The Freedom That Once Was the Internet

Past and present notices and rants from the Editor. Please feel free to discuss the topics posted, but please do NOT add new topics. Thanks.
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The Freedom That Once Was the Internet

Post by editor »

The Lawful Path has been a resource for hard-to-find information since at least A.D. 1996. That's 28 years ago, from when I write this now.

It wasn't until A.D. 2013 that I added this Forum to the site. Since then, for the past 11 years, I've had help with the information gathering, from at least a few loyal subscribers. You know who you are, and I thank you.

The past five years or so, I've been mostly absent from the Forum, popping in once in awhile to deal with runaway spammers, and only occasionally posting an interesting article or writing my thoughts. Life has a way of intruding, and as I get older I seem to only get busier. Regardless, I'm happy to continue providing this meeting place for like minds.

I've never given much thought to the mortality of this site until recently. Sure, I've always had this vague notion that someday the Storm Troopers might show up and close this site down as a purveyor of unsanctioned truths, but that idea always seemed far away. It grows nearer, and begins to take shape.

A few months ago Firestarter, a regular contributor, contacted me saying he noticed a huge jump in the number of views of some of his posts. I didn't think much of it at first. When I had some time, I looked at the server logs. Yes, there was a jump in site activity. At first glance it appeared to be a good thing. Anyone paying attention to current events these days has an overall sense that the Sleeping Giant of the public has begun waking up.

Closer examination painted a different picture. A small number of users were viewing large numbers of posts; more than any human could actually read. We were being attacked by bots.

I firewalled off a couple of the larger offenders and went back to my life, mostly forgetting about the issue. Then a couple weeks ago I noticed that the server upon which The Lawful Path runs, and for which I depend on other services, had slowed to a crawl. A click on any link was taking up to thirty seconds to respond. This was serious!

I dove into the server logs and discovered it was now being attacked by thousands of bots, each of them requesting thousands of pages per day. In the month of March, the forum had 12,003 unique visitors who visited the forum 61,484 times, and viewed 5,134,317 pages, using 103.31 GB of bandwidth.

Contrast this from August of 2023, when we had 7,628 unique users, visiting the forum 13,858 times, and viewing 194,014 pages using 13.47 GB of bandwidth. Here's what that looks like in terms of increase:
  • Unique users: 157%
  • Number visits: 444%
  • Pages viewed: 2,646%
  • Bandwidth used: 767%
Naturally I set to work firewalling out as many of the worst offenders as possible. The server has returned to full service, for now. But here's the issue-- thousands of those bots were from server farms like AmazonAWS and others. Such servers are relatively inexpensive to spin up and provision with bot software, setting them loose on the target of the day. If one gets firewalled out, three more can be easily provisioned to take its place.

There are still thousands of bots hitting the server every day. For the moment they are relatively well behaved, visiting the forum only a few times a day. If I firewall them out I run the risk of shutting out valid users. Any of these bots can be turned up to malicious levels at any time. This happened just a few days ago with one which had been relatively well behaved in the past, and then suddenly requested 22,139 pages in just part of a single day, before I blocked it.

Who is responsible? A lot of the worst offenders come from Hong Kong; some from France and other countries. But the largest numbers come from server farms right here in the U.S. There's no way of knowing who controls those thousands of bots. I'm sure the moment one is reported for abuse, the user spins up a different one.

My best guess is that some of our users have posted articles which the rich and powerful would prefer not be available to the public. I don't blame the users for that, they're doing what they believe is right, in line with the reason this forum exists; making hard-to-find information available.

By now I think you see my point. I now realize, when push comes to shove, it doesn't have to be Storm Troopers who shut down The Lawful Path. Anyone with enough money and resources can DDOS us out of existence. I recommend that anyone who values the information on this forum begin saving articles to your own computers. I also recommend you do the same for resources you value on other sites which may eventually disappear. I've been doing that myself, with some of my favorite content providers on sites such as Bitchute. The time will eventually come when you'll be glad you have your own local archives.

(Note: Don't capture too much at once -- I'm paying close attention to the logs, and you wouldn't want to run afoul of my firewall because you look too much like a bot.)

