Slashdot Mirror


Libraries Asked To Destroy Reports, Databases

unix guy writes: "Our good friends and protectors in the U.S. Gov't have decided that what we used to know we can't know any longer. This LA Times story talks about libraries being ordered to destroy existing government reports and data sources in the name of homeland security." Is it really a fair trade to give up readily-available information about "airports, water treatment plants, nuclear reactors and more"?

675 comments

  1. nothing new here by Xross_Ied · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    trust us you don't need to know this stuff.

    welcome to the united police state of america

    --
    This sig space tolet, reasonable rate.
    1. Re:nothing new here by Xross_Ied · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      sorry you think so..

      Anytime information is destroyed its a bad thing, does not matter if its by a private corporation or the goverment (especially the government).

      Instead of asking the libraries to make this information MORE SECURE*, they are asking that the information be destroied.

      * security could be something as simple as..
      a) stored in a reseved area
      b) accessiable only after you have presented a drivers license or some other photoID.

      --
      This sig space tolet, reasonable rate.
    2. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Did the terrorists get the location of the WTC and the Pentagon from the libary?

      Or did they just drive around New York and Washington until they saw 3 fucking great big buildings?

    3. Re:nothing new here by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      First of all, who the hell modded this down????? What a crock.

      Secondly:
      Or did they just drive around New York and Washington until they saw 3 fucking great big buildings?

      Exactly!

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    4. Re:nothing new here by Xross_Ied · · Score: 1

      anonymous posts start a 0.

      named posts start at 1 (unless the user changes it).

      --
      This sig space tolet, reasonable rate.
    5. Re:nothing new here by 1010011010 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I suppose it's okay for 5,000 people to die so some asshole like you can have access to information you don't need.

      Yes. Yes, it is.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    6. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anytime information is destroyed its a bad thing, does not matter if its by a private corporation or the goverment (especially the government).

      It's not destroyed you idiot, the government still has copies. If I bust my copy of "One More Time" is the song destroyed? I didn't think so.

      Do you enable anonymous ftp to your machine? Do you run chmod -R g+rx / as a matter of course? If not you are a hypocrite.

    7. Re:nothing new here by jacoplane · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This might sound very inhumane, but it's something I feel needs to be said.

      Compare the number of deaths each year due to car-accidents and due to terrorism. Now look at the actions being taken to stop them from happening. Liberties are being grabbed away right, left and center, all in the name of stopping terrorism.

      Don't you think this is exactly what terrorists aimed for? They want americans to feel scared.

      And the worst thing is that I don't think it will help much at all. There will be more terrorist attacks in the future: raising security will not stop this: it will serve primarily to terrorise americans further.

    8. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow, shutting out the public to information, destroying it wherever possible, seems sorta like the middle ages, is this gonna open the way for a dictatorship, and ruin everything that we have accomplished?

    9. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you meen like yourself, maybee we just don't all feel like logging in, and btw, ashcroft isn't a republican, he is a poser from the librals.

    10. Re:nothing new here by whereiswaldo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      EXACTLY.
      Once it's destroyed, it's not coming back. Safe storage would be a MUCH more acceptable solution!

      I wonder how far this is going to go - you know, it would be POSSIBLE for someone who has access to this information to become sinister and then use it against us. Or even sell the information. Maybe we should monitor those people 24x7?

      Because of one terrible terrorist act, WE THE PEOPLE will be the ones paying the price for generations to come it looks like. I would rather live in a society that's not as "safe" but have more freedoms. Our freedom is being limited day by day. Some day we'll just hook up to a Borg regenerator at birth and spend our 70 or 80 years there till we die. Safe! Not fulfilling.

    11. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "... information you don't need."

      How can I design a safer bridge without knowing the weaknesses in current bridges?

      How can I know which bridges to avoid today?

    12. Re:nothing new here by killthiskid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm with you.

      You can apply this to antrax versus the flu.

      Or flying/driving.

      Security is a myth... anyone who understand security understands it's a sliding scale with decreasing means of return.

      I've always viewed security vesus effort as the comparision between a bell-curve and a expotential curve. The amount of effort you expend with increasing security increases expotnentialy. The amount of increased security you get is like a bell curve... at some point you are getting the maximum amount of security per effort... as you move beyond that point, the amount of extra security you can get starts to drop off, while effort goes way up. The last 1% of security takes a nearly infinite amount of effot.

      Effort = laws... or whatever means you have.

      The point I'm trying to make is you can only be so safe. The Bill of Rights means you are free, but you accept some things with those freedoms, like everyone else is free too. And at any moment someone may lose it and start shooting... but you accept that... the problem is, most people don't get it.

      I want my freedom. I am a midwestern. I was raised with guns. I'm a hell of a shot. I was raised with cows & corn. I damn well know food doesn't come from the grocery store, but I've met people that didn't beef comes from cows.

      I know that if the shit hits the fan, I can defend myself. I can get milk, eggs, butter, corn, turkey, deer... and I know friends with siterns and windmill pumped wells that still work. The have pot bellies stoves that work with wood so you can cook a meal.

      Point blank: if the it all went to hell tomorrow, I could be free AND alive. And I want to be free.

      I think that the current state of being has made people week and afraid of freedoms.

      I am not afraid. I want to be free.

      I think most people are afraid... and they don't know how to survive.

      I think survively and freedom (or wanting to free) go hand in hand.

      I've thought about it a lot. I want a certain level of protection from the govt... that's the very premise of govt. But there is a line. And people don't get it. People don't see the line.

      Sigh. I don't know.

      I'm ranting. Please move on.

    13. Re:nothing new here by sunking2 · · Score: 1

      Did you read the article? Does the location of the WTC fall into the category of items that are being destroyed? I don't think so. What is being destroyed is information that could be used in determining the best way to cause terror through a means less obvious and simple to plan as flying into a big building. Notable this is the US water supply and nuclear/chemical plants.

      Example, you want to cause a huge chemical disaster via bombing a a chemical plant, lets say you want to blow up the plant that contains the most amount of chlorine, in the most densely populated area. All of this information can be obtained through various government reports.

      These are the types of things that they are trying to hinder.

      Now, I'm not getting into whether this is the right thing or not. I haven't really decided that. However, the least you people can do is think a little about what the issue really is and not go off half cocked and spout jibberish that doesn't touch the real issue.

    14. Re:nothing new here by zenyu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I suppose it's okay for 5,000 people to die so some asshole like you can have access to information you don't need.

      Ok, I'll throw my hat into the insensitive ring too.

      Of course it is! Do you have any idea how many of us have died to procure that very right? If we were talkin 500 million I'd listen to the arguement, but hell we already gave up most of our freedom because the idea of losing 5,000 million in a day is pretty damn frightening.

      I thought we were on the path to eliminating at least the most ill concieved of those like the confiscation of property on a guilty until proven innocent basis. The Supreme Court even had a case saying you couldn't keep people locked up forever in INS jails before the 11th.. Now we've already adopted KGB tactics and people are actually talking about moving on to Nazi police tactics on PBS. I'd expect that from talk radio, but it's the policy makers who're on PBS.

      And all this over just 5,000 people?

      I think it's mostly just the bruised pride of the empire we're dealing with in these 'you unpatriotic asshole' type posts.

      I don't think you really give a damn about those 5,000. I had two dozen friends in that building, none of whom were for this kind of idiotic descent into book burning. And the only Bush voter who got out is still against it. (All but 2 got out.)

      As a New Yorker I really loath this power grab by the Nixonian cronies in the White House. Meanwhile the congress tells New York to screew itself when it is looking at a 200 Billion dollar hit, with only 21 coming from Congress (If all the promises are kept, congress wants to reduce it to less than 10 Billion, that PR allocation earlier being just a little to brash.) The vacancy rate is UP! in downtown NYC despite the fact that more than 1 million square feet were taken off the market that day. I have very strong friends who are taking psychoactive drugs for the first time because they just can't handle seeing their friends in a huge unmarked grave every day. I started smoking that day.

      But reading the news just gets worse and worse each day, I hold little hope that congress will ever get the sense and the balls to oppose our president and the likes of you.

      New York is a city that values democracy, those 5,000 would not want to live in the world Herr Bush asks for. I have my doubts whether Bush really wants to either.

    15. Re:nothing new here by F.Prefect · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I suppose it's okay for 5,000 people to die so some asshole like you can have access to information you don't need.

      Yes. Yes, it is.

      Amen. That was one of the points of the Revolutionary War in which, coincidentally enough, approximately the same number of people died (4,435 according to this statistical summary of America's major wars). America's history is one of people giving up their lives to secure what we consider to be our basic freedoms. Sadly the average American seems to have forgotten this fact.

      Now, it is true that the people killed in the WTC attack were non-combatants, but this reaction by the U.S. government shames their memory. They were the victims of a craven attack by people who would love nothing better than to see our free society become just as tightly controlled as their own insane regimes.

      And our degenerate leadership is obliging them.

      --
      --Ford Prefect
    16. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dammit, the man is a FASCIST, now lets both stop blaming him on each other, and confess that he is what he is all by himself.

    17. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose it's okay for 5,000 people to die so some asshole like you can have access to information you don't need.

      Ever heard of "Live free or die"? If you want to give up your freedom, please make the appropriate selection from the menu above.

    18. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      >We ought to deport you to Cuba or some shit like that, you idiotic fatass cum-swallowing ass-licking crab-infested shitstain.


      Sigh.


      Morons like the above, sadly, seem to be in the majority these days. Most people support the Bush Administration's increasingly draconian "Anti-Terrorist" sweep, which is basiclly shredding the Bill of Rights. But no one should be really surprised. Look at the War on (some) Drugs--police harassment and even murder of Black males on the streets for little or no reason; warrantless, no-knock searches of private residences; asset forfiture; increased millitarization of the police force--most Americans over the years have supported more and more savage repression in the name of "Law and Order." In truth, all of the talk about America being "the Land of the Free" is just propaganda, and the blather about how Americans value and would fight for their liberty is lies. Americans are mostly just sheep who will bend over for massa without a peep if they think it will make them safe. But it won't--just as the people of Stalinist Russia were not safe under his police state. Oh well. 'Mericans will have to learn the hard way, I guess, just as the Russians learned. I just hope it won't cost too many million dead.

    19. Re:nothing new here by jirka · · Score: 1

      Without such information think of the people that need it. Such as enviromental organizations. We live in a democracy so that we can monitor what happens in the state. This includes say nuclear/chemical plants. Without this information being public, there will be 0 public preassure about enviromental concerns (or any other such concerns). Note that in this case only people that own the plants and government will have this information, that is big bussiness and polititians. Are you willing to trust them your future? If so, why don't we just set up a dictatorship, it's much simpler. It avoids the hassle of voting. And without available information, your vote is arbitrary anyway.

    20. Re:nothing new here by Spruitje · · Score: 2


      wow, shutting out the public to information, destroying it wherever possible, seems sorta like the middle ages, is this gonna open the way for a dictatorship, and ruin everything that we have accomplished?


      Yep, 1984 all over.
      Want to know how the US will look like in about 20 years?
      Read 1984 and you will find out.
      Be carefull, big brother is really watching you.

    21. Re:nothing new here by isorox · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      How ironic

      As I read this thread, IE (public library, they dont have debian systems) deicded to throw a wobbler and crash. Obviously it decided I didnt need to read about what I dont need to read about...

    22. Re:nothing new here by junkpunch · · Score: 1

      Yes. Yes, it is.

      So, when they poison the LA water supply and 500,000 are dead, is that still OK? When they crack open the Boulder Dam and drown a few hunded thousand people? How about a small nuke in NYC (1 million dead)? How about 50 million people dead covered with the festering sores of smallpox? You good with that? Let me know.

    23. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Coward.

      America:
      "Give Me Liberty Or Give Me Death"

      You:
      "Here's my wallet! And my pants! Just don't hurt me or make me feel scared!"

    24. Re:nothing new here by ballpeen · · Score: 1

      Hey, I wanted to add anthrax vs the flu.

    25. Re:nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I suppose it's okay for 5,000 people to die so some asshole like you can have access to information you don't need.


      That many children die in Africa every day and the US government along with their corporations play their integral part. We don't see the government doing much to reign in these multinationals do we?



      Those pushing through these information restrictions have been trying desperately for a long time to take away the public's freedoms and finally they have their chance.



      Everything that millions have died for will be lost and it will happen very quickly.

    26. Re:nothing new here by junkpunch · · Score: 1

      I think you may have accidentally responded to the wrong posting, since this didn't really have any relationship to anything that I said. You might want to check the postings again.

    27. Re:nothing new here by ichimunki · · Score: 2

      If you think removing information that was considered a vital part of our democratic discourse just a few months ago from the public domain is going to prevent any of the things you mentioned from happening, you are severely deluded. If the bad guys are sophisticated enough to engineer smallpox or actually poison a large city water supply, they don't need to go to the library.

      Even so, if it were truly that easy, why were they just fucking around with those hijacked airplanes? I think even Osama bin Laden is not so stupid to start off with what amounts to a nose-tweak compared to the carnage that a half million dead would comprise. I mean, they are fighting to win, aren't they?

      --
      I do not have a signature
    28. Re:nothing new here by 3am · · Score: 1

      i would argue that the average american wants to live, and that the terrorist wants us to die. they could not care less about the state of our civil liberties.

      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
    29. Re:nothing new here by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      don't worry I just metamodded, and "fixed" it for ya.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    30. Re:nothing new here by el_chicano · · Score: 1
      Example, you want to cause a huge chemical disaster via bombing a a chemical plant, lets say you want to blow up the plant that contains the most amount of chlorine, in the most densely populated area. All of this information can be obtained through various government reports.
      You mean like the petrochemical complex next to Houston Texas? Did you know that all those chemical plants are listed in the local Yellow Pages? Or that you can find them by simply by driving around a little?
      Now, I'm not getting into whether this is the right thing or not. I haven't really decided that. However, the least you people can do is think a little about what the issue really is and not go off half cocked and spout jibberish that doesn't touch the real issue.
      Hmmm... you haven't made up your mind yet you spouted off. Your words are nothing but half-cocked gibberish -- maybe you should try following your own advice...
      --
      A man who wants nothing is invincible
    31. Re:nothing new here by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      What happened to the type of person who would pledge his life, fortune and sacred honor to defending the principles of freedom? Why don't any of them run for office anymore?

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  2. Internet by astrotek · · Score: 0

    It seems that the internet will become a place to store information!

    1. Re:Internet by astrotek · · Score: 1

      Accually I was making a cynical joke about all the posts that will be posted by the real karma whores. My post is redundantly funny.

  3. Why bother. by TMacPhail · · Score: 1

    It would just make more sense to make documents and such more secure so that they do not get seen by the wrong people. Build some sort of big, vault facility to place things like that in.

    1. Re:Why bother. by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      And who gets to decide who's the "wrong people", and based on what criteria?

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    2. Re:Why bother. by TMacPhail · · Score: 1

      You make a good point. I didnt really think about that. I suppose that would have to be based on specific cases.

    3. Re:Why bother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't be a problem if the US simply quit letting the "wrong people" into the country. We know what countries they come from. We know that they're male. We even know about how old they are.

      Let's crack down on visas and illegal immigration instead of cracking down on release of useful information to legitimate residents of the US.

    4. Re:Why bother. by uchian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Umm... In my opinion that is the wrong way of looking at it.

      Think about it. These documents are, in effect, a way of saying "security weakness". By making the documents closed, we are promoting security through obscurity, which has been proved time and time again not to work.

      Perhaps instead we should be concentrating more on how to secure those places which the documents, well..., document. We've already seen from September 11th that terrorists and the like are capable of incredible ingenuity, and we must not forget that they are capable of doing their own research - just because we consider them to be mad, doesn't mean that they are stupid.

      Or to put it another way, burning all of the documents that happen to detail airplane security and it's weaknesses will not stop hijackers from taking a plane. ACTING on those documents and improving security will.

      What was the example in the article - a cd containing a dam and resevoir survey? So why not consider the ways that the water system can be attacked, and then safe-guard against these kind of attacks?

    5. Re:Why bother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Think about it. These documents are, in effect, a way of saying "security weakness". By making the documents closed, we are promoting security through obscurity, which has been proved time and time again not to work.

      Cool, can I have your root password?

    6. Re: Why bother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the message congress and the administration is trying to tell us is that real, physical security is just plain too expensive (giving back corporate taxes, etc., apparently isn't). Wiretaps, military tribunals, and control of information are what we're getting instead.

    7. Re:Why bother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we are promoting security through obscurity, which has been proved time and time again not to work.

      I think you're confusing cryptographic security with physical security. Physical security is in fact enhanced by secrecy. Cryptography, however, is not necessarily enhanced by obscurity.

    8. Re:Why bother. by dragons_flight · · Score: 3, Insightful
      ... we are promoting security through obscurity, which has been proved time and time again not to work.

      "Security through obscurity" is not bad. It's only bad when it's your only line of defense. As an extreme example, I would be really upset if my credit card information was published online, but I could still cancel the card and have various insurance against abuses. Similarly, we shouldn't hand terrorists information to use against us, but we also shouldn't remain under any delusion that pulling documents is all the security we need.

      IMHO, during the debate over destroying/not publishing government data you need to ask several questions before restricting information:
      1. Would a terrorist really want or need this information?
      2. Does not publishing this information make the terrorist's job substantially more difficult? In particular, how easily might he do his own research or find the same info in other sources?
      3. Will beneficial programs (including security) be able to continue with little disruption after this information is removed?
      4. Will people continue to improve security and minimize weaknesses in the absence of these publications?
      Unless the answer to all these question is yes, I'd say there is no justification for removing the documents in question. It is particularly important that physical security be continued even in the absence of detailed public accountability. The department of defense certainly maintains efforts to promote their security without ever publishing lists of weaknesses, but less well-funded and less paranoid agencies may not even notice vulnerabilities in the absence of external review.

      There will always be government (and for that matter, corporate) secrets, and they have a valid place in a security scheme, but just not the only line of defense. I can believe that there are some things that might be too compromising, but I hope that the US government continues to record what was destroyed and why, and that a copy be stored somewhere to await a more peaceful time.
    9. Re:Why bother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You moron! You fucking moron! I don't even have the patience with you to find one of the MANY explanations of the difference you have ignored. YOU FUCKING IDIOT!!!

    10. Re:Why bother. by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      I propose a moderation system. When you enter the library you will be granted 20 "mod" points that you can grant to any data to make it one degree more secret or more public...to defend against bad judgement, we could have some folk "meta-moderate" the judgements made by others.

      Let the will of the people prevail!

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    11. Re:Why bother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By making the documents closed, we are promoting security through obscurity, which has been proved time and time again not to work.

      I suppose then we'll have to make sure there are no buffer overflows or other local/remote exploits in these documents. I wouldn't want terrorists remotely gaining access to or DDoSing the 1999 National Forest Service statistics on squirrel breeding rates.

    12. Re:Why bother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every account on a Windows computer is equivalent to the unix "root" account. Without a password even (just hit cancel). Bonus is that every new account on a XP computer is part of the Administrators group by default, again with no password.

      LOL

    13. Re:Why bother. by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      Because it takes time to do this. Making this sort of information somewhat harder to get at by loners, small groups, and some of the larger groups, might give us the extra day we need.

    14. Re:Why bother. by istartedi · · Score: 2

      By making the documents closed, we are promoting security through obscurity, which has been proved time and time again not to work.

      Quick, what's my password?

      I suppose what you really mean is that obscurity alone will not work.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    15. Re:Why bother. by lamontg · · Score: 1
      IMHO, during the debate over destroying/not publishing government data you need to ask several questions before restricting information:

      1. Would a terrorist really want or need this information?

      2. Does not publishing this information make the terrorist's job substantially more difficult? In particular, how easily might he do his own research or find the same info in other sources?

      3. Will beneficial programs (including security) be able to continue with little disruption after this information is removed?

      4. Will people continue to improve security and minimize weaknesses in the absence of these publications?

      There's also another question:

      5. Is there some concievable purpose towards which an intelligent citizen could use the information for reasons such as citizen oversight of government or for research about technology, engineering or social issues which is not terrorism?

      If you can answer 'yes' to that question, then I think you need to keep the information in the public domain and allow free access to it. And since there is no one really suitable to judge in an unbiased fashion weither or not there is a concievable utility to the information being in the public domain, we should err on the side of answering 'yes' to that question.

      Really its not just about "beneficial programs" continuing. That's an amazingly beaurocratic viewpoint of how information gets used. I probably use a majority of the information I consume apart from any beaurocracy, institution or corporation. Yet your only test of the utility of the information in question apart from terrorism seems to implicitly assume that this kind of information is worthless. I'd rather not live in your kind of country, thanks.

    16. Re:Why bother. by Spruitje · · Score: 2


      Wouldn't be a problem if the US simply quit letting the "wrong people" into the country. We know what countries they come from. We know that they're male. We even know about how old they are.


      Well, the fact is that even you're ancestors were not native Americans.
      And, please can you change "letting the wrong people in" in "letting the wrong people out"?
      We don't want all those American morons over here...
      The thing is, that the whole world knows what kind of idiots live in the US.
      The problem with the US is that it thinks that it is the most important country in the world, which in reality it isn't.

  4. yay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Security through obscurity... wonderful.

    1. Re:yay by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

      "Security through obscurity"

      Security through obscurity can be a good thing. If it takes much time and work to do the research before an attack the chance of spotting them increases.

    2. Re:yay by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
      Yeah right, like it would be difficult to find out in what direction you have to fly from the airport to the WTC......

      What are you going to do about that? making city maps harder to read??? They won't be much usefull to normal day use would they?

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    3. Re:yay by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

      "Yeah right, like it would be difficult to find out in what direction you have to fly from the airport to the WTC...... "

      Thats right, you can't stop that with restricting maps. Tight airport security is the only way to solve that.

      However, detailed maps over water supplies for example would be great for terrorists. They can, ofcause, find out anyway but it takes time. How much do ordinary people use information like that? Not very much I would suspect.

    4. Re:yay by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      A friend in NYC tells me that he gets a nauseous feeling whenever he sees the new subway maps, that have a big hole where downtown used to be.

      Now, if we had distributed those maps before the hole actually existed....

      nah, you're right it wouldn't work.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    5. Re:yay by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      How much do ordinary people use information like that?

      Some "ordinary person" who wants to do a study of, say, polluting industries and their proximity to water supplies would want that information. And the government might not be terribly anxious for that "ordinary person" to have the information. No national security threat there, just a potential threat to so-called corporate interests. But it would be easy to yell NATIONAL SECURITY! and keep that information well away from the "wrong hands" of an environmental activist.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    6. Re:yay by hatchet · · Score: 1

      They should build such buildings on wheels so they can move them around.. thus making maps obsolette all the time:)

    7. Re:yay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if and when they rebuild the WTC, they will simply not tell anyone where it is, thus neatly preventing a another attack ;-)

  5. Someone/group PLEASE mirror this stuff by bataras · · Score: 1

    Keep this stuff up. Grab it from google. Write a program to walk government websites and compare them to google's cache of them and re-instantiate them.

  6. 1984 by jon787 · · Score: 0

    Hmmm, the book 1984 comes to mind. Now what was the main character's job again?

    --
    X(7): A program for managing terminal windows. See also screen(1).
    1. Re:1984 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush's Orwellian Address -- or, let's all get together for today's Two Minutes' Hate toward Osama bin Goldstein, er, bin Laden. Do you see anything wrong with quietly allowing the government to pull materials that might, in some infinitesimal way, contribute to something "bad" happening (at least as far as the media blowhards can sensationalize it)?

    2. Re:1984 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you're referring to Fahrenheit 451, in which the main character burns books for a living.

    3. Re:1984 by Imperial+Tacohead · · Score: 1

      Actually, the same thing applies to 1984. The main character, who as I recall was working for the Ministry of Truth, was responsible for both propaganda (writing Big Brother's speeches) and destroying sensitive information.

  7. If the info is so sensitive, why was it public? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why was information about nuclear storage facilities, etc. public in the first place? That seems like pretty senstive stuff--anyone looking it up looks suspicious anyway.

    1. Re:If the info is so sensitive, why was it public? by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      anyone looking it up looks suspicious anyway.

      Why?

      Maybe an environmental activist wants to locate the reactors to study the pollution or safety of stored materials. Maybe my grandma wants to know if there is a reactor near her potential retirement home because she's afraid of nuclear stuff and wants to be far away.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
  8. Exactly what's the problem? by taliver · · Score: 1

    So if they had never wanted to release the information in the first place, in the name of national security, few people would have a problem with it. Instead, they released it, and they think they made a mistake.

    If they had released all they ways to track our submarines, including frequencies that they emit and likely positions, why wouldn't that be fair game to take back? So they compromised it, but if your ass is hangin' out, you don't just walk around going, "Oh well, I guess everyone's already seen it, I shouldn't bother covering it now."

    --

    I demand a million helicopters and a DOLLAR!

    1. Re:Exactly what's the problem? by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      I think the difference now is that the bar has been lowered. In "the old days", the government would have had to show an overwhelming security interest in withholding information and the benefit of the doubt or "bias" (for lack of a better expression) would likely have fallen toward release of the information rather than the contrary. Now the situation is more like "If it might be damaging in any way, under any circumstance, no matter now unlikely, then we'll withhold the information."

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    2. Re:Exactly what's the problem? by DGolden · · Score: 2

      Actually, lots of people would have had a problem with it if they hadn't released it in the first place - hence the popularity of websites purporting to have "leaked government files" and such like. People like to know what their government is up to in america, given that the government is supposed to be working for them, not vice versa.

      How long before 1984 is removed from the libraries???

      --
      Choice of masters is not freedom.
    3. Re:Exactly what's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now the situation is more like "If it might be damaging in any way, under any circumstance, no matter now unlikely, then we'll withhold the information."

      Exactly. Ashcroft has countermanded Reno's order to disclose where possible. Ashcroft's edict says to resist disclosure vigorously if there are any possible legal grounds to withhold. Stalin must be having moldy wet dreams.

      As long as Ashcroft and his kind hold sway, the terrorists are winning. The Taliban doesn't brook dissent; neither does our current administration.

    4. Re:Exactly what's the problem? by arkanes · · Score: 1

      1984, as well as Animal Farm, has been banned in several school libraries (no links handy, sorry) for being subversive or unamerican or some other damn thing.
      The list of banned books gets kinda outrageous, actually. Your local libary likely has a copy, unless it's been removed for reasons of national security.

  9. This is absurd. by trilucid · · Score: 5, Informative


    If the damned terrorists want to know all about our nation's infrastructure, the information is readily available in A LOT OF PLACES, not all under government control. The ways of getting at such data are simply innumerable.

    This is wrong, and yes, I'm going to mention 1984 here. How much closer do we have to get? The government is, in effect if not by intent, enforcing the concept of revisionist history. I don't pretend to understand how to deal with our current problems (here in the U.S.), but this isn't the way.

    Maybe it's time to really step up efforts to archive data in places out of the reach of such efforts. Data warehousing might be what saves us in the future from this sort of insanity. Yes, it would have to have significant funding to work, but that funding could come from anywhere, anonymously if necessary. I for one would contribute.

    Of course, even given that, the government would no doubt make accessible such digital troves illegal at some point, potentially classifying the very action of such access as "terrorist in nature".

    Nobody is going to tell me I can't access public domain information and knowledge. No matter what, people will find a way. Sorry about the rambling here, this just pisses me off.

    Web hosting by geeks, for geeks. Now starting at $4/month (USD)!
    Yes, this is my protest to the sig char limit :).

    1. Re:This is absurd. by Hobaird · · Score: 5, Funny

      We have always been at war with Afghanistan. We have always been allies with Russia.

      --
      -"I talked to God and here's the deal/ He said to floss between each meal" -- Uninvited
    2. Re:This is absurd. by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

      "I'm going to mention 1984 here. How much closer do we have to get? "

      Do you _really_ think we are that close? :)

      "If the damned terrorists want to know all about our nation's infrastructure, the information is readily available in A LOT OF PLACES"

      Yes, but if it's going to take lots of time and resources to find out they can be discovered.

    3. Re:This is absurd. by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      This is wrong, and yes, I'm going to mention 1984 here. How much closer do we have to get?

      We can't get /much/ closer. Any closer and we will be living in the world Orwell painted in 1984.

      This is absurd, ridiculous, and inexcusable. Something HAS to be done to stop this. I, for one, refuse to give in to the idea of living in an Orwellian nightmare "utopia."

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    4. Re:This is absurd. by trilucid · · Score: 2


      Wow, Orwell couldn't have said it better. The implications here are quite frightening. Our (U.S.) government has taken the current situation as a green light to go on the offensive against a whole host of civil liberties and freedoms, and this is just "another brick in the wall" (gratuitous Floyd reference).

      You know, growing up, I told myself I'd never need to own a firearm. I'm sad to say my view on that has changed recently. The most disturbing thing is the possibility that before long, we'll have a hard time deciding who's doing us the most damage: (1) evil people who terrorize our nation and others, or (2) governments that poison the minds of our children.

      Web hosting by geeks, for geeks. Now starting at $4/month (USD)!
      Yes, this is my protest to the sig char limit :).

    5. Re:This is absurd. by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      It has been said before, but it doesn't take much time and resources to find out information for a terrorist attack.
      The WTC wasn't difficult to spot in the NY skyline...

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    6. Re:This is absurd. by trilucid · · Score: 2


      Indeed, if things keep going in the direction they're headed, we'll be very close before long.

      "Yes, but if it's going to take lots of time and resources to find out they can be discovered."

      Sounds like you're advocating security through obscurity, something which (1) doesn't work in the world of software, and (2) doesn't work in the world at large. How about fixing the problems in our world that lead to such devastating consequences in the first place, instead of taking extreme measures after the fact?

      The medical community has started to truly focus on preventive medicine only in the last couple of decades. Perhaps governent should take a cue. And no, enforcing the removal of this information is NOT preventive medicine. I mean that in the sense of looking into the underlying social problems that cause violent eruptions in the first place. Our nation hasn't been particularly good at that througout most of our (brief) history.

      Web hosting by geeks, for geeks. Now starting at $4/month (USD)!
      Yes, this is my protest to the sig char limit :).

    7. Re:This is absurd. by trilucid · · Score: 1


      Your mention of "Utopia" as it were reminds me of another good work in this vein: Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World". VERY good reading for people disturbed by trends like this.

      OT, but IMHO the "sequel", "Brave New World Revisited" is crap, though. Huxley mostly wrote it under the influence of various narcotics, and damn if it doesn't show (sentences that go on for half a page).

      Just my thoughts, nothing more. Thank you for your reply.

      Web hosting by geeks, for geeks. Now starting at $4/month (USD)!
      Yes, this is my protest to the sig char limit :).

    8. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      governments that poison the minds of our children ...

      and our precious bodily fluids!

    9. Re:This is absurd. by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but thats ONE possible attack. It can only be stopped by making sure people can't take over the planes.

      I for one, wouldn't like if terrorists easily could get detailed information about water pipes (for example) so they can spread bacteria as effective as possible.

    10. Re:This is absurd. by 3am · · Score: 0, Troll

      what, you read fahrenheit 451, 1984, brave new world, animal farm, and suddenly you're some sort of expert in the world of politics?

      i don't even think you read 1984 if you think the world we live in vaguely resembles that book. you do orwell a disservice to suggest otherwise.

      if you want to have a taste of what he was writing of, think of the khemer rouge, the USSR in the 40s-50s, PRC in the 80s, and iraq today. this was what orwell was warning us of. in cambodia, people were killed for wearing glasses - that being a sign of being a member of the intelligentsia. for control of thought and ideology, the USSR and PRC were both world ahead of where we stand in the US. you can still be jailed in China for being a part of the falung gong, loosely classifiable as a religion. the only news you would get is from the state-run media.

      you spoiled, spoiled person. of course we need to be vigilante, or people will try to take away our rights for their own power. but to paint a picture where we have close to the situation in 1984 is outright nonsense. 80% of the world doesn't enjoy the rights we do in the US. and if you don't want to end up in an orwellian dystopia, then vote these people out of office. we still live in a democracy, lest you forget.

      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
    11. Re:This is absurd. by Master_Eagle · · Score: 1

      --- governments that poison the minds of our children.

      Next on CNN4Kidz: The ever-wonderful United States killed all of the evil people! Yay us!

      --
      Sig: Where I'd put something witty if I could think of it.
    12. Re:This is absurd. by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

      "Sounds like you're advocating security through obscurity,"

      No, but I think it can help under some circumstances like in this one. I shouldn't be easy to do terrorist attacks.

      "something which (1) doesn't work in the world of software"

      This isn't software. Publishing information about how to hack DNS servers before fixing the problem turned out to be a bad idea.

      "and (2) doesn't work in the world at large."

      You think the world would even exist today if nuclear researches published detailed information and guides on the net about how to make nuclear bombs?

      There are only one reason terrorists haven't detonated an atomic bomb and that is that they don't know how to do it.

      "How about fixing the problems in our world that lead to such devastating consequences in the first place, instead of taking extreme measures after the fact?"

      I'm all for fixing as many problems as possible but just waiting for large scale chemical attack while doing it is not a very good thing to do.

      Some problems can't even be fixed. There are a number of terrorists out there that wants to destroy everyone that doesn't have the same religion for no particular reason at all. How do you fix that? You can't.

      The world is not black and white.

    13. Re:This is absurd. by ConsumedByTV · · Score: 1

      Peace On Earth

      P O E
      u f s
      r s
      i e
      t n
      y c
      e

      --


      "Not my manner of thinking but the manner of thinking of others has been the source of my unhappiness." - M
    14. Re:This is absurd. by dangermouse · · Score: 2
      Then you will also not have access to detailed information about water pipes, so that you can prevent the easy spread of bacteria.

      When you start getting sick, the food processing plant on the edge of town that's pumping brown slime into a big pit swears it isn't them, and the government isn't on the ball, you're telling me you'll rest easy knowing that at least the terrorists don't know about those pipes, either?

    15. Re:This is absurd. by trilucid · · Score: 2


      "I'm all for fixing as many problems as possible but just waiting for large scale chemical attack while doing it is not a very good thing to do."

      Shameless prediction on my part: This will in no way whatsoever reduce the chance of a large-scale chemical attack. It will however, get Joe Sixpack more accustomed to the idea of large-scale government censorship. Which will probably turn out to be more useful for the government than we can possibly imagine.

      "Some problems can't even be fixed. There are a number of terrorists out there that wants to destroy everyone that doesn't have the same religion for no particular reason at all. How do you fix that? You can't."

      I agree completely that there will always be insanity in this world. However, this isn't the way to reduce it or diminish its effect. This *is* a fine example of our citizens paying their government to strip freedoms away using our own tax dollars.

      I think the best we can do is work on the social problems that cause such unrest. If madmen still feel intent on pursuing recourse via terrorist acts, the best we can do is deal with those individuals and groups.

      It's agreed that the world is not black and white. We will always have a hard time balancing the freedoms of the people with national security. This issue is rather clear, however.

      Web hosting by geeks, for geeks. Now starting at $4/month (USD)!
      Yes, this is my protest to the sig char limit :).

    16. Re:This is absurd. by pantherace · · Score: 1
      There are only one reason terrorists haven't detonated an atomic bomb and that is that they don't know how to do it.

      That dear slashdot poster is Bullshit. Anyone with a background in physics could design one, but getting the parts (Weapons-grade plutonium, and/or uranium) would be very difficult.


      On the other hand Russia is supposed to be missing between 30-100 small 'suitcase' nuclear weapons. Hope they aren't missing if you live in a large city. A single one of these would have (if used in place of the planes) leveled a very large portion of NY (depending on yield, which is unknown, but supposed to be in the lower k-ton range)

    17. Re:This is absurd. by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      I read somewhere that the NRA membership doubled during the Clinton era.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    18. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      we still live in a democracy, lest you forget.

      Two words: Electoral college.
      Two more: Florida recount.

    19. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you can still be jailed in China for being a part of the falung gong, loosely classifiable as a religion. the only news you would get is from the state-run media.

      Yeah, and you can be jailed here if you're a member of Hezbollah, which purportedly is a loosely classifiable Islamic activist group, but unfortunately, the only news you would get is from the state-run media (Fox News, CNN, etc). Too bad they think Hezbollah's a terrorist organization, right?

    20. Re:This is absurd. by sirsnork · · Score: 0, Troll

      OK so it'll take a lot of time. A year? 2? 10? Who's saying they didn't start planning this just long enough ago that next week will be the big one?? Restricting information won't stop it. Just slow it down and give them time to think big!

      --

      Normal people worry me!
    21. Re:This is absurd. by fedos · · Score: 1
      If the damned terrorists want to know all about our nation's infrastructure, the information is readily available in A LOT OF PLACES, not all under government control. The ways of getting at such data are simply innumerable. This is wrong, and yes, I'm going to mention 1984 here. How much closer do we have to get? The government is, in effect if not by intent, enforcing the concept of revisionist history. I don't pretend to understand how to deal with our current problems (here in the U.S.), but this isn't the way.

      That's because this has nothing to do with terrorism. The Bush administration saw the terrorist attack as a golden opportunity to push their radical, draconian policies that would otherwise never be allowed to see the light of day.

    22. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A few more: The president-candidate with the most money has by far the best chances in elections in the USA.

    23. Re:This is absurd. by derF024 · · Score: 1

      >Sounds like you're advocating security through >obscurity

      umm.. the real world isn't the internet. script kiddies can bang away on a server for hours and get nowhere if it's configured right, so they should be able to get their hands on exploits. However there's no way to remove all physical "exploits" in a building or a resevior. a real-life script kiddie gets their hands on C-4 or small pox, and there's no way to properly defend against that. the best solution is to keep that information secret, and hope it doesn't fall into the wrong hands.

    24. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the damned terrorists want to know all about our nation's infrastructure, the information is readily available in A LOT OF PLACES, not all under government control. The ways of getting at such data are simply innumerable.

      If it's so easy to get this information, then why exactly is it a problem for libraries to stop carrying this material???

    25. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong. The electoral college, whether its a good idea or not, is a matter of law. If we get do rid if it, we must do so with a constitutional amendment. To ignore the electoral college and appoint Gore president (even though he did get more votes nationwide) is the action that would be undemocratic. For Democracy to work, laws must be respected.

      The idea of Democracy is: the people make the laws, and the laws protect the people.

    26. Re:This is absurd. by gilroy · · Score: 4, Informative
      This is so absurd that I'm sure I'll be "redundant" before I get to hit Submit, but...

      There are only one reason terrorists haven't detonated an atomic bomb and that is that they don't know how to do it.

      Wow, are you dumb. The knowledge on "how" has been widely available for decades. It takes a not-too-sophisticated knowledge of some simple physics. Heck, some university graduate programs assign the shielding calculations, etc., as questions on their qualifying exams!


      What is hard to do, and generally denied to terrorists, is the laborious process of amassing enough fissionable material to make the bomb work. That is not an information thing -- the materials are themselves rare, expensive, and tough to produce. In fact, the best way to combat the true threat of nuclear terrorism is to educate the public about what steps must be taken to keep that material in safe hands. Knowing more, not knowing less, serves the interest of public safety.


      I can't wait until Ashcroft's thought police break down the door to my classroom because I dare to teach the principle of relativity and quantum mechanics that make nukes possible.

    27. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Data warehousing might be what saves us in the future from this sort of insanity.

      Or perhaps data warehousing might be what gets you deemed a liar, criminal, threat to society, and ultimately, a terrorist...

      I post this anon because I don't want THIS data, which is being devoured by carnivore, to let me end up with a hungry rat caged on my face. I am a coward, this year. I'm convinced this is the big one. Everyone please begin preparations.

    28. Re:This is absurd. by Enigma2175 · · Score: 2
      We have always been at war with Afghanistan. We have always been allies with Russia.

      It is patriotic to spend money. We all need to buy foolish things now to "keep the economy going". Ending is better than mending

      --

      Enigma

    29. Re:This is absurd. by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      Do you _really_ think we are that close?

      Detention without trial. Military tribunals that can even prescribe DEATH as a penalty. Secret courts authorizing warrants. Warrantless searches. Information "disappearing" off of library shelves.

      To answer your question,

      Yes.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    30. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I for one, wouldn't like if terrorists easily could get detailed information about water pipes (for example) so they can spread bacteria as effective as possible.

      You want to contaminate a major urban water supply?

      Denver: Dump it in the South Platte River.

      Chicago: There are a few artificial islands offshore in Lake Michigan with pumping stations. Get someone on the payroll there.

      Los Angeles: There are a few aquaeducts coming from the Colorado River in Arizona. Or you can go to the head of Glen Canyon and get a bunch of houseboating tourists and jetskiers and then the remainder can poison LA.

      If you're worried about pipes, then you'd better plan on classifying every piece of paper coming out of your city planning office, traffic engineering department, county surveyor's office, fire marshall's office, etc.

      You want to protect chemical plants? Congratulations: You've just forced the EPA and the state Department of Health and Environment to adopt NSA-style security rules. Considering how many of those documents end up in court records, you've just forced everything in those agencies' purview to be handled in secret tribunals instead of open court.

      What's always impressed me is how I can get good road maps for free from gas stations. I can get better road maps for three bucks from AAA. I can get first-rate topo maps for a few bucks from REI or for even less from the USGS office, one of which is near just about every decent engineering college in the US. And I can drive around and look at the things on those maps with no ID save for a driver's license (checked only when I'm pulled over for traffic violations) or no ID at all if I'm not driving.

      There are plenty of countries where even the worst of those maps would be tightly classified, and where I'd need an actual passport which is actually checked at checkpoints, just to leave my own city. I've been a cranky Southwestern American for long enough to become sick at the mere thought of something like that happening here.

    31. Re:This is absurd. by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 1

      If we give into terrorists demands, then terrorism becomes an incentive. BUT on the same token if we allow our government to take away more and more of our civil liberties and to become secretive and to much powerful (not enough balance, all of this because of terrorists attacks, then we give incentive to our government to provoke more terrorists attacks against us.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    32. Re:This is absurd. by cburley · · Score: 1
      The Bush administration saw the terrorist attack as a golden opportunity to push their radical, draconian policies that would otherwise never be allowed to see the light of day.

      Yeah, that's the ticket. Bush, before 2001-09-11:

      "If only there was some way to get detailed information on our nation's nuclear facilities out of public libraries, so I could push my far-right agenda and simultaneously enrich my friends in the oil industry...?"

      After 09-11:

      "Alright! That's just what I was waiting for! Let's declare war on the public library!"

      Sheesh. Where do people like you get indoctrinated??

      --
      Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
    33. Re:This is absurd. by mpe · · Score: 2

      There are only one reason terrorists haven't detonated an atomic bomb and that is that they don't know how to do it.

      Actually building a fission device is well within the capabilities of many terrorist organisation. (Especially if the people doing the building are prepared to risk fatal exposure to the radioactive parts.) The difficult bit is getting hold of the materials, refining U235 from uranium or Pu239 from spent nuclear fuel is complex, expensive, time consuming and involves chemicals nastier than the radio isotopes themselves.

    34. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It takes a not-too-sophisticated knowledge of some simple physics. Heck, some university graduate programs assign the shielding calculations, etc., as questions on their qualifying exams!

      Do you really think creating a nuclear weapon is something that can be done with a machine shop and a little bit of plutonium? Einstein, Fermi, the top minds of the century, they worked on the bomb for -years-. The so-called plans that have been available for decades are like a kindergartener scrawling a picture of an automobile. Do they know you put gas in to make it go? Yes. Do they know how it works? Hell no.

    35. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reportedly the government was going to spend $100 million this year in order to safeguard actual nuclear weapons in Russia, but that tax refund required this to be cut down to a mere $0... though in light of recent event the administration decided to restore this funding to the tune of $37 million.

    36. Re:This is absurd. by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      The so-called plans that have been available for decades are like a kindergartener scrawling a picture of an automobile. Do they know you put gas in to make it go? Yes. Do they know how it works? Hell no

      The construction of a Little Boy type bomb (if that's the Hiroshima one -- I always confuse the two) is actually considerably simpler than the four-stroke combustion engine. The Manhattan Project's main hurdles were (a) calculating how much fissionable material is needed; (b) working out the theory of shaped charged explosives; (c) manufacturing the fissionables.


      At this point in time, only (c) is really hard. Information, like the truth, will out.

    37. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No that'd be more democractic. It'd betray the US's actual status as a republic though.

    38. Re:This is absurd. by geekoid · · Score: 2

      Someone who mentions 1984, and actually understands the book!
      Kudos to you.
      It pisses me off as well.
      Wht really pisses me of is that I have written the governor, my rep, and me senators. not one has replied in any way. I had written several letter email and snail before and after 9/11/01.
      never a reply.
      Maybe next time I'll use some corporate letter head.
      The next time I get involved in politics, it will be with a gun.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    39. Re:This is absurd. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whats with people thinking they can advertise in their sigs?

      $4/mth with only 10MB space? Why not go for a free site? A proper site would have to go to their $12.95 to even get a unique IP, even then the data transfer limit is only 4GB. Definitely not enough.

    40. Re:This is absurd. by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      I like Steven Landsburg's comment on this: "Our Uncle Sam seems to have got it into his head that if we all buy stuff from each other, we can all end up richer than we started."

      In the end, if you want to buy something, buy it. If not, don't. The ONLY good economic effect it has is that you get something you want. Your buying certainly helps producers: but it hurts other consumers by EXACTLY the same amount!

    41. Re:This is absurd. by trilucid · · Score: 1


      "whats with people thinking they can advertise in their sigs?"

      Gee, I dunno... I enjoy /., and the demographic is just about right.

      "$4/mth with only 10MB space? Why not go for a free site? A proper site would have to go to their $12.95 to even get a unique IP, even then the data transfer limit is only 4GB. Definitely not enough."

      We're neither the cheapest nor the most expensive host out there. If you don't like the prices, don't buy.

      HAND.

    42. Re:This is absurd. by frankie · · Score: 2

      Close. Little Boy was the 2nd bomb -- Nagasaki, plutonium sphere. It needed shaped charges to compress the sphere to criticality.

      Fat Man was the 1st bomb -- Hiroshima, uranium cylinders. It was an insanely simple design. The calculations can be done by any 3rd year nuclear engineering student.

      You make a solid cylinder of enriched U235 whose mass is a smidge below critical. You also make a cylindrical shell of enriched U235, similar mass, whose inner radius is just big enough for the previous rod. When time comes, shoot the rod into the shell. Boom! 10 kilotons, every time (U235 bombs don't scale upwards much).

      The only hard part is making bomb-grade U235, which requires a huge factory.

  10. It always sucks to give up things. by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

    But on the other hand, beeing targeted by terrorists are not very fun either. I don't think it's an excause by the government.

    I think it's a matter of evaluation of who has the most use of this material. How many people except terrorists have use for those documents and how high is that value. Is it high enough to make it worth a possible use of it by terrorists?

    1. Re:It always sucks to give up things. by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's an excause by the government.

