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171 lines
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171 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1459
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Title: HPR1459: Locational Privacy with retrotech-the lowly pager
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1459/hpr1459.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 03:29:55
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---
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We need an END
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Hey it's DeepGeek, I wanted to give you guys a short and informal show on privacy
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and security.
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When the reason I say it's short and formal is because show notes and editing is coming
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to a point becomes a roadblock to me making new content for HPR and so I said to myself
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I'll call in a show and not edit and get out there quick and dirty like there's something
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not quite right about the calling system so I thought I just record this incident of
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the can but this belongs in privacy and security series and what I want to explore with you
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today and put forth to you and see if there's any interest and perhaps opening a dialogue
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on the usage of this thing is I've been playing with an old retro technology in the name
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of locational privacy, a mobile technology, please don't laugh too hard.
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I went out and I purchased a beeper, yes a pager, yes you know what I'm talking about,
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the little stupid thing on your belt that people can call up and key in a phone number
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and you're supposed to call them back, why, well locational privacy is the idea that
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you can go out into the world in Sally Forth and not have the man get a blow by blow of
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your location which currently they can do with cell phones.
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We have a guy at the Hope Conference this gives a presentation called Piracy is Dead Get
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Over It, he's a private investigator, if you haven't listened to these I would advise
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you to do so and the cell phone is a dream snitch to have someone carrying around with
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them. They do analysis on which cell phones which IMEI's stay in the same tower for
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prolonged periods of time and create lists of associations and guilt by association
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is supposed to go against our legal system here in America, but it doesn't. If the FBI
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is drawing up lists of 1000 people who are in the same conference hall at the same time
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and decide they're all evil hackers and they get all get FBI files open on them it's
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fucking sucks. There's no way about it. So the problem it occurred to me is the fact that
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cell phone technology for all its robustness for all the great things about it happens to
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pinpoint your location and lock you into the nearest tower. It does that because it has
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a transmitter, a radio transmitter that sends out a beacon every 10 minutes or if your
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OJ Simpson driving in a road chase 10 times a minute, yes I'm not kidding. And it just creeps
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me out. I just the idea that when I go to my next conference that I will be on a list
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in the FBI's offices of computer criminals subject to investigation just freaks me out.
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And so the transmitter is the culprit. That's what's doing the beckoning. And I used
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to own a T900 page which is a Motorola 2 way pager and because it was meant to be used
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in hospitals and at the time of manufacture it was thought to interfere with medical equipment
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you could turn off the transmitter and it would function as a regular pager. Reminded
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me that your basic one way pager does not have a transmitter. It does not have a transmitter.
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It takes a little dinky AA battery and it's not constantly needing recharges. It's not constantly
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telling them where you are. When you buy it again you've got to tell the page and company where
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in the country you are. And I apologize to people who are listening internationally. I don't know
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what the pager situation is in your country. I do see some resources out there for pagers but
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I don't know the situation. So I'm going to be talking from a US perspective. But if you carry
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around a pager the pager company does not know where you are in the country. They just blasting
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it out. They have a series of transmitter posts throughout the country and they turn on your state
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or in my case there's a conjunction of three states that are very close to each other in the
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United States that has a specific name. And the end you know someone will dial this number. They'll
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get the characteristic four short beeps. And they'll touch a tone number. And then the pager
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company will transmit that to via satellite usually a bunch of transmitting locations. You know maybe
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a thousand. And they'll all blast at the same time your pager's ID and you'll get the message
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provide you're in the 75 square mile radius thing that you've told the cell phone company to
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expect you to be in most of the time. And I want a dream advocating to you giving up the cell phone.
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I myself am involved with taking care of Ellie and laws. A slew of heart patients including my wife.
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I have to be reachable in a certain way. Mobally what I am saying is that if you're a privacy guy
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and presumably if you're listening to the privacy and security mini-series on HPR presumably
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you're a privacy guy right. If you're a privacy guy what I'm suggesting is that you might want to
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look at carrying around a pager once again as we all did in the 90s that it will give you an
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important option you can save yourself for the next half hour or for the next hour I won't be
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traceable. For whatever reason you want not that you're going to do anything wrong but you know
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your privacy guy your moody that way. You might be saying to yourself and hopefully the
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laughter has subsided at this point. Hope you you might be saying to yourself
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didn't this stuff die? Do people still use this? Well it turns out you have to separate the network
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the data network from the actual device as a potential pager customer. You are but one of the things
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that uses the network. You will be sharing the network with a bunch of applications
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that keep the pager companies in the black and cause them to survive and continue to make profits
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and continue to post dividends year after year even to know the user base has dwindled down
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to what by mega corporation standards or by national corporation standards is nothing.
