I lol’d.
Month: August 2017
Google, other tech companies warned over ‘dangerous’ banning of neo-Nazis, hate groups
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Neo-Nazi website the Daily Stormer has been pushed offline or perhaps to the dark web by GoDaddy, Google and Cloudflare, which one by one made it impossible for the news and commentary provider to keep operating after it published an article that criticized a woman who died during last weekend’s violent protests… Continue reading “Google, other tech companies warned over ‘dangerous’ banning of neo-Nazis, hate groups”
How a bitcoin is made
Something to start the day about bitcoin mining.
One of the world’s largest bitcoin mines is located in the SanShangLiang industrial park on the outskirts of the city of Ordos, in Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region that’s part of China. It’s 400 miles from China’s capital, Beijing, and 35 miles from the the city of Baotou. The mine is just off the highway, near the intersection of Latitutde 3rd Road and Longitude 3rd Road. It sits amidst abandoned, half-built factories—victims of an earlier coal mining boom that fizzled out, leaving Ordos and its outlying areas littered with the shells of unfinished buildings.
The mine belongs to Bitmain, a Beijing-based company that also makes mining machines that perform billions of calculations per second to try and crack the cryptographic puzzle that yields new bitcoins. Fifty Bitmain staff, many of them local to Ordos, watch over eight buildings crammed with 25,000 machines that are cranking through calculations 24 hours a day. One of the buildings is devoted to mining litecoin, an ascendant cryptocurrency. The staff live on-site in a building with a dormitory, offices, a canteen, and a repair center. For recreation, they play basketball on an unfinished cement court.
Bitcoin mining consumes enormous amounts of electricity, which is why miners seek out locations that offer cheap energy. The Ordos mine was set up in 2014, making it China’s oldest large-scale bitcoin mining facility. Bitmain acquired it in 2015. It’s powered by electricity mostly from coal-fired power plants. Its daily electricity bill amounts to $39,000. Bitmain also operates other mines in China’s remote areas, like the mountainous Yunnan province in the south and the autonomous region of Xinjiang in the west.
Continue reading “How a bitcoin is made”
Fastening fairleads to my boat pt1
After having painted it, it’s now time to make sure all my hard work doesn’t get scraped off the first time I go through the locks.
I’ve already fitted this roof eye hook on the narrowboat.

This goes some way to reducing the chafing across the apex of the roof.
Most of the damage happens at the sides, where the cabin is between the roof and the bollards.
As it moves backwards and forwards with the boat, it takes all the paint off!
Fairleads
To stop this, we’ve got some ‘fairleads’, also called cleats, skenes and other things.

Fairlead is the most universal term. It simply guides the rope from the side of the boat.
Fitting the fairleads
As it’s going to take the weight of the boat, it’ got to be a sturdy fitting. Continue reading “Fastening fairleads to my boat pt1”
Google Censorship clamps down on the ‘alt-media’
Here are some other sites that have experienced problems similar to michaeltyler.co.uk, and the amount of traffic they’ve lost from search (80%) Google, since the beginning of the year.
- wsws.org fell by 67 percent
- alternet.org fell by 63 percent
- globalresearch.ca fell by 62 percent
- consortiumnews.com fell by 47 percent
- socialistworker.org fell by 47 percent
- mediamatters.org fell by 42 percent
- commondreams.org fell by 37 percent
- internationalviewpoint.org fell by 36 percent
- democracynow.org fell by 36 percent
- wikileaks.org fell by 30 percent
- truth-out.org fell by 25 percent
- counterpunch.org fell by 21 percent
- theintercept.com fell by 19 percent
All authority sites. All producing original content.
In the name of ‘democracy’, ‘free speech’ and ‘human rights’.
Toni Morrison proclaimed that hate speech was equivalent to physical assault in seriousness back in 1993.
That’s a fairly controversial viewpoint. Against the person, it could be argued as true, but against the state?
Is hate against the state, hate?
Google has been working with the ADL to ‘remove hate-speech’ websites from the web. The only problem is, they’re removing sites which are publishing facts that the MSM don’t want to deal with. Continue reading “Google Censorship clamps down on the ‘alt-media’”