Slashdot Mirror


Because Only Terrorists Use 802.11

skinnyd writes "Consultants working for the Department of Homeland Security have announced that the Feds view open WiFi as a means of abetting terrorists, and say that they will compel the open wireless operators will have to close off their nets. 'Homeland Security is putting people in place who will be in a position to say, "If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating."'

782 comments

  1. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    802.11 uses terrorists!

    1. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      in soviet russia dead horse beats you!

    2. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by shnarez · · Score: 1

      Can someone please explain to me what the 'IN SOVIET RUSSIA' jokes are all about? Which slashdot story did I miss?

    3. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, no, no! It's "...posts mod YOU down!" Yours sounds like something Yoda would say.

      "In Soviet Russia, a perimeter around YOU, the survivors create!"

    4. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by inerte · · Score: 1

      You missed the Slashdot story, and its dupe.

    5. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rofl!

    6. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      It was originally a joke by Yakov Smirnoff. Then it turned into a meme on Fark, got added to their filters, and moved to Slashdot. Basically, the idea is to take a sentence, switch it around, and add "In Soviet Russia" (e.g., "You watch television." becomes "In Soviet Russia, television watches YOU!").

    7. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by jericho4.0 · · Score: 2
      Ahh. All the stupid, idiotic, internet memes to waste brain cells on.

      I was going to ask, but was too embaressed.

      --
      "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    8. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not quite sure why somebody modded that down, it ought to be 4 or 5, funny. guess this is what happens when you've moderators on crack.

    9. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by macdaddy357 · · Score: 2

      No, it's here in the US where television watches YOU, if you have a V-chip.

      --
      How ya like dat?
  2. Sigh.... by WetCat · · Score: 1

    The only thing I can say on this... Sigh...

    1. Re:Sigh.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can we get them to tell ISP & others to close insecure mail servers so that they won't be used for SPAM^H^H^H^H terrorist activities ?

      Can we get them to force M$ to close security loophole ?

    2. Re:Sigh.... by kableh · · Score: 2

      But SPAM is a business. Doing that in these uncertain economic times would be unAmerikan! We've rooted you out you commie fag! Report for reeducation at once!

  3. no rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ashcroft has deemed you will have no rights. stop talking and get back to work.

    1. Re:no rights by deBulitz · · Score: 1

      Do you work at 2am eastern? And no, pr0n doesn't count.

    2. Re:no rights by Zauss · · Score: 1

      I'm at work now. And yes, I live in the eastern time zone. I've got the midnight to six shift at a desk. Although I'm not actually doing any work...

  4. Ludicris by Cheeziologist · · Score: 4, Funny

    What else will homeland think of next

    and today all pr0n is banned becuase only terrorists shoot a load off

    1. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good lord, if thats the case Slick Willy Clinton is in for a surprise

    2. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The sad thing is that the terrorists are the only ones with any balls to stand up to the government. We are all sheep.
      Wifi scares them because it's not something they can just turn off like any ISP.

    3. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll
      What I find scarry is that we(senators/house-members) has granted the execute branch a constitutional dictatorship. Having one voice is all good, but what happens in 2-6 years when a new president takes the reigns.

      ---
      Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts abosolutely.

    4. Re:Ludicris by NetGyver · · Score: 2

      Maybe my history is wrong, or perhaps my presidency knowledge is skewed, but doesn't the term for a US president at it's shortest, last 4 years and at its longest, 8 years?

      Perhaps your talking about senators/house member terms. If that's the case, what's the difference if any new president, weither democrat or republican, comes into office? If the house and senate are in abundance of the same party as the president, then i could see your point.

      Maybe that was your point, it was just kind of hard to follow. :)

      --
      A Penny for my thoughts? Here's my two cents. I got ripped off!
    5. Re:Ludicris by SageLikeFool · · Score: 1

      If they take goatse.cx down then the terrorists have already won.

    6. Re:Ludicris by gmack · · Score: 5, Insightful

      More like wi-fi scares them because it's insecure by default and most big corps leave it on default settings without realising that it's the electronic equivelant of dropping your pants and bending over.

      I actually asked a 3com sales guy about it a year ago and got "Well personally there is nothing on my network worth breaking into and I doubt there is anything on yours either"

      These people need to take action and clean up before the govt gets more motivated to regulate them.

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

      It's 2002. The next presidential election is in 2004. If Bush wins, term limits will have him out in 2008. Thus the 2/6 years reference.

    8. Re:Ludicris by UberGeeb · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, I believe the point is that it is right now 2002, and in either 2 or 6 years someone other than Bush will be in office. He's on year 2 of a 4 year term. This ridiculous idea ranks right up there with outlawing cash because the terrorists might mug us and take our wallets. "Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in," huh? So let's outlaw AOL, anyone can stick an AOL cd in their computer and get internet access. Terrorists are the real-world equivalent of trolls, and every time we make a rediculous, reactionary lawto try to stop them, they just laugh that much harder.

    9. Re:Ludicris by blincoln · · Score: 5, Interesting

      These people need to take action and clean up before the govt gets more motivated to regulate them.

      Should it be illegal for businesses to have poor security for their buildings?
      Breaking and entering (in the physical and electronic world) is already a crime. Only a police state regulates the actions of potential victims of crimes to "protect" them.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    10. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What else will homeland think of next You're giving them credit for thinking, which the originating article proves is an ability they lack

    11. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That should be:
      and today all pr0n is banned becuase terrorists "might also" shoot a load off

    12. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you stand up to the government, then from the government's point of view, you *are* a terrorist. Remember: one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter.

    13. Re:Ludicris by zatz · · Score: 5, Funny

      Terrorists are the real-world equivalent of trolls

      Yes, exactly. When you respond to a troll, the terrorists have already won.

      --

      Java: the COBOL of the new millenium.
    14. Re:Ludicris by xigxag · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The sad thing is that the terrorists are the only ones with any balls to stand up to the government.

      The sad thing is that you felt compelled, and justifiably so, to post that insightful yet "Anti-Amarikin" remark as an AC. Just keep in mind that in the future, anonymous posting on Slashdot may have to be eliminated...because only Terrorists post as Anonymous Cowards.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    15. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think Ludicris is going to be a part of this. He's got a new record coming out.

    16. Re:Ludicris by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      This is the best AC posting I've ever seen. Bold and too the point. The US is really starting to suck. The only thing the US government caters to nowadays are the huge megacorporations.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    17. Re:Ludicris by Enigma2175 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "Anti-Amarikin"

      According to our president, it's "Un-Merrikin" to post as an AC in "Merrika". "Anti-Amarikin" is just too big of a word for him.

      --

      Enigma

    18. Re:Ludicris by KingJoshi · · Score: 1

      Should it be illegal for businesses to have poor security for their buildings? Breaking and entering (in the physical and electronic world) is already a crime. Only a police state regulates the actions of potential victims of crimes to "protect" them.

      If a gun shop left the place unprotected and criminals were able to take the guns easily and use it for a crime, to what degree should they be held accountable?

      Most crimes on the internet do no involve death, they can/do cause huge financial, emotional, pyschological problems. They can also help set up communication methods for terrirists.

      The government might be going overboard again, but they have some legitimate reasons.

      Opinion subject to change with new information.

      --
      In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. - Paul Harvey
    19. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Should it be illegal for businesses to have poor security for their buildings?

      If you're a bank... there are standards...
      Even if you're a licquor store, there are standards...

      What you probably don't notice is that most spaces open to the public maintain some time of "security" force (rent-a-cops to shoo away homeless people who want to sleep where it's warm and take a sponge bath in their bathrooms).

      The reality of the mater is there are laws against
      "maintaining a public nusance"... which is really how I would classify most open access points.

      The fact that you don't know these things points out quite clearly that you have no actual rubber-meets-the-road business experience.

    20. Re:Ludicris by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter.

      Isn't that from The Jackel?

    21. Re:Ludicris by gnovos · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I actually asked a 3com sales guy about it a year ago and got "Well personally there is nothing on my network worth breaking into and I doubt there is anything on yours either"

      I know you realize this, but I feel like spelling it out for everyone who would read this sentiment and agree... Even if you don't have any DATA on your network that any hacker would want, you still have a NETWORK that hackers would love to control. 9999 times out of 10,000 "hackers" are not looking for blueprints on your top secret inventions that they could sell to a competitor. They are not looking for your credit card databases, nor your emails to use as blackmail. 9999 times out fo 10,000 they are not looking for data AT ALL! Instead they are looking for a network that they can control that will allow them to go and attack a DIFFERENT network. IF you wanted to hack into the DOD's computer network, would you do it from your home machine? Or ould you do it through a series of hacked accounts on other networks? If you are hosting child porn, would you prefer to have it sitting on the machine under your desk at the office, or would you prefer to put it on somone elses machine entirely?

      If you think you are safe becuase there is no important *data* on your machines that hackers would want, you are not safe.

      Next time you get this kind of answer make sure you get in writing the guy's willingness to take full responsibility when the MiBs come knocked at your door becuase your hacked machine was used to send death threats to the president.

      --
      "Your superior intellect is no match for our puny weapons!"
    22. Re:Ludicris by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      in either 2 or 6 years someone other than Bush will be in office

      So? The Repubs don't have the balls or desire to stop the juggernaut they've created. The Demos don't have the guts to stand up and say that this was all a mistake and none of the Libs or Repubs would vote for them if they did. And the Greens and Libs don't have a chance in hell to field anyone who'd win. I mourn for my country and fear that it must soon be only my country of origin.

      --
      That is all.
    23. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This ridiculous idea ranks right up there with outlawing cash because the terrorists might mug us and take our wallets.

      Almost.

      Cash will be outlawed because it makes anonymous transactions possible. Since terrorist commerce makes up at least 0.001% of all commercial activity, it will be acceptable for the ridiculous legislation to be enforced on the remaining 99.999% of transactions, such as when you buy hemorrhoid cream.

      As if Osama is really using a WiFi laptop with stego postings for communication. Right....

    24. Re:Ludicris by blincoln · · Score: 2

      What you probably don't notice is that most spaces open to the public maintain some time of "security" force (rent-a-cops to shoo away homeless people who want to sleep where it's warm and take a sponge bath in their bathrooms).

      You are missing my point. Are the businesses legally required to have a security force? No. And that's the way it should remain.
      Your other two examples are for specific kinds of businesses, not businesses in general.

      The fact that you don't know these things points out quite clearly that you have no actual rubber-meets-the-road business experience.

