Dit is de reden waarom the UFC site is gehackt
dus ik ga der van uit dat Biiyen en smike nog nooit een stream hebben gekeken van de ufc? of begrijp ik het verkeerd?
Jullie hebben elke UFC gekocht?
Alles tegen SOPA is goed nieuws. Een dergelijk systeem waar overheden onder druk van organisaties als de UFC of platenmaatschappijen sites kunnen blokkeren zonder tussenkomt van een rechter is iets wat je niet moet willen. Voor je het weet word het filter ook gebruikt om andere "ongewenste" sites te blokkeren, en dan krijgen we Chinese praktijken.
Ik vind het prima dat ze iets doen tegen piraterij, maar Internet moet vrij blijven en niet door een filter lopen.
Dat is het punt niet, het punt is dat je andermans spullen kapot maakt en dat leuk/gerechtvaardigd vind omdat je het duur vind. cq. het niet eens bent met hun mening / standpunt.
Verreweg de meeste mensen kunnen geen dure BMW kopen, is het dan gerechtvaardigd om bij de BMW dealer de afbeelding van Hitler op de deur te schilderen? En de sloten vol te spuiten met lijm zodat niemand meer naar binnen kan?
Als jij dat normaal gedrag vind dan verschillen wij van elkaar.
Als je iets te duur vind en het niet kan betalen dan heb je pech.
Dan kun je:
(A) beter werk zoeken
(B) Meer werk zoeken
(C) een alternatief zoeken
maar NIET
(D) andere de schuld de geven en hun schade toe brengen.
Piraterij (bestrijden) is één ding maar SOPA ondersteunen is een heel ander ding, geloof me, dat willen we niet met z'n allen (als uiteindelijk tot iedereen doorgedrongen is wat dat betekent voor de vrijheid op internet).
Zoals Neelie Kroes al terecht opmerkte over SOPA: "Speeding is illegal too: but you don't put speed bumps on the motorway". Jij wil al te keurig en kritiekloos langs het lijntje lopen, weet je hoe de "Powers that be" zo iemand noemen? - Een nuttige idioot -.
Last edited by Westpaw; 24-01-2012 at 16:13.
Het probleem is niet dat UFC geld wil voor zn streams, dat is hun goed recht.
Het probleem is dat SOPA veel meer is en gewoon een grote censuur over het internet zou kunnen gaan werpen. Nu zal het in het begin niet zo'n vaart lopen maar uiteindelijk zou dit mogelijk kunnen uitlopen naar het (voormalig?) Chinese model waar je alleen door overheid goedgekeurde websites mag bezoeken en zij bepalen welke informatie je wel en niet te zien mag krijgen.
Aoki - Hellboy - Gomi - Diaz Bros - GSP - Sonnen - Barnett
"Toto, I've got a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore."
Heb jij überhaupt gezien wat er op de site stond toen die was gehackt of heb je alleen het woord nazi's gelezen en ben je meteen doorgegaan met mij aanvallen?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTIwc59hmk4
UFC Issues Statement in Response to Website Hack
For a company that's adopted an aggressive stance toward fighting online piracy of its pay-per-view events and other content, the UFC seems relatively unconcerned about its website getting hacked over the weekend.
After UFC.com was hijacked and briefly redirected to a site called UGNazi.com -- supposedly in retaliation for the UFC's support of the anti-internet piracy bill SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) -- the UFC released a statement yesterday to assure fans that any information they might have given to the organization via its site was safe.
"On Sunday, January 22nd, the UFC.com website was redirected by a criminal hacker to another website," a statement provided to MMA Fighting read. "The UFC website was quickly restored to the control of the UFC, and there is no evidence suggesting that any confidential information belonging to the company or its customers was compromised by the re-direction of the website. UFC representatives are continuing to investigate the matter and are working with law enforcement agents to prosecute those involved."
That response, however, stands in stark contrast to the initial take offered by UFC president Dana White on Twitter.
"I'm in the fight biz not the website biz," he wrote to one fan who asked him about the hack on Sunday. "Who gives a [expletive]!?"
One answer might be: fans who have given the UFC their credit card information at some point in the past. Between online pay-per-view purchases, merchandise, and UFC Fight Club subscriptions, thousands of fans have no doubt passed important confidential information to the UFC through one of its websites, and those people might have liked a little extra reassurance from the public face of the company.
