They prime people with info - people you are to come into contact with. Eg. the guy "Frank", from way back in 2011, the business owner, who came round from miles away who thought he was going to sell me a particularly worthless laptop I saw his advert for, online. What he said, mentioning America out of the blue [I had connections in America], and the way his voice and body language changed when he said it, let me know something was afoot. It was the only time he actually looked me in the eye when he said that, too. Its not common when one invites an invited person into one's abode that they don't look you in the eye until 10 minutes into the scene. I was thinking it was weird as it was happening - why couldn't the guy look at me? When his entire demeanour changed ,and he said, out of the blue "I have a [family member] in America..." I knew he'd been primed and this was a fishing expedition.
Shortly after that, the monitoring began in earnest - and at one point the Internet disruption I was paying for was so bad I was having to use an Internet cafe for 6 weeks until the director of a certain well known ISP company - who I'd complained to about this interference to my service [by spooks] - could sort out my broadband problems, which they finally did, after incredible hassle, and I was refunded for 3 months line rental because of the interference with service - caused by the very same people who primed the cab driver, etc. 2 days ago. This kind of cr-p happens all the time. They deny any flagging, or monitoring, of course, and will go out of their way to deny it, as conversations I've had very recently or reply letters reveal after the subject had been broached. But we know, spooks - we know, and its not rocket science.
I know I caught you on the hop on Sunday, when I caught that early train into London - but you soon caught up - I saw the 2 short [5'6"?] female officers peering at me from the corner, for a few seconds only, looking intent, talking, then disappearing back round the corner. You think I don't notice tiny things like that, or when you follow me around, or put silly females in my path who come up to me and ask me crazy questions, like "where's Asda?" - twice, when we're standing right outside the place [2014]?
And what about when I turned that corner, just by the Aldi roundabout, and the female student-looking type, or trainee spook, was already looking at me square in the eyes as I turned the corner [that is so very odd!], and walked straight up to me, standing very close to me, asking where the nearest bank was as she needed money? Come on. That's so cheap a stunt. The bank was round another corner down a nearby road 250 yards away - but how come she had a smile of her face whilst looking at me - in the eyes - when I turned that corner? Can you imagine how bizarre that acting was? I believe she must've been dropped off by car immediately preceeding my arriving at the corner she was at the other side of, to get her [and the rest] ahead of me, ready for the verbal. They probably had people watching the event too, close by, and this person [and all the rest at other events, or some of them anyway] are probably wired for sound so anything said can be used later as evidence against myself.
What about the tiny very very young female with the small brown and white terrier dog, whilst waiting at the busstop that's now been moved, that I used nearly every day? Did you think I missed that one? Of course I didn't. And, at the busstop, whilst waiting for the bus - who was the old guy on his mobile phone, 20 yards away, looking away from me all the time I was noticing him, leaning on the gate post.
They also use nondescript very ordinary looking people - including teenage girls to pensioners, both male and female who are recruited to pop along to surveille and watch whoever is deemed a target - I know because ive been witnessing this for months and have been accosted by many of them - particularly young females and older tarty types - possibly prostitutes or ex-prostitutes [often employed by police or connected].
It would take literally all night to list every event since those posters were taken down in 2010, 2 weeks after they were put up, by that very busstop, a week after I gave a couple of the posters to a person who lives in Highgate, London, around the time I met Kevin Annett + co. too, at the same location.
When you hassled me over 2 days beginning at the anti-pope march, and I complained to the IPCC about it, and 6 months later, the verdict back from the IPCC was "no case to answer" - noone from your side could recall what the heck I was complaining about, even though I'd given you the officer's numbers + names, etc etc.? Oh, and funny how that cab driver on Sunday, around 07.15BST, during the station trip mentioned an IPCC complaint he'd had disregarded. What an odd coincidence!! or is it "ham acting"?
September 2010 was obviously the trigger for numerous particularly amateur events that continue to this very day. What about the old doxy who confronted me on the coach journey en route to see a Musa in HMP in 2012 - who, to my irritation - came an sat next to me after a few minutes into the journey, drivelling on about how she'd been wronged by whoever in business and she also thought she was pretty sure she knew a paedo who was a wrong'un? Did you think I'd fall for all her predictable bs? Luckily, I was able to escape off the coach at Hammersmith where I always used to alight to get the tube, but anyone could stake a fortune on me getting a tail by the time I'd reached Caledonian Rd. - the tube stop for either HMP the M's were in.
