hopefully the future landlord of the future space won't read the mailing list
-----
----- Original Message -----
From: Andrew
Sent: 03/15/14 04:46 PM
To: Yardena Cohen
Subject: Re: [sudo-discuss] Requests from the landlord
I'd say its time to consider rent striking until you find a new place. Seriously.
On Mar 15, 2014 4:44 PM, "Yardena Cohen" < yardenack(a)gmail.com > wrote:George, our landlord, has requested that all "revolutionary
literature", and anything with a political theme, including flyers and
papers and posters, be removed from the common area and restricted to
inside Sudoroom only. He also has the usual complaints about too much
furniture, a messy kitchen, crap being left on tables, sleepers, and a
general "lack of understanding about what common area means." The
usual threats to "either charge you more or evict you" were made. He
also complained that somebody was rude to him one time.
This was prompted by him finding the words "CLASS WAR" written in
black marker on the wall of the single-stall bathroom.
I told him I would relay all his messages to the group and otherwise
resisted engaging with him.
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Start your week off in the most actively, technically and politically
correct way possible, with Techno-Activism Third Mondays!
Tomorrow, March 17th, at 6PM we brainstorm off the theme of:
Rightscon Decompression and Review
This month, San Francisco hosted Rightscon, the human rights and
technology conference organized by Access. We saw many familiar faces
there, and thought we'd spend this week's meeting informally talking
about lessons learned, questions raised, and what actions we can take
next. Whether you attended or not, come along, and hear about what
happened and what might happen next.
Also: the latest insider digital rights news from Burma, Venezuela,
Russia, plus your own projects.
All that, plus our usual strange assortment of snacks from Walgreens or
-- given we've just found a hidden Whole Foods market near the office,
perhaps something even *more* exotic.
Time: 6:00pm
Location: EFF offices, 815 Eddy Street, San Francisco (we'll wait at the front door until 6:15; after that, call or text +1 408 480 3412 and we'll come let you in)
This is so awesome
http://www.latinpost.com/articles/8964/20140315/colorado-news-court-rules-p…
Colorado News: Court Rules That Possession of Marijuana Convictions Can Now Be Overturned
A panel of three Colorado Court of Appeals judges unanimously ruled in favor of allowing some state citizens who have been convicted of possessing small amounts of marijuana prior to the implementation of Dec. 2012's Amendment 64 to request their convictions be overturned.
According to Al Jazeera America, Amendment 64 decriminalized marijuana possession up to an ounce. A woman's 2011 conviction for possessing the drug was under appeal when the panel of judges decided to overturn the conviction because of a "significant change in the law."
Brandi Jessica Russell's defense attorney, Brian Emerson, told the judges Thursday that Amendment 64 should be applied retroactively, which the panel agreed with because they said there are some legal exceptions.
"The general presumption of prospective application, however, is subject to a doctrine established by our General Assembly and Supreme Court enabling a defendant to benefit retroactively from a significant change in the law," Judge Mary Hoak said in her 16-page opinion.
<a href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/N6105/jump/33u.latin/artcl;poz=artclmid;sz=250x25…"> <img src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/N6105/ad/33u.latin/artcl;poz=artclmid;sz=250x250,…" /> </a>
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Russell was convicted in Grand County for the possession of one gram or less of methamphetamine, marijuana concentrate possession and possession of less than one ounce of marijuana.
Brian Vicente, one of Amendment 64's authors, said the judges' ruling could ultimately affect hundreds of Coloradoans who were sentenced to jail terms for petty marijuana possession, while some inmates currently serving time could also be released. He also said that prior to the amendment, the state had prosecuted about 9,000 marijuana possession cases a year.
Emerson said the "tide is turning" on the national stance toward marijuana use, and that this ruling is an indication of that. The attorney also said that many prosecutors haven't given up their fight against marijuana possession and use as he still represents a number of marijuana appeals.
"This ruling shows it would be wise for them to focus on more pressing matter," he said.
However, following the judge's decision Thursday, Colorado Attorney General John Suthers released a statement with his plan to appeal the ruling because it could open up more case appeals that don't even involve marijuana. According to Suthers, nothing in the amendment shows that it can be applied retroactively and should not apply to previous cases.
"Well-established retroactivity law in Colorado indicates that statutory changes are prospective only unless the General Assembly or the voters clearly indicted an intent to require such retroactive application," Suthers' statement reads..
During the ruling, the judges agreed that there is nothing in the amendment stating they can throw out previous convictions, but they argued that sate law gives the defendant an opportunity to receive post-conviction relief "if there has been a significant change in the law."
And the judges claim Amendment 64 did in fact significantly change the law.
