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>Searches for 'Benzion Mileikowsky' instead of 'Benjamin Netanyahu' on DuckDuckGo, Google, and other sites
<Zero hits on the first page.
>Searches for 'Benzion Mileikowsky' instead of 'Benjamin Netanyahu' on Yandex
>Immediately get it at the 2nd and 4th result, along with the whole first dozen or so entries
Can anons recommend plugins, software, apps, equipment, tools, and tech which just makes your life better overall with zero room for doubt? The best adblock, privacy, Restore YT Dislikes, and more suggestions are welcome.
4 replies and 7 files omitted. View the full thread
>>706
based
PGP, Sirikali, Veracrypt, Metadata cleaner
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>Searches for 'Benzion Mileikowsky' instead of 'Benjamin Netanyahu' on DuckDuckGo
<first hit on the first page
> it's Natenyahu's dad
Did I get the wrong result? I'm not disputing Goog is pozzed to shit but I always get better results for "iffy" stuff on DDG, despite it also being pozz.
Also what the cat say?
>>704
>https://massgrave.dev/
Never looked into LTSC, can you download official 11 Pro images from Microsoft?
test

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I remember Republicans losing their minds when the government tried switching the public over from conventional light bulbs to LED light bulbs. You would've thought that the government was suggesting that random people walk into your house in order to rape your kids or something.

However, I haven't heard a peep about LED light bulbs from Republicans in ages. No mass protests. No candidates using it as a major issue in their platform. Nothing. 

So when did Republicans decide that LED light bulbs were OK?
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Replies: >>622 >>672 + 4 earlier
>>548 (OP) 
I don't know, but on a side note supposedly Philips bulbs available outside one of the gulf states (Saudi Arabia, I think) are jew-rigged to operate at 125% capacity so they wear out quickly and have to be replaced more often than bulbs available in said county. I can't remember the sauce for this but I saw it on one of the chans.
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>>548 (OP) 
Fuck off kike.  All your ideas are so great they have to be required by law for anyone to use them.
Replies: >>741
>>672
Dumb fag
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"Republicans" are just as retarded as "Dems" for buying into the manufactured, Sportsball-like farce that is our "2 party, uniparty"

The big push for getting rid of conventional bulbs at the time, around 2007, was about getting clean frequency fields in homes so that interference patterns could be more easily used through the tech at the time.
Now with the widespread use of smartmeters and other spytech, the lightbulbs don't matter as much.
Fuck Oblammy!!
Replies: >>743
>>742
How does one get rid of a smart meter anyway?

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https://indieweb.org/
Shoot glowniggers

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>Open EGS to get the free game of the week that I'll never play
>Instead of opening right to the store, it opens up to some page that wants me to download the latest and greatest version of the Unreal Engine so I can create ultra-cool games for ultra-cool gamers
>OK
>Search EGS for anything resembling a tutorial or walkthrough or manual of Timmy's Great Engine so I can create uber-cool games for uber-cool gamers
>Nothing

Honestly, is Timmy this stupid or does becoming a multi-billionaire cause someone to be this stupid? If you're going to hawk your mrga-cool gaming engine, you need to expect that  bunch of people who are going to download it probably have no clue as to how to use the fucking thing.

Get a clue, Timmy; Bundle a comprehensible tutorial with your mega-cool engine.

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Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel, I come from Cyberspace, the new home of Mind. On behalf of the future, I ask you of the past to leave us alone. You are not welcome among us. You have no sovereignty where we gather.

We have no elected government, nor are we likely to have one, so I address you with no greater authority than that with which liberty itself always speaks. I declare the global social space we are building to be naturally independent of the tyrannies you seek to impose on us. You have no moral right to rule us nor do you possess any methods of enforcement we have true reason to fear.

Governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. You have neither solicited nor received ours. We did not invite you. You do not know us, nor do you know our world. Cyberspace does not lie within your borders. Do not think that you can build it, as though it were a public construction project. You cannot. It is an act of nature and it grows itself through our collective actions.

You have not engaged in our great and gathering conversation, nor did you create the wealth of our marketplaces. You do not know our culture, our ethics, or the unwritten codes that already provide our society more order than could be obtained by any of your impositions.

