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Sup with this Lanny?

  1. #21
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    Originally posted by Lanny
    Even you can't possibly be mentally ill enough to not grasp the irony in you accusing other of producing word salad. I'm going to assume this is you trolling.

    I'm not trolling. I wouldn't send packets of detailed info to the FBI nor the White House via snail mail, email and even walk ins.

    which is interesting because Zoklet liked to deflate the seriousness of this by calling me "King of Trolls"

    Then I find out he once worked for the FBI. Perhaps not as an agent or field agent but a computer analyst specialist? it doesn't matter.. they all get pretty close bonded in these agencies. so he may have been why I was never taken serious going back to as early as 2001-2002.

    And I have to question this guy DfG in Pakistan. where Osama Bin Laden was said to have been killed by ST6?> Pakistan was supposed to be our allies but instead knowingly harbored the fucking guy. which.. I don't believe had anything to do with 9/11 or wasn't 100 percent responsible. But rather his family. I believe I read his own Aunt (Regarding 28 pages redacted from a report by the orders of Dick Cheney)

    You're American because you were born here but are you Pakistani by ethnics by chance?
  2. #22
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    Originally posted by A College Professor Ban yourself for spamming. Hmmm how long? Same as you have been handing out to patriots lately, permanent

    I can't understand if this is a soft way of confusion on his part by backspinning BS.

    Fuck him. this isn't a word salad like he is doing. he's purposely fucking shit up here and hiding something.
  3. #23
    A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    What do you need to ask DFG? I saw him in videochat a few months back and I think I called him a fake Paki but he talked to me and is real.
  4. #24
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    Originally posted by A College Professor What do you need to ask DFG? I saw him in videochat a few months back and I think I called him a fake Paki but he talked to me and is real.

    He is living in the Filipines from what I found on him. I have a photo of him near a pool with a white guy. Probably an ExPat married a filipina woman (The white guy)

    Pakistan is a bit different from Afghanistan.. its more Asian than middle eastern yet there was some odd shit happening their during the war.

    the thing about Pakistan is 2 computer dweebs from there had wrote one of the first backdoor device/worm that did hell on computers all over the world using newsgroups back in the 1980s (I believe it was the mid 80s)

    something related to Sub7 , kid script shit to erase emails or files?


    I'm not that computer savey, yet Pakistan seems like a nation full of assclowns. like Austalia and the USA .. perhaps Pakistan can claim to be the first Internet Trollers.
  5. #25
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    there was a documentary on J. Assange which showed WildCat Board

    Wasn't Jeffs first dialup a wildcat board?

    I used a WWIV for mine that lasted about 4 fucking months until it was used as a dump site.

    I came to believe that perhaps J.A. is nothing more than a Government Troll pretending to be on the run.
    Yet he could be what he parades to be. if so.. this photo made me laugh


  6. #26
    A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    zuck looks like a retarded pinhead / peanus above his shoulders
  7. #27
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    interesting site. it wasn't an search extention of the photo I just asked Lanny about before he gives us a backspin good ol Dick Cheney style. trying to confuse us

    also, on the same page, talks about Rumsfelds "Known Knowns" and my own Related/Unrelated (or vice versa)



    NIRVANAnet

    Save
    NIRVANAnet was a dial-up BBS network, started in 1990 in the San Francisco Bay Area, by Joe Russack, also known as Dr. Strangelove (sysop of Just Say Yes), Jeff Hunter, also known as Taipan Enigma (sysop of & the Temple of the Screaming Electron), and Ratsnatcher (sysop of Rat Head Systems). NIRVANAnet was unique among BBS networks because member BBS systems agreed to allow anyone to connect, and access everything on the systems, instantly and anonymously. They also traded thousands of text files between the systems covering every subject imaginable. &TOTSE continued as a website until January 17, 2009, when it was closed by Jeff Hunter.

    It later expanded to include other eclectic BBSs that valued liberty and privacy, including realitycheckBBS, The New Dork Sublime, My Dog Bit Jesus (Berkeley-Oakland, Bittany/Susan), Lies Unlimited (South San Francisco, later Salt Lake City, Mick Freen), Sea of Noise, El Observador, The Salted Slug, The Lair (Boise, Idaho), Burn This Flag (San Jose, run by Zardoz), The Stage, Tomorrows Order of Magnitude (Mountain View/Palo Alto, finger_man) and others.

    The initial NIRVANAnet core consisted of Jeff/Taipan, Joe Russack/Dr. Strangelove, Poindexter Fortran (taking over from Count Zero Interrupt), and Dittany of Crete. &TOTSE closed its node function around 1998; several online "attempts to recreate an online database" were claimed to be impostors by original founding members, who are named on the trademark application (now expired). &TOTSE was—if functioning—a members-only BBS by 2000. Both node and voice functions were discontinued or changed before 1999.

    References
  8. #28
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    Like Revolvy >>
    000
    There are known knowns
    There are known knowns

    SaveThere are known knowns
    "There are known knowns" is a phrase from a response United States Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld gave to a question at a U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) news briefing on February 12, 2002 about the lack of evidence linking the government of Iraq with the supply of weapons of mass destruction to terrorist groups.[1]

    Rumsfeld stated:

    Reports that say that something hasn't happened are always interesting to me, because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don't know we don't know. And if one looks throughout the history of our country and other free countries, it is the latter category that tend to be the difficult ones.[1]

    The statement became the subject of much commentary, including a documentary by Academy Award–winning film director Errol Morris.[2]

    Origin
    Rumsfeld's statement brought much fame and public attention to the concepts of known knowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns, but national security and intelligence professionals have long used an analysis technique referred to as the Johari window. The idea of unknown unknowns was created in 1955 by two American psychologists, Joseph Luft (1916–2014) and Harrington Ingham (1916–1995) in their development of the Johari window. They used it as a technique to help people better understand their relationship with themselves as well as others.

