Die Energiewende in Deutschland ist beschlossene Sache. Der Bundestag hat mit breiter Mehrheit ein umfangreiches Gesetzespaket verabschiedet - bis 2022 soll das letzte Kernkraftwerk vom Netz gehen.
Der Spiegel 30 juni 2011
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Det eviga
Väl formar den starke med svärdet sin värld,
Väl flyga som örnar hans rykten;
Men någon gång brytes det vandrande svärd
Och örnarna fällas i flykten.
Vad våldet må skapa är vanskligt och kort,
Det dör som en stormvind i öknen bort.
Esaias Tegnér 1810
Sunday, March 27, 2011
En ny söndag i mars
Det är
knappast goda nyheter utifrån denna mars månad 2011.
Die Lage an der japanischen Atomruine Fukushima gerät völlig außer Kontrolle: Die Radioaktivität an Reaktor 2 ist jetzt zehn Millionen Mal höher als normal, meldet Betreiber Tepco. Die Rettungsarbeiten an dem Meiler wurden unterbrochen.
knappast goda nyheter utifrån denna mars månad 2011.
Die Lage an der japanischen Atomruine Fukushima gerät völlig außer Kontrolle: Die Radioaktivität an Reaktor 2 ist jetzt zehn Millionen Mal höher als normal, meldet Betreiber Tepco. Die Rettungsarbeiten an dem Meiler wurden unterbrochen.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Söndagens epistel
Die Situation im Atomkraftwerk Fukushima wird immer bedrohlicher. Der Druck in Reaktor 3 steigt, die Regierung warnt vor einer weiteren Explosion.
Ausgerechnet in diesem Meiler wird seit einigen Monaten neben Uran auch Plutonium verwendet - was die Risiken zusätzlich erhöht.
- Detta måste tas som en allvarlig varningssignal.
- Vi kunde leva drägligt före atomåldern och har allt att vinna på att avveckla!
- Vi måste också avveckla vårt drogberoende: drogen olja som inte är förnyelsebar och som leder till uppvärmning av planeten...
Ausgerechnet in diesem Meiler wird seit einigen Monaten neben Uran auch Plutonium verwendet - was die Risiken zusätzlich erhöht.
- Detta måste tas som en allvarlig varningssignal.
- Vi kunde leva drägligt före atomåldern och har allt att vinna på att avveckla!
- Vi måste också avveckla vårt drogberoende: drogen olja som inte är förnyelsebar och som leder till uppvärmning av planeten...
Saturday, December 04, 2010
Friday, September 03, 2010
Äntligen en bank för alla
som liksom bloggaren här
behöver en plats i stan, där man kan samla de
oerhörda mängderna av kulor...
behöver en plats i stan, där man kan samla de
oerhörda mängderna av kulor...
Monday, July 26, 2010
Long Live Assange!
from Cnn today:
Since WikiLeaks is in the business of publishing information that governments and multinational corporations want kept secret, the site employs some technical tricks that aim to keep it from crashing or being hacked.
The site keeps servers on multiple continents, and its sensitive information passes through countries -- such as Sweden, Iceland and Belgium -- that have offered WikiLeaks a degree of legal protection.
"We use this state-of-the-art encryption to bounce stuff around the internet to hide trails -- pass it through legal jurisdictions like Sweden and Belgium to enact those legal protections," the site's controversial editor, Julian Assange, said in an onstage interview at the TED Global conference on July 20.
The fact that WikiLeaks' servers and volunteers are all over the globe makes it, in effect, the "world's first stateless news organization," writes Jay Rosen, a journalism professor at New York University.
Rosen says this is key to the site's ability to protect itself.
"WikiLeaks is organized so that if the crackdown comes in one country, the servers can be switched on in another," he writes. "This is meant to put it beyond the reach of any government or legal system."
Assange reportedly has spent his life developing the tech skills needed to set up such a system.
"As a teenager in Melbourne, Australia, he belonged to a hacker collective called the International Subversives," writes the magazine Mother Jones.
He eventually pleaded guilty to multiple counts "of breaking into Australian government and commercial websites to test their security gaps, but was released on bond for good behavior."
Since WikiLeaks is in the business of publishing information that governments and multinational corporations want kept secret, the site employs some technical tricks that aim to keep it from crashing or being hacked.
The site keeps servers on multiple continents, and its sensitive information passes through countries -- such as Sweden, Iceland and Belgium -- that have offered WikiLeaks a degree of legal protection.
"We use this state-of-the-art encryption to bounce stuff around the internet to hide trails -- pass it through legal jurisdictions like Sweden and Belgium to enact those legal protections," the site's controversial editor, Julian Assange, said in an onstage interview at the TED Global conference on July 20.
The fact that WikiLeaks' servers and volunteers are all over the globe makes it, in effect, the "world's first stateless news organization," writes Jay Rosen, a journalism professor at New York University.
Rosen says this is key to the site's ability to protect itself.
"WikiLeaks is organized so that if the crackdown comes in one country, the servers can be switched on in another," he writes. "This is meant to put it beyond the reach of any government or legal system."
Assange reportedly has spent his life developing the tech skills needed to set up such a system.
"As a teenager in Melbourne, Australia, he belonged to a hacker collective called the International Subversives," writes the magazine Mother Jones.
He eventually pleaded guilty to multiple counts "of breaking into Australian government and commercial websites to test their security gaps, but was released on bond for good behavior."
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