By comparison, after online shoe retailer Zappos.com was hacked earlier this month and the information for a reported 24 million accounts exposed, the company quickly sent out an email to customers to alert them to the situation and advise them to change their login and password information on any other site where they used "a same or similar password." Zappos also reassured customers that the "database that stores your critical credit card and other payment data was NOT affected or accessed."
The UFC's website was quickly restored by late Sunday afternoon for most visitors, but the group that claimed responsibility for hacking both UFC.com as well as Coach.com and CoachFactory.com -- all for their support of SOPA -- posted a message to its website that read simply: "We arn't done...not even close."
The timing of the attack coincided with a pro-SOPA opinion piece in the Las Vegas Review-Journal written by UFC executive vice president and general counsel Lawrence Epstein which accused "[f]oreign criminal websites," such as those that offer illegal streams of UFC events, of costing "legitimate U.S. businesses more than $200 billion a year, siphoning off American jobs, hurting businesses and dampening our economy."
Regardless, the SOPA bill remained unpopular with major online entities such as Wikipedia and Google, both of which participated in protests of the SOPA and PIPA (Protect Intellectual Property Act) bills last week before both were eventually shelved by lawmakers.
Be a Warrior, not a Worrier
Tja. Tegen mensen die zich zorgen maakten om hun gegevens zei Dana: dan koop je toch niet online?
Be a Warrior, not a Worrier
hij ziet internet als de vijand hahaha gekke amerikaan maar hij heeft zeker gelijk, wacht maar de overheid pakt ze wel. gevecht tegen overheid verlies je altijd, zeker die zionistische overheid van amerika
Dana White Responds to Hackers: 'Do It Again, Do It Tonight'
UFC president Dana White doesn't care that UFC.com was hacked on Sunday. In fact, he's urging the parties responsible to "do it again."
"Keep hacking our site," White said Thursday. "Do it again. Do it tonight."
Hackers on Sunday redirected the official UFC page to one of its own as a warning attack against the UFC for its support of the controversial SOPA anti-piracy bill.
Any downtime no matter how temporary is never good for business, but White's position is that he's in the fight business, not the website business.
"I'm not eBay. My website goes down for two days? Okay, our website goes down for two days. We'll fix it," White said. "You're not hurting me by taking my website down."
Since the majority of the UFC's revenues is from pay-per-view, the UFC has long held an aggressive anti-piracy act. SOPA would allow the government to stop advertising networks from accepting copyright-infringing websites as publishers. Additionally, search engines and Internet Service Providers would not be allowed to lead users to the infringing pages.
Opponents are calling SOPA a threat against the freedom of expression. Meanwhile, White says he is simply looking out for his business.
"Is SOPA the perfect bill?" White said. "No, it's not. The only thing that we're focused on is piracy. Piracy is stealing. If you walk into a store and steal a f--kin' gold watch, it's the same as stealing a pay-per-view. I don't care what your twisted, demented idea of stealing is."
A draft for the bill ended up getting postponed on Jan. 20, but White said Thursday that the hackers could actually help resurrect the bill.
"These guys look like terrorists now," said White, adding that hackers are only making government officials angry. " ... a bill that was about to die, it's about to come back."
The hacking was a web address redirect and the UFC says no confidential information belonging to the company or customers were compromised during the attack.
White made it a point that he loves the Internet, but for him, the Internet is also a camping ground for a select group of individuals he's not particularly fond of.
"I've always said this about the Internet: It's a place where cowards live," White said. "It's a place we're cowards live. You don't scare me. You don't scare me."
Be a Warrior, not a Worrier
Oeps. Dana heeft op Twitter ruzie zitten maken met Anonymous. Wordt een lang weekend voor degene die wel de internetguy bij de UFC is.
En toen lag al Dana zijn prive info op straat...
Wat is het toch een dufty, don't start fights you can not win
Fedor - Mousasi - GSP - Aoki - Hellboy - Cigano - Alvarez - Wicky - Diaz - Kitaoka
Signature bet record: 2-0
Dit was echt zo'n moment dat ie beter gewoon even niks had kunnen zeggen. Wat een dom gelul zeg.
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