Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
191
hpr_transcripts/hpr1231.txt
Normal file
191
hpr_transcripts/hpr1231.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,191 @@
|
||||
Episode: 1231
|
||||
Title: HPR1231: TGTM Newscast for 2013-04-16 Bobobex
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1231/hpr1231.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-17 22:00:36
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
You're listening to TGTM News No. 95, Recorded for Tuesday, April 16, 2013.
|
||||
You're listening to the Tech Only Hacker Public Radio Edition.
|
||||
To get the full podcast including political, commentary, and other controversial topics,
|
||||
visit www.topgeektme.us.
|
||||
Here are the vials statistics for this program.
|
||||
Your feedback matters to me.
|
||||
Please send your comments to dg at deepgeek.us.
|
||||
The webpage for this program is at www.topgeektme.us.
|
||||
You can subscribe to me on Identica as the username DeepGeek or you could follow me on Twitter.
|
||||
My username there is dgtgtm.
|
||||
Hello, it's Poverbex again and now for the Tech Roundup.
|
||||
From torrentfreak.com by Andy dated April 10, new Pirate Bay Greenland domains about to
|
||||
be seized.
|
||||
In anticipation of having their Swedish domain name seized, this week the crew of the Pirate
|
||||
Bay took avasive action.
|
||||
In the early hours of Tuesday morning they switched to two Greenland-based domains but
|
||||
already the plan is starting to unravel.
|
||||
The telecoms company in charge of the .GLTLD says it will now block the domains after deciding
|
||||
that they will be used illegally.
|
||||
Sweden has long been associated with the Pirate Bay.
|
||||
The site was founded by Swedes, operated by Swedes, not to mention hosted and proxied
|
||||
by Swedish companies, activists and the local Pirate Party.
|
||||
Under increasing pressure those links were strained by political and legal red tapes to
|
||||
the point where the site's only visible connection with Sweden was its .SE domain.
|
||||
This week even that connection was placed into history when fears over the long-term viability
|
||||
and possible seizure of the domain led the site to choose an alternative.
|
||||
Over the course of Monday night and Tuesday morning the Pirate Bay.SE became the Pirate
|
||||
Bay.GL with the new TLD denoting Greenland, a huge country with a tiny population of
|
||||
just 57,000 people.
|
||||
But now, less than 48 hours later, the latest plan to bring domain stability to the Pirate
|
||||
Bay already requires a plan B.
|
||||
Exact timing is unclear, but very soon the site will lose use of both its .GL domains
|
||||
after TelePost, the company responsible for the .GL registrations, so that it would not
|
||||
allow them to be put to illegal use.
|
||||
TelePost has today decided to block access to two domains operated by far-sharing network
|
||||
the Pirate Bay end quote, the company said in a statement received by Torrent Creek.
|
||||
Those domains are the Pirate Bay.GL and Pirate Bay.GL.
|
||||
We observed Tuesday that the domains have been activated and therefore immediately contacted
|
||||
our lawyer the company said. The announcement was short on detail but at the moment
|
||||
TelePost seemed to just justify their decision based on an earlier Danish Supreme Court ruling
|
||||
that rendered the Pirate Bay an illegal site. Greenland is a self-governing province of Denmark.
|
||||
Currently the Pirate Bay's .GL domains remain operational but the site is redirecting to its .SE
|
||||
domain at least for the time being. A Pirate Bay insider told Torrent Creek earlier this week
|
||||
that they have plenty of domain names in reserve. With that in mind it wouldn't be a huge
|
||||
surprise if the Torrent site makes another domain switch in the near future update. Queeries
|
||||
to the .GL domain registry now confirm that both the domains in question have been officially suspended.
|
||||
We have another story from Andy at torrentfreet.com this one dated April 8th.
|
||||
File shareers will not be held liable for piracy. Russia says.
|
||||
As Russia tries to find a balanced solution to the thorny issue of internet piracy the head of
|
||||
a government department responsible for communications and information technology says that attacking
|
||||
internet users is not the solution. Speaking at the launch of a nationwide campaign to promote
|
||||
legal ebook purchases Vladimir Gregoriev said that the government has no intention of holding
|
||||
download as liable or having them sent to court. Following ineffective anti piracy campaigns and
|
||||
continued displays of resilience by file sharing sites the emphasis of copyright enforcement
|
||||
has switched towards educating the end user in recent years. These so-called strike programs are
|
||||
continuing to spread and recently landed on US shores. While they are supposedly educational
|
||||
in nature there is a massive parallel problem with some rights holders choosing to sue file share
|
||||
as instead. Indeed hundreds of thousands of US citizens have been targeted in recent years.
|
||||
This situation appears to be something the Russian government wants to avoid. According to
|
||||
the head of a government department with responsibility for communications his country won't
|
||||
proceed with holding internet users liable for downloads despite having many millions of file
|
||||
shareers. Speaking at the launch of the read legally campaign a nationwide initiative to encourage
|
||||
citizens to obtain ebooks from official sources Vladimir Gregoriev head of the federal service
|
||||
for supervision of communications information technology and mass media FAPMC for short
|
||||
said that his country will not be following the more aggressive approaches at play in the US.
