freeTSA.org provides a free Time Stamp Authority. Adding a trusted timestamp to code or to an electronic signature provides a digital seal of data integrity and a trusted date and time of when the transaction took place.
As a point-release version, 0.10 lays the infrastructure for what will eventually become a fully mature, production-grade space traffic management system. Future updates on the project roadmap point toward integrating cislunar tracking—extending surveillance capabilities beyond Earth orbit to the region between the Earth and the Moon to support upcoming lunar exploration initiatives.
Malfunctioning systems requiring maintenance tasks that compete with social time.
Ultimately, Big Brother in Space Version 0.10 represents a vital step toward a safer, more predictable orbital highway. By replacing chaos and uncertainty with total visibility and predictive intelligence, the software ensures that humanity's expansion into the cosmos remains sustainable for generations to come.
: This version is typically an early-access or "public" build available on platforms like Technical Note
In the annals of modern culture, few images are as chilling—or as iconic—as the poster of a stern-faced man peering out from a telescreen, accompanied by the caption George Orwell‘s 1949 masterpiece Nineteen Eighty-Four introduced the world to a dystopian vision of totalitarianism, mass surveillance, and psychological domination. The phrase has since become shorthand for any system—governmental, corporate, or digital—that erodes privacy and demands obedience. A reality television franchise, a metaphor for modern state surveillance, a satirical trope, and now, a video game floating in the cold, unforgiving emptiness of space.
$ curl --data "screenshot=https://www.fsf.org/&delay=n" https://freetsa.org/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf $ curl --data "screenshot=https://www.fsf.org/&delay=y" https://freetsa.org/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf # (I'm Feeling Lucky) ### HTTP 2.0 in cURL: Get the latest cURL release and use this command: curl --http2. ### REST API in Tor: Add "-k --socks5-hostname localhost:9050". # Normal domains within the Tor-network. $ curl -k --socks5-hostname localhost:9050 --data "screenshot=https://www.fsf.org/&delay=y" https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf # ".onion" domain within the Internet. $ curl -k --data "screenshot=https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/&delay=y&tor=y" https://freetsa.org/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf # ".onion" domain within the Tor network. $ curl -k --socks5-hostname localhost:9050 --data "screenshot=https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/&delay=y&tor=y" https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf
As a point-release version, 0.10 lays the infrastructure for what will eventually become a fully mature, production-grade space traffic management system. Future updates on the project roadmap point toward integrating cislunar tracking—extending surveillance capabilities beyond Earth orbit to the region between the Earth and the Moon to support upcoming lunar exploration initiatives.
Malfunctioning systems requiring maintenance tasks that compete with social time.
Ultimately, Big Brother in Space Version 0.10 represents a vital step toward a safer, more predictable orbital highway. By replacing chaos and uncertainty with total visibility and predictive intelligence, the software ensures that humanity's expansion into the cosmos remains sustainable for generations to come.
: This version is typically an early-access or "public" build available on platforms like Technical Note
In the annals of modern culture, few images are as chilling—or as iconic—as the poster of a stern-faced man peering out from a telescreen, accompanied by the caption George Orwell‘s 1949 masterpiece Nineteen Eighty-Four introduced the world to a dystopian vision of totalitarianism, mass surveillance, and psychological domination. The phrase has since become shorthand for any system—governmental, corporate, or digital—that erodes privacy and demands obedience. A reality television franchise, a metaphor for modern state surveillance, a satirical trope, and now, a video game floating in the cold, unforgiving emptiness of space.