thetechnate.net

.net crawl

First seen 2026-04-13 · Last seen 2026-05-02 · ok HTTP/1.1 200 728 ms crawled 2026-05-06

DE · 93.90.186.43 · AS8648 dogado GmbH

Reputation 87/100 weak security headers no dmarc policy

Classifying

HTML metadata

Description
Guided by an artificial search dog, we follow in the traces of Operation Columbia, a ten-mile motorcade of grey-painted vehicles that drove from Los Angeles to Vancouver and back in 1947 to spread the ideas of Technocracy Inc. The movement was about to transform the North American continent into a proto-Internet society based on radical degrowth and the "equal distribution of energy among all energy-consuming devices”. Technologists were to replace politicians and a digital energy currency was to take the place of money. Housing, industry, agriculture, transport - the entire North American continent was to be assessed for energy efficiency and rebuilt as needed. Everything - land, means of production, housing and vehicles - was to be shared instead of owned. Despite half a million members, supporters dwindled, for the technocrats rejected revolution as much as candidacy as a political party. In 1947, they made one last attempt to propagate their eco-technoid utopia: As “Operation Columbia”, members drove from Los Angeles to Vancouver, stopping in each city to give lectures, distribute publications or trumpet their messages from loudspeakers along the way. Along the journey we pass data centres, cable ships and the headquarters of all the major internet companies. We become entangled in the infrastructures of the World Wide Web, encounter pioneers, digital natives and users, and finally end up in the dusty archives of Technocracy Inc. trying to save everything we can carry from its impending destruction. While the movement itself faded into oblivion, an internet did eventually emerge in the stretch of land encircled by the technocrats. Today, the grandson of its Canadian director, a former richest man alive, is eager to build up a technate of his own. Images, sounds, artefacts and impressions of the expedition are presented as a constantly growing archive consisting of an installation, an interactive website and a folding map. - The installation itself is framed by wall-sized projections showing extracts from the expedition. They surround a large server floor system made of galvanised steel grating, which is usually used in data centres. On top numbered artifacts, pieces of the expedition’s equipment and Netscape can be found. The artificial search dog that led us to the data now rests on the table reading from her expedition notes, while a spherical soundscape blends the ideas of the technocrats with the roaring server farms, desert storms flowing around the expedition vehicle and other noises. A control monitor shows the original 1947 Operation Columbia image film, and a digital-analogue terminal allows visitors to explore the map as if in an arcade adventure game, gaining more information about the myriad numbered artefacts.
Language
en
Canonical
https://thetechnate.net

Open Graph

url
https://thetechnate.net

Technology

Server
nginx

Third-party hosts loaded (1)

  • cdnjs.cloudflare.com×1

Registration

Registrar
RegistryGate GmbH
Created
2022-12-15
Expires
2026-12-15 208 days left
Updated
2025-12-16
Name servers
  • cns1.cloudpit.de
  • cns2.cloudpit.com
  • cns3.cloudpit.io

DNS records live

NS
  • cns1.cloudpit.de
  • cns2.cloudpit.com
  • cns3.cloudpit.io
MX
  • 10 mx03.secure-mailgate.com
  • 10 mx04.secure-mailgate.com

Email authentication partial

SPF
not published
DMARC
not published
DKIM
no key found at common selectors

Certificate (current)

R12
from 2026-04-19 to 2026-07-18
Expires in 58 days

HTTP security headers

Header hygiene 40/100 Checked live page: https://thetechnate.net/

present
  • x-content-type-options
findings
  • missing HSTS
  • missing Content Security Policy
  • missing frame protection
  • missing Referrer Policy
  • missing Permissions Policy
Header values
x-content-type-options
nosniff

Links to (3)

Linked from (1)