FBI redirection

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Hey!This article isn't lulz just yet, but its coverage can spark a lollercoaster.
You can help by reverting people who delete shit, and vandalizing their user pages.
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Typical pedo
Typical pedo

Do you like to click unknown URLs when someone sends them, incluing those tinyurl links? Do you keep your wifi open as an excuse if the RIAA sues you for warezing? Do you run a Tor exit node? If so, soon the van will be coming to your door. If you survive the bullet wounds, you'll have a nice URL to give to everyone to get them vanned, too.

4chan has had some lame techniques of telling people to search for "lolita" on imagefap.com or to search for child porn on the F.B.I.'s website, but these only scare people. The real links get people vanned.

If you discover a real link, here's how to make the most of it: There's a program called XRummer meant for spamming that was made by Russians. It has an advanced AI that can decode all CAPTCHAs, determine what form fields to fill out, validate emails, and more. It gets you on every forum, blog, and guestbook spamming no matter what even if the site was coded just 20 minutes ago. It gathers tons of proxies that it will go through them until it finds an IP that's not blocked. Run this bastard with the F.B.I. redirection link, advertise it as something legal, and 100 million people will get vanned!

[edit] Example of what happens

Roderick Vosburgh, a doctoral student at Temple University who also taught history at La Salle University, was raided at home in February 2007 after he allegedly clicked on the F.B.I.’s hyperlink. Federal agents knocked on the door around 7 a.m., falsely claiming they wanted to talk to Vosburgh about his car. Once he opened the door, they threw him to the ground outside his house, tazered him, and then handcuffed him.

Vosburgh was charged with violating federal law, which criminalizes “attempts” to download child pornography with up to 10 years in prison. Last November, a jury found Vosburgh guilty on that count, and a sentencing hearing is scheduled for April 22, at which point Vosburgh could face three to four years in prison.


 
 
...that the F.B.I. can put a honeypot out there to attract people is kind of sad. It seems to me that they’ve brought a lot of cases without having to stoop to this.’”

Civil libertarians, “warn that anyone who clicks on a hyperlink advertising something illegal - perhaps found while Web browsing or received through e-mail - could face the same fate,” says the story, adding: “When asked what would stop the F.B.I. from expanding its hyperlink sting operation, Harvey Silverglate, a longtime criminal defense lawyer in Cambridge, Mass. and author of a forthcoming book on the Justice Department, replied:

“Because the courts have been so narrow in their definition of ‘entrapment,’ and so expansive in their definition of ‘probable cause,’ there is nothing to stop the Feds from acting as you posit.
 


 


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Image:Little Troll.gif FBI redirection is part of a series on Trolls.



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