Re: [political-research] Here it is - search your web history with infoaxe

2008-11-17 Thread Mark S Bilk
The infoaxe FAQ says that every user's web history is stored on 
the infoaxe servers.  This is a perfect way for the government 
to find out what any person is looking at on the Web.

Why is it called infoAXE?  Why not infotool or infomemory or 
infohistory, etc.?  Could it be that it's a government axe 
ready to fall on anyone they're trying to gather evidence on
of non-existent terrorism ?  BTW, here's proof that the 
Al-Qaeda terror network is entirely fictional -- a Big Lie:

The BBC documentary _The Power of Nightmares_ (3 episodes of 
almost 1 hour each) is very informative about the Neocons and 
the lies they tell purposely in order to manipulate the public 
into obedience.  It also gives the history of Islamic 
fundamentalism, and proves that Al-Qaeda does not exist, 
and never did -- the idea was fabricated by a prisoner, 
Jamal al-Fadl, who was paid and given witness protection. This 
proof begins at about 6 minutes into the 3rd episode, when 
Jason Burke, author of a book on Al-Qaeda, is first shown.

The video is available in various formats (from small file 
low resolution to large file high resolution) for free and 
rapid download here:

  http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares

On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 04:31:48PM -0800, Sean McBride wrote:
  Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: Here it is - search
 your web history with infoaxe via AltSearchEngines by Charles Knight on
 11/17/08

 What exactly is infoaxe?

 infoaxe is your Personal Web Memory. You never have to remember a web
 page by bookmarking, emailing to yourself etc. We believe that a Web
 user has more important things to do while on the Web than to do these
 other tasks which are basically, distractions.

 With infoaxe, whatever you ’see’ on the Web, becomes instantly
 searchable for you. You carve out your space on the Web by the sites
 you visit and infoaxe lets you search, manage and take this with you
 wherever you go. You will never forget a Web page again. Ever.

 Why do I need infoaxe? Here are some sample scenarios where infoaxe
 comes in handy.

 John had found a review about the IPhone a few months back that he
 really liked. He wants to share that review with his friend Jill but he
 can’t seem to find it again amidst the deluge of IPhone reviews on
 Google.

 Since with infoaxe, you now have your Personal Web Memory, John can
 find the IPhone review that he liked, very easily by searching his Web
 Memory with infoaxe.

 Mary is hunting for apartments in Palo Alto. She has looked at many
 apartments on craigslist and rent.com. She is finding it impossible to
 keep track of the ones she liked. Bookmarking seems like a lot of work
 for so many pages and an overkill since she is sure that after this
 week she wouldn’t really be looking at these apartments again.

 Mary does not have to bookmark anything. If she wanted to revisit all
 the apartments she looked at on University Avenue, she could just
 search infoaxe with the query ‘university avenue’.

 You will also notice that with infoaxe, you can afford to be lazier
 than with Google. For eg. if you wanted to revisit your friend John’s
 blog but can’t remember the url. Finding it with google would most
 likely involve a fairly long query to wade through all the other Johns
 on the Web. With infoaxe, you can afford to just type in “John blog”
 and you are very likely to see it right at the top. (assuming of course
 that you have seen in it at least once before)

 What is Pivot?

 Here is a another slightly less obvious use case. Say, you wanted to
 look at all the websites you looked at when you were researching grad
 schools. This sounds almost impossible to accomplish with a general Web
 Search Engine like Google. The right query is quite hard in this case
 since there likely isn’t one single query which will give you all the
 pages. You might have looked at other grad schools like MIT, CMU etc,
 tips for writing good grad school essays etc. infoaxe helps you here by
 letting you pivot around a Web page in your Web Memory. Think of this
 as something like time travel. You can ask infoaxe to show you all the
 web pages you were looking at when you were looking at the Stanford
 University Graduate Admissions home page. We think its more natural to
 remember events than dates, and pivot lets you pivot around events in
 your Web Memory.

 How can I delete stuff from my Web Memory?

 If you see something in your web memory that you want to delete, click
 on the delete link that appears next to the search result snippet. You
 have the option of deleting just that page or all pages from that site.
 It will take about 2 minutes for the changes to take effect i.e. for it
 to stop showing up in your search results. Source: infoaxe faq


 Infoaxe - Never forget a Page Again! (Quick Demo) from Infoaxe on Vimeo



Re: [political-research] Here it is - search your web history with infoaxe

2008-11-17 Thread Sean McBride
There are many ways to access, monitor and record one's every click and 
keystroke. Probably the best assumption to make is that one has no real privacy 
on the Internet.