      Ad hominem attacks are a poor style to use in a debate.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    25. Re:Ludicris by blincoln · · Score: 2

      If a gun shop left the place unprotected and criminals were able to take the guns easily and use it for a crime, to what degree should they be held accountable?

      To the same degree that they already are - that making poor choices that allow someone access to your weapons leaves you liable for the damage they do with them.

      Most crimes on the internet do no involve death, they can/do cause huge financial, emotional, pyschological problems

      Those crimes are already illegal. Punish the offender - not the victim - as I said.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    26. Re:Ludicris by cars_r_us · · Score: 1

      You don't need to be a terrorist to stand up to your government. If you are not a terrorist, it takes "bigger" balls to "stand up" to your government. Studying history and world news more closely helps.

    27. Re:Ludicris by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      Funny that line should be quoted - I just saw the latest Bond movie (again) last night and that line was used in the movie...

      Or as Wolverine once said, "Terrorists? That's what the big army calls the little army!"

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    28. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really mean that, in general, crackers really get access to 9999 different networks each time they *do* get data from a network?

      Any other way I think your numbers are a bit exaggerated.

    29. Re:Ludicris by pjrc · · Score: 2
      More like wi-fi scares them because it's...

      ... a disruptive (market wise) technology when competiting with telcom's 3G cellular networks and DSL, and cable companies broadband services.

      It really has little to do with security, other than the market security the established telcom and cable companies (who participated in those hearings).

    30. Re:Ludicris by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The sad thing is that you felt compelled, and justifiably so, to post that insightful yet "Anti-Amarikin" remark as an AC

      So a person who stands up to the gov't is automatically classified as an "anti-american", and thus a labelled as a "terrorist"?

      How convenient for the gov't and their media goons. It just makes anyone they want to take down so much easier as a "terrorist".

    31. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All this talk about regulating versus limiting vesus eliminating. If you believe the correlations that one leads to the other, as many would attest leads to that slow, gradual decline in rights, why haven't you spoken up? /. already limits anonymity now. /. restricts individual ACs to 10 posts a day by tracking their IP addresses. Has for years. Hardly anyone realizes this or cares, because they have an account and hence are in the majority.

      Now, for daily readers, no big deal. But for weekend readers of /. that catch up on the past week of postings, you reach that limit typically after reviewing 3 days of posts in just posting helpful URLs. /. editors know this. I've notified them half a dozen times. Half the time, they are utterly clueless as to the problem. They, like you, don't care. And this is something they directly control. They say "Create an account"...uhh, port of the point of anonymity is NOT creating an identifiable account, even one ever so loosely identifiable as just a handle.

      Yes, /. is a site, not a governing body. Still, if they don't do what they believe is a right on something they control, you can utterly forget persuading the general public to control their large government bodies.

    32. Re:Ludicris by xigxag · · Score: 2

      AC, you raise a very subtle point. Slashdot limits AC's to 10 posts a day in order to prevent troublesome posters from ruining the community by posting anonymously. In other words, /., in the guise of preventing terrorism to their website, keeps track of the parties accessing their servers. As do almost all major websites. So what's the difference between this and government mandated lack of privacy? The difference is that, if you chose to spoof /. (for the sole purpose of maintaining privacy) or to sign on from a different terminal every day, or simply to not use /. as a protest to their policies, you wouldn't be committing a crime. Slashdot chooses voluntarily to behave in a certain way, and you can voluntarily choose to respond in any legal fashion. However, when the government decides to eliminate a portion of your privacy, you must accede or else be a criminal. If everyone is forced to use a "registered" IP address, switching to K5 instead of /. won't help you.

      As for the other issue you raise, is /. being hypocritical by limiting privacy while adopting a pro-privacy posture? I don't think so. Even the most ardent supporter of the American "right to bear arms" nonetheless believes that has the right to limit in his own home a guest's bearing of arms.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    33. Re:Ludicris by rpg25 · · Score: 1

      Actually, if you are a military contractor, it is illegal for you to have poor security for your buildings, and furthermore, it ought to be illegal!

    34. Re:Ludicris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So a person who stands up to the gov't is automatically classified as an "anti-american", and thus a labelled as a "terrorist"?

      Both you and the ignorant moderator who modded you up need to take a humor pill...
  5. No terrorists on my wifi... by sdsurfgeek · · Score: 1

    My net name says clearly "notforkooks". So that undesirables will stay away...

    1. Re:No terrorists on my wifi... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone discriminates against the fork ooks. Leave them alone.

    2. Re:No terrorists on my wifi... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, fortunately I am not a tfor kook, I am a sfor kook :) (no tfor kooks) har har har....

      Ok, mod me down... I deserve it...

  6. Great...Big Brother, anyone? by jonny-mt · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Nice, nice. Good to know that freely-available 802.11b will now be a thing of the past thanks to John Ashcroft and the Eye in the Sky. Of course, I can completely see the logic...only terrorists use wireless Internet, so only terrorist use the Internet, right?

    For God's sake, man, give us back our freedoms!!

    1. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by isorox · · Score: 5, Insightful

      only terrorists use wireless Internet

      No, the problem is only Campaign funders run cable networks, wireless is a competitor that is cheap to set up, impossible to control, and very useful. Like the old BBS's, or peer to peer.

    2. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no only terrorists use wireless.
      because noone besides a terrorist things it would be cool to share files with other people in your block/city/apartment with out paying the telcos.