With all that in mind, I'll include an article I just read on Zerohedge, taken from the Epoch Times:
The Freedom That Once Was The Internet Original Article: Authored by Jeffrey A. Tucker via The Epoch Times


It’s time to declare as regards the internet of old: Requiescat in Pace.
It’s dead. We might as well face it.

Nearly every large application and website in existence, meaning most of what people use on what we call the internet, constituting an estimated 95 percent of the main portals of information, is now compromised by some power somewhere, making them no longer part of the free world and no longer part of the army of truth.

If that shocks you, you haven’t used Google or Facebook recently. They are both heavily rigged not to get you the information you want but rather to push out to you information that someone somewhere wants you to have. And the situation is getting worse, not better. This is despite impending court challenges that are hoping for a restoration of free speech. If there were a serious threat that this would happen, wouldn’t we see the censored venues improve and not worsen?

The situation is heartbreaking and gives rise to melancholic reflections on the promise and betrayal.

My fear is that hardly anyone remembers a time when the internet held out the highest hope in modern history for the emancipation of humanity from the control of the powerful. I had a model in my own head of a mass migration out of the controlled and regulated physical world and into a digital realm that was so large, so potentially infinite in scope, containing so many nodes and so many content providers, that states would be hopeless in the face of it.

Yes, I was the paradigmatic case of the techno-utopian who got bitten by the bug of progress in about 1996. I was sitting there at my desk, newly aware of these things called websites, and managing one myself. I put up a few old issues of a newsletter. A few days later, I needed to look at that newsletter. I saw it sitting across the room. At that moment, I suddenly realized that it would actually be easier just to look at it online.

Now, you might laugh when you hear that story. But keep in mind that at that point in history, most people had no idea of the extent of the power of this tool. I did not. I knew that I could post things and they would appear on a screen. But it wasn’t until that moment that it suddenly dawned on me. By posting anything online, I could liberate any bit of information from the physical world, in which only I could have access so long as I was sitting there, and give that same piece of information to millions and billions of people, possibly forever.

I did a deep intake of air in a state of shock and amazement. I immediately knew what my task was. I was determined to get every valuable piece of content in my possession and scan and post in every possible format. I was surrounded by out-of-print items of every sort. I got to work, piece by piece, putting it all up there for the world. I knew it would likely take me the rest of my career to do this but it was joyful work, work that would free the world. I would do my part.

It was two years later when a friend wrote me: “I have the name of a new search engine you absolutely have to try.”

“What’s wrong with AltaVista?” I asked.

“Nothing but this one is far better. It’s called Google.”

Sure enough, it was better. We all adopted Google as a friend. And it was for a very long time. It only improved day by day, and eventually solve the problem of email spam that was the biggest threat to software functioning at the time.

In those days, those of us playing with all these new tools felt like insiders and revolutionaries. We learned to code. We ate and slept HTML, and later learned to separate content and presentation with style sheets. We learned to manage servers and then build online databases to economize on processes to avoid tangles. We played with image formats and sizes. We learned about maximizing speed and search engine access. Every day, we learned a new trick and deployed it.

Goodness, those were heady times. We wore thumb drives from strings around our necks and were constantly plugged in, as builders of the new world.

We felt like we were part of a community, a global one, with the same ideals. Information naturally wanted to be free, we theorized and we believed, and it was up to us to make that happen. Nothing could stop us, not even governments. With unbreakable encryption not even backdoors to servers could do the trick. I ended up writing two full books on the thesis that the more we digitize everything, the freer we would become.

Truth is that everything around us seemed to confirm this view. Social media came along as did video services and free video calling plus every form of instant message to connect us instantly with anyone on the planet. When translation tools became available, even language barriers were breaking down.

My scanning and publishing projects had gone on hyperdrive. I put in several thousand books plus old journals plus diaries plus newsletters and magazines. And I cooperated with teams around the world to make them into digital books and then print books and searchable databases. The universe of information we were creating scaled and scaled and there seemed to be no limit to the abundance of connectivity and information that would pass through these magical tubes that were connecting the planet from one end to the other, regardless of nation states.