You claim there are problems among us that you need to solve. You use this claim as an excuse to invade our precincts. Many of these problems don't exist. Where there are real conflicts, where there are wrongs, we will identify them and address them by our means. We are forming our own Social Contract. This governance will arise according to the conditions of our world, not yours. Our world is different.

Cyberspace consists of transactions, relationships, and thought itself, arrayed like a standing wave in the web of our communications. Ours is a world that is both everywhere and nowhere, but it is not where bodies live.

We are creating a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice accorded by race, economic power, military force, or station of birth.

We are creating a world where anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs, no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or conformity.
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Replies: >>719
>>718 (OP) 
It would be interesting to structure the internet in a neo-tribal fashion.

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are textboards popular outside japan?
Replies: >>511 >>529 >>717
>>510 (OP) 
You have to do something unique to make it popular. Look at reddit. It's basically a text board where OPs are encouraged to contain links to other websites. Before that there was Usenet. If you want something popular or original, you need to think:
What did Usenet do?
What did 2chan do?
What did bulletin boards and web forums do?
What did Reddit do?
What did Twitter do?

And maybe you'll come up with something interesting.
>>510 (OP) 
Other Asian countries have their own BBS systems.  I found the keyboard-driven interface for this Chinese board interesting.

https://disp.cc/b/Beauty

Just use your arrow keys.
- UP and DOWN to navigate the thread list.
- RIGHT to view a thread.
- LEFT to go back to the thread list.
>>510 (OP) 
Yes!
No.
Maybe?
>also death to Zelenkike and Poutin

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https://blogs.windows.com/windowsdeveloper/2025/05/19/the-windows-subsystem-for-linux-is-now-open-source/

Windows Subsystem for Linux goes Open Source
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>>698
I'm debating making a frankenlaptop with a RISC-V board just to stop the gay men because my impulse control keeps getting the better of me. Steam games run really well on just about any modern intel/AMD-based computer, even if on integrated graphics. I still want to stream/pirate videos though, and pajeetcode has basically made it so you need at least 16GB of ram to run anything smoothly, so finding the right board that doesn't cost an arm and a leg is proving to be very annoying
Replies: >>709 >>713
>>708
>>698
Gone are the days when you can just install Linux to escape the gaymes, everything just works. You literally need a processor incompatible with steam or console emulators
Replies: >>713
>>698
autoCAD and solidworks beg to differ
>>708
>>709
our ancestors accomplished much more lifetime cognitive activity because they weren't wasting hours every day bing bing wahooing instead of learning things
Replies: >>716
>>713
Yes, you're right. A truly successful ethnostate should consider barring video game developers from entering  and physically removing those that remain in its newly-acquired territory.

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For example of a one man, albeit jewish operation: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=efPrtcLdcdM
Since then it has only grown worse over there.
How can we keep ourchan clear?
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Replies: >>710 + 1 earlier
>>406
ᛗᛟᛞᛖᚱᚾ ᛈᚱᛟᛒᛚᛖᛗᛊ ᚱᛖᚲᚢᛁᚱᛖ ᛗᛟᛞᛖᚱᚾ ᛊᛟᛚᚢᛏᛟᚾᛊ
Replies: >>714
>>405 (OP) 
same idea as the (BSD)+NIGGER license. corpo and gov't bots/shills can't say nigger, so having to include the word nigger either in the post or a captcha should deal with it
Replies: >>711
>>710
oops, it's MIT+NIGGER. for those who haven't heard about it, plusnigger.org
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>>406
>I partly made a thread suggesting cursive as a joke to filter anons
I 'member that.
We have Tegakake already, if B0tz are suspected in a thread, there can always be a call for "MeatSack" verification.
Only that consistantly FedJacketing shill would be likely to try to call it "handwriting data collection" or something so dumb.
>>407
Ah.. This modern world.
only problem here is that as AI gets more sophisticated, it can run prefab runes through a translator just as I did, just faster.
As to it underztanding context, however...
Replies: >>715
>>714
So cant it harder than cockney.

