[Abel-tasman] More info on what vydox can make you do!

Vydox Vydox at kantrytulialorca.com
Mon Dec 2 13:07:49 CET 2013


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German Chancellor Angela Merkel gestures during  a press conference in Berlin, 
Germany, Friday, July 19, 2013.  Chancellor Angela Merkel is acknowledging 
Germans have been unsettled by allegations of widespread U.S. surveillance 
though she insists patience is needed as officials seek answers from Washington. 
Merkel faced a barrage of questions about the National Security Agency's 
activities at a news conference Friday following a week in which her 
opponents have asserted she's doing too little to confront the U.S. and 
protect Germans' data. Germany holds elections Sept. 22 in which Merkel 
seeks a third term.  (AP Photo/Gero Breloer)German Chancellor Angela Merkel 
vehemently denied the country is a surveillance state after a magazine reported 
her government used a top U.S. National Security Agency spy program.The 
German magazine Der Spiegel reported Saturday on Germanys utilization of 
an NSA system known as XKeyScore, which allows an agency to gather 
all of the unfiltered data a targeted individual has accessed over a 
specific period of time.The XKeyScore program can, for instance, retroactively 
reveal any terms the target person has typed into a search engine, 
DerSpiegel wrote in citing documents seen by its reporters.Additionally, 
the magazine said the system is able to receive a full take 
of all unfiltered data over a period of several days -- including, 
at least in part, the content of communications.According to the Der Spiegel 
repo
Archaeologists have found the rusting remains of 44 submarines off the United 
Kingdoms coast, an oceanic graveyard made up mostly of vessels from the 
German Imperial Navy dating to World War I.Der Spiegel reports a quartet 
of divers are now at work probing the massive trove of 41 
German U-boats, and a trio of English submarines, found at depths of 
up to 50 feet, off Englands southern and eastern coasts.Donning an ultrasound 
sonar device as if it were a wristwatch, underwater archaeologist Mark Dunkley 
tells the German news magazine he anticipates most of the newly unearthed 
submarines will eventually be found to contain the perished crews remains.- 
Archaeologist Mark Dunkley"We owe it to these people to tell their story," 
Dunkley reportedly said, adding, "We divers only approach the boats with 
great caution. Venturing inside would definitely be extremely dangerous."Dunkley, 
who is employed by English Heritage, a public agency bureau within Englands 
larger Department for Culture, Media and Sport, says action is urgently 
needed to preserve the remarkable, historic find.He says he  and his 
team  plan to utilize robots to pierce the de facto underwater 
coffins to reap whatever artifacts are inside. "Perhaps we'll find a cup 
or a sign with a name on it," Dunkley told Der Spiegel.Prior 
to the find, historians were baffled as to the fate of the 
boats. For example, according to the magazine, it was unknown what happened 
to UB 17, under the comm
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