In the previous article we established the real basis of power of the Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell Octopus: rooted in the legacy of Robert Maxwell and Israeli Intelligence’s involvement in the ‘Inslaw Octopus’ which included and influenced the financial industry, the media industry, the academic publishing industry, the computer industry, the arms industry, the intelligence industry, governments, royalty and more. We established why Ghislaine’s client list will never be revealed, why, on balance of probabilities, Jeffrey Epstein didn’t kill himself, and we also revealed that America’s enormous surveillance apparatus is happy for its emergency service calls to be routed via Carbyne: founded by Jeffrey Epstein and the IDF and still essentially run by the Israeli intelligence operatives who backed Jeffrey Epstein, despite even CoVid-19 and the current economic crisis created by Joe Biden.
Twelve years after the proliferation and Hypernormalisation of PROMIS software and the immense wealth and power accumulated by the Inslaw Octopus and its affiliates, Marc Andreesen, current director of Meta Platforms (Facebook) and general Partner of Andreesen Horowitz (lead investor in Bored Apes Yacht Club) founded Netscape Communications Corporation, originally known as Mosaic Communications Corporation, in 1994, then aged 23. This is the official story, anyway, but the deeper story is much more interesting, and begins with one little known yet very influential executive and entrepreneur from the Dot Com 1 era: Delon Dotson. Delon used to be an advisor to me via his Delotek consulting firm in 2014 but subsequently suffered complications from a series of strokes. Delon’s LinkedIn page is still active, and I assume that he is still alive. I hope this article does credit to our relationship and my respect for him and how talented he must have been in the prime of his career. I also hope that this article stands as a word of warning to the military intelligence community to know their limits and know when not to cross them, because the past is gone now and only the future remains.
Delon Dotson used to have a Wikipedia page, but it was deleted for reasons of ‘self-promotion’, however peoplepill.com contains a copy of Delon’s Wikipedia page, which no longer exists. I have pinned a screenshot to the BSV blockchain, just to ensure that it doesn’t go anywhere in future. Delon in his day was easily on the level of someone like Napster and Facebook co-founder Sean Parker, thus the removal of his Wikipedia page is already suspect. While Delon worked at Netscape he was in charge of the engineering team that invented Javascript, founded the Mozilla Foundation amongst many other innovations that we rely upon today. He then went on to be CTO at MP3.com in 1998, organizing Michael Robertson’s IPO. MP3.com was the iTunes of its time, setting new standards in cloud infrastructure that allowed it to process 4 million downloads per day at its peak.
The second person, after Delon Dotson, is internet Hall of Fame inductee Eric Bina, who was inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame at the same time as Marc Andreesen. The reason that Bina and Andreesen were inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame at the same time is that they were both credited with inventing Mosaic Browser (Wikipedia snapshot on BSV here) while both shared time at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications some time broadly between 1991 and 1994, before Mosaic was founded as a business concern. Mosaic was ‘inspired by’ VoilaWWW, created as a ‘research project’ at the NCSPA by Pei-Yuan Wei, a Taiwanese-American ‘businessman’, who describes himself on his own archived UC Berkeley web page as an ‘artist’ in 1991. In Decemember 1991, the month after Robert Maxwell’s death, Andreesen and Bina began work on Mosaic, facilitated by direct funding from the High Performance Computing Act of 1991, or colloquially known as the ‘Gore Bill’ named after Al Gore: famous for both Man-Bear-Pig and being very close friends with Bill and Hillary Clinton, but somehow not famous for passing the Senate bill that started Marc Andreesen’s entire career.
Eric Bina’s Wikipedia page (Wikipedia snapshot on BSV here) for an internet Hall of Fame inductee and a ‘co-creator’ of the modern web browser, is sparse, to say the least. People in ‘occupations’ such ‘programmer’ do not list the period professional experience in terms of ‘activity’ unless they are in the military. Also, if they are in the military their military records are held for a minimum of 62 years before they can be released to the public and within such time they might ‘catch fire’ as happened to the National Personnel Records Center in 1973, which by all accounts saved the Veteran’s Association a great deal of money. At least Eric Bina has a Wikipedia page, however, unlike the third silent co-Founder of Mosaic Browser: Delon Dotson.
In 1992, after passing the Gore Bill to start Marc Andreesen and Eric Bina’s illustrious ‘Internet Hall of Fame’ careers, Al Gore became Vice President of the United States of America alongside Bill Clinton. Thus we might not only have further clues with respect to Facebook’s business practices , Marc Andreesen’s investment in Bored Apes Yacht Club and its Nazi Hyperstitions, but also have further clues regarding the untimely death of Danny Casolaro and the true potential extent of the Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein Octopus.
