Blogging

So I’ve gone and moved my website to a new domain name, from veritasnoctis.net to gaplauche.com. The new blog url is now, of course, gaplauche.com/blog/. No need for any ‘www’ prefix.

I figure the new domain is more professional and SEO-friendly.

I could have kept the same Feedburner url, but decided instead to make it match the new domain name. So if you’re reading this post on one of my old rss feeds, you’ll need to change your subscription url to http://feeds.feedburner.com/gaplauche if you want to keep following my blog. I’ll soon be deactivating the old ones.

All of the old veritasnoctis.net urls should redirect automatically to their gaplauche.com counterparts. Please let me know if you run into any trouble in this regard.

I suppose now I should start blogging here more, eh?

Most of my blogging lately has been going on over at The Libertarian Standard and Prometheus Unbound.

I may cross-post from time to time, but I don’t want this blog to consist merely of duplicate content. So please do follow those sites if you aren’t already — TLS for general news, commentary, and analysis from an Austro-Libertarian perspective; Prometheus Unbound for news and reviews of fiction, primarily science fiction and fantasy, from a libertarian perspective. Oh, and we’re looking for more contributors to Prometheus Unbound, if you’re interested.

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A couple of days ago David mentioned on The Libertarian Standard that the Mises Institute providing its entire online media and literature library as a set of free torrents can be seen as part of a distributed or grassroots intellectual guerrilla resistance against the state.

This is just one aspect of the Mises Institute’s effort to be completely open source. All of the intellectual eggs of the Austro-Libertarian movement are no longer being kept in one basket. The more people who seed those torrents, the easier the burden on the Mises Institute.

But more importantly, should statist or natural disaster strike, the world won’t lose the vast wealth of information hosted by the Mises Institute. Indeed, not only will the information not be lost, but there will be no downtime in its worldwide online distribution. Should states decide to actively move against us, they’ll be in for one hell of a game of ‘whack-a-mole’. They’ll face the same problems the RIAA, Hollywood, and others are facing in their War on Piracy Copying.

Austro-Libertarianism has gone viral, folks.

All this is to set the context for another example of open source anti-state resistance that I recently discovered. WordPress is an open source website and blogging platform. It’s an easy to use, yet powerful, tool for getting our ideas online where people around the world can access them. It’s free, as in speech and beer. This site is powered by it. The Libertarian Standard is powered by it. The Mises Institute’s site is powered by it.

But some countries like China and Australia censor the internet, blocking access to unapproved sites like YouTube and Twitter, filtering or blocking or shutting down or otherwise regulating websites and blogs.

There are ways to get around this censorship, however. Here’s one: The good folks at Global Voices Advocacy, an organization defending free speech online, have heroically created a guide to mirroring a censored WordPress blog. It’s covered by a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license, just like this site and The Libertarian Standard. Get it. Share it. Even if you don’t need it yet, someday you might. Others already do.

In the spirit of the Mises Institute’s torrented online library, I’m hosting the guide here as well.

Cross-posted at The Libertarian Standard.

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This is coming a bit late, since I’ve already made a few posts (automated and not), but welcome to my new website with an integrated and self-hosted blog. I’ve switched to using WordPress as my publishing platform as you can probably tell. I’m still in the process of transferring content over and updating the website. All posts and comments from my old blog have been copied over to my new one. I recently set up Feedburner for it and I’m not sure if it’s kicked in yet or working properly so please let me know if you have any problems and keep in mind that the rss feed may change in the near future. You should be able to subscribe to a variety of feeds one way or another, from the general website/blog and comment feeds to individual post comments to individual post categories and tags. If you have any comments, suggestions, criticisms about or technical difficulties with the new format, please post them here.

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