Regarding al-Qaeda: for an organization that is supposed to be the contemporary 
equivalent of Nazism or Communism, it is the most wispy and least concrete 
entity imaginable. Where are the major show trials of al-Qaeda leaders?


--- On Mon, 11/17/08, Mark S Bilk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Mark S Bilk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [political-research] Here it is - search your web history with 
infoaxe
To: political-research@yahoogroups.com
Date: Monday, November 17, 2008, 7:44 PM











The infoaxe FAQ says that every user's web history is stored on 

the infoaxe servers.  This is a perfect way for the government 

to find out what any person is looking at on the Web.



Why is it called infoAXE?  Why not infotool or infomemory or 

infohistory, etc.?  Could it be that it's a government axe 

ready to fall on anyone they're trying to gather evidence on

of non-existent terrorism ?  BTW, here's proof that the 

Al-Qaeda terror network is entirely fictional -- a Big Lie:



The BBC documentary _The Power of Nightmares_ (3 episodes of 

almost 1 hour each) is very informative about the Neocons and 

the lies they tell purposely in order to manipulate the public 

into obedience.  It also gives the history of Islamic 

fundamentalism, and proves that Al-Qaeda does not exist, 

and never did -- the idea was fabricated by a prisoner, 

Jamal al-Fadl, who was paid and given witness protection. This 

proof begins at about 6 minutes into the 3rd episode, when 

Jason Burke, author of a book on Al-Qaeda, is first shown.



The video is available in various formats (from small file 

low resolution to large file high resolution) for free and 

rapid download here:



http://www.archive. org/details/ ThePowerOfNightm ares



On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 04:31:48PM -0800, Sean McBride wrote:

  Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: Here it is - search

 your web history with infoaxe via AltSearchEngines by Charles Knight on

 11/17/08



 What exactly is infoaxe?



 infoaxe is your Personal Web Memory. You never have to remember a web

 page by bookmarking, emailing to yourself etc. We believe that a Web

 user has more important things to do while on the Web than to do these

 other tasks which are basically, distractions.



 With infoaxe, whatever you ’see’ on the Web, becomes instantly

 searchable for you. You carve out your space on the Web by the sites

 you visit and infoaxe lets you search, manage and take this with you

 wherever you go. You will never forget a Web page again. Ever.



 Why do I need infoaxe? Here are some sample scenarios where infoaxe

 comes in handy.



 John had found a review about the IPhone a few months back that he

 really liked. He wants to share that review with his friend Jill but he

 can’t seem to find it again amidst the deluge of IPhone reviews on

 Google.



 Since with infoaxe, you now have your Personal Web Memory, John can

 find the IPhone review that he liked, very easily by searching his Web

 Memory with infoaxe.



 Mary is hunting for apartments in Palo Alto. She has looked at many

 apartments on craigslist and rent.com. She is finding it impossible to

 keep track of the ones she liked. Bookmarking seems like a lot of work

 for so many pages and an overkill since she is sure that after this

 week she wouldn’t really be looking at these apartments again.



 Mary does not have to bookmark anything. If she wanted to revisit all

 the apartments she looked at on University Avenue, she could just

 search infoaxe with the query ‘university avenue’.



 You will also notice that with infoaxe, you can afford to be lazier

 than with Google. For eg. if you wanted to revisit your friend John’s

 blog but can’t remember the url. Finding it with google would most

 likely involve a fairly long query to wade through all the other Johns

 on the Web. With infoaxe, you can afford to just type in “John blog”

 and you are very likely to see it right at the top. (assuming of course

 that you have seen in it at least once before)



 What is Pivot?



 Here is a another slightly less obvious use case. Say, you wanted to

 look at all the websites you looked at when you were researching grad

 schools. This sounds almost impossible to accomplish with a general Web

 Search Engine like Google. The right query is quite hard in this case

 since there likely isn’t one single query which will give you all the

 pages. You might have looked at other grad schools like MIT, CMU etc,

 tips for writing good grad school essays etc. infoaxe helps you here by

 letting you pivot around a Web page in your Web Memory. Think of this

 as something like time travel. You can ask infoaxe to show you all the

 web pages you were looking at when you were looking at the Stanford

 University