Delon Dotson, the third silent co-Founder of Mosaic Browser, provides some unique insights into the founding and development of Mosaic/Netscape. Delon openly told me that he’d spent time in US Navy Aerospace Intelligence, which would put him, according to his education and civilian career, in a Carrier Strike Group Signals Intelligence unit, or something similar. Delon didn’t expand much upon the subject: most likely because his role was highly classified, but by reading his CV like a Health, Safety, Security and Environment professional, with cursory knowledge of the individual, we can gain valuable insights.
Delon’s ‘About Me’ verbiage on his LinkedIn profile reads very impressively and ticks all the boxes:
Executive experience in large (as CTO) and mid sized (as CEO) companies
Fund raising experience
Academic recognition and philanthropy
Political recognition
Acting as a guide and mentor to start ups in his home town of St Louis, Missouri
Delon’s professional experience is most interesting when viewed alongside his educational experience. Delon starts work as a ‘Director’ at Netscape Communications in May 1992, with no details about experience prior to that even though he first graduated with a BA in Theatre and a JD in Law in 1983. Between 1983 and 1992, Delon was, therefore a US Navy Signals Intelligence Officer of some description, with two years of night school to study to get his BA into Computer Science, as knowing about computers became important and stuff.
Delon joined Mosaic when it was still under development by Eric Bina and Marc Andreesen at the National Centre for Supercomputing Applications, but in that same time Delon was pursuing a Masters in Computer Science from the University of California San Diego. San Diego is, also by coincidence, the principal home port the United States Navy Pacific Fleet. Delon’s role, when Mosiac was launched as a business concern, was as ‘Head of Engineering’, but why would a recent mature graduate, roughly in his mid thirties by this time, in computer science assume the role of ‘Head of Engineering’ when he was splitting his time between studies in San Diego and the NCSA in at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign over and above Internet Hall of Fame inductees, Eric Bina, 28, and Marc Andreesen, 21, who were so ‘inspired’ to build it all themselves? The only answer is that Mosaic was built from the beginning as an intelligence agency concern with a definite strategic purpose, off the back of Al Gore’s High Performance Computing Act of 1991, and that Delon’s role was to babysit the carrying out of that strategic purpose.
Delon remained at Netscape until April 1998, having done his work strategically in order to pass the technology up the corporate chain of command. AOL bought Netscape Communications in November 1998 for $4.2 billion, with the real business dealings most likely having already been completed by the time Delon decided to move on to MP3.com, also based in San Diego, where he took what he’d learned to raise $190 million for their IPO on NASDAQ in 1999. Music, however, was not the purpose of MP3.com, in my view, for those really backing it: the purpose was to develop strategically significant server infrastructure. The business model was bound to fail how it did: in legal turmoil and a pump and dump exit scam, but backers got to test and deploy important technology in a relatively low risk environment.
The technology infrastructure at MP3.com consisted of over 1500 simple Intel based servers running Red Hat Linux (versions 5.2–7.2) in load balanced clusters in data centers run by AT&T, Worldcom and the now defunct Exodus Communications. It was one of the first massively scalable Internet architectures for media delivery. The software of choice was C, Perl, Apache, Squid, MySQL some Oracle and Sybase. This architecture routinely pushed 1.2 Gbit/s total traffic globally.
In January 2000, the buyers of Netscape, AOL, merged with Time Warner in a $350 billion deal, which signaled the peak of the mania. In March 2000 the NASDAQ bubble reached its peak at around 5000, 18 months later it was trading at around 1500, with many companies, including MP3.com, having gone broke in the process, but what lived on was the strategic value of the internet technology to the power brokers: and these concerns were military, intelligence and national security concerns, the provenance of which directly relate to the NSA’s sale of PROMIS to banks with espionage back doors in 1982. Some got rich from the late nineties NASDAQ bubble because they were smart, others because they were lucky, but most people lost money and the ones who gained most weren’t even engaging in what most economists other than the likes of Nitzan and Bichler and Diego Gambetta would even call market activity: they weren’t engaging in trade, they were engaging in a Power Process.
Thus the explanations that Jaron lanier and Tristan Harris give about the dangers of social media, in my opinion, didn’t and have never been the result of good intentions gone awry, but they are and always have been the result of militarized power capital creeping into every aspect of our lives: surveilling and sabotaging everyone, not to protect us, not to make sure that the world is protected and that the vulnerable are particularly well looked after, but rather in order to control us for the sake of money itself and power itself, with a robust and pervasively engineered environment that hacks the brain stem because systemic fear is necessary for power.