vitaminb's carrot and coriander soup http://vitaminb.soup.io/ via Monday Thru Friday: The Illusion of Choice - EPIC FAIL Funny Videos and E... {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://failblog.org/2012/05/10/job-fails-monday-thru-friday-the-illusion-of-choice/","body":"via \u003Ca href=\"http://failblog.org/2012/05/10/job-fails-monday-thru-friday-the-illusion-of-choice/\"\u003EMonday Thru Friday: The Illusion of Choice - EPIC FAIL Funny Videos and Epic Fail Funny Pictures\u003C/a\u003E","url":"http://f.asset.soup.io/asset/3162/7007_75ac.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://failblog.org/2012/05/10/job-fails-monday-thru-friday-the-illusion-of-choice/"><img alt="7007_75ac_400" height="1714" src="http://f.asset.soup.io/asset/3162/7007_75ac_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p>via <a href="http://failblog.org/2012/05/10/job-fails-monday-thru-friday-the-illusion-of-choice/">Monday Thru Friday: The Illusion of Choice - EPIC FAIL Funny Videos and Epic Fail Funny Pictures</a></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user201872" ><a class="" href="http://coloredgrayscale.soup.io/post/252747389/via-Monday-Thru-Friday-The-Illusion-of"><span class="name">coloredgrayscale</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user14" ><a class="" href="http://cygenb0ck.soup.io/post/252783135/via-Monday-Thru-Friday-The-Illusion-of"><span class="name">cygenb0ck</span></a></span>]</p>Fri, 11 May 2012 21:38:05 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252923647/via-Monday-Thru-Friday-The-Illusion-ofurn:www-soup-io:1:252923647image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://truckbearingkibble.com/images/comic/01-18-08.jpg","body":null,"url":"http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/2970/2225_4c3a.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://truckbearingkibble.com/images/comic/01-18-08.jpg"><img alt="2225_4c3a_400" height="176" src="http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/2970/2225_4c3a_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user397409" ><a class="" href="http://rumpelstilzkin.soup.io/post/234448533/Image"><span class="name">rumpelstilzkin</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/252845035/Image"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Fri, 11 May 2012 21:31:12 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252922903/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252922903image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3111/9441_2522.gif"} <p><a href=""><img alt="9441_2522" height="262" src="http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3111/9441_2522.gif" width="360" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user292265" ><a class="" href="http://blysk.soup.io/post/248226302/Image"><span class="name">blysk</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/252849199/Image"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Fri, 11 May 2012 21:29:48 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252922752/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252922752image via QR Codes | MakeUseOf Geeky Fun {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://www.makeuseof.com/tech-fun/qr-codes/","body":"via \u003Ca href=\"http://www.makeuseof.com/tech-fun/qr-codes/\"\u003EQR Codes | MakeUseOf Geeky Fun\u003C/a\u003E","url":"http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3135/4598_a64b.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://www.makeuseof.com/tech-fun/qr-codes/"><img alt="4598_a64b_400" height="665" src="http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3135/4598_a64b_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p>via <a href="http://www.makeuseof.com/tech-fun/qr-codes/">QR Codes | MakeUseOf Geeky Fun</a></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user201872" ><a class="" href="http://coloredgrayscale.soup.io/post/250607863/via-QR-Codes-MakeUseOf-Geeky-Fun"><span class="name">coloredgrayscale</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user14" ><a class="" href="http://cygenb0ck.soup.io/post/252862491/via-QR-Codes-MakeUseOf-Geeky-Fun"><span class="name">cygenb0ck</span></a></span>]</p>Fri, 11 May 2012 21:25:29 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252922201/via-QR-Codes-MakeUseOf-Geeky-Funurn:www-soup-io:1:252922201image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://i.imgur.com/OFeqT.jpg","body":null,"url":"http://c.asset.soup.io/asset/3164/0156_3f2c.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://i.imgur.com/OFeqT.jpg"><img alt="0156_3f2c_400" height="533" src="http://c.asset.soup.io/asset/3164/0156_3f2c_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/252875877/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Fri, 11 May 2012 21:19:03 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252921273/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252921273image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://www.topit.me/item/11142013","body":null,"url":"http://0.asset.soup.io/asset/3164/1888_8317.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://www.topit.me/item/11142013"><img alt="1888_8317_400" height="271" src="http://0.asset.soup.io/asset/3164/1888_8317_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user678559" ><a class="" href="http://igafiga.soup.io/post/252894942/Image"><span class="name">igafiga</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user46681" ><a class="" href="http://cats.soup.io/post/252894983/Image"><span class="name">cats</span></a></span>]</p>Fri, 11 May 2012 21:14:36 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252920629/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252920629image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://9.asset.soup.io/asset/3164/2521_3bc4.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="2521_3bc4_400" height="265" src="http://9.asset.soup.io/asset/3164/2521_3bc4_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user383498" ><a class="" href="http://scorpix.soup.io/post/252904674/Image"><span class="name">scorpix</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user46681" ><a class="" href="http://cats.soup.io/post/252904716/Image"><span class="name">cats</span></a></span>]</p>Fri, 11 May 2012 21:14:04 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252920530/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252920530image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://b.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/7739_15a4.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="7739_15a4" height="4185" src="http://b.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/7739_15a4.jpeg" width="344" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user409088" ><a class="" href="http://asztomasz.soup.io/post/252291761/Image"><span class="name">asztomasz</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user428164" ><a class="" href="http://geek4life.soup.io/post/252321486/Image"><span class="name">geek4life</span></a></span>]</p>Tue, 08 May 2012 20:08:26 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252370303/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252370303image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://i.imgur.com/zFlaY.gif","body":null,"url":"http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3135/9601_1e71.gif"} <p><a href="http://i.imgur.com/zFlaY.gif"><img alt="9601_1e71" height="156" src="http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3135/9601_1e71.gif" width="313" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user156421" ><a class="" href="http://ImmortalYawn.soup.io/post/250655724/Image"><span class="name">ImmortalYawn</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/252121952/Image"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Mon, 07 May 2012 21:55:35 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252257897/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252257897image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":"\u0026lt;like\u0026gt;","url":"http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3156/9426_5ee4.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="9426_5ee4_400" height="594" src="http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3156/9426_5ee4_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p>&lt;like&gt;</p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user1010658" ><a class="" href="http://sillycripple.soup.io/post/252166060/Image"><span class="name">sillycripple</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user180194" ><a class="" href="http://acid.soup.io/post/252173798/Image"><span class="name">acid</span></a></span>]</p>Mon, 07 May 2012 21:46:28 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252256551/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252256551image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://d.asset.soup.io/asset/3152/2061_b89a.gif"} <p><a href=""><img alt="2061_b89a" height="228" src="http://d.asset.soup.io/asset/3152/2061_b89a.gif" width="311" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user578839" ><a class="" href="http://nowater.soup.io/post/251782160/Image"><span class="name">nowater</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/252217026/Image"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Mon, 07 May 2012 21:40:27 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252255710/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252255710image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://5.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/0389_1275.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="0389_1275_400" height="285" src="http://5.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/0389_1275_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user439265" ><a class="" href="http://tout.soup.io/post/252180204/Image"><span class="name">tout</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/252222130/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Mon, 07 May 2012 21:36:39 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252255191/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252255191image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://e.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/0686_b2b9.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="0686_b2b9_400" height="364" src="http://e.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/0686_b2b9_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user702025" ><a class="" href="http://polishh.soup.io/post/252184062/Image"><span class="name">polishh</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/252223220/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Mon, 07 May 2012 21:32:36 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252254677/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:252254677image Googled after: Emotional Equations, Chip Conley {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://www.google.de/imgres?imgurl=http://www.fractal.org/Bewustzijns-Besturings-Model/Plutchikfig6.gif\u0026imgrefurl=http://www.fractal.org/Bewustzijns-Besturings-Model/Nature-of-emotions.htm\u0026h=526\u0026w=494\u0026sz=32\u0026tbnid=kZNzbm2Hi0IFOM:\u0026tbnh=90\u0026tbnw=85\u0026zoom=1\u0026docid=3NvDskJA7Z-xtM\u0026sa=X\u0026ei=hTqoT4fXPMfXtAa9la39BA\u0026ved=0CIkBEPUBMAQ\u0026dur=353","body":"Googled after: \u003Ca href=\"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdEvRiOANsg%20\"\u003EEmotional Equations, Chip Conley\u003C/a\u003E","url":"http://7.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/5399_8012.gif"} <p><a href="http://www.google.de/imgres?imgurl=http://www.fractal.org/Bewustzijns-Besturings-Model/Plutchikfig6.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.fractal.org/Bewustzijns-Besturings-Model/Nature-of-emotions.htm&h=526&w=494&sz=32&tbnid=kZNzbm2Hi0IFOM:&tbnh=90&tbnw=85&zoom=1&docid=3NvDskJA7Z-xtM&sa=X&ei=hTqoT4fXPMfXtAa9la39BA&ved=0CIkBEPUBMAQ&dur=353"><img alt="5399_8012_400" height="425" src="http://7.asset.soup.io/asset/3157/5399_8012_400.gif" width="400" /></a></p> <p>Googled after: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdEvRiOANsg%20">Emotional Equations, Chip Conley</a></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user220690" ><a class="" href="http://RK.soup.io/post/252251474/Googled-after-Emotional-Equations-Chip-Conley"><span class="name">RK</span></a></span>]</p>Mon, 07 May 2012 21:30:18 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/252254397/Googled-after-Emotional-Equations-Chip-Conleyurn:www-soup-io:1:252254397image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://yayhooray.net/thread/385/yh-names-to-images-that-impress-you/p/50","body":null,"url":"http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3101/0065_f872.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://yayhooray.net/thread/385/yh-names-to-images-that-impress-you/p/50"><img alt="0065_f872_400" height="318" src="http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3101/0065_f872_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user562328" ><a class="" href="http://rabbithole.soup.io/post/246781089/Image"><span class="name">rabbithole</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user14" ><a class="" href="http://cygenb0ck.soup.io/post/247811262/Image"><span class="name">cygenb0ck</span></a></span>]</p>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 22:58:01 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247898929/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247898929image World War 3.0 {"tags":[],"type":"link","title":"World War 3.0","source":"http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2012/05/internet-regulation-war-sopa-pipa-defcon-hacking","body":"\u003Cp\u003E When the Internet was created, decades ago, one thing was inevitable: the war today over how (or whether) to control it, and who should have that power. Battle lines have been drawn between repressive regimes and Western democracies, corporations and customers, hackers and law enforcement. Looking toward a year-end negotiation in Dubai, where 193 nations will gather to revise a U.N. treaty concerning the Internet, Michael Joseph Gross lays out the stakes in a conflict that could split the virtual world as we know it.\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EI. Time Bomb\u00a0\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EIn 1979 the Dubai World Trade Centre dominated the skyline of Dubai City, on the horn of the Arabian Peninsula. Today, the World Trade Centre looks quaint, like an old egg carton stuck into the ground amid a phantasmagoric forest of skyscrapers. But come December the World Trade Centre will once more be the most important place in Dubai City\u2014and, for a couple of weeks, one of the more important places in the world. Diplomats from 193 countries will converge there to renegotiate a United Nations treaty called the International Telecommunications Regulations. The sprawling document, which governs telephone, television, and radio networks, may be extended to cover the Internet, raising questions about who should control it, and how. Arrayed on one side will be representatives from the United States and other major Western powers, advocating what many call \u201cInternet freedom,\u201d a plastic concept that has been defined by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as the right to use the Internet to \u201cexpress one\u2019s views,\u201d to \u201cpeacefully assemble,\u201d and to \u201cseek or share\u201d information. The U.S. and most of its allies basically want to keep Internet governance the way it is: run by a small group of technical nonprofit and volunteer organizations, most of them based in the United States.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EOn the other side will be representatives from countries where governments want to place restrictions on how people use the Internet. These include Russia, China, Brazil, India, Iran, and a host of others. All of them have implemented or experimented with more intrusive monitoring of online activities than the U.S. is publicly known to practice. A number of countries have openly called for the creation of a \u201cnew global body\u201d to oversee online policy. At the very least, they\u2019d like to give the United Nations a great deal more control over the Internet.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EMediating these forces in Dubai will be a man named Hamadoun Tour\u00e9. Charming and wily, he is a satellite engineer who was born in Mali, educated in the Soviet Union, and now lives in Geneva. He serves as secretary-general of the U.N.\u2019s International Telecommunication Union (I.T.U.).\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ETour\u00e9 abjures pallid diplomatic doublespeak, instead opting for full-on self-contradiction that nonetheless leaves little doubt where his sympathies lie. In one breath Tour\u00e9 says, \u201cThe people who are trying to say that I.T.U. has an intention of taking over the management of the Internet simply do not know how the I.T.U. is functioning.\u201d In the next, noting that Internet users in America represent only a tenth of the total, he says, \u201cWhen an invention becomes used by billions across the world, it no longer remains the sole property of one nation, however powerful that nation might be. There should be a mechanism where many countries have an opportunity to have a say. I think that\u2019s democratic. Do you think that\u2019s democratic?\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThere is a war under way for control of the Internet, and every day brings word of new clashes on a shifting and widening battlefront. Governments, corporations, criminals, anarchists\u2014they all have their own war aims.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EIn February, the Swedish Supreme Court refused to hear appeals from three founders of the Pirate Bay, the world\u2019s largest illegal file-sharing Web site, who had been sentenced to prison for copyright infringement. The same day, one of those men issued an online call to arms, urging users to abandon the entertainment industry: \u201cStop seeing their movies. Stop listening to their music.... Remix, reuse, use, abuse.\u201d Shortly after that, Google was discovered to have been secretly bypassing privacy settings on Apple iPhones and computers that use the Safari browser; the company was monitoring Web activity by people who believed they\u2019d blocked such tracking. Around the same time, the European Union proposed that companies such as Google must obtain explicit consent from individuals for data collection; but these regulations would not take effect for years, by which point digital dossiers on almost every Internet user will have been bought and sold by marketers many times over. Meanwhile, the F.B.I. has been distributing \u201cSee something, say something\u201d flyers to Internet-caf\u00e9 owners in the U.S., warning that the use of certain basic cyber-security measures could be considered grounds for suspicion of possible terrorist activity. In response to the F.B.I.\u2019s growing preoccupation with virtual insurgents, guerrilla hackers operating under the name Anonymous posted online an audio recording of F.B.I. and Scotland Yard officials discussing how to handle Anonymous attacks. Then Interpol, together with American and European authorities, busted 31 suspected Anonymous hackers\u2014including the one who covertly recorded that conference call\u2014and an F.B.I. official declared victory over LulzSec, one of the most prominent Anonymous splinters, with the boast that \u201cwe\u2019re chopping off the head\u201d of that faction.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThe War for the Internet was inevitable\u2014a time bomb built into its creation. The war grows out of tensions that came to a head as the Internet grew to serve populations far beyond those for which it was designed. Originally built to supplement the analog interactions among American soldiers and scientists who knew one another off-line, the Internet was established on a bedrock of trust: trust that people were who they said they were, and trust that information would be handled according to existing social and legal norms. That foundation of trust crumbled as the Internet expanded. The system is now approaching a state of crisis on four main fronts.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThe first is sovereignty: by definition, a boundary-less system flouts geography and challenges the power of nation-states. The second is piracy and intellectual property: information wants to be free, as the hoary saying goes, but rights-holders want to be paid and protected. The third is privacy: online anonymity allows for creativity and political dissent, but it also gives cover to disruptive and criminal behavior\u2014and much of what Internet users believe they do anonymously online can be tracked and tied to people\u2019s real-world identities. The fourth is security: free access to an open Internet makes users vulnerable to various kinds of hacking, including corporate and government espionage, personal surveillance, the hijacking of Web traffic, and remote manipulation of computer-controlled military and industrial processes.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThere is no agreement about how any of these problems should be solved. There isn\u2019t even agreement on how to define the basic terms of debate. \u201cInternet freedom,\u201d for instance, is the avowed objective not only of the U.S. secretary of state but also of WikiLeaks, which published hundreds of thousands of classified State Department diplomatic cables.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EOne way to think about the War for the Internet is to cast it as a polar conflict: Order versus Disorder, Control versus Chaos. The forces of Order want to superimpose existing, pre-digital power structures and their associated notions of privacy, intellectual property, security, and sovereignty onto the Internet. The forces of Disorder want to abandon those rickety old structures and let the will of the crowd create a new global culture, maybe even new kinds of virtual \u201ccountries.\u201d At their most extreme, the forces of Disorder want an Internet with no rules at all.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EA conflict with two sides is a picture we\u2019re used to\u2014and although in this case it\u2019s simplistic, it\u2019s a way to get a handle on what the stakes are. But the story of the War for the Internet, as it\u2019s usually told, leaves out the characters who have the best chance to resolve the conflict in a reasonable way. Think of these people as the forces of Organized Chaos. They are more farsighted than the forces of Order and Disorder. They tend to know more about the Internet as both a technical and social artifact. And they are pragmatists. They are like a Resistance group that hopes to influence the battle and to shape a fitful peace. The Resistance includes people such as Vint Cerf, who helped design the Internet in the first place; Jeff Moss, a hacker of immense powers who has been trying to get Order and Disorder to talk to each other; Joshua Corman, a cyber-security analyst who spends his off-hours keeping tabs on the activities of hackers operating under the name of Anonymous; and Dan Kaminsky, one of the world\u2019s top experts on the Internet\u2019s central feature, the Domain Name System.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAlthough they may feel a certain kinship with one another, they are not an organized group. Their main point of agreement is that the Internet has changed the world forever, in ways we are only beginning to understand. They know that Order is impossible and that Disorder is unacceptable. They understand that the world is a messy place whose social arrangements come and go. But they are united in the conviction that what must be preserved and promoted at all costs is what the forces of Order and Disorder, in their very different ways, are both intent on undermining: the integrity of the Internet itself as a reliable, independent, and open structure.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EII. Free-for-All\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EVint Cerf knew from the start that there was a problem\u2014he just couldn\u2019t fix it. The year was 1975, and Cerf was on a team of computer scientists at Stanford University under contract to finish a new communications network for the U.S. military. The goal was full cryptographic capability\u2014a system that allowed all messages to be authenticated from both sides\u2014on a network that could be used anywhere in the world. Two things prevented the scientists from making this network as secure as they would have liked. One obstacle was institutional: \u201cThe only technology that would have allowed for such security was still classified at the time,\u201d Cerf recalls. The other obstacle was simple momentum. Before the developers could implement truly secure encryption, Cerf explains, \u201cthe system kind of got loose,\u201d meaning that problems would have to be fixed on the fly.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ECerf is frequently referred to as \u201cthe father of the Internet.\u201d His most celebrated achievement, for which he shares credit with the engineer and computer scientist Robert Kahn, was creating the TCP/IP protocol, the system that allows computers and networks all over the world to talk to one another. He was an early chairman of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or icann, which maintains the Domain Name System, the virtual address book that shows your computer where to go when you type the name of a Web site into your browser. He now works as Internet Evangelist\u2014that\u2019s his actual title\u2014for Google.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EMost of the Internet\u2019s problems, Cerf believes, stem from the issue of state sovereignty. The Internet was designed to ignore national boundaries. It was designed this way, Cerf says, because \u201cit was intended to deal with a military problem\u201d: how could soldiers exchange messages without letting their enemies know where they were? Cerf and others solved that problem by building a decentralized network that routed messages from place to place using addresses that had nothing to do with physical locations.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThis was something new. International telephone transmissions were marked with country codes that named their origins and end points and had to pass through central switches in the countries at both ends. Radio transmissions, similarly, had to hop from the fixed points of towers. On the Internet, by contrast, traffic skittered from place to place on a network whose shape could be in constant flux. The Internet had no center at all.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EWith one exception. The sole centralized feature of the Internet was the Domain Name System. The United States created that system, which lives on root servers, and Americans maintained it even as the Internet started spreading. The first thing your computer does when you type a Web site or e-mail address into your browser is to ask a local D.N.S. server for the numerical IP address of that destination. Because the D.N.S. servers are the first stop, the D.N.S. is not just the Internet\u2019s address book. It\u2019s also the corner post office. Whoever runs the D.N.S. system can potentially control whether your browser requests get to the proper place and thus control where you can and can\u2019t go online.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EBy the mid-1990s, the Internet was teeming with life, some of it dangerous or unpleasant. Certain aspects of the unpleasantness were inadvertently self-created. Since World War II, the U.S. government had classified cryptography as a munition, subject to stringent export controls. In the Internet\u2019s first decades, those restrictions made it difficult to do business securely online. No one liked the prospect of making financial transactions on the Web without strong encryption, and international transactions were impossible unless parties in both countries used the same encryption techniques. So in 1997, President Bill Clinton relaxed export controls on encryption. This had the unintended effect of giving criminals new ways to steal intellectual property: now they could easily encrypt what they took and send it out of the country, to Russia, China, or elsewhere. Those criminals pioneered the systematic exfiltration of intellectual property that plagues American business today.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ELoosening export controls also had the effect\u2014and this was very much intended\u2014of commercializing the Internet. In fact, the Clinton administration was creating something close to an online free-for-all with its determined efforts to make the Net an engine for business. But even after the encryption export controls were relaxed, businesses outside the U.S. remained wary of the Internet, thinking of it as a de facto American protectorate. Its one centralized feature, the Domain Name System, remained under U.S.-government control.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EClinton had seen that problem coming, and had already set out to turn the D.N.S. over to the private sector. The result was icann, a nonprofit body whose advisory committees include representatives of more than 100 countries and scores of corporations. Technically, icann remains under the Commerce Department\u2019s authority, but other governments have a meaningful say in the group\u2019s decisions. For instance, Xiaodong Lee, one of China\u2019s Internet czars, is icann\u2019s vice president for Asia. The creation of icann signaled that the Internet would be something akin to global patrimony, not an online version of American soil.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThis shift helped set the Internet free. But the more the global economy came to depend on the Internet, the harder it was for governments to tame or limit it. This, too, was intentional. To ensure a surge of e-commerce, the administration systematically pushed aside or revised whatever might stand in the way, including taxes, tariffs, regulations, and intellectual-property standards. Grabbing with both hands for the Internet economy meant letting go of old ideals of governance.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EWhole new problems eventually arose as markets and communications moved online, and as all these online exchanges were preserved digitally and became searchable. Who owned all this data? Who should have access to it? Corporations such as Microsoft, Google, and Facebook began butting heads with the government. They also began butting heads with their own customers.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ECorporate ambitions are a huge issue, but \u201cthe real War for the Net,\u201d Cerf believes, \u201cis governments who want to control it, and that includes our own government. If you think about protecting the population and observing our conventional freedoms, the two are really very much in tension.\u201d Cerf cites the debate over the U.S.A. Patriot Act, enacted in 2001, which greatly expanded the U.S. government\u2019s domestic-surveillance authority. He also cites efforts by Middle Eastern governments to control online communications, particularly as the Arab Spring began to unfold, in 2011. And then there\u2019s the vast example of China, whose Great Firewall puts severe limits on what Chinese users can view online.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EOn the Internet, what constitutes a \u201cgovernment\u201d anyway? When Google announced in 2010 that it had fallen victim to Chinese hackers, it chose to publicize the fact that the Gmail accounts of Chinese political dissidents had been compromised. Congressional staffers asked company officials at the time about rumors that Google\u2019s data losses were in fact far more extensive. They recall tense conversations with Google executives, who in effect asserted executive privilege. One Hill aide recalls, \u201cClearly these people are used to having their way with everybody, which pissed us off. Because they are not a state within a state, even though they practically claim sovereignty.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003EIII. The Dark Tangent\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EDead Addict remembers his hand trembling as he dialed the number. What, he wondered, was the point of even making the call? He stopped, reminding himself: the Dark Tangent was counting on him.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EIn 1992, a very young man named Jeff Moss, whose hacker name is the Dark Tangent, wanted to meet some friends he\u2019d made online. So he organized a summer gathering in Las Vegas, which he planned to call \u201cDef Con,\u201d short for \u201cdefense condition\u201d (defcon), the military\u2019s term for its worldwide alert posture. Changes in defcon\u2014a numbered scale from 1 (war) to 5 (peace)\u2014had cued the turning points in WarGames, a movie that made the young Jeff Moss aspire to become a hacker in the first place. Moss had high hopes. For one thing, he wanted Def Con to be a great party. He also wanted to start \u201cbuilding a system of checks and balances\u201d between hackers and law enforcement, two cultures that were becoming bitter adversaries. So when his friend Eli, who goes by the name Dead Addict, volunteered to help Moss plan the gathering, Eli got the job of calling one of the hackers\u2019 arch-nemeses, an assistant attorney general in Arizona named Gail Thackeray, and inviting her to come.\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003ETwo years earlier, Thackeray had helped the U.S. Secret Service run Operation Sun Devil, one of the first crackdowns on illegal computer hacking. A lot of hackers hated Thackeray, and Dead Addict was not surprised when she responded to his invitation with the words \u201cNo. I wouldn\u2019t go to a convention of car thieves, either.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EHackers are nothing if not persistent, and Thackeray was eventually persuaded to spend a few days in the kiln that is Vegas in July. In a fire-engine-red blazer, she listened impassively while hackers as young as 14 described how to crack into every imaginable \u201csecure\u201d computer system. The hackers, for their part, eagerly picked Thackeray\u2019s brain, to learn the legal implications of their recent and planned adventures. As Moss remembers, Thackeray frequently interrupted their questions to insert the word \u201chypothetically\u201d in order to make herself feel a little better about being there.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EEvery summer, Moss uses Def Con to promote conversation between the Internet\u2019s forces of Order and Disorder. He has become the go-between who translates his subculture\u2019s concerns to the culture at large, and vice versa. Each year, more and more law-enforcement, military, and intelligence personnel go to Def Con. On the cusp of early middle age, Moss remains boyish-looking. He wears rimless oval glasses and favors long, silk-lined Shanghai Tang coats. Moss has become a powerful man. He sits on the U.S. government\u2019s Homeland Security Advisory Committee, and he serves as the chief security officer for icann.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EWhere Vint Cerf argues that sovereignty lies at the heart of the War for the Internet, Moss\u2014who as a hacker cut his teeth gaining access to systems and information that belonged to others\u2014argues that the heart of the matter may be intellectual property. As Moss points out, before the Internet, when copyrighted information existed mostly in the form of physical objects, it was inconvenient to violate copyright law, for purely practical reasons. Then the Internet created a giant mashup of Alexandria, the Louvre, the Times-Herald-News-World-Journal-Tribune, and all of television, Hollywood, and the music industry. People started to feel existentially entitled to this wealth of information. As it became normal to post songs, video clips, essays, and stories\u2014all copyrighted by other people\u2014on Web sites, that sense of ownership increased. In many minds, it became not just a convenience but a right.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThis transformation occurred during the same years the Internet became a place to do business. When social-media sites such as Twitter and Facebook merged those two functions\u2014turning the common person\u2019s scrapbook into a cash cow for corporations\u2014they sparked the Internet\u2019s next evolutionary adaptation. The consumer and the citizen now combined to form a complicated new species, most of whose members experienced the change as extremely empowering\u2014even as they were also becoming extremely vulnerable. Individuals were using their free access to intellectual property to express themselves to one another\u2014our Facebook \u201clikes\u201d equaled our actual \u201cselves\u201d\u2014creating a phenomenon that is, for governments as well as corporations, the most tempting target imaginable. This trove of information is to an ordinary census database what a super-collider is to a slingshot.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EPrivacy advocates sounded alarms about the problem, but the 2009 Green Revolution protests in Iran were a major turning point. The ease with which the Iranian government spied on its own citizens\u2014using techniques that anyone could deploy, with free and open-source software\u2014showed the fundamental insecurity of all unencrypted data (which is almost all data) on the Internet. Iranian-government authorities were able to read citizens\u2019 e-mails, diagram their social networks, and keep watch on almost anything else they wanted to observe. The spectacle of that violation, Moss says, underscored for everyone that the character of the Internet had fundamentally changed. It had evolved from, as he puts it, a place \u201cto put pictures of your cat\u201d to a place where \u201cyour liberty\u2019s at stake.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EEven so, the most influential Web sites, such as Google, Facebook, and Twitter, balked at adapting to the new reality they\u2019d helped bring into existence. No communications on any of those sites were fully encrypted yet. Without mockery, Moss recites their arguments in a plain tone, strained only by mild weariness: \u201cIt\u2019s too expensive. We never designed it to be all encrypted. And, you know, the Net is not a private place anyway. It\u2019s not really our problem.\u201d His response, in the same tone, is that, since these corporations built their empires by encouraging everybody to share everything, they have a responsibility to provide security.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EDuring that violent week in 2009, Iran also blocked its citizens\u2019 access to popular dissident Web sites. Government authorities hijacked the Internet\u2019s address book\u2014using a technique called D.N.S. blocking\u2014so that when people tried to organize via Facebook or Twitter, they got sent elsewhere. Today, as chief security officer for icann, Moss is implementing a set of technical changes that will eventually make it more difficult for anyone to engage in D.N.S. blocking\u2014difficult, but not impossible. \u201cI\u2019m curious if it\u2019s fixable,\u201d Moss admits. \u201cEverybody always calls it rebuilding the airplane in flight. We can\u2019t stop and reboot the Internet.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ETechnical constraints are complicated by politics. Not everyone approves of the changes Moss promotes. This winter, Congress considered two bills designed to stop online piracy. The Protect Intellectual Property Act (pipa) and the Stop Online Piracy Act (sopa) could have allowed the U.S. government to mandate D.N.S. blocking\u2014the technique that Iran had used\u2014to prevent Americans from seeing unauthorized postings of copyrighted material on social-media or search-engine sites. The bill might also have made those sites responsible for removing links to pirated material. The D.N.S.-blocking provision was dropped from the bills, whose other problematic features were still subject to revision. But a ferocious Web revolt, incited, in part, by Internet giants such as Reddit, Google, and Wikipedia, invoked the specter of censorship. The legislation was effectively killed.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAccording to Moss, people who want more government control of the Internet are saying, \u201cWell, we\u2019ll just do this. We\u2019ll just do that.\u201d He says, \u201cIt\u2019s like, You just don\u2019t do that with the Internet. Don\u2019t have the legislator who doesn\u2019t understand how anything works make the decisions. The biggest fear is that you\u2019ll have governments around the world legislating technical standards. And then everything comes crashing down.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EBesides, he goes on, \u201cthe more government tries to regulate, the more people will try to build an Internet that is uncensorable and unfilterable and unblockable\u201d\u2014with tools such as darknets, which are hidden networks that run on privately owned machines. On the other side, authoritarian governments want to build their own private Internets. The Iranian government has in fact launched a \u201chalal\u201d Internet, cut off from the rest of the world.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EEven Moss, who participates in the highest-level discussions about global Internet policy, finds himself unable to keep up with all of the efforts to control the Internet that are happening right now. He says, \u201cIf you\u2019re using an analogy of Internet wars, the battles are coming faster.\u201d No sooner had sopa and pipa been scuttled than other legislation sprang up in their place in the U.S., Europe, and elsewhere. In January, after Poland signed an international copyright agreement that included provisions similar to those in sopa and pipa, a group of Polish legislators protested the vote by wearing Guy Fawkes masks\u2014the visual emblem of Anonymous\u2014inside the Polish parliamentary chamber.