    3. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by outlier · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That's not what the article says. It points out that wireless insecurities, particularly on corporate networks, pose a security threat -- no surprise there.

      Because of all the hoopla about homeland security, people are pointing out that *any* insecurity that allows people to access networks in unauthorized ways can be a vector for Bad People who want to do Bad Things.

      The same could be said about critical security problems in networked computers that may be exploited to attack critical networks. I'm sure that federal cybersecurity czar Richard Clarke would say that any insecurity that enables unauthorized network access *may* be a national security threat.

      It doesn't say that you can't have a home or office wifi network. It doesn't even say that freely available wifi is a tool of the terrorists. It says, that systems should be secured, and that responsibility lies at many levels (manufacturers, corporate users, etc).

      This isn't to say that the government doesn't engage in FUD or that civil rights aren't under attack. But it makes mare sense to fight the real threats to individual liberties.

    4. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wireless networks with their poor range, scaling issues, background noise problems, limited range and transmit power, and lack of connection to the internet are not, by any stretch of the imagination, a threat to cable companies. Do you really 802.11b would scale to an entire city?

      Please, try to ground yourself in reality a bit before posting this reactionary drivel.

      The office of homeland security is merely trying to justify its existence and the amount of tax money being put into the beaurocratic incenerator. Now doesn't this seem a little more reasonable than a big corporate/government conspiracy?

      The fact that you were modded up is truly pathetic.

    5. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      But there are no legitimate uses for the unlocked car.
      What if I want to run an open WiFi network for legit uses only?
      I think it would be more akin to someone taking one of those pen-on-a-ballchain's from a bank, unhooking it, and using it to jab someones eye out.
      Bank didnt intend for it to be used like that, they just wanted it public. And even if such an event occured, they'd continue to have a public pen policy.

      --
      Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
    6. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by isorox · · Score: 3, Informative
    7. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by xophos · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So first of all outlaw Microsoft software, it's the biggest securety threat, and it's even more widely used than wifi.

    8. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We must campaign against this sort of digital millenium freedom act...
      I think they [not only homeland sec...] bother about not being able to track log files of every connected wifi user. 802.11b could be a very nice thing because users are able to create their own networks for all purpose (ip telephoning, browsing) and nobody is able to ask for log files because they don't even exist.

    9. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by nomadic · · Score: 2

      Go look at all the people urging us to vote for Bush on the old election threads. They claimed he was the "geek" candidate. He was the "libertarian" candidate. Of course, those are the kinds of libertarians who only identify as such because they just hate paying tax that much. Don't care much about other freedoms.

      They got their wish though. We may be moving towards a totalitarian police state, but those mean ol' taxes have gone down.

    10. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder if free wireless access being banned for "security" reasons has anything to do with this?

    11. Re:Great...Big Brother, anyone? by IMZombie · · Score: 1

      I don't see why a few well placed omni's couldn't host a crapload of users across a city with directional antennas on the far end. Can you say Sprint broadband? Same diff.

      People are covering 20 mile gaps using out of the box Lynksys WAP11's and recycled primestar dishes. Heck even a Pringles can-tenna cound probly get signal at that range.

  7. Gotta love the /. knee-jerk reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    All they want to do is mandate minimum security levels for Wi-Fi network operators so as to prevent intrusions.

    There's a difference between intentionally limiting rights and establishing minimum standards of conduct. I suppose you guys never heard of speed limits on highways.

    1. Re:Gotta love the /. knee-jerk reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, wouldn't a speed limit be a MAXIMUM limit? not a minimum standard? A Maximum standard? more of a regulation then a standard...

    2. Re:Gotta love the /. knee-jerk reaction by The+Grey+Mouser · · Score: 2


      All they want to do is mandate minimum security levels for Wi-Fi network operators so as to prevent intrusions.

      There's a difference between intentionally limiting rights and establishing minimum standards of conduct. I suppose you guys never heard of speed limits on highways.


      Argument by analogy is always a dicey proposition. It's not clear how speed limits are precisely the same as mandating a secure network. After all, the threat of bodily harm is far more readily apparent in the latter case. If you want to extend this analogy to its natural conclusion, you would be forced to agree that mandating secure wireless networks is wrong, because the government cannot establish a speed limit on private roads...oh sure, you can get to public roads (the internet) from your private road, but regulation does not apply until that threshold is crossed.

      So let's drop the shallow analogy and argue the actual point at hand. Many home and business users would probably stand to gain from regulations of WiFi equipment. However, only a few business and institutions are actually in a position where a network compromise could prove dangerous. And these should clearly not be employing wireless technology (I would be concerned, for example, if the computer network controlling the local nuclear power plant were attached to a wireless network...) But for the average business, or home network, the real concern is not that vital computer systems are more vulnerable (since there is no shortage of systems hacked through the wire network), but the greater anonymity afforded the attacker.

      I don't deny that this is a problem, and makes serious attacks that much harder to prosecute, but it does pose an important question for the general populace as this technology becomes ubiquitous. Namely, what are the responsibilities of a private citizen to monitor their own private network? I mean, whether the hole in security is due to faulty protocols implemented in the hardware or a clueless user (or an intentionally open network) is immaterial from the perspective of infrastructure security. I think this discussion needs to happen soon, and should not be one-sided (the government lecturing the public).