      Actually, it's both an excuse and a legitimate concern. Anyone who has something that he wants to sweep under the rug can yell "National Security!" and the matter will be duly swept.

      There are indeed some legitimate concerns that should be considered (but perhaps not acted on, depending on the results of the consideration) but there are also lots of opportunities to take advantage of the situation to quell any embarassment too.

      We seem to have skipped right over the sober considerationpart and jumped right into action. I am reminded of something I was told some years ago: Don't just do something, sit there!

      It appeas that we're jumping overboard here without due consideration of the consequences.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    2. Re:It always sucks to give up things. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you deserve to be abused by the authoritarian regime you are helping to create.

      Personally, I'll die fighting this kinda crap if they try to force it on me.

    3. Re:It always sucks to give up things. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It appeas that we're jumping overboard here without due consideration of the consequences.

      You're assuming these things haven't been considered. Those that have most to hide have been dreaming of an opportunity like this for a long time. Now Osama bin Laden has enabled them to do what they could previously only dream about. For example, just imagine what a terrorist might be able to do with a Florida ballot paper!!

  11. double-plus ungood by berserker2001 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    war is peace, etc. need i say any more?

    --
    Me lose brain? Uh, oh! (laughter) Why I laugh? -Homer Simpson
    1. Re:double-plus ungood by TheMonkeyDepartment · · Score: 1

      OOOH!!!! You're so hardcore, you quoted 1984!!! WELL DONE I say to you!!! You really STUCK IT TO THE MAN!!!!

      If your non-existent opinion was any more irrelevant, you'd be Richard Simmons.

    2. Re:double-plus ungood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, you do. Something along the lines of "I apologise to everybody for being such a karma-sucking orwellian-nightmare paranoia complex linux user who is under constant threat of government-persecution-syndrome becuase I have no friends or a life outside of a cathode ray tube, mainly owing to unmangeable hair, greasy spotty skin and a penchant for buggery".

  12. I don't know what to think by jptxs · · Score: 1

    Man this is conflicting. Sure, it's bad to let a potential terrorist gain access to info about a nuclear plant that may help them kill millions. On the other hand, the slippery slope to police state only requires a 1 degree dip to start the ball rolling. Hmmm...

    --
    we speak the way we breathe --Fugazi
    1. Re:I don't know what to think by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Which has a greater ability to make your life miserable: the US Gov't backed by Microsoft, Monsanto, et. al. or a bunch of terrorists?

      I don't trust anyone, but I fear the gov't more... That is why we have the bill of rights.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    2. Re:I don't know what to think by Eccles · · Score: 2

      Sure, it's bad to let a potential terrorist gain access to info about a nuclear plant that may help them kill millions.

      Which, for all you pro-nukers out there, may be a good reason *not* to build nuclear power plants...

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  13. Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by heldlikesound · · Score: 0, Troll

    Let me get this straight, people are complaining that the Government wants to destroy Government documents. I mean, come on foks, these belong to the Government!!! Who are YOU to say what the Government does!!!! If you wanted to burn your tax records, nobody's gonna stop you, why should it be any different for the Government!?!?!?! Poor Government, they should have a live concert to raise money for it.

    heldlikesound

    --


    Cloud City Digital: DVD Production at its cheapest/finest
    1. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      If you wanted to burn your tax records, nobody's gonna stop you,

      They would indeed.

      If you can't produce the required documents when they are demanded, you can be tossed into jail. Which is a pretty good incentive to protect said documents and not burn them.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    2. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by brunes69 · · Score: 2

      Hey moron, in case you didn't know..I AM THE GOVERNMENT, AND SO ARE YOU

      . The govenment was created, and is there, to serve me, and the rest of the citizens. Those aren't the government's documents, they're mine!
    3. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by Zeshan · · Score: 1

      I mean, come on foks, these belong to the Government!!! Who are YOU to say what the Government does!!!! If you wanted to burn your tax records, nobody's gonna stop you, why should it be any different for the Government!?!?!?!

      The government is not a private citizen.

      Zeshan

    4. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
      You forget that in a democracy you are the government, so they are destroing your papers also....

      Another point is that you need those papers to check the government, you shouldn't blindly trust politicians you know. On the other hand, if you look at the circus you americans made of the last elections this isn't very surprising...

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    5. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Who are YOU to say what the Government does!!!!
      You're kidding right?

      Or have you missed the point of Democracy?
    6. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by 3am · · Score: 2

      oh, what a circus our DEMOCRATIC SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT IS.

      first you remind us of our rights as US citizens, then you mock our democratic process. you are such a hypocrite.

      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
    7. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      Hey moron, call up the various government offices and demand, as the boss, that they stop this madness.

      Good luck, drop me a line when you succeed.

      I may be "part of the government" and "one of its bosses," but see if my individual voting brings the government back in line with the Constitution nd the principles the nation was founded on (NOT the Bible, BTW).

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    8. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So give it a new name -- Government Inc. as obviously governments do not belong to people anymore but are private companies, right ?

      Not that this would be a US of A problem only. Governments behaving like they would own their people, that is and at the end of the day it all comes down to the question who serves whom.

    9. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I may be "part of the government" and "one of its bosses," but see if my individual voting brings the government back in line with the Constitution nd the principles the nation was founded on (NOT the Bible, BTW).

      Then I propose that you don't vote from this day on.

    10. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      first you remind us of our rights as US citizens, then you mock our democratic process. you are such a hypocrite.

      Describing our last presidential elections is not equivalent to mocking all elections.

    11. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by catalina · · Score: 1
      ...you shouldn't blindly trust politicians you know.

      Not to mention the ones you don't know...

    12. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by rmgrotkierii · · Score: 0

      Well nope, they don't "belong" to the gov't. They are PUBLIC DOMAIN. Meaning, they belong to me and every other American. And as far as tax documents, I think the IRS will make a case aganist you for burning official documents. But hey, if you don't care spending the next twenty to twenty-five years at Fort Leavenworth, go ahead and tell the IRS you are doing that. :)

      --
      Reality is for those who can't face Science Fiction.
    13. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      NOT the bible? hmmm.... stuff like "love thy neighbor" and "be tolerant and forgiving" and all of that; yeah, lets pitch all of that because it came from the Bible. ...

      take what works whatever the source, learn from everything you can; else you are what you hate, boyock.

    14. Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pitch all of that because it came from the Bible

      Okay, but let's keep the part where god has a bunch of children eaten by a bear. That was funny.

  14. idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the Excited States indeed!

  15. Sad... by bluephone · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The free and legal exchange of information we need as citizens is slowly being eroded by pinheads in Washington. What scares me more and more is that this information is being taken from us NOT by people we elected, but people who were appointed, and I don't just mean Tom Ridge. For a moment I was glad that my state no longer had him as Governor, then I realized how much more damage he can do at a national level.

    Tom Ridge also has a history of denying information to his citizens. As the former governor of PA, he made it illegal to have cellular phone programming information if you were not directly related to a cellular company, whether a seller of phones, repair shop, etc. The Black Crawling Systems BBS archives formerly for sale by l0pht could not be sent to PA because of my wonderful unconstitutional legislature and governor. I fear what else Tom Ridge will try to take away.

    --
    jX [ Make everything as simple as possible, but no simpler. - Einstein ]
    1. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In case you forgot, our President was appointed himself. So is it of any surprise?

    2. Re:Sad... by Qui-Gon · · Score: 1

      The free and legal exchange of information we need as citizens is slowly being eroded by pinheads in Washington...

      Not that I am for this type of "information hiding"...

      Do you have better ideas on how to keep malicious people from harming our nation? Share them. I don't think this sort of thing is the answer either. Although, if you have any weaknesses you try not to let your enimies know what they are. The sad part is this sort of thing hurts us too.

      With that in mind... If you don't like the way things are run in government then (and this is the beauty of America) you can affect change. Write your Congressmen, Senator, etc. Hell, maybe even get involved directly. Bottom Line: Voice your opinion. Here is a good start, but discussing it here is not going to change anything.

      Let those "Pin heads" know you don't like this sort of censorship.

      --

      We are blind to the Worlds within us
      waiting to be born...
    3. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bush bashers are getting dumber and dumber.

    4. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But still not as dumb as bush himself.

    5. Re:Sad... by fishebulb · · Score: 1

      yes. because someone who went to an ivy league school is dumb. granted his dad got him there but still. what school did you graduate from?

      He isnt a good public speaker, and he has bad speech writers. stop saying he is dumb

    6. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Do you have better ideas on how to keep malicious people from harming our nation? Share them. I don't think this sort of thing is the answer either. Although, if you have any weaknesses you try not to let your enimies know what they are. The sad part is this sort of thing hurts us too.

      So, does that mean anyone who is concerned about the welfare of the nation should just shut up unless he/she knows exactly what to do to cure what ails it? If so, then when the government pulls these documents, then only the government will be able to exact change, not its constituents. All Hail the Great Dictator!

    7. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      yes. because someone who went to an ivy league school is dumb. granted his dad got him there

      His dad got him there, and once there he consistently pulled Cs. What more is there to say? And don't forget that whopping high-school GPA and SAT score.

    8. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "He isnt a good public speaker, and he has bad speech writers. stop saying he is dumb"

      Smart people write their own speeches.

    9. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I entered into university on my own. I didn't need my daddy to help get me there.

      The professors probably gave him C's because there is no lower grade to give the son of a rich white man.

    10. Re:Sad... by dytin · · Score: 1

      Write your Congressmen, Senator, etc. Hell, maybe even get involved directly. Bottom Line: Voice your opinion. Here is a good start, but discussing it here is not going to change anything.

      You know as well as I that if he writes his congressman, all that he'll get in return is a form letter - the congressperson won't even read his letter let alone take the time to actually send him a personalized letter back (not that I blame him, I'm sure he is very busy, but thats beyond the point). And if that doesn't work you want us to get involved directly? Come on, I mean I know that it is possible to run for city board or whatever, but that takes money and a LOT of time. And, even if he does get elected to his city board, what actual changes can he make on the national level? All that you really can do is get a lot of people to express their opinion to their congressman, or elect a new one next election. Therefore, discussing issues here IS going to make changes. Probably more changes than anyhing else that he could do. Why? Because you are able to reach a lot of people - the same people that will eventually go to the polls and vote.

    11. Re:Sad... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      yes. because someone who went to an ivy league school is dumb. granted his dad got him there but still. what school did you graduate from?

      I am not the original poster but I'll take a swing. I graduated from a small liberal arts college in Washington, DC. (The Catholic University of America) What's worse, I graduated from its Physics Department, with a total enrollment of 12. Does this make me "dumb"? Does it make me dumber than anyone who graduated from, say, Princeton? No, of course not.



      Just like "graduating from an Ivy League college" is a far cry from a guarantee of intelligence.


      Since a large portion of the President's job involves public speaking, and since -- presumably -- he knows he isn't good at it, a smart man would see that he should find some good speech writers to compensate. I don't know that the President is an idiot. He's just failed to offer me any evidence to the contrary.

    12. Re:Sad... by vscjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Do you have better ideas on how to keep malicious people from harming our nation?

      Burning books isn't being done because there are no alternatives, but because it's cheap.

      It's quite simple to make power plants, air traffic, and other vital infrastructure secure. However, industry isn't willing to pay the cost. It's so much easier to run to politicians and say "ban this information" and "ban that information" and "outlaw this or that device".

      Doing security right means that we will be paying more for electricity and air travel, and a consequent decrease in what people might count superficially as "standard of living", as you couldn't just dash down to Florida for a couple of hundred dollars. And the diminished profit margins and increased operating costs would be a painful blow to large investors. On the other hand, it would also result in an increase in low-skilled employment and it would preserve our rights to free access to information. To me, it's pretty clear which choice is preferable. It's also pretty clear to me what the rich and powerful prefer.

    13. Re:Sad... by wass · · Score: 1
      because someone who went to an ivy league school is dumb. granted his dad got him there but still. what school did you graduate from?

      I graduated from an ivy-league school - U. Penn. . After graduating, I've also taken some classes at Harvard . Ivy League status in itself means nothing, don't get the impression that an Ivy League education solely by it's prestige is a significant achievement.

      I can affirm that there were a large number of fools/idiots at U.Penn (less at Harvard, but they're still present). For some of these, you'd be surprised they even graduated high school.

      I can also say that there is little chance a school would flunk out a student who's family is of some prominence (eg, his father was a Yalie, Prescott Bush was a senator), or of economic influence.

      Not to mention Bush Sr's and Junior's membership in the exclusive Skull & Bones club.

      --

      make world, not war

    14. Re:Sad... by istartedi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sheesh... what a pity you can't clone phones and steal service anymore. That was no different than saying that it is illegal to duplicate a skeleton key. If you've ever seen such a key, you might notice something on the key that says to the locksmith, effectively "don't duplicate this key or you could get in trouble".

      The main problem with this kind of stuff is that the hacker's legitimate rights to experiment are running afoul of the need to translate the physical lock and key into the "virtual" realm. If hackers had a clue, they would have lobbied for something like a "student locksmith license" with a nominal fee and ethical guidelines as to how it could be used.

      Instead they elevate their base desires to moral posturing and attempt to wrap themselves in the 1st ammendment. They refuse to recognize the need for people to protect their services; refuse to work with the authorities and insist on working against them. It's no wonder they get no respect.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    15. Re:Sad... by cburley · · Score: 1
      Doing security right means that we will be paying more for electricity and air travel, and a consequent decrease in what people might count superficially as "standard of living", as you couldn't just dash down to Florida for a couple of hundred dollars. And the diminished profit margins and increased operating costs would be a painful blow to large investors. On the other hand, it would also result in an increase in low-skilled employment and it would preserve our rights to free access to information. To me, it's pretty clear which choice is preferable. It's also pretty clear to me what the rich and powerful prefer.

      Let me get this straight: you're saying the rich and powerful prefer spending $200 instead of $450 for a round-trip flight to Florida, even if the lower price comes with a much better chance their penthouse apartments will be wiped out by a suitcase nuke?

      And that the ordinary citizen prefers "security done right" if it means a much greater cost of living?

      I'm sure you have a valid argument somewhere in there, but darned if I can find it.

      --
      Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
    16. Re:Sad... by vscjoe · · Score: 1
      Let me get this straight: you're saying the rich and powerful prefer spending $200 instead of $450 for a round-trip flight to Florida,

      No, they are concerned with the value of their stock portfolio. Companies and stockholders believe, rightly or wrongly, that their profits and stocks go down when labor costs rise.

      And that the ordinary citizen prefers "security done right" if it means a much greater cost of living?

      If the airline industry becomes more labor intensive, it creates more jobs even if air travel becomes somewhat less affordable. I think on the whole, that may be a tradeoff many people prefer. After all, even cheap airline tickets don't do you any good if you don't have a job. (The point at which price increases through additional labor costs result in a net loss of jobs depends on elasticity of demand for the particular product.)

      This cut-throat race to cut costs on labor has led to poor service and poor security in many areas, as well as eliminated many good jobs. I would like to see that trend reversed, even if it means somewhat more expensive airline tickets and other services.

    17. Re:Sad... by cburley · · Score: 1
      Let me get this straight: you're saying the rich and powerful prefer spending $200 instead of $450 for a round-trip flight to Florida,

      No, they are concerned with the value of their stock portfolio. Companies and stockholders believe, rightly or wrongly, that their profits and stocks go down when labor costs rise.

      Okay, hmm, so you believe some 50% or more of the American public -- the percentage of stockholders -- constitute "the rich and powerful"?

      And that the ordinary citizen prefers "security done right" if it means a much greater cost of living?

      If the airline industry becomes more labor intensive, it creates more jobs even if air travel becomes somewhat less affordable. I think on the whole, that may be a tradeoff many people prefer. After all, even cheap airline tickets don't do you any good if you don't have a job. (The point at which price increases through additional labor costs result in a net loss of jobs depends on elasticity of demand for the particular product.)

      This cut-throat race to cut costs on labor has led to poor service and poor security in many areas, as well as eliminated many good jobs. I would like to see that trend reversed, even if it means somewhat more expensive airline tickets and other services.

      Unemployed people fly all the time, and certainly prefer lower rates -- in fact, I suspect deregulation and competition has done more to enable poor people to visit family members frequently than to render them unemployed and/or poor in the first place.

      All in all, though, I think you're saying that airlines, airports, and the industry as a whole should do security "right" rather than however it's convenient, with which I agree 100%, even though I guess I'm a member of "the rich and powerful" myself. ;-)

      But the real question is: if the government allowed a free market to flourish in air travel vis-a-vis security issues (personal and airline, but not, e.g., turning planes into missiles), would the general populace choose safety and security, e.g. via demonstrated record, over low price?

      My guess is, they'd tend to choose low price, since that appears to be exactly what they've done for the past 20 years or so. Some airlines have better safety records than others, just as some car manufacturers do. Some of us prefer paying extra for a better-designed car and/or a better-run business "experience"; most people make their choices at different price points.

      So, an even more interesting question is: should Americans who refuse to fly at prices inflated by security practices they personally feel are unnecessary be forced to choose other, less-safe, modes of travel, such as automobile, by government/industry fiat, or should they have the freedom to choose another airline, one that offers low rates by not pretending to offer high personal/airline security (maybe they'd allow passengers to keep their guns, for example)?

      I don't believe this is even close to a rich-vs.-poor, politically-powerful-vs.-weak issue, considering its much more fundamental connection to the security-vs.-freedom and security-vs.-opportunity (generalized form of price or cost) issues.

      Or, viewed from another angle, the reason you might assume the rich and powerful don't want so much regulation might be because, in this country, the rich and powerful get that way, generally, by best meeting the needs of the people of this country, who are, generally, free to choose between security and low price, quality and quantity, etc. on an individual, per-transaction basis.

      Whereas, in nations with comparatively little individual freedom in these areas, you'd probably find their rich and powerful prefer lots of regulation, little choice among individuals, artificially high prices, excess security ("best" implemented by friends and relatives at high salaries), because that's how they got where they are.

      My point here is that just because the rich and powerful in the West (and the USA in particular) happen to be for a thing does not mean the thing is bad in general, or even bad for the common man. That's a popular myth, one which is true on occasion at least, but which, as a general rule, does not stand up under close scrutiny.

      So, argument by invoking the phrase "the rich and powerful" does not work, at least not for me -- in fact, it suggests to me that the person making that argument doesn't really believe in, or can't elucidate, other, more viable, arguments in favor of his position.

      --
      Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
    18. Re:Sad... by vscjoe · · Score: 1
      But the real question is: if the government allowed a free market to flourish in air travel vis-a-vis security issues (personal and airline, but not, e.g., turning planes into missiles), would the general populace choose safety and security, e.g. via demonstrated record, over low price? My guess is, they'd tend to choose low price, since that appears to be exactly what they've done for the past 20 years or so.

      The notion that much in the airline industry is driven by buyer preferences operating in a free market is silly: there are far too few sellers, the choices are far too limited, and the information a buyer has is far too limited. Buyers simply have no way of ascertaining that they get what they pay for when it comes to security (or even something as simple as legroom or service). If a buyer can't have some reasonable assurances that he gets something for the premium he pays, he might as well buy the cheapest ticket. That's the reason why you see a race to the bottom when it comes to service or security standards.

      My point here is that just because the rich and powerful in the West (and the USA in particular) happen to be for a thing does not mean the thing is bad in general, [...] So, argument by invoking the phrase "the rich and powerful" does not work, at least not for me -

      I didn't make such an argument. It's just an observation that the people who drive corporate policy are wealthy individuals and people in position of power. If you let your emotional reactions to such phrases get in the way of an economic argument, well, what can one do?

      Okay, hmm, so you believe some 50% or more of the American public -- the percentage of stockholders -- constitute "the rich and powerful"?

      That's highly misleading. If you hold stock in a company through a mutual fund or a pension plan, you may be a "stockholder" in some sense, but there are few if any choices you can exercise or influence you can have on the companies whose stock you supposedly "hold". Most such stockholders don't usually even have the choice of divesting themselves of any particular stock easily. The people who set the agenda are the tiny fraction of wealthy, individual stockholders with sufficiently large holdings to be heard, portfolio managers, and the government who occasionally chimes in.

    19. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are fucking cracker whose job was made harder and now you are bitching on /.
      Funny how common criminals like to whine about their "rights" to commit crime disappear.

    20. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      For a moment I was glad that my state no longer had him as Governor, then I realized how much more damage he can do at a national level.

      Tom Ridge also has a history of denying information to his citizens. As the former governor of PA, he made it illegal to have cellular phone programming information if you were not directly related to a cellular company, whether a seller of phones, repair shop, etc. The Black Crawling Systems BBS archives formerly for sale by l0pht could not be sent to PA because of my wonderful unconstitutional legislature and governor. I fear what else Tom Ridge will try to take away.

      Exactly. I love how his name gets put on every little thing the government in Pennsylvania does. And the stuff they are doing online, while better than nothing, I guess, is more inefficient in most cases than having to visit the government office in the first place. How messed up is that? My latest favorite is the issuing of one of those new license plates with a damned web address on it. Nothing wrong with my old plate at all. And then they are all happy and proud of themselves because they give you ways to recycle the old plate. Ummm. How about not wasting the resources to create a new one in the first place?!? And of course, we all know how Pennsylvania actually imports trash from our neighboring states. And then there is the logging companies and mining companies destroying more and more forest every year. It's sad. I got off on a tangent there, sorry. But TOM RIDGE IS A FRIGGIN' IDIOT WHO HAS SOLD OFF AS MUCH OF OUR STATE AS HE COULD AND TRIED TO LOOK GOOD DOING IT.
    21. Re:Sad... by cburley · · Score: 1
      But the real question is: if the government allowed a free market to flourish in air travel vis-a-vis security issues (personal and airline, but not, e.g., turning planes into missiles), would the general populace choose safety and security, e.g. via demonstrated record, over low price? My guess is, they'd tend to choose low price, since that appears to be exactly what they've done for the past 20 years or so.

      The notion that much in the airline industry is driven by buyer preferences operating in a free market is silly: there are far too few sellers, the choices are far too limited, and the information a buyer has is far too limited. Buyers simply have no way of ascertaining that they get what they pay for when it comes to security (or even something as simple as legroom or service). If a buyer can't have some reasonable assurances that he gets something for the premium he pays, he might as well buy the cheapest ticket. That's the reason why you see a race to the bottom when it comes to service or security standards.

      So, you're saying that buyers preferences can't influence the industry much, so buyers focus only on price, so the industry gets too widely and completely influenced to set low prices??? Hmm. That seems like widespread influence by the common man to me, especially when I ignore your attempt to narrow the issue as if air travel was the only option -- as if an airline had only other airlines with which to compete, and not trains, buses, automobiles, the Internet, Nintendo, and television as well.

      For myself, I have had a "legroom issue" for a long time. I've actually chosen flights and flight conditions, as well as to not fly at all, based on what was feasible in terms of promises for legroom. And, hey, guess what, American Airlines, about a year ago, started promising more legroom in coach...and United (I think it is) now allows reserving seats in exit rows ahead of time, allowing me to be sure I'll have legroom!

      But I guess that's just proof to you of my power, as one of "the rich and powerful", to influence industry.

      My point here is that just because the rich and powerful in the West (and the USA in particular) happen to be for a thing does not mean the thing is bad in general, [...] So, argument by invoking the phrase "the rich and powerful" does not work, at least not for me[...]

      I didn't make such an argument. It's just an observation that the people who drive corporate policy are wealthy individuals and people in position of power. If you let your emotional reactions to such phrases get in the way of an economic argument, well, what can one do?

      Yes, people in positions of power -- like the shareholders, which constitute, on the whole, the majority of Americans. I mean, sure, one doesn't normally appoint to the Board of Directors of a company like American Airlines a group of people with little or no experience in business -- which excludes many non-rich people, but many wealthy, powerful ones as well.

      But while those individuals may directly set the agenda for that company, they do so based on their perception of the agendas each and every potential consumer and partner has for that same company. Ultimately, you are the boss of American Airlines, in that you can decide, for yourself, whether to fly it based on whether you believe they provide sufficient safety, security, comfort, timeliness, etc. for the price they charge. Ditto for each other airline, every other mode of travel. You have plenty of choices, and there are hundreds of millions of people just like you making the same choices.

      However "rich and powerful" CEO John Q. Esquire is, if he can't figure out how to best meet your collective demands in the competitive market, he won't be CEO for long.

      Why you go off on a tangent about "emotional reactions" I don't understand, but I guess you ran out of arguments.

      If you hold stock in a company through a mutual fund or a pension plan, you may be a "stockholder" in some sense, but there are few if any choices you can exercise or influence you can have on the companies whose stock you supposedly "hold". Most such stockholders don't usually even have the choice of divesting themselves of any particular stock easily. The people who set the agenda are the tiny fraction of wealthy, individual stockholders with sufficiently large holdings to be heard, portfolio managers, and the government who occasionally chimes in.

      Yet, for the most part, corporations tend, on the whole, to have "agendas" set for them that reflect the desires of the public at large to be able to easily buy, at affordable prices, food, shelter, services, and so on.

      Personally, I find your deemphasis of the importance of the common man's thoughtful consideration of how and when to invest funds in the market somewhat condescending, but, mostly, I find it mathematically unsupportable: it may be that someone making less than $100K is, as an individual, able to influence a given corporation only 1/100th as much as someone worth $10M, but, seeing as there's probably more than a hundred times as many people fitting the former description than the latter, I don't see how the latter end up completely in control.

      And when I look at the fact that there are far more McDonald's restaurants around than Four Seasons; far more government programs that take money directly from the wealthy and give it directly to the poor than vice versa; and far more Targets and Wal-Marts than Neiman-Marcuses (or whereever us rich and powerful folk shop), it becomes even more difficult to understand just how the rich and powerful manage to control so much in our country, knowing their tastes and aspirations as I presumably do (being one of them, y'see).

      So, I suggest you take your own advice and restrict yourself to "economic arguments", rather than presuming to speak either for us rich and powerful folk or to our ability to set the agenda for corporate America.

      --
      Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
    22. Re:Sad... by ChaosDiscordSimple · · Score: 1

      Sheesh... what a pity you can't clone phones and steal service anymore.

      After all, if you can't talk about or exchange about it, no one can possibly steal service. And magically anyone who already has the information will find their copies destroyed and unable to be copied.

      There are already laws against stealing phone service. Anyone interested in breaking that law will be perfectly willing to break laws limiting access that that information.

      Heck, maybe I'm curious how much danger I'm in that some evildoer will steal cell phone service using my account number? Am I not allowed to research that? I simply need to blindly trust the phone company?

      That was no different than saying that it is illegal to duplicate a skeleton key. If you've ever seen such a key, you might notice something on the key that says to the locksmith, effectively "don't duplicate this key or you could get in trouble".

      I wasn't aware that it was actually a law. The restricted keys I've had access to simply say "DO NOT DUPLICATE", and never referenced any particular laws.

      Illegal or just a recommendation aside, it's easy enough to work around. Buy a key grinding machine. Mock up a key grinding machine (they're not that complicated). Cut a key by hand (hard, but possible). Get a minimum wage job at a hardware store grinding keys and use their key grinder. Bribe the minimum wage kid working the key grinder at your local hardware store to ignore the warning. File off the warning. break off the top bit with the warning.

      Outlawing knowledge is pointless, it spreads too easily. A photocopier, or a scanner and the internet make it cheap and easy. Outlawing knowledge makes it hard to do valid research. I should need any sort of legal permit to research anything I own. I should be free to pick the locks on my house or experiment with the security of my cell phone (as long as I don't steal service). If I can get information on how the lock or cell phone works, great.

    23. Re:Sad... by ChaosDiscordSimple · · Score: 1

      I should need any sort of legal permit to research anything I own.

      Doh! I mean "I should not need any sort of legal permit to research anything I own." Perhaps I need a permit certifying my ability to proofread before posting.

    24. Re:Sad... by fishebulb · · Score: 1

      i didnt mean to imply that just because he went to an ivy league school is a gaurantee of intellince, but he did do better on the act/sat's (cant remeber which one it was) than gore. If he managed to become president of the United States, i doubt he is the village idiot.

      On a side note, has anyone noticed lately in his speech that he a) has become a better speaker, much more banter and impromptuness (sp?), and b) he is doing the clinton thumbs up

    25. Re:Sad... by Qui-Gon · · Score: 1

      Ugg... You totally missed the point (which is why you probably posted as Anonymous Fool).

      If you read the whole reply you would have noticed my point was to get involved with the problem and not just sit back and complain about the "pin heads".

      --

      We are blind to the Worlds within us
      waiting to be born...
    26. Re:Sad... by Qui-Gon · · Score: 1
      You know as well as I that if he writes his congressman, all that he'll get in return is a form letter - the congressperson won't even read his letter let alone take the time to actually send him a personalized letter back (not that I blame him, I'm sure he is very busy, but thats beyond the point).

      That is a poor assumption. "Why try? I am only going to fail." Come on.

      And if that doesn't work you want us to get involved directly? Come on, I mean I know that it is possible to run for city board or whatever, but that takes money and a LOT of time.

      First I didn't say it was easy or cheap. Nor did I say run for city board. What I meant was do things like start a petition, picket, etc. Someone once said "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance." I believe to be more true now then ever.

      All that you really can do is get a lot of people to express their opinion to their congressman, or elect a new one next election. Therefore, discussing issues here IS going to make changes.

      Couldn't agree more.

      Why? Because you are able to reach a lot of people - the same people that will eventually go to the polls and vote.

      IMHO... Slashdot folks only account for a small amount of the american public.

      --

      We are blind to the Worlds within us
      waiting to be born...
    27. Re:Sad... by vscjoe · · Score: 1
      And when I look at the fact that there are far more McDonald's restaurants around than Four Seasons; far more government programs that take money directly from the wealthy and give it directly to the poor than vice versa ; and far more Targets and Wal-Marts than Neiman-Marcuses (or whereever us rich and powerful folk shop), it becomes even more difficult to understand just how the rich and powerful manage to control so much in our country, knowing their tastes and aspirations as I presumably do (being one of them, y'see).

      Well, of course, with your firm belief in the existence of an efficient mass market in the US and seeming lack of familiarity with alternative choices, that's doubtlessly the only conclusion you can reach. Of course, I'd view that reasoning as kind of circular.

      To many people who have personal experience living and working in other countries for extended periods of time, and according to numerous economic studies, the US standard of living is lower than in many other western nations, even though the US is clearly economically predominant. Americans live with inconvenient and unreliable transportation systems, a flakey banking system, poorly built homes, poor nutritional choices, poor health services, and poor choices for recreational activities. Even being a reasonably well off consumer in one of the more civilized areas of the US, in many of these areas, I simply cannot get better products and services.

      To me, it's pointless to argue whether the US market represents an optimal outcome for US consumers--it clearly does not. The only question to me is: why not? Why do Americans put up with living like this? I mean, people in developing nations can't afford to live any better than they do, but the US has the money and the resources to do better.

    28. Re:Sad... by cburley · · Score: 1
      How you manage to jump to the conclusion that I believe "the US market represents an optimal outcome for US consumers" is beyond me.

      I pointed out that it evidently does not represent an outcome anywhere near the ideal that a small group of "the rich and powerful" would impose if they could...which you implied they would like to do.

      There's a vast area between the claims you made, which I rejected, and "an optimal outcome" -- it's called "the excluded middle", i.e. the middle choice excluded by your either/or, black/white logic.

      I am curious about those other nations you claim enjoy a higher standard of living -- would you say their system of government and market involves power concentrated in (corresondingly) fewer hands -- a sort of elite -- than the US, or more? Can you give examples of how the government and market work together there to ensure citizens have the choices US citizens don't (and, presumably, can't in our quasi-free-market system) have?

      --
      Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
  16. Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by sydb · · Score: 2

    This is the most upsetting story I've ever read on Slashdot; it reminds of Fahrenheit 451.

    Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.

    --
    Yours Sincerely, Michael.
    1. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Velex · · Score: 2

      This is the most upsetting story I've ever read on Slashdot; it reminds of Fahrenheit 451.

      Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.

      We can't. Akira's forgotten to take his drugs again.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    2. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by sydb · · Score: 2

      I'm afraid I don't understand your comment, though I think I understand the sentiment.

      --
      Yours Sincerely, Michael.
    3. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      I just finished reading Farenheit 451 again.

      For those of you who have not read it or do not remember, it is set in Future America where the "firemen" destroy books and control access to information. How did it get to be that way? Bit by bit -- incremental removal of information that offends some minority, is "dangerous," etc. Posessing and/or distributing proscribed information meant that you were an enemy of the state.

      The U.S. remains a powerful, but insular, nation in this future. And it has plenty of enemies. The government is apparently making war -- on who, and why, people don't know. But citizens are drafted to fight in it.

      It's not clear that the U.S. wins the war.

      Everyone should read FH451. The author's not in the back was very interesting as well, talking about censorship of his works, FH451 even, by publishers. Including in textbooks which include his works.

      His book, and afternote, reminded me of the "DVD censorship" software /. mentioned recently. On CNN a few days ago I saw that a group of biblethumpers had planned to burn six copies of Harry Potter because it mentions witchcraft. The local (Texas) law officials denied them the request, so they had to make do with shredding the books publically. I wish I had been there -- I would have started tossing bibles in the fire, or shredder, to make a point.

      Everyone please go read FH451, the Constitution, and the Declaration of Independence. Read a little Medieval history; the Church (the also the state) caused the Dark Ages! It burned books, burned heretics, and controlled information. Irish heretics preserved the old works, which allowed the Renaissance and Enlightenment to happen. Not coincidentally, the power and influence of the Church dropped and Western Civilization was reborn and the enlightenment and science progressed.

      The authors and backers of the DMCA, SSSCA, and similar laws, and the "copyright holders" who wish to further erode the Public Domain, are of a kindred spirit with the Firemen in Farenheit 451 -- limit information, but include lots of commercials! Be a good little citizen.

      Someone please dig up the Founding Fathers.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    4. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Velex · · Score: 2

      This is the most upsetting story I've ever read on Slashdot; it reminds of Fahrenheit 451.

      Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.

      (bleh. I was so shocked that a nation of freedom could do such a thing that I screwed up my analogy and forgot about the preview button.)

      We can't. Tetsuo forgot to take his pills again.

      I don't think that I'll ever forget that scene from Akira where Tetsuo loses control of his powers. This is what's happening: our government is trying to control a power it never should have had in the first place: censorship. It never was designed to have that power. Now, because the people share the sentiment of censorship, the whole thing is mutating out of control. There's nothing we can do about it, even if we wanted to.

      It already is too late.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    5. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.
      The United States helped expunge the Nazis from Germany. As a United States citizen, I humbly request they return the favor.
    6. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Irish monks who did the whole knowledge-preserving thing were never classed as heretics. They were (somewhat ironically, given the more recent history of Ireland) certainly very different from Roman Catholic christians, but about the major sticking point was that the Irish invented about 3x as many saints as Rome (the extra Irish "saints" were actually the old Celtic pantheon, but Rome let 'em away with it without commment, since it got them more converts from the Irish religions). The Early Irish and Roman Catholic churches were eventually unified without significant bloodshed.

    7. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by pantherace · · Score: 1
      A Point to add: Copyright itself was concieved as a control of the works of authors (in England I believe) so that works offensive to the crown or church couldn't be published.

      Someone please dig up the Founding Fathers. Shouldn't be too long before they get up, given how fast they are spinning.

    8. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, no. His comment is a reference to the anime Akira. In it, the government also keeps its citizens in the dark, in that case, about psychics.

    9. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
      Yeah seriously..

      "Let's make LIBRARIANS destroy this information for us! Hey, come to think of it, they have records of who's checked out various books, don't they? Let's make all librarians federal employees and give them powers to go to people's homes and destroy any copies of information which has been withdrawn! Who better to do it?"

      Actually, I was reminded of a SF author's work as well, but it wasn't Bradbury- it was Asimov. Remember that bit in the Foundation trilogy where Hober Mallow's just learned a spy^H^H^Hmissionary has been let onto his ship? And he relieves the guy of duty immediately- and what he says about that?

      "There's no merit in discipline under ideal circumstances. I'll have it in the face of death, or it's useless."

      What use is freedom that only works under ideal circumstances? What good are rights that only apply if you won't use them? We ARE looking at freedom in the face of death- as we learned painfully. Unfortunately it seems like a lot of people instantly conclude, "Oh- never mind!" and only gave a rat's ass for their freedom and rights so long as nobody was getting hurt. It doesn't work like that. We need to embrace our freedoms MORE in the face of death- they are all that separate us from the Taliban itself.

      Yes, this is a US citizen saying this. Sorry, but I'm a stranger here myself... do you really think we are in control here?

    10. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by dragons_flight · · Score: 2

      How did it get to be that way? Bit by bit -- incremental removal of information that offends some minority, is "dangerous," etc. Posessing and/or distributing proscribed information meant that you were an enemy of the state.

      Can it actually work this way? Since the invention of the printing press, I can't recall a single instance in which society allowed itself to be censored into ignorance by the existing govenrment. There have been numerous cases where a revolution has led to information censoring and revisionist history. New leaders and new power structures may seek to control the flow and dissemination of information, but they tend to do so in broad and blunt strokes.

      I tend to doubt that the genie of information can ever be substantially eroded by anything short of revolution. This seems to be true to an especially high degree in America where citizens often believe in their right to free information to a higher degree than anywhere else on earth.

    11. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But aren't all the Nazis dead? Even if there are any still around, why would they want to help rescue USian freedom?

    12. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't just this -- Bush recently revoked the current and future rights of journalists to view old presidential memos and such. Normally, after a period of time (IIRC, something like 30 years), they're opened. That is no longer the case.

      One wonders what exactly he's doing that he's unwilling to let the public know about.

      random link

    13. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by David+Greene · · Score: 1
      Read a little Medieval history; the Church (the also the state) caused the Dark Ages! It burned books, burned heretics, and controlled information.

      Sorry? The Church caused the Dark Ages? Funny, I thought that was due to the sacking of Rome. Certainly the Church is not without fault during this period and many others, but to say it caused the Dark Ages is a stretch.

      Irish heretics preserved the old works, which allowed the Renaissance and Enlightenment to happen.

      Yes the Irish preserved much knowledge, but don't forget contributions of people such as Thomas Aquinas who brought much of the knowledge preserved in the East (often by Islamic scholars) back to the Western Church. It was controversial, but not heretical.

      Not coincidentally, the power and influence of the Church dropped and Western Civilization was reborn and the enlightenment and science progressed.

      Hold on. Elightenment and science progressed because people had access to better reproduction and distribution methods. The Church didn't suddenly go away, allowing the scales to fall from the eyes of the populous. In fact, the Reformation, a wholly faith-based (no pun intended) movement, resulted in a great deal more emphasis placed on scholarship in the Roman Church.

      To say that the Church is somehow afraid of and opposed to knowledge is ludicrous given the many scholastic figures in its ranks. Yes, yes, yes human fear stupidty sometimes ruled the day and people such as Galileo paid for it (though he was not entirely without responsibility). But that is human nature. Such things happen in our world today without any help from religious doctrine.

      Scientists of the 19th century were driven by creation passages in Genesis which instruct mankind to be stewards of the Earth. Ironically, these very passages lead Darwin to his theory of evolution. God does have a sense of humor. :)

      --

    14. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by zenyu · · Score: 1

      Let's make LIBRARIANS destroy this information for us! Hey, come to think of it, they have records of who's checked out various books, don't they? Let's make all librarians federal employees and give them powers to go to people's homes and destroy any copies of information which has been withdrawn! Who better to do it?

      I've worked at a couple libraries and neither kept a record of who had checked out a book aside from who last checked out the book (in case the next patron reported it damaged.) When you returned the book it was removed from your record and your name only remained with the book until someone else checked it out and returned it without complaint. This was done for the privacy of the patron, it was not just a memory saving thing.

      The first library did destroy books that no one checked out for a couple years and the second destroyed all their books in a scanning project. I found a 500 y.o. law book on their shelf once that I sincerely regret not stealing. Those scans were horrible one bit color low res things too, think microfilmed newspapers.

    15. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      No. Read ALOT of medieval history. Those who read only a little get their facts grossly distorted.

    16. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by crayz · · Score: 1

      Actually it's after 12 years IIRC. So Reagan's were just about to be opened up(in January). Now, we wouldn't want to say anything to possibly denigrate the image of our fine President, but George Bush Sr worked as VP for Reagan, and who knows if their might be some scandals waiting to happen as soon as that information gets out.

    17. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by Happy+Monkey · · Score: 2

      Can it actually work this way? Since the invention of the printing press, I can't recall a single instance in which society allowed itself to be censored into ignorance by the existing govenrment.

      Would the USSR fit this criteria? Now, it wasn't complete ignorance, since many people got good educations, but non-state-sponsored information was heavily restricted. It seems to be happening again, with the reinstated state control of the media in Russia.

      --
      __
      Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
    18. Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 by arkanes · · Score: 1

      You can't really say "the Church", especially during that period and come down firmly as either causing/maintaing the Dark Ages for maintaining information that allowed the Renaissance. It was both, really. During the Dark Ages, the Church, in the form on monks, certainly did preserve and maintain many books and information that certainly would have been lost. That information was also strictly restricted to the clergy, to the point where anyone desiring an education pretty much had to join the Church. The Church also (in the form of it's bishops, cardinals, and other officials) went to great lengths to prevent the spread of "improper" information. For example, literacy in anyone except nobles or churchmen was frowned on and viewed with great suspicion. Bibles were only printed in Latin, the better to keep thier contents under the control of the clergy.

  17. A government for the people by the people.. by Xross_Ied · · Score: 1

    This is the 1st step in eroding whatever accountability that exists for big government.

    Also, it makes it that much harder for scholars of economics, etc to access information that they need.

    --
    This sig space tolet, reasonable rate.
    1. Re:A government for the people by the people.. by Xross_Ied · · Score: 1

      whats wrong with my sig?

      --
      This sig space tolet, reasonable rate.
  18. What's the problem? by statusbar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All a person REALLY needs in life is McDonalds, Music, Movies, Sports and Religous Dogma.

    It is dangerous to give people Education, Information and Freedom. After all, they might be terrorists like the evil Taliban who refuse to give their citizens Education, Information and Freedom.

    Hey, did anyone watch the debate a couple of weeks ago on CNN where they discussed giving U.S. federal agents the right to use torture?

    Get ready for the future: it is murder - leonard cohen

    --
    ipv6 is my vpn
    1. Re:What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      SEX!!!! You fogot SEX!!

    2. Re:What's the problem? by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

      >SEX!!!! You fogot SEX!!

      We're nerds we don't get to have sex. ;-)

      Besides, as every prisoner knows, that's not a constitutional requirement, nor a human rights issue!
      So that's OK then! ;-)

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    3. Re:What's the problem? by David+Greene · · Score: 1
      All a person REALLY needs in life is McDonalds, Music, Movies, Sports and Religous Dogma.

      It is dangerous to give people Education, Information and Freedom.

      Why do you see these things as mutually exclusive? It saddens me that we members of the so-called "intelligensia" are so limited in our outlook. If we were a little more informed about the world we live in, perhaps we'd be a lot more tolerant of it.

      --

    4. Re:What's the problem? by statusbar · · Score: 2

      • Why do you see these things as mutually exclusive?

      Umm... I'm NOT the one who sees them as mutually exclusive. Our 'officials' are the ones. who do.

      And THAT's the problem.

      There is no need for Manufacturing Consent any more now that we have Forced Consent.

      --jeff

      --
      ipv6 is my vpn
    5. Re:What's the problem? by David+Greene · · Score: 1
      I'm NOT the one who sees them as mutually exclusive. Our 'officials' are the ones. who do.
      Apologies if I came across as caustic or otherwise ill-tempered. I was beginning to despair after reading post after post bemoaning the lack of intellectual goodness in our population.

      The goal of my post is to point out (to the general Slashdot crowd, not you personally) that Britney Spears and Fox NFL Sunday are bits of information no more dangerous (and quite probably less dangerous) than, for example, information about security holes in Linux. Knowing about and enjoying these things does not necessarily mean one has turned off the brain.

      I could just as easily argue that engineers who discuss the intricacies of the priority inversion problem all day are a sad group who are missing big and significant aspects of life such as culture, philosophy and history. Clearly this is false on face, as is the assumption that attending church services is a dangerous submission to dictatorial power.

      --

    6. Re:What's the problem? by statusbar · · Score: 2

      Yup, I agree with you.

      I remember a childhood buddy that left to join the military. When he got back his nose was up in the air and he always insulted the 'people who were just civs'.

      I told him that it is those people's rights to BE civilians that he is actually trained to fight for.

      I don't think he understood.

      or perhaps I am the one who didn't understand....

      --jeff

      --
      ipv6 is my vpn
    7. Re:What's the problem? by ZPO · · Score: 1

      You've got half the issue right here. It disturbs me greatly the we are seeing the notion of "need" in these discussions. We see it both from the various government agencies and from the public discourse.

      The discussion of "need" leads to many dark and forbidding places. Does anyone really "need" unrestricted internet access, guns, stamp collections, rare books, magazines, open media, etc, etc, etc.

      Instead we should be talking about "legitimate use". If an item or information has some legitimate use then it should be openly available to American citizens. We already have the appropriate safeguards in place for items. Its called "law". To take the gun issue (always a favorite) We already have laws to make crimes with a firearm illegal (and up the penalty over the same crime committed without a firearm). I find it unlikely that an individual intent on the crime of homicide will be dissuaded from using a firearm because it is illegal.

      In the realm of information we have classification. If disclosure of the information would cause damage to the US then it can be classified. We have CONFIDENTIAL, SECRET, and TOP SECRET based on various levels of damage to the US the disclosure could cause. For the really interesting things we have compartments (codewords). If these documents do not make the grade for classification then they need to be publicly available.

      Can a terrorist use a report on water storage facilities to plan an attack? Yes they can. Can a student use this same information as part of a legitimate civil engineering program at a public university? Yes the can.

      The question is where do we draw the line. It is niether black and white nor simple. For years the US has had export controls in place for so called "dual use" technology. These controls were applied to equipment which had both civillian and military uses. While the controls were pretty well botched up they were there. It is *gravely* concerning that we are now applying something akin to dual-use controls to information available to American citizens.

      What is the long term solution? I think it will be very unpopular. It's called *Personal Responsibility* and taking accountability for your own safety and security. Europe has much more recent experience with terrorism and perhaps we can learn some lessons from them. I lived in Central America during the days of the Madellin (sp?) Cartel and in the UK during the height of the IRA bombings. I can tell you there was a much greater awareness on the part of indiduals about their own personal safety.

      There is a very dangerous idea permeating current American society. The government is not here to protect you *tactically*. The government (local/state/federal) is here to protect you *strategicly*.

      IE - Increased scrutiny of foreign entry visas and stepping up actions to deport persons that overstay those visas - STRATEGIC (government responsibilities)

      IE - Person with knife running past you in the airplane aisle or person leaving a heavy briefcase behind on a commuter train - TACTICAL (personal responsibility.

      We (the US - and I'm proud to be a citizen) got our noses bloodied on 9/11 and got a very nasty wakeup call. We lost 5K+ of innocent civillians. Now we have to decide what to do next.

      We need to make sure we respond with calm logic and restraint rather than kneejerk reactions to clamp down on everything and create a police state. If we attempt to rely on the government to protect us that is what will happen. Oh by the way, they will also be telling us what we *NEED* and what we can think.

      If instead we respond with logic and measured response then we can create a better informed and aware public.

    8. Re:What's the problem? by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      I was thinking about this today, and wondering if torture's so bad if used correctly. First of all, I think that perhaps "deprogrammers" might have better luck getting information out of terrorists, as their fanaticism is very much like a cult.
      But anyway. Take the hypothetical situation where there is a nuclear weapon hidden in Washington, and will go off in a month. And the only person who knows where it is is in custody, but isn't talking. How do you get this information?

      I abhor the idea of torture, but there are cases where the end justifies the means. The thing is - it couldn't be done in secret. There's too much chance for abuse. So what I'd propose is that the only way something as terrible as this could be done is with a national referendum or something like that. Put a provision into law *allowing* it, but by no means make it anything but an absolute last resort.

    9. Re:What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >where they discussed giving U.S. federal agents
      >the right to use torture
      You miss understood the discussion. That was if US Federals agents can do the torture HERE in the US. We already do torture out of the country. My Ex-Fiance was from Panama and spent a bit of time in Noriega's dungeuns. She told me about what was done to her in very graphic details. While it was performed by Panamainians, it was under the direction of US Soldiers. We have taught these idiots how to torture without leaving too many physical scars.

      The Bushes have been berry beery good for the world and the US.
      I think NOT.

    10. Re:What's the problem? by statusbar · · Score: 2

      Right, it couldn't be done in secret.

      Maybe we could televise the tortures? Sell tickets? Closed-circuit TV in pubs! Hey there is $$$ in this torture thing.

      Regardless, you have a terrorist who is not only willing to die but is EXPECTING to die. Any information extracted from him is suspect. The ability for misuse is huge. There is a reason why we are not allowed to utilize torture now. People forget that this reason still exists.

      --jeff

      --
      ipv6 is my vpn
    11. Re:What's the problem? by statusbar · · Score: 2

      Horrible. Well, see technically the US does not do the torture. They just train other people to do it for them. They just circumvent the red tape.

      --jeff

      --
      ipv6 is my vpn
    12. Re:What's the problem? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      They ARE mutually exclusive! Nobody with Education and Information would eat at McDonalds! :)

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    13. Re:What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, history has already proven that the CIA has the right to use torture and sell drugs to American citizens on American soil. It seems totally unfair to me to keep the feds from taking part in all this fun. If we're going to have a corrupt government. Let's have a REALLY corrupt government. There's no problem here, eveyone just move along.

    14. Re:What's the problem? by screwtheNSA · · Score: 1

      Hold it right there folks! We have a "few" questions YOU WILL ANSWER, or else! If the government of this nation decides that torture is legal, then i proclaim it to be OPEN HUNTING SEASON ON THE FEDS! Arm yourselves, the feds will be carrying black pouches of Phenobarbital and numerous hypos for injecting hundreds of peopl, JUST LIKE YOU! BEFORE this gets out of hand, and we all know it will; we MUST reduce the government to the size of a quibbling child, strong as a puppy, but NO TEETH! Rights are rights, and NOT "priveledges" people, this is the area that is OFF LIMITS to government control! Steal a car, lose your right to vote....NOT ME! NOBODY, no government body, department, agent, agency has authority to deny usurp and deprive ANY citizen ANY rights that are ABOVE ALL LAWS, and are HUMAN RIGHTS, and NOT under any government regulation/s. Fuck with MY rights....DIE ASSHOLE! I'll kill anybody bent on depriving me of MY rights! I also have the RIGHT to SAY what i want to as well! I WILL say what i want and when i want, so all of those goody-two-shoes roaches can scurry off to hide from the nazis, while i prefer to stoke my 7MM Mag rifle, and various handguns and do battle with a corrupt and dangerous government!

      --
      206.39.38.2, DDN-BLK-36, DOD NET INFO CENTER. 800.365.3642 206.36.0.0-206.39.255.255 NET RANGE.
  19. Spreading Fear by thinmac · · Score: 1

    This is the sort of move that to Bush administration has been wanting to do for months, and has been building the fear up to accomplish. Three months ago, average, intellegent people would be making lots of noise against destroying public records, and because of sunshine laws and the like it couldn't have been done. But now, because the government has been sewing fear rather than hope, people are ready to give up all sorts of important civil rights because the think that they going to be killed by crazy terrorists at any moment.
    50 years ago, the government told us "There's nothing to fear but fear itself". Now they say "You're all going to watch your loved ones die of chemical and biological warfare, and then die yourselves". Is it any suprise that an agenda has now shown up?

  20. What is news here? And why not under "US"? by dragisha · · Score: 1

    One doesn't have to be a rocket scientist (or, say, Arthur Clarke) to see this coming since Reagan's US. Maybe it's visible only outside of US?
    US problems aside, how long can Slashdot dive like this?

    --
    http://opencm3.net, http://www.nongnu.org/gm2/
    1. Re:What is news here? And why not under "US"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, please. Crap like this has been going on long before Reagan. Get your head out of your ass and stop trying to score partisan brownie points.

  21. Nazi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cows.

    I'm so glad our country no supports book burning.

    welcome to the 21st century.

  22. 1984!?!? by eander315 · · Score: 1
    "The document seemed innocuous enough: a survey of government data on reservoirs and dams on CD-ROM. But then came last month's federal directive to U.S. libraries: "Destroy the report."

    So a Syracuse University library clerk broke the disc into pieces, saving a single shard to prove that the deed was done."

    And then later in the story...

    "Officials acknowledge that there are very few examples of terrorists actually using public records to glean sensitive information, but they say that the terrorist attacks prove the need for extraordinary caution."

    What's next? Memory holes? This is completely rediculous. The orders coming from the US federal government are becoming extremely worrisome. Before long they'll ban the Constitution, and we'll have a lovely police state.

    To steal a line from Idioteque, a Radiohead song: "We're not scaremongering/This is really happening"

    1. Re:1984!?!? by 3am · · Score: 1

      try to remember you medicine.

      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
  23. Ben Ladin Wins ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... what more need I say

  24. well...now the US gets to it too... by dollargonzo · · Score: 1

    hehe, looks like the us is quite a ways behind russia in hiding data from the citizens. russia has been hiding government for who knows how long. people do not have access to any civil information, and there is only one possible result: halt of progress. people who tried to make advances in russia could not get the information needed (ie. a bridge builder not being able to build a bridge cause he couldnt get data on the sizes of ships). i truly hope that idiots in dc dont do this: we would lose our global technology advantage!

    --
    BSD is for people who love UNIX. Linux is for those who hate Microsoft.
  25. My Favorite Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This quote reminds me entirely too much of 1984

    "We have to get away from the ethos that knowledge is good, knowledge should be publicly available, that information will liberate us,"

    Arthur Caplan, University of Pennsylvania bioethicist

  26. Good grief... calm down by imrdkl · · Score: 3, Insightful
    People, this is about not being quite so liberal with the plans for our US infrastructure. Note the article says that the information was "yanked", and not destroyed.

    I argue it never should have been so carelessly deployed in the first place. The hype and the rush to make information available on the web could have been more carefully evaluated, especially by the holders of the plans. Not just plans to dams and waterways, either. Now it's deployment-readiness is being re-evaluated. I doubt it's much more than that.

    It is time for our government to introduce the same amount of security that we've been deploying on company webservers and mail systems for years.

    I dont believe for a second that this information will now not be inaccessible to someone who is interested for any non-deadly reason.

    I believe in Librarians too much for that.

    1. Re:Good grief... calm down by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      carelessly deployed?

      I'm sorry but information on how to design a water filtration plant should be public knowlege and should be a required class for high school kids. Designs and research on civil engineering projects is a vital and valuable resource to engineers, scientists, and the members of the public that have brains that are consisted of something other than jello.

      The only way to breed the geniuses for the next decade is to give them complete access to how things were done and accomplished. Yes studying the plans for the Hoover Dam will teach a student far better than point to a picture and this is a dam, it holds back water... mmmm kay?

      Our society is content with breeding morons and holds contempt against anyone that has an interest or knowlege above the "norm"

      Yes, I know how a nuclear bomb works, but there is no way in hell anyone with just the raw materials can build one. and any of these over-hyped "terrorists" could never accomplish it.

      All they were able to do was crash a few planes, devastating as it was, it's not rocket science.

      Yes I demand access to all that science has to offer. I demand access to microbiological research. and I demand access to chemical research... I demand access to engineering and civil design research.

      and sadly, being a scientist (anyone interested in science is a scientist so bug off phd weenies) I'll probably be among the first targetted by my own government in the name of security.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:Good grief... calm down by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      But then came last month's federal directive to U.S. libraries: "Destroy the report."

      So a Syracuse University library clerk broke the disc into pieces, saving a single shard to prove that the deed was done.


      I'm curious - it what way was this not destroyed?

      Anyhoo - Personally I think this is a case of someone being appointed realizing he has do SOMETHING - and ANYTHING is better then nothing right? I've read many books on terrorism from a historical perspective. One of my old professors actually had some statistics that showed the more we do to stop terrorism the more terrorism we end up with - and for the most part its true. So they don't allow metal knives on board air planes? Oh well - they still give out metal forks.

    3. Re:Good grief... calm down by A.S. · · Score: 1

      Note the article says that the information was "yanked", and not destroyed.

      You didn't read the article did you?
      And I quote:
      The Government Printing Office has begun ordering about 1,300 libraries nationwide that serve as federal depositories to destroy government records...
    4. Re:Good grief... calm down by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      Because it still exists in some government stockpile somewhere. Probably where some people know it exists. How is destroying *copies* of a report destroying the report?

    5. Re:Good grief... calm down by lamontg · · Score: 1
      People, this is about not being quite so liberal with the plans for our US infrastructure. Note the article says that the information was "yanked", and not destroyed.

      You obviously didn't bother to read the actual source. The information was destroyed. Specifically, the CDROMs the information was on were broken and all but one shard (to prove it was destroyed) were thrown away.

    6. Re:Good grief... calm down by imrdkl · · Score: 2
      Ok, with a few hours sleep, I'm ready to reduce your mutterings to rubble. (metaphorically speaking, of course).

      I think the very key of your argument is sound. The crux of the biscuit is not the information, but the ability to use it. Right?

      First, all of us morons would never have any interest in the information, because we dont have the time, energy or interest to do what it takes to LEARN how to make use of information. It's only the black hats who do that. Right?

      Security is a desparate struggle against: "people who have interest or knowledge above the norm" and are not (simultaneously?) "phd weenies". Right?

      Cmon. Security is part knowledge, part perseverence, part neighborliness, and just a dash of parnoia, yes. What is being protected AND deployed underneath the security (when the above requirements are met) is the real treasure. This thread was a good reminder of that.

    7. Re:Good grief... calm down by Captn+Pepe · · Score: 2
      People, this is about not being quite so liberal with the plans for our US infrastructure. Note the article says that the information was "yanked", and not destroyed.

      Erm ... nope. Sez the article:

      But then came last month's federal directive to U.S. libraries: "Destroy the report." So a Syracuse University library clerk broke the disc into pieces, saving a single shard to prove that the deed was done.
      ...
      Because the water survey was published and owned by the U.S. Geological Survey, the libraries that participate in the depository program said they had little choice but to comply. Some librarians asked if they could simply pull the CD from shelves and put it in a secure place, but federal officials told them it had to be destroyed.

      So if by "yanked" you mean that a copy may still exist somewhere in the massive archives of the Government Printing Office, then I can't really argue. But from a public perspective, the disks have been smashed with no particular reason to believe that they will be made available again.

      On the other hand, I'd be curious to know how many of those librarians quietly burned copies of those disks first, for safe keeping. Don't underestimate librarians: they are some of the most tenaciously pro-first amendment types you'll ever meet, and they are surprisingly technically sophisticated to boot. Corporate publishers have hated them for years; I guess now its the government's turn.

      --

      Quantum mechanics: the dreams that stuff is made of.
    8. Re:Good grief... calm down by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      No it's not.

      If I design a machine that can turn lead into gold (or better yet Steel into gold :-) and keep it's location secret but my physical security is to keep it under a tarp in my backyard. Should I destroy all records of it's existance and design? how about imprision everyone who has asked what is in my back yard? that's our countries idea of security.

      Better would be to give the device actual security.. like guards, a minefield and anti aircraft guns. How about actually protecting that device or place instead of just trying to make believe that it doesnt exist?

      water plant? what water plant? That's a rubber sex toy factory, no wait it's a storage facility for styrofoam packing peanuts.. There' no water plant here.

      This is the crux and entire design to security in the united states. It's easier to deny access to information than it is to simply protect the item.

      How about something simpler... place armed guards from ohhhh maybe the reserves at these locations? how about adding simple security?

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    9. Re:Good grief... calm down by imrdkl · · Score: 1
      If I had only had time to debate you all.

      One, small, nit tho...

      -- Despite all your rage, you're all still just rats in a cage.

      Was not this originally delivered in first-person, singular form? Smashing Pumpkins, right? But it sounds like an accusation, instead of an angst, like this.

    10. Re:Good grief... calm down by NetBoy · · Score: 1

      Just remember, that should you somehow be
      able to fish it out in a library, then your
      activities will also be monitored. As will
      everyone else present - that's the way it's
      written.

      Who wants to put money on whether on not
      simply requesting a "removed" item will
      trigger surveillance?

      Nothing to fear, the library video cameras will
      not be linked to any databases either. But
      you've nothing to fear because you've not done
      anything illegal. That argument has worked well
      throughout history.

      But then, didn't the President just sign an
      order effectively ending the release of
      presidential papers? We don't need history.

    11. Re:Good grief... calm down by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      > I'm sorry but information on how to design a
      > water filtration plant should be public knowlege
      > and should be a required class for high school
      > kids.

      Shouldn't we make sure they know basic algebra and how to write proper English before we try to force knowledge about the mechanics of large utility plants into their heads???

      Stop thinking like everyone's a goddam scientist. It's not that people aren't studying these things because they don't want to learn; it's because there's no good reason why Joe Average NEEDS to know the physics behind a nuclear explosion. Sad to say it, but the learning capacity of the typical person is finite.

      You want to learn all you can. That's great. But why do you feel entitled to access to all these materials that other people worked hard to develop? I would think it's their choice whether to let you see them.

  27. All hail the Taliban! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because we are becoming more like them every day.

  28. Way to prioritize stories... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody mentioned the secret tribunals that were announced during the week... yet this gets the big front page announcement. Irregardless of whether or not it relates to technology... tribunals scare me a hell of a lot more than not being able to read the specs on a nuclear plant in the comfort of my own home.

  29. does anyone remember... by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    the RPG called the morrow project?

    Everything happening parallels the prologue of the morrow project awefully closely... Governments destroying knowlege databases and books, and controlling access to information in the name of security.

    I urge many of you to start an information cache. If you must, bury PVC vaults with information in them in safe locations (Geocaches)

    Myself? I have all of my water filtration information from when I ran a water planet 3 years ago.. I have all of the theory, chemistry, microbiological and design information. (Heck I think i even have a copy of the plant's bleprints from 1929 and the revisions from 1978.)

    Whats next? ban chemistry and chemistry information for the safety of the country?.. Outlaw science outside sanctioned government departments?

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:does anyone remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have all of my water filtration information from when I ran a water planet 3 years ago

      Sweet. Was this in Civilisation, or are you really an intergalactic leader?

      Otherwise, good points. Infringe the rights of the honest law abiding citizen without affecting the terrorists, but ultimately create a lot more terrorists - inside your own country.

      We should hold a sweepstake on how long it will take for civil war to emerge in America. I say it is under 100 years away.

    2. Re:does anyone remember... by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      LMAO!

      Damned typos... water PLANT is what was supposed to be there.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    3. Re:does anyone remember... by The+Milky+Bar+Kid · · Score: 1

      I urge many of you to start an information cache. If you must, bury PVC vaults with information in them in safe locations (Geocaches)

      Why go to this trouble? The perfect information storage medium was invented about 20, 30 years ago now.

      Digitize the info, encrypt it, dump it on a remote computer somewhere - or on your hard drive.

      Then distribute the info to anyone else who asks for it. So we have a million copies on a million computers. A lot of this stuff is words, and simple pictures - we've got 20gb drives these days. Everyone can keep a copy.

      Show them what we mean when we say "Information wants to be free".

      --
      -- This post is about truth, beauty, freedom, and above all things, Karma
    4. Re:does anyone remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shutup you damn brit. anyone from a decent country spells that game's name with a 'z'

  30. Urban Exploration by wormyguy1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    About two years ago, I became really interested in urban exploration (exploring storm drain tunnels, etc). While I never actually went down in a drain (maybe some day), I remember going to city hall and spending some 5 bucks for gigantic plotted maps of the city storm drain and sewer system. The guy behind the counter in the engineering department gave me a few weird looks as to why I would need these maps and information, but legally he had to do so for various reasons, one of them being that I'm paying for these systems to be maintained with my tax dollars, I have a right to know about them. I think some of the more libral libraries might still give out this information, I have a hard time believing any library taking the US gov't seriously about this.

    --
    NerfOnline - Because Nerf Guns aren't just for kids -
    1. Re:Urban Exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's already happened, at least here at Carnegie Mellon University. There was a web site containing floor plans of most campus buildings. Some were in quite amuisngly good detail and had interesting notations on them such as "Service Tunnel", "Steam Tunnel", etc. Highly useful in mapping out the, er, hot moist underground side of the campus. Wonderful that I found all the tunnels before that website started returning 403's, although really all that information was available through good ol' word of mouth too.

    2. Re:Urban Exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I should note, for clarification:
      403 is forbidden. This was an official university website which had access control changed on it, not some random geek's site which was just taken down (that would be 404)

  31. bunch of cry babies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you slashdot people are always ready to cry when the governement takes a step to reduce the risk of the citizens of the USA. Maybe you should stop trying to understand politics and matter of national securities and return to discussing whether linux needs a true /bin/sh instead of saying your opinions about thing you do not understand. Geeks do not run this country and never will.

    1. Re:bunch of cry babies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a coward and a cretin. This country was founded on *freedom*, remember? We wage war in the name of *freedom*, remember? I honestly don't see how anyone can take this country seriously anymore when freedom is the first thing to go out the door at the first little sign of danger. It is *pathetic*.

    2. Re:bunch of cry babies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, while freedom is our goal, absolute freedom is an extreme. If murder was suddenly no longer illegal, we would have more freedom, but that freedom would come at a price.

      Life is all about balance: a balance between the extremes. The question which must be asked is, is this *particular* freedom and its advantages worth the price of its disadvantages?

    3. Re:bunch of cry babies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah right... when was last time you went to the library to get info about the water distribution infrastructure of the USA? Nobody goes to the library to read that... it should not even be in the library... liberty is say what you what, do what you want (until you step into someone else liberty)... not having critical infrastructure plans in the library (such as here in Southern California, where water come from 1000 miles north through the California Aqueduc). So, let me conclude by saying that you are the moronic dick and go back to /bin/sh before insulting people about things you have no clue about.

  32. Lovely quote from the article: by Ikari+Gendou · · Score: 1
    "We have to get away from the ethos that knowledge is good, knowledge should be publicly available, that information will liberate us," said University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Arthur Caplan.

    This guy has got to be out of his mind...

    --

    Call on God, but row AWAY from the rocks!

    1. Re:Lovely quote from the article: by WildBeast · · Score: 1

      good enough then, if he's so certain about his claims why is he a bioethicist to being with? He should get rid of his knowledge.

    2. Re:Lovely quote from the article: by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > "We have to get away from the ethos that knowledge is good, knowledge should be publicly available, that information will liberate us," said University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Arthur Caplan.
      >
      > This guy has got to be out of his mind...

      No, he's not. He's doing his job, which is to retard the development of biotechnology.

      He's a bioethicist, not a biologist or bioengineer. That means he knows a bit about how living things work, and everything about why biologists and bioengineers shouldn't be allowed to work on 'em.

      (It sounds like I'm speaking in irony, but I'm not. Think about it. When was the last time a bioethicist said "Yeah, this is pretty cool tech, let's build it"? I mean, they're always saying "Wow, sounds promising, but dangerous. Better ban research in that area for 20 years 'till we get a handle on the consequences.")

      100,000 years ago, he called himself a pyroethicist, and if we hadn't clubbed his kind into submission, we'd still be living in caves and eating raw meat. ("Well, we see the potential for fire, but look at what happens when it gets out of controlTHUNKTHUNKTHUNKOOF")

    3. Re:Lovely quote from the article: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "Ignorance is Strength." - 1984

    4. Re:Lovely quote from the article: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bioethicists are a plague upon modern medical research. The positions themselves have been designed to placate a public paranoia which has been stirred up and promulgated by the PC Left Wing. That they actually have some kind of power in determining public policy is frightening. They are almost to a man (or woman) led strictly by anti-technology dogma, their positions determined long before any actual "research" is done on the topic at hand.

      They are a perfect example of the decline in Western Academia - the tenure system has been corrupted by political extremists who are actively unfriendly to the goals of academia itself.

  33. In this case, security through obscurity is bad by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Security through obscurity only works in a "police state" like a company intranet where there are cleck-points (i.e. firewalls) and good records of every request to pass the check-point.

    Russia for a long time made use of this method to protect their nuclear facilities: Obscure the facts, have everyone be watched by the KGB, and give the nuclear workers the best of ecerything. This worked in a closed society with closed borders because the nation was secure even if the facilities were not. However, this does nto work for Russia today, and their facilities are extremely insecure.

    This is the wrong sort of security through obscurity to have in a free nation. Unless the NSA, CIA, and FBI want to join forces and spy on all Americans for evidence of terrorism (and maybe bring back the UAAC from the 50's) it prevents the dialogs from occuring that bring about better security policies...

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:In this case, security through obscurity is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I thought Russia's facilities were insecure because their government almost went broke and couldn't pay people to guard them.

    2. Re:In this case, security through obscurity is bad by Petrol · · Score: 1

      It is becoming apparent that we should form some kind of House Committee on Unamerican Activities, or something...

      --
      ...and that's the end of our show. Donk!
  34. Is scientific information next? by mj6798 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Many of the books on the shelves at libraries are probably much more "dangerous" than those government reports. Standard textbooks and research papers contain information about how to create dangerous chemicals and organisms, how to protect yourself during laboratory work, and how such dangerous chemicals and organisms can be dispersed. Of course, those textbooks don't talk about terrorism or warfare, they talk about agriculture, organic chemistry, and molecular biology.

    At the end of this path is a society in which a few, carefully screened individuals have all the knowledge and the rest of the population lives in ignorance. In fact, throughout history, we have had societies like that. The "knowledge elite", of course, derives lots of power and wealth from their knowledge and soon dispenses with the need to consider input from the masses, who don't know what's going on anyway.

    It is up to us in a democratic society to decide how far we want to go down that path. At least we still have the choice for now--once we are too far down that path, democracy inevitably disappears, since you can't make informed political decisions if you don't have information.

    1. Re:Is scientific information next? by dcunning · · Score: 1

      I'd say that we have already begun to walk down that path: ask the average person on the street an easy science question. Better yet, ask three. See how many people can answer such basics as: what are the 9 planets, what makes an acid vs. base, and what particle makes up electricity. I'd be surprised if you could get three correct answers half the time.

      Granted, these facts won't help most people out in their day to day lives, but how can you expect people to make informed decisions --i.e., make input-- without even a basic grasp of the things they can find or see (given a window, no clouds, and some distance from a city) in their kitchen.

      As in a previous post mentioning the connection between Roman history and American history, the ultimate downfall will probably be the complacency of the masses, not the government's (or s') "bamboozling."

      If anything, this existing complacency will only make the potential loss of public, even scientific, information much easier to carry out. What people don't know or know about, the don't care for. What people don't care for, they'll let go of freely. Then people begin forget what it is that they don't know.

      I'd say any potential problems that may stem from or be influenced by this order are already in existence. We, as a society, have high regard for but little understanding or science, engineering and math. The reigns of power have already been handed over, at least partially. Even among /.'s it you can find the superiority of "we know more than the silly hordes of (insert AOLers, Micro$oft-using-foole, etc.) :-)

      As for the masses not being informed... when was the last time you saw science news as part of network television? The newspapers do a little better... How much trouble do you have checking out science books from the library... not a lot of competition there. Why do ghosts, UFOs, ESP, etc. get MORE time on TV, presented in a "sciency" manner, than real science?

      The masses are already uninformed; many don't even pause to think about it, even with the stunningly open access that does exist and probably will still exist a year or five from now.

      To completely branch off: this is why we need more teachers, better paid teachers, more focus on "learning to learn" etc.

      To bring it back ontopic (sort of): Don't let the dangers of the moment distract you from a, IMHO, much more insidious problem that stands to make this whole thing moot.

    2. Re:Is scientific information next? by Cyno · · Score: 1

      Then I have to ask you. Do you think choosing President Bush was an informed political decision for the people who voted for him? When was the last time the public made an informed political decision?

  35. Media delay? by Skater · · Score: 1

    The article made it sound like a lot of the destruction has already been accomplished. I want to know why the media took so long to report it?

    It's almost as if it was embargoed until it was too late to stop it...

    --RJ

  36. This has been going on for *years*... by Ed+Bailey · · Score: 3, Informative

    Way back about 20 years ago when I was entering the World of Work(tm) I worked at a university, in their data center. A prof was doing research on the state of bridges in Connecticut (there had been a recent high-profile bridge failure in the state).

    Anyway, he got a data tape from either the state or federal government (I don't recall which) of a bunch of bridge-related information. It was my job to pull the data from the tape, and do some initial checking to make sure we read the data correctly. In order to make sure everything looked OK, the tape came with a record definition, showing each field in the record, its size, and the type of data it contained.

    The interesting thing was that two fields were listed in the record definition, but were zero'ed out on the tape -- the latitude and longitude of each bridge. It turned out that the agency responsible for the data would not release that one datum; the concern was that the data could be militarily significant in time of war.

    So making data harder to find in the name of homeland security is nothing all that new...

    Ed

    1. Re:This has been going on for *years*... by Advocadus+Diaboli · · Score: 1
      The interesting thing was that two fields were listed in the record definition, but were zero'ed out on the tape -- the latitude and longitude of each bridge. It turned out that the agency responsible for the data would not release that one datum; the concern was that the data could be militarily significant in time of war.
      Damn, then I should be careful on my next holidays to follow my passion to "log" all the coordinates of interesting things with my GPS. I wouldn't like to go to jail for "spying". :-)

      So the next thing will be that we destroy all civil GPS receivers, maybe bring also down the internet and find ourselves back in the deepest middleage.

      And how long until we burn books again like in the "Reichskristallnacht" in Germany long ago?

      And yes, for the geography coordinates it works. I got an authentic screenshot from a CNN broadcast that has a map behind the speaker and the map shows "Switzerland" at the position where (according to my map) the former CSSR (Slovakia) is located. I really hope that the guys that are dropping bombs on Afghanistan now have some more accurate maps...

    2. Re:This has been going on for *years*... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's not kidding about the Switzerland thing:
      http://www.plover.com/~mjd/misc/whereisswitzerla nd .jpg

  37. Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who... by Western+Light · · Score: 1

    1) Demands access to nearby water treatment procedures and the core architecture to the local thermonuclear reactor

    2) Yet cries foul when asked to produce even the vaguest form of identifications such as a SS#, driver's license, non-web based email address?

    Just a question...

  38. Why so soft solution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The gov should that this seriously, and call for a mass suicide and a contamination of the land with nuclear materials, so no citizen or inch of land ends under the control of the enemy! If you do it, do it to the end.

    Ohh, wait, no citizens and no land means no gov... they will have to colaborate, sorry for them.

  39. Publicly burn them by j7953 · · Score: 2

    They should publicly burn those documents. It's the only way to be sure.

    --
    Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
    1. Re:Publicly burn them by Reziac · · Score: 1
      Better yet, folks, read the story at the base link:
      http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/triumph/tr-b ookburn.htm

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  40. Why did that building fall over? by PigeonGB · · Score: 1

    How come we didn't know there was a water main running underneath that stadium?

    Well back in 2001, the government ruined all records and we had no idea where anything was, so we just built over it and hoped for the best.

    This is also why schools are not allowed to operate anymore. If we give people knowledge, they will only use it for evil purposes.
    So, wanna talk about the new advances in pen and paper technology? Sorry, stick and dirt technology. It is safer.

    --
    I have 3656.9 Bogomips. How many Bogomips do you have?
  41. Damn Google Cache... by GrEp · · Score: 2

    Sorry Mr. Ridge. There is this invention called the Google Cache. A new terrorist tool used to defeat draconian ISP's, the RIAA, and now the US Government from stoping the flow of information.

    Speaking of flow, how about some USGS dam safety links at
    http://www.wes.army.mil/ITL/damsafe/sites.html, what??? 404? Not found??

    Lets try this google cache thingy

    Wow. I can still see the website. We had better shut down that evil Google ;)

    --

    bash-2.04$
    bash-2.04$yes "Don't you hate dialup connections?"| write USERNAME
    1. Re:Damn Google Cache... by flollywebfrog · · Score: 0



      Wow. Google will be the Proles' savior. Halleluya.

      --


      ________________
      All my sig are fjdklafjkldafjkldafdaklf
    2. Re:Damn Google Cache... by Gary+Yngve · · Score: 1
      Google has a mechanism that allows people to remove content from the cache. If the govt wished to, they could get pages removed from google's cache. EFF lists at least one govt page (map of nuclear reactors in US) that is not cached in google anymore: EFF article

      For more information on google's cache removal policy, look here.

  42. Hummm. by GISboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Google was mentioned as a place to get chached information, but no one drew the conclusion that it could be considered a circumvention device under the DMCA.

    Scary, really, scary...when you consider that it is not the "powerful" aspects of the DMCA, but the more subtle/incidious/recurring detriments of the act/law.

    What I find even more sad is that even though you consider the damage Bin Laden did, it pales to what we are doing to him. We are taking his life, his livelyhood and turning his own people, much less the whole world, against him.

    Be careful what you wish for, eh? He wanted to see those towers come down, I believe was the direct quote.

    So, limiting access to information in this way, well what happens when the people who need it can't get it? And the damn breaks quite literally and figuratively?

    Again, I say, be careful what you wish for.

    --
    If it is not on fire, it is a software problem.
    1. Re:Hummm. by imrdkl · · Score: 2

      The way I see it, there are two genies out of the bottle here. Neither can be put back. The first is information, the other is encryption. The latter is available to ALL of the owners and guardians of former. Destruction of information is a stupid mistake, and most likely a knee-jerk reaction in this case. In spite of all the great arguments to the contrary in this thread, I still gotta believe that librarians will dispense this information according to their own discretion.

    2. Re:Hummm. by GISboy · · Score: 1

      well put imrdkl, well put.

      DeCSS, Anarchist Cookbook, The Constitution, Steven King, fiction and non fiction alike.

      I think I can safely call this kind of thinking Digital McCarthyism.

      I would go further, but X-files is on now.
      (how's that for a conspiracy?)

      --
      If it is not on fire, it is a software problem.
    3. Re:Hummm. by imrdkl · · Score: 2
      Man, I know I keep pointing it out, but this crowd is absolutely untouchable when it regards FOI. We need this inflexibility in our population. Don't ever change, my countrymen.

      But... this is not just another book banning along the lines of Grapes of Wrath, Uncle Toms Cabin, etc., either.

      Neither is this a librarian tearing up, burning, or even locking away a book. They (librarians) will need some time to learn to fight for (and protect) a piece of plastic, or other digital data, but they will fight. I feel quite certain of it. And when the digital medium contains information that should be secure, it will be made that way by these same people.

  43. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well maybe i'm concerned about the gov. tampering with the water supply & want to investigate without risk of reprisal

  44. Spooky by T.Hobbes · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This quote says it all:
    "We have to get away from the ethos that knowledge is good, knowledge should be publicly available, that information will liberate us," said University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Arthur Caplan. "Information will kill us in the techno-terrorist age, and I think it's nuts to put that stuff on Web sites."

    The debate here is between the idea there is and that there is not a net benefit in having an open society, where individuals by virtue of citizenship have access to whatever information they want so long as it doesn't post an immediate and vital security threat. Once you start censoring papers and publications because they can fathomably be used to hurt the government, you limit the public's ability of oversight in public health, security, and spending. No longer can public-interest groups review and recommend changes to public works and such. You also reduce accountability of the government to the people and the press: if the plans on public works are state secrets, graft and corruption become much easier and less dangerous. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, because this style of censorship does not have a clear standard of justification - a 'clear & present danger', say - the issue of a slippery slope comes into play. There is, I suppose, one fundamental questions to be asked: first, is the realistic danger of the censorship greater than the realistic danger of the information being censored?
    1. Re:Spooky by The+Milky+Bar+Kid · · Score: 1

      University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Arthur Caplan

      I don't know the guy, so don't take this as referring to him, but in the case of the main 'bioethicist' I've read of (who will remain nameless), 'bioethicist' means 'ex-priest quoting dogma and expecting people to take him as a serious scientist'.

      Arthur Caplan may be a trained bioethicist, but what does that have to do with information? I thought bioethicists were meant to talk about gene modification and cloning and stuff. Not Terrorism.

      --
      -- This post is about truth, beauty, freedom, and above all things, Karma
    2. Re:Spooky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      .......bioethicist Arthur Caplan.

      Dr. Caplan is a media shill who gets paid to dispense controversial opinions on television. Most of his appearances have centered on cloning. He's doing little more than following the grand modern academic tradition of denigrating the belief in and pursuit of "truth", particularly as practiced in its most successful form, science. I can never read a comment like his without the uneasy impression that people like Dr. Caplan want to set themselves up as gatekeepers to the truth, to decide for our own good what we little people should be allowed to know. Be very afraid.

    3. Re:Spooky by Captn+Pepe · · Score: 2
      The debate here is between the idea there is and that there is not a net benefit in having an open society, where individuals by virtue of citizenship have access to whatever information they want so long as it doesn't post an immediate and vital security threat. Once you start censoring papers and publications because they can fathomably be used to hurt the government, you limit the public's ability of oversight in public health, security, and spending.

      Indeed. As far as I can tell, nearly everyone here missed this juicy little tidbit from the article:

      Indeed, chemical and water industry groups are lobbying the Bush administration to curtail regulations providing public access to the operations of public facilities, data that environmentalists say are critical to ensuring safety.

      Hmm ... now why on Earth would they do that? Everyone knows that the chemical industry has always had the best interests of the citizenry and the environment at heart. Obviously, if this operational data is removed from public view, these industries will just work that much harder to police themselves with respect to public health and the like.

      Next information-restriction order that comes down, ask yourself: who could possibly have lobbied for that?

      --

      Quantum mechanics: the dreams that stuff is made of.
  45. Speaking of conspiracies.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    some people have waaaaayyyy too much time on their hands.

  46. Sad... and stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I don't just mean Tom Ridge

    you said you didn't just mean Tom Ridge and then you went on to criticize Tom Ridge, Tom Ridge, Tom Ridge... get your thoughts straight before you post.

  47. This is Bull Shit!!!!!! by Anonymous+Butthead · · Score: 1

    Anyway, now that i've vented... let me say my true view on this. Chances are it's information we currently (as the US NAtion) know. If we come to find out it's just a coverup, then this is retarded. But if it really is for the sake of the nation, then damnit, i'd rather not know some survey info then have my water contaminated!

    --
    Hey, this is my sig, if you don't like it, STOP READING MY POSTS!
    1. Re:This is Bull Shit!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you're an idiot and that should say all.
      Learn how to spell and write topics.

      Best Greetings Mrago

    2. Re:This is Bull Shit!!!!!! by Anonymous+Butthead · · Score: 1

      hey, fuck you, buddy!!

      --
      Hey, this is my sig, if you don't like it, STOP READING MY POSTS!
  48. Get rid of Ashcroft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, this man has done more to set this country back than anything in the last two decades. I thought GW's dad tried to get SMART people to surround his son? He sure failed miserably here. I'm embarresed for our country. And does anyone else hear South African overtones when they see "Homeland Security"? Isn't that just a step away from the jackboots and press censorship? Wake up people! Those of you that voted for GW in the last election, you should be afraid of what you have wrought.
    (AC today, to prevent reprisals)

    1. Re:Get rid of Ashcroft by Master_Eagle · · Score: 1, Troll

      Plus he lost his senate election to a dead guy.

      --
      Sig: Where I'd put something witty if I could think of it.
  49. The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by TheMonkeyDepartment · · Score: 0, Troll

    Hold on here. Why do you need detailed information about nuclear reactors or airports? These are government installations and are currently thought to be very vulnerable to a terrorist attack.

    The Constitution does not, anywhere, guarantee "freedom of information." Further, our country is not only beholden to the Constitution, it is bound by hundreds of years of precedent-setting legal cases, legislation, and military and common law. I believe there is a legally demonstrable *CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER* to allowing just anyone to have access to this kind of information.

    If you're writing a paper, doing a scientific study or have some other legitimate reason to access this information, you could probably get permission to access it. Otherwise, no, you don't need to know about it right now. And yes, I think the government has the right to keep certain information secret to protect lives.

    Where the fuck did anyone get the idea that the Constitution permits an absolute right to access this kind of information?

    1. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by J'raxis · · Score: 2, Insightful
      TheMonkeyDepartment wrote:
      And yes, I think the government has the right to keep certain information secret to protect lives.
      Thats what the label CLASSIFIED is for. This is information already released to the public that theyre trying to recover ex post facto. And one should not have to get special permission from anyone to write a paper about a bloody power plant.
    2. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by TheMonkeyDepartment · · Score: 0, Troll
      I'm so sorry that you disagree with me. But let me get right to your "sum-up":


      Congress nor the Judicary, nor the Executive Branch nor anyone has any right, regardless of law, case law, or common law, to restrict ANY speech, at all in any form. Do you understand that? Its absolute. Its unending. Its unyielding. What if it leads to nuclear war? Too bad. What if it leads to more terrorism? Too bad. What if it means the end of life, the universe, everything? TOO BAD.


      I just don't think this is true. I'd bet you that NONE of the sitting Supreme Court Justices would agree with you. The Constitution has a self-implied responsibility to protect ITSELF, that is, to ensure its longevity and protection from destruction. It is not "absolute." It is CONSTITUTIONALLY based on the interpretation of the Supreme Court. And look at those guys! Do you think they're going to "interpret" that, as you say, even if it leads to nuclear war or more terrorism, it's "TOO BAD"? No way. They're going to come down against terrorism every time. And they have that right -- the Supreme Court is every much a part of the Constitution as the 1st Amendment is!

      This is based on the argument that


      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.


      is sufficiently cloudy on access to information about airports, nuclear reactors and power stations. I see "freedom of speech" in there, but I don't see "freedom of access to information" present. I don't see how "Speech = access to info". Perhaps you could enlighten me.
    3. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by TheMonkeyDepartment · · Score: 1

      If the government created or collected that information, then yes, the government should have a say about who gets access to that information.

    4. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by J'raxis · · Score: 3, Informative
      When the government publishes information, it is nearly always published as public domain information this means that the information becomes public knowledge, available to everyone, etc., etc. When they published their information, they had their say, and they chose a license, public domain, that is essentially irrevocable.

      Take for example, The CIA World Factbook, essentially a full-fledged atlas/almanac published by the CIA, yearly. See the copyright notice on the publication:

      The Factbook is in the public domain. Accordingly, it may be copied freely without permission of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
    5. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by TheMonkeyDepartment · · Score: 1

      By the way, I have long thought that the Slashdot moderation system is a total sham. But this proves it: this post has been assigned a "troll" rating. Hey, just because I present an opposing viewpoint, it becomes a troll? The ignorant political bias of this totally uninformed, immature and out-of-touch forum finally comes through. Suck my ballsack, moderators.

    6. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by Trekologer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      is sufficiently cloudy on access to information about airports, nuclear reactors and power stations. I see "freedom of speech" in there, but I don't see "freedom of access to information" present. I don't see how "Speech = access to info". Perhaps you could enlighten me.

      But we do have something called the Freedom of Information Act. This requires the government to make non-classified information public. There are only a few exceptions to this, including the internal operations of agencies, personal memos, law enforcement, and this little piece:

      (1)(A) specifically authorized under criteria established by an Executive order to be kept secret in the interest of national defense or foreign policy and (B) are in fact properly classified pursuant to such Executive order;

      Now, IANAL, but it would seem like the government is breaking the law. As far as I know, there has been no Executive Order (re)classifying this information.

      There is another question: can previously unclassified information be classified? Is this similar to trade secrets where, once its made public, its no longer subject to trade secret protections.

    7. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by TheMonkeyDepartment · · Score: 1
      Notice how there is no exception in the First Amendment that says: "except when the Supreme or Inferior Courts deem the speech to dangerous, bad, or potentially harmful". Thats not in there. Why? Because they didnt want that.

      Total and complete nonsense. The Constitution, article III, section 2, states that "The judicial power shall extend to all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution". This means that the Supreme Court has the power to interpret the Constitution.

      You wrote:

      The Constitution is an absolute document.

      This is just not true. The Supreme Court interprets the Constitution. It is not -- nor has it ever been -- absolute. Any juris doctorate graduate student will tell you that. The power of the Supreme Court to interpret and judge ALL sections of the Constitution is every bit as important as the Constitution itself.

      So next time you listen to the radio, or watch TV, or read a book, or go to the library, ask yourself: has this information been censored? The answer is yes, and the Constitution has been trampled.

      Totally untrue, although a totally different topic. Radio, television and books are businesses. We all have freedom of speech, but that speech carries repercussions. No one is free from these repercussions. We can say whatever we want against the government, we can spew whatever misinformed garbage pops into our heads. But television, radio and books don't have to print it -- they are businesses, and their bottom line is making money . This is such a different subject, I'm surprised you even brought it up. Some ignorant fuck (let's say, Bill Maher of Politically Incorrect) makes an unfortunate statement. Sure, he's free to MAKE the statement -- but now he must live with the consequences. ABC is trying to make money. Millions of people call into ABC, swearing they'll never watch the show again. It is totally within ABC's right to cancel Bill Maher, for any reason or for NO reason. They are a business, plain and simple. Quite frankly, if they ask him to show up on TV wearing a fucking ballerina costume, they can do it -- he signed the damn contract.
      This misdirection doesn't work -- let's stay on the topic here. Radio, TV and books are private businesses and as such, they can print or not print whatever the fuck they want. Public libraries are public property, but still under the jurisdiction various governmental entities. If you want to create a website containing information about nuclear power plants or airports, you are totally free to call these places up, collect the information and organize it yourself.
    8. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The Constitution does not, anywhere, guarantee "freedom of information."

      Sure it does:

      Amendment IX
      The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

      Amendment X
      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited to it by the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

    9. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by jack+deadmeat · · Score: 1

      Nobody has the right to yell "Fire!" in a crowded theater, though.

    10. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by istartedi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Congress did NOT pass a law abridging free speech in this case.

      Apparently, the materials are ON LOAN from the government to these "depository libraries". The government owns these materials. It can do what it wants with them. Having the librarian destroy them just saved the cost of shipping them back so the govt. could destroy them. Perhaps it would have made less waves if they had shipped them back and destroyed them themselves.

      So, if you want to hire a bunch of guys, do a survey of all the water systems in the US and then publish it, go ahead. If the government then refuses to allow you to publish, then you have a 1st ammendment case.

      As representatives of the people, the government determined that the people desired this information only to the extent that it would not jeopardize our lives.

      You can hardly argue that the government fails to represent The People in this case. The vast majority would agree that we are better off without uncontrolled access to this information.

      There is a fine line that must be walked. Take away too much information, and we end up with Chernobyl--a classic example of what happens without an informed, active environmental lobby. Give out too much information and we end up with terrorists knowing where the Cole is docked and just where to ram it.

      The fact that we are having this argument on /. and in the media is encouraging. When people are afraid to dialog like this; afraid to be controversial, that's when I'll be afraid.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    11. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by TheMonkeyDepartment · · Score: 1

      I just watched "Saving Private Ryan" last weekend, broadcast in its entirety, unedited, on ABC, during prime time. The word "fuck" was used several times, and the violence was extremely graphic. No one got arrested.

      Based on this, apparently you are incorrect. (I'm still waiting for the word "cunt" but I'll bet it's coming soon, and I'll bet it shows up on Fox Network.) There is a complex set of regulatory guidelines which create standards and practices for broadcast television.

      Off on a tangent: If Thomas Jefferson tuned into television today, he'd probably puke into his fucking 3-cornered hat. "We should have been more clear about the whole 'make no law' thing," he'd probably say.

      Kinkos might refuse to copy a bestiality graphic, but not because it's illegal. The corporation, Kinko's, has a set of guidelines for itself. They don't want to be in the business of duplicating bestiality images. I used to co-manage a large copy shop in Houston, and we'd copy just about anything. The only time we refused to copy something, it was brochures for the local KKK, but that was just because, well, I hate the KKK. But that was our decision as a shop.

      As far as I know, there are very few pictures that are truly illegal to print. Our lawyers told us not to worry, unless someone brought child porn in, or wanted to copy money. (There are strict rules about how money can be copied. No, it is not totally illegal, but you're not allowed to just duplicate it.)

      I did not mean that the SC can just throw out parts of the Constitution. Sorry if I was unclear.

    12. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by Tyler-Durden255 · · Score: 1

      As far as these matrerials being "on loan" it is my understanding that surveys produced with public money by a government agency are not copyrightable (or not supposed to be) and that the information contained therein is public domain.

      By asking libraries to destroy these materals the agency asking for destruction is asserting there athority over the librarian and library (that they might not actually have) and attempting to withdraw some information from the public domain. That is they are taking something away from us that they had forced us to pay for already.

      As far as "too much information" allowing terrorists to know where the U.S.S Cole is docked, that's jsut laughable. It's a fucking big ship! how the fuck are you going to hide it? put everyone under house arrest and higher snbipers to take out anyone near a port who is not authorized to work there that day?

    13. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by RexRuther · · Score: 1

      When you say "on loan from the government" it brings up the fact that the government is "...of the people, by the people, for the people...". Therefore this information is our property...we created it, we own it, and we deserve to have access to it.

      --
      -"The early bird catches the worm, but the late bird sleeps the most"
    14. Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! by aziraphale · · Score: 1

      Yes you do. Especially if the theater's on fire. You probably have a moral obligation to tell them.

      Just because the government doesn't want the people sitting in the theater to know it's on fire (just carry on watching the movie, it'll all be okay), doesn't mean they can stop you from telling them. That's the whole point of the freedom of speech guarantees in the US constitution.

      Broader question: if the government knows the theater's on fire, does it have an obligation to tell the people?

  50. Slashdot really needs to get away from politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I didn't start reading slashdot a few years ago for anti-government, they're out to get us, black-helicopter type discussions. It's basically a tech site and should really remain that way. I agree with anti-censorship and stuff, but coming to slashdot is NOT the place intelligent political and legal discussion.

    It just seems the editors really are using this site to push their own agendas here.

    Please go back to the way things used to be.

    1. Re:Slashdot really needs to get away from politics by ballpeen · · Score: 1
      Discussing .NET development, but not Microsoft antitrust, or whether Samba should be de-balled, or whether circumventing copyright protection should be illegal to speak about in technical terms, or whether the FCC should start regulating Net comm protocols, or...

      That sort of non-political tech site?

    2. Re:Slashdot really needs to get away from politics by J'raxis · · Score: 1
      Anonymous Coward wrote:
      [B]ut coming to slashdot is NOT the place [for] intelligent political and legal discussion.
      I see youre intent on proving that. Carry on.
  51. Have to go to China now by Mandelbrute · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Now if I want to find out about US nuclear engineering I'll have to go to China and read their copy.

    If I want to find out about US weapons I'll have to get a brochure from the manufacturer, or ask military in another country about how they perform in combat conditions (I'll just need to go to Latin America).

    Seriously, any street map or telephone book has military value, but that is no reason to go overboard and ban them. If information is only a tool of the state, the state will soon run out of people that can use information.

  52. Bill Gates was right by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    Open Source is unAmerican or perhaps it's the US government who's unAmerican. You decide.

    1. Re:Bill Gates was right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up you dumb fuck! You're what, 10 years old?

    2. Re:Bill Gates was right by WildBeast · · Score: 1

      Ten years old and yet more mature than you.

  53. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Legion303 · · Score: 1
    1) Demands access to nearby water treatment procedures and the core architecture to the local thermonuclear reactor

    2) Yet cries foul when asked to produce even the vaguest form of identifications such as a SS#, driver's license, non-web based email address?

    It's not paradoxical at all (assuming that's the word you meant. A discrepancy is a divergence of facts). We have the right to demand accountability from our government. Businesses have no right to demand accountability from individuals.

    Happy to help.

    -Legion

  54. Hey, by RainbowSix · · Score: 2

    Well they didn't have terrorism in Orwell's 1984, right?

    Next we won't need to vote because terrorists could go to the polls and vote for terrorist friendly politicians

    --
    --------
    It's OK to be social, just don't tell anyone about it.
    1. Re:Hey, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Willkommen to The United States of East Berlin, in this great year of the Fatherland, 2001!

      Anyone own the movie Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade? Fast forward to the part where all the Nazi's parade around the huge bonfire of government ordered books to be burned. Lovely.

      It's a good time to be American isn't it?

      Time to set up the camps, only this time, let's burn the Schindler's first, yes?

      Arbeit Macht Frei

    2. Re:Hey, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They will simply make felons of everyone, making it illegal to fart the wrong way, thus eliminating votes of dissent. Convicted felons can't vote, and a slew of draconian laws will be passed to criminalize everything.

      SIEG HEIL!

    3. Re:Hey, by 47PHA60 · · Score: 1

      In the Orwell novel, terrorism and terrorists existed, but it was left unanswered as to whether these were outside forces or a Party invention.

      The attacks on Sept 11 were carried out by real terrorists (as opposed to government agents trying to fool us into believing in terrorists), but it appears as though the Bush administration is trying to define our rights solely on a belief in "future terrorists."

      I wish they would get this through their stupid minds: THE SEPT 11 ATTACKS WERE THE RESULT OF CAREFUL PLANNING AND LAX SECURITY. By lax security, I mean that there were no armed guards on the planes, no security for the cockpits, and no procedures in place to make it difficult for the criminals to take control of the planes. FIX THESE PROBLEMS before turning our nation into a police state.

      Notice that these actions are not being taken as 'wartime' or 'emergency' actions; instead the administration is trying to create a permanent state in which we do not have the right to know what they are doing unless they decide that we will use the information properly (which they get to define, naturally).

      Is it necessary? In the short term, it may be. However, these actions are definitely setting up the tools for a totalitarian state to flourish (if not this administration, some future one). Look what Joe Stalin and Sadaam Hussein "accomplished" when they got control of an all-powerful state.

      There are people like this in our nation, but they've never been able to control the US government before. Bush and his friends, by thinking of next week to the complete exclusion of the next decade or more, are setting us up for a future in which another War of Independence may be necessary, except this time we won't be fighting a foreign power; we'll be fighting ourselves. What I think may more likely occur is that some future administration will loosen these restrictions if the world situation is calmer. But, I have not heard anyone in Bush's administration talking this way. They basically say it is too dangerous for our government to be open and under the control of its citizens.

      Come to think of it, a new revolution in the future may work out fine for born-again Christians who eagerly await the final battle. Luckily there are none of those in Bush's administration. Wait a minute...

  55. 1984 Reference, yeah yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Winston crumbled up the paper and threw it into the furnace. The one thing he knew that could prove the wrongs, he threw into the fire.

  56. Re:Sheeeeesh..... Uhhh... to clarify by heldlikesound · · Score: 1

    I didn't think i'd need the sarcasm tags but I should have used them. Yes, I'm kidding, I think people missed the whole point of my post, WE ARE THE GOVERNMENT!!!!

    --


    Cloud City Digital: DVD Production at its cheapest/finest
  57. Your standard on-point conspiracy theory comment by ballpeen · · Score: 1

    This from an article published in 2000. It's so easy for people to:
    A. call clear statements like this The Obvious, and thereby ignore it, not bothering to REPEAT IT, as often and to as many people as possible, and ACT accordingly;
    B. Brush off anything that attributes non-pop media patterns as "conspiracy theory" junk - hey, anything's possible, so why should I believe you?

    Somebody took the time to write this out, hence the quote, but it's what A LOT of us really know, and ignore on the day-to-day, for reasons A or B (that latter usually being plain fear):

    "The "excess democracy" of the 1960s and 1970s attacked this shared consensus from below, and neoliberal planners decided from above that ongoing consensus wasn't worth paying for. They accepted that segments of society would persist in disbelieving various parts of the matrix. Activism and protest were to be expected. New means of social control would be needed to deal with activist movements and with growing discontent, as neoliberalism gradually tightened the economic screws. Such means of control were identified and have since been largely implemented, particularly in the United States. In many ways America sets the pace of globalization; innovations can often be observed there before they occur elsewhere. This is particularly true in the case of social-control techniques.

    The most obvious means of social control, in a discontented society, is a strong, semi-militarized police force. Most of the periphery has been managed by such means for centuries. This was obvious to elite planners in the West, was adopted as policy, and has now been largely implemented. Urban and suburban ghettos--where the adverse consequences of neoliberalism are currently most concentrated--have literally become occupied territories, where police beatings and unjustified shootings are commonplace.

    So that the beefed-up police force could maintain control in conditions of mass unrest, elite planners also realized that much of the Bill of Rights would need to be neutralized. (This is not surprising, given that the Bill's authors had just lived through a revolution and were seeking to ensure that future generations would have the means to organize and overthrow any oppressive future government.) The rights-neutralization project has been largely implemented, as exemplified by armed midnight raids, outrageous search-and-seizure practices, overly broad conspiracy laws, wholesale invasion of privacy, massive incarceration, and the rise of prison slave labor, [taken to new extremes by the requirements of a "war on terrorism" and "homeland security"]. The Rubicon has been crossed--the techniques of oppression long common in the empire's periphery are being imported to the core.

    "In the matrix, the genre of the TV or movie police drama has served to create a reality in which "rights" are a joke, the accused are despicable sociopaths, and no criminal is ever brought to justice until some noble cop or prosecutor bends the rules a bit. Government officials bolster the construct by declaring "wars" on crime and drugs [and terrorism]; the noble cops are fighting a war out there in the streets--and you can't win a war without using your enemy's dirty tricks. The CIA plays its role by managing the international drug trade and making sure that ghetto drug dealers are well supplied [and now, as a matter of public policy, ramping up Cold War-style covert activity against states, groups and individuals worldwide, to combat a "stateless terrorist enemy"]. In this way, the American public has been led to accept the means of its own suppression.

    "The mechanisms of the police state are in place."

    Pubished in 2000. My emphasis and updates added...

    MHO: People of good conscience should start with acquiring knowledge, actually locating, discussing, and, on the basis of having checked out, supporting organizations like EFF. For a start. Maybe repeat in front of the mirror: "Every day, in every way, my Internet is shrinking to nothing, unless I do something about it." Try rereading the Emperor's New Clothes... Ask yourself: Where was I when the DMCA was passed?

  58. get your facts right by mj6798 · · Score: 2
    The article clearly says that the information is being destroyed:

    Some librarians asked if they could simply pull the CD from shelves and put it in a secure place, but federal officials told them it had to be destroyed.

    You also wrote:

    I argue it never should have been so carelessly deployed in the first place. The hype and the rush to make information available on the web could have been more carefully evaluated, especially by the holders of the plans. Not just plans to dams and waterways, either. Now it's deployment-readiness is being re-evaluated. I doubt it's much more than that.

    I can't think of information that would be of more public interest than whether my community is at risk from a poorly built chemical plant, from an ill-placed dam, or whether a watershed or water supply is at risk from logging or contamination.

    Your view is the traditional "security through obscurity". It doesn't work: it only puts people at risk from accidents and exploitation. Vulnerabilities need to be corrected, not hidden, no matter how inconvenient that may be for industry or the government. A smart terrorist has lots of time on his hands and doesn't need the library to figure this stuff out for one target; the people who need that information are environmentalists and citizens, who cannot devote their whole lives to this stuff but still want to protect and create livable and safe communities everywhere.

    1. Re:get your facts right by imrdkl · · Score: 1
      Your view is the traditional "security through obscurity".

      No. Thats not my view. Thats you telling me what my view is. Consider that obscurity is not destruction, as well.

      It's late here, and the kids dont know, and dont care about this stuff. They'll be awake at 7am as always. But thanks for a most excellent last thread of the day.

    2. Re:get your facts right by Safety+Cap · · Score: 2
      Your view is the traditional "security through obscurity". It doesn't work...

      Previous post:

      It is time for our government to introduce the same amount of security that we've been deploying on company webservers and mail systems for years.

      Of course this guy wants security through obscurity -- look at how well it worked with "I love you," "Red Alert," "sadmind," et cetera!! Since companies do so well with their "security," why shouldn't the government emulate that?

      What'samaddayou, you some kinda think-nik? Don't worry, the "Peace Police" will be 'round shortly to round you up.

      --
      Yeah, right.
    3. Re:get your facts right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your view is the traditional "security through obscurity". It doesn't work: it only puts people at risk from accidents and exploitation. Vulnerabilities need to be corrected, not hidden, no matter how inconvenient that may be for industry or the government.

      Looks like 'security through obscurity' is the new catchphrase around here, folks.

      What is the opposite of security through obscurity? Okay, to pretend a problem isn't there probably won't help you when someone eventually manages to find it; publication might get it fixed quicker (although it's best to give the folk at least a chance to fix it before needing to go public).

      But this isn't the online world, this isn't Microsoft, this isn't bugfixes. It also isn't a movie, but I'm sure we've all seen something where the criminals pore over a floorplan to find the easiest way in. Now try to apply the analogy. Does making the information on the building easily available allow you to catch the small-time crims breaking in, so you can 'patch' your security holes for the big break-in? Can you really do anything to fix a weak point in the structure/design that a terrorist might exploit? Is it even conceivable that by regular folk looking at the plans, you will get any indication of the obvious attack points and a way of fixing them?

      If any of these materials are significantly useful to the general public, then they need to be left available. Not because of some anti-obscurity campaign, but because they are restricting generally beneficial material out of fear of possible exploits. If any of these materials aren't particularly useful or important, then there's no need for public access.

      This isn't about Microsoft trying to stop people finding bugs in their software; it's about Microsoft not showing people the code so they can spot the obvious bugs in the first place. And the terrorists are angry anti-Microsoft hackers who would just love to find, publish and exploit a security hole to create as much havoc as possible - why should Microsoft want to make their job any easier? (and before we say 'security', remember that these hackers are actively looking for flaws, would be first to abuse them should they be published, and their intentions are NOT to improve security).

      In the real world (as in Microsoft?!) you can't get rid of all the vulnerabilities; you also can't take away everything the terrorists might conceivably use. The question is not about full freedom of information, or total restrictions; it's about finding a balance between what is useful to the public and what is unnecessary and dangerous for them to have access to.

  59. In slashdot style... by awharnly · · Score: 1

    Insert totally inappropriate reference to "security through obscurity" here...

    Seriously, folks, sometimes security through obscurity is exactly what you want. You don't chmod a+r your password file, do you?

    The point is not that denying world-read to an encrypted password file makes it *impossible* to crack a server. The point is, it makes it quite a bit tougher than it otherwise would be.

    Likewise, making information tougher to come by is not being advertised as a guarantee. But, it can make an attack harder to do, which is a good thing.

    1. Re:In slashdot style... by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Problem is, Bin Laden is much more intelligent than Bush and the entire US government (a shrimp is also more intelligent buy hey). Therefore, he would have aquired all this information and more long ago. Plus, you only need to stand by the fence of any millitary buildings with a gps, take a few readings, and triangulate and you have the exact location ready to enter on the navigation computer.. neat huh?

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    2. Re:In slashdot style... by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      PS Mod parent down in name of national security

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    3. Re:In slashdot style... by imrdkl · · Score: 2, Funny
      You don't chmod a+r your password file, do you?

      Of course I do. Only the shadow knows....

    4. Re:In slashdot style... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He didn't specify a path, he said "your password file." For some people this is called /etc/passwd, for some it is /etc/shadow. (I call mine /etc/dummkopf, just for variety.)

    5. Re:In slashdot style... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, we aint paranoid and we make sure to use
      strong passwords (you probably need a brain and
      memory for it). But of course we dont give out
      our password hashes, but is US giving out its
      intelligence agencies information? No. So
      what is your point? That we aint paranoid enough?

      Some people also chmod 611 /etc, maybe you should
      do that too. People surely wont eb able to guess
      your /etc/passwd. That you chmoded wrongy and it
      would be security by obsecurity (if it contained
      hashes). Not a certain level of paranois. Second
      do you use root for everything? How do you except
      the system applications to figure out what uid
      users have if the libraries cant access /etc/passwd or did you actually chmod them a+s?

      Man get some phsyciatric help against your paranoism and your stupidity.

  60. This is gonna sound whacked but. by t0qer · · Score: 1

    Maybe what we need is more security around the information. We allready have most of that stuff available online.

    So the simple fact is, by not being on the net, inside of a library that was built to also serve as a fallout shelter, inside of any united states city within the united states border, really does make the information that much more secure.

    Uh oh, I hope I havn't given homeland security any idea's that they should be targetting website's instead of libraries. Awe man sorry my bretherin slashdotters I think I did a boo boo.

    1. Re:This is gonna sound whacked but. by ballpeen · · Score: 1

      Even easier and more efficient: outlaw the Web, replace with AOL! It's up and running and has 20% of America online already, it's more accesible with Keywords instead of those pesky URLs and no @ things on email, and it'll boost the economy as helping megacorporateconglomerates always does - good to go...

  61. this is dumb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello! the recent attacks were in the planning
    stages for at lease 2+ years! wtf is the point
    of removing the info now? If you ask me it is to
    hide stuff from the public, not the 'terrorists'

  62. I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While it is true that the terrorists may be able to access particular information if they try hard enough, there is a lot to be said for making sensitive and detailed information harder to get to. For instance:

    A) By making each piece of sensitive information harder to get to, you make it exponentially more time consuming to query FROM vast realms of it. e.g., if the terrorists wanted to know the exact engineering specifications used for all the nuclear plants around the country to look for a particularly weak design.

    B) By making information harder to come by, we can up the ante by forcing the terrorists as a GROUP, to become more sophisticated/educated. e.g., the size of the effort rules out the few top level people, but the scope/difficult rules out the average ignorant terrorist.

    C) By making information harder to come by, we can make the act of looking for that information much riskier. For instance, rather than merely having to go online or to any public library (anonymously), they must go to a few enumerated locations and risk being spotted and/or creating a trail after the fact.

    D) By clamping the flow of information, we can force the terrorists to work with far many more unknowns.

    Lastly, these various elements play off each other greatly. Just as widespread efficiencies in capitalist markets have allowed for expontentially more efficient production, so to can this widespread "inefficiency" make it vastly harder for the terrorists to get _all_ the intelligence that they need.

    The Press uses your same argument in defence of some of their more questionable publications. Besides being a disingenious assertion, it very much under-estimates the value of good intelligence. Intelligence is even more important for the terrorists in many ways, because they need to make their relatively few resources stretch much further. The further they stretch, the more they expose themselves and the fewer manhours they can devote to actual acts of terrorism.

    Btw, I would not at all be surprised, for instance, if Saddam Hussain got more worthwhile intelligence from the likes of CNN (e.g., troup movements, morale, technology, etc) in the comfort of his bedroom than he did from his entire intelligence service during the Gulf War. The Press can use their apparent legitimacy to get DIRECT, NEAR REAL TIME, and RISKLESS (for the enemy) access to top level officials; whereas with proper controls in place this kind of intelligence would require a capable intelligence agency with significant resources.

    1. Re:I disagree. by 1010011010 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, shit, you're right.

      I'll put my rights in a #10 envelope and send them right off to Ashcroft.

      I'm so much happier now! That Guy Montag is an asshole. I'm glad they got him.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    2. Re:I disagree. by zmooc · · Score: 1
      If I were a terrorist and I'd want to do something bad but it's hard to find the information to do bad thing X, I'll just do bad thing Y. While doing that I also encourage the government of my victims to pass legislation that will further lessen their freedom.

      I think such legislation won't help a fuck against terrorism but it most certainly will abridge the freedom of all americans so in a way the terrorists have reachad a part of their goal with the help of the government.

      --
      0x or or snor perron?!
    3. Re:I disagree. by chris_7d0h · · Score: 1

      Well, the press is hardly where one turns for reliable information.
      Ex. CNN has on several occations made it clear that they are bias in reporting news. Especially the Gulf war was heavily angled. "Precision bombs" hitting home, while later revealing they missed 80-90% of their targets!

      CNN is imho the least trusted source for information.

      When it comes to general info. gathering, I can think of a number of better ways. None of which includes the media.
      Heck, if I want to know something I just call and talk to someone directly informed, seek someone who was previously involved or who is otherwise related to the type of info I'm interested in.
      Ofcourse all info must be weighed and given a "reliability classification" in order to reach the truth.

      As a non-US citizen I have had no problem what-so-ever to get hold of whatever information I have been interested (regarding US, US-companies etc.). (Note I'm NOT a terrorist, just a regular Joe who, like anyone else, have the need to know things related to what I do).
      By your governments decision to yank stuff from your public info. houses (libraries, public service houses et al) I see that the only the loosers are the american public. This will not affect one bit from where I get my information.
      I assume the same is true for anyone looking to cause harm as well!

      As someone else said, this feels like your government is taking maximum opportunity of a tragic incident to restrict your way of life and further convert your great nation into a totalitary police- / corporate ruled state.

      I'll have to re-evaluate the idea of migrating to the US since your country seem to become ever less appealing to live in.

      --
      In a society that believes in nothing, fear becomes the only agenda ~ Bill Durodié
    4. Re:I disagree. by anthony_baxter · · Score: 1
      What nonsense! By following this line of argument, you end up in a world where no-one except the Appropriate People are allowed to know anything. And look at how well that's worked in the past.

      Who decides what "proper controls" are? And how do you suggest that anyone checks up on whether these controls are being used or abused? Or do we just give up all rights because someone in Authority told us that it was important?

      An informed public is the only defense against tyranny. And tyranny's a far more dangerous thing than a few religious nutters who want to martyr themselves.

    5. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your rights? Is it your right, for instance, to know the exact path and time of the Presidents limo for the next year? How about its weaknesses?

      Can you at least admit the possibility that some information is a FAR greater threat to our collective rights than its absence? It's not at all a stretch to assert that this kind of information exists, even the most brazen free speech advocates have seen the wisdom of moderation of some restrictions during times of war and in other cases.

      We limit your right to yell fire. We limit commercial speech. We limit your right to speak intentional lies about people (e.g., slander/libel laws). All are generally recognized to be in the public's best interest. Why is it any less legitimate to not allow the public 100% free and open access to sensitive and detailed information? Many of the supposed harms inflicted by these acts are not necessarily harms at all. For instance, I've heard the argument that students of engineering need to know the principles involved in building a dam. Fine, but they don't need to know exactly the structural weaknesses of particular sites, or who would die if it were, or the schedules of security. Their needs can be met without significantly putting the public at threat. Where there is significant intersection, it's at least reasonable to put some controls on that information.

      If you have particular grievances, fine, then enumerate them. You're reacting to one extreme (e.g., the scenario depicted in F451) by going to another extreme. It may be true that some legitimate information may be temporarily unavailable, but it may require substantial time to sort through all of it to make those distinctions, in the mean time, terrorists can have their way with us. Cost/Risk vs Benefit...it simply doesn't compute with the vast majority of the information listed.

    6. Re:I disagree. by lingenfr · · Score: 1

      I am not sure which is more disappointing, that 80% of the commentary is from folks who can't be bothered to read the article or the inane moderators who seem to be about as discerning as the crowd seated in the student section of a college football game.

      With that whining out of the way... I don't have a big problem with the article. I think that what the government (and yes I work for the government, so go back to your plywood shacks and keep working on your manifestos 1984 gang) is trying to do is regain some control of the potentially sensitive information that they distribute. I did not see much about denying access. What I did read in the article was about controlling and monitoring access to potentially sensitive information.

      That seems reasonable. I am sure that we will get alot of fodder about both ends of the pendulum (too much access/too little access), but I think that we will strike a balance. Security and an open society are often at odds. We (and I mean all of us as opposed to the royal 'We') are going to have to decide how much access we are willing to sacrifice in order to feel secure.

      We (and I do mean the royal 'We'/Federal government) have been working for the past several years to lessen the quantity and quality of information that is available to hostile folks monitoring government websites. Sept 11 has increased our sense of urgency.

      Fear not Orwellians, all is not lost. I think that our republic will survive and we will get it 80% right. If we got it exactly right, tens of thousands of websites like slashdot would go out of business. Have a good weekend.

      Flame On Johnny.

    7. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well, the press is hardly where one turns for reliable information.
      Ex. CNN has on several occations made it clear that they are bias in reporting news.
      When it comes to opinions and late breaking news, sure, they get a lot of it wrong. However, when it comes to basic facts when they're not vieing for who can be first, it's pretty accurate.

      As a non-US citizen I have had no problem what-so-ever to get hold of whatever information I have been interested (regarding US, US-companies etc.). (Note I'm NOT a terrorist, just a regular Joe who, like anyone else, have the need to know things related to what I do).
      By your governments decision to yank stuff from your public info. houses (libraries, public service houses et al) I see that the only the loosers are the american public. This will not affect one bit from where I get my information.
      I assume the same is true for anyone looking to cause harm as well!
      And what of this has changed one iota for you? Libraries still exist. Financial information on companies still exists (very much so). We're talking about very specific and detailed information that a very small part of the population can even claim to have the most remote of interest in.

      As someone else said, this feels like your government is taking maximum opportunity of a tragic incident to restrict your way of life and further convert your great nation into a totalitary police- / corporate ruled state.
      Oh please. Why? Justify your belief in reasoning that US policymakers are out to shaft its own people, rather that being motivated for the same reasons that I'm arguing for (e.g., the defence of Americans and other people). What do they gain by unreasonably restricting actual rights other than gaining the hate of certain interest groups? If this were say, no "hate speech" against Corporations, that might be one thing. But oppression for its own sake...? Gimme a break. These people need to get re-elected.
    8. Re:I disagree. by RFC959 · · Score: 1
      I did not see much about denying access. What I did read in the article was about controlling and monitoring access...
      Maybe you missed the bit that said "The Government Printing Office has begun ordering about 1,300 libraries nationwide that serve as federal depositories to destroy government records..." Destroying the records sure looks like denying access to me. Or maybe you just consider "denying" to be a special case of "controlling". Nice to see that the doublethink extends throughout the FedGov...
    9. Re:I disagree. by anthony_baxter · · Score: 1
      Ok, you're asking for examples of data that's being restricted that shouldn't be? How about the moves to block access to data about chemical hazards in communities? (see, e.g. this testimony)

      Or the "no, you shouldn't know about security holes in your operating systems" that MS is using the current scare to push?

      Trusting people in power to "just do the right thing" without any oversight is incredibly foolish. Even if the current people are as pure as the driven snow, all it takes is one bad guy in a position of authority, and we're screwed.

    10. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2
      Ok, you're asking for examples of data that's being restricted that shouldn't be? How about the moves to block access to data about chemical hazards in communities? (see, e.g. this testimony [house.gov])
      Ok, that's one specific issue. However, if you actually bother to read your own link, it becomes quite clear that this lady is very much opposed to previously excessively open system. For example:

      "Washington can no longer afford to hand any interested individual a road map to the chemical calamities they could cause with the toxic materials located in communities nationwide. Some would argue that the milk has already been spilled.Well, the quicker a decision is made to close the reading rooms and keep both them and the website permanently shuttered, the better. Furthermore, the Environmental Protection Agency should purge its website of other data that might aid and abet terrorists plots to sabotage chemical plants.Such information would still be made available to citizens through the appropriate local venues, but it would not be delivered to aspiring terrorists on an Internet silver platter."

      Or the "no, you shouldn't know about security holes in your operating systems" that MS is using the current scare to push?
      While this is totally OT and while I'm no fan of MS, you're misrepresenting the facts. There is a difference between being aware that holes exist and being essentially given the tools to trivially hit millions of people with it.

      Trusting people in power to "just do the right thing" without any oversight is incredibly foolish. Even if the current people are as pure as the driven snow, all it takes is one bad guy in a position of authority, and we're screwed.
      Did I say give them carte blanche? No, I never said or implied such a thing. What I did say, and will affirm, is that I have no reason to believe that they are out to screw us for the sake of screwing us. This is not the same thing. Furthermore, I believe these specific acts to be not only reasonable, but quite necessary. Your expert does too, at least in her domain.
    11. Re:I disagree. by chris_7d0h · · Score: 1
      When it comes to opinions and late breaking news, sure, they get a lot of it wrong. However, when it comes to basic facts when they're not vieing for who can be first, it's pretty accurate
      As for the specific example of CNN and the Gulf war, CNN did admit to the spreading of disinformation on purpose. The reason according to them was to boost morale for the alies and to lower it for the enemy. Media is to report objectivly the truth and not be an instrument of propaganda. Since that admittance the credibility of named news network has hit bottom.
      And what of this has changed one iota for you? Libraries still exist. Financial information on companies still exists (very much so). We're talking about very specific and detailed information that a very small part of the population can even claim to have the most remote of interest in.
      Exactly, it has not change one iota for me. However, I doubt it has changed anything for the people with dubious agendas as well (terrorists/spies). This act of post-classification is only hurting the casual readers (the general public) since anyone with specific interest in this information will already have it available for data mining or refence. If not, there are a bunch of ways/places to get hold of it.

      As Vectus wrote on another thread:
      "Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws."
      - Plato

      This applies to classification as well.
      Oh please. Why? Justify your belief in reasoning that US policymakers are out to shaft its own people, rather that being motivated for the same reasons that I'm arguing for (e.g., the defence of Americans and other people). What do they gain by unreasonably restricting actual rights other than gaining the hate of certain interest groups? If this were say, no "hate speech" against Corporations, that might be one thing. But oppression for its own sake...? Gimme a break. These people need to get re-elected.
      Why would politicians do anything wrong intentially or otherwise? *gee* I don't know. Seriously. As history has shown; when someone become part of an elite group (ruling body for ex.) ideas and values often change (to a bit or more). As for people needed to be re-elected. Well there is a single digit number of people who you vote for (a few more for congress). At the same time there are millions of people working withing the gvt. Most of the decisions and actions which affect you are not taken by people on whom you can vote. Also, not everyone sees re-election as gods ends. As one becomes part of a group (any group) one widens one's social network. In this case people in higher positions within gvt. will have an easy way to get appointed to other important offices later on (places without much scrutiny from the public for ex.). This unofficial way to "walk around the top" makes the need for reelection a bit less important than it had been, had all positions of importance been voted on. Note, this situation is by no means unique for the US, but was given to emphasize why all is not as ideal as can be in a democratic system.

      The only way the great mass of citizen can affect wrong doings is by knowing about them and harassing their few elected representatives in the hope that they will make a difference. If people are not informed the system will colapse or be turned into a whatever the ruling body would like it to be.

      --
      In a society that believes in nothing, fear becomes the only agenda ~ Bill Durodié
    12. Re:I disagree. by ortholattice · · Score: 2
      We limit your right to yell fire. We limit commercial speech. We limit your right to speak intentional lies about people (e.g., slander/libel laws). All are generally recognized to be in the public's best interest. Why is it any less legitimate to not allow the public 100% free and open access to sensitive and detailed information?

      Regarding your 3 examples:

      • Yelling fire (when there is not one) entails stating a falsehood.
      • A fraudulent or misleading claim in a commercial entails stating a falsehood.
      • Slander and libel entail stating falsehoods.
      This, in my mind, is their distinction. Telling lies is never good. Knowing the truth is always good.
    13. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2
      This, in my mind, is their distinction. Telling lies is never
      good. Knowing the truth is always good.
      Well that doesn't include commercial speech, which is regulated in far more ways than just to tell the "truth". [Or how aobut, something I didn't mention before, the growth of privacy laws.] Furthermore, we have no laws that simply say you cannot lie. In fact, I'm sure the ACLU would get very upset if such a law were to be passed.

      Lastly, how can you say telling the "truth" is always good. Your credit card number, home address, and phone number are the "truth". Yet if I posted them all on slashdot I know you'd be upset. Likewise, if I were to publish Bush's secret service itenerary and the weaknesses of his security detail, most reasonable Americans would be rightfully upset.

      Lies are not always bad and the truth is not always good. Like most subjects, absolute behavior can be very dangerous and harmful.
    14. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2
      As for the specific example of CNN and the Gulf war, CNN did admit to the spreading of disinformation on purpose.
      The reason according to them was to boost morale for the alies and to lower it for the enemy.
      Media is to report objectivly the truth and not be an instrument of propaganda.
      Since that admittance the credibility of named news network has hit bottom.
      Prove this. The rest of what you said is just a rehash of the argument that I addressed.
    15. Re:I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Geez, why's everything got to be so extreme around here?

      Can nobody argue a point without "following this line of reasoning" through as far as they possibly can until it turns into 1984?

      Who decides what "proper controls" are? And how do you suggest that anyone checks up on whether these controls are being used or abused? Or do we just give up all rights because someone in Authority told us that it was important?

      See, who's talking about giving up all rights?
      Do we not HAVE appropriate elected representatives? Opposition parties to uncover and bring attention to those facts that are detrimental to the current power? Freedom of information laws? People we've put in place to DECIDE these things? A system that allows for their removal if they abuse their power? In a democracy you get to choose the people you'd like to represent you; majority rules, of course, but it almost seems like everyone here feels they have to be running the country themselves lest anyone else dare to make a suggestion as to what they can and can't do!

      Information wants to be free, but apparently many who spout this agree that while it includes material that was never theirs to distribute freely, it's not okay for it to be free to companies who want to watch my TV viewing habits or track my movements by security camera...

      Back in the real, moderate, world, people hopefully recognise that there is some information that is too sensitive for the general public. The spread of information is good, but I don't want my credit card details included in that. Now perhaps instead of complaining about any and all restriction of information, we could consider the effects of THIS instance. Is this information really that sensitive? If not, then complain about this instance, not paranoia about what it may lead to. No government is stupid enough to outlaw libraries on the basis that nearly every book contains some content that could conceivably be loosely linked to terrorism; that kind of exaggeration isn't convincing anyone.

      Who decides what is appropriate? How about the people we've chosen to decide that (though preferably unencumbered by financial incentives)? What about people who understand the implications? How about those who have a responsibility to and whose futures rely on the support of the people they are 'protecting'? How about a mixed group of people where someone would always have something to gain from uncovering material if it were protected only to preserve the reputations of the majority group?

      On the whole I think if this material was previously available, then it probably isn't directly and obviously dangerous for the public to know. This probably does represent another overreaction to the current situation, and another unnecessary attempt to restrict the factors that at best are only loosely related to this particular event, instead of addressing major security problems and admitting to and dealing with some of the root causes for the events and any valid reasons as to why there is a justified hatred (of course not justifying terrorism, but contributing to its happening) of America there.

      I'd rather see people discussing why this information is too sensitive to publicize, or too beneficial to hide, whether it is going to make any difference to situations like the current one (or other possible outcomes), and just how much the public really has a right to know, than more empty rhetoric and extremist paranoia about freedom of information and the trampling of rights.

    16. Re:I disagree. by chris_7d0h · · Score: 1

      > Prove this.

      It was on 60 minutes I seem to recall.
      Unfortunately I do not have a VCR and did not tape it.
      Ask around and perhaps someone has it taped for your viewing pleasure.

      > The rest of what you said is just a rehash of the argument that I addressed.

      As for the rest, they were a direct response and explanation to the points you addressed.
      What other answer did you expect?

      --
      In a society that believes in nothing, fear becomes the only agenda ~ Bill Durodié
    17. Re:I disagree. by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      I have never heard terrorists say that abridging these kind of freedoms is their goal. If anything, a totalitarian-like state would be even more harmful to the terrorists than a freer one.

    18. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2
      As for the rest, they were a direct response and explanation to the points you addressed. What other answer did you expect?
      My point was that I do not wish to argue the same point twice. However, I might have expected some substantial support for an argument that runs contrary to the majority of expert, military, congressional, and executive opinion. I fail to see how it can be reasonably argued that the casual citizen has a substantial interest in, say, the structural design of every nuclear powerplant in the country, yet this same information is easily had by a terrorist group. This kind/quality/quantity of information doesn't grow on trees, it's either released by government decree or it's taken by a sophisticated intelligence gathering apparatus. In other words, the cost of exercising reasonable controls on the flow of information to the public is nominal/non-existent in the vast majority of cases and the benefit (increased security) is substantial. Unless you have something further to add, there's just not much more to discuss.
    19. Re:I disagree. by jkovach · · Score: 1

      I'd like to know the structural weaknesses of that dam so I can decide whether or not to live downstream of it.

      I'd like to know about the design, security, and operating safety record of that nuclear plant so I can decide if I want to buy that nice vacation home across the lake from it.

      As you can see, information that is useful to terrorists can also be quite useful to the average Joe as well. Locking it up in the name of Homeland Security will eventually lead to us being told "It's safe, trust us, we're the Government/Big Power Company/whatever". Judging from the past, such interests have not been exactly forthcoming about threats to public safety resulting from their activities. I'd like to be able to check on things for myself, thank you very much. Or at least have the confidence of knowing that the media has access to the information so they can (in theory) check on these things for me.

    20. Re:I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A) By making each piece of sensitive information harder to get to, you make it exponentially more time consuming to query FROM vast realms of it. e.g., if the terrorists wanted to know the exact engineering specifications used for all the nuclear plants around the country to look for a particularly weak design.

      What a totally bitchin' idea -- lets get our personal information out of those massive government and corporate databases so the business snoops can't profile us without going to a hell of a lot more trouble than they presently have to. No more selling of entire states' worth of driver's license information. Go back to the original Social Security Administration dictum that the SSN is not to be used for other than SSA-mandated purposes. No adding an 'A' to your SSN to evade this intent. Rigidly enforced access controls to keep people in official capacities from snooping in databases for other than explicitly-defined job-related purposes.

    21. Re:I disagree. by lamontg · · Score: 1
      A) By making each piece of sensitive information harder to get to, you make it exponentially more time consuming to query FROM vast realms of it. e.g., if the terrorists wanted to know the exact engineering specifications used for all the nuclear plants around the country to look for a particularly weak design.

      A) By making each piece of sensitive information harder to get to, you make it exponentially more time consuming to query FROM vast realms of it. e.g., if concerned citizens wanted to know about design flaws in the nuclear plants around the country which they live in.

      B) By making information harder to come by, we can up the ante by forcing the terrorists as a GROUP, to become more sophisticated/educated. e.g., the size of the effort rules out the few top level people, but the scope/difficult rules out the average ignorant terrorist.

      B) By making information harder to come by, we can up the ante by forcing concerned citizens as a GROUP, to become more sophisticated/educated. e.g., the size of the effort rules out the few top level people, but the scope/difficulty rules out the average ignorant citizen.

      C) By making information harder to come by, we can make the act of looking for that information much riskier. For instance, rather than merely having to go online or to any public library (anonymously), they must go to a few enumerated locations and risk being spotted and/or creating a trail after the fact.

      C) By making information harder to come by, we can make the act of looking for that information much riskier. For instance, rather than merely having to go online or to any public library (anonymously), they [concerned citizens] must go to a few enumerated locations and risk being spotted and/or creating a trail after the fact.

      D) By clamping the flow of information, we can force the terrorists to work with far many more unknowns.

      D) By clamping the flow of information, we can force concerned citizens to work with far many more unknowns.

      As the original article points out there are two different ways that you can deal with the problem of information. You can either secure the problem areas so that even people who have information are powerless to use that information to harm others -- or else you can start trying to control the free flow of information.

      Clamping down on the free flow of information is nothing more than "security through obscurity" and will probably be equally as effective. And its major influence will probably not be keeping information out of the hands of terrorist, but keeping information out of the hands of concerned citizens and allow the government to operate with no grass roots oversight.

    22. Re:I disagree. by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      You could not be more wrong. The goal of a terrorist is to cause discontent, panic, and unease in the populace. As the US govt clamps down on dissent, free press, freedom of expression, freedom of association etc it will cause increased agitation in an already agitated public. I know most americans have a critically short memory span but if you remember a while back an American hated the govt so much they blew up a federal building. All those people who ran the shovel brigade in jarbirdge, who opened up the water mains in oregon, who phoned in death threats to govt employees all over america are not going to be happier as a result of a government crackdown on freedoms.

      Those people are already armed and organized. They already hate the govt and now any act of terrorism they may commit will be automatically blamed on arabs. They have a free ride for the forseeable future to do whatever kind of mayhem they want. All these laws will simply encourage them to go ahead.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    23. Re:I disagree. by lamontg · · Score: 1
      We're talking about very specific and detailed information that a very small part of the population can even claim to have the most remote of interest in.

      And who is to decide who among the citizenry has legitimate interest in a topic and gets access to that information? Who is to decide which topics are off limits to anyone because they are declared to have no legitimate uses among the citizenry?

      I happen to have done a lot of research on the synthesis of illegal pharmaceuticals. One of the entirely legitimate purposes of becoming educated on the synthesis of these chemicals is to understand what chemicals people are consuming on the black market and what the health effects of those chemicals might be.

      Should someone 'clear' me to be able to research the synthesis of these compounds? How can anyone tell the difference between myself and someone who is interested in the synthesis purely for the purposes of actually synthesizing them illegally?

      Similarly, how can you tell the difference between someone who is interested in design flaws in nuclear reactors because they don't want one to meltdown in their backyard and someone who is interested in exploiting those design flaws to create a large number of deaths?

      Am I to be excluded from this information because my primary interests in life revolve around computers and not around pharmacy or nuclear engineering? Must I have a master's degree before I can enter the inner sanctum of knowlege about a subject?

      We shouldn't be focusing on controlling access to information. We should be focusing on ways to create fewer terrorists and ways to give them fewer opportunities even though they have information.

    24. Re:I disagree. by Malcontent · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "We're talking about very specific and detailed information that a very small part of the population can even claim to have the most remote of interest in."

      Defending the rights of minorities is the hallmark of a republic. When I was in school my professor explained the difference between a democracy and a republic this way. A democracy is a lynching of a black man by ten white men. Ten votes for, one vote against. In a republic lynching is not acceptable because the right of minories are not up for vote.

      "Oh please. Why? Justify your belief in reasoning that US policymakers are out to shaft its own people"

      you are kidding me right? Is it your position that the US policymakers never shaft their own people? How many examples of this would it take to convince you that the US policymakers reoutinely shaft their own people?

      "Gimme a break. These people need to get re-elected."

      All they need to get elected is a bunch of money. Most americans are sheep and will vote for whoever the TV says to.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    25. Re:I disagree. by Twanfox · · Score: 1
      First, it's important to know just what pieces of information they've decide the public no longer needs to know. Locations of buildings, aqueducts, water filtering plants, etc? I'm sure copies of this information are already beyond the government's reach. What is location going to tell you anyways other than where to strike? They could find that out other ways, it just takes more time.

      Second, the whole concept of 'ignorance is bliss' and 'information kills' is totally bogus. Nothing about information intrinsically kills, or is dangerous. It's what's done with the information that makes a difference. Will the government census be locked up now, because it shows the greatest concentration of people as a potential target? That could be construed as 'sensitive information' in such a light. Sequestering information does 2 things. It makes it difficult for the "nameless" terrorists from finding out about us. It also makes it more difficult for citizens to know what is going on around them. Overall, I forsee the result of terrorists maintaining their knowledge base, and citizens losing access to such information for a long time.

      Considering how the 4 planes were hijacked, it really brings home one notion. For all the information that we have here in the US, the population of the US is nieve (or was highly so before the attacks). Nieve in the fact that simple things as boxcutters could be used to take over a plane without ever first damaging the plane. Nieve in the fact that the pilots seemed to forget the first rule of vehicles, a rule which basically states that any vehicle is a leathal weapon. Adding fuel into the mix adds explosive power behind that weapon. It seems just puzzling to wonder why the pilots ever considered placing themselves in a position where their vehicle could have been taken over.

      For all the information that the US had, none of it stopped the attacks, none of it kept us informed of what we should do in the event of attack or threat, and almost none of it was used prior to the attacks. Suddenly, we want to sequester more information away from the people, and expect that the people will feel comfortable and safe?

      It ultimately comes down to one thing. What information has the government decided we are no longer safe in knowing? What information has been censored that does not need to be? What information that has been published should not have been in the public's hands in the first place? (Specific structural integrety tests on dams and other installations should not necessarily be public knowledge, but information on where the dam is should be)

    26. Re:I disagree. by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      The Anthrax terror seems to be blamed on a home-grown terrorist (I'm not saying said terrorist isn't an Arab or Muslim).

    27. Re:I disagree. by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      Another point. Some of the populace, I'm not sure how many, but it could be alot, might feel more safe with their freedoms abridged.

    28. Re:I disagree. by mpe · · Score: 2

      Sequestering information does 2 things. It makes it difficult for the "nameless" terrorists from finding out about us. It also makes it more difficult for citizens to know what is going on around them.

      It may do the former, since the terrorists are unknown they may well still have access.

    29. Re:I disagree. by mpe · · Score: 2

      If anything, a totalitarian-like state would be even more harmful to the terrorists than a freer one.

      Except that terrorists may be able to more easily hide in an environment where everyone is a "suspect".

    30. Re:I disagree. by mpe · · Score: 2

      Do we not HAVE appropriate elected representatives? Opposition parties to uncover and bring attention to those facts that are detrimental to the current power?

      In the case of the USA most definitly not. Since two large political parties utterly dominate all arms and levels of government.

    31. Re:I disagree. by mrseth · · Score: 1

      You can yell "Fire!" in a theater all you want even if there is no fire and you will be perfectly permitted to do so unless you cause an immediate breach of the peace, such as a riot. If everyone just tells you to sit down and shut up, you've broken no laws. You can also pretty much slander anyone you want as well. Slander is *very* difficult to prosecute, since it is inherently spoken. Libel is written, but still it has a high threshold to be able to be successfully prosecuted, especially if the plantiff is a public figure. Then you can pretty much forget about it. How do think The Enquirer and The Star survive? Most of what they do is libel. BTW, it does not need to be a lie to be slander or libel. If I was your next door neighbor and just happened to be the editor of the Washington Post and I was pissed because you let your grass grow too high or something and the I wrote a truthful but malicious Op Ed piece about your personal sex life that did you great measurable damage than you could successfully sue my ass...as long as you aren't a public figure.

      Anyway, I think the way to combat terrorism is with more speech and not less. Terrorists are generally born in fertile beds of poverty and ignorance. The sooner the 1st world wakes up and realizes that as long as we have terribly skewed distributions of wealth and the accoutrements of such, we will have this problem. This administration in the US claims that they are not "nation builders." If they don't become such very soon, then prepare for more of the same. This is the same mistake we made a decade ago in Afganistan as well as with Germany after WWI, etc. Look at what good the Marshall plan did for Europe and Japan for an example.
      As a card-carrying member of the ACLU, even I agree that some restrictions of civil liberties may be neccessary in time of war, but these should be made temporary and be kept to a minimum. The Bush administration has gone way over the top in my opinion on several fronts. I think this is another one. What will they be restricting next? Perhaps scientific journals in "dangerous" fields? Certainly you could make the same arguements...

    32. Re:I disagree. by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Your rights? Is it your right, for instance, to know the exact path and time of the Presidents limo for the next year? How about its weaknesses?

      Of course not! The President, Praise be to Him, and His Congress and His Senate are to be exalted and protected. It is vital to We, The Little People that our hereditary Political Class are allowed to continue doing so without danger or threat of interruption. If only we could do something about the annoying 10% turnover of incumbents are well, we might have enable our Political Class to be truly effective.

      • It may be true that some legitimate information may be temporarily unavailable, but it may require substantial time to sort through all of it to make those distinctions, in the mean time, terrorists can have their way with us

      How temporary is the destruction of knowlege? How long are we to live as though we are in imminent danger? I know! I'll ask my Elected Representative (even though I voted for the other guy), always assuming that His armed guards allow me into His fortress home carrying an identical weapon to theirs. While I'm there, I'll also bring up His anti-gun policies, assuming His bodyguards allow me to.

      Government of the People, by the People, and for the People. We never quite got there, did we.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    33. Re:I disagree. by ortholattice · · Score: 2
      Lastly, how can you say telling the "truth" is always good. Your credit card number, home address, and phone number are the "truth".

      You are mixing up privacy with truth. No one says you have to reveal your credit card number to me. But stating a false one rarely serves any purpose other than fraud. And imagine if the phone book, rather than simply suppressing unlisted phone numbers, listed them with false information, so you could not trust anything you found in it.

      Lies are not always bad.

      With this statement, you tell me I cannot trust anything you say. If you're going to say something, tell the truth, otherwise say nothing, if it's none of my business. If it is my business, like a flaw in a product I'm about to purchase from you, then you should say it, and truthfully. That is, if you are an honorable person. (Perhaps I am unusual in that respect; if I sell someone a used car I just cannot feel good about myself unless I disclose its known problems.)

      We have no laws that simply say you cannot lie.

      And I would want no such law. It is a matter of ethics and trust. Once a government, company, or girlfriend is caught in a lie, you can no longer trust them, except under very extraordinary circumstances.

    34. Re:I disagree. by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      you're going to say something, tell the truth, otherwise say nothing, if it's none of my business.

      There are cases where a lie is better than saying nothing or telling 'the truth'. It is okay, for instance, to lie to an attacker.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    35. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2
      You are mixing up privacy with truth. No one says you have to reveal your credit card number to me. But stating a false one rarely serves any purpose other than fraud. And imagine if the phone book, rather than simply suppressing unlisted phone numbers, listed them with false information, so you could not trust anything you found in it.
      You entirely miss the point. You said the truth is always good, acting as if there is no reason to ever not to share the truth openly. Meanwhile, you insist on making a special class of information that SHOULD be hidden, you call it "privacy." Yet you're unwilling to make reasonable accomodation for a far more important issue: self defence.

      With this statement, you tell me I cannot trust anything you say. If you're going to say something, tell the truth, otherwise say nothing, if it's none of my business. If it is my business, like a flaw in a product I'm about to purchase from you, then you should say it, and truthfully. That is, if you are an honorable person. (Perhaps I am unusual in that respect; if I sell someone a used car I just cannot feel good about myself unless I disclose its known problems.)
      Quite the opposite in fact. I'm a very ethical person, but I am mature and thoughtful enough to admit of the truth that every reasonable person arrives at when forced. Furthermore, this does not mean that I'm any more likely to lie about things that should not be lied about. For instance, with my product, if I were to lie about its flaws, I would be hurting an innocent person. I would also be ruining my credibility as a business person (which is priceless). Thus, I would never lie about such a thing.

      However, in a time of war, I might be willing to create disinformation, knowing that despite our best efforts the enemy will get ahold of the various truths, but that I can make these truths all the less dangerous to us by dilluting it with lies/misinformation. Again, here we can proceed rationally, considering the costs and the benefits of telling the truth or lieing.

      Furthermore, it means very little for you to say that you'd never lie, because I have no way of knowing that you're sincere or even if you've thought of all the significant eventualities that might force you to reconsider. What's more, given my life experience, I'm far more likely to trust a person that I consider to be frank with me (e.g., not an idealist), than a person that declares themselves to be "pure" in its various forms.

      In any event, you miss the point. If you allow for some truths not to be told (or even to be forcefully REMOVED--e.g., your name from a database), you simply cannot say that you are absolutely for the free flow of information, be it the truth or not.
    36. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2
      Defending the rights of minorities is the hallmark of a republic. When I was in school my professor explained the difference between a democracy and a republic this way. A democracy is a lynching of a black man by ten white men. Ten votes for, one vote against. In a republic lynching is not acceptable because the right of minories are not up for vote.
      Talk about twisting the truth. Listen, there is a difference between a member of group A standing up and saying that group B should not be discriminated against, because it might eventually come around to group A; and representatives of this government following procedures laid forth in our republic to make certain non-essential information unavailable. This is not about the majority incrementally crushing the rights of the few.

      you are kidding me right? Is it your position that the US policymakers never shaft their own people? How many examples of this would it take to convince you that the US policymakers reoutinely shaft their own people?
      Ahem, nice way to cut out the rest of my quote..."for its own sake". You want to argue that they're out to screw us, then give me a plausible motive. Otherwise, I highly suggest that not paint them as evil and instead come at it from the approach that you think their policy, while properly motivated, is misguided.

      All they need to get elected is a bunch of money. Most americans are sheep and will vote for whoever the TV says to.
      You know, I'm not a sheep. I'm educated, I'm a free-thinker, and I follow politics and world news regularly. Yet I happen to think that US policy is, on a whole, pretty good. Are there some flaws and occassional injustices? Sure, but on the whole there's not much more that can be done systematically.

      The simple fact of the matter, that many radicals on slashdot do not grasp, is that most Americans are pretty content with the leadership and abhor the ideas espoused by those fringe groups such as the Green Party. They're not too stupid to grasp what is relevant to them.

      Btw, I always find it ironic how those that claim to be interested in the masses show such utter lack of respect for them.
    37. Re:I disagree. by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1

      I'm not a sheep. I'm educated, I'm a free-thinker, and I follow politics and world news regularly. Yet I happen to think that US policy is, on a whole, pretty good.

      Pretty good for whom? Globally speaking your opinion is in the minority. A small minority.

      >The simple fact of the matter, that many radicals on slashdot do not grasp, is that most Americans are pretty content with the leadership and abhor the ideas espoused by those fringe groups such as the Green Party. They're not too stupid to grasp what is relevant to them.

      Simple fact of the matter is the opinion of the lowest common denominator is not usually the most enlightened, especially when it is an opinion molded by smarter people, with vast amounts of money and media power. They are not too stupid to grasp what is relevant to them because what is relevant to them consists mostly of gasoline prices, 'Must See TV', and the emotional drum-beating and heart-string pulling done by our 85% fact-free news broadcasters. Also, the "fringe-groups" wouldn't be so abhored (nor so desperate) if they weren't consistently portrayed as wild-eyed fanatics with granola caught in their hair. Abhoring them is usually a direct reflection of the shallow, biased, dismissive coverage they get from almost every media outlet.

      Motivation? You can fit most of the worlds billionaire CEO's and powerful politicians in one big room. They're job is like a combination of Monopoly and Risk. Look at Bin Laden's investments, and those of the Bush families, follow the campaign contributions and cabinet appointments. Look at Afghanistan on a map, or forget the map, look at it on a Risk board. The Public is just another piece on the board. It's still their game.

      The only 2 ways you can think US foreign policy is "on a whole, pretty good" is to have an average or lower IQ and believe what you're spoon fed, OR be a US citizen and have very jingoistic beliefs. Oops, and there is also self-delusion.

      on the whole there's not much more that can be done systematically.

      This seems to be the crux of the argument. Although it's an unimaginative, generalized, non-statement, it still manages to smack of very low expectations.

      We can do much better.

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    38. Re:I disagree. by FallLine · · Score: 2
      Pretty good for whom? Globally speaking your opinion is in the minority. A small minority.
      Says who? Sure, some people hate us (e.g., a certain part of the Arab world), but this also ignores the hoardes of immigrants that seek entry into the US each year, legal and illegal, the many supporters of the US abroad, the popularity of our culture (you can deny it all you want), and many other factors.

      Even if you accept this, that the US is unpopular, it's NOT a popularity contest. Doing the right thing isn't always the most popular thing, before or after the fact. After all, most of these foreigners are the "lowest common denominator" that you're so ready to dismiss. What's more, they lack perspective and basic knowledge of US domestic policy that I, or even the average American, has. They also do not have the same interests that the US has.

      Motivation? You can fit most of the worlds billionaire CEO's and powerful politicians in one big room. They're job is like a combination of Monopoly and Risk. Look at Bin Laden's investments, and those of the Bush families, follow the campaign contributions and cabinet appointments. Look at Afghanistan on a map, or forget the map, look at it on a Risk board. The Public is just another piece on the board. It's still their game.
      Yet another irrational plea.

      The only 2 ways you can think US foreign policy is "on a whole, pretty good" is to have an average or lower IQ and believe what you're spoon fed, OR be a US citizen and have very jingoistic beliefs. Oops, and there is also self-delusion.
      Or maybe I've actually taken the time to study it with some depth without some bipolar view of the world.

      This seems to be the crux of the argument. Although it's an unimaginative, generalized, non-statement, it still manages to smack of very low expectations.
      Quite the opposite. I know what it means to lead and I believe that the kind of criticism that many of these critics engage in is destructive, not constructive. It's very easy to sit back and take potshots when you yourself are not actually making decisions that you can be held accountable for.
    39. Re:I disagree. by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      ---We limit your right to speak intentional lies about people (e.g., slander/libel laws).---

      Unless this is a lie about someone society doesn't like in the first place. Then it's perfectly legal.

    40. Re:I disagree. by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      Isn't it funny how, since we are unable to figure out who this guy is, we decided to publically release an FBI profile that was basically just a bunch of schoolyard insults? "He's most likely a loner, a loser, he probably has no girlfriend cus he's too ugly and insecure...."

    41. Re:I disagree. by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      I half expect him to expose himself by running into FBI headquarters and yelling "I do TOO have a girlfriend!"

    42. Re:I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for the specific example of CNN and the Gulf war, CNN did admit to the spreading of disinformation on purpose. The reason according to them was to boost morale for the alies and to lower it for the enemy. Media is to report objectivly the truth and not be an instrument of propaganda. Since that admittance the credibility of named news network has hit bottom.

      Hehe... well this is either a case of them screwing up bigtime and trying to cover it up ("no, we meant to get it wrong, really!"), or else they are indeed untrustworthy. Having them and various other networks to compare (and somewhat better ones than Fox News, although they're not too bad except when editorialising...) they certainly haven't been presenting the 'whole' truth this time either.

    43. Re:I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But provided it isn't all run by a single party, whichever of the two large political parties doesn't have the majority power, has a lot to gain by uncovering any mistakes or bad decisions made by the party in power.

    44. Re:I disagree. by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      :)

    45. Re:I disagree. by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      "Btw, I always find it ironic how those that claim to be interested in the masses show such utter lack of respect for them."

      I have no interest in the masses. I have an interest in myself. In many many ways I am a minority in the united states. When the time comes that the US govt does not like me anymore they will use the gullable masses to round me up. Don't mistake my critisim of the US govt as some sort of a fondness for the brainless dupes who gather in front of the TV every night.

      Did you follow the election? Do you remember the NY republican primary? That was a tough one for Bush because McCain was actually running ahead in many part of NY. Bush knew that if he lost NY his chance at the presidency was over. So they tried all kinds of nasty tricks like trying to get McCain off the ballots in some places and such. Well towards the end McCain was starting to pull ahead when a texas businessman spent a tens of thousands dollars (out of the goodness of his heart of course) and bought a bunch of advertising claiming that McCain was in favor of giving women breast cancer. It was done in a very sleazy way but that's not really surprising.

      What is suprising was the the people of NY actually believed this. They not only thought that McCain was in favor of giving women breast cancer but that George Bush had nothing to do with these ads. Bush won by a slim margin.

      If that is not evidence of the stupidity of the american public I don't know what is (well that and the WB network but I digress).

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    46. Re:I disagree. by mpe · · Score: 2

      But provided it isn't all run by a single party, whichever of the two large political parties doesn't have the majority power, has a lot to gain by uncovering any mistakes or bad decisions made by the party in power.

      Except that a) you end up with these two parties being very similar in policies (possibly simply using different names for the same thing), since they are chasing the same electorate, b) the one not in power will call virtually everything the other does a "bad decision". Such that there will be no special attention drawn to the worst decisions and policies.

    47. Re:I disagree. by chris_7d0h · · Score: 1

      As for classifying Nuclear related facilities, I agree. I can't think of a good reason to have this available to people without professional interest.
      Unfortunately I can imagine that the withdrawl will be drastic and include things which in fact DO have public interest, such as construction plans / locations of infrastructure, plans of coming constructions and other things which are interesting to ordinary people (weighing where to build houses, estimating real estate values etc.)
      There are ofcourse more things than just construction plans which is of interest and could possibly be affected, but only time will tell.

      --
      In a society that believes in nothing, fear becomes the only agenda ~ Bill Durodié
  63. Where's God? by WildBeast · · Score: 1

    I don't see God coming to me and taking away my freedom to speak, read, say dirty words, have sex, drink beer, go out, etc. just so he can guarantee my security. The government should look at that role model and do what he does (nothing).

    Freedom has it's pains, but it's worth it. Enough is enough, it's time for our governments to take their responsibilities and leave us alone.

  64. Illusion of Security by smasch · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What really scared me about the Sept. 11 attacks was not that I would get killed/injured/harmed by a terrorist attack, it's that people would effectively give the government free reign to do whatever they want. Right now, President Bush's approval rating is an astonishingly high 89% -- this is at least close to the highest it's ever been. Doesn't that scare anyone out there?

    The problem is that everybody's still shell shocked over the Sept 11 attacks and everybody wants closure over this and the feeling of security. Sure, airports security has been stepped up, but has it gotten any better? They're collecting far more nail clippers now, but they're still getting knives through. No matter how much security they place at the airport, or any other place for that matter, "bad stuff" will still get through. And even if they made something completely safe, the terrorists will simply go elsewhere.

    Let's face it, had the government pulled this shit a year ago, people would have been absolutely pissed. People would have been writing to their congressmen, there may have been protests, but bottom line it would not have happened. Does anybody out there think that government documents like this would have been pulled a year ago? Do you think there would have been an anti-terrorism bill a year ago?

    The only good thing is that this will probably come full circle. Maybe it will be in a year, maybe two years, maybe longer, the general public will want this stuff public again. Some accident will occur, people will want to know more about what their local chemical plant is doing, people will want to know where their water is coming from, and after all this terrorist fear has blown over the people will want this stuff back.
    Just wait.

    1. Re:Illusion of Security by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Bush's approval rating is 89%!?!?!?!

      That even scares me, and i live in England!:

      (lol 2DTV):
      (in bushes office)
      General: "Sir, its time for your three o'clock briefing."
      Bush: "Huh?"
      (General holds up a big micky-mouse clock with pictures of micky and minie next to the numbers)
      General: (Points at clock) "What time is it?"
      Bush: "Err... its mousey time!!!"
      General: "Sir, we have to start using the numbers now."
      Bush: "oh.."
      ROFL

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    2. Re:Illusion of Security by smasch · · Score: 1

      Yes it's 89%, and it was 92% for a while in October (which is the highest for any president back to at least 1938).


      Here's the source. (It's about one page down).

    3. Re:Illusion of Security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck, Brits are as dumb and as underestimating as ever.
      What can I say, you will burned for the 100th time.

  65. Oh. by loraksus · · Score: 2

    So now terrorists won't be able to get access to the information that was freely available years prior to this.
    Oh.
    Ok.
    I feel so safe now, knowing that the people in charge of so-called homeland security are a bunch of idiots.

    It reminds me of the whole "STOP DECSS" thing.

    I take offense to this not because these documents are being lost to the memory tubes, but that the administration is showing their incompetence / ignorance.

    --
    1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    1. Re:Oh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Incompetent? Nope, Mr. Bush knows exactly he's doing and exactly where he wants to take this country, and it has nothing to do with the Constitution he swore to uphold and protect.

      NEVER trust a President that says his job would be easier if he were a dictator, because he intends to make his job exactly that.

      Fuck the Flag. I fly the Constitution here.

  66. thought crimes by necrognome · · Score: 1

    I've had enough of this incremental approach to securing our country. Let's ban mischievous, deviant, dangerous, and all other kinds of "bad" thoughts. All in the name of homeland security, of course...

    If it's illegal to think about terrorism, there won't be any terrorists, right?

    --


    Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    1. Re:thought crimes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot that individuality is "bad" because it could cause people to think for themselves. Next thing you know they'll realize that our leaders might actually not know what's good for us.

  67. I guess they haven't learned their lesson by Ryu2 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, look at how effective the effort to censor DeCSS was.

    --
    There's 10 types of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
  68. It really makes you wonder by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

    It makes you wonder huh? why a person like Bin Laden, would want to hurt a peace loving, free, democratic country like America, where the people are free to say and see as they please, and justice is served fairly and just... anyway i digress:

    Howdy!!! My name is Osama^H^H^H^H^H Bob^H^H^H Jim-Bob, and I am a good old Apple(tm) Pie American (alrights reserved). I was born here in err... Texas, in a cave^H^H^H^H ranch. We have many goats^H^H^H^H^H sheep^H^H^H^H^H cattle here on our diddley old farm, and I was wondering - now that those infidels^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H jolly ol' smart men in them there suits down in washington with that Bush fella have done away with those public records to protect us good ol' law abiding capitalists^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H citizens, where could I by chance be able to happen across some of those records to see if me' ranch is on any errr... um.. telephone cables so as to not disturb anything when digging my well. I would also like some maps of government buildings, for err.. my site-see'n tour of washington for when me and my wife Abd^H^H^H Mayble vist by plane^H^H^H^H^H car next month. I will no-kill^H^H^H^H^H^H^H be indebt to anyone that could help me kill those pigs^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  69. What's the penalty for noncompliance? by Ryu2 · · Score: 2

    Is there legislation, either new, or changes to existing ones like Freedom of Information, to back these "ordered destructions" up?

    Are they actually classifying the data now formally (eg, slapping a Secret or Top Secret designation)?

    If not, I don't know how it could be justified. What happens if someone doesn't comply fully (eg, secretly burns a copy of the CD?

    --
    There's 10 types of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
  70. Twin Towers by vlad_petric · · Score: 1

    I'm sure it took the terorists a lot of research time to find the location of the Twin Towers ...

    The Raven.

    --

    The Raven

  71. Glory be... by TACD · · Score: 1

    Library documents doubleplusbad crimethink securewise. Slashdot doubleplusbad crimethink duckspeak purgewise. America doublsplusgood keep citizens safewise via purges rightswise recordswise miscellaneous.

    --
    Security through promiscuity is no better than security through obscurity.
  72. the obligitory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if information is outlawed, only outlaws will have information

  73. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Western+Light · · Score: 1

    "discrepancy" merely describes being at variance or disagreeing which can at times coexist to create a paradox. We have the right to demand accountability from our government.

    Yes we do. But our government is not an abstract concept. It is made up of us, the citizenry, people like you and me. It is not equally acceptable that the citizenry can expect some meager form of accountability from a citizen who wants access to potentially sensitive information? Would it not be irresponsible of those serving us to not even consider it?

    Can the interests of the majority of citizens never prevail agains the interests of one citizen?

  74. The thing is... by Chasing+Amy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The thing is, the terrorists already have all the documents they need. When we raided Saddam's nuclear program during the Gulf "conflict" (not much of a war, really, and no formal declaration then as now, which I find stupid), we found declassified documents gotten from the U.S. government printing office for a modest fee, from the early days of our nuclear program. We also found them being put into practice--we found 1940s era (in terms of the tech) cyclotrons being used to make fissionable uranium. We hadn't thought this possible before because the technology can only produce minuscule quantities of the right uranium isotope, so we wrote it off as impractical and declassified the design schemtics and all for the cyclotrons we'd tried with in the early days. Turns out Saddam was more patient than we are.

    Such documents have been available for years. Terrorists already have them. They are already on the Internet. Closing the barn door after the horse is gone is needless. We just need to keep from declassifying anything else that ought not to be. Problem is, the three-letter agencies never want to declassify anything, and that would be even worse than declassifying dangerous infrastructure or nuclear information. I don't want terrorists attacking my country. But if my country becomes any more backwards and secretive than the Star Chamber it's already fast becoming, then I wouldn't mind so much if the whole thing gets destroyed and we have to start from the fundamentals again. I believe it was Jefferson who advocated periodic revolutions, to remove the "cruft" that accrues around any government.

    In two centuries, we've gone from isolationist "paradise" happy to revel in our beautiful countrysides and stay out of world conflicts for our own good, to the Roman Empire of the modern world. I'm not one of these assholes who whines about how America deserves what it gets--certainly innocent people just going about their daily lives don't deserve to die--but frankly I'm not surprised nor dismayed, either. I don't really like my government. It did worse things than pulling easy-to-get-elsewhere data from libraries, even before Sept. 11. While I lament the deaths of the innocent, part of me hopes our government keeps baring its true fangs until everyone sees what it is and gets fed up with the cruft and corruption. Our government taxes us to death to do worthless things like give 2 BILLION dollars of aid ech year to Egypt, which hates us, hundreds of millions each year to Afghanistan, whose government sponsored terrorism against us, and BILLIONS to several other countries which almost all Americans couldn't care less about. Why should it be the responsibility of a teacher making near-poverty wages to subsidize third-world regimes? That's practically communism. After all, "to share everything and be poor together is madness." Why do we do it? The stock answer, political stability. The real answer, to subsidize regimes that are favorable to U.S. corporate interests, so that people who would cut off U.S. trade don't get into power.

    That's what it's all about in the end. Take from the average working class citizen to subsidize corporations, corporations which get tax breaks to "stimulate the economy" (read: get companies to make more stuff and get people to buy more stuff, whether the stuff is necessary or not). The rest of the world objects to so much American stuff floating around and destabilizing their own native industries--and I can't blame them for that; I can sympathize since corporate America's stuff also destabilizes native industries here in America (average citizens can't compete with the Wal-Marts; we all become employees whereas in the old days many, many more of us would be owners, and could work towards being owners). In turn America is hated and attacked, though unfortunately foreign terrorists don't want to make the distinction between American citizens and the government which lords it over them. In turn the government acts even more repressive. The question is if and when we will reach the breaking point, where pressure leads to a breakdown in the economic and social structure. I have to say, I hope so. It would give us a chance we won't have otherwise to return to the core fundamentals of the Constitution, shedding all the strained and bogus interpretations and omissions which have been imposed in the intervening years--such as the fact that the Tenth Amendment is entirely ignored.

    There are so many parallels between the U.S. and the Roman Empire--our history and development run along the same lines. Agrarian Republic to world-shaking Empire. True Republic to puppet government controlled almost exclusively by the elites. A country which avoids warfare once it consolidats itself and expands to its natural boundaries, to an Empire which thrives on warfare to promote economic interests.

    This has digressed from the small topic of restricting information to the larger issues which have spawned such restriction. But it is undoubtedly an action which is a thread in this larger tapestry. We really ought to examine proactively the reasons behind our government's actions, rather than reacting to them one by one. This is the problem the media has--they promote dwelling on the small issues, while ignoring the bigger picture because it won't fit into a 90-second segment. We really need to examine these themes when incidents arise, instead of treating each as if it existed in a vacuum.

    --

    Chasing Amy
    (We all chase Amy...)
    "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws"-Tacitus
    1. Re:The thing is... by chris_7d0h · · Score: 1

      This post if by far the most insightful one I've ever read on slash dot!

      It deserves to be placed on a much needed "Hall of 50 top posts" on this board.

      --
      In a society that believes in nothing, fear becomes the only agenda ~ Bill Durodié
    2. Re:The thing is... by GospelHead821 · · Score: 1

      You have remarkable insight into the core of the problem and you raise a very interesting point. I too was considering the possibility of a [peaceful] revolution. I think that our current legislative process focuses too much on patching up real or perceived problems rather than building a strong, clear set of laws that will deal with a broad category of issues. This, in turn, leads, at worst, to breaches of constitutionality and, at best, to an unsound legal structure. I truly think that the people need to be orchestrated such that they will demand that government stop pandering to corporate interests and return to the fundamental principles upon which our nation was founded. Obviously, this isn't an easy task. I can't even say it's possible. After all, a revolutionary effort that appears to have coherence and any real power is almost certain to be quashed by any government (every regime tends to act to preserve itself from genuine, external threats.) However, I think that things have gone so far that it is necessary.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    3. Re:The thing is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree with much of this posting, you seen to have a very libertarian point of view on this whole matter. I don't think an isolationist government was a good thing, nor is our current state of meddling in everyone's business for our own benefit a good thing. I look forward to a republic like America where the citizens care about science, want to learn about politics of the world, are interested in protecting their rights, and actively vote. However, it seems as if there is a feedback loop of poor candidates leading to poor voter turnout leading to poor media, which in the end creates a very corrupt and confused government. Until sociologists can analyze where this government went wrong, I don't think we'll ever been any better off than this world we currently live in. I personally put the blame on our foolish economy which destroy's the environment, taxes the overall mental health of our nation, and constantly increases the amount of time we spend working, as compared to playing or thinking. But that's just my opinion.

      -Matt

    4. Re:The thing is... by zkosky · · Score: 2, Funny

      The horse is gone ??? !!!!

    5. Re:The thing is... by planet_hoth · · Score: 1

      In two centuries, we've gone from isolationist "paradise" happy to revel in our beautiful countrysides and stay out of world conflicts for our own good, to the Roman Empire of the modern world.

      A very poor, overly simplistic analogy.

      America is not the Roman Empire redux. The Romans were conquerors. Name me one nation the United States has annexed in the last 75 years. Recent US administrations have fought abroad when forced to protect US interests. The US even fights in places like Kosovo, Bosnia and Somalia on solely humanitarian grounds. When we're done fighting, we leave, and often help rebuild the country as well. (Now I'm not defending any particular US foreign policies in particular, I'm just showing how they refute your analogy.)

      I also highy disagree that the US is "backwards and secretive". Look at the US's "peers" in the world scene: Russia, China, India, Japan, Britain. Now, I'd say the US is *at least* as progessive and open as any of these other nations. (Of course, I'm sure the US looks plenty "backwards and secretive" in comparison to your personal utopian vision of government.)

      I also love how you point out that Iraq was using declassified materials in the nuke program in one breath, and claim the US should continue to make these materials public in the next. Wouldn't it have been better not to have declassified the docs in the first place?

      --

    6. Re:The thing is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hawaii, you imbecile.

    7. Re:The thing is... by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      "Name me one nation the United States has annexed"

      The US has learned it's lessons from the experience of nations like Israel and russia. Namely that pysically occupying people who don't want to be occupied is a painful and expensive endevor. Look at palestine. To this day palestenians would rather die then live under Israeli rule. We are much more sophisticated then that.

      We control people via puppets and proxies. We overthrow democratically elected governments to install our own despots (shah of iran). We fund and arm lunatics like pinochet, we train death squads in central america, we fincacially support countries like israel who routinely torture prisoners and kill civilians and of course we routinely kill via bombardment and sanctions. I think it was a former secy of state who said that the deaths of 1.2 million people including over 500,000 thousand children in iraq was a "inevatable but aceptable consequence" of our sanctions in Iraq. That is not a actual quote but it was the jist of the comment.

      Why would we actually occupy a country when we can install a puppet govt and make sure the people are killed, tortured, enslaved or simply made to work prividing us with coffee and sugar. It's cheaper and easier and allows us pretend that we are somehow more moral then the roman empire.

      "Look at the US's "peers" in the world scene: Russia, China, India, Japan,"

      Moral relativism at it's best. You see we are not the only ones evil!. Why not pick the best examples and strive to be like them? Better yet why not decide what is moral and right and do that.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    8. Re:The thing is... by Chasing+Amy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think our government has become unsound because of two things: the reliance on money and power for becoming a viable candidate to the legislative and executive branches, and the detachment of the judicial branch from the actual letter and intent of the Constitution.

      As for the first, it is more or less self-evident. We've had several different political parties come and go over the course of our history--the idea that we are a two-party system and better for it is a relatively new and completely untrue one. In any given geographical area, there were always several parties--groups of people interested in politics who wished to back and promote a candidate who agrees with their ideals. Some of these were directly affiliated with national parties which were the most prominent, such as Democrats or Whigs or later Republicans. While they therefore had an advantage thanks to networking and name recognition and improved fundraising, politics was essentially still local. Local parties had almost equal power to field candidates and get them recognized within a given district. And, an individual with a great reputation and local name recognition could build up his own group of supporters--essentially his own local party--and do damn well.

      This is no longer true thanks to the fact that the national party structure is able to raise so much money for paid media advertising, that the national parties have raised the bar for entry of third-party or independant candidates ridiculously high, and that media outlets like television--which is now sadly the only way most people get information--only give coverage to the candidates from the Big Two parties in most cases, being motivated to save their costly airtime, and seldom cover third-party or independant candidates with equal vigor.

      The current Big Two parties have secured through legislation their ability to get candidates on the ballot automatically, while anyone else has to work very, very hard to get his name there. In the old days, everyone had to work at the same level. Why give such preferences to an organization simply because it happens to be dominant at a particular time? If the Democrats and the Whigs had done the same thing back when they were the two most prominent parties, well, the Whigs would still be around and the Republicans would never have had a chance to rise to the same level.

      Because of this artificial prominence, almost all the money goes to these two parties, since most people believe in the two-party mythos and believe--rightly since the playing field has become so tilted--that very few third-party or independent candidates can win. Such huge warchests and powerful backing and lobbying have been amassed behind the Republicans and Democrats, that few others can compete--television is now the primary medium, and it costs a lot of money to buy a little bit of airtime. Money is therefore primary to getting a candidate elected, whereas originally it was a minor consideration since most campaigning was done in person by stumping and through local newspaper coverage. Now, local newspapers are the things nobody reads that are given away at the grocery store and elsewhere; almost everyone reads their nearest big-city paper instead, which is usually more of a regional or national paper in which local issues aren't the most important, and so local candidates not backed by a major party are given little or no shrift. And nobody really stumps, since they can get more coverage by buying airtime and ads, and doing the occasional speech instead of hurriedly going around the election district trying to explain your beliefs to everyone in person. TV is just so much more effective, and so much more expensive...

      The result is entrenched parties which will always be in power thanks to their artificial advantages. Would the Founders believe that two parties with great prominence at a pearticular time should be able to pass legislation to make getting elected harder for everyone else and easier for them? No. To make it worse, as Noam Chomsky points out throughout his writings and videos (though I don't take him seriously on many other things), the Big Two really aren't at all far apart in philosophy. They're both for Big Government and extreme federalism, just to different ends and in different areas. They seem different to the average person, because each party is for or against certain things like abortion--but at the core, they both agree on the same sort of system, the same sort of political philosophy; they only disagree on details, not on major structures. The result is that voters usually get to choose between two sides of the same coin. Where's the party that, for example, wants to reduce federal government to only those things explicitly authorized and reasonably implied by the constitution? Plenty of people want that--yet the artificial obstacles prevent such people from banding together and having any reasonable chance of fielding candidates.

      As for the judicial branch, I think it went awry when it started interpreting the Constitution instead of just reading it as literally as possible. Today there is no dispute about whether we should interpret the Constitution or not--there are just "strict constructionists" who try to interpret it narrowly and "loose constructionists" who try to interpret it broadly. Why not just read the damn thing instead? If the Constition says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."--that's pretty self-explanatory. Congress shouldn't pass any laws regarding religions or churches whatsoever; it can pass no laws which restrict speech or writing; it can pass no law to prevent people from peacefully assembling. What's there to interpret? The Court should just decide what laws do and do not violate this; no interpretation is necessary. Interpretations are used for justifications of decisions, but unfortunately under our system they then become precedent and have the force of law themselves. So, don't interpret at all. Explain why a law violates or does not violate, but don't add or remove meanings by making grand pronouncements about what you think the Constitution means. It's written in plain language after all, and for good reason.

      An example of what goes wrong when the judiciary interprets instead of simply reading the Constitution word for word is the mess about what the 2nd Amendment "means," hinging around interpretation of the word "militia". "A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed." Why does this need interpretation? Militia had a very simple meaning at the time--any able-bodied man over the age of majority and under a certain age, who was therefore eligible to serve in a military capacity. But that doesn't matter anyway, because just reading the sentence, any English major can tell you that that sentence is equivalent in meaning to this one, which is easier for modern readers to parse since they no longer teach us so well about subordinate clauses and such: "Because a well regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." Again, unless you are a moron you understand this sentence. It needs no interpretation. It is entirely self-evident. If you believe in gun control, fine--pass a Constitutional amendment to add restrictions; just don't try to read things you want to see into words which are so simple and straightforward. I should add that we can keep convicted felons from owning firearms, though, because felons do not have and never had full rights unless they are restored by legislative action, which is why we can keep them from voting, owning firearms, etc.

      This is the cause of much of our legal cruft--people want to interpret the Constitution and the laws to suit their own desires, even when it obviously contradicts them. What they should do is campaign for those changes, not try to twist the Constitution and laws through interpretation to fit those changes. It demeans and diminishes the letter and spirit of those documents, and makes it progressively easier for everyone else to twist and tweak them to fit into their own ideologies and wishes--especially since we have a system of precedent. The Founders wrote the Constitution in very simple language--excruciatingly simple for the day, when flowery embellishments were the norm. It's simple to understand. People need to stop trying to make it conform to their own beliefs. Campaign to change it if you don't agree with it--just don't reduce it to meaninglessness because you want to interpret it to allow your opinions rather than what it clearly says.

      Because of this judicial love of interpreting things to avoid the obvious, we've lost the last bastion of our rights. For example, the legislation passed recently to allow law enforcement agencies to read anyone's Net traffic headers without a warrant is blatantly contrary to the Fourth Amendment's admonishment that "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." You have to have a particular reason to look at anything which would otherwise be private, and you have to have a warrant which specifies exactly what you can look at. Pretty simple. But the Court can and will interpret these words however it wants, instead of just reading them literally and if need be asking the simple question WWTJD--What Would Thomas Jefferson Do? After all, he wrote those words. If they seem at all ambiguous--which they don't really--simply honestly thinking about what Jefferson and others directly involved meant by them is the only valid method of clarification. They were amazing people, a generation of thinkers and doers who threw off the bonds of subjugation and created a new and thriving, trend-setting nation. They wrote the Constitution as plainly and unambiguously as they could, to avoid the need for interpreting it.

      And the Bill of Rights was an afterthought which many of them thought was unnecessary since such rights were so obvious at the time. It was a time when people and state governments were put ahead of the federal government. It was a time when national government was expected to conduct foreign policy, regulate interstate commerce and interstate disputes, and to otherwise leave us all alone. It was a time when the Ninth and Tenth Amendments still meant something: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." We had the full rights and protections of the Common Law. The federal government was there to assist the people and the states, not to extend its regulations into every facet of our lives.

      Now our rights are not so obvious--at least to those full of interpretations and agendas, and to the majority of people who just don't know our proud history and heritage. Anyone who's read the writings of Jefferson and Madison, and Washington's journal, Franklin's papers, etc., knows that they would be appalled at our current system. Again, they were brilliant men, and created a system which still functions better than could be expected even after 200 years of cruft weigh it down and pervert it. There is no single government in the world which has operated for so long without very fundamental changes to its structure. (Before someone mentions England, it changed fundamentally at the beginning of the 20th century, when the House of Lords was finally rendered impotent.)

      What I'd like to see is a return to this core. The Constitution should be enforced, not interpreted. The federal government should leave domestic law enforcement (except where it crosses state or national boundaries) and any other function not dealing with what the Constitution explicitly delagates to them, except for a few useful things not enumerated like printing the national currency, to the states. Most of our tax money could be spent at the state level, instead of having a national government dominated by pork barrel politics which loses big chunks of our money while filtering it back down to the states. Why not just have that money go directly to the states through state taxes? Why not have the federal government leave us alone, and just worry about protecting the people and their rights, as the Constitution charges it? Our federal tax dollars should be spent on defense and national infrastructure, not on foreign aid to bolster corporate sales penetration into foreign markets and on tax breaks to whatever interests got the President elected. Big political parties should be given no preferential treatment over small ones--they all need to jump through the same hoops to get on the ballot. Basically, I'd like to see a return to the federal government we had in 1805, with changes, additions, and subtractions only where obviously needed thanks to the changes that have taken place in the intervening years. It would be a small, lean, efficient government. It wouldn't need to hide things from the people. It wouldn't need to promote corporate interests. You wouldn't need to be in the pocket of a big corporate interest just to viably enter it.

      But this will never, ever happen without outright revolution. Politicians would never willingly give up their corporate perks. Politicians are not visionary enough to look to the Constitution rather than their petty opinions. Politicians don't want to give up the powers they have which are not enumerated by the Constitution, since most things would become the province of state governments again rather than the national government--for example, abortion would be up to the States to decide individually, since the Constitution does not give the federal government the authority to regulate such things except where they become interstate issues. Unless a state violates a Constitutional right of its people, or an issue involves national defense or foreign policy, the federal government would largely let the state governments and the people who elect them decide what to do.

      What I see is a large bureaucratic government that has taken the place of the nimble and responsive government we once had. What I see is a government which seeks to monitor its people, without reason, without probable cause, without warrant. What I see is a government which killed Randy Weaver's family because he advocated gun ownership rights and was therefore branded suspect--and which does similar things all the time albeit with much less publicity. What I see is a government which wants to keep everything about itself secret, even to the point of not letting the public know if toxic nuclear waste is being stored near them. What I see is a government which is owned by corporations, and more directly beholden to them and their money than to the people themselves.

      I've gone on and on far too long; everyone gets the point. But right now, I don't see the cruft being removed without a real Jeffersonian revolution. It's time to collect all the information and all the arms while it's still legal to do so, because at some point both may be outlawed just when they're most necessary. I love my country, and I love its history. But I want a real government of the people, by the people, for the people, to take the place once more of our current government of the corporations, by the corporations, and for the corporations. I want accountability where there is none. And I know I'm not alone.

      --

      Chasing Amy
      (We all chase Amy...)
      "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws"-Tacitus
    9. Re:The thing is... by planet_hoth · · Score: 1

      Uh, I'm pretty sure Hawaii was annexed in 1898, which would be LONGER than 75 years ago. Imbecile. :P

      --

    10. Re:The thing is... by planet_hoth · · Score: 1

      Uh, I more or less agree with a lot of what you have to say. But of course you're making a different point than Amy was...

      (OT: Please don't forget that Hussein refuses to import the full amount of food and medicine he is allowed under the oil-for-food program, which isn't helping the situation in Iraq any. But it's still obvious to me the sanctions policy has failed and needs to go...)

      Moral relativism at it's best. You see we are not the only ones evil!.

      I'm not looking for moral relativism, I'm looking for perspective. I know, it's a foreign concept around here. (Any anyway, I don't think I'm going out on a limb by saying that, generally speaking, the US is an open society, not a closed and secretive one.)

      I hate it when people hyperbolize to make a point. Making crappy analogies between the US and [the Roman Empire/Nazi Germany/whatever] is getting tiresome. Make your damn point and let it stand on its own merits.

      Better yet why not decide what is moral and right and do that.

      ...the best policy of all!

      --

    11. Re:The thing is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Why should it be the responsibility of a teacher
      >making near-poverty wages to subsidize third-world
      >regimes? That's practically communism. After all,
      >"to share everything and be poor together is
      >madness." Why do we do it?

      Let me answer, this, its callled modern colonialisation. You send in "help", and then
      request the "help" to be paid back, by selling
      your natureresources back to US cheap. That way
      all these third-world countries to is to pay
      back intrest of the "help" money to US. And you
      gain on "helping" third-world countries.

      Becouse your country seems to be so corrupt that
      the money they actually make on "helping" other
      third-world countries isnt used on you, the
      citizens of that country is becouse of you to
      support this kind of corrupt goverment.

      Let me explain this easier:

      Tax money XX money -> US Gov -> Third World -> TW Sells cheap natural resources to pay intrest for "help" -> US Gov XX*XX money

      Btw, isnt any kind of colonisation and slavery
      forbidden by the UN Human rights thing?

    12. Re:The thing is... by anonymous+loser · · Score: 1
      Name me one nation the United States has annexed in the last 75 years.

      Hawaii. I'll bet you didn't realize that Hawaii wasn't even a U.S. state when Pearl Harbor was attacked, did you? I also bet you didn't know there happened to have been a ruling monarchy in Hawaii that was forcibly overthrown by the U.S. government. Oh...it was "democratic" in that they later had a vote to determine whether Hawaii should become a state, but there was no option on the ballot for Hawaii to remain a sovereign nation.

    13. Re:The thing is... by hey! · · Score: 2

      Since we are veering OT...

      I think our government has become unsound because of two things: the reliance on money and power for becoming a viable candidate to the legislative and executive branches, and the detachment of the judicial branch from the actual letter and intent of the Constitution.

      Our government has become unsound because of the untenable system of plurality voting.

      Think about the vibrancy and diversity of America in every field of human endeavor: business, arts, science, sport. By comparison, compare the impoverishment of our political arena, it's lack of originality and its complete superficiality. This is the direct result of an electoral system in which a vast central majority is up for grabs and original (and initially minority) viewpoints are completely marginalized.

      The influence of money is, in my view, a secondary effect. We are being sold two very similar laundry detergents designed to be attractive to the central majority; vast resources must go into the packaging and media efforts which aim to convince us that (a) Brand X has all the good qualities of Brand Y and (b) Brand Y has none of the good qualifies of Brand X.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    14. Re:The thing is... by planet_hoth · · Score: 1

      Please see here:

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=23921&thresh ol d=-1&commentsort=3&mode=thread&pid=2583541#2583709

      --

    15. Re:The thing is... by exa · · Score: 1

      You are an intelligent person. If there were 1 million people like you in the US, much would change.

      I'm thrilled at all the cunning interpretations slashdot readers have given under this post.

      It's apparent that Americans still have reason to guide them.

      --
      --exa--
    16. Re:The thing is... by Dirtside · · Score: 3, Informative

      If the Constition says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."--that's pretty self-explanatory. Congress shouldn't pass any laws regarding religions or churches whatsoever; it can pass no laws which restrict speech or writing; it can pass no law to prevent people from peacefully assembling. What's there to interpret?


      What's there to interpret? How about the following question: "What constitutes speech?"

      The 1st Amendment only specifically mentions "speech" and "the press". What do they mean by "the press"? The freedom of the news media to publish what it likes? Or the freedom of individuals to use a printing press? Or the concept of physical publication and distribution? Or all of these? Or none of these? "The press" is *AMBIGUOUS*, and leaves us with no choice BUT to interpret.

      So let's say you read the 1st Amendment completely literally. The only things that are guaranteed protection are the freedom to speak aloud, and the freedom to write, print, and distribute whatever you like. What about... artwork? If I create a piece of art that shows a caricatured black man with big lips and beady eyes supplicating before a regal white master, is that protected by the First Amendment? After all, I did not write anything, and I did not say anything.

      But clearly it would be ludicrous to prohibit the expression of whatever it is that I'd be trying to express with that artwork. Yet the 1st Amendment says nothing about artwork. Now what?

      Other things that are not explicitly mentioned in the 1st Amendment, but it would be (in my opinion) wrong to not consider protected: computer source code, any form of electronically stored data, sign language, rude hand gestures, facial expressions (for example, glaring at someone)... hey, how about THOUGHT? Thought isn't mentioned or even referenced by the 1st Amendment. Therefore we can prohibit certain kinds of thought, right?

      My point here is that your position is untenable -- language almost by definition is ambiguous, and without something to concretely resolve that ambiguity, we are left with literally no choice but to interpret the language and figure out what it means. Unless, of course, you think that none of the above things I mentioned should be protected? Not that there's anything wrong with that -- you're entitled to your opinions, another side effect of the First Amendment.
      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    17. Re:The thing is... by hublan · · Score: 1
      Hawaii. I'll bet you didn't realize that Hawaii wasn't even a U.S. state when Pearl Harbor was attacked, did you?

      Get your facts straight.

      • 1893 The US forcibly overthrew the Kingdom of Hawaii.
      • 1900 Hawaii annexed as a territory.
      • 1946 Hawaii was listed as a non-self-governing territory under United Nation.
      • 1991 The Hawaii Advisory Committee to the US Commission on Civil Rights issued a report documenting 73 years of civil rights violations against Hawaiians.
      • 1993 The US Congress passed Pub Law, "the Apology Bill", officially apologising to the Hawaiian People for the illegal overthrow of the Kingdom in 1893. Ka Lahui Hawaii became a member of the UNPO.
      • 1996 The representatives of the US State Department and Departments of Justice and Interior came to Hawaii for a briefing on the Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, but no progress was made towards the implementation of a program for self-determination for Kanako Maoli. The Urban Institute of Washington D.C. reported that the Hawaiians have the worst housing conditions in the US. The UNPO mission to Hawaii reviewed the status and conditions of Native Hawaiians and inquired into the state initiative for a plebiscite.
      • 2000The US Census recognized Native Hawaiians in their survey of the US population

      Nothing out of the ordinary there. They just figured out how to do it more subtly and over shorter timescales.
      --
      My spoon is too big.
    18. Re:The thing is... by Chasing+Amy · · Score: 2

      Again, there's only room for interpretation if you specifically seek to find wiggle room. The English language is fairly plain and straightforward in this respect, as it is used in the Bill of Rights.

      You asked "What constitutes speech?" Well, literally and obviously, it is whatever is spoken. If you say it, it is speech. I thought that was completely obvious. Figuratively of course one can speak using things other than his mouth, such as through looks, gestures, drawings, and other modes of expression. Since this figurative definition was in common usage among literate people long before the Constitution was written, it can and should be included when reading the clause.

      People like to think of this inclusive definition as a "modern interpretation", but it is not. Shakespeare wrote that one can speak with a look, and Petrarch wrote that art speaks to the beholder. The inclusive definition of speech was as valid at the time as it is now. Again, if there is any doubt as to what something means, WWTJD.

      Your other question was what do they mean by "the press." Again, it's rather obvious. The press is anyone who puts words and/or pictures down onto a tangible medium, such as paper. Pretty straightforward.

      If you want to get all historical, when the Constitution was written people did not use the term "the press" to refer to reporters, as they usually do now. It was literally anyone who makes or has made for them any words or images set down on paper or similar materials for distribution or public consumption, be it newspapers, broadsides, woodcut illustrations for hanging on walls, etc.

      > So let's say you read the 1st Amendment completely literally. The only things that are
      > guaranteed protection are the freedom to speak aloud, and the freedom to write, print, and
      > distribute whatever you like. What about... artwork?

      You're purposefully seeking a case which requires complicated interpretation, instead of using common sense. Artwork clearly fits into a definition of speech that was valid at the time the Constitution was written, and since it is an image in a tangible medium rather than in a spoken one it is also literally covered under freedom of the press. Of course, you can also create artwork that speaks, in which case that is also less figuratively covered under freedom of speech. ;-) Or maybe you use your speaking artwork to say something for you that it doesn't actually say in words, in which case it is figuratively also speech as well as literally speech which is figurative.

      See what happens when you try to be needlessly complex! I did that to illustrate the fact that if you want to find ambiguity and complexity, you always can. But why not look for the clarity and simplicity instead? If you want to know what the Founders meant by speech and press, and don't want to merely use common sense and basic English knowledge and your knowledge of Jefferson's writings, there's a simple answer: look at the definitions in dictionaries and encyclodepias commonly found in the libraries of the literate at the time the Constitution was written. Accept all the definitions you find as valid ones, and move on.

      Notice how none of this attempts to read new meanings into the words of the Constitution, or even presumes that such new meanings are required when new things are devised which did not exist when the Constitution was written. New meanings ar not required at all. Invent a new form of art, fine--it will still either be in a tangible format or constitute speech, and in either event will be covered safely by the First Amendment.

      Notice that if there is any interpretation going on--again I think it's just using common sense, and don't see that it is really interpretation at all--it is interpreting the new things to reduce them to their essential function and purpose, to compare them with the wording of the Constitution. It is not, however, in any way interpreting the words of the Constitution to accomodate the new things. I think that's a very clear differene. In that way, the meaning of the Constitution never changes, and never needs interpreting, which can lend subjectivity to what is supposed to be the ultimate in objective guidelines. New things may be invented, but I cannot think of any new functions that have been created--new inventions still serve the same functions as older ones.

      Even now I'm staring at all my little computer program icons lined up on my desktop, trying to think of one single program that does something fundamentally new that did not exist in 1789. Not a one of them does anything new--they just do the same old things in new and easier and better ways. I thought for a second that streaming video was new, but it's not--it;s just a new way of letting me see a performance.

      I think there's a lesson in there somewhere--as when Aristotle said over 2000 years ago that "There's nothing new under the Sun." It's true. And I remain convincd that there's no need to interpret when the definitions of the period are sufficient to cover even the newest of inventions, which serve the same core functions that have always existed.

      Oh, and if you really need a right that can't be explicitly justified by merely reading the Constitution word for word, remember this Amendment: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." This implicitly refers to the Common Law, and you have all sorts of rights in there that you probably never knew you had. Pity we don't have them anymore, since the Court likes to make things up as it goes instead of relying on the body of knowledge that all colonists and early Americans regarded as being the foundation for their rights. But again, I digress...

      --

      Chasing Amy
      (We all chase Amy...)
      "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws"-Tacitus
    19. Re:The thing is... by metis · · Score: 2

      If you want to know what the Founders meant by speech and press, and don't want to merely use common sense and basic English knowledge and your knowledge of Jefferson's writings, there's a simple answer: look at the definitions indictionaries and encyclodepias commonly found in the libraries of the literate at the time the Constitution was written. Accept all the definitions you find as valid ones, and move on.

      While you seem to argue infavor of no interpretation, which IMHO is nonsense, the passage above suggests that you are really after original intent. When original intent is not sufficient because the object did not exists, you want to perform the most minimal interpretation that will find some equivalent or close that did exists.

      Others have pointed out that this minimal interpretation is often simply not enough. My problem is your desire to keep the US outside of history. The success of strict constructionism suggests that this desire is common in America. The constiution was written in the eightenth century. Wouldn't it be strange indeed if someone in the eighteent century was prescient enough to provide with his imagination for all eternity. The Muslim fundamentalists believe exactly the same about a text written in the seventh century. Granted, 1200 years is a lot of time, but do you doubt that one day the literal meaning of the US constitution will be as outdated as the literal meaning of the Koran? Historically, cultures that sanctify the literal meaning of their founding documents turn up as the great losers. Successful cultures keep their founding documents in constant flux, using them to anchor themselves in the past but not to bury themselves in the past.

      Of course, once you leave the original intent you are in the hands of the interpreters. Legal interpretation is technically done by the court but it is eventually the political system as a whole that decides. Maybe a lot of the appeal of strict constructionism comes from the desperation that anything good can come from the US political system.

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
    20. Re:The thing is... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      "Others have pointed out that this minimal interpretation is often simply not enough. My problem is your desire to keep the US outside of history. The success of strict constructionism suggests that this desire is common in America. The constiution was written in the eightenth century. Wouldn't it be strange indeed if someone in the eighteent century was prescient enough to provide with his imagination for all eternity. The Muslim fundamentalists believe exactly the same about a text written in the seventh century. Granted, 1200 years is a lot of time, but do you doubt that one day the literal meaning of the US constitution will be as outdated as the literal meaning of the Koran? Historically, cultures that sanctify the literal meaning of their founding documents turn up as the great losers. Successful cultures keep their founding documents in constant flux, using them to anchor themselves in the past but not to bury themselves in the past. "

      The whole IDEA behind the US Constitution is that Government cannot be trusted and requires checks and balances to keep them from screwing us! Has that changed in the last 200 years? Hell no! I don't think that will change in the next 1200 years! Thomas Jefferson never imagined a big metal flying machine bringing down a giant building full of people, but he sure the hell could foresee Government using a tragedy as an excuse for a power grab!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    21. Re:The thing is... by Chasing+Amy · · Score: 2

      My problem with the way you seem to want to go about things is that you want to change the meaning of the Constitution as we go along. That turns a fundamental and constant enumeration of rights into a meaningless bunch of words that should be twisted to fit the temper of the times.

      Now, for the most part the Constitution has been interpreted to provide a more generous smattering of rights--but it can also be interpreted to provide fewer and more limited rights. Our protection against that is to read the Constitution plainly, and reduce things which did not exist at the time to their fundamental functions in order to compare them to what the Constitution says.

      A good example of the dangers of interpreting the Constitution instead of "interpreting modern things," if you want to call it that, is the Court's acceptance of pen rigisters and similar invasions of privacy. Until now they have not been used in directly nefarious full-scale monitoring of the populace, yet new technology has made that a reality, as the new monitoring of all Internet packet headrs demonstrates. Basically, the Court said that law enforcement agencies can look at what phone numbers you call and what addresses you send mail too since that is external to the content of the communication, and since anyone who looks at the outside of an envelope can see the addressing information.

      The Court had a few reasons for making these decisions. One is that thanks to new technologies like the telephone, people could communicate faster and more directly and law enforcement would be left out of the loop. They wanted to give some power to law enforcement to at least know who's talking to whom in an investigation. That seems reasonable, and since the Fourth Amendment doesn't address telephones for obvious reson this is a reasonable interpretation right?

      But it set us up for letting the FBI do what they are putting into place and planning at this very moment thanks to the PATRIOT and USA legislation. They are using this interpreted power the Court gave them to now apply the same principle to the Internet, but now there's the technological capability to track and monitor everyone who goes to a specific website or who sends or receives e-mail from a specific address, and you name it they can track and log it. There's even a plan to concentrate traffic at a few key points so that they can do precisely this.

      The net effect is that the Fourth Amendment ceases to apply the moment you plug in a network cable or turn on a modem. All because the Court wanted to interpret things instead of doing the more logical--drawing an analogy between the new thing and whatever accomplished its function back when the Constitution was written. If you do that, then clearly a person's telephone calls and Internet packet headers are personal effects, covered under the Fourth Amendment from being searched or seized without a reason and a warrant. They are information in the form of electronic signals, no different in function from words on a paper. Can law enforcement stop a courier carrying a letter and read it? Or even read the address on it if it were passed by private courier? No? Then they should not be able to do the same with telephone calls or tcp/ip traffic.

      This placement of any interpretation on the modern things to be compared with Constitutional protections, rather than on the Constitutional protections to get them to reference the modern things, results in a better protection of rights in a more unwavering and less subjective way.

      Now, none of this prevents operation of what the Framers intended to be the vehicle for changing the Constitution when such changes are needed: amendments. They are hard to pass for a reason--we shouldn't go atround changing the arbiter of our rights willy-nilly, without good reason and reasonable agreement, without time and deliberation and debate. There is a definite, long process for amending the Constitution. And notice, please, how that process is completely short-circuited today through the process of judicial interpretation. Instead of the legislatures reacting to new situations by initiating the long process of debate and compromise to form new amendments when needed, the judiciary just does the same thing with the stroke of a pen, with no public review or discourse or input.

      That is the real problem. Legislatures are lazy and inept. They never want to undertake the method of deliberate change provided by the Founders, because it is too hard. Bah. And because the people in every state would have input. Double-bah.

      Judicial activism has short-circuited our whole Constitutional system of government in a way. You may not see the dangers inherent with such opportunity for quick and thoughtless change without understanding the long-term consequences, but the Framers did, and that's why they provided a deliberately slow and public and broad-based method of Constitutional change.

      --

      Chasing Amy
      (We all chase Amy...)
      "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws"-Tacitus
    22. Re:The thing is... by metis · · Score: 2
      My problem with the way you seem to want to go about things is that you want to change the meaning of the Constitution as we go along. That turns a fundamental and constant enumeration of rights into a meaningless bunch of words that should be twisted to fit the temper of the times.

      I do not want to be condescending but the above sentence suggests you are not very informed about the concept of interpretation. This is a subject that can easily fill a library. They are people spending their whole life trying to figure out what exactly interpretation is. If you find the subject interesting you might like to read a little about it.

      I'll make a few brief notes about how I see the issue. words do not have an abstract and unchanging meaning. Speech conveys meaning in a particular context. One way to think of reading is that When you read a text you create an instance of the text as speech in your mind and that speech conveys meaning. The most difficult question is 'what anchors meaning'. The problem is this. Take 10 readers of Hamlet and you are going to get 20 very convincing arguments about the meaning of Hamlet. ( s/hamlet/bible/ or s/hamlet/constitution, etc.). Obviously the words themselves, the black glyphs on the page are not enough. People suggest context, the theory that the interpreter uses, history, biorgaphy, etc. And yet, surprisngly, not anything goes. If you try to argue that Hamlet is a receipe for blueberry jam, you will be laughed at. One way of looking at this is that any interpretation is work. It is something you do with material for previous interpretations as well as other raw materials. And that to do it well you have to have mastery in the particular category of texts you are interpreting. This seems a low requirement in theory but in practice it is actually quite formidable. Veryy few people can succesfully push forward new interpretations.

      One of the results of this attitude is that the meaning of texts comes bundled with an interpretive community. The same text can mean totally different things in two different interpretive communuities. Consider the meaning of the Bible for deeply pious protestants vs. the same Bible for historians studying the Roman Empire in the first century. If you put the two groups in the same room you will know immediately that they are not talking about the same book, and indeed they aren't.

      The constitution has a layered interpretive community. At the center stand the justices, around them the law professors, and around them the whole citizenry. Arguing in favor of strict costructionism, Antonin Scalia argues that it is the purpose of the constitution to prevent change, therefore it is by definition a conservative document. However, the interpretive community is also a conservative body. Remember that the work of interpretation always starts with previous interpretations. And one learns how to interpret by reading previous interpretations. That procees assures that the constitution is anchored in the past. The purpose of this process is on the one hand, to allow change to happen, adjusting the law to new circumstances. But on the other hand, change is dampened significantly, and instead of the law changing with every electoral moodswing, only persistent and steady political changes make it all the way to the constitution. The success of this process depends on the soundness of the political institutions that organize the interpretive community. That is the weak point. I suspect that a lot of people are attracted to minimalist positions because of their low faith in the soundness of American political institutions. That safety is however illusory. Can a piece of paper stand in way of a nation bent on destroying itself? The political system has a number of vital functions. If these functions are not carried out well, the result is general national decline. Political functions are political, so you cannot expect them to be fulfilled by non-political mechanisms except for very short time. And political functions are essential, so you cannot solve the problem by downsizing the job description of the political system. Eventually, either you fix the political system or you suffer the consequences.

      You will probably note that the argument is circular. The interpretive community preserves the meaning of the constitution. The constitution preserves the political organization, which then defines the interpretive community. The circle however is extended in time. Every iteration of each factor interact with other factors at a different iteration. That is how change is dampened and meaning does not become arbitrary.

      Now, for the most part the Constitution has been interpreted to provide a more generous smattering of rights--but it can also be interpreted to provide fewer and more limited rights. Our protection against that is to read the Constitution plainly, and reduce things which did not exist at the time to their fundamental functions in order to compare them to what the Constitution says.

      That is true of the Warren court. It is certainly not true of the Rehnquist court.

      The net effect is that the Fourth Amendment ceases to apply the moment you plug in a network cable or turn on a modem. All because the Court wanted to interpret things instead of doing the more logical--drawing an analogy between the new thing and whatever accomplished its function back when the Constitution was written. If you do that, then clearly a person's telephone calls and Internet packet headers are personal effects, covered under the Fourth Amendment from being searched or seized without a reason and a warrant. They are information in the form of electronic signals, no different in function from words on a paper. Can law enforcement stop a courier carrying a letter and read it? Or even read the address on it if it were passed by private courier? No? Then they should not be able to do the same with telephone calls or tcp/ip traffic.

      I honestly think you are being naive. The constitution strikes a balance between the needs of law enforcement and individual ( privacy is not a constitutional issue). Every judge has a feeling about were this balance should be drawn. The constitution basically says that there should be a balance. It doesn't define 'probable cause' or 'unreasonable search'. Every judge then interprets legal history to square with her own sense of the proper balance. The general position of the balance is essentially political (Conservatives want more law enforcements, civil-libertarians and lefties want more individual rights). Not surprisingly, politicians decide the general balance by appointing like-minded judges.

      A judge can follow your interpretive method and still arrive to the conclusion you deplore. Why compare headers to addresses in the bag of private courrier? why not compare it to a note tucked on your door from the outside? Why not say that cyberspace is like a public space, and when you visit a website you are like visiting a physical space outside your house? I am not saying this is a better interpretation. But don't try to argue with 'yes but the difference is...' When you compare different things there are always differences. Every choice of metaphor privileges a similarity and ignores a difference. When you interpret you make choices. The point of making these choices is not to get it absolutely right. It is to get a useful and predictable legal framework that is not too far away from the one used before. If the choice turns out to have unwanted side effects, it can be changed or adapted later.

      This placement of any interpretation on the modern things to be compared with Constitutional protections, rather than on the Constitutional protections to get them to reference the modern things, results in a better protection of rights in a more unwavering and less subjective way.

      First, I disagree with the claim, see above. But I also disagree with the goal. The goal of the forth amendment is not to protect individuals against law-enforcement. That could have been done simply by prohibiting searches and arrests altogether. The purpose of the ammendment is to force the legal system to come up with a measured balance between the needs of law-enforcement and the protection of individual rights. I do not see any constitutional reason for putting that balance here rather than there, beyond what is literally said.

      Now, none of this prevents operation of what the Framers intended to be the vehicle for changing the Constitution when such changes are needed: amendments. They are hard to pass for a reason--we shouldn't go atround changing the arbiter of our rights willy-nilly, without good reason and reasonable agreement, without time and deliberation and debate. There is a definite, long process for amending the Constitution. And notice, please, how that process is completely short-circuited today through the process of judicial interpretation. Instead of the legislatures reacting to new situations by initiating the long process of debate and compromise to form new amendments when needed, the judiciary just does the same thing with the stroke of a pen, with no public review or discourse or input.

      I completely agree that the judges have been to aggressive lately. But the ammendment process is designed for major changes. It is not designed for the day to day working of the legal system. Do you really want to pass a constitutional ammendment to decide whether internet addresses are effects or not? Do you want the constitution to be a 3000 pages document? Consider this. If you go this way, you have practically disabled the process of legislation. Instead of passing laws, congress will only pass constitutional ammendments. Since that is so much more difficult, legislation will be even more slow and paralized. Who will fill the vacuum? judges! Besides, there is a well understood mechanism for correcting over-zealous judicial interpretation. It is called judicial nomination. Call your senate representatives and tell them that each new judge should be asked a single question in their senate confirmation. "What standard should the supreme court use when deciding whether it has authority to overturn congressional legislation?". If the reply is to close to the position of the present court, kill the nomination.

      That is the real problem. Legislatures are lazy and inept. They never want to undertake the method of deliberate change provided by the Founders, because it is too hard. Bah. And because the people in every state would have input. Double-bah.

      That is simply not fair. The US political system is designed to make legislation slow. This design is in the constitution itself.

      Judicial activism has short-circuited our whole Constitutional system of government in a way. You may not see the dangers inherent with such opportunity for quick and thoughtless change without understanding the long-term consequences, but the Framers did, and that's why they provided a deliberately slow and public and broad-based method of Constitutional change.

      And they also wrote a very short and minimal constitution with the expectation that the details will be worked out with flexibility in the common law tradition which was not alien to them. If they did not like the common law system ( in which judges are very free to interpret laws, relative to the Imperial tradition in continental Europe ) they would have certainly said it.

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
  75. Talk is Cheap... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So ya'll get off yer arses and:

    1) Register to Vote

    2) Vote for Libertarian Candidates

    3) Join and Donate to organizations that champion the Bill of Rights. EFF and ACLU are a good start, but a larger list can be found at:
    http://www.indefenseoffreedom.org/

    4) Learn more about the Constitution and our national heritage, and promote the importance of knowing the same to young people

    1. Re:Talk is Cheap... by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      A more immediate solution to this situation would be to download and mirror as much of this information as possible. Preferably on overseas servers, however I dont see why you cannot mirror it on an American webserver most, if not all government-produced and publically available information is placed into the public domain; they cannot actually order you to remove it (because its not classified, and they do not own any copyrights on the material).

  76. Preserve this stuff! by wytcld · · Score: 2

    Which libraries are using the government demands as lists of materials to move to overseas public Internet archives? Those CD-ROMS they break, keeping a shard as evidence of their distruction, they burn a few copies first, somewhere, right?? (Oops, "burn" in the "lase" sense.) As Ashcroft goes increasingly over the line, who will organize his impeachment?

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  77. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  78. Security by Obscurity is no answer by DMouse · · Score: 1

    If there is one thing everyone needs to learn from crypto, its that security by hiding is no security.

    Sure, actually fixing problems is more expensive in the short term than hiding the problems, but fixing problems is the only way that engineers et al will actually get trained to build things securely.

    Otherwise, you just wind up with a large insecure infrastructure. Bad bad bad.

  79. In the UK we have the D-Notice by Lord+Hugh+Toppingham · · Score: 0
    In the UK we have the Official Secrets Act. This protects us from sensitive information 'leaking out' to the public.

    On the whole, it seems to work very well, and it has protected us from all kinds of terrorist threats.

  80. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Legion303 · · Score: 1
    "discrepancy" merely describes being at variance or disagreeing which can at times coexist to create a paradox.

    Where is the discrepancy?

    "We have the right to demand accountability from our government."

    Yes we do. But our government is not an abstract concept. It is made up of us, the citizenry, people like you and me. It is not equally acceptable that the citizenry can expect some meager form of accountability from a citizen who wants access to potentially sensitive information?

    That's not what you said, nor was it what I was referring to. You were talking about people who demand information from their government but dislike providing information to others, as if they were hypocritical for doing so. I merely pointed out that that is not the case.

    Would it not be irresponsible of those serving us to not even consider it? Can the interests of the majority of citizens never prevail agains the interests of one citizen?

    If you want to start debating a new topic I'll be more than happy to, but let's finish the one you started first.

    -Legion

  81. what to think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, think about how Microsoft wants all info about Windoze bugs and hacks to be disclosed (yeah, right). Then, compare how you feel about this current issue.

  82. Sorry, wrong analogy by (void*) · · Score: 2

    I'll agree with you that making information harder to come by increases security. But really, doing chmod a-r on the password file is a bad example. The reason is that the password file is the ONLY PLACE in the system where the lgin is stored. If the password were stored elsewhere (eg. root making a personal copy of it in his own directory and leaving it 755), turning off permissions does nothing.

  83. U need new CD scanner! by jeanicinq · · Score: 1

    Syracuse University needs new compact disc reader. If the disc gets broken then how are Syracuse University associates able to prove that the compact disc has any data from the report.

    This could create new business for new types of compact disc reader. The broken compact disc can not spin so the new reader has to be able to scan the compact disc piece. If there are multiple pieces then the compact disk reader program has to sort the pieces in order to complete data tracks.

    (c) Two Thousand One

  84. Slashdot paranoia by bryan1945 · · Score: 2

    I am currently working on a homeland security project involving military forces. Yes, there are very good reasons why some of this info is being pulled. No, it is not a good thing to pull this info, but as I said there are reasons for this.

    As for you Orwell, F451 folks, no one I've dealt with (up to the General level) has any interest in censorship or any of that nonsense. These people are extremely pissed off and want to go kick someone ass, but since they're techies they need to stay in the US and do some tasks here.

    As for the top politicos in Washington, I have no first hand knowledge, but 3rd or 4th hand knowledge tends to support the belief that they are concerned with securing our country, not a bunch of Mr. Burns' holding their hands saying "Excellent!" while contemplating implementing censorship.

    I wish I could go into more detail, but I can't. Of course, all of you now think I'm a lackey of the establishment anyway. Oh well, I tried.

    --
    Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    1. Re:Slashdot paranoia by ballpeen · · Score: 1

      And you are saying...what?

      Most people, one on one, are GOOD. I'm quite sure that rampant EVIL is about as rare snuff flicks.

      No doubt, the people you've been dealing with are as nice and well-intentioned as they seem to you. That doesn't make what's being done just as peachy keen as well.

      It's the basic "guns don't kill people argument" -- inconclusive!

    2. Re:Slashdot paranoia by bryan1945 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I was just trying to convey the feeling I have about the people who are making these decisions. On a grand scale, I DO believe that information should be always available. I also believe that these measures should be temporary.

      I wanted to point out that /. seems to view issues in absolutes; all information should be available, government and corporations are always bad, open source is the best, etc. But in real life there are mitigating circumstances that make the absolute right thing wrong. You want full info flow- give out the plans to nuke bombs, your companies network architecture, the PIN # of your ATM card. Yes, these are absurd and taken to the extreme, but your interpretation of what is the proper level of info flow may differ from the next person's. Who is to say what info you want released is right, rather than what your neighbor wants released?

      To bring it together, there are people who believe that the level of info out there is too much. You may disagree, but I may disagree about what you want to keep private.

      Hope this helps clarify my position.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    3. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Including paranoia, can the center hold? Works maybe like this: Good intentions and obscurity can hold for a period - say the 4-years of WW2 ... which period is EXTERNALLY defined. And those empowered starting the affair are those at the end returning to what all held to be proper and good. God help us if the "war" period becomes INTERNALLY defined, and a new pack-of-thugs takes over knowing only paranoia.

    4. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems like some people you do not understand that an INDIVIDUAL and a GOVERNMENT are NOT THE SAME THING!

    5. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Uncle+Warthog · · Score: 1
      You know, I've got to congratulate you. You never said "trust me" once, yet you're implying that this approach to homeland "security" is proper, correct, folks should trust that it is the right thing, and are going out of your way not to give any answer at all to the most important question: Why? Why is this what's being done? Why, if "it is not a good thing to pull this info", do it at all?

      The problems that come from this approach are many and I find myself wondering if you or any of those you've dealt with ("up to the General level") are conscious of what kind of issues they're getting into here.

      One obvious one is that implying that people should trust and agree what's being done is right without telling them why is a good way to get the exact opposite reaction.

      Another is this: It doesn't matter whether you or those you're working for or dealing with have "very good reasons" or not. It doesn't matter whether you, those you've dealt with, or the top politicos in Washington have any interest in censorship or not. The problem is that the effect is the same regardless of interests, beliefs, or concerns; Informaiton is being censored here. Perfectly good information that has many more legitimate, non-terrorist uses than terrorist ones.

      Suppressing information is not going to stop anyone from terrorizing anybody.

      Unlike you, I can go into more detail but I won't. I'd like to think anyone reading wouldn't need to ask me "Why?" but if they do, I'd be happy to tell them. Of course now you'll think that I'm just some post-happy conspiracy theorist who has read 1984 or Farenheit 451 one too many times. "Oh well, I tried."

    6. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Velex · · Score: 2

      You want full info flow- give out the plans to nuke bombs, your companies network architecture, the PIN # of your ATM card.

      For the first two: those things can be found out, and are really meaningless to security, because they rely upon security through obscurity. The third is not security through obscurity -- it is the kernel of security.

      As concerns the first, the buidling of nuclear bombs is the natural result of science. In order to stop people from knowing about nuclear bombs, you have to censor science. This is not absolutism -- that is the only way to keep people from knowing about nuclear bombs. The people that made the bombs that wiped out Hiroshima and Nagasaki figured it out, and so can anyone else.

      As concerns the second, the architecture of you r network is meaningless to whether or not someone is going to hack you. Your architecture will be found out by any h4x0r worth his phr33r. However, that h4x0r can't do anything at all if your servers are secure. If you're running an old version of ISS and you get 0wn3d, don't blame it on the h4x0r knowing your architecture, blame it on your server's security being shotty. Security through obscurity all too often creates false senses of security that lead to ISS-based 0wnage.

      The third, as I've stated before, is another case entirely. The password is the essential thing that security boils down to in most cases. Even then, you must ask yourself: is not sharing a certain information x security through obscurity? If x is superficial, such as the address of your servers or the physics behind a nuclear reaction, then hiding x is security through obscurity. If x is at the core of your system, then hiding it is not.

      Has the government ever shared the passwords to their servers? No. And neither should you share your PIN number. All else is irrelevant to security. So what if the h4x0r knows how to use your ATM card or knows the ATM you frequent -- he can't do a thing without that password.

      This isn't absolutism, unless absolutism is the result of applying abstract logic to determine what's at the root of shotty security.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    7. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And we are now sheep??

    8. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      It is stupid to respond to specifics, when those specifics were only meant to gistify something. Respond to the idea, not just the straw men. Just because the person you're arguing against isn't brilliant, doesn't mean his general position isn't right.

    9. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      No. The effect isn't necessarily the same. The short-term, outward effect may be, but that doesn't mean the long term affect will be.

      Intentions DO matter, because they directly affect what other decisions will be made in the future.

    10. Re:Slashdot paranoia by teatime · · Score: 1

      Intentions DO matter, because they directly affect what other decisions will be made in the future

      On that note:
      --"The road to hell is paved with good intentions"

    11. Re:Slashdot paranoia by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      I am currently working on a homeland security project involving military forces.

      I'll sleep safer in my bed tonight knowing that Slashbots are looking out for evil terrorists lurking in libraries. Because there are no libraries outside the United States, and no books in private ownership either.

    12. Re:Slashdot paranoia by ballpeen · · Score: 1

      The dissection of your reply - in the reply below - is, as someone else snidely pointed out in after it, overly literal and pumped up. But basically, it misses your point, which was clear from the beginning.

      Considering that most hip young hackers and IT types are all in general a smug lot - it's the nature of cliques. And absolutes tend to go with this often obnoxious territory. So that comment is obvious.

      However, these days, with history going in cycles as it does, we are in revolutionary phase, and a lot of it is ideologically driven, rather than by technology or blood. And in that case, SOME things have to be taken pretty close to absolute, so as not to cloud more important issues.

      CORPORATE CONGLOMERATES and GOVERNMENTS are, on the whole, BAD these days. Just look at the record. And what's on deck. The INDIVIDUALS, all tens and hundreds of thousands of them that make these corps and govs go, are still mostly just right as rain, fine folk, good people.

      Good people do bad things. Even when they don't mean to. It's dangerous to confuse the individual people with their collective actions. And it's worse to take the soul out of science.

    13. Re:Slashdot paranoia by ballpeen · · Score: 1

      That's kind of like retarded haiku! Cool.

      Who the hell is this Anonymous Coward?

    14. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      So's the road to heaven. Your point?

      Most people travel the middle road.

    15. Re:Slashdot paranoia by Uncle+Warthog · · Score: 1
      I can't see how and make no mistake, the effect is the same: the information has been removed from public access. Whether someone's intentions were good or not, removal of the information from public access is the effect here. That's a fact. Long or short term anything makes no difference at this point. This is happening now.

      Sure, the previous poster could have tried to convince me that his intentions were good, but he didn't (and that was the point of my previous post). In fact, he so much as admitted that it wasn't a good thing to do but was doing it anyway. It would take a lot more than that to convince me of anyone's intentions where a purge of valuable information is taking place.

  85. Something else to ban by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The government feels obliged to destroy public records of public facilities because they feel those records create a blueprint for terrorism. Documents describing dams, power plants, pipelines, etc. are being destroyed to protect the citizens of America.

    They've missed a document that is more dangerous than all these blueprints combined.

    • With this document, terrorists could map out the functioning of important governmental institutions and formulate a plan of attack.
    • In fact, this document specifies some of the most important potential targets a terrorist could choose
    • Degenerent elements of society have already used this document to damage our government using the proceedures outlined in this very document
    • The victims of these degenerates have lost countless hours, have been forced to financial ruin, have been falsely ridiculed in public opinion, and in some cases been driven to suicide
    • The government has taken no action to limit the spread of this subversive document
    • Individuals who have read this document feel a false sense of security against attacks
    • This document has been interpreted to permit hate speech, destruction of property, forced slavery, and imprisonment of innocent people
    In fact, the government has spent billions of dollars spreading this document to murderers and terrorists.

    The document in question?
    The U.S. Constitution.

    Write your Congressperson now and ask them to protect you by banning the U.S. Constitution!

  86. meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ya know. I just happen to live within walking distance of one of these depositories... so if I started making backup copies of *public documents* I guess I'd be a terrorist. yeah.

    fuck this shit. If I could, I'd be outta here.

    and if this was Tom Ridge's idea, he needs to get his ass beat. if I remember right from some random conversation, his wife's a librarian.

    MOTHERFUCKERS.

  87. What next? by Zach` · · Score: 2

    Well, it started out innocently enough. I popped up Slashdot and read the top story. Something about censorship. Clicked the news article and got taken to some LATimes article. Was reading it and then noticed "Anarchist's Cookbook."

    I'd heard of it before, but never actually read it. My curiosity was piqued and I fed in the info to Google. Luckily enough, they have a section devoted solely to this compiliation. I managed to find it after the second or third link.

    After agreeing not to use the information improperly, I found it laying before me... the Anarchist's Cookbook, in its entirety, along with an added bonus of the Terrorist's Cookbook.

    I soon found myself thinking rather nasty thoughts and reading up on interesting sections in the Anarchist's Cookbook.

    By chance, I happened to look outside my window and noticed three police cars, lights flashing, less than 50 yards from my house.

    They weren't there for me, but the effect was chilling enough. I swear I have never ALT-F4'd, deleted my History, and cleared my browser location bar so quickly in my life.

    Whew.

    1. Re:What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "By chance, I happened to look outside my window and noticed three police cars, lights flashing, less than 50 yards from my house.

      They weren't there for me, but the effect was chilling enough. I swear I have never ALT-F4'd, deleted my History, and cleared my browser location bar so quickly in my life. "

      And people say we're not in a police state...

      Citizen: No officer...I wasn't thinking any bad thoughts!!!
      Cop: we'll see what your ISP has to say about that...CHECK THE CARNIVORE, BOYS!!!
      Citizen: NNNOOOOOOOOO!!! I didn't mean to be inquisitive!! I'm sorry!! It'll never happen again!!!
      Cop: You bet it won't...TERRORIST!!!

      They weren't there for you...you're on next wednesday's list...

    2. Re:What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You state the problem perfectly.

      "They" don't NEED to crack down on us; we're doing it for them. Not that i could fault your actions, or even claim that I'd do any different; ... but you should have run screaming out the door "YES! I'm reading forbidden knowledge and I"LL DO IT AGAIN!"

      So they shoot you down. How many of us can they do that to? Are there enough free persons left in the world to refresh the tree of liberty with a bit of blood?

      too bad we can't challenge "them" to an all out UT match.

  88. I'm reminded of a quote by CtrlPhreak · · Score: 2

    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - Benjamin Franklin

    All this crap being done under the name of "homeland security", just wait till it doesn't go away after the war is over. If they ever declare the war over.

    --
    WikiAfterDark.com It's a sex wiki, go now!
    1. Re:I'm reminded of a quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This war will never be over. We've finally entered the "constant state of warfare" in Orwell's 1984.

    2. Re:I'm reminded of a quote by Peyna · · Score: 1
      I'd like to use your use of Benjamin Franklin's quote to say something. I have heard far too many people saying the opposite of that: "What's the point in freedom in your dead?" sort of statements. I've even read these statements in reader comments in Time magazine.

      Does the American public have no concept of what freedom really is? Do the people claiming life outweighs the importance of freedom have any clue what any war that we fought in the past was for? We might as well be Czechoslovakia during World War II and let Hitler roll right over us, since it's better than being dead. (no offense to Czechs, I have Czech heritage myself.)

      Whatever happened to "Give me liberty, or give me death!"?

      --
      What?
    3. Re:I'm reminded of a quote by fizban · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but here's the thing. We are no way NEAR the type of oppressive government that we fought against in the previous world wars. NO where NEAR. So, let them take a slice of the information out there. We'll see what happens. If they try and take more and more and more, and you start to see large groups of people actually AFFECTED by the removal of information, then it goes to a democratic vote and the needs of the country will be decided.

      I understand the cries of tyranny and oppression, but you people don't even understand the idea of it. The United States lives in the most open society in the world, with millions of freedoms for each individual. The blueprints of some random nuclear facility are not going to change anyone's life.

      If things DO start to affect people's everyday lives, then you'll see the public backlash, and that's beautiful. Because THAT, my friend, is democracy at work. So, I say, let them take the information. You don't need it anyway. But keep your eyes and your ears open and keep watch on your government. Your liberties aren't taken away yet and I doubt they ever will be. We haven't quite gotten to the state of Franklin's quote.

      --

      +1 Insightful, -1 Troll. What can I say, I'm an Insightful Troll.

    4. Re:I'm reminded of a quote by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      Hitler did it the same way.
      Slowly changing the rules, getting people into office and getting popular support...
      And then when he has enough rules changed.. BAM. Nazi Germany.

    5. Re:I'm reminded of a quote by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      I understand the cries of tyranny and oppression, but you people don't even understand the idea of it. The United States lives in the most open society in the world, with millions of freedoms for each individual.

      But fewer every day.


      It's not just the loss of a specific liberty that bothers me, though that would be worrisome enough. It's the growing loss of the habit of freedom... these steps aren't being justified and not enough people are asking for justification. We have an administration whose gut reaction to everything seems to be: Censor, Hide, Obscure. Remember the earlier brouhaha about the members of the Vice President's energy panel? The White House played that close to the vest because, at the root of it, they do not believe in public disclosure. Of anything. To anyone.


      The functioning of a democratic society absolutely depends on an intelligent, informed electorate. Every single attempt by the government to restrict information, to destroy data, to preclude debate must be scrutinized, debated, and, usually, resisted.


      Otherwise, all is lost. The enemies of the United States, as the Constitution reminds us, are both foreign and domestic ... and some of them, mayhaps, live and work on Pennsylvania Avenue.

    6. Re:I'm reminded of a quote by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Whatever happened to "Give me liberty, or give me death!"?

      It's time we all adopt the motto of New Hampshire, which I have always admired:


      Live free or die!

    7. Re:I'm reminded of a quote by sconeu · · Score: 2

      It's time we all adopt the motto of New Hampshire, which I have always admired:

      Live free or die


      Except, of course, for New Hampshire's Senator Judd Gregg.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  89. Awwwkkkkk FSCK!!! by tcc · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now with all this crap going around, gnutella will not only have porn, mp3 and DiVX-encoded movies and warez going around... it'll be jammed with blueprints and engineering stuff...

    I'm sure it's all a big plot to clug the bandwidth so people stop leeching warez and vids and go buy them for all the trouble it'll take to get them for free...

    ...brilliant...

    heh

    --
    --- Metamoderating abusive downgraders since my 300th post.
  90. Sunshine Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are a joke. Think about it: after a while people get used to having less freedoms and don't bother to try to get them back. Look at all the individual states who have crazy/stupid laws for the littlest of things. Notice how most of them date back to the last century? And notice how people don't bother to remove them because people forgot? What's worse is when they're actually enforced, which wastes tax dollars on those stupid laws.

  91. What about.... by base2op · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What about people who have some of this information memorized. Should they be destroyed as well?

    It kind of makes me want get the information and put it up on web server located in switzerland.

  92. Break out the flame throwers! by lkaos · · Score: 2

    It's book burning time. Well, we don't have flame resistant houses, but I'm sure the fire departments will gladly assist in the destruction of so called "sensitive documents." While there at it, lets destroy all books too because they only make people unhappy.

    It's ok for certain things to be classified, because for something to be classified, it must be registered and must be deemed worthy to classify by two government officials. There are checks and balances to make sure that things aren't just classified for no apparent reason.

    Just deciding that something is sensitive and then making all these rules about giving access to it is just ridiculus. Anyone can access classified information too, they just have to be able to demonstrate a Need-To-Know and have received appriorate security clearance.

    So now, you can be deined access if your background is shady and to be able to view this material, you must present a need to know.

    Gee, sounds to me like there is a new level of classification that is bi-passing the safeguards of classification.

    If it can be reasonably assumed, that the undisclosed release of this information is likely to cause damage to national security, then it should be classified and be treated with all the same safe guards as anything else that is confidential.

    What this is, is a loop-hole. And it probably is illegal.

    --
    int func(int a);
    func((b += 3, b));
  93. Wrong, wrong, wrong... by abumarie · · Score: 2, Funny

    Whatcha goota do is to get rid of cars. Automotive accidents cause 6 yimes as many deaths each year as did the disaster of sept 11. Further, you gotta think how much crime this would stop in general. Are you gonna rob a bank and do a getaway on a skateboard? And terrorists, if you can't have cars, you can't have air travel cuz you can't get to the airport. Whatcha gonna do? Crash a scooter into the pentagon. As usual, the silly government goes for the easy target...

    --


    Sex is heriditary, if your parents didn't have it chances are good you won't either.
  94. Too little too late... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is it they are doing so many bizarre things in the name of national security that have nothing to do with the prevention of the disaster of 9/11?

    They are trying to take advantage of this disaster to take away our rights, force us to use the computer encrytion that they want us to use and restrict access to data that is needed by the people in a democracy to make an informed decision.

    They only thing that they have done to prevent a new 9/11 is making the doors to the cockpit stronger, arming a few flight crews with stun guns and searching the passengers better.

    But there is still a huge gaping hole in airport security. Do you know that they are still just matching the bags up to the person on the airplane? They aren't searching the bags to see if there is a bomb on board, with the assumption that no one would kill themselves.

    After the events of 9/11 we can see that the people that the USA have wronged over the the past few decades have no problem at all with sacraficing their own lives to strike back at us. Sad to say, but very true.

    The only real security would be to either search every bag as well as the carryons are searched, or not to allow any bags at all.

    I don't think the Bush administration cares about security as much as they care about taking advantage of this situation to relax the restrains on the police and military, while restricting access of Americans to information they need to make informed choices about issues and canidates.
    I think a more meaningful discussion is about what we did to these people so that they would attack us in the first place? If we wronged these people then the American officials that committed the crimes should be put in court for their crimes.

    I know for a fact that we have killed many leaders and supported dictators in that region for decades now, all in the name of cheap oil. How many millions of people have we kept from democracy and in abject poverty, so that we could have 3 cars and cheap gas for those cars.

    What goes around, comes around.

    If we treated everyone with the respect and dignity that we ourselves expect, then we wouldn't have to worry about 25 college graduates with a full life ahead of them and the ability to learn to how fly a jumbo jet all killing themselves and taking thousands of Americans with them.

    Until we face these issues and solve this problem then we are going to face terrorist attacks.

  95. Look at that bonfire! by Stardo · · Score: 1

    Hey, time to start burning some books! I know this is reminiscent of something in history, but next time I go to the library I probably won't be able to pull out my favorite history book to find out because it'll probably have been destroyed.

    --

    1. Re:Look at that bonfire! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, time to start burning some books! I know this is reminiscent of
      something in history, but next time I go to the library I probably won't be
      able to pull out my favorite history book to find out because it'll
      probably have been destroyed.

      Does the word Alexandria ring a bell?

      Oh shit! Good thing I am an...

      ac

  96. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    2) Yet cries foul when asked to produce even the vaguest form of identifications such as a SS#, driver's license, non-web based email address?

    That person would cry foul for reasons you're conveniently ignoring. You remember from history class who Richard Nixon is, right? You know what Watergate is, right? You know what Nixon did to people he didn't like, right? So, if someone in the government holds a grudge against you, and you happen to legally obtain these sensitive documents, what's preventing that someone from painting you as a terrorist, now that they have a monopoly on truth and information? They have the records that you checked out those documents, they have, real or fabricated, records of your activity, and wouldn't have much difficulty convicting you in public trial of espionage or other trumped up charges.

  97. Most effective by J'raxis · · Score: 2, Funny

    Remove all the information after its published, cached, archived, and probably already been read by anyone planning to use it soon should be most effective. The next step is to try and outlaw the information itself, because we know that if its illegal to possess the information, the terists will just hand over what they have and miraculously forget what they already read, just like if we outlaw strong encryption.

    Maybe we should just get to the heart of the matter and outlaw terrorism. Oh, wait...

    1. Re:Most effective by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      But because of this, *future* information might never be made no-id-needed publicly available.

  98. Foolish... by PotatoHead · · Score: 2

    What sucks is that the information is already out there. Those that are interested in this sort of thing already have it and have mirrors too.

    Wonder if cryptome has any of this laying around?

  99. Data warehousing by LazyDawg · · Score: 2

    I think its time for people to take $50 and make archives of their favorite books, databanks or documents that the government wants banned using that wonderful piece of technology by Xerox.

    The Xerox Machine has been used for decades by people who wanted to read a reference or other unborrowable book on their own time, now it will be a handy tool for keeping certain pieces of content available.

    Sure, its an inelegant solution, but if enough people do it and make multiple off-site backups in the public domain, the appointed censors that keep passing stupid edicts like this will have to do something REALLY stupid and REALLY public.

    --
    "Look at me, I invented the stove!" -- Ben Franklin
  100. So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You people are all so full of it. The government pulls a few minor government reports and you shout that we're living in a police state. I'm so tired of hearing people shout 1984 everytime your supposed "Constitutional right" to know absolutely anything and everything you care to is violated. Get over yourselves already.

  101. So what's a body to do? by Uncle+Warthog · · Score: 1
    Sure, I can see that personal freedoms, "rights" if you will, are going down the dumper. Lately things seem to be picking up speed. The real question is this: what do we do about it?

    Well, let's start with throwing the bums out. Not the terrorists. I'm talking about the politicians who are, with this boneheaded act and many, many others like it, are finishing the terrorists' work for them. I like to think I've done my part. Perhaps not as well as I could have, but I've done what I was allowed to: I'm certainly not the one who voted them into office. Most of the folks I know whom I could convince didn't either. Unfortunately, they're still there and still in power. Let's scratch that technique off the list.

    Well, another possibility is this: Let's throw the bums out at the point of a gun. I'm certainly not the only one whose ever thought of this; Just ask any member of one of the many "militias" which have sprung up in this country over the past couple of decades (and don't let your eyes swim too much at the speed with which he or she tries to recruit you). Before any of you think I'm advocating this kind of response, let me assure you that I'm not. Bloodshed is seldom the right response to anything, this included. Bloodshed is what started all of this in the first place and I just can't bring myself to see it as a part of the solution. Let's throw this "solution" out too.

    The only other thing I can think of is to go somewhere where this sort of #^#$^$# isn't a problem. Can anyone think of somewhere where this sort of thing doesn't go on? (Again, I'm not talking about the terrorism here...) I can't, but let's assume you can. Out of those places, can you think of any that haven't or aren't in the process of adopting the U.S.A.'s way of thinking (for any of a variety of reasons, potential terrorism included)? Maybe you can, but I can't.

    So what's a body to do? I'd love to hear some good answers and I'm sure a lot of other folks would too. The clock is ticking.....

    1. Re:So what's a body to do? by J'raxis · · Score: 1
      Actually, bloodshed has always been the response, historically speaking. A society where a government has convinced the people they can effect change by mere complaint, then the government can simply ignore the complaints, is a society that can easily turn despotic.
      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
      The Declaration of Independence (emphasis added)

      Although I would have to say that I am much more amenable to flight than fight, as I dont see anyone having a chance in hell of knocking down the United States government in its current size. You wont find a country that lives according to the original intent of the founders of the United States (considering the U.S. invented that system of democracy), but some still come closer than the U.S. does now. Theres Canada, but they seem to be headed the same way the U.S. is, like you said. Australia and England, re censorship and state control of information, are far worse than the United States. If you want a country that doesnt involve itself in foreign affairs, theres Switzerland. I still think Canada is the best bet, however.

  102. Thanks Timothy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it really a fair trade to give up readily-available information about "airports, water treatment plants, nuclear reactors and more"?

    Will it take a terrorist attack on a uranium refinement plant or reactor and the deaths of tens of thousands before you accept this kind of measure?

    BTW, this is neither a troll nor offtopic!

  103. Libertarians WAS: Re:Upset; ... Fahrenheit 451 by fwc · · Score: 2
    I'm going to have to read Fahrenheit 451. From the excerpts I've read here and elsewhere it sounds omniously scary.

    Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.

    I normally don't push libertarianism in this forum, other than via my sig, but this is getting way out of control. If we want to do something about this long-term we need to work on getting people in office which share our ideals.

    After being fed up the last presidential election with the Republicrats, I decided to go out and look at the different parties. After much searching I discovered the Libertarian party.

    Without going into a long post about their ideals, I'll just summarize by saying I hear a large portion of the vocal slashdot community spouting those ideals. Perhaps the most relevant portion of their platform to this discussion is this:

    We oppose any abridgment of the freedom of speech through government censorship, regulation or control of communications media...

    I'll spew one or more two references and then shut up. If you'd like to figure out where your views really fit in with politics, the libertarian party has The World's Smallest Political Quiz which is a set of ten questions which will rank you into which area you best fit.

    For more info on the Libertarian party, click on the link in my sig...

  104. Possible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Didn't you hear? They ratified the 28th Amendment today:

    Amendment 28

    1. This amendment officially renders Amendments 1 through 27 invalid, unless otherwise specified with an executative order.

    2. All existing states shall be consolidated into 5 milirary districts, for the purposes of control. All state Constitutions are hereby invalid.

    3. Christanity is the only permitted religion in the United States. Any attempt to practice atheism or any other religion shall be considered treason. Any violation of the 10 Commandments shall be punishable by death.

    4. The Supreme Court and Congress shall disband immediately. The Executative Branch and the military shall assume control of government functions.

    [not.]

    P.S. - I bet Ashcroft is having a wet dream just thinking about this.

  105. Do we elect these people? by Ashcrow · · Score: 1

    Do we? Generally speaking the people want security officers who know what they are doing as much as possible. Would we want to put a garbage man friend-of-a-polotician the role of head CERT offical. Heck no! So why do we seem to always get these knee jerk reactions for covering up information that is, well, informative?

    This isn't the America I read about in books.

  106. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Western+Light · · Score: 1

    "discrepancy" merely describes being at variance or disagreeing which can at times coexist to create a paradox.

    Where is the discrepancy?

    The discrepancy lies in wanting to have your cake and eat it too.

    "We have the right to demand accountability from our government."

    Yes we do. But our government is not an abstract concept. It is made up of us, the citizenry, people like you and me. It is not equally acceptable that the citizenry can expect some meager form of accountability from a citizen who wants access to potentially sensitive information?

    That's not what you said, nor was it what I was referring to. You were talking about people who demand information from their government but dislike providing information to others, as if they were hypocritical for doing so. I merely pointed out that that is not the case.

    I misunderstood. I thought your disagreement was substantive, not semantical.

  107. Ironic, isn't it? by BarefootClown · · Score: 2

    Ironically, the story mentions another bit of government suppression of information:

    In the past, it has taken a tragedy to buck the trend toward more and greater public access. That's what happened in California in 1989 after actress Rebecca Schaeffer was shot to death at her Los Angeles home by an obsessed fan who used publicly available motor vehicle records to find out where she lived. The state quickly cut off public access to such records.

    So the same government that has been invading our privacy and publishing the data now says that "some things shouldn't be made public." The same government that says we shouldn't be allowed to hide things that might be used against us has decided to hide things that might be used against us. I wonder if this new-found interest in information security will also be applied to our personal information. (Now taking bets.)

