Sunday, 18 February 2007
 

Google Your Tube
Contributed by The Gray Dog

Last week, I put together a Flash video to help draw attention to “A Gathering of Eagles.”  It has had an exceptional response at my site since it was first announced last weekend, and I have since made it available for others to use at their BLOGs and web sites with the request that no one post it at YouTube.  I continue to read from people new to the Gathering of Eagles forum(s) and BLOG site asking, “Why don’t we post it at YouTube?”

Google_youtube_200The answer is simple.  YouTube and its corporate parent Google have become part of the Far Left fringe of the MSM.  This fact has been evidenced to me by the numerous requests I receive from my colleagues and friends to “capture” a YouTube video for posterity’s sake, before it is removed for “objectionable” content.  Of course “objectionable” usually means anything that is conservative, anti-jihad, anti-illegal immigration or anti-liberal.  Google takes the same approach when approving “ad-sense” accounts. 

Someone I have been associated with for a very long time has just decided to get back to blogging after a year hiatus.  If you believe Google and YouTube are not anti-conservative please read “Bamgoogled” at Stop Liberals.

Contributed by The Gray Dog on February 18, 2007 at 04:53 PM in Dem Dumbness, The Gray Dog, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack


Monday, 07 August 2006
 

Security flawed in electronic passports
Contributed by Bill Faith

LAS VEGAS -- Electronic passports being introduced in the United States and other countries have a major vulnerability that allows criminals to clone embedded secret codes and enter countries illegally, a researcher warned.

A demonstration by German computer-security specialist Lukas Grunwald showed how personal information stored on the documents could be copied and transferred to another device.

It appeared to contradict assurances by officials in government and private industry that the electronic information stored in passports could not be duplicated.

"If there is an automatic inspection system, I can use this card to enter any country," Mr. Grunwald said, holding up a computer chip containing electronic information he had copied from his German passport.

[Read on.]

Contributed by Bill Faith on August 7, 2006 at 12:09 PM in Bill Faith, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack