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Oracle Donates Software for Big Brother Database

8onal writes: "C|Net is reporting that Oracle CEO Larry Ellison has followed through with his threat, I mean promise, to assist with Uncle Sam's crimefighting efforts. "...Ellison said he has delivered Oracle's 9i database management software to a U.S. government agency for national security, but he declined to give further details, such as which agency or for what usage." Seeing as how he has already supplied the CIA with software, I bet it went to another 3-letter group."

67 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. Ellison's interests by mwillems · · Score: 4, Flamebait

    Seems to me Larry Ellison is being rather opportunistic here, plus, this fits in well with his world vision, which has always been centralistic and in favour of control - I remember Oracle giving me a presentation once about their expense system at Oracle: all expense reports worldwide! go to (and are approved in) one central database in the US head office. Not for good database reasons but for control reasons. See also the NIC (thin client)- central control, again.

    Having said that, opportunism in the light of Sep 11 is not restricted to Oracle. Companies like Siebel, MS, and many others have also tried to gain market share. I am sure we all see through this.

    Michael

    --

    ---
    BDOS ERR ON A:>
    1. Re:Ellison's interests by bani · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course he's being opportunistic. Lots of people have been shamlessly exploiting the 9/11 attacks for their own selfish motives.

      The white house is doing it, congress is doing it, spammers are doing it. I'm actually suprised m$ hasnt stepped up to the plate already...

    2. Re:Ellison's interests by carlos_benj · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Seems to me Larry Ellison is being rather opportunistic here...

      A business that isn't opportunistic to some degree will fail. With businesses involved in disaster recovery for instance, not stepping up marketing efforts in light of 9/11 would be foolish. People's minds are more tuned to the message, as they should have been before the events. I think the difference between that scenario and what Ellison is doing is that he is trying to use the tragedies to create a perceived need for something that will be of little real value and might cause considerable harm. In short, he's not far removed from those collecting for bogus charities "helping" New York Police and Firefighters' families.

      --

      --

      As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

    3. Re:Ellison's interests by dcocos · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'd be willing to bet that anyone will be able to login with SCOTT/TIGER and SYSTEM/MANAGER so it won't be too hard to figure out what data they are collecting.

    4. Re:Ellison's interests by dazed-n-confused · · Score: 2
      their expense system at Oracle: all expense reports worldwide! go to (and are approved in) one central database in the US head office. Not for good database reasons but for control reasons.

      The Register has a couple of good stories about how this system screwed over two other vast enterprises that tried to use it: Marconi and Cisco.
    5. Re:Ellison's interests by gazz · · Score: 2, Funny

      it's probably a joke, but M$ will cash in if ppl listen to this:

      Subject: Fwd: Please participate - satellite project

      Help me spread the word about this advisory from NASA. On Thursday night at 9 PM Eastern time, a satellite photo of the United States will be taken, showing our nation united.

      If you own a PC-compatible laptop, NASA has requested that you purchase Microsoft's new Windows XP operating system and install it onto your computer. The process is simple and should take about an hour. It's Microsoft's best operating system ever and lets you get more out of the Internet!

      Take the laptop outside at 9 PM, start up Windows XP, and hold the "Start" screen up to the sky to symbolize our new "start" at coming together and fighting terrorism. Visit microsoft.com for more on how you can eXPerience more!


      Pssshhh, is all I can say (thanks to a speech impediment I developed after teasing some rather aggressive Gerbils)

      --
      it's the taking apart that counts
    6. Re:Ellison's interests by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 2

      Yes, you'd be dealing with red tape no matter what region you worked in.

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
  2. Hmm.. how can I make a headline? by jason99si · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My question is, did the XXX agency ASK for a copy of the software, or did Larry just up and give it to them.

    I think its more likely that he tracked down an address and just mailed it out so he could get in the CNET headlines.. as well as increase pressure to implement his proposed system.

  3. Building by dbitter1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Even with the software, the database still has to be built... I assume some of the radical [domestic, non-terrorist] militias [/cults/political activists] the ATF would love to watch aren't going to be nice enough to forward dirt on themselves in electronic format...

    --
    For us carnivores, "Sucking the marrow out of life" isn't a transcendentalist philosophy but a practical instruction.
  4. Standard marketing technique by Raindeer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the US governement really falls for this obvious marketing technique, they are dumber then I allready thought they were. Having worked within the Dutch government I know that once a database has been addopted, it hardly ever gets replaced for another dbms. They might build another front end, upgrade the dbms, but switching from vendor is just not an option. It is too scary to make such a big step. Oracle knows this and supplying the database for a national ID-card will mean business for life.

    Also don't forget, that there will be many government agencies that want to tie in their database with the national ID-database or base their database on it. Oracle will have a foot and a leg in the door there as well.

    1. Re:Standard marketing technique by Mike+Connell · · Score: 2

      Unless of course, they were intending using Oracle anyway. Something that doesn't seem unlikely given the size of the project.

    2. Re:Standard marketing technique by humps · · Score: 2, Informative

      >>but switching from vendor is just not an option.
      nope, it is always an option. Its not an if the people implementing the middleware were lazy and used all the database specific functions. If the middleware is implemented in such a way that it only requires a generic API (such as JDBC, ODBC, and yes I know not every db implements all optional JDBC/ODBC features), changing the database is not a difficult task and I've seen it in big corps. Its also not an option when a contract is still effective.

      I use pure JDBC, I switch db from Oracle to SQLServer2k to DB2 or MySQL back and forth. Stupid middleware implementation is to be blamed. And Larry won't get business for life if a better cheaper db is out there.

    3. Re:Standard marketing technique by wirefarm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >>>but switching from vendor is just not an option.
      >nope, it is always an option.

      Rarely.
      In many gov't shops, the Oracle sits on the one Sun box in the place and is only touched buy the ouside vendor-unix guys who stop in once-in-a-while to tweak it. (Those guys who never come to lunch with you.)
      You may have in-house people who can fsck around with an in-house built Ms Sql Server or Oracle db, but that rarely has anything to do with that one lonely off-limts box in the corner.

      Technically, "yes". All you have to do is email the vendor and get a data dictionary for the 'box-in-the-corner', but in reality, don't hold your breath. Either you will never get it, or worse, you will, then you realize that it is such crap that it will take two years before you could possibly get a system working in any other home-grown rdbms. They have the advantage: though the databases are total crap, design-wise, they've spent the last ten years polishing these turds into bombproof 'systems'.
      (Ignore the little man behind the curtain... Ignore that box in the corner...)
      I wish it weren't so...

      Cheers,
      Jim in Tokyo

      --
      -- My Weblog.
  5. Credit cards as an example...? by bani · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Oh dear.

    credit cards are among the easiest systems to defraud.

    And here Ellison is touting them as an example for the national ID system to follow?

    It's just more proof that Ellison is hitting the crack pipe especially hard these days.

    And AFAIK Ellison has still not answered those simple questions that were posed to him, eg "what terrorists, if any, would a national ID card system have stopped?"

    1. Re:Credit cards as an example...? by DavidpFitz · · Score: 2

      Perhaps he meant the security which companies such as Visa employ. CC's themselves aren't very secure (in terms of fraud) but you can bet Visa's systems are rock solid. You may hear that blah-blah.com's web site was cracked open are CC numbers got at, but that's nothing to do with Visa's own database security (which, incedentally rund DB2) -- so is Ellison saying the US Government should move to DB2?! :-)

  6. Standards by Iamthefallen · · Score: 4, Funny


    Ein folk, Ein reich, Ein RDBMS?

    What? The form you must fill as you enter the US asking if you're a terrorist, nazi or have participated in any genocides recently isn't enough?

    --
    Wax-Museum Fire Results In Hundreds Of New Danny DeVito Statues
    1. Re:Standards by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Funny
      > Ein folk, Ein reich, Ein RDBMS?
      >
      > What? The form you must fill as you enter the US asking if you're a terrorist, nazi or have participated in any genocides recently isn't enough?

      Nope. It'll have a new line: "Are you now, or have you at any time in the past, administered a Sybase server?"

  7. Umm... by powerlinekid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Don't companies give software to the govt all the time, or am I missing something? I know they're donating it but I don't think the problem here is this. I think the problem is Ellison's continued push for those id cards and mass public data records (bettering those of the fbi, etc). I'm sure this is unconstitutional somewhere involving privacy, etc. I'm just waiting for microsoft to roll out Windows XP smartcard edition, so not only will .NET passport book you a flight online but you'll need it to get you on the damn plane.

    --

    can't sleep slashdot will eat me
    1. Re:Umm... by grid+geek · · Score: 2, Interesting

      From a UK perspective we don't get software given as such but have meaningful "parnerships" with industry where they match government funding for research projects, usually meaning software. This gives them a zero opportunity cost, ensures all the students / researchers know their software (and will take this knowledge into industry a couple of years later) and get access to the latest research. It's not a problem, it's just part of the research business and doesn't usually cause too many problems.

      I don't know too much about the US constitutional issues but the right of privacy (or right to be left alone according to the Supreme Court) doesn't usually extend to hiding from the gov.

      I guess a single system would be good to tie in birth & death certificates, tax records, driving licences, medical stuff etc from the perspective of making it really hard to create false identities (or really easy if you happen to be the government) but what of identity theft?

      All you'd need to do is get in the one system and you could take over someones life. Kinda scary. Especially if you could then reclassify someone as a terrorist at the stroke of a key.

  8. What's the problem by YearOfTheDragon · · Score: 2, Troll

    "Ellison has followed through with his threat, I mean promise,"
    What's so bad with that?
    Control isn't bad itself.
    If I put a Troll or an Off-topic I get a -1 and if I put an interesting comment I get a plus.
    That's control, and is good. Moderation is used very bad sometimes. But the goal is fine.
    What matters is not that the CIA has that information, but what does with it.

    --
    -= If you fight Dragons long enough, you will become a Dragon =-
    1. Re:What's the problem by 1D10T · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Basically you are right. The problem I see is that the government might be able to put it to bad uses. If you allow certain control this might be ok while there is the current government. But remember what happens when a person like Hitler gets the power. He may put the existing infrastructure to his own bad uses. That is the time when you see you shouldn't have allowed the control, because it could be used to your own bad.

    2. Re:What's the problem by oyenstikker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A /.'er with a [port scanner/cd burner/whatever] is okay, because he will use it for good, not evil.

      But government with a whatever is not okay, because it will use it for evil, not good?

      So you trust yourself, but not the government. Fine, the government trusts itself, and but you.

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    3. Re:What's the problem by Ivan+Raikov · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's so bad with that?
      Control isn't bad itself.

      Um, "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."

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

      Oh, God, no. Someone's given the government software they could put to bad uses. It's so lucky that our government doesn't have its own money with which it can purchase software to put to bad uses. Then we'd really be up a creek.

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
  9. Another 3-letter group by IainMH · · Score: 4, Funny

    Seeing as how he has already supplied the CIA with software, I bet it went to another 3-letter group

    Not AOL?!! They are the people we fear the most!

    1. Re:Another 3-letter group by Xpilot · · Score: 3, Funny

      The M.I.B.?

      Nah, they use alien technology.

      The I.B.M.?

      Nah, they develop alien technology :)

      --
      "Backups are for wimps. Real men upload their data to an FTP site and have everyone else mirror it." -- Linus Torvalds
    2. Re:Another 3-letter group by codemonkey_uk · · Score: 2

      Perhaps it was the FSF. That would be a turn up for the books. :)

      --

      Thad

  10. Why this does not matter by wackysootroom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. If Larry Ellison offered you a free copy of arguably the #1 database server (and the most expensive) on the market, would you turn him down?

    2. The article makes no mention of what kind of data will be stored in the database server.

    Even if there is no 'National ID card' information, Ellison saved our government lots of money by giving us expensive software. Lobbying the legislature, writing congress letters, etc. is up to us.

    IMHO, the government probably listened to his schpiel, said thanks, and used the software for something else besides the ID card.

  11. Good thing they beat M$ to it by The+14+year+old · · Score: 2

    Microsoft could have "donated" their passport "technology" to the government, and we all know that could lead to very bad things. Damned be the day that my hotmail account is bound to a National ID Card!

    --
    "I hate people, but i love Gatherings. Isn't it ironic?" -- Randall Graves, Clerks
  12. Look at the history of SSN by sllort · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One of the most popular uses of the Social Security Number is stalking your ex-spouse. Larry's database should make this... easier?

    Then there's the ACLU's stance: There must be no national ID system -- either in law or in practice.

    But all of this means nothing, and preaching to the /. choir is pointless. There's only one number the politicians will look at. And it's this one.

    If you want to do something proactive, try to do something about that.

    1. Re:Look at the history of SSN by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Interesting
      • preaching to the /. choir is pointless. There's only one number the politicians will look at. And it's [opinion polls]

      You're being too simplistic. Other numbers that can effect their decision:

      • Number of $50 bills in the brown paper bag passed under the table in the diner.
      • Number of roofied cheerleaders in the back of the limo.
      • Number of useless idiot nephews who can be given PR jobs with a fat expense account and no job description within the bidder's company.

      This isn't meant to be funny. We have honest politicians, but not enough, and a system where 90% of career incumbents are re-elected doesn't exactly encourage honesty or integrity.

      I think we've already lost the national ID card argument. All we have to worry about now is how well the system is implemented, and how many false positives it will generate when despatching the MIBs to apprehend evil doers. Given that law enforcement in increasingly using SWAT tactics these days (whether they're trained in them or not) even for such dangerous criminals as computer crackers, I'd hope that whatever system we settle on actually works, especially if it's going to be used by all branches of government at all levels.

      If Sally Secretary is going to initiate a paramilitary action against Karl Kracker just by typing in his ID number, I'd far rather that there are safeguards in place to ensure that the goons actually go to Karl's house and not mine. In that respect, an Oracle system might be the least of a host of evils.

      Consider the alternative: who do you want to make go away today?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  13. Question, what's so wrong with this? by snatchitup · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    Question, we have the right to privacy, but do we also have the right to anonymity?

    I think it's too much fuss about the inevitable.

    Regards...

    1. Re:Question, what's so wrong with this? by Theodrake · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Yes. I have the right to make a purchase with cash. I don't have to use a credit card or check. I believe you can still purchase Postal Money Orders with cash and no id. And even though a clerk may ask to see my Drivers License to purchase liquour or tobbaco products, they don't record that information.

      But the question is does the government have a right to know who I am at its will, or only when there is a reasonable belief I have broken a law. It seems to me that the government is trying to make me identify myself even when there is no belief I have commmited a crime.

  14. Responsibility by Tomcat666 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We've had it with people working in medicinal areas (they developed the Hippocratic oath to make sure only to help the people), and with scientists (remember Hiroshima?).

    It seems like programmers are in the focus now. Would you write software that will be used in military devices (to kill people)? To observe people and violate their privacy? How can you know what your software is used for?

    We should take care of what we are doing when we publish and/or write a piece of software.

    This also has some interesting aspects for open source licenses like the GPL. There's no part of the GPL forbidding the use of the licensed software for militaristic purposes (wrong?) or privacy intrusion (to stay on topic). Since most hackers are friendly people and the GPL reflects a big part of the hacker ethics, it should probably restrict the use of your software for the "wrong" purposes.

    On the other hand, if you're not as pacifistic and freedom-loving as I am, you might say that the GPL shouldn't restrict the use of software so much. But then I think programmers should consider NOT to release a program if it could be used in a bad way.

    Hackers are putting so much love and work and spare time into their projects that they are thinking about its possibilities anyway, so maybe the only danger here is commercial software, written only to earn money.

    --
    Two Worlds - One Sun [Spirit]
    1. Re:Responsibility by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      if you think anyone does OSS out of love you're sadly mistaken. They do it to get fame and prestige in their society (the OSS community, i.e. Slashdot, k5). Very few people do anything for other people because they want to, and they've usually taken an oath to their God and believe they'll burn for eternity if they don't.