Who was the guy plain-clothes that time that jumped my exit through the ticket barrier at Cale. Rd. - creeping close right behind me as i went through the ticket barrier device, unnoticed until we'd gone through the thing - so he could get off the station without using his ticket - not that he even had one in the 1st place because he was a spook on duty tailing me. White guy, black well-worn leather jacket, dark jean-type trousers, black medium length hair - centre parting, slightly unshaven, dark t-shirt. He gave it away by staring malevolently at me, off and on, in the lift one has to get in at Caledonian Rd. tube before the ticket barriers + the street exit. He leant against the wall on the left in the lift, clocking me off and on as the lift awaited moving and then went up, whilst I looked forward towards the lift exit 2 yards away, by the other lift wall to the right. Was I being provoked, the same as they did when with Annett in Oxford street, on the march, the day after the pope's Lambeth visit in 2010, the officer literally pushing me backwards away from the other 5 this character was with, after the helicoptor must've got me with face recognition when in the middle of scores of people waiting to begin the march by Selfridge's? Then, after being separated from Annett + co, after being held by the side of the road as the march began for about 6 minutes, you allowed me back into it, and I caught up with Annett, only to have another officer never further than a few yards way from me for the entire march, ahead of me to my right, who kept turning back to look directly at me, often. You surely have all recorded - all this connected to the IPCC complaint they couldn't remember anything about, made a fortnight later.
It would take literally all night to list every event that's been noticed. The common factor in all this is my local agency [with others they've told], who I reported the Hollie Greig case to, in 2010 [ignored, emails to the then chief constable were blocked also], and also a "missing person" was reported to them in 2012 [ignored also].
But what is happening to CERTAIN OTHERS especially is gross, and much, much worse. You act "under the law" - and that will never work, and is very illegal. Gangstalking, when connected to government, is a public scandal. How come genuine citizens are punished when reporting serious crimes committed by government employees, and the government employees are left alone to continue the serious crime, and the persons reporting the crime's lives are made hell - even imprisoned? What I've noticed is ridiculously negligible compared to many good citizens targeted simply because of what they know, and do about what they know.
When people join enforcement agencies I well believe they have the honesty and integrity needed, and are to be applauded for that. But, along the way, some fall, and turn into pure monsters. This has, and is happening right now - to a lot of people. Where did it go so wrong for these people to make them change into monsters? Where? And what do they hope to achieve by it all? Is it all down to simply having a bigger bank balance?
Its pathetic.
Update: and that's without the phone hacking going back years [landline and mobile, [and audio recorded also], some callers or recipients of calls made refusing to believe me at first, until, in calls after, what I had been telling them about blossomed in front of our very ears - that changed their minds, And the computer being hacked constantly also, which varies according to whose doing it - one can usually distinguish by what's being done.
See more, added 31/07/17 [clipped message]:
This is extremely sad reading - compounded with the knowledge that the local council and connected parties are allegedly responsible for doing nothing to avert the horrific stalking described, let alone being behind it all. I am in a similar position, stalking-wise, to this which is described, with, imo, exactly the same parties running the entire show.The general public do not realise certain agendas which are now in place, and what is going on, courtesy of these government departments. They are not aware of how seemingly ordinary and general members of the public - locals - are used to surveille [and harass] one, who report to their fellow stalkers when one has gone out, where wider surveillance takes over. These Watchers can even be in place at the place one is going to if one has, for example, used a public bus to get to wherever one happens to be going to, or be at the place one is going to if one has ordered a cab, or bought train or coach tickets to somewhere. It is not hard to tell who these stalkers are, often by their incessant and quizzical stares, for no reason. Often I arrive home to find a neighbour waiting to greet me - an elderly, almost senile next door neighbour who I have no contact with at all, yet who regales me with a "hello!" when I am about to go into my block. Obviously someone has tipped him off - mobile phone messaged him or whatever - that I will be arriving home in 15 minutes or whatever, and his job is simply to be seen and be there as I arrive home, to reinforce the outrageous fact that surveillance is being enacted. If I've ordered a cab for the following day, this neighbour will be there as the cab arrives, no matter what time or how early it may be, as he was at 7am last Sunday when he stood watching me get into a pre-ordered cab - what was he doing waiting by my abode at 7am on a Sunday morning in the remote, secluded close that I live in? Other neighbours I have no contact with often try and engage me in conversation whilst out - mysteriously appearing away from my home when I am awaiting a bus home, at random locations, or even when I'm in a "Subway" sandwich bar - they waltz in shouting "hello!" as I'm sitting there - its uncanny, and all approaches are avoided like the plague. One next door neighbour is a class A drug abuser, so who knows what's going on with her approaches and why she should suddenly appear, targeting myself when I am out, walking right up to me and attempting to engage in conversation as if we're old friends and she's known me for years. For weeks her friends would knock on my door asking for her [she lives in the block next door] - each one apologising for disturbing me after realising they had, deliberately, the wrong address. Who can be behind all of these weird happenings?
https://butlincat.blogspot.co.uk/2016/06/domestic-surveillance-days-of-my.html ].
videos: nearly all of these videos have been removed - even those that I have made on my mobile phone of the hacking on my pc, for example - an obvious attempt to stifle the exposure of what's being shown.