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EOne thing is clear. After this winter\u2019s debates on piracy, it will be difficult for legislators to handle Internet policy the way they\u2019ve handled so many other issues: by gentlemen\u2019s agreements among interested parties. The intensity of protest will make that impossible. And the guerrillas have powerful weapons.\u003Cbr /\u003EIV. The Summer of Lulz\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThe man known as Jericho said, \u201cRaise your hand if you were never an asshole at some point in your career.\u201d Not many hands went up. Last August, hundreds of people jammed into a ballroom at the Rio hotel in Las Vegas for a Def Con panel on hackers who operate under the name of Anonymous. The event was called \u201cWhoever Fights Monsters\u201d\u2014a reference to Nietzsche: \u201cWhoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he himself does not become a monster.\u201d Jericho\u2019s line was a reference to Aaron Barr, the former C.E.O. of the cyber-security firm HBGary Federal. Several months earlier, Barr had plotted to discredit WikiLeaks by faking documents to make the group look unreliable. Then Barr investigated the Anonymous hackers who were supporting WikiLeaks, and boasted to the Financial Times that he had \u201ccollected information on their core leaders, including many of their real names.\u201d In retaliation, Anonymous hackers annihilated Barr\u2019s Web site, spilled HBGary\u2019s archive of 71,000 e-mails onto the Web, raided Barr\u2019s Twitter account, and remotely deleted everything from his iPad. Stephen Colbert summarized the event memorably: \u201cAnonymous is a hornet\u2019s nest, and Barr said, \u2018I\u2019m gonna stick my penis in this thing.\u2019\u201d\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EJericho is known to the outside world as Brian Martin, a Denver cyber-security consultant. The objective of his discussion was to talk about\u2014and to\u2014Anonymous hackers. Some of them were in attendance. Jericho was hoping to nudge them toward using their power in constructive ways that minimize collateral damage.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EHe sat at a table onstage with Joshua Corman, whose day job is as director of security for a firm called Akamai. Corman, a compact, bearded man, tapped his fingers on the table, fiddling with his Starbucks coffee cup. A few months later, in Corman\u2019s dining room in the small New Hampshire town where he lives, we watched a video of the discussion. He recalled being almost paralyzed with nerves.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAfter the HBGary hack last February, the public image of Anonymous went split-screen. On the one hand, Anonymous operations supported the Arab Spring (and, later, Occupy Wall Street). On the other hand, a group of hackers identifying itself as a splinter of Anon, called LulzSec (\u201clulz\u201d means \u201claughing out loud\u201d at the victim of a prank; \u201csec\u201d means security), launched a series of attacks that trashed all standards of privacy and security. The attacks, known as \u201cthe summer of lulz,\u201d were, on the whole, as pathologically anarchic as something the Joker might have done. LulzSec hacked Fox.com and leaked the contestant database for the show X Factor, then posted a fake news story about Biggie Smalls and Tupac Shakur on the PBS Web site. When Arizona passed a Draconian immigration bill, LulzSec spilled online the personal contact information of hundreds of the state\u2019s policemen.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EIn many cases, Corman recalls, \u201cthere was no moral, or righteous, or freedom cause\u201d behind the actions. \u201cIt was about having fun and breaking stuff.\u201d When he decided to speak publicly, Corman endorsed the goals of using the Web to effect political change and expose corruption, goals that Anonymous hackers sometimes cite. Even so, he could not stop worrying that by doing so he was putting himself and his family in harm\u2019s way.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EReporters generally refer to Anonymous as a \u201cgroup\u201d or, somewhat more accurately, as \u201ca loose collective.\u201d Anonymous, Corman explains, is not really a group, and it is a \u201ccollective\u201d only insofar as there is some overlap among the individuals who perform the deeds attributed to Anonymous. \u201cAnonymous is more like a brand or a franchise,\u201d Corman says\u2014it\u2019s a term used by many individuals and groups with many ideologies for many kinds of actions. Hacking by Anonymous generally expresses a hunger for the complete transparency of governments and corporations. Anonymous hackers often oppose surveillance and promote self-government. Beyond these principles, there is little consensus. Corman compares Anonymous to a Rorschach blot, in which the forces of Order and Disorder alike see what they want to see.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EWith Jericho, Corman started tracking Anonymous last year. (This effort has nothing to do with his day job at Akamai.) On Corman\u2019s blog, the two offer what may be the most clear-eyed analysis of the Anonymous phenomenon available anywhere. Why, given the risks, does Corman pursue it? In some ways, the arc of his life seems to leave him little choice. He became the man of the household at age 14, after his parents\u2019 divorce. Like many children who prematurely take on adult responsibilities, he developed a fascination with power. For Corman, that fascination was nourished by the comic-book adventures of Spider-Man, a six-foot plastic statue of whom stands in the foyer of his house. He often quotes a famous Spider-Man line\u2014\u201cWith great power comes great responsibility.\u201d Corman sometimes escaped from the burdens at home by diving into his computer. He compares his early experiences of programming, and of the Net, to a kind of sorcery.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ECorman believes that the spread of \u201chacktivism,\u201d which first made mainstream headlines when Anonymous attacked the Church of Scientology in 2008, demonstrates that \u201cthose who can best wield this new magic are not nations. They\u2019re not politicians. The youngest citizens of the Net don\u2019t even recognize allegiance to a country or to a political party. Their allegiance is to a hive. In some ways this is very exciting. In other ways this is terrifying.\u201d The terrifying part, for Corman, is that the Web gives individuals immense power without instilling the \u201ccompassion, humility, wisdom, or restraint to wield that power responsibly.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ECorman once jokingly referred to himself as \u201cthe guy with the Spider-Man statue who\u2019s gnashing his teeth in New Hampshire.\u201d Like everyone who understands the decentralized structure of the Internet, he is skeptical of government attempts to control it. He does harbor some hope, and it\u2019s partly a legacy of those comic books: \u201cThe most badass hackers I know get no satisfaction out of attacking. They prefer defending, because it\u2019s harder.\u201d He wonders if we\u2019re about to see the rise of another form of Internet vigilante, who will create tools to vanquish Anonymous attacks and deliver the miscreants by the scruff of the neck, as Superman would, to the government\u2019s doorstep. \u201cDo the Avengers need to rise?\u201d Corman asks. \u201cWhen do they rise? They rise when the system doesn\u2019t sufficiently fight evil.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EIn the meantime, Anonymous has spawned a tiny cottage industry that keeps a very low profile: mercenary fighters hired by major corporations to protect them from attacks. HBGary used to perform this kind of service, until it was ambushed. These mercenaries conduct surveillance on the Internet chat rooms where Anonymous hackers congregate, hoping to warn corporate clients of potential peril. They also develop virtual weapons that companies can buy to defend themselves.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EIt is hard to defend against the media, however, which has mainly served the purposes of Anonymous. One Fortune 100 mercenary I spoke with laid out the typical template in the press: \u201cThe stories are: Insert high-value target here; something bad happens; attribute it to Anon. And people are eating that up.\u201d At the \u201cWhoever Fights Monsters\u201d panel discussion in Las Vegas last summer, Joshua Corman says, one hacker in the audience asked, \u201cWhy doesn\u2019t Anonymous do something more discreet instead of these huge attacks that cause collateral damage, and just tell the press what you did?\u201d Another hacker, who is known to participate in Anonymous operations, answered instantly: \u201cThey don\u2019t cover it. We tried.\u201d Listening to that exchange, Corman says, he realized, \u201cThe media is a player in this drama. They\u2019re not observing or describing. They\u2019re being played.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAnd they\u2019re being played by all parties. The bust of Anonymous and LulzSec in March was hailed even by many leading cyber-security bloggers as \u201cthe end of Anon.\u201d The idea that any faction of Anonymous has a \u201chead\u201d that could be chopped off, as the F.B.I. claimed, suggests either a fundamental lack of understanding of the phenomenon or a willful misrepresentation of it. (It may well be the latter. According to the F.B.I., the most prominent among the hackers who were arrested, Hector Monsegur, known as \u201cSabu,\u201d had been an F.B.I. informant since the previous June\u2014a period during which he rallied LulzSec hackers to attack the F.B.I.) Corman says, \u201cEven if every current participant of Anonymous were arrested, someone would take up the design of this activity, if not the mantle.\u201d In other words: as an instrument of disruption, Anonymous may be too resilient ever to be killed.\u003Cbr /\u003EV. Organized Chaos\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EA new telecom treaty is unlikely to result in either side achieving total victory. At the very least, however, the negotiation in Dubai will move countries to put their cards on the table and declare just how much control they want to assert over Internet governance.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThe Net has given more individuals more power in a shorter period of time than any new technology in history. And unlike many other world-changing technologies, there is no institutional barrier to access. This has made it, on balance, mostly destructive of institutional authority, especially that of nation-states. National sovereignty encompasses many powers, but one of its core elements has been a monopoly on the control of overwhelming force. Now that hackers are able to penetrate any and all computer networks, including military ones, that monopoly no longer exists. Nation-states, not surprisingly, resist the erosion of their power and seek ways to reclaim it.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EHamadoun Tour\u00e9, who will be running the show in Dubai, says he seeks nothing more than a \u201clight touch\u201d on the Internet\u2019s operations. He in fact chuckled when he uttered those words in the course of an interview.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAt least three big issues are very likely to be on the table in Dubai, and there\u2019s nothing light about them. One is taxation\u2014a \u201cper click\u201d levy on international Internet traffic. Western countries and business organizations oppose such a tax, as you would expect. China and many Third World countries favor it, saying the funds would help build the Internet in developing countries.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EA second issue is data privacy and cyber-security. Authoritarian governments want to tie people\u2019s real names and identities to online activity, and they want international law to permit national encryption standards to allow government surveillance.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThe third issue is Internet management. Last year, Russia, China, and some pliant allies jointly proposed a U.N. General Assembly resolution (which failed) suggesting the creation of a global information-security \u201ccode of conduct\u201d and\u2014as if declaring open season on icann and the other non-governmental groups currently in charge\u2014asserting that \u201cpolicy authority for Internet-related public issues is the sovereign right of states.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAll of these proposals amount to a wish list by the most extreme elements of the forces of Order. The forces of Disorder have no official voice at the negotiations\u2014obviously they\u2019re not invited\u2014but they represent a wild card. Although they have thus far shown no apparent interest in Dubai, some of them have announced plans to perform a technical feat beyond anything done so far. In what is being called Operation Global Blackout, they want to bring down the Domain Name System itself\u2014and thus halt all Internet traffic completely\u2014with a springtime attack on the root servers, all in the name of protesting \u201csopa, Wallstreet, our irresponsible leaders, and the beloved bankers who are starving the world for their own selfish needs out of sheer sadistic fun.\u201d Whether that happens (or even could happen), the announcement was an obvious warning flag. Internet experts take the threat seriously. Even if it fails, it presages future attempts.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EIn the War for the Internet, is there a middle way? The forces of Organized Chaos are not an organized group, don\u2019t call themselves by any name, and disagree on many points. In what follows, I\u2019m going to try to distill a synthesis of their views.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThe commitment that unanimously binds them is to make the Internet as reliable as possible. One leading apostle of reliability is Dan Kaminsky, a security analyst and D.N.S. expert and the head of a new stealth start-up. He is a close friend of Jeff Moss\u2019s\u2014and, like Moss, a self-appointed ambassador to Washington. He sometimes opens meetings on the Hill by saying, \u201cThere are bad guys on the Internet. Unfortunately, you\u2019re helping them.\u201d He is a serial entrepreneur whose current mission is to augment passwords with other ways for Internet users to prove their identities that are more robust, easier to use, and harder to crack. \u201cThe only thing everyone agrees on,\u201d says Kaminsky, \u201cis that the Internet is making everyone money now and it\u2019s got to keep working.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAs they devise new systems of authentication, Kaminsky and others are working to be sure that these authentication systems preserve the qualities of privacy and online anonymity\u2014even though anonymity has contributed to, if not created, almost every problem at issue in the War for the Internet. The task at hand is finding some way to square the circle: a way to have both anonymity and authentication\u2014and therefore both generative chaos and the capacity for control\u2014without absolute insistence on either. It is a neat philosophical trick: Sun Tzu meets John Locke meets Adam Smith meets Michel Foucault.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ENo one can say exactly how these sorts of standards would be defined and applied, or who would be their custodians. World governance doesn\u2019t work. It has been pursued for eons by hardheaded pragmatists and woolly-brained eccentrics. Time and again it has been defeated by the vagaries of human nature and the opportunistic conflict of competing interests. In the case of the Internet, the number of interested parties runs into the billions, and they come from divergent cultures and pursue irreconcilable objectives. As Vint Cerf points out, this basic reality seeps through every aspect of the War for the Internet. Around the world and across generations, people have different tolerances for civility, incivility, and invasion of privacy. \u201cI think it will be very hard to resolve this in a way that\u2019s globally acceptable,\u201d he says.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EFreedom in human society, by definition, includes some concept of boundaries. Freedom on the Internet has, thus far, lacked any real concept of boundaries. But boundaries are being invented. It seems certain that nations, corporations, or both will create more zones on the Internet where all who enter will have to prove their real-world identities. Google and Facebook are already moving in this direction. The most heavy-handed suggestions entail a virtual passport or ID, which could include biometric data.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ESome see stringent, universal, and mandatory authentication of identity as a commonsense solution to a number of the Internet\u2019s biggest problems. If all of our alter egos were brought into line with our analog selves, wouldn\u2019t we all behave better? Wouldn\u2019t online criminals stop using the cloak of anonymity to steal from and spy on people? Wouldn\u2019t people pay for the books, music, movies, and newspapers that many now take for free?\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EThe forces of Organized Chaos reject this argument. Vint Cerf says, \u201cWhen I hear senators and congressmen complaining about anonymous speech, I want to stop them and say, you should read your own history. The anonymous tracts that objected to British rule and rules had a great deal to do with the American Revolution. Weren\u2019t you paying attention in civics?\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EGiven the radically decentralized nature of the Internet, the most important thing that anyone can do is to try to make the center hold\u2014but not too tightly. That means protecting the Domain Name System, the Internet\u2019s sole central feature, from government control while keeping governments involved in maintaining it. The point is: there is no single \u201csafe pair of hands,\u201d whatever the forces of Order might say. Any safe pair of hands is a dangerous pair of hands.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAt the same time, the security of the D.N.S. itself needs to be radically upgraded, to obstruct hijacking and surveillance. Software-coding languages must become more secure, to make programs more difficult to hack and manipulate. Breach-reporting standards must be established, at least for critical infrastructure, to help corporations and law enforcement share knowledge about hacking threats. Metrics for security and privacy\u2014two qualities that most people value but no one knows how to measure\u2014need to be defined. Finally, \u201cnetwork neutrality\u201d must be preserved. Net neutrality is almost as plastic a concept as Internet freedom, but to the forces of Organized Chaos, it means maintaining the telecommunications infrastructure as a level playing field. The Internet is open to everyone; service providers can\u2019t discriminate; all applications and content moves at the same speed.\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003ETo accomplish any of these things, governments will need to create formal mechanisms to give the people who know the most about the Internet\u2014including computer engineers and hackers\u2014a meaningful voice in making policy. Basic Internet literacy is now as critical to good governance as basic knowledge about economics or public health, yet Washington is still full of what Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, of California, calls \u201cWite-Out-on-the-screen people.\u201d Dan Kaminsky says that hackers, for their part, have to stop focusing exclusively on \u201cbreaking stuff\u200a\u201d and also start focusing on \u201cfixing stuff.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EAnd if Internet companies do not want intrusive regulation, whether from their own governments or from treaties such as the one to be negotiated in Dubai, they will need to start solving the Internet\u2019s problems on their own. Melissa Hathaway, who led cyber-security strategy for Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, points out that \u201cthe top 20 Internet service providers in the world carry 90 percent of the Internet traffic. They can see when you\u2019re infected by a botnet. They can see when you\u2019ve been hacked.\u201d Hathaway has defined a set of general principles that Internet companies and governments might get behind, such as a \u201cduty to warn if in imminent danger.\u201d As she puts it, \u201cIt\u2019s just like the law of the sea: the duty to assist.