      I also think it mildly amusing that the government is now incredibly concerned with the security of private home and small-business networks, given its own chequered past, with missing laptops and high-profile break-ins. Maybe the terrorists don't need much help :-) While the government threatens regulation, it might be useful to turn some questions around; like, why are any critical computer systems accessible via the internet, anyway? Instead of a mountain of terrorist fear-mongering, maybe we should ask the government to set a better example than they do presently.

      Apologies for rambling...

      Cheers,

      The Mouser

    3. Re:Gotta love the /. knee-jerk reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe it's this, maybe it's that, maybe it affonculo!

    4. Re:Gotta love the /. knee-jerk reaction by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Speed in itself isn't a problem; careless driving while speeding is. That said, careless drivers following speed limits still cause lots of accidents.

      And before you say 'if they were speeding it'd be even worse', let me say this. The same can be said of driving a smaller car instead of an SUV. A semi going 55 mph will do ALOT more damage then my sedan.

  8. NOOO by TekReggard · · Score: 1

    I own a cell phone and a radio! I must be a terrorist! OHH and Truckers have radios too! Some of them have laptops with wireless, are they terrorists too?

    1. Re:NOOO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps they don't do the same things a terrorist would do, but they certainly smell like an Arab terrorist, which can be best described as a mixture of a wet block of cheese, body odor, and camel shit.

    2. Re:NOOO by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      How do you propose to break into Internet hosts, release a targeted worm/virus, or initiate a distributed denial of service attack against critical Internet infrastructure using only your cell phone and/or radio?

      You have to have Internet connectivity somewhere. What changes here is that IP connectivity used to be somewhat traceable (you had to provide some form of information and usually a credit card, not to mention most ISP's have caller ID). With open Wi-Fi networks, the trail ends with the Wi-Fi operator. Generally he doesn't even know you were ever on the network. And if he does, it's doubtful he's obtained anything remotely identifying about you. You can commit whatever crimes you want and you will never be caught.

  9. Hello? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a GOOD thing. Although I'm sure some freeloaders will disagree, it's a good thing to whip those lazy admins into thinking about security, whether it's wireless or wired LAN. If it takes some coaxing from the federal government under the auspices of the eternal War on Terror, so be it. Seems like the only time the management at my company is interested in security is the week before our biannual external security audit.

    1. Re:Hello? by oo7tushar · · Score: 2

      sure security is good but what about us people who want to share our connection with everybody and everybody?

      Also...we should be free to be lazy.

    2. Re:Hello? by AntiFreeze · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This is not a good thing. Alerting people to the insecurities of wireless networks is a good thing. Setting up minimum standards for wireless security is a good thing (which is part of what HomSec wants to do). But saying that if you don't adhere to those minimum standards then you're helping terrorists is ludicrous.

      If your admin isn't interested in security, then you've got a bad admin. Government regulations and threats of helping terrorists won't change that.

      As far as the security of America goes, there are much more potent problems to deal with before worrying about terrorist's annonymous internet access. Our ports. Our porous borders. Our politicians.

      So to sum up: HomSec may have a very valid point, but how they've addressed it is pathetic. There are more important things for the new department to be taking care of. If HomSec latches on to every little "security" problem in America, they'll get nowhere fast. If they choose big problems and start with those, the deparment might even make itself worthwhile.

      Insecure wireless networks shouldn't be a matter of National Security, they should be a matter of personal security.

      --

      ---
      "Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller

    3. Re:Hello? by DarthWing · · Score: 1

      Would "everybody and everybody" include spammers and DDoSers that would be more than willing to use your connection as a spoof IP?

    4. Re:Hello? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      So when does this new policy apply to Microsoft and their [legendary|continuous|massive] security leaks? I'd like to see Bill and Steve dragged into court in chains for "aiding terrorists"!

      Yeah, like that'll happen.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    5. Re:Hello? by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 2

      Call me crazy, but if you do the right thing for the wrong reason, then you have *not* done the right thing. You just got lucky.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    6. Re:Hello? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yer crazy.

    7. Re:Hello? by peculiarmethod · · Score: 1

      no ones mentioned that.. they aren't following their own policies historically speaking (as you were stating) - ie, they as a party screw up - fire the finacial director (happened yesterday TWICE) for his beliefs, and march on. Same here.. terrorist communicate via methods they can't modulate or monitor.. whats the answer? the extremist 'your communication standard is very flawed, move away, nothing to see' rhetoric. What I suggest is a discourse on proposed solutions based on already funded projects and available academic projects within realm of interest, move to a panel (sp?)- then move to vote. Not a media driven declairation of fear. Bah humbug I say. Admit wrongs and make right decisions when they're obvious instead of reloading new men behind old issues..
      new bonuses..

      sigh

      the cycle continues

      pm

      are you my friend? (I don't believe in linking)

      --
      ** "It's not my job to stand between the people talking to me, and the ones listening to me." -- Pego the Jerk
    8. Re:Hello? by oo7tushar · · Score: 1

      I'm going to leave it open cause I believe that most people who use it will be good. I may or may not monitor it once in a while and if I monitor it and I catch somebody using it for inappropriate means then I will warn them and tell everybody in my neighbourhood about them :)

      But...if spammers use it then it's my problem not the governments'. If the people who get spammed complain to me then I will direct them to the person who spammed them.

  10. Insecure Networks? by jorupp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So it's a crime to run an insecure network? What about an insecure computer that can be cracked and used to launch an attack, is that a crime too?

