Twenty internet cuts this week, one today. No let up either on individual laptop and TV interference. Will the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman investigate the Information Commissioner's decision that poses a threat to Declan's life? Our Church and State emails virtually obliterated this week too
Our Church and State website has no less than 63 Nobel Laureates on it despite the never-ending assault on our email; see paragraph 2 under "Church and State" on this blog's sidebar (updated today).
Declan and I pay British Telecom £900 a year for broadband and TV. We have had three BT engineers in our flat to date. No personal equipment, phone line or aerial fault detected. As well as frequent cuts from the internet, individual laptop and TV interference continues unabated. Individual laptop speeds of a fraction of 1 Mbps have not been uncommon since last December. No let up either on the signal quality we get from our second BT TV YouView box. We have always had and continue to have perfect TV reception on free view channels when we switch to our aerial.
6 June: British Telecom: A record-breaking 18 internet cuts in the last two days, 16 of them today. What is Declan doing? Having broken into the San Francisco elite, he is now fully focused on AI and brain-computer interfaces
First readout above: "2021-06-07 03:50:16 UTC ... cache can't open /home/customer/www/churchandstate.org.uk/ ... - Too many open files...." Constantly repeated.
7 June: SiteGround has gotten back to me. Access to our Church and State website has been repeatedly denied. Do I have a fix? They have named WP Rocket, who I have being paying for many years for one plugin
Declan and I are living in a Mayor of London's Rough Sleepers Initiative (RSI) designated property. We expect that any time now, we will have lost our almost two-year battle to stabilise our tenancy. We are currently battling the Information Commissioner's decision that allows St Mungo's to continue processing coercive support plans without our knowledge or consent and that poses a direct threat to Declan's life.
8 June: Will the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman investigate? Eviction back to the streets a third time from a Mayor of London Rough Sleepers Initiative property doesn't just constitute a death sentence for Declan. I am also likely to be left physically crippled for life
I am truly appalled by the unlawful violation of the Heavey's basic right to send and receive email without interference. I would be most grateful for anything you may be able to do by way of taking measures to correct this gross abuse.
An American professor to then Home Office Minister Lynne Featherstone in 2010
It has gotten to the stage where if I want to increase my chances of getting through to new people an email seeking permission to republish an article on Church and State, I must wait until I have at least three high quality permission emails to send. That was exactly the case for me yesterday. A success rate of one in five Church and State emails has become the norm for Declan. But not even that worked for him yesterday (above).
This Church and State blog was temporarily blocked on 14 May 2021. The following categories in my (paid for) backup blog at WordPress are up and running:
British Telecom
Email Interception
Equality Commission
Facebook[1]
Financial Ombudsman
Housing Ombudsman
Investigatory Powers Tribunal
Parliamentary Ombudsman[2]
Peabody Trust[3]
Pixsy
St Mungo's
Vandalisation of property
All links go to my new backup blog at Wordpress.
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[1] The lead post in this category reveals that we have had 10.7 million hits in the past three years on Facebook and despite the company's unfair practices.
[2] Posted on 14 May, the lead blog post in this category includes a section on internet cuts and individual laptop interference and a section on TV interference.
[3] Peabody Trust's appalling new terms of tenancy have been added to this category. We live in a Mayor of London Rough Sleepers Initiative designated property.
"These con men can do a lot electronically but enforcing their claim will require bringing a suit. Paying $249 is just a dispute=a small claim. Which has not been proven." An American perspective
8 June: Pixsy (day 210): I have found Declan's Motion to Dismiss to fight their threatened court action in an article titled "Defense Against the Dark Arts of Copyright Trolling". No sooner had we heard from them than they were named and shamed by Computer Weekly and it's a truly sickening read
Beware the use of "free" photos off the internet - they may not be as free as you think, thanks to automated image recognition tools and dubious use of Creative Commons licensing- as targets of one German photographer found out to their cost: https://t.co/64ryecBz1v
— ComputerWeekly (@ComputerWeekly) November 18, 2020
The Investigatory Powers Tribunal has carefully considered your complaint and Human Rights Act claim, and has concluded that it is obviously unsustainable, and thus falls within the provisions of Rule 13(3)(a) of the Investigatory Powers Tribunal Rules 2000, such that, pursuant to s67(4) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, the Tribunal has resolved to dismiss the claim.
The Investigatory Powers Tribunal was created in October 2000 by the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act and given the power to investigate any complaints against the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), MI5 or MI6, as well as complaints about surveillance operations mounted by the police or any other public bodies. The Guardian reported in 2014 that the tribunal, which claims to be completely independent of the UK Government, is secretly operating from a base within the Home Office, by which it is funded. The newspaper found that the IPT had investigated about 1,500 complaints and upheld only 10, five of which concerned members of one family who had all lodged complaints about surveillance by their local council. No complaint against any of the intelligence agencies had ever been upheld. The discovery that the IPT is lodged within a Whitehall department has fuelled criticisms of the tribunal that has been levelled by rights groups, lawyers and complainants. The IPT's critics complain that the secrecy is excessive and that its procedures are stacked so heavily in favour of the government and against complainants that it is fundamentally unfair. According to The Guardian, some senior lawyers have described the IPT as "Kafkaesque", while one eminent barrister dismissed it as a "kangaroo court". The newspaper also reveals that because of the perception that the tribunal is unfair, many would-be complainants spurn it.
'Independent' court scrutinising MI5 is located inside Home Office http://t.co/ZezpDipCPx via @guardian
— Ian Cobain (@IanCobain) March 5, 2014
From My Picks:
15 May: The Investigatory Powers Tribunal considered Declan's complaint and Human Rights Act claim, and concluded that it is obviously unsustainable. It has gotten to the point where sending and receiving emails is like playing in a casino
Our list of 304 Honorary Associates includes 20 Nobel Prize laureates, 18 US National Medal laureates and 13 knighted professors notwithstanding the excessive targeting of these categories of emails in particular. (In April Declan had the honour of adding the 20th Nobel laureate to the list, having had an average of 85% of his emails blocked for over a week.)
http://churchandstate.org.uk/honorary-associates/
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