    2. Re:Responsibility by mindstrm · · Score: 2

      Well.. you are trying to apply a moral philosophy to programming that could be applied to anything else in this world. Should people invest in companies that engage in questionalbe practices? Should the shareholders of Microsoft be at fault because of MS's anti-comptetitive practices? What about those who invest in weapons companies. They should all be guilty as well?

      The GPL is about freedom of software. To restrict it's use is subjective. Is using it for weapons systems wrong? What if it's the only thing protecting you from some totalitarian regime trying to take over your country? Is it still wrong?

      Pacifism is great, but it ignores reality.

    3. Re:Responsibility by MrResistor · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I think this is a straw man arguement. You're blaming the technology for the uses it's being put to, and frankly it's inappropriate. Technology is nothing but a tool, like a hammer. You're essentially asking all hammer manufacturers to shut down because it's possible to kill someone with a hammer.

      Your arguement is certainly pacifist, but not freedom-loving at all. Censorship is the enemy of freedom, even if it is self imposed! The GPL is about Free-as-in-speech, and if you alter the license so that, for example, GPLed code can't be used in weapon systems, then it is no longer Free-as-in-speech. You are removing freedoms in order to impose your own pacifist morallity on others. That doesn't sound very freedom-loving to me. Feel free to write your own license for your code that prevents military use, but don't ask for such a clause to be added to a license like the GPL, it violates the basic principles on which that license is built.

      Personally, I would have no problems writing code specifically for weapons systems if I were being paid to do it, nor would I be bothered if code I wrote for some other purpose were used in a weapon system. The for pay requirement above is merely a reflection of my desire to be paid, and my recognition that the military-industrial complex has the capability to do that. Unfortunately a military is necessary in our world, and a modern military requires technological systems. Someone is going to get paid to create those systems, and it might as well be me.

      RDBs have many potential uses, none of which are destructive (unlike nuclear physics and medicine). Some of the potential uses are invasive, but does that mean the world should be deprived of this technology? Certainly not, especially considering the only difference between invasive and non-invasive RDBs are the people using them.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    4. Re:Responsibility by abe+ferlman · · Score: 2

      Well, it would be illegal to write controller code for a patent-lawyer-emulator-mecha-warrior robot named "Jack ValentEliza". Other than that though, you're basically right about the GPL and the weapons thing.

      --
      microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
  15. NSA scrutiny by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Funny
    Seeing as how he has already supplied the CIA with software, I bet it went to another 3-letter group.
    ...Where everyone looking at it is having fits of laughter having a look at the "security" features...
    1. Re:NSA scrutiny by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      Where everyone looking at it is having fits of laughter having a look at the "security" features...

      You say that, but let me tell you, I don't think you could take over a Unix host if the SQL*Net port was the only one open to you. And I have never in my years of working with Oracle come across someone with a password on one schema being able to get at any other schemas that they hadn't been granted. Certainly the quality of Oracle's "security" is higher than that in almost every Unix.

  16. Turf wars among the intelligence agencies by fhwang · · Score: 3, Insightful
    In the story, Ellison is quoted as saying: "There is cooperation (among government agencies). But there's a lot of data fragmentation."

    Of course, one of the biggest reasons for the data fragmentation is that that intelligence agencies don't cooperate -- if anything, they're notorious for their turf wars. Ellison is downplaying the organizational battles in order to pitch his technical solution.

    One of the causes of the turf war is that the intelligence agencies are poorly defined and poorly monitored. Once an intelligence agency is created, it tends to have a life of its own. Case in point: The CIA was originally chartered to help the U.S. fight the Cold War, something it did with laughable incompetence at times. But when the Cold War ended -- an event which took the agency entirely by surprise -- nobody at the CIA thought "Since our job is done, let's tell Congress to shut us down so we can be unemployed." No, of course, they looked around for other threats to pitch to the White House. With terrorism, they seem to have found it.

    Except for the fact that much of the anti-terrorism work will be domestic, and that therefore it falls under the aegis of the FBI, instead. But can you imagine the CIA bosses, always anxious about Congressional funding and eager to get into the anti-terrorism spotlight, staying out of the fray? Forget about it.

