That's not the point. This is a half past six demonstration that was so rapidly agreed on that apparently no one bothered to discuss just how it should proceed in terms of technical details.
Printable View
That's not the point. This is a half past six demonstration that was so rapidly agreed on that apparently no one bothered to discuss just how it should proceed in terms of technical details.
Good to see that Uncyclopedia is taking a different stance
Quote:
Imagine a World
Without Lolcats, Bronies, and other complete stupidity
The Uncyclopedia community has authorised a blackout of the English version of Uncyclopedia for 24 hours in protest of the blackout of the English version of Wikipedia. Unlike them, we support the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the U.S. House of Representatives and the PROTECTIP Act (PIPA) in the U.S. Senate - bills that, if passed, will help purify and secure the currently free and open Internet, once and for all putting an end to the mess of memes and blogs and social networking.
Wikipedia urges you to take action, but today we ask you to not take any action at all.
Let it happen. Allow the Internet to be purified.
thedailywtf.com is funny too.
/gleeful
I think they did it for the effect -- first the page appears, there is a brief delay (< 1 sec), then the page redirects to the blackout. The only way to do that is with js. Mediawiki is not very dynamic client-side, so it should work without js. (...yep)
I guess the point was made anyway. Most people probably don't use it that much in a day, but they use it occasionally and so know what it is.
i like the german hackers solution. meow.
World Of Technology: German Hackers Are Building a DIY Space Program to Put Their Own Uncensored Internet into Space