\u201d\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003EBeyond this core agenda, the forces of Organized Chaos, by and large, think that the Internet should be allowed to evolve on its own, the way human societies always have. The forces of Organized Chaos have a pretty good sense of how it will evolve, at least in the short term. The Internet will stratify, as cities did long ago. There will be the mass Internet we already know\u2014a teeming bazaar of artists and merchants and thinkers as well as pickpockets and hucksters and whores. It is a place anyone can enter, anonymously or not, and for free. Travel at your own risk! But anyone who wishes can decide to leave this bazaar for the security of the bank or the government office\u2014or, if you have enough money, the limousine, the Sky Club, the platinum concierge. You will always have to give something up. If you want utter and absolute privacy, you will have to pay for it\u2014or know the right people, who will give you access to their hidden darknets. For some services, you may decide to trade your privacy and anonymity for security. Depending on circumstance and desire, people will range among these worlds.\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EAside from wealth or arcane knowledge, the only other guarantor of security will be isolation. Some people will pioneer new ways of life that minimize their involvement online. Still others will opt out altogether\u2014to find or create a little corner of the planet where the Internet does not reach. Depending on how things go, that little corner could become a very crowded place. And you\u2019d be surprised at how many of the best-informed people about the Internet have already started preparing for the trip.\u003C/p\u003E"} <p><p> When the Internet was created, decades ago, one thing was inevitable: the war today over how (or whether) to control it, and who should have that power. Battle lines have been drawn between repressive regimes and Western democracies, corporations and customers, hackers and law enforcement. Looking toward a year-end negotiation in Dubai, where 193 nations will gather to revise a U.N. treaty concerning the Internet, Michael Joseph Gross lays out the stakes in a conflict that could split the virtual world as we know it.</p><p>I. Time Bomb </p><p>In 1979 the Dubai World Trade Centre dominated the skyline of Dubai City, on the horn of the Arabian Peninsula. Today, the World Trade Centre looks quaint, like an old egg carton stuck into the ground amid a phantasmagoric forest of skyscrapers. But come December the World Trade Centre will once more be the most important place in Dubai City—and, for a couple of weeks, one of the more important places in the world. Diplomats from 193 countries will converge there to renegotiate a United Nations treaty called the International Telecommunications Regulations. The sprawling document, which governs telephone, television, and radio networks, may be extended to cover the Internet, raising questions about who should control it, and how. Arrayed on one side will be representatives from the United States and other major Western powers, advocating what many call “Internet freedom,” a plastic concept that has been defined by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as the right to use the Internet to “express one’s views,” to “peacefully assemble,” and to “seek or share” information. The U.S. and most of its allies basically want to keep Internet governance the way it is: run by a small group of technical nonprofit and volunteer organizations, most of them based in the United States.<br /><br />On the other side will be representatives from countries where governments want to place restrictions on how people use the Internet. These include Russia, China, Brazil, India, Iran, and a host of others. All of them have implemented or experimented with more intrusive monitoring of online activities than the U.S. is publicly known to practice. A number of countries have openly called for the creation of a “new global body” to oversee online policy. At the very least, they’d like to give the United Nations a great deal more control over the Internet.<br /><br />Mediating these forces in Dubai will be a man named Hamadoun Touré. Charming and wily, he is a satellite engineer who was born in Mali, educated in the Soviet Union, and now lives in Geneva. He serves as secretary-general of the U.N.’s International Telecommunication Union (I.T.U.).<br /><br />Touré abjures pallid diplomatic doublespeak, instead opting for full-on self-contradiction that nonetheless leaves little doubt where his sympathies lie. In one breath Touré says, “The people who are trying to say that I.T.U. has an intention of taking over the management of the Internet simply do not know how the I.T.U. is functioning.” In the next, noting that Internet users in America represent only a tenth of the total, he says, “When an invention becomes used by billions across the world, it no longer remains the sole property of one nation, however powerful that nation might be. There should be a mechanism where many countries have an opportunity to have a say. I think that’s democratic. Do you think that’s democratic?”<br /><br />There is a war under way for control of the Internet, and every day brings word of new clashes on a shifting and widening battlefront. Governments, corporations, criminals, anarchists—they all have their own war aims.<br /><br />In February, the Swedish Supreme Court refused to hear appeals from three founders of the Pirate Bay, the world’s largest illegal file-sharing Web site, who had been sentenced to prison for copyright infringement. The same day, one of those men issued an online call to arms, urging users to abandon the entertainment industry: “Stop seeing their movies. Stop listening to their music.... Remix, reuse, use, abuse.” Shortly after that, Google was discovered to have been secretly bypassing privacy settings on Apple iPhones and computers that use the Safari browser; the company was monitoring Web activity by people who believed they’d blocked such tracking. Around the same time, the European Union proposed that companies such as Google must obtain explicit consent from individuals for data collection; but these regulations would not take effect for years, by which point digital dossiers on almost every Internet user will have been bought and sold by marketers many times over. Meanwhile, the F.B.I. has been distributing “See something, say something” flyers to Internet-café owners in the U.S., warning that the use of certain basic cyber-security measures could be considered grounds for suspicion of possible terrorist activity. In response to the F.B.I.’s growing preoccupation with virtual insurgents, guerrilla hackers operating under the name Anonymous posted online an audio recording of F.B.I. and Scotland Yard officials discussing how to handle Anonymous attacks. Then Interpol, together with American and European authorities, busted 31 suspected Anonymous hackers—including the one who covertly recorded that conference call—and an F.B.I. official declared victory over LulzSec, one of the most prominent Anonymous splinters, with the boast that “we’re chopping off the head” of that faction.<br /><br />The War for the Internet was inevitable—a time bomb built into its creation. The war grows out of tensions that came to a head as the Internet grew to serve populations far beyond those for which it was designed. Originally built to supplement the analog interactions among American soldiers and scientists who knew one another off-line, the Internet was established on a bedrock of trust: trust that people were who they said they were, and trust that information would be handled according to existing social and legal norms. That foundation of trust crumbled as the Internet expanded. The system is now approaching a state of crisis on four main fronts.<br /><br />The first is sovereignty: by definition, a boundary-less system flouts geography and challenges the power of nation-states. The second is piracy and intellectual property: information wants to be free, as the hoary saying goes, but rights-holders want to be paid and protected. The third is privacy: online anonymity allows for creativity and political dissent, but it also gives cover to disruptive and criminal behavior—and much of what Internet users believe they do anonymously online can be tracked and tied to people’s real-world identities. The fourth is security: free access to an open Internet makes users vulnerable to various kinds of hacking, including corporate and government espionage, personal surveillance, the hijacking of Web traffic, and remote manipulation of computer-controlled military and industrial processes.<br /><br />There is no agreement about how any of these problems should be solved. There isn’t even agreement on how to define the basic terms of debate. “Internet freedom,” for instance, is the avowed objective not only of the U.S. secretary of state but also of WikiLeaks, which published hundreds of thousands of classified State Department diplomatic cables.<br /><br />One way to think about the War for the Internet is to cast it as a polar conflict: Order versus Disorder, Control versus Chaos. The forces of Order want to superimpose existing, pre-digital power structures and their associated notions of privacy, intellectual property, security, and sovereignty onto the Internet. The forces of Disorder want to abandon those rickety old structures and let the will of the crowd create a new global culture, maybe even new kinds of virtual “countries.” At their most extreme, the forces of Disorder want an Internet with no rules at all.<br /><br />A conflict with two sides is a picture we’re used to—and although in this case it’s simplistic, it’s a way to get a handle on what the stakes are. But the story of the War for the Internet, as it’s usually told, leaves out the characters who have the best chance to resolve the conflict in a reasonable way. Think of these people as the forces of Organized Chaos. They are more farsighted than the forces of Order and Disorder. They tend to know more about the Internet as both a technical and social artifact. And they are pragmatists. They are like a Resistance group that hopes to influence the battle and to shape a fitful peace. The Resistance includes people such as Vint Cerf, who helped design the Internet in the first place; Jeff Moss, a hacker of immense powers who has been trying to get Order and Disorder to talk to each other; Joshua Corman, a cyber-security analyst who spends his off-hours keeping tabs on the activities of hackers operating under the name of Anonymous; and Dan Kaminsky, one of the world’s top experts on the Internet’s central feature, the Domain Name System.<br /><br />Although they may feel a certain kinship with one another, they are not an organized group. Their main point of agreement is that the Internet has changed the world forever, in ways we are only beginning to understand. They know that Order is impossible and that Disorder is unacceptable. They understand that the world is a messy place whose social arrangements come and go. But they are united in the conviction that what must be preserved and promoted at all costs is what the forces of Order and Disorder, in their very different ways, are both intent on undermining: the integrity of the Internet itself as a reliable, independent, and open structure.<br /><br />II. Free-for-All<br /><br />Vint Cerf knew from the start that there was a problem—he just couldn’t fix it. The year was 1975, and Cerf was on a team of computer scientists at Stanford University under contract to finish a new communications network for the U.S. military. The goal was full cryptographic capability—a system that allowed all messages to be authenticated from both sides—on a network that could be used anywhere in the world. Two things prevented the scientists from making this network as secure as they would have liked. One obstacle was institutional: “The only technology that would have allowed for such security was still classified at the time,” Cerf recalls. The other obstacle was simple momentum. Before the developers could implement truly secure encryption, Cerf explains, “the system kind of got loose,” meaning that problems would have to be fixed on the fly.<br /><br />Cerf is frequently referred to as “the father of the Internet.” His most celebrated achievement, for which he shares credit with the engineer and computer scientist Robert Kahn, was creating the TCP/IP protocol, the system that allows computers and networks all over the world to talk to one another. He was an early chairman of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or icann, which maintains the Domain Name System, the virtual address book that shows your computer where to go when you type the name of a Web site into your browser. He now works as Internet Evangelist—that’s his actual title—for Google.<br /><br />Most of the Internet’s problems, Cerf believes, stem from the issue of state sovereignty. The Internet was designed to ignore national boundaries. It was designed this way, Cerf says, because “it was intended to deal with a military problem”: how could soldiers exchange messages without letting their enemies know where they were? Cerf and others solved that problem by building a decentralized network that routed messages from place to place using addresses that had nothing to do with physical locations.<br /><br />This was something new. International telephone transmissions were marked with country codes that named their origins and end points and had to pass through central switches in the countries at both ends. Radio transmissions, similarly, had to hop from the fixed points of towers. On the Internet, by contrast, traffic skittered from place to place on a network whose shape could be in constant flux. The Internet had no center at all.<br /><br />With one exception. The sole centralized feature of the Internet was the Domain Name System. The United States created that system, which lives on root servers, and Americans maintained it even as the Internet started spreading. The first thing your computer does when you type a Web site or e-mail address into your browser is to ask a local D.N.S. server for the numerical IP address of that destination. Because the D.N.S. servers are the first stop, the D.N.S. is not just the Internet’s address book. It’s also the corner post office. Whoever runs the D.N.S. system can potentially control whether your browser requests get to the proper place and thus control where you can and can’t go online.<br /><br />By the mid-1990s, the Internet was teeming with life, some of it dangerous or unpleasant. Certain aspects of the unpleasantness were inadvertently self-created. Since World War II, the U.S. government had classified cryptography as a munition, subject to stringent export controls. In the Internet’s first decades, those restrictions made it difficult to do business securely online. No one liked the prospect of making financial transactions on the Web without strong encryption, and international transactions were impossible unless parties in both countries used the same encryption techniques. So in 1997, President Bill Clinton relaxed export controls on encryption. This had the unintended effect of giving criminals new ways to steal intellectual property: now they could easily encrypt what they took and send it out of the country, to Russia, China, or elsewhere. Those criminals pioneered the systematic exfiltration of intellectual property that plagues American business today.<br /><br />Loosening export controls also had the effect—and this was very much intended—of commercializing the Internet. In fact, the Clinton administration was creating something close to an online free-for-all with its determined efforts to make the Net an engine for business. But even after the encryption export controls were relaxed, businesses outside the U.S. remained wary of the Internet, thinking of it as a de facto American protectorate. Its one centralized feature, the Domain Name System, remained under U.S.-government control.<br /><br />Clinton had seen that problem coming, and had already set out to turn the D.N.S. over to the private sector. The result was icann, a nonprofit body whose advisory committees include representatives of more than 100 countries and scores of corporations. Technically, icann remains under the Commerce Department’s authority, but other governments have a meaningful say in the group’s decisions. For instance, Xiaodong Lee, one of China’s Internet czars, is icann’s vice president for Asia. The creation of icann signaled that the Internet would be something akin to global patrimony, not an online version of American soil.<br /><br />This shift helped set the Internet free. But the more the global economy came to depend on the Internet, the harder it was for governments to tame or limit it. This, too, was intentional. To ensure a surge of e-commerce, the administration systematically pushed aside or revised whatever might stand in the way, including taxes, tariffs, regulations, and intellectual-property standards. Grabbing with both hands for the Internet economy meant letting go of old ideals of governance.<br /><br />Whole new problems eventually arose as markets and communications moved online, and as all these online exchanges were preserved digitally and became searchable. Who owned all this data? Who should have access to it? Corporations such as Microsoft, Google, and Facebook began butting heads with the government. They also began butting heads with their own customers.<br /><br />Corporate ambitions are a huge issue, but “the real War for the Net,” Cerf believes, “is governments who want to control it, and that includes our own government. If you think about protecting the population and observing our conventional freedoms, the two are really very much in tension.” Cerf cites the debate over the U.S.A. Patriot Act, enacted in 2001, which greatly expanded the U.S. government’s domestic-surveillance authority. He also cites efforts by Middle Eastern governments to control online communications, particularly as the Arab Spring began to unfold, in 2011. And then there’s the vast example of China, whose Great Firewall puts severe limits on what Chinese users can view online.<br /><br />On the Internet, what constitutes a “government” anyway? When Google announced in 2010 that it had fallen victim to Chinese hackers, it chose to publicize the fact that the Gmail accounts of Chinese political dissidents had been compromised. Congressional staffers asked company officials at the time about rumors that Google’s data losses were in fact far more extensive. They recall tense conversations with Google executives, who in effect asserted executive privilege. One Hill aide recalls, “Clearly these people are used to having their way with everybody, which pissed us off. Because they are not a state within a state, even though they practically claim sovereignty.”<br />III. The Dark Tangent<br /><br />Dead Addict remembers his hand trembling as he dialed the number. What, he wondered, was the point of even making the call? He stopped, reminding himself: the Dark Tangent was counting on him.<br /><br />In 1992, a very young man named Jeff Moss, whose hacker name is the Dark Tangent, wanted to meet some friends he’d made online. So he organized a summer gathering in Las Vegas, which he planned to call “Def Con,” short for “defense condition” (defcon), the military’s term for its worldwide alert posture. Changes in defcon—a numbered scale from 1 (war) to 5 (peace)—had cued the turning points in WarGames, a movie that made the young Jeff Moss aspire to become a hacker in the first place. Moss had high hopes. For one thing, he wanted Def Con to be a great party. He also wanted to start “building a system of checks and balances” between hackers and law enforcement, two cultures that were becoming bitter adversaries. So when his friend Eli, who goes by the name Dead Addict, volunteered to help Moss plan the gathering, Eli got the job of calling one of the hackers’ arch-nemeses, an assistant attorney general in Arizona named Gail Thackeray, and inviting her to come.</p><p>Two years earlier, Thackeray had helped the U.S. Secret Service run Operation Sun Devil, one of the first crackdowns on illegal computer hacking. A lot of hackers hated Thackeray, and Dead Addict was not surprised when she responded to his invitation with the words “No. I wouldn’t go to a convention of car thieves, either.”<br /><br />Hackers are nothing if not persistent, and Thackeray was eventually persuaded to spend a few days in the kiln that is Vegas in July. In a fire-engine-red blazer, she listened impassively while hackers as young as 14 described how to crack into every imaginable “secure” computer system. The hackers, for their part, eagerly picked Thackeray’s brain, to learn the legal implications of their recent and planned adventures. As Moss remembers, Thackeray frequently interrupted their questions to insert the word “hypothetically” in order to make herself feel a little better about being there.<br /><br />Every summer, Moss uses Def Con to promote conversation between the Internet’s forces of Order and Disorder. He has become the go-between who translates his subculture’s concerns to the culture at large, and vice versa. Each year, more and more law-enforcement, military, and intelligence personnel go to Def Con. On the cusp of early middle age, Moss remains boyish-looking. He wears rimless oval glasses and favors long, silk-lined Shanghai Tang coats. Moss has become a powerful man. He sits on the U.S. government’s Homeland Security Advisory Committee, and he serves as the chief security officer for icann.