TagsMarijuana, marijuana legal, pot legalization, Colorado, Amendment 64, decriminalization, Colorado Court of Appeals
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Sent from my iPhone
Hello,
I completed my hack of porting the Darkplaces gaming engine to the
Raspberry PI. Here are a few videos of the PI in action running
Quake-related games at 1080p.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtQQkRlrLIw&list=PLCnagLKAtPONIbS0AnuE47bHN…
Gameplay is 20-30 frames per second at 1080p with full audio. For a $25
computer this is not bad at all. In some parts of the world the PI is the
very first computer people have seen.
The package will be released sometime next week and source code will be
merged into Darkplaces afterwards.
Peace,
Autonomous
Come on by this afternoon and learn about digital security, encrypt your
communications, make some anti-NSA/pro-crypto buttons, and join us for a
GPG keysigning party!
All skill levels welcome!
Hope to see you there!
-Jenny
what do people think of the shotspotter system installed in oakland?
it's a network of microphones on telephone poles, each with a GPS (for
a precise clock) and a network connection. When a gunshot-like sound is
detected, they send the sound and its precise timing to a central server
that determines the location of the shot, and tells the police to go
there.
some people have expressed concern that the microphones are used to spy on
people, but it would be impossible to hear a conversation from the top of
a telephone pole that wasnt already loud enough to be heard inside nearby
houses (or the phone in your pocket).
apparently the city pays $264,000 per year to keep shotspotter going. I
think sudoroom people could do it for much less if they thought it was a
useful thing. They would be discontinuing it to save money, or perhaps to
avoid having to send cops to do actual work once in a while...
i mean.. sending police toward the gunfire? sounds like a good idea...
http://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/Oakland-cops-aim-to-scrap-gunfire-detec…
George, our landlord, has requested that all "revolutionary
literature", and anything with a political theme, including flyers and
papers and posters, be removed from the common area and restricted to
inside Sudoroom only. He also has the usual complaints about too much
furniture, a messy kitchen, crap being left on tables, sleepers, and a
general "lack of understanding about what common area means." The
usual threats to "either charge you more or evict you" were made. He
also complained that somebody was rude to him one time.
This was prompted by him finding the words "CLASS WAR" written in
black marker on the wall of the single-stall bathroom.
I told him I would relay all his messages to the group and otherwise
resisted engaging with him.
>> George, our landlord, has requested that all "revolutionary
>> literature", and anything with a political theme, including flyers and
>> papers and posters, be removed from the common area and restricted to
>> inside Sudoroom only. He also has the usual complaints about too much
>> furniture, a messy kitchen, crap being left on tables, sleepers, and a
>> general "lack of understanding about what common area means." The
>> usual threats to "either charge you more or evict you" were made. He
>> also complained that somebody was rude to him one time.
Now he's threatening to start throwing things in the garbage if I
don't go and help him clean up immediately.
As much as I don't like things being thrown in the garbage, I'm not
going to take orders from him. I helped clean the common area
thoroughly only a week ago, especially the kitchen area. I came here
to do actual work today.
If he tries to talk to me again, I am going to leave.
i can't tell if you replied to the list or just privately to me.
that sounds like it would be fun, but it would be more worthwhile if there
were a larger goal to be accomplished, ideally with funding.
it wouldn't be trivial - what is the right way to record timestamps onto
an audio recording from a GPS? perhaps use one of the two audio channels
as a SMPTE timing track? that's kinda ridiculous but there's probably
lots of code already written...
On Fri, 14 Mar 2014, Hol Gaskill wrote:
> I'd be down to make a few time of flight receivers with you.
>
> on Mar 14, 2014, Jake <jake(a)spaz.org> wrote:
> what do people think of the shotspotter system installed in oakland?
>
> it's a network of microphones on telephone poles, each with a GPS (for
> a precise clock) and a network connection. When a gunshot-like sound is
> detected, they send the sound and its precise timing to a central server
> that determines the location of the shot, and tells the police to go
> there.
>
> some people have expressed concern that the microphones are used to spy on
> people, but it would be impossible to hear a conversation from the top of
> a telephone pole that wasnt already loud enough to be heard inside nearby
> houses (or the phone in your pocket).
>
> apparently the city pays $264,000 per year to keep shotspotter going. I
> think sudoroom people could do it for much less if they thought it was a
> useful thing. They would be discontinuing it to save money, or perhaps to
> avoid having to send cops to do actual work once in a while...
>
> i mean.. sending police toward the gunfire? sounds like a good idea...
>
> http://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/Oakland-cops-aim-to-scrap-gunfire-detec…
> _______________________________________________
> sudo-discuss mailing list
> sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
> https://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss
>
>
>
>
Anyone know how to deal or fix the expired security certificate on the sudoroom website? I can't log in or view it from any of the Linux laptops or desktops at sudoroom //
Sent from my iPhone