimegirls.fap
Parker Parker
I like the cut of your jib. I'll come poking by when (if) I get the opportunity to assist.
Andrew Ortiz
Set a calendar reminder for mid 2019 or something. They're getting hardware production ramped up for standard issue nodes and antennas so you don't have to get so far in to techno autism if you don't want to.
Ideally by 2020 people should be able to spend a few hundred on a node and two types of antennas and have cheap, reliable internet at rates much lower than the standard $70 comcast bill.