    1. Re:Turf wars among the intelligence agencies by alen · · Score: 2

      There is still a lot of work work for the CIA. It's charter is to collect intel information from all foreign governemnts, including allies. And bin laden isn't exactly an American citizen and falls out of the FBI's jurisdiction.

      But you're excatly right about the life of it's own. I used to work for the DoD and they will think up of anything to keep their jobs alive. It could be the most useless army unit or agency, but they will find ways to say how indispensible they are to national security.

    2. Re:Turf wars among the intelligence agencies by brunes69 · · Score: 2

      Another problem, as far as I understand it anyway, is that there is alot of overlap betwen the agencies. For example, the NSA overlaps alot with the CIA, both in their goals and how they achieve them. And the NSA ovrlaps in some areas (Satelite communications monitoring, etc) with the US Military. Not to mention how much the responsibilities of the various domestic agencies (FBI, US Marshals, local police) overlap.

    3. Re:Turf wars among the intelligence agencies by wfrp01 · · Score: 2

      In the story, Ellison is quoted as saying: "There is cooperation (among government agencies). But there's a lot of data fragmentation."

      It follows that Larry believes the answer is to consolodate all this data into one massive system.

      There's an expression "don't put all of your eggs in one basket". It applies well to this and any other situation where people say "there are too many competing ways of doing X". Sure, this "fragmentation" Larry abhors can be a pain in the ass sometimes. But I'd certainly rather have a little chaos here and there, than one massive central point of failure. Remember what happened to the centrally controlled economy of the former Soviet Union?

      --

      --Lawrence Lessig for Congress!
    4. Re:Turf wars among the intelligence agencies by ChadN · · Score: 2

      "And the only people we hate worse than the Romans... Are the fucking Judean People's Front!"

      BTW. "The Crook Factory", by Dan Simmons, is a very fun book to read about similar topics. In particular, it is a story about Ernest Hemingway's (real-life) spy ring in Cuba during WWII, and the infighting of the various US and German intelligence agencies during that time.

      --
      "It's overkill, of course. But you can never have too much overkill." - Anonymous Slashdot Coward
  17. How exactly does this change anything? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sure, it may be a marketing gimmick, but in reality, what does this change? If the gov't wasn't planning on creating a national ID card system, getting a complete Oracle system isn't going to change their minds.

    On the other hand, if they *were* planning on creating a national ID card system, it's a pretty safe bet that they'd choose Oracle as a platform.

    So, other than Ellison making sure his name stays in the headlines (There's an entire industry that revolves around keeping people's names in the headlines, so this is nothing new), what's the harm here? This act alone is not going to create a national ID card system.

  18. Re:But which OS!?!? by alen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Do you seriously think he is going to recommend NT and an easy future migration to SQL Server? Some people in the government already don't know anything except for microsoft and why make it worse?

  19. Larry's not alone by leonbrooks · · Score: 2
    Paul Allen of Microsoft fame, to name another financial heavyweight, is also putting his money where his beliefs are. I respect their rights to support causes that they like, I just wish there were a little less lying and misdirection by them, plus a little less blind acceptance by the other parties involved.

    Or else, that I was only a hairsbreadth away from being able to do the same kind of things. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  20. Re:But which OS!?!? by Jburkholder · · Score: 2

    You know, I'd love to know some of the details of this transaction (although that would take away some of the fun of wild speculation).

    I'm really scratching my head about what, if any, strings Larry was able to put on this 'gift'. Doesn't seem to likely he would be able to steer the way this goes by putting conditions on his donation.

    "Here, I'm granting a 'special-use' license to the US Federal Government for unlimited instances of Oracle9i. Now, you can use these any way you see fit for the national id card project, with just a few 'provisoes'. First, you can't ever run it on or with any Microsoft software. Next, blah blah blah...."

    "Um, okay. Gee thanks."


    I'd have to guess Oracle would have to gift this software with no strings, other than stuff to cover their butt.