<br /><br />Where Vint Cerf argues that sovereignty lies at the heart of the War for the Internet, Moss—who as a hacker cut his teeth gaining access to systems and information that belonged to others—argues that the heart of the matter may be intellectual property. As Moss points out, before the Internet, when copyrighted information existed mostly in the form of physical objects, it was inconvenient to violate copyright law, for purely practical reasons. Then the Internet created a giant mashup of Alexandria, the Louvre, the Times-Herald-News-World-Journal-Tribune, and all of television, Hollywood, and the music industry. People started to feel existentially entitled to this wealth of information. As it became normal to post songs, video clips, essays, and stories—all copyrighted by other people—on Web sites, that sense of ownership increased. In many minds, it became not just a convenience but a right.<br /><br />This transformation occurred during the same years the Internet became a place to do business. When social-media sites such as Twitter and Facebook merged those two functions—turning the common person’s scrapbook into a cash cow for corporations—they sparked the Internet’s next evolutionary adaptation. The consumer and the citizen now combined to form a complicated new species, most of whose members experienced the change as extremely empowering—even as they were also becoming extremely vulnerable. Individuals were using their free access to intellectual property to express themselves to one another—our Facebook “likes” equaled our actual “selves”—creating a phenomenon that is, for governments as well as corporations, the most tempting target imaginable. This trove of information is to an ordinary census database what a super-collider is to a slingshot.<br /><br />Privacy advocates sounded alarms about the problem, but the 2009 Green Revolution protests in Iran were a major turning point. The ease with which the Iranian government spied on its own citizens—using techniques that anyone could deploy, with free and open-source software—showed the fundamental insecurity of all unencrypted data (which is almost all data) on the Internet. Iranian-government authorities were able to read citizens’ e-mails, diagram their social networks, and keep watch on almost anything else they wanted to observe. The spectacle of that violation, Moss says, underscored for everyone that the character of the Internet had fundamentally changed. It had evolved from, as he puts it, a place “to put pictures of your cat” to a place where “your liberty’s at stake.”<br /><br />Even so, the most influential Web sites, such as Google, Facebook, and Twitter, balked at adapting to the new reality they’d helped bring into existence. No communications on any of those sites were fully encrypted yet. Without mockery, Moss recites their arguments in a plain tone, strained only by mild weariness: “It’s too expensive. We never designed it to be all encrypted. And, you know, the Net is not a private place anyway. It’s not really our problem.” His response, in the same tone, is that, since these corporations built their empires by encouraging everybody to share everything, they have a responsibility to provide security.<br /><br />During that violent week in 2009, Iran also blocked its citizens’ access to popular dissident Web sites. Government authorities hijacked the Internet’s address book—using a technique called D.N.S. blocking—so that when people tried to organize via Facebook or Twitter, they got sent elsewhere. Today, as chief security officer for icann, Moss is implementing a set of technical changes that will eventually make it more difficult for anyone to engage in D.N.S. blocking—difficult, but not impossible. “I’m curious if it’s fixable,” Moss admits. “Everybody always calls it rebuilding the airplane in flight. We can’t stop and reboot the Internet.”<br /><br />Technical constraints are complicated by politics. Not everyone approves of the changes Moss promotes. This winter, Congress considered two bills designed to stop online piracy. The Protect Intellectual Property Act (pipa) and the Stop Online Piracy Act (sopa) could have allowed the U.S. government to mandate D.N.S. blocking—the technique that Iran had used—to prevent Americans from seeing unauthorized postings of copyrighted material on social-media or search-engine sites. The bill might also have made those sites responsible for removing links to pirated material. The D.N.S.-blocking provision was dropped from the bills, whose other problematic features were still subject to revision. But a ferocious Web revolt, incited, in part, by Internet giants such as Reddit, Google, and Wikipedia, invoked the specter of censorship. The legislation was effectively killed.<br /><br />According to Moss, people who want more government control of the Internet are saying, “Well, we’ll just do this. We’ll just do that.” He says, “It’s like, You just don’t do that with the Internet. Don’t have the legislator who doesn’t understand how anything works make the decisions. The biggest fear is that you’ll have governments around the world legislating technical standards. And then everything comes crashing down.”<br /><br />Besides, he goes on, “the more government tries to regulate, the more people will try to build an Internet that is uncensorable and unfilterable and unblockable”—with tools such as darknets, which are hidden networks that run on privately owned machines. On the other side, authoritarian governments want to build their own private Internets. The Iranian government has in fact launched a “halal” Internet, cut off from the rest of the world.<br /><br />Even Moss, who participates in the highest-level discussions about global Internet policy, finds himself unable to keep up with all of the efforts to control the Internet that are happening right now. He says, “If you’re using an analogy of Internet wars, the battles are coming faster.” No sooner had sopa and pipa been scuttled than other legislation sprang up in their place in the U.S., Europe, and elsewhere. In January, after Poland signed an international copyright agreement that included provisions similar to those in sopa and pipa, a group of Polish legislators protested the vote by wearing Guy Fawkes masks—the visual emblem of Anonymous—inside the Polish parliamentary chamber.<br /><br />One thing is clear. After this winter’s debates on piracy, it will be difficult for legislators to handle Internet policy the way they’ve handled so many other issues: by gentlemen’s agreements among interested parties. The intensity of protest will make that impossible. And the guerrillas have powerful weapons.<br />IV. The Summer of Lulz<br /><br />The man known as Jericho said, “Raise your hand if you were never an asshole at some point in your career.” Not many hands went up. Last August, hundreds of people jammed into a ballroom at the Rio hotel in Las Vegas for a Def Con panel on hackers who operate under the name of Anonymous. The event was called “Whoever Fights Monsters”—a reference to Nietzsche: “Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he himself does not become a monster.” Jericho’s line was a reference to Aaron Barr, the former C.E.O. of the cyber-security firm HBGary Federal. Several months earlier, Barr had plotted to discredit WikiLeaks by faking documents to make the group look unreliable. Then Barr investigated the Anonymous hackers who were supporting WikiLeaks, and boasted to the Financial Times that he had “collected information on their core leaders, including many of their real names.” In retaliation, Anonymous hackers annihilated Barr’s Web site, spilled HBGary’s archive of 71,000 e-mails onto the Web, raided Barr’s Twitter account, and remotely deleted everything from his iPad. Stephen Colbert summarized the event memorably: “Anonymous is a hornet’s nest, and Barr said, ‘I’m gonna stick my penis in this thing.’”</p><p>Jericho is known to the outside world as Brian Martin, a Denver cyber-security consultant. The objective of his discussion was to talk about—and to—Anonymous hackers. Some of them were in attendance. Jericho was hoping to nudge them toward using their power in constructive ways that minimize collateral damage.<br /><br />He sat at a table onstage with Joshua Corman, whose day job is as director of security for a firm called Akamai. Corman, a compact, bearded man, tapped his fingers on the table, fiddling with his Starbucks coffee cup. A few months later, in Corman’s dining room in the small New Hampshire town where he lives, we watched a video of the discussion. He recalled being almost paralyzed with nerves.<br /><br />After the HBGary hack last February, the public image of Anonymous went split-screen. On the one hand, Anonymous operations supported the Arab Spring (and, later, Occupy Wall Street). On the other hand, a group of hackers identifying itself as a splinter of Anon, called LulzSec (“lulz” means “laughing out loud” at the victim of a prank; “sec” means security), launched a series of attacks that trashed all standards of privacy and security. The attacks, known as “the summer of lulz,” were, on the whole, as pathologically anarchic as something the Joker might have done. LulzSec hacked Fox.com and leaked the contestant database for the show X Factor, then posted a fake news story about Biggie Smalls and Tupac Shakur on the PBS Web site. When Arizona passed a Draconian immigration bill, LulzSec spilled online the personal contact information of hundreds of the state’s policemen.<br /><br />In many cases, Corman recalls, “there was no moral, or righteous, or freedom cause” behind the actions. “It was about having fun and breaking stuff.” When he decided to speak publicly, Corman endorsed the goals of using the Web to effect political change and expose corruption, goals that Anonymous hackers sometimes cite. Even so, he could not stop worrying that by doing so he was putting himself and his family in harm’s way.<br /><br />Reporters generally refer to Anonymous as a “group” or, somewhat more accurately, as “a loose collective.” Anonymous, Corman explains, is not really a group, and it is a “collective” only insofar as there is some overlap among the individuals who perform the deeds attributed to Anonymous. “Anonymous is more like a brand or a franchise,” Corman says—it’s a term used by many individuals and groups with many ideologies for many kinds of actions. Hacking by Anonymous generally expresses a hunger for the complete transparency of governments and corporations. Anonymous hackers often oppose surveillance and promote self-government. Beyond these principles, there is little consensus. Corman compares Anonymous to a Rorschach blot, in which the forces of Order and Disorder alike see what they want to see.<br /><br />With Jericho, Corman started tracking Anonymous last year. (This effort has nothing to do with his day job at Akamai.) On Corman’s blog, the two offer what may be the most clear-eyed analysis of the Anonymous phenomenon available anywhere. Why, given the risks, does Corman pursue it? In some ways, the arc of his life seems to leave him little choice. He became the man of the household at age 14, after his parents’ divorce. Like many children who prematurely take on adult responsibilities, he developed a fascination with power. For Corman, that fascination was nourished by the comic-book adventures of Spider-Man, a six-foot plastic statue of whom stands in the foyer of his house. He often quotes a famous Spider-Man line—“With great power comes great responsibility.” Corman sometimes escaped from the burdens at home by diving into his computer. He compares his early experiences of programming, and of the Net, to a kind of sorcery.<br /><br />Corman believes that the spread of “hacktivism,” which first made mainstream headlines when Anonymous attacked the Church of Scientology in 2008, demonstrates that “those who can best wield this new magic are not nations. They’re not politicians. The youngest citizens of the Net don’t even recognize allegiance to a country or to a political party. Their allegiance is to a hive. In some ways this is very exciting. In other ways this is terrifying.” The terrifying part, for Corman, is that the Web gives individuals immense power without instilling the “compassion, humility, wisdom, or restraint to wield that power responsibly.”<br /><br />Corman once jokingly referred to himself as “the guy with the Spider-Man statue who’s gnashing his teeth in New Hampshire.” Like everyone who understands the decentralized structure of the Internet, he is skeptical of government attempts to control it. He does harbor some hope, and it’s partly a legacy of those comic books: “The most badass hackers I know get no satisfaction out of attacking. They prefer defending, because it’s harder.” He wonders if we’re about to see the rise of another form of Internet vigilante, who will create tools to vanquish Anonymous attacks and deliver the miscreants by the scruff of the neck, as Superman would, to the government’s doorstep. “Do the Avengers need to rise?” Corman asks. “When do they rise? They rise when the system doesn’t sufficiently fight evil.”<br /><br />In the meantime, Anonymous has spawned a tiny cottage industry that keeps a very low profile: mercenary fighters hired by major corporations to protect them from attacks. HBGary used to perform this kind of service, until it was ambushed. These mercenaries conduct surveillance on the Internet chat rooms where Anonymous hackers congregate, hoping to warn corporate clients of potential peril. They also develop virtual weapons that companies can buy to defend themselves.<br /><br />It is hard to defend against the media, however, which has mainly served the purposes of Anonymous. One Fortune 100 mercenary I spoke with laid out the typical template in the press: “The stories are: Insert high-value target here; something bad happens; attribute it to Anon. And people are eating that up.” At the “Whoever Fights Monsters” panel discussion in Las Vegas last summer, Joshua Corman says, one hacker in the audience asked, “Why doesn’t Anonymous do something more discreet instead of these huge attacks that cause collateral damage, and just tell the press what you did?” Another hacker, who is known to participate in Anonymous operations, answered instantly: “They don’t cover it. We tried.” Listening to that exchange, Corman says, he realized, “The media is a player in this drama. They’re not observing or describing. They’re being played.”<br /><br />And they’re being played by all parties. The bust of Anonymous and LulzSec in March was hailed even by many leading cyber-security bloggers as “the end of Anon.” The idea that any faction of Anonymous has a “head” that could be chopped off, as the F.B.I. claimed, suggests either a fundamental lack of understanding of the phenomenon or a willful misrepresentation of it. (It may well be the latter. According to the F.B.I., the most prominent among the hackers who were arrested, Hector Monsegur, known as “Sabu,” had been an F.B.I. informant since the previous June—a period during which he rallied LulzSec hackers to attack the F.B.I.) Corman says, “Even if every current participant of Anonymous were arrested, someone would take up the design of this activity, if not the mantle.” In other words: as an instrument of disruption, Anonymous may be too resilient ever to be killed.<br />V. Organized Chaos<br /><br />A new telecom treaty is unlikely to result in either side achieving total victory. At the very least, however, the negotiation in Dubai will move countries to put their cards on the table and declare just how much control they want to assert over Internet governance.<br /><br />The Net has given more individuals more power in a shorter period of time than any new technology in history. And unlike many other world-changing technologies, there is no institutional barrier to access. This has made it, on balance, mostly destructive of institutional authority, especially that of nation-states. National sovereignty encompasses many powers, but one of its core elements has been a monopoly on the control of overwhelming force. Now that hackers are able to penetrate any and all computer networks, including military ones, that monopoly no longer exists. Nation-states, not surprisingly, resist the erosion of their power and seek ways to reclaim it.<br /><br />Hamadoun Touré, who will be running the show in Dubai, says he seeks nothing more than a “light touch” on the Internet’s operations. He in fact chuckled when he uttered those words in the course of an interview.<br /><br />At least three big issues are very likely to be on the table in Dubai, and there’s nothing light about them. One is taxation—a “per click” levy on international Internet traffic. Western countries and business organizations oppose such a tax, as you would expect. China and many Third World countries favor it, saying the funds would help build the Internet in developing countries.<br /><br />A second issue is data privacy and cyber-security. Authoritarian governments want to tie people’s real names and identities to online activity, and they want international law to permit national encryption standards to allow government surveillance.<br /><br />The third issue is Internet management. Last year, Russia, China, and some pliant allies jointly proposed a U.N. General Assembly resolution (which failed) suggesting the creation of a global information-security “code of conduct” and—as if declaring open season on icann and the other non-governmental groups currently in charge—asserting that “policy authority for Internet-related public issues is the sovereign right of states.”<br /><br />All of these proposals amount to a wish list by the most extreme elements of the forces of Order. The forces of Disorder have no official voice at the negotiations—obviously they’re not invited—but they represent a wild card. Although they have thus far shown no apparent interest in Dubai, some of them have announced plans to perform a technical feat beyond anything done so far. In what is being called Operation Global Blackout, they want to bring down the Domain Name System itself—and thus halt all Internet traffic completely—with a springtime attack on the root servers, all in the name of protesting “sopa, Wallstreet, our irresponsible leaders, and the beloved bankers who are starving the world for their own selfish needs out of sheer sadistic fun.” Whether that happens (or even could happen), the announcement was an obvious warning flag. Internet experts take the threat seriously. Even if it fails, it presages future attempts.<br /><br />In the War for the Internet, is there a middle way? The forces of Organized Chaos are not an organized group, don’t call themselves by any name, and disagree on many points. In what follows, I’m going to try to distill a synthesis of their views.<br /><br />The commitment that unanimously binds them is to make the Internet as reliable as possible. One leading apostle of reliability is Dan Kaminsky, a security analyst and D.N.S. expert and the head of a new stealth start-up. He is a close friend of Jeff Moss’s—and, like Moss, a self-appointed ambassador to Washington. He sometimes opens meetings on the Hill by saying, “There are bad guys on the Internet. Unfortunately, you’re helping them.” He is a serial entrepreneur whose current mission is to augment passwords with other ways for Internet users to prove their identities that are more robust, easier to use, and harder to crack. “The only thing everyone agrees on,” says Kaminsky, “is that the Internet is making everyone money now and it’s got to keep working.”<br /><br />As they devise new systems of authentication, Kaminsky and others are working to be sure that these authentication systems preserve the qualities of privacy and online anonymity—even though anonymity has contributed to, if not created, almost every problem at issue in the War for the Internet. The task at hand is finding some way to square the circle: a way to have both anonymity and authentication—and therefore both generative chaos and the capacity for control—without absolute insistence on either. It is a neat philosophical trick: Sun Tzu meets John Locke meets Adam Smith meets Michel Foucault.<br /><br />No one can say exactly how these sorts of standards would be defined and applied, or who would be their custodians. World governance doesn’t work. It has been pursued for eons by hardheaded pragmatists and woolly-brained eccentrics. Time and again it has been defeated by the vagaries of human nature and the opportunistic conflict of competing interests. In the case of the Internet, the number of interested parties runs into the billions, and they come from divergent cultures and pursue irreconcilable objectives. As Vint Cerf points out, this basic reality seeps through every aspect of the War for the Internet. Around the world and across generations, people have different tolerances for civility, incivility, and invasion of privacy. “I think it will be very hard to resolve this in a way that’s globally acceptable,” he says.<br /><br />Freedom in human society, by definition, includes some concept of boundaries. Freedom on the Internet has, thus far, lacked any real concept of boundaries. But boundaries are being invented. It seems certain that nations, corporations, or both will create more zones on the Internet where all who enter will have to prove their real-world identities. Google and Facebook are already moving in this direction. The most heavy-handed suggestions entail a virtual passport or ID, which could include biometric data.