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MethrenRaf

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« le: Décembre 26, 2024, 12:20:06 am »
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 At 2:23 a.m. on May 9, 2010, suspected Tucson shooter Jared Loughner allegedly asked a group of gamers online:  Does anyone have aggression 24/7  This is just one one of the many bizarre statements contained in more than one hundred online posts obtained by The Wall Street Journal alle stanley termoska ged to be from Loughner. An FBI stanley website  official involved in the investigation of the Tucson shootings tells CBS News the FBI is aware of the alleged postings made, as reported in the Journal, on gaming websites. The FBI is currently investigating whether Loughner was, in fact, responsible for them. A report from Reuters claims that these statements resulted in Loughner being kicked out of the forum.Special Section: Tragedy in Tucson        The Journal reports there were 1 stanley cup 31 postings written between April and June 2010 in a web forum linked to the online game Earth Empires. They cover a time period during which Loughner struggled immensely to find work, and was repeatedly rejected by women.The breadth of subjects they cover is wide, but the disturbing nature of many of the posts led other gamers to wonder whether Loughner was mentally ill or on drugs, the Journal reports.In a May 20 posting around midnight, Loughner allegedly wrote:  I bet your hungry...Because I know how to cut a body open and eat you for more then a week. ;-  Other posts talk about Loughner s inability to land a minimum-wage job after sending out 65 applications, and being rejected by women, the Journal reports.            The posts a Vgat Court upholds law prohibiting  gay cure  therapy
 Jeff Garzik is a dreamer. You know, the kind of guy who probably  cups stanley thought that he could fly with his red cape when he was younger.  Note: As a toddler, I unsuccessfully tried to fly several times.  But now Jeff Garzik is looking higher. He   looking to space, and he wants Bitcoin to live there.     No, seriously. Garzik recently proposed a plan to send a Bitcoin computer into space with an inexpensive CubeSat, so that there would always be a node in the network that hackers couldn ;t crack. The CubeSat would be able to communicate with Bitcoin computers on Earth by radio. It sounds crazy, but it   actually not a bad idea. As Wired   Robert McMillan points out, Bitcoin computers are vulnerable to so-called Sibyl attacks. It could give criminals a way of spending their bitcoins more than once, he explained in a recent blog post, and it   also part of the so-called sel stanley vaso fish miner scenario that Cornell University researchers des stanley mugs cribed last month, saying it could bring down the entire system. Bring down the entire system  That can ;t be good. Garzik is serious, and he   already raised 37 Bitcoins鈥攁bout $37,000 at current exchange rates. Trips to space are more expensive than that, of course, but the dreamer thinks he can get everything together and have a Bitcoin computer in space in only three to five years. It   not the first such plan, either. [Bitcoin Forum via Wired] Image via Flickr / antanacoins