    The term was also commonly used inside NASA. Rumsfeld himself cited NASA administrator William Graham in his memoir; he wrote that he had first heard "a variant of the phrase" from Graham when they served together on the Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States during the late 1990s.[3] Kirk Borne, an astrophysicist who was employed as a data scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center at the time, noted in an April 2013 TED talk that he had used the phrase "unknown unknowns" in a talk to personnel at the Homeland Security Transition Planning Office a few days prior to Rumsfeld's remarks, and speculated that the term may have percolated up to Rumsfeld and other high-ranking officials in the defense department.[4]

    The terms "known unknowns" and "unknown unknowns" are often used in project management and strategic planning[5] circles.

    Known unknowns refers to "risks you are aware of, such as cancelled flights...."[6]

    Unknown unknowns are risks that "come from situations that are so out of this world that they never occur to you. For example, prior to the invention of the personal computer, manufacturers of typewriters probably didn't foresee the risks to their business".[7] Contemporary usage is largely consistent with the earliest known usages. For example, the term was used in evidence given to the British Columbia Royal Commission of Inquiry into Uranium Mining in 1979:

    Site conditions always pose unknowns, or uncertainties, which may become known during construction or operation to the detriment of the facility and possibly lead to damage of the environment or endanger public health and safety. The risk posed by unknowns is somewhat dependent on the nature of the unknown relative to past experience. This has led me classify unknowns into one of the following two types: 1. known unknowns (expected or foreseeable conditions), which can be reasonably anticipated but not quantified based on past experience as exemplified by case histories (in Appendix A and 2). Unknown unknowns (unexpected or unforeseeable conditions), which pose a potentially greater risk simply because they cannot be anticipated based on past experience or investigation.



    Known unknowns result from phenomena which are recognized, but poorly understood. On the other hand, unknown unknowns are phenomena which cannot be expected because there has been no prior experience or theoretical basis for expecting the phenomena.[8]

    The term also appeared in a 1982 New Yorker article on the aerospace industry, which cites the example of metal fatigue, the cause of crashes in de Havilland Comet airliners in the 1950s.[9]

    Reaction
    While the remarks initially led to some ridicule towards the Bush administration in general and Rumsfeld in particular, over time the consensus regarding it has shifted over the years and it now enjoys some level of respect. For example, Rumsfeld's defenders have included Canadian columnist Mark Steyn, who called it "in fact a brilliant distillation of quite a complex matter",[10] and Australian economist and blogger John Quiggin, who wrote, "Although the language may be tortured, the basic point is both valid and important."[11]

    Psychoanalytic philosopher Slavoj Žižek says that beyond these three categories there is a fourth, the unknown known, that which we intentionally refuse to acknowledge that we know: "If Rumsfeld thinks that the main dangers in the confrontation with Iraq were the 'unknown unknowns', that is, the threats from Saddam whose nature we cannot even suspect, then the Abu Ghraib scandal shows that the main dangers lie in the "unknown knowns"—the disavowed beliefs, suppositions and obscene practices we pretend not to know about, even though they form the background of our public values."[12]

    German sociologists Daase and Kessler (2007) agree with a basic point of Rumsfeld in stating that the cognitive frame for political practice may be determined by the relationship between what we know, what we do not know, what we cannot know, but Rumsfeld left out what we do not like to know.[13]

    The event has been used in multiple books to discuss risk assessment.[2][14]

    Rumsfeld named his autobiography Known and Unknown: A Memoir. In an "Author's Note" at the start of the book, he expressly acknowledged the source of his memoir's title and mentioned a few examples of his statement's prominence, including this Wikipedia article.[15] The Unknown Known is the title of Errol Morris's 2013 biographical documentary about Rumsfeld.[16]

    Analytical sciences
    The term "known unknowns" has been applied to the identification of chemical substances using analytical chemistry approaches, specifically mass spectrometry. In many cases, an unknown to an investigator that is detected in an experiment is actually known in the chemical literature, a reference database, or an internet resource. These types of compounds are termed "known unknowns". The term was originally coined by Little et al.[17] and reported a number of times in the literature since then as a general approach.[18][19][20][21]

    I can't post it all because of Lanny's restrictions but here is the source
    it was under totse

    https://www.revolvy.com/page/There-are-known-knowns
  9. #29
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    https://www.revolvy.com/page/NIRVANAnet
  10. #30
    totse3.com Space Nigga
    Isn't this guy "Revolvy" one of the 4 guys (I think he's indian or paki) in the film Steve Jobs (The one with Ashton Kuchar ?) like he was first one in with other kids in Steve's neighborhood who helped build the first apples out of steve's parents garage? and Steve went off on him saying something mean like "you're insignificant" that's hella fucked up but I think Steve said sorry at some point.. or not.



  11. #31
    Lanny Bird of Courage
    ITT: trolling
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