    Hmm... wonder if that means running a non-up-to-the-latest-patch OS or application is a crime?

    1. Re:Insecure Networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      So it's a crime to run an insecure network?

      In some industries, it is; run a google search on HIPAA.

    2. Re:Insecure Networks? by Chuqmystr · · Score: 1
      Hmm... wonder if that means running a non-up-to-the-latest-patch OS or application is a crime?

      w00t! So in that vein of logic it would be illegal to use winbloze! SCHWEETE!

    3. Re:Insecure Networks? by penguinboy · · Score: 2

      If not illegal, it's certainly irresponsible and not something a considerate network community member would do.

    4. Re:Insecure Networks? by Kafka_Canada · · Score: 2

      This is an excellent point, and I think the parent should be modded up.

      On that note, while you're correct that responsibility at different levels should be compatible -- i.e. if you leave open to "terrorists" (any malefactor, really) your resources, be they network or computer, you should be punished regardless of the type of system -- a more fundamental question is to what degree one *should* be held accountable for possessing open resources that could be abused. For instance, suppose you run back into the store to grab the bag of spinach you forgot, and leave your car running with the doors unlocked. A bystander sees the opportunity and drives off in your car, but in his hasty getaway he hits a pedestrian. This is analogous to either the WIFI case or the broken OS case, but perhaps makes the issue more apprehensible: should you be held criminally responsible for "abetting terrorism" because you "possessed an open system"?

      --

      A geek is a geek is a geek. See what I mean.

      --
      Fuck it
    5. Re:Insecure Networks? by sinserve · · Score: 2

      No Sims for you.

    6. Re:Insecure Networks? by gmack · · Score: 2

      "Hmm... wonder if that means running a non-up-to-the-latest-patch OS or application is a crime?"

      After having to deal with expsnsive DoS attacks made possible by admins who didn't give a damn about security you won't find me crying should they start imposing a fine to running servers with known vulnerabillities...

      After all I spend the time upgrading each time a new security patch is issued so why the hell should I have to suffer because of the incompetance of admins who don't?

    7. Re:Insecure Networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Indeed, only terrorists use windows ;)

      Mmmm, maybe this Homeland Security thingy isn't so bad...

    8. Re:Insecure Networks? by mosch · · Score: 5, Insightful
      clearly you run a small, unimportant network. at many companies it's a fact of life that you need to put security fixes through a verification process to make sure that they don't cause any problems that are worse than the vulnerability before applying them. In the meantime, you're knowingly running a network with some security flaws.

      In the real world, we can't all just apply every patch immediately, some of us need to make sure that a patch won't cause a problem with vital services before we do so, and contrary to what you may have read on slashdot, those verification processes aren't always trivial.

    9. Re:Insecure Networks? by inerte · · Score: 2

      And your point is you think you are more successful.

    10. Re:Insecure Networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      In some industries, it is; run a google search on HIPAA.

      Seen the recent thread on this on /.? It turns out all the big players, starting with MS, have exemptions for running their systems regardless. As always, the law will be imposed upon those lacking the legal resources to resist.

    11. Re:Insecure Networks? by deranged+unix+nut · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is an interesting question. To take that line of thought a bit further...

      How long before it is a crime to release software (or make available source code) that contains known security flaws?

      If running a non-up-to-the-latest-patch OS or application is a crime in some industries, what liability does the software provider have? If they know of a security flaw or weakness, can they still release it for use in those industries?

      Then, would it become a requirement to do a certain amount of testing for security weaknesses before releasing software?

      If that happens, would sharing "in-development" source code (sourceforge) become illegal for "security reasons"?

    12. Re:Insecure Networks? by Tony-A · · Score: 2

      This is why full disclosure and Open Source is better. It's a lot easier to defend if you know exactly what you're defending against and exactly what you have to defend with. Note that with Open Source, unlike Closed Source, the attacker does *not* know exactly what you have.

    13. Re:Insecure Networks? by Charm · · Score: 2
      Then, would it become a requirement to do a certain amount of testing for security weaknesses before releasing software? If that happens, would sharing "in-development" source code (sourceforge) become illegal for "security reasons"?

      You probably would have to put big disclaimers on it saying "not fit for real world use, development version only". I actually think making sure that software is secure is a good thing. Of course having stupid laws enforce it won't make it so.

      --
      -- RTFM:Slackware::Beer:Saturday
    14. Re:Insecure Networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the fuck are you to judge someone else's network to be "unimportant"?

    15. Re:Insecure Networks? by frozencesium · · Score: 1

      and people wonder why network security is such a problem...

      granted security fixes may have to go through some kind of verification...the thing is, it shouldn't take that much time. many of the latest problems in MS have been cross site scripting issues in IE and IIS. patches for this kind of thing are usually for better data checks (properly formated strings, etc). if you are using some software that breaks when this kind of patch is applied, then you have bigger issues.

      with *nix, the security alerts have been more varried in type and service, but again, a quick check of the problem and the fix should let you know if it *might* break something. i have found it rare that a security fix (as opposed to a bug fix) rarely breaks anything, and my orginization would rather be without even a necissary service temporarily than leave them open to data theft. some companies out there would rather the patch be applied than remain open because a patch may or may not break some service. it's a risk management type thing. oh, yeah...and if some of your software breaks because of a security patch...it might be time to fix your shitty software...

      honestly? i could be wrong, but how many times has a security patch caused a problem?

