Thursday, December 6, 2012

Slap on Sibbal's Face


In reply to the lame request by our telecom minister, FB has slapped him so hard. Here is what Facebook has to say:



"We want Facebook to be a place where people can discuss things freely, while respecting the rights and feelings of others, which is why we have already have policies and on-site features in place that enable people to report abusive content. We will remove any content that violates our terms, which are designed to keep material that is hateful, threatening, incites violence or contains nudity off the service. We recognise the government's interest in minimising the amount of abusive content that is available online and will continue to engage with the Indian authorities as they debate this important issue"

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Twitter caught it Right!

Ever since Mr. Kapil Sibbal,  India’s acting telecommunications minister reportedly met the top officials of Yahoo, Facebook & Microsoft and asked them to screen the content from India before it gets published.
Social networking world reacted so strongly to reply back to this dumbass act.
This whole drama is to keep a cap on the thought process of Junta over various social networking channels.





Congress has seen the incumbency factor in our tweets, updates and want to reduce it before election since Social networks have already fucked some bad governance in Egypt & Israel. So, just want to save its ass and to keep their ego high, this govt. is behaving so stupidly and acting like morons.

Tweepals have given a kind reply to our so called  telecommunications minister and he is now trending as #IdiotKapilSibal 

Pic courtesy: myindiapictures.com

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Image speaks louder than Words

An Image speaks louder than Words on Social networks.

Here is a famous example... this image is getting popular on FB... That's the power of Social networks Babebeahhhhh...


Sunday, October 7, 2012

Google Doodle Celebrates Physicist Niels Bohr's 127th Birthday

Google Doodle celebrates the 127th birthday of Niels Bohr, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist who revolutionized our understanding of the structure of atoms.
The Google Doodle shows off the atomic model that Bohr came up with in 1913. Bohr was the first to incorporate quantum physics into our understanding of atoms by putting forth the notion that electrons orbit around the nucleus of an atom.
Bohr was born in Copenhagen in 1885 and went on to win the Nobel Prize for his work in 1922. After World War II broke out, Bohr fled Denmark and eventually ended up in the United States where he and his son worked on the Manhattan Project, which led to the development of the atomic bomb. While he may be associated with the bomb, the Nobel Prize committee points out in their biography of him online that Bohr devoted much of his later years to the "peaceful application of atomic physics and to political problems arising from the development of atomic weapons."
Bohr is now widely viewed as one of the leading physicists of the 20th century.