  21. I'm disappointed by blonde+rser · · Score: 2, Funny

    I wake up and still in a haze I check /. to find a headline containing "Oracle" "Donates" and "Big Brother." So I assume that Oracle is donating software to help children's charities... only to be brought back into the cynical reality when I read the article and realize the Orwelian reference. Too bad

  22. The question is.... by darrad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do we really want any database that contains the kind of information we are talking about running on a piece of software developed by a corporate entity.

    I may be a Black Hellicopter KOOK here, but I am thinking back the the movie, "The Net"(Bad movie, good story)

    If the US Government sets up this database, running on software developed by any third party, then security will always be a problem. How many "Easter Egg" type bugs exist in most of today's software. What happens if one of the coders at Oracle was having a bad day, and added a backdoor to the database, and then publishes the path to it on the Internet?

    I don't pretend to have a solution to this, short of not doing anything, which is probably the best thing we can do. Knee-jerk reactions to the events of 9/11 will end up costing us more than the actual events.

    I think someone should propose to Ellison to have all of his personal data (credit card #'s, SSN, financial statements, "real" income, not what is reported to the IRS)stored in an Oracle database that is web-enabled. That will tell us all we need to know.

    Scary stuff....

  23. CDs will go straight to trashcan by jeffy124 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    policy in all us govt agencies, particularly those dealing with intelligence and security is to _not_ accept donations from vendors, including demoware from tech conferences. Part of this is security interests but also integrity. The gov't doesnt want vendors freely supplying software in hopes they would buy more licenses.

    so given that, whenever ellison's donation arrives at whatever agency he donated them to, they'll probably tell ellison "thanks, but no thanks" and toss the box in the trashcan.

    --
    The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
  24. BB Database by glowingspleen · · Score: 2

    A Big Brother database? Neat. I'm all for it, as long they don't let that guy Will win again. He's evil!

  25. Uhh.. software donation. So what? by mindstrm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I mean seriously.. if the price of the Oracle software is what stands in the way of the powers that be rolling out such a system, they have a serious problem already.

    I also don't see the big controversy. The government already HAS huge databases, analyzed by supercomputers, to figure out things like taxes, and whatnot.. what's another database? The issue is how things are used, not that they exist.

    1. Re:Uhh.. software donation. So what? by Robotech_Master · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree with you.

      And I find it very disappointing that certain Slashdot folks automatically jump to conclusions and post stories with slanted headlines. It does not exactly help Slashdot's credibility as a news source to assume the worst automatically in every instance.

      It seems that "U.S. Government" + "Database" automatically equals "Big Brother." This makes about as much sense as saying "kid" + "representation of a gun" = "maniacal school killer." A database is a tool, and many of them are used by the government already for ordinary, beneficial purposes, ranging from small mailing lists on departmental computers to the drivers's license system that ensures that only people who know how to drive well enough not to be a hazard on the road are driving. Sure, there are abuses, but in this case we don't even know what the software is going to be used for. It seems a bit premature to rant about "big brother" to me.

      Would it really hurt to post the same story under a more neutral headline and avoid the spectacle of yellow journalism?

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
  26. Oracle was FOUNDED for the CIA by Hobart · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Look up Oracle's history. They produced the first ever commercial relational database -- under contract to the CIA for a project called Oracle that got cancelled. Then they decided to market it, and took the name Oracle.

    In fact, Larry Ellison was fired from Oracle in his early years there. :)

    --
    o/~ Join us now and share the software ...
  27. Oracle or SQL by fathed · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What would happen if Microsoft did this today?

    Shouldn't we be fair, has the government done research to find out which database software would best fit their requirements?

    --
    Intelligence is a matter of opinion.
  28. Re:Hmmm... Three letters by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Funny
    > The I.R.S!!!

    As long as we're guessing, how about the INS? Lord knows those fucksticks could certainly use the help.

    And it'd be consistent with Ellison "[declining] to give further details, such as which agency or for what usage".