Was it always an illusion? Probably. The point is that the internet at its height was built by people (like me) who believed in it and worked toward achieving the ideal.

The ideal became gradually compromised over time. Copyright claims wrecked the idea of putting all knowledge online, as the Google Books program quickly discovered. Patent claims stopped the development of new tools, and did their part to consolidate the industry. Gradually what led to institutional power on the internet was not use or innovation but war chests of claims of “intellectual property.”

Such claims were inherently at war with what the internet wanted to be. I joined a band of brothers and sisters who were going to get rid of such old-fashioned rules and replace them with new ones, including file sharing apps and open declarations of Creative Commons licensing. Indeed, we had everything solved, a perfect way forward.

We forget one thing: the long historical trajectory of powerful states and their powerful corporate allies to work together to consolidate control and exploit the rest of humanity. As it turned out, there was no technical solution to that problem, no code, no app, no legal trick, no innovation, and not even a mass movement. The cartels got busy to regain control.

I’m going to date this new period of consolidation from about 2012 onward. It’s hard to say exactly when it all took shape but it was at some point during the Obama years. The antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft was the warning shot: play ball with the state or we will break you up. That threat is still with us.

Looking back, it’s clear that some people in government and corporate boardrooms simply declared: this new freedom that people think they have cannot work for stabilizing our power. We have to bring it to an end. The new world will operate more like the old.

The victory of Brexit in the UK and the election of Donald Trump in 2016 terrified elites the world over, and these seemed to be backed by growing populist movements far and wide. It was at this point that powerful interests simply decided that internet freedom had not worked for their interests. They decided to declare it to be over.

There were three steps in this process.

First, consolidate the industries, so that we only have to deal with a few rather than many: Google, Microsoft, Facebook, and a few others. Have them buy up any and all innovative competitors and either rope them into their operations or shut them down completely.

Second, erect high regulations in the industry to make sure that these main players are permanent and not challenged anymore by punks in a garage somewhere.

Third, embed regime-sympathetic managers and investors at these institutions and gradually turn them from serving the public to serving the regime.

The lockdown games of 2020 and following were their chance to deploy their new machine of censorship and control to see just how well they worked to propagandize the population. As it turns out, they worked pretty well. And that leaves only one last step: criminalize all speech that contradicts that which is approved.

That is happening in Brazil. The United States is next. China is the model of control.

Fortunately and for now, the work of many of us from the past survives in various forms but for how long? It is clear where we are headed. The power elite want the internet to work exactly like media of old: three channels saying all the same thing forever.

Will they get away with it? So far it is working. Of the internet dreams of old, we can say: The dream was betrayed at multiple levels and in ways is worthy of great novels.

To gain full control of the internet as a means of managing the public mind, however, is going to take far more than consolidation and surreptitious infiltration. To complete the task will require a level of population coercion on a scale we’ve never seen in history. Possible? Doubtful.

As for the dream of achieving freedom itself, we will always say: “Per aspera ad astra.”
--
Editor
Lawfulpath.com
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Firestarter
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Re: The Freedom That Once Was the Internet

Post by Firestarter »

editor wrote: Sat Apr 13, 2024 8:26 pmCloser examination painted a different picture. A small number of users were viewing large numbers of posts; more than any human could actually read. We were being attacked by bots.
editor wrote: Sat Apr 13, 2024 8:26 pmI dove into the server logs and discovered it was now being attacked by thousands of bots, each of them requesting thousands of pages per day. In the month of March, the forum had 12,003 unique visitors who visited the forum 61,484 times, and viewed 5,134,317 pages, using 103.31 GB of bandwidth.
Interesting, but this doesn’t explain that the huge spike in views went mostly to “my thread” on Donald Trump, and a couple of others in the “Politics and government” section does it?
Or was this a strategy to picture Firestarter as a "bad actor"?!?

It was sort of odd seeing more than 100,000 of views a day to a single thread, with the number of “users online … in the past 5 minutes” less than 100.