"PRIVATE EYE"s IAN HISLOP + GCHQ EXPERT PROF. R. ALDRICH DISCUSS THE NEW "SNOOPERS CHARTER" + HOW GCHQ HAVE BEEN BREAKING THE LAW FOR 17 YEARS!! 6DEC16
USE FANTASTIC AMOUNTS OF "DISCERNMENT" WITH THE GOVERNMENT SPOKESPERSON'S SPIEL AT 6 MINS 10 secs OR SO IN THIS VIDEO [and elsewhere]!!! PURE TRIPE!!
Getting Personal -
HACKER FILMED LIVE ON MY COMPUTER 22 JULY 16
1] my computer being hacked - on seeing this strange event, which had happened a couple of time before this time, I quickly grabbed my mobile phone and recorded it - theentire events only lasting around 2 minutes, if that. The "shaking screen" stopped after making this video public in July 2016.
KEYLOGGING FILMED ON MY PC 13 JULY 16
My computer being keylogged and filmed as it happens, while writing an email in my gmail a/c. I have a long history of being monitored, prob. by the sometimes very amateur "security services" [or connected] more than likely because of my reporting and highlighting certain shocking cases of child removalfrom perfectly good families, or other seriously irregular cases of imprisonment of persons, etc....eg. Carol Woods Lancs. whistleblower, the "Hampstead satanic Ritual Abuse" case, Peter Hofschroer, the Baylis family child removals, and many more appalling cases that are systematically and deliberately ignored by our wonderful government
VIDEO REMOVED
KEYLOGGING BY A HACKER CAPTURED AGAIN ON FILM 12 AUG. 2016
BEING KEYLOGGED [hacked] 8NOV16
#EdwardSnowden: How Your Cell Phone #Spies on You 23Oct2019
Wednesday, 25 December 2013
If You Have a Smart Phone, Anyone Can Now Track Your Every Move + SNOWDEN: HOW TO TURN YOUR PHONE "BLACK"
By Pamela Owen
Details about text messages, phone calls, emails and every website visited by members of the public will be kept on record in a bid to combat terrorism.
The Government will order broadband providers, landline and mobile phone companies to save the information for up to a year under a new security scheme.
What is said in the texts, emails or phone calls will not be kept but information on the senders, recipients and their geographical whereabouts will be saved.
Direct messages to users of social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter will also be saved and so will information exchanged between players in online video games.
The information will be stored by individual companies rather than the government.
The news has sparked huge concerns about the risk of hacking and fears that the sensitive information could be used to send spam emails and texts.
Nick Pickles, director of privacy and civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch, said: 'Britain is already one of the most spied on countries off-line and this is a shameful attempt to watch everything we do online in the same way.
'The vast quantities of data that would be collected would arguably make it harder for the security services to find threats before a crime is committed, and involve a wholesale invasion of all our privacy online that is hugely disproportionate and wholly unnecessary.
The plans have been drawn up by home security service MI5, MI6 which operates abroad, and the GCHQ, the governments communication headquarters which looks after the country's Signal Intelligence.
Security services would then be able to request information on people they have under surveillance and could piece together their movements with information provided.
Security services are said to be concerned about the ability of terrorists to avoid tracking through modern technology and are believed to have lobbied Home Secretary Theresa May to introduce the scheme.
According to The Sunday Times ministers are planning to include the spy initiative called the Communications Capabilities Development Programme in the Queen's speech in May.
Jim Killock, executive director of the Open Rights Group, said: 'This would be a systematic effort to spy on all of our digital communications.
'No state in history has been able to gather the level of information proposed,' he said to The Sunday Times.
Smartphone apps are being used by the companies that sell them to store information about your children.
Small print in the information provided before it is downloaded gives permission for the information to be accessed.
The Sunday Times examined 200 apps available and out of those 170 provided the right to access some information stored on the phone.
Developers have said they need the information in order to ensure the products work properly but some of the data accessed has little relevance.