      -frozen

      --
      I'm not always the brightest pixel in the stream
    16. Re:Insecure Networks? by SirCrashALot · · Score: 1

      Ahh, and since redhat can no longer release certain updates in the US due to DMCA regulations, we are all in violation of the law.

    17. Re:Insecure Networks? by gmack · · Score: 2

      " In the real world, we can't all just apply every patch immediately, some of us need to make sure that a patch won't cause a problem with vital services before we do so, and contrary to what you may have read on slashdot, those verification processes aren't always trivial."

      How does "the real world" handle it when some kiddy beaks in and erases the webserver? I can count on a scan every 4 hours or so as soon as a new exploit is handed to the kiddies. That's not a large margin of error. But then I also avoid vendors who break things on security patches.

      But then I wasn't talking about admins who take a week either.. I was referring to the idiots who can't even bother patching servers 2 MONTHS after a security fix is released.

      I once tracked an attack an unpatched irix machine that hadn't been patched in three years. Clearly something is wrong with that picture.

    18. Re:Insecure Networks? by gmack · · Score: 2

      MS set the record for bad patches with NT4 with some patches crashing services ven disabling copeting sofware. It's not that much of a supprise that some admins are still afraid of patches to this day.

      The basic problem is that some vendors like to roll security patches in with general software upgrades. MS has gotten better about that lately but then I still have an XP patch that prevents the system from booting.

      The real fix is to avoid vendors who have a track record that bad.

    19. Re:Insecure Networks? by mosch · · Score: 1
      i could be wrong, but how many times has a security patch caused a problem?
      Personally, I've seen patches for solaris and redhat that fucked Oracle. I've seen Oracle patches that fucked SAP. I've seen a solaris patch that fucked CheckPoint. I've seen any number of patches which didn't even fix anything.

      Go look at the records on patch releases, and you'll see that it's not uncommon for a vendor to fix the same problem twice in a row, about a week or two apart, because the first fix either didn't fix the problem or it caused major issues with something.

    20. Re:Insecure Networks? by abulafia · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure you have worked on a large network supporting lots of people with responsibility for an IT budget.

      When I was doing this (and thank god I'm not any more), we started by applying patch clusters and whatnot without testing. And of course, it quickly became a problem - if you haven't had a patch destroy an application, count yourself as leading a charmed life.

      We had to build a test network duplicating the machines to be updated, to test everything before deployment. Granted, it was useful for things besides security patch planning, but it was expensive. And then you have the personell cost of rebuilding the environment you're patching, every time a new patch comes out. Sometimes it isn't a big deal, sometimes you reinstall the OS from scratch and install Oracle, say, or Great Plains, to replicate a specific environment. It quickly becomes a couple of day job for an expensive admin. Do the math - it costs money. The only reason it is worth is is by contrast - if you bring down a service used by millions of people a day on a patch, that costs more. Ask Ebay.

      --
      I forget what 8 was for.
    21. Re:Insecure Networks? by wandernotlost · · Score: 3, Insightful
      How long before it is a crime to release software (or make available source code) that contains known security flaws?

      Won't happen. That wouldn't further the interests of the big businesses that have paid for our politicians. Outlawing open wireless nets only hurts the consumers, who aren't organized enough, and aren't informed enough to object meaningfully. It certainly helps out the ISP-megacorps who want to retain control of access.

      The only way this kind of thing will stop happening is when our politicians stop having their primary source of funding/perks come from big businesses, making them more accountable to the people they are supposed to represent.

      Perhaps Iraq isn't the only place due for a "regime change."

    22. Re:Insecure Networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > should you be held criminally responsible for "abetting
      > terrorism" because you "possessed an open system"?

      If and only if someone uses your system to commit a crime, only
      after the fact, and only with evidence.

    23. Re:Insecure Networks? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      I'll give you an exact case where that happened: In Kansas City a couple years ago, a woman exited her car for a moment to go into a store, leaving her young son in the back seat. An ex-con just released from a local jail (and I believe they later determined that he was released DESPITE BEING WANTED IN ANOTHER CASE) jumped in the car and attempted to steal it. The woman saw this, ran back to try to get her son out, the man pushed her away and drove off. The son, attempting to get out of the car, became entangled in the SEAT BELTS, hung outside the car and was dragged by the perp for several miles until a number of other drivers on the highway saw the child dangling (quite dead) from the car. Several drivers forced the perp off the road, dragged him from the car and sat on him until the police arrived.

      You correctly could ask who is insecure here - the police department that released a wanted fugitive or the seat belts that caused the boy's death? Or the mother who simply left the car for an instant? I vote for the former...

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    24. Re:Insecure Networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is _exactly_ why we need TCPA. Vendors could proactively disable computers that were not running the latest Service Pack. Customers would be forced to pay for security updates before their computers could be re-enabled.

      Three cheers for Palladium.

    25. Re:Insecure Networks? by Chazmyrr · · Score: 1

      Many of us don't have a choice of vendors. A product may only be available from one or two vendors. Corporate policy may dictate that you use a specific product from a specific vendor. Even if the product is more expensive and not optimal for the task, you'll be retired before the paperwork for a deviation is approved. In short, you use the corporate standard product in the corporate standard configuration if you want to keep receiving your corporate standard paycheck.

