Confidentiality

I’m not a man of the Internet, nor am I one of modern systems. I adapt a bit because it’s a suit that one must wear. I am outdated in comparison to the most modern technology of the day. There is nothing more ancient than the era in which one lives, when thinking about the years to come.

It’s always important to not be ridiculous. But it is difficult to not appear so in a distant future: our clothes, our customs, our cars with gasoline and petroleum, our flights, wonders of gravity from the ships that these generations have placed in the air and sea and the philosophical and moral musings. Everything will be reevaluated or revalued, while everything continues to be new and old in the blink of an eye.

Something lost in this historic moment in communications is confidentiality. Important military secrets and the malicious plots of rebels are discovered by empirical use, not by the manufacture of new instruments.

The United States of North America has fallen; it fell precisely on the Internet by the so-called Internet hackers. While the same way that one loses their junk mail, uninteresting to others, as I could have lost in the first months of the year, the voice of Miss Hillary is heard throughout the world with offensive language for many heads of state.

It’s difficult to explain a sarcastic phrase, to take away significance from a thought expressed off key and with the complicity of a confidential collaborator. The damage remains done and subsequent diplomacy will be awkward.

Those most seasoned in the art of information and the most malicious, by the clandestine nature of their activities, have come falling down, one after the other, at the hands of the volunteer mega technicians. This demonstrates the unreliability of the system, which constitutes the great advances of the modern era. Its use, of course, is unsustainable, but for its supporters and fanatics it is unbeatable.

As a result: I don’t love the Internet, despite its enormous advantages in information and communication. But I use it in modest amounts because the previous era has concluded. However, the Internet brought uncertainty and disloyalty, as we have seen, even with state secrets. And I use, which is unbearable for Lorenzo, the harshest vulgarity and anonymous insults, not controlled — perhaps uncontrollable — by the media.

There are those who rejoice in the exposure of the United States’ secret information; there were also those who must have celebrated the fall of the Twin Towers. They are friends, on the other hand, of the neo-socialists of the 21st century, whose leaders use such aggressive and provocative language against other heads of state that is, in some way, transparent by the type of diplomacy — i.e. antinomianism — they utilize. It is not even worth encrypting, as it is seen by all.

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