Fair Use Computer Game
mpawlo writes "As reported by Greplaw, The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) together with Privacyactivism has released an interactive video game designed to
educate players about their privacy and fair use rights. The game is focused on digital rights management technologies, online spyware, and data profiling servers. We have seen similar games in Sweden from the Anti-piracy Bureau and Flash movies from BSA in the US, however striking a different tune. Play Carabella." Cute idea.
Don't look for music online, unless you're willing to obtain it illegally.
The best place to legally buy music is still a record shop.
Import albums give you more rights than most US releases.
Summing it up, if you want your rights back, stay offline and move abroad.
free the mallocs!
Would anyone actually 'play' this who wasn't interested already to know the entire content of the game?
Content of the Game:
That's about the extent of the game.
Why not just send out a press release?
I didn't get full score...
Does anyone know a cheat for this game?
BTW, I'm also looking for the No-CD patch...
Oh yes, and my dog ate my serial number. Can anyone help me?
Thanks!
(Parody of posts that usually go up on forums as soon as a game is released... Guess it won't be happening here! Trust the EFF to take all those kinds of fun away...)
So, I go to the site.
Play the game
It tells me I should surf anonymously.
I try the privacy.net page to see what I leave behind.
I go to the recommended www.anonymizer.com.
Put in the privicy.net page to check what they really do:
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This Page is available with an Aonymizer subscription
WHY IS THE PAGE UNAVAILABLE
The Anonymizer Free Trial version restricts access to some web sites in order to keep the service working quickly and efficiently, without overloading.
Sites most often restricted include gaming, casino, adult, career, and web email sites. Other sites may be restricted at random as well.
Our Full Version premium service DOES NOT restrict access to any pages, costs less than $5 per month, and has many more features than the free version. Sign up now!
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So, in order to check out what they are trying to sell me, I need to subscribe?
On to the next (rewebber):
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WELCOME TO REWEBBER!
You are a registered user of our regular service? Please press the button
You do not have a valid Rewebber account yet? We are very pleased about your interest and give you the option to test our service for free.
Please register for your test account
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Registering REQUIRES an email account that they will send a testing password to (sure, mail accounts are easy to come by, but it is kind of a bother to just have a look at the results.
NEXT: http://www.multiproxy.org
No Data. This is a site that appears to exist to sell ads to you in the most annoying way they can. It's a freeware thing you load and appears to - damn, another ad floated in and blocked that part of the page.
Next: www.inetprivacy.com
35 bucks. Although it says you can download from a broken link.
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Overall, pretty bad results from the EFF recommended way of surfing without leaving a trail.
Spackler
PS: I ran these from IE (hence the floating ads that I had not seen in a while). Man, this is how people surfed before Mozilla?
A strange game. The only way to win is not to play. How about a nice mp3 from an independant artist's web site?
Up to a certain age (actual age determined by "maturity" level), most children don't really want to make up their own minds - they want their parents/guardians to tell them what's wrong & right. That gives them a moral base which they can incrementally adjust as they get more life experience.
It's not too hard to imagine a kid raised by someone who _really_ let the kid "make up his/her own mind". The term "spoiled brat" comes to mind.