(via s-o-u-t-h-o-f-h-e-a-v-e-n-69)
[video]
[video]
YouTube University:
Data access from everywhere.
(via the-elf-has-had-enough)
[video]
[video]
[video]
Did you know one of the original ideas for the end of Freddy vs Jason had Pinhead breaking up the fight?
Either way here’s some concept art of it
@barkerverse
(via radioblueheart)
Prison Phone Companies Are Recording Attorney-Client Calls Across the US -
oh boy it gets EVEN WORSE
The company further stated that calls from correctional facilities are recorded by default, and that private numbers, such as attorneys, must be added to a list to prevent the system from recording calls. “If a number is not registered as private and the called party ignores the warning, the call to that number will be recorded,” the company wrote. “On rare occasion[s], this has resulted in the inadvertent recording of calls to unregistered attorney numbers.” […]Securus’ audits in New York, however, revealed more than 100 Brooklyn defense attorney phone numbers did not wind up on the do-not-record list despite requests for privacy. Defense attorneys in Maine, California, and Texas have raised similar objections, and some private defense attorneys have waited for over a year to end up on a jail’s call list in New Orleans, according to a report produced by Court Watch NOLA, a non-profit. One sheriff does not allow unrecorded calls between attorneys on their cell phones and clients, Court Watch NOLA’s executive director Simone Levine told Motherboard. […]But Securus claimed it is actively implementing changes to prevent the recording of calls with attorneys by adding an option which lets incarcerated people specify when they believe a call being made is private. If this option is selected and the number is not on the facility’s list, the call will not be completed, according to the company.“guys, guys, don’t worry, we only record numbers that aren’t on our special list (that we curate). we’ll just make it so that instead of being recorded, they just won’t be able to call their attorneys at all! we see nothing wrong with this idea. it’s definitely not more fucking dystopian than systemically recording conversations in the first place!”
(via marxistprincess)
Hundreds of thousands of revolutionary workers took to the streets of Berlin on January 5, 1919 to protest the appointment of a new Social Democratic police chief, initiating the short-lived Spartacist Uprising.
Via History of Socialism