    --

    "Make it ten--I am only a poor corrupt official."
    --Captain Louis Renault (Claude Rains), Casablanca

  108. If it is available in lots of places... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I guess if it is available in a lot of places, it's OK to destroy a few since we have copies. Yes?

  109. your a fool by abolith · · Score: 1

    first the kind of info they are wanting to destroy is not super sensitive in nature. It doe snot include the presidents motor route. the things we are talking about is simple information, nothing life threatening. however what is to stop them from doing what Nazi germany did and start outlawing other forms of information ??
    I am remindd of a quote tho I can't remember where from.
    "Beware of those who would deny you information, for in thier hearts they dream themselves your master"

    --
    if you want "No More Hiroshimas" then I say "You First. No More Pearl Harbors."
    1. Re:your a fool by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      It doe snot include the presidents motor route. the things we are talking about is simple information, nothing life threatening.

      Nor anything essential for you to conduct a full and happy life. Why do you need detailed information about the structure of the Hoover Dam, for crissake?

      Any nut with a hijacked airliner can find the Hoover Dam, but it takes detailed knowledge to determine exactly where impact will create the most damage.

      Nobody's mentioned the cloistering of any info that I expect to miss. Ir is regrettable the the Freedom of Information Act has been gutted -- if that were the issue that turned Slashotters into crybabies, I'd be wetting my diapers right along with you. But the governemnt recalling data about national infrastructure, making it harder to obtain, makes plenty of sense to me.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    2. Re:your a fool by jmauro · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nor anything essential for you to conduct a full and happy life. Why do you need detailed information about the structure of the Hoover Dam, for crissake?

      You might live down stream from the dam and want to know the possiblity/probablity of complete collaspe if some nut wanted to ram a plane into it. I really doubt that nut would want that information at all, or even most of the information being removed.

      There is legitmate reasons about wanting data about things near where you live or want to live. Would you like to know that a chemical plant exchanges its water near where the cities intake is? Most of this information was used to calculate risks in areas and to know who is doing what. Taking it away does nothing to really help national security, but does everything to pervent people from being informed about what the government and others are doing to the communities in which they live.

    3. Re:your a fool by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      "the things we are talking about is simple information, nothing life threatening."

      You've read it all?

    4. Re:your a fool by Tassach · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Why do you need detailed information about the structure of the Hoover Dam, for crissake?

      Maybe because I'm studying Civil Engineering, moron.
      But more to the point, it's because the government has NO FUCKING BUSINESS telling me what I can and cannot read, write, say, or publish, nor may they dictate how or to whom I may pray, nor may they tell me what groups I may join. The government is EXPLICITLY FORBIDDEN to do any of these things, and if it does so it has surrendered any claim of legitimacy it may have.
      Any nut with a hijacked airliner can find the Hoover Dam, but it takes detailed knowledge to determine exactly where impact will create the most damage.

      Detailed knowledge? Hardly. All you need is to read a college level physics textbook, or even apply a little common sense. In theory, the ideal place to hit it would at the base, where the stress is the greatest; however, this is also where the structure is the strongest, so you run the risk of not damaging the structure sufficiently to cause a catastrophic failure if you fail to hit it hard enough. Therefore, you probably want to hit the structure at it's thinnest point (top center) and try for a progressive failure -- make a small hole, and hope that the force of the water rushing out gradually causes more of the structure to fail. [actually the BEST way to burst a big dam is to burst a smaller one upstream]
      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    5. Re:your a fool by mpe · · Score: 2

      Nor anything essential for you to conduct a full and happy life. Why do you need detailed information about the structure of the Hoover Dam, for crissake?
      Any nut with a hijacked airliner can find the Hoover Dam, but it takes detailed knowledge to determine exactly where impact will create the most damage.


      Do you also have armed guards for the people who built it? Best also get rid of all the records of Sir Barnes Wallace too :)

    6. Re:your a fool by grahamm · · Score: 1

      Maybe at the moment not many people need information on the structure of the hoover dam. However, in two or three hundred years this information may be invaluble to historians. It is a function of libraries not only to provide today's information today but to preserve current information for future generations.

    7. Re:your a fool by Jonathan_S · · Score: 1

      Or watch the history channel sometime. In WWII the British had a special squadron of planes to blow up German damns, the way they did it was to get the explosive [barrel in this case] to drop most of the way down the damn on the water side; because water transfers pressure and therefore explosions more efficiently than air.

      How hard do you think it would be for somebody to rig a big explosive, drag it behind a boat and then go fishing near a major damn?

      Extensive structural knowledge is necessary if you want to use a minimum of explosive, or want to control some aspect of the collapse, otherwise you can go the brute force and ignorance route.

    8. Re:your a fool by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      Dambusters. Damn fine movie. Loved the Deathstar sequence!

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  110. Documents don't kill people by richardoz · · Score: 1

    Documents don't kill people. People kill people.

    --
    All the worlds indeed a .sig, and we are mearly players..
  111. Seen this before... by Eddie+the+Jedi · · Score: 2, Informative
    Looks like the Gubmint is stealing another page from the old Soviet Union playbook. Begining with Stalin's regime (or possibly even Lenin's), an important part of the USSR's defense against invaders was that accurate maps were considered state secrets. All published maps were intentionally made inaccurate—by changing the locations of roads, towns, landmarks, etc., or adding new ones where none actually existed.

    Time for me to go dig up that old 'Ask Slashdot' article about which country now most deserves the title "Land of the Free."

    --
    The dog ate my .sig quote.
    1. Re:Seen this before... by T-Lex · · Score: 1

      Absolutely, right on point. I was about to say the same thing, but thought I'd search and see if anyone else had mentioned this.

      How ironic is this? Every time freedoms are diminished in war, there is a consensus that it was wrong and shouldn't happen again. Thousands died in meaningless violence in September, should we add to that tragedy by allowing our freedoms to be curtailed?

      Isn't it about time we learned this lesson?

      It seems easy enough to understand that we need to sacrifice to remain free when we view it in terms of soldiers overseas, but we too must do what it takes to maintain our liberties here at home.

  112. ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1984

  113. Why can I not mod this +1, "Tragic"? by dpilot · · Score: 2

    And at the moment, I've even got the points. But it's currently marked "Funny", and maybe it would be, if it weren't true.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  114. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Western+Light · · Score: 1

    You know what Watergate is, right?

    A testament to how well the system works -- that no individual is more important than the system -- even if that individual is the President of the United States

    what's preventing that someone from painting you as a terrorist, now that they have a monopoly on truth and information? There is nothing preventing "them" from painting "you" any way they like. That is the andvantage/disadvantage right of a free media. To restrain that right would be censorship. Even Bush, Clinton and others have regularly been portrayed as terrorists in various media. However, there is no monopoly on truth or information in this country. And who is the "they" you are referring to?

  115. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  116. Office of Homeland Security =?= Nightwatch by pantherace · · Score: 1
    For those of you who watched babylon 5, think about how easily something supposedly for peace & happyness turn incrementally into a SS like group. The Office of Homeland Security has never been for the improvement of happiness, so they seem to be further down the road to something very bad.
    They just strike me as similar.

    My great hope is that I am paranoid, because if I am not, we are fscked. (Disclaimer: I am rather pessimistic about humanity.)

  117. Re:Quit yer bitchin'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey. Quit yer whinin', bitch.

  118. Book Burning.... by metacosm · · Score: 1

    I am all for anti-terrorism and all that, but if BOOK BURNING(information destruction) doesn't raise some red flags, maybe terrorism isn't the thing we have to fear the most.

    I want to be safe, but at what price...

  119. Firstly, it's "you're", not "your". by FallLine · · Score: 2

    Secondly, that's my point, that we CAN say that some information should not be so readily published without being pushed ANY closer to a Nazi regime. [In other words, you're contradicting yourself, at least by implication that we should NOT publish the President's motorcade details.] Thirdly, what stops us is the same thing that would allow us, should we choose to do so, to stop this action in the first place: our Legislative, Executive, and Judicial process.

    1. Re:Firstly, it's "you're", not "your". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, chill out. You corrected someone's grammar in the subject of your message? With all those caps, add a "BZZZZT, YOU'RE WRONG!!" and you have all the makings of the worst argument ever. Don't lower yourself to that level, just make your point and stay cool. It's just Slashdot.

    2. Re:Firstly, it's "you're", not "your". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but the 'worst argument ever' post would also have to NOT contain a sensible argument in there.

      "BZZT YOU'RE WRONG" doesn't help the argument, but it makes it more fun when you're right.

  120. No brainer. by be-fan · · Score: 2

    Why is anybody surprised about this? The US government is simply trying to protect citizens. They're using the time-tested and mature method of security through obscurity. If the terrorists have trouble getting information about something, how can they blow it up? Its the same method that made Microsoft products so damn bullet-proof, and it will definatly make the US a safer place to live!

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    1. Re:No brainer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Out of curiousity, have you ever read 1984?

    2. Re:No brainer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure he was kidding. Bulletproof Microsoft products? Security through Obscurity works?

      PS Read Brave New World, it's more frightening ;)

  121. "Information at your fingertips" by Dr.+Nonsense · · Score: 2, Informative
    Govt printing office access site

    Find your local Federal Depository - the 1,350 libraries that they are asking (telling? ordering?) to destroy documents.

    Go talk to the librarians, ask their opinions, voice your opinion, read some documents, see how or if they are actually disposing of them, etc.
    I wonder how long it is before we can no longer access this list.

  122. Freenet Now! by Vegan+Pagan · · Score: 2

    If there was ever a reason to use Freenet, this is it.

  123. Government Doc Repositories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a librarian in Central Texas. I've done research in various doc. repositories around the state. The people who run these things are rabid. They won't give up the docs. I doubt they would even agree to have any sort of definitive sign in process. The gov. puts out *so* much paper that alot of these places are years behind in making the documents available. These people will fight the fight, even in these times.

  124. 1984 Style by chew8bitsperbyte · · Score: 1

    This sounds just like the "Ministry of Truth" as I believe it was called from 1984. For those of you who don't know, the Truth office was in charge of destroying historical documents that had any content that was against the beliefs of the government. People had to go back and rewrite historical events so that the government was always "on top". hmmm, only 17 years too late, but hey... at least we got there!

  125. funny, I thought people already did that by Erris · · Score: 1
    Data warehousing might be what saves us in the future from this sort of insanity. Yes, it would have to have significant funding to work,

    Excellent! We can get together to solve this problem. We can build proper repositories of information so that all people can read and learn. The place must be large and well airconditioned to preserve the things put there. It's called a library. If we really get enough public support we can make a University so that people can be guided in their learning, organize the materials stored in the library and create new content for the library.

    Computers and technology are not going to save you. The government has ordered the burning of books. The USA act gave the federal government access to any and all databases, so you can't hide there. While it is possible to set up distributed encrypted libraries, the network itself is not under your control.

    The only defense is to point out the folly. Hiding "Evil" information will insure that only evil people have it when it's needed. This will not make the world any safer, it will make it dumber.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
  126. I hope Google backs stuff up by plankers · · Score: 1
    I hope Google or another search engine backs things up. Google has a caching mechanism that would enable people to retrieve the documents that have been destroyed, so I hope we can retrieve them and publish them again.

    Unfortunately, our government is acting on their belief that the people they serve are a danger to the publicly-elected officials.

  127. Orwell said it best by CleverNickName · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ignorance Is Strength

    It's true that our American way of life is under attack...at least Bush, Ashcroft and the rest of them got that one right.

  128. Furthermore... by gregm · · Score: 1

    Congress has also declared that locations and schedules for the following: shopping malls, highschool football schedules, church services, boyscout jamborees and tupperware parties shall not be given out to the general public in an attempt to keep us all safe. Anyone wishing to find out any of the aforementioned top secret info should register with the thought police to get clearance.

    Also a number of subjects are now considered dangerous and contraban. Anyone caught teaching or even knowing about electricity, metal shop, chemistry, automechanics, water purification and/or piloting an airplane shall be lobotomizd unless proper security clearance can be obtained. That is all.

  129. You just don't get it... by Millennium · · Score: 2

    Law does not prevent crime. There is a reason for this, namely, because laws are absurdly easy to disobey. So easy, in fact, that you and I probably break laws every day, most of which we're not even aware of.

    To counterbalance this, laws have to be crafted to make them impossible to disobey. For example, rather than saying "action x is prohibited" (which anyone can do) you say "action x is punishable by sentence y" (which then leaves the matter to the courts to obey or disobey, and obeying the law is basically what courts do, so you're safe).

    If you want to prevent crime, there is only one way: education, not legislation. And even this will fail sometimes. That is something a free society must accept; sometimes the bad guy will get away with crimes, but this is worth it if the innocent remain free because of it.

    All governmental actions like this do is keep the information out of the hands of innocent, law-abiding citizens who have legitimate reasons (or at least non-malicious ones) for not wanting the data. Criminals will get whatever it is they want, no matter what you do, so the difference that these orders make is negligible at best.

    1. Re:You just don't get it... by mpe · · Score: 2

      Law does not prevent crime. There is a reason for this, namely, because laws are absurdly easy to disobey.

      Also if someone is going to disobey one they are quite likely to not care if they disobey more than one...

      For example, rather than saying "action x is prohibited" (which anyone can do) you say "action x is punishable by sentence y" (which then leaves the matter to the courts to obey or disobey, and obeying the law is basically what courts do, so you're safe).

      If someone is prepared to risk sentence Y they are also tend to be perfectly willing to enguage in actions with a lesser sentence. e.g. someone prepared to shoot people isn't likely to be worried if they do so with an illegally held firearm whilst trespassing.

  130. Enter the dark ages by Reziac · · Score: 1
    I can't help but think of the burning of the Great Library of Alexandria. Or of the destruction of early scientific documents during the Dark Ages, because they disagreed with dogma. Or of Fahrenheit 451. Or of 1984. Or of 2001, the year the Second Dark Ages really started.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    1. Re:Enter the dark ages by Essron · · Score: 1

      I agree. Game over. Batten down the hatches.

  131. Just out of curiousity.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..anyone want to take bets on how long it'll be before you won't even be allowed to know what your tax dollars are being spent on? "I'm sorry, sir, but we're going to have to repossess your car. Why? You haven't paid all of your income tax. Yes, I'm aware that it's risen, sir..no, I can't tell you. Homeland security." Homeland security is the same sort of bullshit as "home-style," or "like mom used to make." It's supposed to make you feel all good and fuzzy inside, but it's really just used to disguise the fact that you're being handed a big, steaming pile of bullshit.

  132. If knowledge is outlawed... by Vegan+Pagan · · Score: 2

    ...then only outlaws will have knowledge.

  133. Security through Obscurity myth by Tom7 · · Score: 2


    Security through Obscurity is not automatically bad. In fact, security through obscurity is pretty damn good, especially in the real world where reconaissance is much more difficult. (In the digital world, intercepting data or playing with a digital black box in your basement is much easier.)

    A well-designed system AND obscurity is a harder target than a well-designed system alone. The warning about security through obscurity is to those amateur cryptographers who think that cooking up a secret algorithm will get them mathematically sound security. The rule just doesn't apply in the same way to physical security. (Would you post a sign on your door saying, "I have tens of thousands of dollars in my safe, but my vault is secure!"?)

    That said, I'm still against hiding this information simply because it's ineffectual. They'd probably be better off tracking people who looked it up; that'd be just as bad a civil rights infraction, but might actually make a difference...

  134. The Librarian Faith by snarkh · · Score: 1
    I believe in Librarians too much for that.


    Do we see the beginnings of a new religion there?

  135. OH? by xant · · Score: 2
    Gimme a break. These people need to get re-elected.


    Not if they succeed.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
    1. Re:OH? by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

      Excuse me. I happen to personally know many current and former members of the US armed forces who would be the first to revolt if any of our governmental leaders tried to illegally maintain their power.

    2. Re:OH? by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      There may be a few but most would simply obey their superiors like they were trained to do.
      I spent my time in the military and my observation was that most people would most like go awol if they could or just do what they are told. You and your buddies may try and do something but let's face it you are no match against the combined armament of the entire US military infrastructure. you would be killed like the tens of thousands of taliban or the hundreds of thousands of iraquis.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

  136. I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument... by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:

    Btw, I would not at all be surprised, for instance, if Saddam Hussain got more worthwhile intelligence from the likes of CNN (e.g., troup movements, morale, technology, etc) in the comfort of his bedroom than he did from his entire intelligence service during the Gulf War.

    I'd be surprised. And it's starting to bother me that these old tired saws are trotted out time and again. Where is the evidence that Hussein does this? That the 9/11 terrorists used public data? That any of the Orwellian measures being proposed, had they been in place, would have actually prevented these atrocities?


    Before we sign away all our traditional freedoms and legacies -- and opennes of government is certainly one of these -- perhaps we should be asking more questions about the effectiveness of the "solutions" and the motives of the people pushing them.

  137. 1984 memory holes, anyone? by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1

    This is exactly what goes on in George Orwell's 1984. Information that is considered harmful to the government's control is thrown in memory holes, where it is taken by vacuum to huge furnaces (they burn a LOT of documents in 1984).

    This kind of move will only take away from the average citizen's knowledge of his country, and won't take anything away from the terrorists. If they want to know something, they can find out with little or no trouble.

  138. predictable /. reply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    uniformly libertarian atheism...don't even bother with the comments.

  139. Re:I'm reminded of a quote-Assumptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your making an assumption.That the citizentry is diligent. That the citizentry will recognize the loss of it's freedoms. Remember you can drop a frog into a pan of boiling water and it will jump out. Place it in a cold pan of water and raise the tempature and it will slowly boil to death. People have shown a great amout of apathy concerning matters that don't affect them immediately. Before WTC most people didn't know anything about afghanistan, nor muslims. Now is different. look what it took.

  140. Wrong source. by BryanHughes · · Score: 1

    The feds need to shutdown most of the news media. It seems to me that they are the ones providing most of the information the "highly intelligent terrorists" are using to attack America. By the way, would someone show me one thing that the terrorists have done so far that requires an I.Q. over 10?

  141. Contrast (aka RTFA) by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:

    People, this is about not being quite so liberal with the plans for our US infrastructure. Note the article says that the information was "yanked", and not destroyed.

    Blockquoth the LA Times article:

    So a Syracuse University library clerk broke the disc into pieces, saving a single shard to prove that the deed was done.


    OK, if some of the more radical quantum infortmation theorists are right, information can't really ever be destroyed. But I think it falls within the commonly-accepted use of "destroyed" when we start smashing CD-ROMs.



    What's next? Torch-lit parades and book-burning rallies?

  142. mod me as a troll? here it is again. by 3am · · Score: 1

    what, you read fahrenheit 451, 1984, brave new world, animal farm, and suddenly you're some sort of expert in the world of politics?

    i don't even think you read 1984 if you think the world we live in vaguely resembles that book. you do orwell a disservice to suggest otherwise.

    if you want to have a taste of what he was writing of, think of the khemer rouge, the USSR in the 40s-50s, PRC in the 80s, and iraq today. this was what orwell was warning us of. in cambodia, people were killed for wearing glasses - that being a sign of being a member of the intelligentsia. for control of thought and ideology, the USSR and PRC were both world ahead of where we stand in the US. you can still be jailed in China for being a part of the falung gong, loosely classifiable as a religion. the only news you would get is from the state-run media.

    you spoiled, spoiled person. of course we need to be vigilante, or people will try to take away our rights for their own power. but to paint a picture where we have close to the situation in 1984 is outright nonsense. 80% of the world doesn't enjoy the rights we do in the US. and if you don't want to end up in an orwellian dystopia, then vote these people out of office. we still live in a democracy, lest you forget.

    --

    A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
  143. Oh my... by Nemesis][ · · Score: 1

    Ack! The government is following M$s advice....

    ...guess that answers that question!

  144. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is a SS# and drivers license vague identification?

  145. God help this country by i1984 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Of any story I can remember reading on Slashdot, this one is the most frustrating and depressing.

    Information is the lifeblood of a free society governed by the consent of the governed. If information is destroyed (or even made inaccessible to all but the most determined individuals armed with subpoenas), the practical effect is that the governed don't know what we're consenting to. Policies that prevent open disclosure of information are ripe for exploitation as tools to conceal embarrassing information. Public outrage is a powerful motivator in an open society, but how can the public express outrage when the information that would prompt such outrage may be cloistered away by embarrassed bureaucrats who can simply claim the information could be dangerous in the wrong hands?

    I have news for everyone: almost any information can be dangerous in certain circumstances. What our illustrious and infallible (ok, only 89% infallible) administration has apparently decided is that information no longer need be imminently dangerous to fall subject to the censors. Unfortunately potentially dangerous covers a lot of vague territory (or perhaps fortunately if that information contains something personally embarrasing to you).

    Now if the chemical plant down the street is poisoning your water, you just have to hope that the regulators responsible for letting the water become contaminated don't decide that the chemicals aren't too scary to talk about. If you live downstream from a dam, don't bother asking why/if the security team failed their last test. Just trust that everything will be Ok; you don't need to know about it!

    This isn't about not trusting government. I don't distrust government, rather I doubt that everyone in government will always necessarily do the right things. Individually government consists of people with emotions, agendas, visions, and goals that I may not share. I can't trust that without meaningful oversight and clearly defined standards for making information secret, that everyone who governs will always do the right thing. You see, open information means I don't have to trust those in government.

    Unfortunately, it is in times of crisis that open government is most important, because it is easiest to precipitate abuse when there is 89% approval and everyone is looking the other way. In fact, it is considered unpatriotic to even suggest that times of crisis are times of opportunity for abuse.

    We know that with attention diverted, this would be the perfect time to make politically unpopular decisions: give vast tax breaks to huge companies, strip away environmental regulations, invalidate laws in states that legalize doctor assisted suicide, etc... Why can we rest assured that no lower level bureaucrat might take advantage of the situation to obfuscate potentially embarrasing or dangerous agency screw-ups?

    Our military has many legitimate secrets, but as the agency given the greatest freedom to keep its activities secret, it has not done an excellent job of obeying the spirit of the law. Now with civilian agencies also keeping secrets (that I believe everyone agrees are less threatening than military secrets) isn't the potential for abuse proportionally greater?

    If there is necessity to obscure information -- and sometimes that's hard to say because we don't know what information is being blocked -- then there should be extremely clear guidelines on exactly what should be controlled. Information that does not pose an imminent security danger should still be made available, but perhaps with some authentication of those requesting it, i.e., require written request and valid ID. Finally, the clearly defined regulations limiting access should automatically expire after five years unless Congress decides that there are ongoing security risks that require an extension of the controls. Of course it goes without saying that the information should not be destroyed.

    Doubtless some of you may take the view that we need to surrender some of our typical openness to secure the safety our our nation. To this I would respond that: a) by surrendering openness we're simultaneously surrendering security -- we just don't know how much; b) if something must be surrendered we should consider very carefully what should be surrendered and how we should do so; and c) we must keep in mind that information is a double edged sword and our society is based upon the assumption that openness is our guarantee of freedom. This country would look very different without freedom of information; please consider very carefully where to draw that line.

    There are consequences to viewing open information as our enemy. I can only hope that more rational minds soon prevail; rights surrendered in times of crisis are rarely returned.

    Of course, all this is an aside to the question of the efficacy of blocking the information...

    It would be much easier to avoid the allusions to Orwellian horrors if our own government didn't insist on Orwellian policies labeled with positively Orwellian names.

    Of course, Farenheit 451 also hasn't been more relevant anytime in recent memory than now. I hope everyone reads it.

    God help this country.

    1. Re:God help this country by mrBoB · · Score: 1
      There is a problem with most Americans when November rolls around and its time to vote... They either don't care, or are not educated (enough) in the way our Government and Country operate. They assume that elected officals will keep their best interests at heart. They also seem to think that the only options are the ass and elephant.

      You know, we've had several "political groups" in this country over its history. However, the only thing that is permanent, insofar as you and I are responsible citizens and vote is the following: senators and representatives (and pretty much any other "public figure," like entertainment figures, stars and musicians) are just like you and me. Sure those senators and representatives may have different educations and ideals, but that really doesn't mean anything on election day. They're Americans, they were born of woman, live, pay taxes, and die. (You/We) Americans have a responsibility on election day to vote for the person who best represents _OUR_ ideals. Since the Roman Republic proved that a citzenry that votes on _everything_ is too archaic, our system of representation is _PERHAPS_ the best thing; time will tell. I don't think most people truly grasp how great our Founding Fathers were when it came to philosphy, politics, economics, etc. Their brilliance is one of the reasons you and I able to sit here and discuss this. To keep our system running the way our Founding Fathers intended (and those of us RESPONSIBLE CITIZENS), we must vote. But being a responsible voter, a responsible citizen requires more than one day a year.

      Every day a law is debated, every day we don't stay in contact with our represenatatives is another day they work without guidance. Get in contact with them! Also try to be a little keen on the issues. Every elected official in this coutry SWEARS to uphold and defend the Constitution.

      Another important document that most people know nothing about is the US Code. It has more impact in your daily life than the Constitution. The Constitution serves as a GUIDE; US Code contains actual LAWS that citizen must ABIDE by. Look it up; it's pretty important.

      Basically it boils down to: become informed. You can't vote responsibly if you don't know whats going on.
      -Bob

  146. Freedom of the press and self-censorship by Nonesuch · · Score: 2
    Danheskett writes:
    Next time you hear your favorite song on the radio, and they change "fuck" or "shit" or "bitch" to something else or just bleep it out, be aware that its because the government told them they couldn't play that on the air or print it in the press.

    Wrong.

    When a newspaper prints or does not print profanity, it is not 'because the government told them they couldn't ... print it in the press", it is because the Editor decided not to include it so as not to offend the readership and taint the 'family' attitude of a particular paper.

    There is no government pressure on newspapers not to print 'fuck', and there have been many cases in the past couple of years of major papers printing 'fuck'. In eaach case, the decision is made by the editors, without giving a damn what the government thinks.

    In much of the 'old school' newspaper business, the 'First amendment' is more important than life itself. A newspaper may engage in self-censorship, where they choose to print or omit 'fuck' or 'shit' based on how the readers will respond, how the editorial board of the newspaper want to present the issue and the paper itself, and how the word fits into the story... but not because of government pressure.

    1. Re:Freedom of the press and self-censorship by Rinikusu · · Score: 1

      As an example, Howard Stern's radio station had to pay thousands of fines for his use of profanity on his show. The kicker was that the made more money on advertising, so they were glad to let "the shock jock" continue. On a reasonable level.

      I don't know why papers and the like censor shit, piss, fart, cunt, cocksucker, motherfucker, tits, fart, dirty twat. I don't know of a specific ordinance other than local "obscenity" laws that would be applicable, so the point regarding "mass acceptance" may be pretty valid.

      Personally, fuck's just another word.

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    2. Re:Freedom of the press and self-censorship by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference between "sanitizing" language and real censorship. If I call you a ***king @$$hole, you know exactly what I mean, even though the actual words are bleeped out. If an airline safety report is deleted for "security reasons" you don't even know it exists - unless you're a terrorist who already has a copy of the info.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  147. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Legion303 · · Score: 1
    I misunderstood. I thought your disagreement was substantive, not semantical.

    It was. I regret that you still can't see the difference between demanding information from the government (individual government employees are still representatives of the government, regardless of your semantic games) and demanding information from normal citizens (whom I believe compromise more of the Slashdot readership than government employees do).

    When you understand the difference, you'll understand that there is nothing wrong with demanding accountability from the government while striving to protect personal privacies.

    -Legion

  148. Maybe we should ban guns? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know someone might use a gun to do something that might threaten national security? Maybe we should make all guns unavailable. I think we should ask all gun shops to destroy all guns they have in stock.

  149. The big obscenity here..... by Newer+Guy · · Score: 1

    The big obscenity here isn't September 11th. It's our own government USING September 11th to take away our liberties! These law enforcement republican zealots are using the worst thing to ever happen to the United States to further erode the freedoms that we hold dear. They wave the flag, and Congress says "yup yup yup" and passes things that they've been rejecting for years as major invasions of our privacy. Want to know the really scary thing? Sen. Leahy of Vermont is now speaking up on how: "all our liberies have been taken away"... Uhm excuse me Senator but DIDN'T YOU VOTE FOR THIS BILL??? That's the scary part...these clowns (obviously) vote for things they have no clue about...then they say: "oops" once they realize that their constituents are pissed at them for doing so. Maybe we need to make a new movie: "Mr. Moron goes to Washington"!

    1. Re:The big obscenity here..... by mrBoB · · Score: 1

      "Mr Moron goes to Washington" would be a big production, considering the Senate and House (not including aides) is what 600+?! Anyway, just kidding you ;-) All we can do is vote, folks ...
      -Bob

  150. Uh oh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They missed a spot! [not REALLY anonymizer.com]

  151. Bad Sportsmanship? by stinkydog · · Score: 2

    Sam Lowry: Excuse me, Dawson, can you put me through to Mr. Helpmann's office?

    Dawson: I'm afraid I can't sir. You have to go through the proper channels.

    Sam Lowry: And you can't tell me what the proper channels are, because that's classified information?

    Dawson: I'm glad to see the Ministry's continuing its tradition of recruiting the brightest and best, sir.

    Sam Lowry: Thank you, Dawson.

    Welcome to the United States

    SD

    --
    âoeWho knew something as harmless as willful ignorance could end up having real consequences?â
  152. Landmarks to be closed to the public... by mrBoB · · Score: 1
    Anyone who has gone on a tour at any of our major lankmarks in this country already know the tactical wealth of knowledge that the tour-guides spew. You can find out almost anything, including building materials, height (obviously), depth, thickness in (some) location. Take for example, the wonderous tidbits at this site. Now assume you have malicious intent AND a background in XYZ (ballistics, explosives, nuclear theory, etc). Hell, Atta et al prolly went on a couple of tours in the WTC towers. We _KNOW_ for a _FACT_ that most criminals "CASE" a joint before committing their acts. It doesn't take a genious to figure out that _ANY_ information can and do serve both purposes, malicious and good. Considering all these things, I think it is imperative that _ALL_ major US (and possibly World-Wide) Landmarks be closed indefinately, at least untill we can be certain the world is safe for all civilized people.

    Thank you,
    Bob

    PS. If you can't tell, I'm speaking facetiously. I think I have made my point.

  153. as a librarian.... by blisspix · · Score: 1

    i'm really sad that we as a profession have no protection against the will of the government.

    We have our freedom to read policies, but they are worthless against this kind of bullying.

    Libraries have been under threat from so many different challenges, so that just proves how powerful information is.

    Unfortunately, the ALA is not an especially strong lobby group and this situation is unlikely to end soon.

    As an Australian, I can only say how glad I am that our government has not resorted to this kind of action.... yet.

  154. Bin Ladin has Aleady won by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/releases/01facts/99mortali ty.htm
    in 1999:
    44,536 deaths from Alzheimer's
    28,874 persons died from firearm.
    19,102 persons died of drug-induced causes.
    19,171 persons died in 1999 from alcohol-induced causes.

    In 2001:
    ~5000 ppl died in 2001 due to terrorist.
    ~5 ppl have a died from a local terrorist group with anthrax.

    So where do we focus our energy and money?
    On stopping dangerous information from going out to US citizens. BTW, more money is now being spent on "homeland defense" than on Research.
    Pretty soon it will be the "fatherland" that must be protected at ALL cost.

    The funny thing is, this information is available in libraries in britain, italy, france, canada. Basically in all free countries. Bush and cronies are stripping us of our rights and liberties and many have not learned from our and others past abuses. This information that bush/ashcroft want hidden is easily gleaned from so many other sources that ony we suffer.
    It is amazing that these idiots who understand the danger of having our gun rights stripped would so quickly strip us of our information rights and liberties.

  155. During WWII... by mshiltonj · · Score: 0

    IIRC, During WWII in England, the govt had taken down all the street signs and stopped the sale of maps. This was to stop (or at least slow down) german spies who made it to the shore.

    Street signs are back up and we can all buy maps of london.

    How is this any different?

    Not that I support this action. I'm ambivalent at best. I do think Bush is abusing his power to some degree. But OTOH, I don't want the "Detailed Security Plans for Nuclear Reactor X" manual easily available to Osama and his cronies, either.

    1. Re:During WWII... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Willkommen to The United States of East Berlin, in this great year of the Fatherland, 2001!

      Anyone own the movie Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade? Fast forward to the part where all the Nazi's parade around the huge bonfire of government ordered books to be burned. Lovely.

      It's a good time to be American isn't it?

      Time to set up the camps, only this time, let's burn the Schindler's first, yes?

      Arbeit Macht Frei

  156. Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

    Have you ever heard of preventative measures? we are castigating the CIA for not preventing the Sept. event; would we not castigate the US government if another event occured, this time from publically available info?

  157. Calutrons, not cyclotrons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The terms are easily confused, I'd say.

  158. If you have money. by digit · · Score: 1

    If you have money than you can find out the info you waht. But to stop poor me to find info is not right!

  159. Genius at work.... by F34RL3SS+L34D3R · · Score: 1

    This makes a load of sense doesn't it. Lets "protect" our citizens from terrorists by taking away their access to government information. This type of knee-jerk reaction has been tried in the past and HAS NEVER and WILL NEVER WORK!

    About a year ago, I was purusing(?) the web and came across a bunch of active DARPA projects, specifically biological, technological, and military. I was blown away at the detail with which they described and outlined the project, its goals, and its overall implementation. I emailed the DARPA contact for questions concerning DARPA projects and asked him why this information was available on the web, and much less to the public at all (I know that may be a little naive, but there are some things I think the public doesn't need to know). Anyways, I recieved an email back stating that due to international security agreements or some shit, that we must provide information about our military projects (DARPA) to our allies over seas. That also meant it was provided for our enemies as well.

    I have many mixed feelings when it comes to our governments role in the global stage. This example above, is one instance in which I totally and completely disagree. This information should be kept within the confines of the intelligence community(contradiction). PERIOD. Information about landmarks, geographical data and so forth I could care less about. If you remove the ability for terrorists to physically attack us within our countries border, what does it matter what information is out there?

  160. Slashdot, Interview John W. Berry! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need to Slashdot interview John W. Berry the President of the American Library Association and establish whether or not the ALA is for or against removing this information from libraries. We must find out if librarians are for or against this, and we must get an unequivocal answer. If they are for this, there is no use in trying to preserve this information in libraries, or we must get librarians who care about this to stand up and speak out against this. The best thing we can do is give a chance for the right people to go on record about this. It's all we can do in a country where we still have the right to public discourse.

    Do not let the rights your forefathers paid for in blood be signed away by the stroke of a pen.

  161. New use for gnutella by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And we all thought gnutella would only be used for pr0n and warez. Time to start file sharing all those "hot" documents on risk management and civil engineering!

  162. Fuck you Fascist Pig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Democracy doesn't work unless crackpots like us continue to question authority. If you think the big picture gets anywhere close to your level you have no understanding of the system you work within.

    The current conditions are very dangerous, especially with an appointed leader, like Dubya. The US is showing many similarities to Germany during the rise of the Nazi party. Idiots call CNN and ask why we aren't using nukes. I think the average American wouldn't mind having their neighbor disappear as long as they heard rumors at the office. In fact, if Pat Robertson was declared king and all non-christians in the country were asked to leave, i think most folks in my midwestern home town would breath a sigh of relief. To watch CNN and not feel manipulated by extreme propaganda is plain stupid.

    These are very dangerous times, but not because of bombs and terrorists. We will never recover from this. America is probably now and forever a police state. I can assume this because the closer we get to "victory" in this "new war" the more CNN reminds that it will take a "very long time" (read: forever). Not only are we being prepared for the shift to fascism, but they are already taking away not only our rights, but our information. History is now subjective, period. The proverbial frog is on a slow boil.

    Keep your jackboots shiny, sooner or later John Ashcroft is going to ask you to stick them up my libertarian ass.

    posted anon to avoid thoughtcrime charges

  163. I read the article, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    tried to track down The Anarchist Cookbook via the Internet. Found a promising site on angelfire.com, except that it had pulled all the files.

    Okay, if they want to, fine by me. But any competent inorganic or organic chemist can come up with the recipes for any defined explosive without needing to download them from the Net!!! And the French Tourists - oops, the Terrorists, know that much. And probably a fair few fully trained and dedicated chemists as well.

    Instead, what we'll have is on one hand a set of panicky governments cutting off air to their citizens, and on the other hand we'll have a whole lot of obnoxious citizens wanting to do the government's work for them.

    Well, you get what you pay for!

  164. 1984? by Malluck · · Score: 0

    Anyone who's read 1984 can draw some direct correlations. "Those who control the past, control the future." I suspect it wont be too long before the government is asking us to burn all our old books in favor of their nice new "patriotic" copies.....

  165. This just in: FREEDOM IS UNSAFE by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 2

    By it's very NATURE. It infuriates me to see things like this, and to see a good two-thirds of the country supporting the idea of a national ID card. You know what, I can't fucking stand it. You whining little pansies need to MOVE TO LONDON where there's a camera on every street if you like the idea of information being restricted for 'our safety'. America might be the only truely free country, with a bill of rights to back it up. People who want to live in a society that treats it's citizens this way have more places to choose from than I care to count. So excuse my attitude, but FUCK OFF.

    1. Re:This just in: FREEDOM IS UNSAFE by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 2

      And another thing, I was raised in Frankfort, KY where a lot more than 6,000 people died to give me what freedom I have left. So I hope you can understand my anger. How many bloody revolutionary wars are you willing to have before you just let one goddamn country be free? I know it's not safe. Fucking DUH. I mean seriously, what about those of us who want to be left alone with our 'perilous' freedom? Do we one-up the founding fathers, and colonate the moon to claim independence? And when the moon gives in to big-brotherism, where do we go then? Our democracy is in bad enough shape as it is, leave it the hell alone. To anyone who believes things like this are the solution; you're not the countries' mommy or daddy. We don't need your protection. And any "Americans" who disagree should get the hell out and move to a country that already fits their 'security' needs. Please don't shape this one place of real freedom into another group of Government-protected citizens.

  166. basic knowledge criminalized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The average citizen doesn't need to know that slamming a jetliner into a tall building will result in death and damage. Once we have rid the world of this information, we will all be able to sleep easier.

  167. Re:Is there an odd discrepancy with a person who.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unless you're under 18 you are the government, too. (assuming you're a US citizen) And I think you mean "hypocritical".

  168. Why They're Doing This (And Why They're Wrong) by RoninM · · Score: 2

    Since 11 Sep 2001, there's been a lot of jibber-jabber by supposedly socially conscious Americans and pundits that we foolishly display our weaknesses to anyone and everyone that's listening. A well-meaning, but misguided, person finds it easy to reason that our greatest problem is the media's willingness to exploit our (greatest) problems. "Why, I can't even tune in to the nightly news without hearing about yet another security breach/scare at an airport and someone telling us that airport security still sucks." ... Doesn't this smack a little of blaming the messenger? Someone who exploits the message to do wrong is clearly to blame, but aren't those that are regularly told of the security holes also responsible when other people get hurt? I call it negligence.

    But here we are and the bipartisan, belligerent cries have struck a chord with our less-is-more (when it comes to individual rights) Administration. Suddenly, the information is to blame, and not the people that neglect to fix the problems that have been exposed. Does this sound like Security by Obscurity to anyone? The American people have a right to know our inadequacies. It's just too damn bad that we didn't give a damn before 11 Sep 2001 -- and we don't really give a damn after it. Instead, we've given Bush carte blanche and he's telling us to put our heads in the sand... Well, here we go.

    --
    If a corporation is a personhood, is owning stock slavery?
  169. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  170. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  171. Daddy Bush is running the show!! by Newer+Guy · · Score: 1

    Why wasn't this so obvious before? Daddy Bush is pulling the strings behind the scenes. Look at the appointments G.W. has made..every one one of his daddy's cronies from Cheney on down! Not a single one of them under 60 either...doesn't this seem strange for a 'young' president? Add to this the fact that Daddy Bush used to head the CIA, and the administration's terrorist policy becomes crystal clear. It's DADDY BUSH'S policy we're seeing here.

  172. You are a moron by evilviper · · Score: 2
    By making information harder to come by, we can up the ante by forcing the terrorists as a GROUP, to become more sophisticated/educated.

    Right... It took a hell of a lot of brain power, and classified information to crash a f***ing plane into the WTC.

    The focus of anti-terrorist efforts should be security rather than obsecurity. Would you rather live in a country where it's illegial for reporters to tell the public that airlines are vulnerable (obsecurity) or a world where we actually address the security problems and make the airlines more secure (security)?

    This path of restricting information, that is taken by the government as a solution to all problems, must not continue. The process of natural selection will ensure that the USA has no future if this continues to be the means of public protection. Just as with the former Soviet Union, restricting information will only lead to the downfall of our country; and because of the powerful position we are in-it will lead to global instability.

    Something dramatic must be done soon to turn around this remnant of WWII. We've seen time and time again that groups of people sending mail to government officals has made no effect in even the most insignificant issues. So the only question here is what is to be done that will cause an about face in this 50 year old communist policy?

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    1. Re:You are a moron by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • We've seen time and time again that groups of people sending mail to government officals has made no effect in even the most insignificant issues.

      Mailing anthrax provokes an instant response; the government runs for the hills then picks a dusty country far away full of strange looking people, and bombs the crap out of the economic infrastructure of it. This isn't funny, it's deeply, agonisingly sad.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  173. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  174. One last bit of Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With all this information being stripped from the average citizens, here is one other piece that you may wish to use. The Anthrax spores were electro-stated treated. This is American technology. There are 500 ppl in the world who know how to do this. The interesting part of this is that the spores should repel one another, encouraging aerosolving. BUT they should also stick to other envelopes. What it amounts to is that there was some sophisticated technology used for the spore treatment. This involves a LOT of money. But if only sent out in envelopes then the secondary rate of infection due to the envelopes touching each other should be much higher than the rate of infection in the postal workers. That was not the case. This shows several things:
    1) this was a local GROUP, not bin ladin and not an individual.
    2) They have an inordinate amount of money backing them and some pretty good talent as well.
    3) due to the high rate of infection amongst postal workers vs. receipents of the envelopes, It is a postal worker who is submitting the envelopes.
    4) Since the envelopes try to mis-direct to Bin Ladin, I would assume that they have delivered a message to our government behind the scence (but I have no knowledge or proof, just a hunch).

    5) Since these were directed against liberals, I would guess this to be anti-abortionist, but just a hunch again.

    So, how useful is information? It allows us to know when we are being lied to by the Government. Information is MUCH more useful than any other weapon in the world. So as much as Bush and his cronies keep guns fully available, he is actually trying to strip us of the most important. Our right to know.

    1. Re:One last bit of Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it should read:
      There are less than 500 ppl in the world....

      unfortunatly, I used the symbol < . My fault.

    2. Re:One last bit of Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's certainly the first time I'm heard anyone accuse the New York Post of being liberal.

      But I'm not one to let facts stand in the way of a conspiracy theory.

  175. Anarchist's Cookbook by Animats · · Score: 2
    I came across a copy of The Anarchist's Cookbook in a tourist bookshop at Ghiradelli Square, filed under "'60s nostalgia".

    You can still get such things from Loompanics.

    Al-Queda has demonstrated that they already know how to build bombs. And this info has been available for years. It's not a big deal at this point.

  176. In related news... by Butch · · Score: 1

    All open source software used in critical applications
    is to become closed source immediately. Apparently
    hackers and terrorists can read through the source, if it's made available and may
    discover bugs, which can be exploited to harm the American way of life.

    Removing access to the source code, and making reverse engineering illegal,
    is clearly preferable and safer.

  177. Our government is making us LESS secure by DreamingReal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This event seems to be the latest in a string of events our government justifies in the name of "national security". Unfortunately, these actions will make us LESS secure in the long run.

    Destroying information in public libraries, restricting requests through the Freedom of Information Act, Bush's executive order that allows a sitting president to seal presidential records indefinitely - all of these events result in less information for the public to properly judge the actions of our government. This is inexcusable in a republic.

    Without public accountability, our elected leaders will have carte blanche to commit aggregious acts in the name of our country. Any illegal actions that they take, clouded in executive priviledge and secrecy, could very well sow the seeds for future terrorist attacks.

    We need to know exactly what our government is doing, particularly while we are at "war". The only way we will win a "war" against terrorism is to stand the moral high ground, and wage it with justified, measured response. If our government begins to wage it with illegal and extreme methods (in our name and without our knowledge) we are assured to locked in a vicious cycle of retribution and revenge that will only hurt ourselves in the long run.

    --
    We want some answers and all that we get
    Some kind of shit about a terrorist threat

    - Ministry
  178. What's truly sad is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that after most of you write your cute little posts and type out some neat little quote that you found in Bartlett's, you'll feel your job is done.

    Personally I feel like these sorts of things are ALWAYS over-exaggerated by the slashdot kids when they occur, but that it could all be made worthwhile if people actually made an honest attempt to mobilize a complaint against whichever organization instead of just sitting back, pressing Submit, and returning to renaming your MP3s while watching Cowboy Bebop or Powerpuff Girls or whatever you watch these days.

    Our generation is taught to have an opinion, but we were never taught how to do anything with it. That's really the most harmful thing, not multiple random reflexive acts by governmental agencies.

  179. And i thought intelligent people visitied /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    guess i was wrong. At no time did anyone say the information is gone, you can still get it from the appropriate government agency - its just not available to anyone who walks into a library.

    for your information, it has been common practice in times of war for centuries to remove sensitive things from the general public's view - they even used to print maps with non existent roads, towns, etc. - the whole time leaving out real ones. ANd yes, we, the US, did these things during WW2.

    get a grip, or are you all really whining because ole GW is so popular these days?

  180. ... by jirka · · Score: 1

    Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.

  181. Logic Bomb... by gnovos · · Score: 2


    A) By making each piece of sensitive information harder to get to, you make it exponentially more time consuming to query FROM vast realms of it. e.g., if the terrorists wanted to know the exact engineering specifications used for all the nuclear plants around the country to look for a particularly weak design.

    B) By making information harder to come by, we can up the ante by forcing the terrorists as a GROUP, to become more sophisticated/educated. e.g., the size of the effort rules out the few top level people, but the scope/difficult rules out the average ignorant terrorist.

    C) By making information harder to come by, we can make the act of looking for that information much riskier. For instance, rather than merely having to go online or to any public library (anonymously), they must go to a few enumerated locations and risk being spotted and/or creating a trail after the fact.


    So, by this logic, the only terrorists left will be those who are patient, intelligent, and willing to take incredible risks. By circumventing the flow of information you won't make the terrorists go away, you know. Instead you'll make them smarter, more educated, make them plan more carefully, and make them REALLY commit to a task mentally and spiritually, becuase they will know the risks are great.

    How does this argument end up being for the destruction of public records?

