Radical-safest TLDs in 2007

Juan juan.g71 at gmail.com
Wed Oct 1 23:10:49 PDT 2014


On Wed, 1 Oct 2014 17:18:10 -0700
Rich Jones <rich at openwatch.net> wrote:

> I wrote this in 2012:
> https://gun.io/blog/secure-your-domain-where-is-safe-to-register-a-domain-name/

	sweden? they are puppets of the americunt nazis



> 
> Maybe not quite what you're after, but perhaps it could give you
> something to work with.
> 
> R
> 
> On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 3:54 PM, Douglas Lucas <dal at riseup.net> wrote:
> 
> > On 10/01/2014 01:57 PM, rysiek wrote:
> > > Dnia poniedziałek, 29 września 2014 09:08:48 Douglas Lucas pisze:
> > >> I have a historical question. In 2007, anywhere from January to
> > >> September, what TLDs were regarded as the most pirate-friendly or
> > >> journalism-friendly or safest from takedowns of whatever stripe,
> > >> e.g. the sort of DHS DMCA takedowns we have now, etc.?
> > >
> > > Might I enquire what could possibly the reason to ask such a
> > > question?
> > >
> >
> > I am writing a short story. There is a scene set in 2007, roughly
> > October. Two characters disagree on what TLD to get to provide
> > material to others. One wants a .com to sell the stuff. The other
> > wants the most non-capitalist, pro-freedom TLD possible. The
> > difference characterizes the two individuals.
> >
> > For credibility: I attended @ClarionWest Writers Workshop in 2008,
> > which is for writers of science fiction and fantasy. (To verify:
> > The Workshop follows me, @DouglasLucas, on Twitter, and I wrote a
> > series of blog posts about my six weeks there
> > http://www.douglaslucas.com/blog/tag/clarion-west-2008/ I'm
> > including more and more cyberpunk/cypherpunk elements in my
> > fiction. Probably because my life has been altered over the course
> > of getting more into FLOSS and writing journalism pieces as part of
> > an investigative partnership with WikiLeaks, as you can see here:
> > http://douglaslucas.com/nonfiction
> >





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