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editor wrote: Sat Apr 13, 2024 8:26 pmWho is responsible? A lot of the worst offenders come from Hong Kong; some from France and other countries. But the largest numbers come from server farms right here in the U.S. There's no way of knowing who controls those thousands of bots. I'm sure the moment one is reported for abuse, the user spins up a different one.
Who ultimately could be behind this, and the advertising spam BOTs? The usual suspects include the Democrat-Republican party that is trying to make Americans vote for 2 demented old crooks, the Anglo-Dutch royals, and the Abu Dhabi oil sheiks.

As an aside, I was trolled on the Thecrowhouse.community forum by former Davidicke.com moderator Truthspoon, who lives/works in the UAE. The first BOT posts were literally identical with BOT advertisements posted on the Crowhouse (before it was deleted from the internet), “Can I contact admin?? I'ts important”.
Truthspoon posted on Lawfulpath too: viewtopic.php?p=81762#p81762


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editor wrote: Sat Apr 13, 2024 8:26 pmI've never given much thought to the mortality of this site until recently. Sure, I've always had this vague notion that someday the Storm Troopers might show up and close this site down as a purveyor of unsanctioned truths, but that idea always seemed far away. It grows nearer, and begins to take shape.
I’ve regularly thought that (especially since December 2023 when the views already went up), as on all other forums that I’ve posted on I was censored, banned or the forums were even deleted completely…


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editor wrote: Sat Apr 13, 2024 8:26 pmI also recommend you do the same for resources you value on other sites which may eventually disappear. I've been doing that myself, with some of my favorite content providers on sites such as Bitchute. The time will eventually come when you'll be glad you have your own local archives.
Another possibility is archiving pages (archive.is or web.archive.org), although obviously this isn’t as “secure” as saving information to a "local archive".


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editor wrote: Sat Apr 13, 2024 8:26 pmNaturally I set to work firewalling out as many of the worst offenders as possible. The server has returned to full service, for now. But here's the issue-- thousands of those bots were from server farms like AmazonAWS and others. Such servers are relatively inexpensive to spin up and provision with bot software, setting them loose on the target of the day. If one gets firewalled out, three more can be easily provisioned to take its place.

There are still thousands of bots hitting the server every day. For the moment they are relatively well behaved, visiting the forum only a few times a day. If I firewall them out I run the risk of shutting out valid users. Any of these bots can be turned up to malicious levels at any time. This happened just a few days ago with one which had been relatively well behaved in the past, and then suddenly requested 22,139 pages in just part of a single day, before I blocked it.
You are probably aware that not all BOTs are necessarily bad, archive sites use BOT’s and “search engines” (that I can’t really call “good”…) also use “crawler” BOTs:
A Web crawler, sometimes called a spider or spiderbot and often shortened to crawler, is an Internet bot that systematically browses the World Wide Web and that is typically operated by search engines for the purpose of Web indexing (web spidering).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_crawler


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My fear is that hardly anyone remembers a time when the internet held out the highest hope in modern history for the emancipation of humanity from the control of the powerful. I had a model in my own head of a mass migration out of the controlled and regulated physical world and into a digital realm that was so large, so potentially infinite in scope, containing so many nodes and so many content providers, that states would be hopeless in the face of it.
They promoted the internet by giving this impression of genuine freedom of speech, but internet could never be this "emancipation of humanity from the control of the powerful". It was always designed as a massive surveillance, brainwashing "weapon" as part of the technocratic agenda.

I did once foolishly believe that compared to the TV, the internet would give us more control over the information we could get.
But the only information we can easily find are advertisements, state propaganda, and bogus conspiracy theories, while everything we do on the www is closely monitored by computer algorithms (that are even used to brainwash us).
For some reason internet “search” engines block my posts: http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread ... orld/page2

The Order of the Garter rules the world: viewtopic.php?p=5549#p5549
medicineman9
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Joined: Tue Sep 03, 2019 9:44 pm

Re: The Freedom That Once Was the Internet

Post by medicineman9 »

I had exactly the same problem and solved it in the following way:
https://www.simplemachines.org/communit ... c=588805.0

I guess this way you dont have to firewall anything. I guess firewalling is dangerous anyways as you could lock out your own users or something, but I am not familiar with firewalls at all.
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