SIFT TOP 5 MOST POPULAR BLOG POSTS THIS WEEK - Scroll down to see the latest posts
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Why is it being exposed again now? The Christchurch mosque shooting was an obvious fake right from the outset. It's good that another...
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Here are 10 conspiracy rabbit holes I'm looking into: The Wellness Company Just who are TWC really sponsoring and how much sway do the...
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IS SHE A TRANNY? Yes Brigitte Macron is clearly a man, but maybe we also need to ask some questions about Candace Owens, because "she...
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Much as I like to declare myself a cell phone free zone, the less dogmatic truth is that I actually have continually owned cell phones since...
Wednesday, 2 October 2024
Tuesday, 1 October 2024
CASTING MESSAGES OUT INTO THE MATRIX
At the start of this year I shifted my attention to this www.sift.co.nz blog and started things off with the post "A new approach to Blogging"
It's long been an idea in the back of my mind that although my pictures probably all disappear into the vast sea of the internet without trace, it's possible that one of them might end up being seen by someone who might type in the URL out of curiosity and who knows what might happen. I'm casting out messages in bottles.
So starting today I'll include a signed image on every blog post, and make more effort to spread them around. Some of them will undoubtedly be double ups, but too bad, I'm not going to be anal about this!
Monday, 30 September 2024
SYSTEM OF A BLOG
If my blogging is to be more of a process of posting random snippets of information in a way that I can easily search through and find again later after I forget what it was I was going on about, or rapidly reshare online, then I need a simple system that works well, and fits in with my practice of switching between my PC and various laptops.
But those platforms were set up with essentially unlimited budgets, and some of them were actually done really well. Like Facebook for example, the largest social media platform, which supposedly has two billion accounts, and while that number is utter bollocks, simply because most of those accounts are either AI or just plain fake, it still has a huge number of real users.
I have tried a few different ways to fling out information online, and come to conclusion that obscure blockchain forks like Blurt or Bastion just are never going to work, even with the best intentions in the world, simply because they have no real audience. And meanwhile the larger blockchains like Steemit or Hive are every bit as deep state controlled and censored as the mainstream platforms.
The quickest and easiest way for me to record ideas, format them, add images, and post them online, is to do it on Blogger, which is owned by my sworn enemies, Google, but I've been using it forever and it works like a charm. And next I might as well share them on Facebook, which was set up by the CIA, but if bugger all people are going to see what I post anyway, I might as well go with what works most easily.
So starting tomorrow, October 1st 2024, This will be my ultra low key simple blogging system:
1. Write brief posts (almost "tweets" rather than blog posts, but I loath X/Twatter), and publish them first on my Blogger blog www.sift.co.nz
2. Share them around online a bit. At this stage that is mainly just going to be on Facebook, and for some of the posts, also extra copies on a couple of my own alt blogs, but who knows, I may get carried away and add a few other platforms back into the mix if I can do all this effortlessly enough.
Sunday, 29 September 2024
Saturday, 28 September 2024
LIBGEN IS TEMPORALLY DOWN
The way Libgen just pop back up is a great example of how to overcome censorship and globalist control using the deep state's own systems against them
"On Thursday, some links to the notorious shadow library Library Genesis (Libgen) couldn't be reached after a US district court judge, Colleen McMahon, ordered what TorrentFreak called "one of the broadest anti-piracy injunctions" ever issued by a US court.
In her order, McMahon sided with textbook publishers who accused Libgen of willful copyright infringement after Libgen completely ignored their complaint.
To compensate rightsholders, McMahon ordered Libgen to pay $30 million, but because nobody knows who runs the shadow library, it seems unlikely that publishers will be paid any time soon, if ever.
Because Libgen's admins remain anonymous and elusive—and previously avoided paying a different set of publishers $15 million in 2017—McMahon granted publishers' request for an uncommonly broad injunction that may empower publishers to go further than ever to destroy the shadow library"
But these clowns don't have a shit show of taking down Libgen - it will just pop back up again
"But even under such a broad injunction, the question remains whether publishers can succeed in taking down Libgen—which openly informs users that using its platform violates copyright laws and encourages them to pirate books anyway.
"It is illegal to download ('make copies of') material that is protected by copyright," Libgen's 2023 video said. "However, all that is illegal is not criminal… for the average person, generally there won't be any criminal consequences under copyright law from having pirated items on your computer."
Current alias domains:
The RS URL is down but the IS & ST domains are both working today
RS is Russia, IS is Iceland, and ST is São Tome
https://www.worldstandards.eu/other/tlds/