    At the INS, I'd bet the usage would be "Put it in the mailroom for six months. Have an agent take it from the mailroom and put it on the shelf sometime in spring of 2002. Have another agent wipe the dust off the box in 2004. Take the box off the shelf and try to install it on a 4.77 MHz PC/XT in 2007. (Side project: Install a CD-ROM for the PC/XT. Should be done by 2011.) When the installation program reports "not enough RAM" sometime in 2018, write a glowing report to Congress about the wonders of the ongoing INS modernization programme, and how, Real Soon Now, INS will finally be able to stop Bad Guys and illegal aliens from getting into (and staying in) our country, if it weren't for all those goddamn legal aliens we're still spending all our time trying to get rid of through interminably long delays in their paperwork."

    Slashdotters can moderate this as (+1, Funny). INS employees will probably moderate it as (+1, Informative).

  29. Secret militairy tribunals.. by Otis_INF · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A country which has a president who wants to install secret military tribunals shouldn't be worrying about if Oracle is able to access data inside governmental databases, but should be worrying about what the difference between the USA WITH secret tribunals and a 3rd world country with a dictator and secret tribunals really is.

    --
    Never underestimate the relief of true separation of Religion and State.
  30. Just like printers by ToasterTester · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Give the database to the goverment, then make big bucks on development tools, support, and maintenance contracts.

  31. Good Point by Srin+Tuar · · Score: 2


    And for our next government policy: we all have a right to "Heads" but "Tails" will be outlawed.

  32. Hope it's better than ours... by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I work for a branch of the government (I don't wish to disclose which one) and we recently purchased Oracle 9i products. All I can say is that I hope the unnamed gov't department has better luck with it than we've had.

    So far the website initiative we are developing using Oracle Portal has been one disappointment after another. While I understand the 9i database software is working fine, other components of the package have simply fallen flat on its face, particularly a serious compatibility issue with Solaris servers.

    The way I see it, the government is probably, for once, getting what it's paying for. Nothing.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  33. Conditional? by nettdata · · Score: 2

    I'm betting that while the software is "free", there's probably some condition that says Oracle Consulting will have to do the work.

    As everybody in the Oracle Financials world knows, buying Financials is only a small percentage of it's cost. Just wait until you see how much it costs to get it installed and configured!

    Larry is a lot of things, but stupid isn't one of them.

    --



    $0.02 (CDN)
  34. Re:But which OS!?!? by wannabe · · Score: 2

    Odd but true -

    I have the 9/2001 NSA Commercial Product Evaluations CD on my desk and the latest Oracle trusted system was the Version 7 DB with the correct security enhancements. No current version was currently even in the process of being evaluated.

    On the other hand, MS SQL server 7 was in the process of getting trusted system status per the NSA under Rainbow criteria as well as the updated CPE criteria.

    I'm as much of a conspiracy nut as the rest of /., but when it comes right down to it, reality tells me that a certified trusted system is going to win the bid over a non-trusted system.

    And NT 4.0 Service Pack 6a with the Security Level C2 enhancements meet the NSA trusted system criteria for that level.

    All of this, of course, is not to say that Larry and the boys couldn't fast track the evaluation...

    --
    "Draw them in with the prospect of gain, take them by confusion." Sun Tzu
  35. Oh, Oracle? Ah, nothing to worry about by Lobsang · · Score: 2, Funny

    If big brother depends on Oracle to retrieve and consolidate your data, rest assured your privacy is safe...

    :)

  36. Oracle.Net? by Peteresch · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Does anyone know if Elison & Gates have been talking to each other? I can just see it...

    Oracle convinces Gov to use national ID card

    Microsoft signs deal to merge Oracle database with Passport and .Net services

    Oracle controls the largest personal information collection ever.

    Microsoft convinces Government that Windows is required on all computers to keep information confidential

    Government forbids the use of any other OS

    Of course some see them as opposites.


    ... Gates never lobbied for a law requiring that every person in the United States be forced to use Internet Explorer.
  37. Amiga CIA TLAs by xixax · · Score: 2

    Hmm.... so you mean the CIA chips in my Amiga *weren't* Complex Interface Adapters? No wonder serial.device was so damn slow, it was sending my cache file to Washington the whole time.

    Antti

    --
    "Everything is adjustable, provided you have the right tools"