Totally jacked off. That seems to be my default state, more and more.
Tried to load my video edit here on Blogger (for like the third consecutive shot), but was unable to do so, as the video is in excess of 200 megabytes and the limit on Blogger is 100 mb or something like that.
Wanted to sign up for Yandex, as they have video hosting, I believe. But Yandex want my phone number.
WTF for? What is this, world-wide totalitarian surveillance in force?
Decided it might be a good time to put that throw-away mobile phone voucher to use, at last. I was supposed to use it to sign back onto the Twitter account I've been shut out of, but I have an aversion to being held to ransom for my phone number, and I've an aversion to censorship in general, so I'm not playing with the Twitter assh*les ... and I've shut down the stand-by on principle, although I'm sometimes tempted to sign on again ... but there's a whole other story in that. It looks as though I cannot sign up for the Twitter FRAUD & CENSORSHIP lies and propaganda promoting corporate and overnment controlled public communication 'social media' platform without giving them a phone number, which I won't do.
So, anyway, I think to myself, why not put that throw-away SIM to use and sign up for the Yandex video hosting, so I can get my video edit up online, without having to put it through YouTube, which I'm not fond of hooking up to, along with anything else to do with Google and their data-sucking scams. It's bad enough that I'm here. I really should be on Russia's VK, or somewhere. But maybe I'd be too radical for the Russians? LOL
Yandex seemed the shot for video hosting, and I really don't care what information Russians have. I'd sooner be spied on by Russians than Google, so I thought I'd give it a shot.
It appears that I live in a totalitarian open air prison.
Tried to validate the pre-paid SIM card I had, so that I could sign up for Yandex and upload my video. But validating the pre-paid card is no go without providing a massive amount of personal data: name, address, phone number, e-mail, and formal identification numbers (such as medical number, licence number, passport number and so forth).
The card *is* pre-paid. As such, I would argue that the telecommunications provider is breach of contract by accpting consideration while subsequently denying service. Where are the lawyers? How about a big class action claim, ambulance chasers? Where the f*ck is my service and why should I provide all this personal data, as if I were under arrest?
At the end of the day, it's not like I'm not traceable. I did not bother to VPN or to TOR, so it's not like I cannot be found if I must be found.
That being so, what the f*ck is this totalitarian prison camp demand for all this PRIVATE data, just to be able to set up a phone number on which to get verification codes to activate video hosting and social media accounts on an anonymous basis, rather than giving my private data on a platter to those that simply do not need my personal data, or to hackers (in due course).
Tried to put through the pre-paid SIM on a totally phony basis, which drove me up the wall, trying to make up names, a fake birthday, having to set up a throw-away e-mail, having to search for a phony street address, having to make up a fake telephone contact number, and, finally, having to devise a fake driver's licence number.
It does my head in just making up one creative anonymous user-name for things, let alone all the faking and note-taking involved in that exercise, so that I could keep track of the garbage I was making up.
It turns out that you can't even set up a fake account to activate your PRE-PAID SIM because these communications carrier kapo have a direct link to what is government information and soon reject fake formal verifiable IDs, although they accepted my fake look-up address as 'verified'. LMAO
The solution, then, would be just to make up an account using real data of a real person, but I'm not up for entering into ID theft or whatever that would constitute.
As criminals would have no such qualms, what exactly is the point of the government raping ordinary citizens who simply want privacy? What's going on here? Why are we in prison?
I just wanted to upload my 'Samurai Project' video to Yandex video hosting, on an anonymous basis ... well, as anonymous as you can be without bothering to mask one's ISP address.
Once done, I couldn't delete my fake e-mail account, because the controls aren't obvious in the Russian service I used. What's wrong with site designers? Why would they make it hard to find a 'delete account' button and leave their service full of fake and disused e-mail addresses?
Intended to delete and then to set up something a bit more sensible than the fake account I sort of just bashed out off the top of my head, but now I'm too frazzled to cope with more fake names for anonymous accounts that aren't really anonymous, and I don't fancy being stuck with an ugly sounding e-mail or Russian social media account name.
North Korea or China ought to help us Western prisoners out by hosting fully anonymous services for Westerners that are sick of being spied on and private data raped. C'mon, Kim, stick it to the US-Anglo prison warders. LOL
As I've skipped a night's sleep engrossed in more video editing, I'm not feeling so good after the video upload saga, followed by the SIM card activation citizen prisoner's nightmare. I'm really wired, in a very unpleasant way.
I'm supposed to cook, but I don't know how I'll get on doing that. Aside from being extremely wired, I'm sort of zombied out and too agro to really want to, even though I must.
This sounds strange, but it also sounds rather appealing to me: we're having Rissoles in Stroganoff Sauce. If I can get my sh*t together enough to make it.
We're arguing now, because I'm being hassled to cook and I'm not quite done. The parting shot to me was: "I hope you get arrested."
No solidarity among prisoners here. LOL
Wonder if closed prisons have faster internet?
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