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Talk:Project Chanology/Decentralisation program

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A wise choice would be... After the the Feb 10th raid, if you are in continued contact with other protesters that were there, use other means to plan outside of websites. Direct contact is the safest route to go as long as you are certain they are who you think they are.

Another anon: Perhaps we can make a Tor node? If they can't find it, they can't stop it, and few/nobody has the ability to DDoS over tor simply because there aren't that many ways onto it.

YAN: That's a bad idea. having a public site and a tor site makes the site more vulnerable. Read about Onion server stability. Now, if it's a seperate server with auto-synching, that's different.

BTW, I want to help mirror or provide offline backups, but I don't know how to backup an SQL server remotely. (This is how you do it. You know PHP, right?)

Anon: Although we need to decentralize, putting links to all of the sources is still a good idea, we need to make it so they cant take it down but we can still find it

Anon: Don't attempt to obscure important public data like raid dates. Remember: if we can find it, they can find it, might as well make it as easy to find as possible. If you're going to mirror, maybe look into some "selective mirroring" like a separate site that mirrors only pages relevant to New York City. This could be like seeding a NYC-only wiki with everything currently on this wiki about it, then eventually taking the stuff off this wiki.


LoneAnon: Personally, I think it would be the most efficient if before the March 15th raid anons were to spread the word that everyone should make fake aims/msns or if your brave enough, use your own. Then during the raid people would either exchange them or give them to a single person and then through chatrooms the anons would discuss local events, etc. This is just a dumber version of what you guys were saying, however, we are trying to get the public in this and most people don't know how to use mIRC, etc. and chatrooms would be the easiest way of local communication. And Co$ has the same chance of infiltrating one of those as they would the other stuff so there's no real security faults.

I agree with the aim/msn idea, it could use some tweaking but since everyone knows how to use messagers, it would open it to the public.

If we're going to do a chat like that, why not use irc?

>>Well we could, but then someone would have to make like 100 rooms for every city, and there might be issues with either booting someone or who gets op, but idk, as long as its accessible to the public and easy to use, there shouldn't be a problem. so now all we have to do is come up with a unanimous solution.

>>Most people have not heard of IRC (REmember, we want the general public here), so they may be wary of installing another client they would end up not using ever again. IT'd be MUCH easier to start and dissiminate messages thru AIM and MSN, as proven by those viruses that crop up ever now and then. We need to inform the public with the least amount of effort required on the public's part. -- AnonymousRaven

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