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A pitifully few million people use it but there's a whole variety of machinery that is talking
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to each other over the antennas of the receiving and transmitting antennas of the pager company
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and it's so you might be saying well is it viable in a long term? Well let me just you know I've
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been doing the deep geek which means you read everything you can on the internet. That's you know
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something my friends came up with doing a deep geek on that topic yeah I've been reading everything
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there's a whole bunch of applications out there that are keeping these in America that's two
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companies alive they involve a slew of things that you would not imagine like networks of
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parking meters talking to their home base talking to meter readers talking to
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parking enforcement personnel speed checkpoints you know listen little signs to say the speed
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limit here is 55 miles per hour you're doing and it blinks 65 yeah that can be paged to a cop
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around the corner just so you know anything that involves one transmission transmission
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hitting a whole bunch of things that have to be turned on irrigation systems I will wonder how
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all the sprinklers on an 18 hole golf course get turned on at once they don't want to run wires
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under that grass now do they use a network so there's all kinds of things that are going on out
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there that are using this and you're actually buying a little slice of time to transmit some stuff
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to you you're doing it with the idea of locational privacy you could you could be any place in the state
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so the two remaining companies after the rounds of buyouts here in the United States are American
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messaging which is formerly Verizon and USA mobility which is formerly watch wireless and metrical
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and you can go out out there to the web and read how how these companies began buying each other out
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in the end you know a nice this is a kind of game where the national company makes sense
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because you can get paid to multiple cities at once so people who travel around in a region
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you know it's better than having a local paging company by local paging company back in the day
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when this stuff started like in the 60s and 70s and 80s it was the hospital owned their own paging
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system the fire department owned their own paging system and they worked in that city in that town
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in that building but now we have these things on networked this technology is really heavily used
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by first responders and medical personnel these are people who just can't afford to be out of touch
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they're on call in a way that requires them to be reachable and so they have to worry about what
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if the cell phone network goes down what if this what if the switching system behind the cell phone
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network goes down what if my local tower goes down all those things can lead to a doctor or a cop
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an ambulance driver a paramedic not getting the message they have to get so these people are carrying
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two communications devices typically if not something that's managed by their local
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organization and indeed one of the pleasant surprises I had because I happen to live in a
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French service area I happen to live in an area where where I work there's only only one of the
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cell phone companies has a tower and the paging company doesn't work where I happen to work but
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happens to work at my in-laws and at my computer lab so I was very pleased to find out that there's
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a service available from both the paging companies called message carbon copying what you do is
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you define the email address to the paging company of that you want a copy of every page to go to
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so if someone were to page me the paging company pages my device and at the same time sends an
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email to an address that happens to be my mobile text phone number for my cell phone so my
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page gets copied to the cell phone and just like you might have two distress mirroring each other's
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content arrayed array in your computer and you get more nines of service that way because remember
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this drive is what 94% reliable so if you get two distress mirrors each other the chance of both
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of them filling it once drops down to 99.9% it's the same deal with this technology you can now have
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this important number this page or number get piped to both your pager and your cell phone
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and the idea of both of these systems failing together is so minuscule you don't have to worry about
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it one of the questions you might ask is well who's going to use the pager you know because they
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people now expect to be able to cell phone call you you know I'm reading resistance from friends
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and associates about this but you know what if they have to reach you and you don't pick up your
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cell phone guess what they're going to go into their phone book and pull out your pager number
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if they're that close to you and they have to reach you so don't worry about it
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in the meantime you may also get into having certain key piece of information transmitted
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for instance you can have your a text pager a text enabled pager will have an email address
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and an sms address so people can text into and or email you in the form of a pager command
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and get you the message that way as well as the fact that you could forward select emails
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to your pager if you want to you could write a script with proc mail to cause your email server that
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you run to page you with with things like when you get an email or perhaps might want to make a
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cron job and get a list of emails that have come in during the day at a certain time when you know
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you'll be in range of everything the form factors fantastic my pager is about a core the size of
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my cell phone i'm forever leaving my cell phone in the car because it's it's bulky the pager is always
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on the hip it's always on i've also had one other application that i did want to mention to you my
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dear listeners and that's this i get very very annoyed with voicemail i suffer like many people
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from an affliction known as audio processing disorder which means my hearing is fine but my
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interpretation of words is difficult especially over a stack a connection like a like a cell phone
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call or something like that or if i was background noise it it those me i am better off reading
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which is why i often communicate better by email regardless about what people who don't suffer
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from that think of me and you know if i got people hanging up on my voicemail machine
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i would drive into range get on a parkway you know one of these one of these interstate commercial
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parkways with with big trucks on it right and my indicate we're going that that i had a voicemail
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i would pull over into the curb because i have to type my password because i'm a privacy and
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security guy to got a type in my password for voicemail and just to hear a series of people hanging
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up on my voicemail machine as my car get but got gets buffered back and forth by 18 wheel trucks
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going up the parkway i also got annoyed by robo calls too well guess what if people hang up on your
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page or number it doesn't page you and those four beeps looking for a numeric input
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absolutely baffle the hell out of robo calls software so if you want you can set up your home phone
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to forward calls instead of to your mobile voicemail to your page accompany
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for free you can get a recording of your voice saying hi it's deep geek because that's what all
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my friends call in the real world too i'm not accepting voicemails anymore dial a call and number
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on your keypad now and you will never have to deal with robo calls again for the rest of your life
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so i'm greatly enjoying carrying two devices once again and from time to time i say now i need my
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privacy and i'll peel the back off my cell phone and i'll pull out the battery of my cell phone
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i'll leave my beeper on and it's a lot like that scene in the novel 1984 by george oh well
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where smith goes into the part person he thinks is a co-conspirator
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happens to be an inner party member he says i'm going to turn off the the tele screen for a half
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hour that's what my life has become i feel like that character you can turn off the surveillance for
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a half hour well dear listener if you are geeky enough you too can drop off the grid
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for periods of time it's a little inconvenient you're roughing it comparatively speaking
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but you can do it so this has been deep geek do yourself a favor and go to duck duck go or your
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favorite search engine and key in the words of vocational privacy and um join the privacy
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revolution after the summer of snowden my friends bidding you well good day
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