<br /><br />Some see stringent, universal, and mandatory authentication of identity as a commonsense solution to a number of the Internet’s biggest problems. If all of our alter egos were brought into line with our analog selves, wouldn’t we all behave better? Wouldn’t online criminals stop using the cloak of anonymity to steal from and spy on people? Wouldn’t people pay for the books, music, movies, and newspapers that many now take for free?<br /><br />The forces of Organized Chaos reject this argument. Vint Cerf says, “When I hear senators and congressmen complaining about anonymous speech, I want to stop them and say, you should read your own history. The anonymous tracts that objected to British rule and rules had a great deal to do with the American Revolution. Weren’t you paying attention in civics?”<br /><br />Given the radically decentralized nature of the Internet, the most important thing that anyone can do is to try to make the center hold—but not too tightly. That means protecting the Domain Name System, the Internet’s sole central feature, from government control while keeping governments involved in maintaining it. The point is: there is no single “safe pair of hands,” whatever the forces of Order might say. Any safe pair of hands is a dangerous pair of hands.<br /><br />At the same time, the security of the D.N.S. itself needs to be radically upgraded, to obstruct hijacking and surveillance. Software-coding languages must become more secure, to make programs more difficult to hack and manipulate. Breach-reporting standards must be established, at least for critical infrastructure, to help corporations and law enforcement share knowledge about hacking threats. Metrics for security and privacy—two qualities that most people value but no one knows how to measure—need to be defined. Finally, “network neutrality” must be preserved. Net neutrality is almost as plastic a concept as Internet freedom, but to the forces of Organized Chaos, it means maintaining the telecommunications infrastructure as a level playing field. The Internet is open to everyone; service providers can’t discriminate; all applications and content moves at the same speed.<br /><br />To accomplish any of these things, governments will need to create formal mechanisms to give the people who know the most about the Internet—including computer engineers and hackers—a meaningful voice in making policy. Basic Internet literacy is now as critical to good governance as basic knowledge about economics or public health, yet Washington is still full of what Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, of California, calls “Wite-Out-on-the-screen people.” Dan Kaminsky says that hackers, for their part, have to stop focusing exclusively on “breaking stuff ” and also start focusing on “fixing stuff.”<br /><br />And if Internet companies do not want intrusive regulation, whether from their own governments or from treaties such as the one to be negotiated in Dubai, they will need to start solving the Internet’s problems on their own. Melissa Hathaway, who led cyber-security strategy for Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, points out that “the top 20 Internet service providers in the world carry 90 percent of the Internet traffic. They can see when you’re infected by a botnet. They can see when you’ve been hacked.” Hathaway has defined a set of general principles that Internet companies and governments might get behind, such as a “duty to warn if in imminent danger.” As she puts it, “It’s just like the law of the sea: the duty to assist.”<br /><br />Beyond this core agenda, the forces of Organized Chaos, by and large, think that the Internet should be allowed to evolve on its own, the way human societies always have. The forces of Organized Chaos have a pretty good sense of how it will evolve, at least in the short term. The Internet will stratify, as cities did long ago. There will be the mass Internet we already know—a teeming bazaar of artists and merchants and thinkers as well as pickpockets and hucksters and whores. It is a place anyone can enter, anonymously or not, and for free. Travel at your own risk! But anyone who wishes can decide to leave this bazaar for the security of the bank or the government office—or, if you have enough money, the limousine, the Sky Club, the platinum concierge. You will always have to give something up. If you want utter and absolute privacy, you will have to pay for it—or know the right people, who will give you access to their hidden darknets. For some services, you may decide to trade your privacy and anonymity for security. Depending on circumstance and desire, people will range among these worlds.</p><p>Aside from wealth or arcane knowledge, the only other guarantor of security will be isolation. Some people will pioneer new ways of life that minimize their involvement online. Still others will opt out altogether—to find or create a little corner of the planet where the Internet does not reach. Depending on how things go, that little corner could become a very crowded place. And you’d be surprised at how many of the best-informed people about the Internet have already started preparing for the trip.</p></p> <p><a href="http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2012/05/internet-regulation-war-sopa-pipa-defcon-hacking">http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2012/05/internet-regulation-war-sopa-pipa-defcon-hacking</a></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user191105" ><a class="" href="http://Freeminder23.soup.io/post/247853643/World-War-3-0"><span class="name">Freeminder23</span></a></span>]</p>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 22:57:14 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247898789/World-War-3-0urn:www-soup-io:1:247898789link Kids today can smell but can't spell. {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://imgur.com/gallery/cHs5B","body":"Kids today can smell but can't spell.","url":"http://4.asset.soup.io/asset/3109/2804_038a.png"} <p><a href="http://imgur.com/gallery/cHs5B"><img alt="2804_038a_400" height="298" src="http://4.asset.soup.io/asset/3109/2804_038a_400.png" width="400" /></a></p> <p>Kids today can smell but can't spell.</p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user336666" ><a class="" href="http://digitalalias.soup.io/post/247878677/Kids-today-can-smell-but-cant-spell"><span class="name">digitalalias</span></a></span>]</p>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 22:53:17 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247898297/Kids-today-can-smell-but-cant-spellurn:www-soup-io:1:247898297image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://d.asset.soup.io/asset/3108/0717_3669.png"} <p><a href=""><img alt="0717_3669_400" height="277" src="http://d.asset.soup.io/asset/3108/0717_3669_400.png" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user599825" ><a class="" href="http://veryrude.soup.io/post/247687209/Image"><span class="name">veryrude</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/247886728/Image"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 22:49:29 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247897346/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247897346image Data & Pond {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://www.facebook.com/The.Doctor.Who.Tardis","body":"Data \u0026amp; Pond","url":"http://5.asset.soup.io/asset/3103/5621_b311.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://www.facebook.com/The.Doctor.Who.Tardis"><img alt="5621_b311_400" height="536" src="http://5.asset.soup.io/asset/3103/5621_b311_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p>Data &amp; Pond</p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user666769" ><a class="" href="http://quarante-deux.soup.io/post/247091611/Data-Pond"><span class="name">quarante-deux</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user428164" ><a class="" href="http://geek4life.soup.io/post/247203902/Data-Pond"><span class="name">geek4life</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 23:36:26 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247568881/Data-Pondurn:www-soup-io:1:247568881image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://funnypictures.co.uk/post/20378791715/tellingitlikeitis","body":null,"url":"http://e.asset.soup.io/asset/3058/8062_d4bf.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://funnypictures.co.uk/post/20378791715/tellingitlikeitis"><img alt="8062_d4bf_400" height="533" src="http://e.asset.soup.io/asset/3058/8062_d4bf_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user370306" ><a class="" href="http://sellerie.soup.io/post/243009689/Image"><span class="name">sellerie</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user336666" ><a class="" href="http://digitalalias.soup.io/post/247215320/Image"><span class="name">digitalalias</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 23:30:17 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247568332/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247568332image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://wins.failblog.org/2012/04/17/epic-win-photos-kaneda-bike-win/","body":null,"url":"http://4.asset.soup.io/asset/3105/5924_c388.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://wins.failblog.org/2012/04/17/epic-win-photos-kaneda-bike-win/"><img alt="5924_c388_400" height="266" src="http://4.asset.soup.io/asset/3105/5924_c388_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user394520" ><a class="" href="http://gruetze.soup.io/post/247349455/Image"><span class="name">gruetze</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:45:09 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247551339/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247551339image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://i.imgur.com/IRsuv.jpg","body":null,"url":"http://3.asset.soup.io/asset/3101/2691_3c0f.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://i.imgur.com/IRsuv.jpg"><img alt="2691_3c0f_400" height="749" src="http://3.asset.soup.io/asset/3101/2691_3c0f_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user336180" ><a class="" href="http://frell.soup.io/post/246819602/Image"><span class="name">frell</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user14" ><a class="" href="http://cygenb0ck.soup.io/post/247359208/Image"><span class="name">cygenb0ck</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:42:25 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247550621/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247550621image kotkotkotkotkot {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":"kotkotkotkotkot","url":"http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3105/7281_8b94.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="7281_8b94_400" height="463" src="http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/3105/7281_8b94_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p>kotkotkotkotkot</p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user313972" ><a class="" href="http://destrukcja.soup.io/post/247377776/kotkotkotkotkot"><span class="name">destrukcja</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user46681" ><a class="" href="http://cats.soup.io/post/247379465/kotkotkotkotkot"><span class="name">cats</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:40:30 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247550292/kotkotkotkotkoturn:www-soup-io:1:247550292image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://a.asset.soup.io/asset/3104/8186_ca8f.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="8186_ca8f_400" height="414" src="http://a.asset.soup.io/asset/3104/8186_ca8f_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user380747" ><a class="" href="http://weakchick.soup.io/post/247219702/Image"><span class="name">weakchick</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/247468363/Image"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:33:25 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247548775/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247548775image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://forgifs.com/gallery/d/167852-5/Creepy-stalker-cat.gif","body":null,"url":"http://7.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/3607_9f1f.gif"} <p><a href="http://forgifs.com/gallery/d/167852-5/Creepy-stalker-cat.gif"><img alt="3607_9f1f" height="242" src="http://7.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/3607_9f1f.gif" width="322" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/247480959/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:32:52 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247548594/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247548594image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://i.imgur.com/qNQVy.jpg","body":null,"url":"http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/3590_23c9.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://i.imgur.com/qNQVy.jpg"><img alt="3590_23c9_400" height="299" src="http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/3590_23c9_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/247480698/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:32:45 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247548548/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247548548image "Breivik will uns lehren, es sei OK, aus Hass, Vergeltung oder Ideologie zu tö..." {"tags":[],"type":"quote","title":"\u003Ca href=\"http://twitter.com/ennomane\" class=\"user\"\u003Eennomane\u003C/a\u003E","source":"http://twitter.com/ennomane/statuses/192304869703548930","body":"Breivik will uns lehren, es sei OK, aus Hass, Vergeltung oder Ideologie zu t\u00f6ten. Wer seinen Tod fordert, hat die Lektion gelernt."} <p>"Breivik will uns lehren, es sei OK, aus Hass, Vergeltung oder Ideologie zu töten. Wer seinen Tod fordert, hat die Lektion gelernt."</p><p>&ndash;<a href="http://twitter.com/ennomane" class="user">ennomane</a></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user180194" ><a class="" href="http://acid.soup.io/post/247131331/Breivik-will-uns-lehren-es-sei-OK"><span class="name">acid</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/247481546/Breivik-will-uns-lehren-es-sei-OK"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:20:47 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247545959/Breivik-will-uns-lehren-es-sei-OKurn:www-soup-io:1:247545959quote (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://29.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m26up1UaEl1qkbahbo1_500.jpg","body":null,"url":"http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3098/3314_b321.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://29.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m26up1UaEl1qkbahbo1_500.jpg"><img alt="3314_b321_400" height="564" src="http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3098/3314_b321_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user795438" ><a class="" href="http://sunwalk.soup.io/post/246501126/Image"><span class="name">sunwalk</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/247484287/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:17:09 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247545187/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247545187image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3092/1730_e860.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="1730_e860_400" height="300" src="http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3092/1730_e860_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user814719" ><a class="" href="http://morela.soup.io/post/245561986/Image"><span class="name">morela</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/247483983/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:17:08 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247545181/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247545181image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://9.asset.soup.io/asset/1081/0169_62b0.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="0169_62b0_400" height="415" src="http://9.asset.soup.io/asset/1081/0169_62b0_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user342789" ><a class="" href="http://superbabcipomidorowakazdainnaniechsiechowa.soup.io/post/76261607/Image"><span class="name">superbabcipomidorowakazdainnaniechsiechowa</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/247484100/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:17:01 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247545151/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247545151image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://a.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/2794_bf76.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="2794_bf76_400" height="1496" src="http://a.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/2794_bf76_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user149630" ><a class="" href="http://atheism.soup.io/post/247465295/Image"><span class="name">atheism</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/247501403/Image"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:12:41 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247544220/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247544220image Come closer – (ad for an funeral parlour) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":"Come closer \u2013 (ad for an funeral parlour)","url":"http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/5958_f3b6.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="5958_f3b6_400" height="287" src="http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3106/5958_f3b6_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p>Come closer – (ad for an funeral parlour)</p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user415493" ><a class="" href="http://soup.lostprofile.de/post/247514955/Come-closer-ad-for-an-funeral-parlour"><span class="name">buttscratcher</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user392768" ><a class="" href="http://kokoloko.soup.io/post/247516895/Come-closer-ad-for-an-funeral-parlour"><span class="name">kokoloko</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:05:11 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247542822/Come-closer-ad-for-an-funeral-parloururn:www-soup-io:1:247542822image Kot, który jeździł koleją (Monorail cat) {"tags":[],"type":"regular","title":"\u003Ca href=\"http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/memowisko/~3/N5hsJt7yZlQ/kot-ktory-jezdzi-koleja-monorail-cat.html\"\u003EKot, kt\u00f3ry je\u017adzi\u0142 kolej\u0105 (Monorail cat)\u003C/a\u003E","source":"http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/memowisko/~3/N5hsJt7yZlQ/kot-ktory-jezdzi-koleja-monorail-cat.html","body":"\u003Cdiv\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-EPwRC3dVn5g/T458mZr_a8I/AAAAAAAACz0/gczMxatmuw4/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-ikona-mem.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-EPwRC3dVn5g/T458mZr_a8I/AAAAAAAACz0/gczMxatmuw4/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-ikona-mem.jpg\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cdiv\u003E\n\u003Cb\u003EKoty\u003C/b\u003E, co mo\u017ce bez problemu zauwa\u017cy\u0107 w\u0142a\u015bciciel takiego czworonoga, potrafi\u0105 godzinami siedzie\u0107 w jednym miejscu i nie wykazywa\u0107 absolutnie \u017cadnego zainteresowania rzeczywisto\u015bci\u0105*. Futrzaki le\u017c\u0105ce w najdziwniejszych pozycjach wsz\u0119dzie gdzie tylko mo\u017cna ju\u017c od dawna stanowi\u0142y jeden z bardziej uzale\u017cniaj\u0105cych trend\u00f3w fotograficznych w sieci. Za spraw\u0105 jednego z takich zdj\u0119\u0107 powi\u0105zano koty z wynalazkiem kolejnictwa z XIX wieku.\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n______________\u003Cbr class=\"Apple-interchange-newline\" /\u003E*Z drugiej strony, kiedy kot upatrzy sobie wystarczaj\u0105co intryguj\u0105c\u0105 zabawk\u0119 (najcz\u0119\u015bciej stop\u0119 pod ko\u0142dr\u0105, drukark\u0119 lub foliowy worek), potrafi si\u0119 ni\u0105 zajmowa\u0107 bez przerw przez 72 godziny.\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-gvdtiGLuyxw/T46dbSGwisI/AAAAAAAACz8/1gLt_qWSThE/s1600/monorail-cat-kolejka-jednoszynowa-einshienerp-brennan-scherl-1907-niemcy-mem.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-gvdtiGLuyxw/T46dbSGwisI/AAAAAAAACz8/1gLt_qWSThE/s320/monorail-cat-kolejka-jednoszynowa-einshienerp-brennan-scherl-1907-niemcy-mem.jpg\" height=\"320\" width=\"242\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cb\u003EKolej jednoszynowa\u003C/b\u003E (ang.