    --
    "Your superior intellect is no match for our puny weapons!"
    1. Re:Logic Bomb... by cburley · · Score: 1
      So, by this logic, the only terrorists left will be those who are patient, intelligent, and willing to take incredible risks. By circumventing the flow of information you won't make the terrorists go away, you know. Instead you'll make them smarter, more educated, make them plan more carefully, and make them REALLY commit to a task mentally and spiritually, becuase they will know the risks are great.

      Let me get this straight, Mr. Logic Man.

      You're saying you'd prefer that terrorists be able to do great damage to this country without having to be particularly smart, well-educated, capable of planning, or committed?

      Or do you really believe setting the bar high is all that's needed to make terrorists better at doing their jobs??

      Wow. Guess we need to get rid of all the locks on our doors -- we're just making all them criminals just too dang smart!

      Okay, sarcasm aside, here's a clue: whether the particular proposal is a good idea, it is not illogical to adjust one's defensive posture so that the pool of attackers able to actually penetrate it becomes vastly smaller, consisting primarily of intelligent, committed people. In fact, that's probably about 95% of how successful defense works.

      (Yes, there are cases where the opposite approach can work. In films and TV shows, an approach often shown is where a "hero" avoids direct attack by a very intelligent bad guy by generating, or finding, a less-bad mob of people and "hiding" in it, using the protection of the mob, usually an "amoral entity" in that context, from an enemy. It works because the hero prefers the risk of being in such a mob -- e.g. maybe there are a few pickpockets -- to the certainty of attack by the enemy. I don't see how that principle applies to this proposal: even RMS and the FSF finally gave up having no password on the Internet, and they weren't even risking death or dismemberment by leaving access entirely public. The approach works when the surrounding mob hampers enemy access more than it helps. I doubt the ability of any random web surfer to figure out just where to hit Hoover Dam with a missile would seriously hamper the ability of Saddam Hussein to actually do the deed, but, then, I'm not Mr. Logic Man.)

      --
      Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
  182. I thought we'd evolved past book burning. by xQx · · Score: 0

    You yanks never cease to amaze me.

    If it wasn't for people like Bill Hicks who demonstrated not ALL you yanks stand behind your government's stupidity and call it "patriotic", I'd be very, very scared.

    "I'm not talking about the reasons the government tells us, because I hope you know this, I think you do, all governments are lying cocksuckers. " -- Bill Hicks

  183. Middleway by dragonfly28 · · Score: 1

    Isn't it possible to come to a middle way?
    like not every idiot can get the data they want but that they have to prove where for they need it.
    And thus preserving the knowledge instead of destroying it.

    I mean generally speaking not everybody needs to get this information so that when students some how need to know something about how an airport is constructed to can get that info. And by making it restricted will raise the barrier for obtaining the information.

  184. Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    would we not castigate the US government if another event occured, this time from publically available info?

    Would we castigate the airline industry for allowing terrorists to take over their planes and crash them into skyscrapers? Well, apparently not. Instead we give the airlines tons of money so they can continue to make a profit while their revenues decline.

    The terrorists most likely used publically available info to carry out the 9/11 attacks. After all, the location of the World Trade Center wasn't exactly a secret. On the other hand, knowledge on how to fly a commercial jet was not readily available, so the terrorist simply went to school and learned. Should we now close down flight schools because terrorists might learn how to fly planes at them?

    Perhaps we should prohibit anyone from having access to any information unless they can demonstrate a need to know. We don't want just anyone knowing how to write encryption software, or reading court transcripts that describe how a bomb was built.

    Besides, if the public can't locate our water treatment plants, power plants, chemical plants, or dams, maybe we can finally shut those pesky environmentalists up. To top that off, we can boost the property value of land near those hazards.

  185. This is part of a scary trend by D.+J.+Keenan · · Score: 4, Informative
    The actions describe by the LA Times are part of a scary trend. The Economist has a series of stories about how rights are being lost in the name of terrorism fighting. In the US, over 1000 people are being detained incommunicado, sometimes subject to mistreatment. Another story (this not free) describes how some terrorism trials will now be conducted in secret and need not prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. In the UK, the Home Secretary has warned judges not to apply the Human Rights Act. And mobile-phone calls are now logged, which forces terrorists to use only pre-paid phones (wow).

    Likely the cowed populace will ask for even more disenfranchisements.

  186. Life imitating art: dystopia by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
    The Morrow Project, Gamma World and the other ancient RPGs portrayed a rather dim, dystopian view of the future. Stories like Brave New World (Huxley), 1984 (Orwell), Farhenheight 451 (Bradbury), did as well. The latter group was intended as a warning of potential consequences. Too bad, but they seem to be serving as a template for policy makers rather than as a warning.

    Another one to add is the film Rollerball which fits the same genre of obscure sci fi. A short but key scene deals with the electronic archive which has been used to effectively destroy key information through technological obselecence. There a few large corporations have taken over the planet and run the media and other information channels to keep the masses under control. Is this the path that policy makers wish to chose?

    Destroying access to information won't do anything except hurt U.S. citizens. It's a rather unpatriotic move considering the countries background in freedom and openness. It certainly looks like win (or at least a major concession) for "the forces of evil". However, it could be a key tool in certain political agendas.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  187. Summary of Linked Article and Responses by cburley · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Facts in linked article: federal and state governments (that is, several distinctly accountable organizations whose leaders are democratically elected), already charged with the responsibility of determining what sorts of government-created information sources (such as convenient collections of data on national infrastructure) should be made easy to access by the public, review said convience and access and recommend adjustments in response to the greatest loss of civilian life on US soil due to outside aggression in decades.

    Reporter's blather in article, supported by quoting various hysterical people (or, probably, selecting only their most hysterical-sounding quotes): the usual assumptions that this is a mere first step in an inevitable long march designed to lock the American people into perpetual ignorance.

    Relevant factoid: the Bush administration started by canning Clinton's last-minute imposition of higher restrictions on arsenic levels in water at the national level; claimed it needed time to carefully review the issue before codifying such an imposition; took tons of flak from Democrats and "greens" for "increasing levels of arsenic in our nation's water supply"; waited until after the 2001-09-11 attacks (about last week, I think) to quietly restore the Clinton restriction, with little fanfare or applause from Democrats/greens as far as I could see (especially compared with news coverage of the issue earlier this year).

    Does this suggest the Bush administration is using the 09-11 attack to effect environmental protection under the cover of darkness? I think not; rather, I would hope that, after review, the decision turned out to be sound.

    Implication: taking careful stock of sensitive information in public view and selectively having some copies of it, especially convenientally accessible copies, rendered inaccessible (e.g. take info off web, destroy a few CD-ROMs) until further review and/or security can be implemented seems not only wise, but consistent with other things this Administration has done, even if some of those things are out of step with the far-right, pro-business agenda with which its critics charge it.

    /. posters: by and large, they assume this is just one of the last few steps until the 1984 or Fahrenheit 451 scenario, probably because they've neither read the books nor seen the movie(s?), and because they're unable to avoid generalizing to absurd levels from specific situations in response to the paranoia with which they've been indoctrinated.

    Sad fact: this action is too-often compared with the DMCA, the SSSCA, copy protection, and so on, but the most important message we can send to our government today is, YES, you have a duty to carefully consider which public information should be conveniently accessible (and we'll help you make those sorts of decisions), but you should get the heck out of the business of allowing or sponsoring censorship solely to prop up failing business models being employed by corporate America.

    The reason that's a "sad fact" is that the latter specific message is going to be swamped by the vastly-easier-to-flyswat general version that says "any form of censorship is evil", even when it amounts to merely making certain convenient collections of data less trivial to access remotely, even when it is clearly necessary, at least in the short term, for national-defense purposes.

    Think about it folks: Jack Valenti is now being enlisted as a friend in defense of this nation against terrorists, to encourage the movie industry to support the war effort a la WWII, etc. As such, he (or, more precisely, his support of what amounts to legalized terror waged against those who share info on, e.g., how to view DVDs on "hacker OSes" like GNU/Linux) cannot simply be broad-brushed as "evil" when most Americans are more concerned about true terrorism than complete freedom to view DVDs.

    So "we" have to be much more incisive in the way we simultaneously oppose arbitrary restrictions on the free flow of information among peers and yet support the choice of people to unite to form a common defense against external attack.

    Knee-jerk ranting against practical national-defense measures, especially done just to make Bush and/or Republicans look bad, won't get the job done -- it'll actually make things worse (we'll lose more civil liberties, lose the war against global terrorism, or perhaps both).

    (Note that if you really don't support any form of censorship, even defense, then go ahead and make that argument as you see fit. I happen to think most people who think all forms of censorship are equally evil haven't really thought the issues through carefully or at least considered which battles are worth fighting today. Even "extremists" like RMS and the FSF finally chose to "censor", or limit, access to their systems -- their information, if you will -- after some 20 years of being, practically, password-free. Even the purest possible spokesman against all forms of censorship might tend to lose his powers of persuasion after being taken out by a suitcase nuke! So please realize that freedoms and rights are abstract concepts, made practical by adhering to them as much as possible, and no further than that.)

    --
    Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
  188. They should do more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They shouldn't allow air companies to publish the timetables for their flights! That way terrorists wouldn't know when the airplane is leaving.
    They should also ban Tom Clancy's books, just in case the terrorists get any ideas from them. :-)

    The USA starts to look as a scary place to live, seen from an European point of view. And sadly, that's not a joke :-/.

  189. Ahhh..the glorious past by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Why don't we just abandon all technology and return to foraging for nuts and berries all day? Life really was so much simpler when we were wearing animal skins and the worst thing we had to worry about was being decapitated by a hungry sabre-toothed tiger. Let's bring back the past in all its splendour.

  190. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  191. too late for this anyway by Wansu · · Score: 2

    "When the horse is gone, the fool shuts the stable door."

    Since the 9/11 attack, a disturbing pattern has emerged. The rights of law abiding citizens are being curtailed without much effect on those who would enter this country and commit terrorist acts.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  192. Re:nothing new here (New category needed) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -1, Twat

  193. Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:

    we are castigating the CIA for not preventing the Sept. event; would we not castigate the US government if another event occured, this time from publically available info?

    "We" are not, in that "we" includes me, and I am not, castigating the CIA. Not yet. Little has been offered to show that the Sept 11 events were preventable without superhuman efficiency and draconian surveillance.



    Under an argument similar to yours, the government would be outlawing box cutters -- heck, we know they can be used for highjacking. We'd also be outlawing airplanes, since they can be highjacked. We'd outlaw trucks and trains, since they too can carry a massively destructive load of kinetic energy, to say nothing of their fuel. TV often broadcasts pictures of the New York skyline -- maybe ben Laden got his idea from a transition pan in "Friends". Better ban that, too... after all, wouldn't we be remiss if someday someone did get the idea from TV?


    The problem with that is, the only way to stop people from getting the "bad" ideas is to stop them from having ideas at all. That price is too high to pay.


    It might be counterintuitive, but the experience of the software industry has shown that the best solution is more openness, not less. Hiding information doesn't protect the information, and it doesn't protect people. We should be extremely wary of government directives to destroy records... too many people seem to think, "Well, I'm unlikely to need a report on dams, so OK."

  194. HOORAY by arseonick · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    God bless America, land of the free!

  195. Is becoming an expert illegal? by braddock · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This country was founded and GOVERNED by self-made experts. If I want to become an expert on bio-terrorism, computer security, US water distribution systems, nuclear weapons, or post-modern cinema, am I going to be told:

    "No, you don't need to and are not allowed, but here's a fine job at McDonalds; we're saving all those uninteresting curiosities for select Harvard graduates with connections since we only trust people who were raised and work in the establishment already."

    I think maybe the reason this so agitates me (and many of you) is that I am a self-educated college-dropout security and technology "expert" with a successful consulting career. Many of America's greatest "expert" figures past and present: Franklin, Gates, Jobs, Wozniak, Ellison, Dell, Edison, Turner, F Scott Fitzgerald, were not college graduates.

    Is denial of information not most importantly an insult to the merits of self-education and curiosity? Isn't that why it rightfully pisses off this community?

    Braddock Gaskill

  196. hey, do you know where icann get some facts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If information is criminalized, only criminals will have IT (see also: bush/gates alliance). on to the book burnings. i sure feel safer now.

    We're here for you J., (please don't tell anybody), should you, at some point, be forced to have your head extracted from your .asp.

  197. Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Funny
    • Where is the evidence that [...] any of the Orwellian measures being proposed, had they been in place, would have actually prevented these atrocities?

    Come on, it's plainly obvious how it would have worked:

    • Swarthy Man carrying Large Bag Marked "Bomb": I'd like a one way ticket from Boston to Los Angeles. Here is my valid passport and payment. When does that flight board, please?
    • Minimum Wage but Really Highly Trained Receptionist: I'm sorry, Sir, that information is classified.
    • Swarthy Man carrying Large Bag Marked "Bomb": Curses, foiled again.
    • Minimum Wage but Really Highly Trained Receptionist: By the way, Sir, I notice that you ticked the "I am a terrorist" box. Please wait there while I call security
    • Swarthy Man carrying Large Bag Marked "Bomb": Damn you tricksey infidels and your impenetrable security measures!
    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  198. Sigh .. by kd5biv · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Who was it that said when all you have is a hammer, it's tempting to treat everything as if it were a nail?

    That's the mentality I see running the show inside the Beltway these days. When we need smarter security, we get dumb ideas like this -- and this one is worse than useless, because it makes people feel safer without actually providing any protection.

    That's the upside of it. The downside is that now anyone worried that someone is going to find evidence of their scam, or screwup, in our Federal Depository Libraries can get that evidence destroyed under the watchful eyes of U.S. Marshals and not only can we not stop it, most of us won't even know when it happens.

    Oh well .. at least I haven't been pulled over for not showing a flag ..

    --


    73 de N5VB (ex-KD5BIV) AR SK
  199. Police State? by vandan · · Score: 1

    What police state?
    You guys are just tripping.

  200. huh? by mickeyreznor · · Score: 1

    Members of the public who want to use reading rooms at federal agencies such as the Internal Revenue Service must now make an appointment and be escorted by an employee to ensure that information is not misused.

    How exactly do they do this? Does this employee escort you for your lifetime to make sure you don't "misuse" this information?

  201. Engineering schools are still open.. by xtal · · Score: 2

    What's to stop a terrorist from just going to school in the USA and learning all the particulars they want? Here in Canada, there are flyers all over the place on "Education in the USA". Engineering is the same no matter where you go, as well. All you need are textbooks, which, last time I checked, you didn't need ID and a security clearance to buy. If that happens, I'm going to get real worried.

    The only defence against terrorists is an educated, thinking populace. Unfortunately, an educated, thinking populace doesn't knuckle under to government propaganda and control quite as easily as an ignorant, reflexive populace. The strengths of our countries (I'm Canadian) is that we are free to exhange information and ideas to -better- ourselves. It's the free discource of information that's given us the economoies we take for granted. I fear this has been forgotton by those who are too easily scared by sensationalist media, and too easily capitalized on my power-hungry politicians.

    --
    ..don't panic
  202. Book burning? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Berlin there is a monument at the place where the Nazis took "subversive" books out of the library and burned them. The monument is a glass window in the ground. You stand over it and look down to see white library shelves, empty of the books they are meant to evoke. The monument is labeled with a quote from Heinrich Heine made 100 years before Hitler came to power:

    "Dort, wo man Bücher verbrennt, verbrennt man am Ende auch Menschen."

    "They that start by burning books will end by burning men."

    As a German Jew, what do you want to bet Heine's works were among those burned on that horrible night?

  203. On the fourth amendment... by isaac · · Score: 1

    Where do you read anything in the fourth amendment that says anything about email headers? I see persons, houses, papers, and effects. Email headers literally aren't any of those things, any more than email itself is "speech" in the literal sense.

    What about wiretaps? Remember the Olmstead case of 1928? Our Supreme Court essentially followed your advice and took the Fourth Amendment literally. Since the cops could tap the wires on the public easements (and never set foot in your home), no warrants were required. This was the rule until 1967's Katz v. United States.

    Of course, you might say that perhaps we should amend the constitution to add protections as the plain language of the amendments no longer track their spirit. But of course amending the constitution is incredibly difficult, and I daresay that codifying even the limited rights we enjoy right now would be impossible in today's political climate.

    Every year, the Freedom Forum conducts a national survey to measure the general public's attitudes about the about the First Amendment. According to the poll conducted this summer, the percentage of Americans who said they strongly agreed with the statement "the First Amendment goes to far in the rights it guarantees" increased from 10% to 29%. Another 10% "mildly agree." That's 39% of the population, plus or minus 3%. I doubt the First Amendment as written to day would be ratified by the states with those numbers.

    This survey was conducted in May and June, 2001 by the Center for Survey Research and Analysis at the University of Connecticut. I cringe at the thought of what results 2002's survey will reveal.

    -Isaac

    --
    I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
    1. Re:On the fourth amendment... by Chasing+Amy · · Score: 2

      An e-mail header is definitely an effect, and arguably a paper since it serves precisely the same function as writing words on parchment.

      As for Olmstead, the mistake is that once again, those electronic impulses are clearly a person's effects. Therefore warrants would be required even on public easements, because law enforcement would be intercepting your property while it is transit via courier--the courier being the telephone line.

      Notice how very simplified that is--quite on purpose. It doesn't take interpretations of what the Founders meant and where their limits were--it just takes reducing any item which did not exist at the time of the Constitution's writing to its most basic functions and seeing whether it is therefore covered or not. One could call this process interpretation--I'd call it using common sense, personally--but if it is interpretation, then it's interpreting the modern item according to its function, not interpreting the Constitution to guess what it would have said about the modern item.

      Just the way I see it, though...

      --

      Chasing Amy
      (We all chase Amy...)
      "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws"-Tacitus
  204. "Shall we put an end to the human race; or ... by KjetilK · · Score: 1
    shall mankind renounce war?"

    There are some very important points here. The above is something from the Russell-Einstein manifesto, and its essense: That weapons of mass destruction are available and in such a quantity it is not difficult to kill mankind, and even if those weapons are destroyed, the knowledge will always be there, and the weapons can be rebuilt within a short time if necessary.

    Thus, for the survival of our species, there is no option but to make an end to all conditions were weapons of mass destruction may be deployed.

    This is no less important today, because today, those weapons are so easily available.

    Obviously, there are risks of openness, but a closed society will be unbearable, and most probably no more secure.

    Real security can only be achieved by renouncing war.

    --
    Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  205. Buckle up, or else! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    America's been a police state for quite some time. How else can they execute collecting more than 50% of the average american's income in taxes. Or, keep the more citizens in prison than any nation on earth.

    Lose the illusion this is all something new. Or that the first poster was anything more than a clueless idiot latched onto the gravy train that is the US regime.

    Freedom is NOT the same as being treated as a pet, but that is the popular definition. "Freedom" hasn't been seen in these parts for decades and likely never will be again.

    The "shift" was over a long time ago. What's going on now is just the winners asserting their authority. The whole terror thing is a lucky accident for them. They can advance their agenda by 10 years or more. They're not going to miss the chance.

    You're right, we will never recover from this. Nobody want's to. And, it has nothing to do with current events. Dumb people make for poor self governance, the closer their IQ approches that of a sheep the more they demand to be treated like one.

    What else did you expect? Combine greed, power lust, and the ability to execute and you get the worse humanity has to offer.

    While we're at it, the whole "noble motives" thing is a complete crock. Government is about pushing of personal agendas, consulting fees, and power lust. The entire process is designed to drum good people from the race as early as possible, and to prevent itself from being changed in any significant way.

  206. citation by IdocsMiko · · Score: 1
    Do you have more details on that CNN debate? Specifically, who was involved, the air date, a transcript perhaps?

    -miko

    1. Re:citation by statusbar · · Score: 2
      Found it.

      http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0111/07/tl.00.html

      CNN Talkback Live
      November 7, 2001
      Torture: Should It Be an Option When Dealing With Terrorists?

      It is offensive to even discuss it.

      Have a NICE DAY!

      --jeff

      --
      ipv6 is my vpn
  207. Recurring theme... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Public outrage is a powerful motivator in an open society, but how can the public express outrage when the information that would prompt such outrage may be cloistered away by embarrassed bureaucrats who can simply claim the information could be dangerous in the wrong hands?

    Unfortunately for us all, restricting access to information is THE most traditional form (and effective) methods of control used by governments (ask the church about why it used latin for so many centuries). It is very effective, and it protects vested interests.

    It is very sad to note that under the current circumstances this abuse of power seems to be running at full speed. One of the scariest things that I noticed after Sep 11 was that the 'special interest groups' (e.g., military, security and Oracle) jumped on the 'I want my share of the pie' wagon faster than the public outrage over the attack. Many of our 'leaders' seemed to see the incident as another 'opportunity' for profit -- not a crisis or threat.

    Restricting access to information seems, to me, to be much more about control at home than defending against threats from abroad (or even from domestic terrorists).

    As a final note -- I've never met a manager (or up) that didn't like being able to cover-up their screw-ups or hide the fact that they are easily replaced.

  208. Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. by Happy+Monkey · · Score: 2

    TV often broadcasts pictures of the New York skyline -- maybe ben Laden got his idea from a transition pan in "Friends". Better ban that, too... after all, wouldn't we be remiss if someday someone did get the idea from TV?

    Obviously, we need to restrict all crime dramas and action cop films from creating original ideas. The only crimes that they should be able to depict are crimes that have already happened several times, and are already widely known. Otherwise, they could be used as ideas by terrorists.

    And Tom Clancy should have the same restrictions. Or at least it should be against the law to translate his books to Arabic.

    --
    __
    Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
  209. Not as bad as in Britain...yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US power elite are using these latest terrorist attacks as an excuse to implement attacks on democratic rights they couldn't pull off before. Scary stuff. At least it's not as bad as in Britain: the following description is of measures in the 'Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Bill' that the Brit government is trying to pass this year:


    'Under a "voluntary code of practice" drawn up by the home secretary, communication service providers must retain information on their customers for possible use by police and other law enforcement agencies. Directly contradicting the supposedly voluntary character of this arrangement, clause 102 states that the home secretary will be able to force communications services to comply.

    Data retained will include an individual's geographical location determined through their mobile phone; sender and recipient details on emails; a complete log of a person's Internet sessions, including their IP address; and the address of all Web sites they have visited. Communication service providers are currently only able to retain such information for billing purposes, after which it must be destroyed.'
    (my emphasis).

    Damn scary stuff!

    I got this information off the World Socialist Website, which I highly reccomend as a great place to get good news and info. (See Britain: government unveils draconian "anti-terror" bill)

  210. Re:The thing is...is the Thing by kinghype · · Score: 1

    "....Our federal tax dollars should be spent on defense and national infrastructure, not on foreign aid to bolster corporate sales penetration into foreign markets..." Isnt part of our national infrastructure an international system of commerce?

  211. Reminds me of ... by iaamoac · · Score: 1

    "Let's destroy the observatory so this will never happen again!" So spaketh Moe.

  212. Competition improves the breed by hey! · · Score: 2

    Or so the ecologists say.

    An eagle is swift. A lion is strong. An American society is free.

    Each of these strengths comes with a cost. An eagle isn't as silent as an owl. A lion doesn't have the endurance of a camel. And we don't have the ability to control information that a totalitarian state does.

    This is just a poetic way of saying that we shouldn't ape the practices of politically backward regimes just because in a few tactical situations they have a narrow and ultimately insignificant advantage. All past attempts to cross the camel and the lion have had predictably unsatisfactory results. Manzanar didn't help us against the Japanese in WW2 and McCarthyism if anything hampered succeeding decades of anti-communism.

    At best, these sort of measures are a kind of infantile wishful thinking: somehow if we take measures which seem strong, we will have a strong defense. It is perhaps symtomatic of not having a coherent strategy for dealing with the terrorist challenge, that we are doing everything we can think of. A wise person once said, if you don't think too well, you had better not think too much.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  213. Hmm, whats up with my calendar? by vulgrin · · Score: 1

    I just bought a new 2002 calendar and flipped open the first page. It says "January, 1984"

    What gives?

    Vulgrin the Sigless

    --
    I sig, therefore I am.
  214. Last night over green tea and bong hits . . . by ahfoo · · Score: 1

    Satan and I discussed Mr. Ashcroft's future plans.
    The Prince of Darkness, in his characteristic kindness kept trying to assure me that the standard fare of a thousand years of drowning in rivers of blood and excrement followed with an eternity of being eaten alive by maggots and assorted virmin and all the rest of that standard Hell fare was good enough for any sinner. Even Ashcroft.
    But the big guy knows himself all to well and he is well aware that he always errs on the side of timidity and that's why he comes over so often to consult with me because he knows I'm a real hard ass.
    I pointed out that this guy is not just a typical asshole like Bush, but a real sonofabitch that needs The Special Treatment(TM).
    Satan gasped at the suggestion. But he knew I was serious. I could see he was shook up over the matter so I poured him another tea.
    Look man, I said to the Lord of Darkness, this sonofafuck doesn't even wear cool wear uniforms. I mean the nazis did this book burning shit, sure, but at least they had stylin' Mercedes and death's head tie pins and swastikas and torch lit grope-a-rama rallies and all that good shit. This guy is just a dumb fuck with no sense of style. We can't let that go unpunuished. I say give him the works.
    Satan seemed to think I was overdoing it a bit. He left still unpersuaded that Ashcroft really deserves The Special Treatment(TM) but I'm pushing for it as long as this shit keeps up.
    Ashcroft, if you or your lackeys read /., I'm telling you right now, you are being judged. Consider your fate and prey for mercy.

  215. reminds me of my country ... by vu2lid · · Score: 1

    ...India ... Were a lot of such restrictions are there (like restrictions on reasonably accurate local maps etc.). Most of these rules are carry over from the period when British ruled India (BTW British left India in 1947). But inspite of the rules those who really need, get them anyway... I guess :-)

  216. A more effective way to combat domestic terrorism by hey! · · Score: 2

    The best way to attack complexity is simplicity. If we can force the enemy into the kinds of elaborate attacks that they are not properly organized to carry out, we have won.

    If we learned anything from Sep. 11, it should be that. The tactic used on September 11 was simplicity itself; it was put together from information that anybody who flew could gather with his own two eyes. Granted, flight training for at least two people was important, but it is hard to beleive that even post Sep. 11 that a determined terrorist network can't arrange to get this somewhere. If reservoirs are targetted by some future, it won't be by some elaborate tactic that requries detailed engineering plans, but by something incredibly simple based on observations that can be patiently gathered over several years. For example you could go with a truck bomb or even a backhoe and take out the aqueducts supplying a major city. It doesn't take blueprints to locate these, just common sense and a little time.

    This is what we should be thinking about -- the kind of attack that a determined, resourceful enemy could mount without the support of an elaborate and closely coordinated organization. Any defense that requires the enemy to be less intelligent, determined and resourceful than we are is no defense.

    I think the right response to security vulnerabilities is to expose them, not to hide them. This means seeing opporuntities for simple but devestating attacks that our most intelligent and resourceful people can find.

    For that reason, if we are really serious about hardening our national defenses, we should institute a national competition among engineering students to design the most effective terrorist attack, using the very kinds of public information that the Bush administration is trying to hide. To win, you'd have to have a plan to acquire the resources you needed (with points awarded practical demonstrations); you could win in the "Most Horrific" category for sheer numbers of people killed (e.g. WTC), or the "Most Frightening" category for the attack that affects the most day to day lives (e.g. anthrax).

    This kind of contest would be hard to get off the ground, because the results would be frightening and politicians wouldn't like this. It would require that administrators of public and private installations sit up and take action when their facilities are implicated in a potential terrorist attack. We may on occasion have to take drastic emergency action because of a simple but horrific vulnerability that some white hat hacker has discovered.

    However, I don't think this will in any way harm us, because the black hats are already at work on this, and we may even be able to forstall some attacks before they happen. We can't rely just on our security apparatus to do this. As they say in the open source movement, most of the smart people in the world don't work for you. Once we mined the best expertise of our police and intelligence people, we end up with the ideas of marginal value like purging our libraries. Far better to open the problem up to as many people as possible.

    This suggestion first came to me as a joke, but the more I think about it the more deserving serious consideration it seems to me. Years ago in the Reagan administration, when I was an MIT student, we used to talk about the new defense grant policy of focusing on deaths-per-dollar. We BS'd this around quite a bit. My own contribution was to suggest picking up a waste 2x4 from a construction dumpster and start hitting people on the noggin (a sure winner if we take the common government assumption that staff time is free). However there were some people who had some seriously lethal ideas for cheap ways to kill lots of people. I'm pretty certain that if I could put together a dream team of some of these chemical and mechanical engineers, biologists, and overall smart people, we could think up a few things that the FBI hasn't.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  217. Slashot dosen't always tend to absolutes by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

    I don't think that you've really represented what is being said. You've put things in absolutes more than most posts here have. No, government and corporations are not ALWAYS bad. The question is, are they ALWAYS good? And when they're not, what recourse do citizens have? Traditionally, corporations have, in practice, been given more legal rights and protections than individuals. A store can try overbilling me, and unless I catch it, I lose my money. But if I accidentally take somthing from a store, they can put me in jail. There are analogs with environmental law and pollution or just about anything else. The best way to nail bad corporate practices is to demonstrate a particular environment/trend/company practice and that requires information. The same goes for government. A single mistake always has plausable deniability.

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    1. Re:Slashot dosen't always tend to absolutes by ballpeen · · Score: 1

      I said, given these revolutionary times, some things have to be taken as a rule of thumb: one rule, CORPS & GOVS are BAD. Not every incorporated entity, or even big multimillion dollar companies. We're talking the MNCs, the transnational, M&A to sumo status conglomerates. The AOLTW, MS, GE, automakers, etc. The top of the Fortune 500.

      You could disagree with this being a revolutionary time. I can't argue past a pop, reading alt news sources online point, but from what I have seen, things are getting critical. The DMCA and hundreds of other little bits and pieces of legislation are already in and starting to kick in. The dotcom golden age of independence was drowned in...oh, coincidence, billions of dollars. The FCC is about to start regulating the Net. Now the gov wants its own Net. AOL wants ICANN to make keywords an alternate or replacement to URLs. Their national channels often advertise shows with AOL keywords and no URLs. They alone have 30 million subs, and 80 million on IM - it's plausible that someone says, let's shut down the Net and use AOL instead. Colin Powell was/is(?) on the AOL board, appeared as a guest with Steve Case for the Carlyle group. His son is chairman of the FCC, appointed by Bush. The Net is going DOWN... if things are done.

      I'm not a WTO fanatic, I really didn't even know what all that was about until a couple months ago. 9-11 didn't freak me out, it just made me finally look around a little. And it's a revolution, civil ideological war fought by proxy with no one really watching. The military is stunned, still in the LAST turn of the century. The power elite is thus exposed. The people need to rally and revise, but they don't even know this is all going on.

      So I was responding to someone who seemed to be saying: look, I'm working on one of these projects military homeland defense, evil Bush things, and hey, the people are cool, and the arguments aren't unreasonable.

      And when things are as trick as they are, that type of thinking isn't open-minded, it's classically naive. That's the way these things work.

      Hence, rule of thumb. No the same as saying STOP THINKING. Just, use this - as opposed to who knows what void - as a STARTING POINT when you evaluate, before you conclude and start spreading the word of your revelation.

      Like Lemmy from Motorhead said to me in a real life interview, "Maybe Hitler was right." It was from a dream of his. Didn't print it. You gotta evaluate, use your head. A few "absolutes" can help!

  218. List of Removed Items by tiltowait · · Score: 1
  219. Re:nothing new here just a side note by onepoint · · Score: 1

    >>fact that more than 1 million square feet were taken off the market that day

    WTC had more than 1 million square feet closer to 10 million rentable. please see http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/World_Trad e_Center.html

    And you are correct downtown has leveled off and the hope is that it will start rising.

    -Onepoint

    --
    if you see me, smile and say hello.
  220. So when do we start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    calling the "Office of Homeland Security" HOMESEC?

  221. Teller was right by n6mod · · Score: 1

    I can't find a reference right now, but Edward Teller was quoted as saying something that paraphrases to:

    Classifying documents only marks the good stuff. If you publish everything, we'll bury them in paper.

    This falls in that category. By making something difficult to access, you flag it as valuable.

    -Zandr

    --
    You have violated Robot's Rules of Order and will be asked to leave the future immediately.
  222. Truely the last thing I will say. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    About 5 years, I was going to write a book about Bio-Terrorism. The approach was simplier than what is currently done. Get a job with the airlines, perferably doing the airplane cleaning ( the same way that whoever is spreading anthrax works for the postoffice). Have another part of the terrorist group grow the bacteria/virus on the sly and then dry it. Place it in a small envelope in the overhead baggage compartment. On todays aircraft to save fuel, air is heavily recirculated. Therefore, if you have spores or a lyophilized virus, these will circulate heavily on the aircraft. Chance are good that you will get at least several ppl who are traveling across multi-cities for a several day trip. If doing Yersina Pestis (black death), they can spread it further and to the medical community, it would appear to be Flu. There are other deaseses that I could come up with, but why? If you want to do it up right, modify HIV to handle desication (it can't at the moment and that is why it spreads through fluids) and place a gene for something else. Now, you have the perfect vector.
    So how much information did it require to inflict harm doing this? NONE of what is going to be denied would have helped here. So you see, we are always at risk. Denying us citizens information will not stop a terrorists.

    Finally, was the information for WTC and Pentagon construction publicly available? I doubt it. Yet, they pulled off a VERY succesful attack (no, I do not praise it, but it was successful, by there measure).

  223. information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Information does not kill poeple.
    People kill people.

    In any situation it is important to look for some
    perspective.
    This situation is as old as humanity. There were always people who wanted to force they values on others. There were always people who wanted to loot other people, or whole nations: like the
    colonialism. Thre were always people who found joy
    in malevolence.

    The difference between having information available or not is equal to the difference between dying stupid or enlightened.
    If you want to be protected, live long and die stupid... well its your choice.
    I prefer to live enlightened, if not for other reason then the sheer joy of beeing able to toy around with my thoughts and with my world.

    The above mentioned people will exist anyway. To spend a life in intellectual darkness will not help...

  224. In the name of the United States Governmet by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 1

    I hereby place you under arrest for telling people how to colapse the Hoover Dam.

    Sign here to agree to the above statement please.

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  225. Newspapers have printed 'The seven dirty words' by Nonesuch · · Score: 2
    No, really, the FCC says there are words you can never ever say on the radio.
    The FCC regulates the airwaves, and their broadcast regulations are much stricter than the federal laws regulating 'speech'. Basically, radio and TV are special cases, not to be compared to newspapers.
    Also: how about this. Can the New York Times print the source code to DeCSS? Nope. Thats "abridgement" of the free press.
    Actually, the NYT can print the source code to DeCSS. They might be prosecuted after the fact, but they cannot be prevented from printing it, and as the code was entered into court records, they could lawfully print those records without repercussion.

    I specifically singled out newspapers in my comment, because the 'press' (in the oldest sense) tends to be very strict defenders of their right to print what they choose... and generally they choose not to print profanity, solely because of their image as a 'family paper'.

    Actually, many newspapers will print 'fuck' and similar language without using ***, where the editors feel that the word is important to the article.

    And yes, newspapers can print 'the seven dirty words', without censure by the government. Many papers have printed all or part of George Carlin's original monologue over the years.

    Back in 1995, as part of a response to the CDA, the Philadelphia City newspaper and Harper's magazine printed the seven dirty words in reporting on an online article by the American Reporter.

  226. Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. by junkgrep · · Score: 1

    ---Would we castigate the airline industry for allowing terrorists to take over their planes and crash them into skyscrapers? Well, apparently not. Instead we give the airlines tons of money so they can continue to make a profit while their revenues decline.---

    It's worse than that.
    First, consider that the fact that an airline goes bankrupt doesn't mean the planes stop flying. Plane routes will continue to be flown for as long as they are profitable. If they cease to be profitable, they will very RIGHTLY not be flown. In this case, demand for airline flights is going to fall, because people just aren't as eager to fly. This means that the real market for airline flights is going to shrink: flying is going to become less profitable. But the government, obvlivious to this, is going to keep on trying to fund the airlines in an attempt to get as many flights flown as there used to be BEFORE people became much more averse to flying. The result is, again, huge profits to an industry that's not providing services to anyone at the level they are getting funded.

    Then consider stock differentials due to risk. People are willing to pay certain prices for certain stocks depending on how risky they are. The airlines have a certain level of risk that factors in even the offchance of things like this. By basically covering any shortfalls, the government has destroyed these risk differentials.

  227. Re:The thing is...is the Thing by Chasing+Amy · · Score: 2

    > Isnt part of our national infrastructure an international system of commerce?

    Umm, no. That would be an *international* infrastructure, which is not authorized by the Constitution. The federal government is of course explicitly authorized to conduct foreign policy and enter into trade agreements, but it is in no way authorized to spend its time and our tax money working for large corporations. Trade agreements are about generic ground rules that individuals and organizations wishing to engage in commerce between two or more nations must follow in order to avoid problems with any of the participating governments--but what our federal government does goes ar beyond this. It brokers special deals and breaks for corporations, which veers off from setting ground rules for trade into actually becoming a first party to that trade. My favorite example of this is how our government gives loans to foreign nations and then arranges to forgive parts of the debt through opening up that area for more of our corporate commerce--the federal government should in no way be giving my tax dollars away in order to negotiate a lower tariff for large corporations.

    Again, just my opinion on the matter...

    --

    Chasing Amy
    (We all chase Amy...)
    "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws"-Tacitus
  228. info: look at history, again. by LifesABeach · · Score: 1



    Hey, I got an idea! Lets burn the location of New York. That will make you feel good? We'll hide our selves because we're strong!

  229. Nitroglycerine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nitroglycerine is one of the most sensitive explosives, if it is not
    the most sensitive. Although it is possible to make it safely, it is difficult.
    Many a young anarchist has been killed or seriously injured while trying to
    make the stuff. When Nobel's factories make it, many people were killed by the
    all-to-frequent factory explosions. Usually, as soon as it is made, it is
    converted into a safer substance, such as dynamite. An idiot who attempts
    to make nitroglycerine would use the following procedure:

    MATERIAL EQUIPMENT
    ________ _________

    distilled water eye-dropper

    table salt 100 ml beaker

    sodium bicarbonate 200-300 ml beakers (2)

    concentrated nitric ice bath container
    acid (13 ml) ( a plastic bucket serves well )

    concentrated sulfuric centigrade thermometer
    acid (39 ml)

    glycerine blue litmus paper

    1) Place 150 ml of distilled water into one of the 200-300 ml beakers.

    2) In the other 200-300 ml beaker, place 150 ml of distilled water and about
    a spoonful of sodium bicarbonate, and stir them until the sodium bicarbonate
    dissolves. Do not put so much sodium bicarbonate in the water so that some
    remains undissolved.

    3) Create an ice bath by half filling the ice bath container with ice, and
    adding table salt. This will cause the ice to melt, lowering the overall
    temperature.

    4) Place the 100 ml beaker into the ice bath, and pour the 13 ml of concentrated
    nitric acid into the 100 ml beaker. Be sure that the beaker will not spill
    into the ice bath, and that the ice bath will not overflow into the beaker
    when more materials are added to it. Be sure to have a large enough ice bath
    container to add more ice. Bring the temperature of the acid down to about 20
    degrees centigrade or less.

    5) When the nitric acid is as cold as stated above, slowly and carefully add the
    39 ml of concentrated sulfuric acid to the nitric acid. Mix the two acids
    together, and cool the mixed acids to 10 degrees centigrade. It is a good
    idea to start another ice bath to do this.

    6) With the eyedropper, slowly put the glycerine into the mixed acids, one drop
    at a time. Hold the thermometer along the top of the mixture where the mixed
    acids and glycerine meet. DO NOT ALLOW THE TEMPERATURE TO GET ABOVE 30
    DEGREES CENTIGRADE; IF THE TEMPERATURE RISES ABOVE THIS TEMPERATURE, RUN
    LIKE HELL!!! The glycerine will start to nitrate immediately, and the
    temperature will immediately begin to rise. Add glycerine until there is a
    thin layer of glycerine on top of the mixed acids. It is always safest to
    make any explosive in small quantities.

    7) Stir the mixed acids and glycerine for the first ten minutes of nitration,
    adding ice and salt to the ice bath to keep the temperature of the solution
    in the 100 ml beaker well below 30 degrees centigrade. Usually, the
    nitroglycerine will form on the top of the mixed acid solution, and the
    concentrated sulfuric acid will absorb the water produced by the reaction.

    8) When the reaction is over, and when the nitroglycerine is well below 30
    degrees centigrade, slowly and carefully pour the solution of nitroglycerine
    and mixed acid into the distilled water in the beaker in step 1. The
    nitroglycerine should settle to the bottom of the beaker, and the water-acid
    solution on top can be poured off and disposed of. Drain as much of the
    acid-water solution as possible without disturbing the nitroglycerine.

    9) Carefully remove the nitroglycerine with a clean eye-dropper, and place it
    into the beaker in step 2. The sodium bicarbonate solution will eliminate
    much of the acid, which will make the nitroglycerine more stable, and less
    likely to explode for no reason, which it can do. Test the nitroglycerine
    with the litmus paper until the litmus stays blue. Repeat this step if
    necessary, and use new sodium bicarbonate solutions as in step 2.

    10) When the nitroglycerine is as acid-free as possible, store it in a clean
    container in a safe place. The best place to store nitroglycerine is
    far away from anything living, or from anything of any value.
    Nitroglycerine can explode for no apparent reason, even if it is stored
    in a secure cool place.

  230. Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

    There is a middle ground. Whether we're following the right path on that middle ground is up for debate. I consistently test as a politcal Centrist, so I feel insulted when people form a straw man argument out of my statement.

    The best solution in the software industry is more openness *to those who are interested in improving/learning from the source*. I sincerely doubt that many black hats add anything of value back to a project. (This analogy that we're on doesn't correlate well enough with what the gov is doing).

  231. Anthem Re:Is scientific information next? by Essron · · Score: 1

    I recommend you all read Ayn Rand's Anthem. Its a powerful statement about reverse-engineering and fascist control. And its only 100 pages, so if you aren't used to looking at paper, it shouldn't hurt your eyes.

    I think all slashdotters should be familiar with this simple, short story.

  232. ATTENTION FOLKS!!!! THIS IS IT. YOUR FREEDOM HAS by 7dragon · · Score: 1

    NOW LEFT THE BUILDING!!!

    Standby for more repressive laws and more secret meetings. Not that you non-voters care any. The
    WTC incident is a ploy. As much as terrorists might be responsible so could this be an inside job, designed to manipulate.

    What if Timothy McVeigh wasn't a disillusioned patriot? What if he was doing a dangerous job that he shouldn't have been caught doing, but knew the risks? (Think IMF -- "The secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions". How do we know an IMF isn't a real agency? We wouldn't if you remeber the TV show.)

    Who has the most to gain by the U.S. becoming more repressive?

    All we have to do is change our intereference-based foreign policy and some of the global animosity from extremists will begin to be less important.

  233. Orwell said it best by SimCash · · Score: 1
    Orwell said
    Those who control the past, control the future; Those who control the future, control the present; Those who control the present, control the past.
    So, if you control the present you can rewrite history, and from history we get our guidance on what we will make of the future (just think of all the people who die each year because in the past their ancestors were killing someone else's ancestors).

    Does this mean that we (for example) should not kill terrorists today. No. Why not? Because they are a threat to the future. What is does mean is that we should not kill Egytians today because their ancestors were killing Romans. There is a difference, and if you cannot see that difference, then find some books and read until you are educated, then we can discuss it.

  234. 50% of all statistics are lies. by leuk_he · · Score: 1

    28,874 persons died from firearm.
    19,102 persons died of drug-induced causes.


    Some simple math says that a few million people (in the US) die each year. Why not get the big ones? your number one (Alzheimer) is close to old age. why not include smoking , or car accidents in it. Or even better, look at the word population, how many people die of hunger?

    1. Re:50% of all statistics are lies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There were just the easy numbers that I could find. I was looking for cancer and automobile but google did not produce them, so....
      Besides, these should have gotten the point across. That is, that we have blown everything out of proportion and are simply allowing our rights and liberties to disappear for irrational fears and stupidities.

  235. proof in the pudding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it just proves that the Sept. 11 attacks were a conspiracy commited by our own govt. to enable them to start taking away all our rights.

    ...and like Mortal Kombat, IT has begun.

  236. ORP OP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Orp op quandi wando flu!

  237. "Banned Books Week" by seven89 · · Score: 1


    For a number of years, American libraries
    and book stores have been sponsoring a
    "banned books week" to raise public awareness about the
    evils of censorship. A typical scare story mentioned
    during this celebration might involve some overly
    sensitive partents complaining about drug references in
    "The Wizzard of Oz." or whatever, as if such misguided
    goofball "challenges"
    are a great threat to our freedom.


    So I wonder what the American Library Association's position
    is on the censorship described in this thread? Will they
    mention it during next years "banned books week?"


    (We're not in Kansas anymore!)

    1. Re:"Banned Books Week" by blisspix · · Score: 1

      at your service -

      http://www.ala.org/pio/crisis/index.html

      http://www.ala.org/washoff/

      also read www.libr.org/Juice (library juice) which always has a lot of comment on these matters

  238. Slahdot paranoia by screwtheNSA · · Score: 1

    Well golly there Miss Ruby; did my bad old .45 Colt Army revolver get up again and take a shot at you? Hmmmm....cold steel, some brass, lead and fulminate of mercury now, somehow, HAS LIFE! IT'S ALIVE exclaimed John ASScroft; IT'S ALIVE! WHEN will people UNDERSTAND the FACT that INANIMATE OBJECTS CAN'AT DO A DAMNED THING, unless it is CONTOLLED BY A HUMAN!!!! A gun CAN'T kill, it IS the controlling person that aims, shoots and kills another, the gun can't tell steel from flesh! Give up freedom and liberty for a bit of security, and you will get, nor deserve NEITHER! *Oh I'll happily give up my right to bear my child so the big brave ATF agent can kill my daddy...* Armed assault by the agents of governmental bodies are a REAL form of SOCIAL TERRORISM! We the SHEEPLE of the UNFIT states of Amooica, and to the dictatorship to which we bow; one nation, in control of many; with despotism, and murderous control over all! Bush bless us will you please; you're a "god" we all "love"; so, stand upon us...don't trrust us, to be on our own until you fingerprint us all... FUCK THIS HOMELAND INSECURITY PARANOID DELUSIONS!! GROW UP...FIGHT BACK! WE DO HAVE THAT RIGHT! USE OF FORCE UPON A FORCE BENT ON DICTATING WHAT YOU DO IS NOT THE LAW, BUT TERRORISM!

    --
    206.39.38.2, DDN-BLK-36, DOD NET INFO CENTER. 800.365.3642 206.36.0.0-206.39.255.255 NET RANGE.
  239. Dude, Wil, your domain is fucked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Attempts to log on give an "access denied" message, and mail bounces.