Thursday, July 28, 2016

Picture of the Day - 466

Super
"Super" by Tomais Ashdene

If you wish to see more of Tomais' photography, please visit his Flickr photostream by clicking the name under the picture.

Friday, July 22, 2016

In Memory of Utøya and Oslo - July 22, 2011

On this day 77 children, teenagers and adults were massacred by a crazed fascist on a killing rampage in Oslo city centre and on the island of Utøya in Norway.

Remember the victims!

Picture of the Day - 465

dark sky | over the fence
"dark sky | over the fence" by ★ Ḏ@ηαƒ ★

If you wish to see more of ★ Ḏ@ηαƒ ★'s photography, please visit his Flickr photostream by clicking the name under the picture.

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Support the Open Internet


European Regulators are about to decide whether to give big telecoms corporations the power to influence what we can (and can’t) do online. Europe urgently needs clear net neutrality guidelines to protect our freedoms and rights online. We have until July to help Europe protect the open Internet.

Join the movement, take action now!

http://www.savetheinternet.eu

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Transcript of the video:

Corporations don't control the Internet. Yet.
You can visit Google, or Facebook, but they're not the Internet. Amazingly, these giant corporations exist right alongside smaller independent websites. Like those by Startups and activists, that are working to lessen their power and create something independent that allows more freedom and is less intrusive than the big corporations.
But now, that's changing. The telecom companies we use to access the internet are giving corporate giants like Facebook special treatment.
Sometimes it's a marketing trick. Other times it’s for profit: they sell special treatment to them.
Either way, the result is the same: A terrible new future where old Telecom giants and new Internet giants conspire to remain in control. Forever. A future where videos on corporate sites work. But on small sites, they break. A future where expensive phone calls work. But free calls over the Internet break.
A future where giant corporate sites are subsidized to appear free. But independent sites are so expensive or slow to access, that no one visits them. This future may be coming to Europe.
By August, EU regulators will make their final decision: They will either prohibit special treatment with strong net neutrality rules, or hand the Internet's future to the corporate giants of telecom and tech.
In the United States, Brazil, and India, net neutrality activists and small startups have been winning, with millions of messages to regulators, and protests in the streets.This summer, it's Europe's turn. And it depends on you.

Click here to send your message to European regulators, share this video, and find a protest near you.