|
||||
We do not plan to hold internet users liable for downloading as they do in the US where owners
|
||||
of computers can end up in court Gregoriev said. Russia does intend however to take a tougher
|
||||
stance within fringing sites. As reported in January sites will be expected to conform to
|
||||
stricter notice and take down standards if they are to avoid trouble. Responsibility for illegal
|
||||
downloads will be placed on the owners of pirate websites Gregoriev has confirmed adding that
|
||||
Russian file shareers can expect to be subjected to advisory measures similar to those already
|
||||
underway in the United States. File shareers will enter an educational campaign he said stopping
|
||||
short of elaborating on how such a project would be operated. The decision to focus on sites is
|
||||
something US rights holders will be keen to see in action. In recent years there have been endless
|
||||
complaints from the music industry particularly over so-called aloe f mp3 clones and vkontact
|
||||
Russia's answer to Facebook. To date little has been done to stop their growth despite fiery
|
||||
complaints from the USTR. Our next story comes from eff.org dated April the 9th by honey for
|
||||
quarry. Can police read text messages without a warrant? Sound Francisco the Electronic Frontier
|
||||
Foundation EFF urged the Washington State Supreme Court Monday to recognise that text messages
|
||||
are the 21st century phone call and require that law enforcement officers obtain a warrant before
|
||||
reading texts on someone's phone. Text messages are a ubiquitous form of communication and their
|
||||
context can be as private as any telephone conversation said EFF staff attorney honey for quarry.
|
||||
We use text to talk to our wives and husbands our kids our co-workers and more.
|
||||
Police should not be able to sift through these personal exchanges on a whim. They must show
|
||||
probable cause and get a warrant before accessing this information. In this case police sees the
|
||||
cell phone during a drug investigation and monitored incoming messages. Officers responded to
|
||||
several texts setting up meetings that resulted in two arrests without first getting a warrant.
|
||||
Prosecutors have argued that no warrant was required because there should be no expectation of
|
||||
privacy in text messages as anyone can pick up someone out his phone and read what's stored there.
|
||||
But in two related amicus briefs filed Monday EFF argues that searching the phone for the texts
|
||||
without a warrant clearly violates the constitution. The state argues that just because someone can
|
||||
intercept a communication you should reasonably expect that communication to be intercepted.
|
||||
That's a dangerous way to interpret the fourth amendment said for quarry.
|
||||
The prosecutor's theory would eviscerate any privacy protections in the digital age.
|
||||
We're asking the Washington State Supreme Court here to recognise what's at stake
|
||||
and to require a warrant before allowing officers to read text messages on a cell phone.
|
||||
Venkat Balasabrami of focal PLLC in Seattle, Washington served as EFF's local council in these cases.
|
||||
For the full amicus briefs please follow the link in the show notes.
|
||||
Next we have another story from EFF.org this time dated the April 12th and by Trevor Tim.
|
||||
Huffington Post credits internet activists with major victory in stopping bad CFA bill
|
||||
but good reforms are still needed. We have great news on the last day of our week of action aimed
|
||||
at congress over the computer fraud and abuse act CFAA for short the draconian computer hacking law.
|
||||
Huffington Post is reporting that House Republicans put the brakes on an awful expansion to the CFA
|
||||
that threatened internet rights. Even better Huffington Post is crediting pressure from
|
||||
internet activists for this major victory. A House subcommittee with jurisdiction over the law
|
||||
chaired by Republican Jim Sen's Brenner had planned to vote on a reform of the bill next week
|
||||
as part of the House Republican Legislative flurry they dubbed Cyber Week according to both
|
||||
Republican and Democratic AIDS on the panel. However the bill was pulled back because of pressure
|
||||
from the internet community. All week EFF and a host of other groups have been engaged in a
|
||||
week of action aimed at stopping this bill in its tracks. We started the week with a letter signed
|
||||
by EFF and organisations from across the political spectrum but it's you the internet users who
|
||||
have emailed, tweeted and called congress to make sure that your voices have been heard.
|
||||
As the Huffington Post reported the move to pullback plans to change CFAA is another indication of
|
||||
the growing strength of the cyber community which first flexed its muscles in a public way to block
|
||||
SOPA, a bill that would have handed much more control of the internet to the government and its
|
||||
corporate allies. It's important to remember this fight is far from over and you should definitely
|
||||
contact congress if you've not already done so. Even though the CFA expansion has been tabled
|
||||
and there's reportedly no timeline for bringing it back, legislators could revive it at any moment.
