nytimes.com— The government contends that it is perfectly free to inspect the hard drive of every laptop that enters the country in the same way it looks through suitcases.
Jan 7, 2008View in Crawl 4
GTFO! Are you serious about that? :-0Parliament must have been running scared from threats of peaceful protests after the Countryside Alliance protested the hunting ban. Yep, those respectable, well-mannered people from the English rural shires are *scary*!
I agree that the average person is not that remarkable, but the average guy probably has a few images or other files they wouldn't want their mom or wife seeing. ("See mom, I only have Christan worship music on here". *listens to encrypted file system with only rock music after mom leaves.)
thenativeraverJan 7, 2008
Your mom might, that is if you ever leave the basement...
ninja0Jan 8, 2008
or you could have a unix/linux system and just mount your drive at home to your laptop after you're out of the airport ;)
j1ggyJan 8, 2008
Buried, I don't live there, never would.
computerwiz_222Jan 8, 2008
sd
bosssmileyJan 9, 2008
GTFO! Are you serious about that? :-0Parliament must have been running scared from threats of peaceful protests after the Countryside Alliance protested the hunting ban. Yep, those respectable, well-mannered people from the English rural shires are *scary*!
j1ggyJan 10, 2008
That's because we have a $1000 cap on donations. In America, the gov't is bought by corporate donations and will always be until that changes.
metalwolfJan 18, 2008
I agree that the average person is not that remarkable, but the average guy probably has a few images or other files they wouldn't want their mom or wife seeing. ("See mom, I only have Christan worship music on here". *listens to encrypted file system with only rock music after mom leaves.)