Last week it was discovered the app for Twitter had been secretly accessing mobile phone address books.
Director of Big Brother Watch, Nick Pickles, told The Sunday Times: 'How many parents knew that a simple mobile phone game would give someone the ability to access their child's location, see what their camera lens is looking at or see the phone number of who is calling their child?'
Mr Pickles added it was proof of how weak regulation was.
source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2103314/Government-spy-programme-monitor-phone-text-email.html#ixzz2oWJshw00
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Christopher Mims April 20, 2012
Navizon’s technology is also reminiscent of the location data provided to retailers and marketers by Skyhook’s Spotrank system, which has a different set of pros and cons: That data is available for every point on the planet, but it only includes devices running Skyhook software.
http://www.technologyreview.com/view/427687/if-you-have-a-smart-phone-anyone-can-now-track-your-every-move/
How to Disable Facebook Places Location Tracking
If this feature creeps you out a little bit, you're not alone.
"Have you ever bothered to click on the "Places" map on your Facebook timeline? It kind of creeped me out the first time I tried it. It almost felt like Facebook was stalking me.
Hovering my mouse pointer over any of the red dots on the Facebook Places map revealed pictures I had been tagged in at each location, status posts I had made from different places, etc. I had never really thought that Facebook was aggregating all of this geotag data together, and frankly, I'm not crazy about them doing this for me. Depending on your privacy settings, your friends and others may also be able to see this information.
If you don't like Facebook presenting your location information in a scrapbook-for-stalkers format, you can turn it off (sort of). Let's take a look at a few things you can do to remove your location data from the Facebook Places map.
Step 1 - Remove Geotags From Your Pictures Before You Upload Them to Facebook
To ensure that future pictures posted to Facebook and other social media sites don't reveal your location information, you should make sure that the geotag information is never recorded in the first place. Most of the time this is done by turning off the location services setting on your smartphone's camera application so that the geotag information doesn't get recorded in the picture's EXIF metadata. There are also apps that will help you strip our the geolocation information of pictures you've already taken. You might want to try deGeo (iPhone) or Photo Privacy Editor (Android) to remove the geotag info from your photos before uploading them to social media sites.
Step 2 - Disable Location Services for Facebook on Your Mobile Phone / Device
When you first installed Facebook on your mobile phone, it probably asked for permission to use your phone's location services so that it could provide you with the ability to "check-in" at different locations and tag photos with location information. If you don't want Facebook knowing where you are posting something from, then you should revoke this permission in your phone's location services settings area.
Step 3 - Enable the Facebook Tag Review Feature
Facebook recently made an attempt to go from a super-granular privacy settings structure to an ultra-simple one. It now appears that you cannot selectively prevent people from tagging you at a location, however, you can turn on the tag review feature which allows you to review anything you've been tagged in, whether it's a picture or a location check-in. You can decide whether tags get posted before they are posted, but only if you have the tag review feature enabled.
To Enable the Facebook Tag Review Feature:
1. Log into Facebook and select the settings padlock icon next to the "Home" button at the top right corner of the page.
2. Click the "See More Settings" link from the bottom of the "Privacy Shortcuts" menu.
3. Click the "Timeline and Tagging" link on the left side of the screen.
4. In the "How can I manage tags people add and tagging suggestions?" section of the "Timeline and Tagging Settings menu, click the "Edit" link next to "Review tags people add to your own posts before the tags appear on Facebook?"
5. Click the "Disabled" button and change its setting to "Enabled".
6. Click the "Close" link.
After this setting is enabled, any post that you are tagged in, whether it's a photo, location check-in, etc, will have to gain your digital stamp of approval before it's posted to your timeline. This will effectively prevent anyone from posting your location without your express permission.
Step 4 - Limit Who Can See Your "Stuff" on Facebook
Also located in the newly revamped Facebook privacy settings area is a "Who can see my stuff" option. This is where you can limit the visibility of future posts (such as ones with geotags in them). You may choose "Friends", "Only Me", "Custom", or "Public". I advise against choosing "Public" unless you want the whole world knowing where you are and where you've been.
This option applies to all future posts. Individual posts can be changed as they are created or after they are made, in case you want to make something more public or private later on. You can also use the "Limit Past Posts" option to change all of your old posts that might have been "Public" or "Friends of Friends" to "Friends Only".
It's a good idea to check your Facebook privacy settings about once a month as they seem to make sweeping changes on a regular basis that could affect the settings you have in place. Check out our Facebook Privacy and Security section of our site for more guidance.
About.com Internet / Network Security