|
||||
The Justice Department has been lobbying for these expansions for years and there's no indication
|
||||
that it will stop. The Justice Department has also just asked congress for more money to prosecute
|
||||
computer crimes despite the fact that it's been widely accused of prosecutorial misconduct in
|
||||
the cases that they've already brought. Notably it's case against the late activist and internet
|
||||
pioneer Aaron Schwartz. Most importantly we still need congress to pass real CFAA reform that
|
||||
will definitely state that violations of website terms of service and employee terms of use are
|
||||
not crimes and that would prevent defendants from being locked away for years for acts that
|
||||
cause little or no economic harm. We need to protect innovators, activists, security researchers and
|
||||
everyday internet users from a law that should only be aimed at real computer criminals that
|
||||
commit malicious acts like stealing credit card information. So please follow the link in the
|
||||
story, go to an email your representatives to tell them your support CFAA reform then you can
|
||||
follow up with a phone call telling them the same thing. Let's ensure what happened to Aaron Schwartz
|
||||
never happens to anyone else. Our final story this week comes from tecder.com dated April 12
|
||||
by Timothy Geigner. Police search for mugger for three weeks, internet finds him in an hour.
|
||||
We've discussed before the ways law enforcement groups use social media, frankly the general theme
|
||||
tends to be that they aren't very good at interneting whether it's mocking invasive vaginal
|
||||
searches or catfishing music fans with well tread tropes. It seems the wider internet plays the
|
||||
web game better than the LEOs. All the while you occasionally will hear someone in law enforcement
|
||||
decrying how awful the internet is and even sometimes attempting to shut down certain sites.
|
||||
Yet despite being so underappreciated the wider internet sure does love to show how good they are
|
||||
catching suspected criminals. That capability was on full display in the case of a mugging in New
|
||||
York City where police had been searching for a suspect for three weeks before deputising the
|
||||
internet which then identified him in an hour. Within an hour of gorker posting the video of the
|
||||
crime on the site a helpful comment a link to a facebook page that appeared to show the suspect
|
||||
wearing the same clothes in photos taking mere hours prior to the crime. The link led to the
|
||||
facebook page of 21-year-old Aiden Folen who had photos of him taken hours before the robbery.
|
||||
According to gorker the photos revealed the same sweatshirt the mugger wore in the video
|
||||
with large fraternity letters on the front. Commenters on the New Year's Day Daily Intelligence
|
||||
site which also posted the video also linked back to Folen. Folen has since been arrested and
|
||||
charged with robbery and assault. Internet 1, Stupid Ratboy Crimes 0. But the larger point is
|
||||
that far from the crime-inducing cesspool claimed by some LEOs the internet is a tool that they should
|
||||
be using. Many LEOs recognise that utilising social media to put together suspect timelines
|
||||
but the aggregate of the public internet is also a tool to catch violent criminals.
|
||||
Social media acts as a timeline of people's lives accounts of their activities and now they
|
||||
are playing significant roles in helping to solve crimes most notably exposing the stupid
|
||||
real rape case back in January. It's worth noting that there's a difference between having the
|
||||
public help law enforcement find suspects and LEOs keeping watch over social media. The lesson
|
||||
here is that it's the not all or nothing with law enforcement and the internet. You can get the
|
||||
help you need without invading the public's lives. For some other headlines of the news this week
|
||||
please follow the links in the show notes. These stories are wiki league strikes again
|
||||
website publishes 1.7 million documents on US foreign policy. Athens,
|
||||
Intermedia has been shut down repression in Greek ensues.
|
||||
This podcast has been started to produce by the TGTM news team, a editorial selection by Deep Geek
|
||||
whose are the story authors reflects their own opinions and not necessarily those of TGTM news.
|
||||
News from tech.com, allgov.com, Havana Times.org and RawStory.com are used under a range permission.
|
||||
News from torrentfreak.com and eff.org is used under permission of the creative commons by
|
||||
attribution license. News from democracynow.org is used under permission of the creative commons
|
||||
by attribution non-commercial no derivatives license. New sources do retain their respective
|
||||
copyrights. That's it for this week. Thank you for listening. Thank you for listening to this
|
||||
episode of Talk Geek To Me. Here are the vials statistics for this program. Your feedback
|
||||
matters to me. Please send your comments to dg at deepgeek.us. The webpage for this program is at
|
||||
www.talkgeektoMe.us. You can subscribe to me on identical as the username deepgeek or you could
|
||||
follow me on twitter. My username there is dggtm as in deepgeek talk geek to me. This episode of
|
||||
Talk Geek To Me is licensed under the creative commons attribution share like 3.0 on poor license.
|
||||
This license allows commercial reuse of the work as well as allowing you to modify the work
|
||||
so long as you share alike the same rights you have received under this license. Thank you
|
||||
for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does our
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on day through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever considered recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dark pound and the economical and
|
||||
computer cloud. HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com or binref projects across
|
||||
the sponsored by LUNA pages. From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to LUNA pages.com
|
||||
for all your hosting needs. Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative
|
||||
commons, attribution, share alike, videos or license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user