Huh? Forty-four? No, no, no. You must mean TWENTY-four. 'Cuz that's the highest number. I mean, c'mon. 24. Fuhgettaboutit.
4Dragons if you were smart you'd delete this thread or get rid of the pictures which I'm not sure you can do without leaving attachments.
Should the government somehow see this I can guarantee you you'll come under questioning.
Get the f#ck working on it or post some porn to your posts.
I'm am not joking dude as anyone who even jokes with guns and posts Obama pictures is in a world of trouble.
Get Todd to help you if nessasary as he could even get some sh#t over it.
Sonny
Sonny you have the IQ of a squirrel. Everything I posted is about the number 44. This is my birthday thread. I turned 44 today. Time for you to step away from the keyboard old guy.
<----44
Happy Birthday old man
Hey happy b-day and I like you dude. But the NSA can pluck this stuff right off the net. Even if it's about you being 44 and misdirect it to something sinister. I am not f#cking joking 4dragons so don't think it's funny. These other idiots here who rave about it here aren't your friends. I'd like to be so I'm offering good advice. Get rid of this thread as it could cause you some serios trouble.
That being said is all I can do.
Sonny
44 is 4dragons pant size
http://www.webpronews.com/new-leak-s...online-2013-07
In early June, former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed PRISM to the world. The secret NSA program allows the agency to collect communications from major tech companies. Various programs revealed since then have all been about streamlining that data collection. The latest leak, however, shows that the NSA has far more power than previously thought.
The Guardian reports today that it has obtained slides that detail a NSA program called XKeyscore. The program, much like PRISM, allows the agency to collect the Internet communications of foreign and domestic targets. What makes this latest leak so worrisome, however, is that it seems to be held to even less oversight than the other surveillance programs.
Before we get into that, let’s take a look at what XKeyscore is. According to training documents obtained by The Guardian, the NSA says XKeyscore can snoop on “nearly everything a typical user does on the Internet.” It does this through a collection of 700 servers around the world that pick up pretty much everything anybody does online. Analysts can then enter something as simple as an email address or an IP address, and be looking through everything the NSA has on that person.
PFA is definitely in the top 10 million websites the NSA is monitoring.
LOL not.
This site really does help me feel young.
Yes I prolly am on their watch list as I have made comments on how I see the CIA as ruthless and cold blooded.
But I can almost guarantee that with hunderds of millions of spikers that they use this thread has already been seem by those up above in security.
What they will do is not known but only to them.
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