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But you could own nothing and be happy.
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>>660
Yep. what do you suggest for good hardware?
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>>659
>So we both may have some insight...
Sure, but very few of them get in-depth with learning about how they work--They hire professionals to set up their systems,(generally,) so they are automatic.
Kek! Then again, some of these A+ list stars who we've seen lose their shit may have done so do to their OS's
>getting off the x86_64 plantation onto something like where I am is a not a matter between haves and have-nots but the dos and do-nothings.
This is VERY true, and is applicable to all aspects of life.
Right now, in the US, there are 8 digit net-worth faggots who eat goyslop every day, and suck up HOURS of screentime ((( Entertainment )))--
and on the other side of things, there are those relegated to 5 figures who look into things deeply without being "Fed the info", make their own things and food, instead of buying everything they own and use.
It truly isn't about money, "Success" or fame-- It's about the DRIVE to fed one's intellectual curiosity.
Truth be told, you'll NEVER be able to fully secure your machine from agencies who want in. I mean agencies and Bureaus, not individual actors. that is known.
Keeping your system secure from the rando Troon with stripey socks from cracking your box and waging a campaign against you is absolutely the point.
Not to mention, willfully rejecting the push by corpos to make you into a commodity.
>>660
TY anon.. I appreciate your straightforward candor here with this topic.
>Gentoo OpenBSD
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Replies: >>663
>>662
> It's about the DRIVE to fed one's intellectual curiosity.
*FEED
Weird Freudian Slit...
> some of these A+ list stars who we've seen lose their shit may have done so do to their OS's
Every iPhone user is a few clicks by someone sitting in some building somewhere from total chaos introduced to their personal and public-facing lives.
Software, the operating system, matters.

> there are 8 digit net-worth faggots who eat goyslop every day
Spiritual poverty is a thing.

> you'll NEVER be able to fully secure your machine from agencies who want in.
This is a (you) problem.
Both I and my colleagues view and post on this site on machines that are not realistically going to be digitally compromised. CIA, Mossad, Santa Claus, whatever NGO Blackrock hires, can't do shit.

> Keeping your system secure from the rando Troon with stripey socks from cracking your box and waging a campaign against you is absolutely the point.
Yeah there are indeed too many actual faggots in the government.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/nsa-investigates-secret-sex-chats-dei-agency-message-board

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I ran Arch on my work laptop for 2 years now just for the memes. I didn't believe it would hold but apart from a couple updoot issues (that only broke a single AUR program that I didn't want to manually compile...and Postgresql fucking major versions), which didn't affect bootability and other things, there was no issue. To my surprise, actually. I never actually believe it would hold this long

t. btw user for 3 years now

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The long story short of Tor is that it was created by the US army to be used by US spies in foreign countries and it needs as many users as possible to "drown the fish".

"because their spies use it too" is the answer to such affirmations as "If Tor could make you really anonymous, they would not let you use it."

So officially no police, no feds, no gov agency, in the world, can break Tor. (despite the tens of thousands of pedophiles who got arrested along the years for visiting illegal onions)
They even say they don't even want to break Tor, because if they did then opponents may also be able to. What ridiculous bullshit...

Follow my reasoning:
All countries spy on other countries. Even if their own spies use Tor too, they just know that other countries also have spies spying on them and using Tor, so of course they all want to break Tor's anonymity. And soon or later they will eventually can, then they'll have a big advantage over all the other ones that still can't.

Now imagine you are USA. You love spying the fucking shit out of everybody. You had Tor created for you, you financed it, the creators live in USA, the Tor website is hosted in USA, 3/4+ of nodes are either in USA or in your slave-state Germany. You just have total control over everything about Tor, and of course you want to break Tor's anonymity.
How could you not be able to? How the fucking hell could you not?

How could Tor's anonymity be real?

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>>687
This is why I baked Tor into a social app I wrote and added about two million users to the Tor network. Most of those users don't even know what an IP address is.
Replies: >>695 >>696
>>692
Cool what app?
>>692
you're way too based for this site my friend. I think most of the tor real action goes on using hidden nodes these days
Replies: >>697
>>696
What tor analogs are there anyway?
Replies: >>699
>>697
lokinet. The memey vpn grift if you're stupid and new to computing.  I have given up the concept of being able to truly hide long term internet activity. The more obfuscation you do the more they ask questions, thus defeating the entire purpose

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