\u00a0\u003Cb\u003Emonorail\u003C/b\u003E, niem. einshienerp) jako pomys\u0142 konstrukcyjny pojawi\u0142a si\u0119 w roku 1821, kiedy \u003Cb\u003EHenry Robinson Palmer\u003C/b\u003E postanowi\u0142 opatentowa\u0107 sw\u00f3j pomys\u0142 na zawieszenie dw\u00f3ch wagon\u00f3w o jednakowej masie po obu stronach pojedynczej szyny\u00a0umiejscowionej\u00a0nad ziemi\u0105. Jednak dopiero projekty kolejek jednoszynowych utrzymywanych w pionie za pomoc\u0105 \u017cyroskopu (cho\u0107by takie jak kolejka Brennana i Scherla z 1907 roku widoczna po prawej) da\u0142y nadziej\u0119 na wykorzystanie wynalazku do tworzenia po\u0142\u0105cze\u0144 kolejowych w trudnym terenie. Wybuch pierwszej wojny \u015bwiatowej zatrzyma\u0142 jednak rozw\u00f3j wi\u0119kszo\u015bci projekt\u00f3w na d\u0142ugie lata. Obecnie gros konstrukcji tego typu spotyka si\u0119 w du\u017cych aglomeracjach miejskich (szczeg\u00f3lnie w \u003Cb\u003EJaponii\u003C/b\u003E, gdzie mie\u015bci si\u0119 siedziba najwi\u0119kszego producenta tego typu system\u00f3w, Hitachi Transportation Systems). Z powodu atrakcyjnego, futurystycznego wygl\u0105du i relatywnie niskich koszt\u00f3w umieszczenia konstrukcji nad ziemi\u0105, kolejki jednoszynowe stosowane s\u0105 tak\u017ce w weso\u0142ych miasteczkach i du\u017cych parkach rozrywki (niekt\u00f3rzy w tej kategorii umieszczaj\u0105 kolejk\u0119 kursuj\u0105c\u0105 wzd\u0142u\u017c \"pnia\" wyspy \u003Cb\u003EPalma D\u017camira\u003C/b\u003E usypanej w Dubaju za grube miliony dolar\u00f3w.\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Xwgi75aAlio/T48MFrtyyTI/AAAAAAAAC0U/4OEqrADwNYc/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-oryginal-mem.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Xwgi75aAlio/T48MFrtyyTI/AAAAAAAAC0U/4OEqrADwNYc/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-oryginal-mem.jpg\" height=\"238\" width=\"320\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\nOd \u003Cb\u003E12 stycznia 2007\u003C/b\u003E roku dla wielbicieli kot\u00f3w oraz tropicieli mem\u00f3w internetowych pierwszym skojarzeniem ze s\u0142owem \u003Cb\u003Emonorail\u003C/b\u003E sta\u0142 si\u0119 jednak kot le\u017c\u0105cy na lustrze w grubej metalowej oprawie w spos\u00f3b ukrywaj\u0105cy jego \u0142apy przed w\u015bcibskim okiem aparatu. Samo zdj\u0119cie pojawi\u0142o si\u0119 najpierw (\u003Cb\u003E2 listopada 2006\u003C/b\u003E) na blogu serwisu catmas.com (nieczynnego z powodu zamkni\u0119cia projektu blogware, na kt\u00f3rym strona si\u0119 opiera\u0142a).\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\nKolejne przer\u00f3bki, pojawiaj\u0105ce si\u0119 na przestrzeni lat na catmas.com (co mo\u017cna cz\u0119\u015bciowo sprawdzi\u0107 dzi\u0119ki serwisowi \u003Ca href=\"http://archive.org/web/web.php\"\u003EWayback Machine\u003C/a\u003E zapisuj\u0105cemu stan witryn internetowych z ca\u0142ego \u015bwiata) oraz w innych serwisach (oczywi\u015bcie nie brak przyk\u0142ad\u00f3w z \u003Ca href=\"http://icanhascheezburger.com/\"\u003Eicanhascheezburger.com\u003C/a\u003E) przedstawiaj\u0105 inne koty w czasie \u015bwiadczenia us\u0142ug transportowych lub w innych konfiguracjach zwi\u0105zanych z podr\u00f3\u017cami kolej\u0105.\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://web.archive.org/web/20071030001907im_/http://catmas.com/images/2006/12/monorail-cat-has-left-the-station.gif\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://web.archive.org/web/20071030001907im_/http://catmas.com/images/2006/12/monorail-cat-has-left-the-station.gif\" height=\"238\" width=\"320\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Ca href=\"http://i1.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/116/475/tumblr_lhdb7g3FCb1qzekdio1_500.gif\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://i1.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/116/475/tumblr_lhdb7g3FCb1qzekdio1_500.gif\" height=\"320\" width=\"260\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/136/806/11714107741.gif\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/136/806/11714107741.gif\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Cbr 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src=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-aRlfJL1MoQY/T48TDAEi7mI/AAAAAAAAC1I/J7UZlJ_T9aU/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-plug-sniezny-mem.jpg\" height=\"320\" width=\"238\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-twi5zBQTksE/T48TCHnVf2I/AAAAAAAAC1A/bGY78OksZhg/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-pies-jednoszynowy-spoznia-sie-z-powodu-sniegu-mem.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-twi5zBQTksE/T48TCHnVf2I/AAAAAAAAC1A/bGY78OksZhg/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-pies-jednoszynowy-spoznia-sie-z-powodu-sniegu-mem.jpg\" height=\"212\" width=\"320\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-00Rmw1kR-bc/T48TDvv1j4I/AAAAAAAAC1U/YklpF4yEClw/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-trasa-safari-mem.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-00Rmw1kR-bc/T48TDvv1j4I/AAAAAAAAC1U/YklpF4yEClw/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-trasa-safari-mem.jpg\" height=\"230\" width=\"320\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-t20pnww5dVE/T48TEQcdb6I/AAAAAAAAC1c/VnKGu3HwwXI/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-wykolejenie-wykotowanie-mem.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-t20pnww5dVE/T48TEQcdb6I/AAAAAAAAC1c/VnKGu3HwwXI/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-wykolejenie-wykotowanie-mem.jpg\" height=\"263\" width=\"320\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Ch2\u003E\n\"If it fits, I sits\"\u003C/h2\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-g5vFRhOhtxA/T48W9z6beaI/AAAAAAAAC2g/eYncdXJ69PU/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-wytlaczanka-do-jajek-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-g5vFRhOhtxA/T48W9z6beaI/AAAAAAAAC2g/eYncdXJ69PU/s320/if-it-fits-i-sits-wytlaczanka-do-jajek-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\" height=\"320\" width=\"237\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\nSam\u0105 sk\u0142onno\u015b\u0107 kot\u00f3w do \u003Cb\u003Esiadania w pozornie niewygodnych miejscach\u003C/b\u003E \u015bwietnie podsumowuj\u0105 zdj\u0119cia opatrzone nag\u0142\u00f3wkiem \"\u003Cb\u003EIf it fits, I sits\u003C/b\u003E\". Ten bliski jednoszynowemu kotu trend zapocz\u0105tkowany zosta\u0142 w \u003Cb\u003Epa\u017adzierniku 2010\u003C/b\u003E roku, kiedy \u015bwiat\u0142o dzienne ujrza\u0142o zdj\u0119cie kota siedz\u0105cego w wyt\u0142aczance do jajek.\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ThBnswVh814/T48W3UaTNeI/AAAAAAAAC1k/efWTlAnElYE/s1600/a-cup-of-cat-if-it-fits-kubek-kota.png\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ThBnswVh814/T48W3UaTNeI/AAAAAAAAC1k/efWTlAnElYE/s400/a-cup-of-cat-if-it-fits-kubek-kota.png\" height=\"270\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-inxwLPROdzE/T48W4DkaaYI/AAAAAAAAC1o/AxV6iP6VRz8/s1600/if-it-fits-i-ships-kot-pakowanie-kota-do-wyslania.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-inxwLPROdzE/T48W4DkaaYI/AAAAAAAAC1o/AxV6iP6VRz8/s400/if-it-fits-i-ships-kot-pakowanie-kota-do-wyslania.jpg\" height=\"292\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-offhD4wid7Y/T48W4s1ibpI/AAAAAAAAC1w/-AckTRby8a0/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie-i-wygoni-psa.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-offhD4wid7Y/T48W4s1ibpI/AAAAAAAAC1w/-AckTRby8a0/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie-i-wygoni-psa.jpg\" height=\"300\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-vCcs3Rv5A0I/T48W5Y0j9GI/AAAAAAAAC14/nuQWYet0mrc/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-vCcs3Rv5A0I/T48W5Y0j9GI/AAAAAAAAC14/nuQWYet0mrc/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\" height=\"395\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-lGgjqsmNwMs/T48W6NPZzmI/AAAAAAAAC2E/nS07sZgOnYU/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-niebieska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-lGgjqsmNwMs/T48W6NPZzmI/AAAAAAAAC2E/nS07sZgOnYU/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-niebieska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\" height=\"296\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-glt0kl0hIpE/T48W7dY527I/AAAAAAAAC2M/RhYu8mRKO6I/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-pies-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-glt0kl0hIpE/T48W7dY527I/AAAAAAAAC2M/RhYu8mRKO6I/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-pies-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\" height=\"353\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-9W-zg-_anTw/T48W8F_4PQI/AAAAAAAAC2Q/_ioCP_hv_5E/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-9W-zg-_anTw/T48W8F_4PQI/AAAAAAAAC2Q/_ioCP_hv_5E/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\" height=\"296\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-OdXduYwt8EM/T48W8vYHxxI/AAAAAAAAC2c/eZqdU8yAxTs/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-na-jedzenie-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-OdXduYwt8EM/T48W8vYHxxI/AAAAAAAAC2c/eZqdU8yAxTs/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-na-jedzenie-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg\" height=\"300\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Rn_QBTtxOBg/T48W-ohoCzI/AAAAAAAAC2s/fD26dg9Z9J0/s1600/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie-lezacy.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Rn_QBTtxOBg/T48W-ohoCzI/AAAAAAAAC2s/fD26dg9Z9J0/s400/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie-lezacy.jpg\" height=\"282\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cdiv class=\"separator\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-H4ZthKQZdns/T48W_gIVxpI/AAAAAAAAC2w/qTLCkqQ4Kno/s1600/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-H4ZthKQZdns/T48W_gIVxpI/AAAAAAAAC2w/qTLCkqQ4Kno/s400/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie.jpg\" height=\"332\" width=\"400\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cb\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\u003C/b\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cb\u003EPodobne memy:\u003C/b\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cul\u003E\n\u003Cli\u003E\u003Ca href=\"http://www.memowisko.com/2012/03/kotow-sobotnie-harce-z-niewidzialnymi.html\"\u003EKoty i ich niewidzialne zabawki\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/li\u003E\n\u003Cli\u003E\u003Ca href=\"http://www.memowisko.com/2012/01/longcat-niespotykanie-dugi-kot.html\"\u003ELongcat, niespotykanie d\u0142ugi kot\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/li\u003E\n\u003Cli\u003E\u003Ca href=\"http://www.memowisko.com/2011/12/nyan-cat.html\"\u003ENyan cat\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/li\u003E\n\u003C/ul\u003E\n\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cdiv\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://www.facebook.com/memowisko\"\u003ELubisz to!\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003C/div\u003E\u003Cdiv class=\"blogger-post-footer\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/3354133927543477482-1120077615474260654?l=www.memowisko.com\" height=\"1\" alt=\"\" width=\"1\" /\u003E\u003C/div\u003E\n\u003Cp\u003E\u003Ca href=\"http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/0/da\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/0/di\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/1/da\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/1/di\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/p\u003E\u003Cdiv class=\"feedflare\"\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?a=N5hsJt7yZlQ:qg7GfsDmkng:yIl2AUoC8zA\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?d=yIl2AUoC8zA\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E \u003Ca href=\"http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?a=N5hsJt7yZlQ:qg7GfsDmkng:qj6IDK7rITs\"\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?d=qj6IDK7rITs\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\n\u003C/div\u003E\u003Cimg src=\"http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/memowisko/~4/N5hsJt7yZlQ\" height=\"1\" width=\"1\" /\u003E"} <div> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-EPwRC3dVn5g/T458mZr_a8I/AAAAAAAACz0/gczMxatmuw4/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-ikona-mem.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-EPwRC3dVn5g/T458mZr_a8I/AAAAAAAACz0/gczMxatmuw4/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-ikona-mem.jpg" /></a></div> <div> <b>Koty</b>, co może bez problemu zauważyć właściciel takiego czworonoga, potrafią godzinami siedzieć w jednym miejscu i nie wykazywać absolutnie żadnego zainteresowania rzeczywistością*. Futrzaki leżące w najdziwniejszych pozycjach wszędzie gdzie tylko można już od dawna stanowiły jeden z bardziej uzależniających trendów fotograficznych w sieci. Za sprawą jednego z takich zdjęć powiązano koty z wynalazkiem kolejnictwa z XIX wieku.<br /> <br /> ______________<br class="Apple-interchange-newline" />*Z drugiej strony, kiedy kot upatrzy sobie wystarczająco intrygującą zabawkę (najczęściej stopę pod kołdrą, drukarkę lub foliowy worek), potrafi się nią zajmować bez przerw przez 72 godziny.<br /> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-gvdtiGLuyxw/T46dbSGwisI/AAAAAAAACz8/1gLt_qWSThE/s1600/monorail-cat-kolejka-jednoszynowa-einshienerp-brennan-scherl-1907-niemcy-mem.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-gvdtiGLuyxw/T46dbSGwisI/AAAAAAAACz8/1gLt_qWSThE/s320/monorail-cat-kolejka-jednoszynowa-einshienerp-brennan-scherl-1907-niemcy-mem.jpg" height="320" width="242" /></a></div> <b>Kolej jednoszynowa</b> (ang. <b>monorail</b>, niem. einshienerp) jako pomysł konstrukcyjny pojawiła się w roku 1821, kiedy <b>Henry Robinson Palmer</b> postanowił opatentować swój pomysł na zawieszenie dwóch wagonów o jednakowej masie po obu stronach pojedynczej szyny umiejscowionej nad ziemią. Jednak dopiero projekty kolejek jednoszynowych utrzymywanych w pionie za pomocą żyroskopu (choćby takie jak kolejka Brennana i Scherla z 1907 roku widoczna po prawej) dały nadzieję na wykorzystanie wynalazku do tworzenia połączeń kolejowych w trudnym terenie. Wybuch pierwszej wojny światowej zatrzymał jednak rozwój większości projektów na długie lata. Obecnie gros konstrukcji tego typu spotyka się w dużych aglomeracjach miejskich (szczególnie w <b>Japonii</b>, gdzie mieści się siedziba największego producenta tego typu systemów, Hitachi Transportation Systems). Z powodu atrakcyjnego, futurystycznego wyglądu i relatywnie niskich kosztów umieszczenia konstrukcji nad ziemią, kolejki jednoszynowe stosowane są także w wesołych miasteczkach i dużych parkach rozrywki (niektórzy w tej kategorii umieszczają kolejkę kursującą wzdłuż "pnia" wyspy <b>Palma Dżamira</b> usypanej w Dubaju za grube miliony dolarów.<br /> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Xwgi75aAlio/T48MFrtyyTI/AAAAAAAAC0U/4OEqrADwNYc/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-oryginal-mem.jpg"><img src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Xwgi75aAlio/T48MFrtyyTI/AAAAAAAAC0U/4OEqrADwNYc/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-oryginal-mem.jpg" height="238" width="320" /></a></div> Od <b>12 stycznia 2007</b> roku dla wielbicieli kotów oraz tropicieli memów internetowych pierwszym skojarzeniem ze słowem <b>monorail</b> stał się jednak kot leżący na lustrze w grubej metalowej oprawie w sposób ukrywający jego łapy przed wścibskim okiem aparatu. Samo zdjęcie pojawiło się najpierw (<b>2 listopada 2006</b>) na blogu serwisu catmas.com (nieczynnego z powodu zamknięcia projektu blogware, na którym strona się opierała).<br /> <br /> Kolejne przeróbki, pojawiające się na przestrzeni lat na catmas.com (co można częściowo sprawdzić dzięki serwisowi <a href="http://archive.org/web/web.php">Wayback Machine</a> zapisującemu stan witryn internetowych z całego świata) oraz w innych serwisach (oczywiście nie brak przykładów z <a href="http://icanhascheezburger.com/">icanhascheezburger.com</a>) przedstawiają inne koty w czasie świadczenia usług transportowych lub w innych konfiguracjach związanych z podróżami koleją.<br /> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20071030001907im_/http://catmas.com/images/2006/12/monorail-cat-has-left-the-station.gif"><img src="http://web.archive.org/web/20071030001907im_/http://catmas.com/images/2006/12/monorail-cat-has-left-the-station.gif" height="238" width="320" /></a><a href="http://i1.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/116/475/tumblr_lhdb7g3FCb1qzekdio1_500.gif"><img src="http://i1.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/116/475/tumblr_lhdb7g3FCb1qzekdio1_500.gif" height="320" width="260" /></a></div> <div class="separator"> <br /></div> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/136/806/11714107741.gif"><img src="http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/136/806/11714107741.gif" /></a></div> <div class="separator"> <br /></div> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-KlFPQdtvnts/T48S_lH2vVI/AAAAAAAAC0k/SPGCnOD-GlY/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-dom-spokojnej-starosci-mem.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-KlFPQdtvnts/T48S_lH2vVI/AAAAAAAAC0k/SPGCnOD-GlY/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-dom-spokojnej-starosci-mem.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-DufzSw6SyNw/T48TAa11qwI/AAAAAAAAC0o/4gIIUsd-S1g/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-kot-lewitujacy-mem.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-DufzSw6SyNw/T48TAa11qwI/AAAAAAAAC0o/4gIIUsd-S1g/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-kot-lewitujacy-mem.jpg" height="237" width="320" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-2vzZ0gy68KU/T48TBOMfsJI/AAAAAAAAC0w/w5SMnqo6TOg/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-last-stop-ostatni-przystanek-mem.jpg"><img src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-2vzZ0gy68KU/T48TBOMfsJI/AAAAAAAAC0w/w5SMnqo6TOg/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-last-stop-ostatni-przystanek-mem.jpg" height="214" width="320" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-3yUbZ1cAhaQ/T48TBv7t3FI/AAAAAAAAC04/S5imZkQQ6r4/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-ogrzewane-wagony-mem.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-3yUbZ1cAhaQ/T48TBv7t3FI/AAAAAAAAC04/S5imZkQQ6r4/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-ogrzewane-wagony-mem.jpg" height="241" width="320" /></a><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-aRlfJL1MoQY/T48TDAEi7mI/AAAAAAAAC1I/J7UZlJ_T9aU/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-plug-sniezny-mem.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-aRlfJL1MoQY/T48TDAEi7mI/AAAAAAAAC1I/J7UZlJ_T9aU/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-plug-sniezny-mem.jpg" height="320" width="238" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-twi5zBQTksE/T48TCHnVf2I/AAAAAAAAC1A/bGY78OksZhg/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-pies-jednoszynowy-spoznia-sie-z-powodu-sniegu-mem.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-twi5zBQTksE/T48TCHnVf2I/AAAAAAAAC1A/bGY78OksZhg/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-pies-jednoszynowy-spoznia-sie-z-powodu-sniegu-mem.jpg" height="212" width="320" /></a></div> <br /> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-00Rmw1kR-bc/T48TDvv1j4I/AAAAAAAAC1U/YklpF4yEClw/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-trasa-safari-mem.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-00Rmw1kR-bc/T48TDvv1j4I/AAAAAAAAC1U/YklpF4yEClw/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-trasa-safari-mem.jpg" height="230" width="320" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-t20pnww5dVE/T48TEQcdb6I/AAAAAAAAC1c/VnKGu3HwwXI/s1600/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-wykolejenie-wykotowanie-mem.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-t20pnww5dVE/T48TEQcdb6I/AAAAAAAAC1c/VnKGu3HwwXI/s320/monorail-cat-kot-jednoszynowy-wykolejenie-wykotowanie-mem.jpg" height="263" width="320" /></a></div> <div class="separator"> <br /></div> <h2> "If it fits, I sits"</h2> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-g5vFRhOhtxA/T48W9z6beaI/AAAAAAAAC2g/eYncdXJ69PU/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-wytlaczanka-do-jajek-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-g5vFRhOhtxA/T48W9z6beaI/AAAAAAAAC2g/eYncdXJ69PU/s320/if-it-fits-i-sits-wytlaczanka-do-jajek-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg" height="320" width="237" /></a></div> Samą skłonność kotów do <b>siadania w pozornie niewygodnych miejscach</b> świetnie podsumowują zdjęcia opatrzone nagłówkiem "<b>If it fits, I sits</b>". Ten bliski jednoszynowemu kotu trend zapoczątkowany został w <b>październiku 2010</b> roku, kiedy światło dzienne ujrzało zdjęcie kota siedzącego w wytłaczance do jajek.<br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ThBnswVh814/T48W3UaTNeI/AAAAAAAAC1k/efWTlAnElYE/s1600/a-cup-of-cat-if-it-fits-kubek-kota.png"><img src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ThBnswVh814/T48W3UaTNeI/AAAAAAAAC1k/efWTlAnElYE/s400/a-cup-of-cat-if-it-fits-kubek-kota.png" height="270" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-inxwLPROdzE/T48W4DkaaYI/AAAAAAAAC1o/AxV6iP6VRz8/s1600/if-it-fits-i-ships-kot-pakowanie-kota-do-wyslania.jpg"><img src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-inxwLPROdzE/T48W4DkaaYI/AAAAAAAAC1o/AxV6iP6VRz8/s400/if-it-fits-i-ships-kot-pakowanie-kota-do-wyslania.jpg" height="292" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-offhD4wid7Y/T48W4s1ibpI/AAAAAAAAC1w/-AckTRby8a0/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie-i-wygoni-psa.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-offhD4wid7Y/T48W4s1ibpI/AAAAAAAAC1w/-AckTRby8a0/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie-i-wygoni-psa.jpg" height="300" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-vCcs3Rv5A0I/T48W5Y0j9GI/AAAAAAAAC14/nuQWYet0mrc/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-vCcs3Rv5A0I/T48W5Y0j9GI/AAAAAAAAC14/nuQWYet0mrc/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg" height="395" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-lGgjqsmNwMs/T48W6NPZzmI/AAAAAAAAC2E/nS07sZgOnYU/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-niebieska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg"><img src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-lGgjqsmNwMs/T48W6NPZzmI/AAAAAAAAC2E/nS07sZgOnYU/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-miska-niebieska-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg" height="296" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-glt0kl0hIpE/T48W7dY527I/AAAAAAAAC2M/RhYu8mRKO6I/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-pies-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-glt0kl0hIpE/T48W7dY527I/AAAAAAAAC2M/RhYu8mRKO6I/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-pies-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg" height="353" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-9W-zg-_anTw/T48W8F_4PQI/AAAAAAAAC2Q/_ioCP_hv_5E/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-9W-zg-_anTw/T48W8F_4PQI/AAAAAAAAC2Q/_ioCP_hv_5E/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg" height="296" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-OdXduYwt8EM/T48W8vYHxxI/AAAAAAAAC2c/eZqdU8yAxTs/s1600/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-na-jedzenie-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg"><img src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-OdXduYwt8EM/T48W8vYHxxI/AAAAAAAAC2c/eZqdU8yAxTs/s400/if-it-fits-i-sits-pojemnik-na-jedzenie-kot-usiadzie-wszedzie.jpg" height="300" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Rn_QBTtxOBg/T48W-ohoCzI/AAAAAAAAC2s/fD26dg9Z9J0/s1600/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie-lezacy.jpg"><img src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Rn_QBTtxOBg/T48W-ohoCzI/AAAAAAAAC2s/fD26dg9Z9J0/s400/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie-lezacy.jpg" height="282" width="400" /></a></div> <br /> <div class="separator"> <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-H4ZthKQZdns/T48W_gIVxpI/AAAAAAAAC2w/qTLCkqQ4Kno/s1600/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie.jpg"><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-H4ZthKQZdns/T48W_gIVxpI/AAAAAAAAC2w/qTLCkqQ4Kno/s400/if-it-not-for-sits-why-it-made-of-warm-kot-na-laptopie.jpg" height="332" width="400" /></a></div> <br /></div> <b><br /></b><br /> <b>Podobne memy:</b><br /> <br /> <ul> <li><a href="http://www.memowisko.com/2012/03/kotow-sobotnie-harce-z-niewidzialnymi.html">Koty i ich niewidzialne zabawki</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.memowisko.com/2012/01/longcat-niespotykanie-dugi-kot.html">Longcat, niespotykanie długi kot</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.memowisko.com/2011/12/nyan-cat.html">Nyan cat</a></li> </ul> </div> <div> <a href="http://www.facebook.com/memowisko">Lubisz to!</a><br /> </div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/3354133927543477482-1120077615474260654?l=www.memowisko.com" height="1" alt="" width="1" /></div> <p><a href="http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/0/da"><img src="http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/0/di" /></a><br /> <a href="http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/1/da"><img src="http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/y0lGeuMA1kHJVvR4rFpQ6XXgvTs/1/di" /></a></p><div class="feedflare"> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?a=N5hsJt7yZlQ:qg7GfsDmkng:yIl2AUoC8zA"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?d=yIl2AUoC8zA" /></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?a=N5hsJt7yZlQ:qg7GfsDmkng:qj6IDK7rITs"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/memowisko?d=qj6IDK7rITs" /></a> </div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/memowisko/~4/N5hsJt7yZlQ" height="1" width="1" /><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user222477" ><a class="" href="http://panszpik.soup.io/post/247531873/Kot-kt-ry-je-dzi-kolej-Monorail"><span class="name">panszpik</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user46681" ><a class="" href="http://cats.soup.io/post/247533477/Kot-kt-ry-je-dzi-kolej-Monorail"><span class="name">cats</span></a></span>]</p>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 20:59:12 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247541444/Kot-kt-ry-je-dzi-kolej-Monorailurn:www-soup-io:1:247541444regular Source: {"tags":[],"type":"link","title":"Source:","source":"http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/justin-bieber-talks-sex-politics-music-and-puberty-in-new-rolling-stone-cover-story-20110216","body":null} <p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/246612497/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p><p><a href="http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/justin-bieber-talks-sex-politics-music-and-puberty-in-new-rolling-stone-cover-story-20110216">http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/justin-bieber-talks-sex-politics-music-and-puberty-in-new-rolling-stone-cover-story-20110216</a></p>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:24:37 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247057592/Sourceurn:www-soup-io:1:247057592link (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://a5.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash2/149348_386926648004332_208899849140347_1232981_534582504_n.jpg","body":null,"url":"http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3099/2114_37bc.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://a5.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash2/149348_386926648004332_208899849140347_1232981_534582504_n.jpg"><img alt="2114_37bc_400" height="361" src="http://2.asset.soup.io/asset/3099/2114_37bc_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/246612497/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:23:50 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247057475/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247057475image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://e.asset.soup.io/asset/3097/2686_7ff1.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="2686_7ff1_400" height="502" src="http://e.asset.soup.io/asset/3097/2686_7ff1_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user394490" ><a class="" href="http://footcrab.soup.io/post/246304246/Image"><span class="name">footcrab</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/246614513/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:22:58 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247057264/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247057264image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":"http://imgur.com/nSrct","body":null,"url":"http://0.asset.soup.io/asset/3099/1184_7500.jpeg"} <p><a href="http://imgur.com/nSrct"><img alt="1184_7500_400" height="565" src="http://0.asset.soup.io/asset/3099/1184_7500_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user528138" ><a class="" href="http://kraken.soup.io/post/246605782/Image"><span class="name">kraken</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user777010" ><a class="" href="http://Pornobalken.soup.io/post/246615028/Image"><span class="name">Pornobalken</span></a></span>]</p>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:22:26 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247057122/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247057122image (Image) {"tags":[],"type":"image","source":null,"body":null,"url":"http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3100/0230_7edd.jpeg"} <p><a href=""><img alt="0230_7edd_400" height="400" src="http://6.asset.soup.io/asset/3100/0230_7edd_400.jpeg" width="400" /></a></p> <p></p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user180194" ><a class="" href="http://acid.soup.io/post/246683334/Image"><span class="name">acid</span></a></span>]</p>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:16:50 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247055712/Imageurn:www-soup-io:1:247055712image Computerbroschüren, 50er- bis 70er-Jahre (3) {"tags":[],"type":"regular","title":"\u003Ca href=\"http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Glaserei/~3/G4DeXKg-Uyc/\"\u003EComputerbrosch\u00fcren, 50er- bis 70er-Jahre (3)\u003C/a\u003E","source":"http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Glaserei/~3/G4DeXKg-Uyc/","body":"\u003Cp\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-21.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-21\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72900\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-21.jpg\" height=\"184\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-22.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-22\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72901\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-22.jpg\" height=\"359\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-23.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-23\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72902\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-23.jpg\" height=\"364\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-24.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-24\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72903\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-24.jpg\" height=\"375\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-25.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-25\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72904\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-25.jpg\" height=\"363\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-26.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-26\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72905\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-26.jpg\" height=\"378\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-27.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-27\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72906\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-27.jpg\" height=\"363\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-28.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-28\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72907\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-28.jpg\" height=\"365\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-29.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-29\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72908\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-29.jpg\" height=\"362\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-30.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-30\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72909\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-30.jpg\" height=\"362\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/p\u003E\n\u003Cp\u003E(\u003Ca href=\"http://theflavor.com/2012/03/14/computer-brochures-50s-70s/\"\u003EThe Flavor\u003C/a\u003E)\u003C/p\u003E\n\u003Cimg src=\"http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/Glaserei/%7E4/G4DeXKg-Uyc\" height=\"1\" width=\"1\" /\u003E"} <p><br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-21.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72900" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-21" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-21.jpg" height="184" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-22.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72901" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-22" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-22.jpg" height="359" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-23.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72902" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-23" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-23.jpg" height="364" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-24.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72903" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-24" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-24.jpg" height="375" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-25.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72904" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-25" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-25.jpg" height="363" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-26.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72905" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-26" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-26.jpg" height="378" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-27.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72906" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-27" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-27.jpg" height="363" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-28.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72907" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-28" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-28.jpg" height="365" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-29.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72908" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-29" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-29.jpg" height="362" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-30.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72909" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-30" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-30.jpg" height="362" alt="" width="280" /></a></p> <p>(<a href="http://theflavor.com/2012/03/14/computer-brochures-50s-70s/">The Flavor</a>)</p> <img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/Glaserei/%7E4/G4DeXKg-Uyc" height="1" width="1" /><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user78261" ><a class="" href="http://glaserei.soup.io/post/245721326/Computerbrosch-ren-50er-bis-70er-Jahre-3"><span class="name">glaserei</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user180194" ><a class="" href="http://acid.soup.io/post/246685091/Computerbrosch-ren-50er-bis-70er-Jahre-3"><span class="name">acid</span></a></span>]</p>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:13:28 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247055027/Computerbrosch-ren-50er-bis-70er-Jahre-3urn:www-soup-io:1:247055027regular Computerbroschüren, 50er- bis 70er-Jahre (2) {"tags":[],"type":"regular","title":"\u003Ca href=\"http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Glaserei/~3/ZreKHuepS_8/\"\u003EComputerbrosch\u00fcren, 50er- bis 70er-Jahre (2)\u003C/a\u003E","source":"http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Glaserei/~3/ZreKHuepS_8/","body":"\u003Cp\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-11.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-11\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72888\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-11.jpg\" height=\"500\" alt=\"\" width=\"234\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-12.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-12\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72889\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-12.jpg\" height=\"500\" alt=\"\" width=\"223\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-13.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-13\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72890\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-13.jpg\" height=\"363\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-14.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-14\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72891\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-14.jpg\" height=\"362\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-15.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-15\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72892\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-15.jpg\" height=\"360\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-16.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-16\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72893\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-16.jpg\" height=\"362\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-17.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-17\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72894\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-17.jpg\" height=\"361\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-18.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-18\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72895\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-18.jpg\" height=\"363\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-19.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-19\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72896\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-19.jpg\" height=\"212\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Cbr /\u003E\n\u003Ca href=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-20.jpg\"\u003E\u003Cimg title=\"computer-brochures-50se2809370s-20\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-72897\" src=\"http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-20.jpg\" height=\"219\" alt=\"\" width=\"280\" /\u003E\u003C/a\u003E\u003C/p\u003E\n\u003Cp\u003E(\u003Ca href=\"http://theflavor.com/2012/03/14/computer-brochures-50s-70s/\"\u003EThe Flavor\u003C/a\u003E)\u003C/p\u003E"} <p><br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-11.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72888" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-11" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-11.jpg" height="500" alt="" width="234" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-12.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72889" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-12" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-12.jpg" height="500" alt="" width="223" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-13.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72890" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-13" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-13.jpg" height="363" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-14.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72891" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-14" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-14.jpg" height="362" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-15.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72892" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-15" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-15.jpg" height="360" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-16.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72893" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-16" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-16.jpg" height="362" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-17.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72894" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-17" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-17.jpg" height="361" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-18.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72895" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-18" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-18.jpg" height="363" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-19.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72896" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-19" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-19.jpg" height="212" alt="" width="280" /></a><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-20.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-72897" title="computer-brochures-50se2809370s-20" src="http://blog.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/wp-content/computer-brochures-50se2809370s-20.jpg" height="219" alt="" width="280" /></a></p> <p>(<a href="http://theflavor.com/2012/03/14/computer-brochures-50s-70s/">The Flavor</a>)</p><p>[Reposted from <span class="user_container user78261" ><a class="" href="http://glaserei.soup.io/post/245280305/Computerbrosch-ren-50er-bis-70er-Jahre-2"><span class="name">glaserei</span></a></span> via <span class="user_container user180194" ><a class="" href="http://acid.soup.io/post/246685094/Computerbrosch-ren-50er-bis-70er-Jahre-2"><span class="name">acid</span></a></span>]</p>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:13:20 GMThttp://vitaminb.soup.io/post/247054993/Computerbrosch-ren-50er-bis-70er-Jahre-2urn:www-soup-io:1:247054993regular