      Now, lets talk patches. Suppose a new security patch comes out to fix an unchecked buffer. After testing the patch for a week or two, I determine that it will take three months and $100k in software upgrades to work around the issues introduced by the patch. Let us also suppose that there are several other documented vulnerabilities that are easier to exploit and for which a patch has not been released. Why in hell should I spend that kind of money to put bars over the window when my front door is wide open?

    26. Re:Insecure Networks? by gmack · · Score: 2

      I sure as hell hope that's not a server with access from the internet...

      If it does have access to the internet then what you have there is a break in waiting to happen.

    27. Re:Insecure Networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Depending on the child's age, whether the car was left running, how long she was gone, the neighborhood, the weather, etc., simply leaving a child unattended in a car can in itself be considered a crime against the child, even if no untoward consequences arise. I believe they call it child endangerment. The fact that another person did further harm to the child doesn't really absolve her of neglecting the kid in the first place, although by the same token she isn't responsible for the other person's actions either. Analogize this to the original topic as you will, but I'm not sure you can because a child, unlike data or network resources, is a person with rights. Because of this added factor, the moral equation just isn't the same.

  11. Well.. by ShooterNeo · · Score: 2

    On the one hand, this obviously is an example of extreme overreaction and paranoia, they do have a point here.

    Open wireless nets where anyone can log in without any trail left (other than the hacker must be physically close to the AP OR have a high gain antennae and be miles away) would allow someone to be truly anonymous online. They could trade in kiddey porn, hack poorly secured computer systems, say nasty things about federal employees...all the usual suspects that piss the government off. The government doesn't like this, and is using the umbrella of "homeland security" to do something about it. It has absolutely nothing to do with terrorism (face it : any computer that controls anything truly important probably isn't connected to the internet or has extensive protection).

    1. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Lets be serious. There are plenty of free ppp places still out there. Someone can easily get on through those or through a million insecure government military or university access points that have dial up lines. In a lot of places now you could just go into college libraries and jack-in right from there. If they want to hide their identity they can easily connect somewhere where they could route through some moron's misconfigured masquerading proxy that accepts packets from anywhere and logs nothing. Wireless does make it a little easier but someone can get on and hide their identity with or without it.

      There are plenty of computers that have very important tasks on the internet and low security. I don't think of terrorists as being technically proficient, but if a skilled "terrorist" hacker comes along we could be in quite a bit of trouble.

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

      Dial-up connections can be traced, as any phone call can be, to a physical location. So can cybercafe use. Wireless access, on the other hand, can be very had to locate without a lot of specialized equipment.

      Also, what makes you think terrorists aren't technically proficient? With the funding they have, I'm sure they could buy proficiency if they need to. Can you tell who is a terrorist on sight? Could the wealthy philanthropist funding a "security enhancement" project be a terrorist? Who knows. Money talks, though, and terrorists have some very wealthy backers.

    3. Re:Well.. by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      Hate to break it to you, but that jack in the university library is traceable. The university can record what IP address they assigned to that physical network wire at what time, so if the attack victim can trace things back to an IP and time of the attack, the university just has to pull out the security camera tape from that time to get a full-color picture of whomever was using that specific physcal port at that moment... the suspect has to have within a wire's length of the port!

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

      Hate to break it to you, but that jack in the university library is traceable. The university can record what IP address they assigned to that physical network wire at what time, so if the attack victim can trace things back to an IP and time of the attack, the university just has to pull out the security camera tape from that time to get a full-color picture of whomever was using that specific physcal port at that moment... the suspect has to have within a wire's length of the port!

      And how long will this take? The perp would be thousands of miles away by the time the security tapes were pulled and seen days later.

      Oh, and the perp could always were a hat, sunglasses, etc to disquise themselves.

      Sheesh!

    5. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IP addresses assigned to wires? What are you smoking? At best you might find a mapping of the IP address back to the MAC address that was in use, and if you're lucky the switches will still have that MAC address in their port listings.

      The more likely case is that once they're gone, you're left with no data at all. You'd have to run scans checking for new hosts AND mapping their switch ports constantly, or you risk missing one.

      Besides, if you plug in a WAP and hide it somewhere, you can sit nearby with your laptop and appear on the network with different hardware addresses until they find it. Sure, you're out the $100 for the access point, but in the meantime you've had plenty of fun while remaining relatively far from the actual plug.

    6. Re:Well.. by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      Just remember not to leave prints on the lost access port...

    7. Re:Well.. by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      Security camera?

      I haven't actually looked but I don't recall noticing any security cameras in the lab at City College of San Francisco...

      And their Linux boxes are running unpatched Red Hat 6.2 - I know because my UNIX Sys Admin teacher told me that when I suggested my extra-credit project be a talk on Linux security...

      See all you terrorists at the lab...

      Oh, wait, I log in from home - or maybe through the wireless at Chevy's...

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  12. And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by idiotnot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It would seem that anyone who could get internet access could potentially affect networks. Should they regulate AOL distributing CD's with a thousand free hours? I mean, the terrorists could easily use a stolen credit card (oh, I'm sure they'd have qualms about doing that...)to get initial access....

    Okay, so they wouldn't be moving as fast as they would going through a corporate network.

    But if a LAN Admin is stupid enough to leave his access points open (with access to the outside world), then the company gets what it deserves for hiring an MSCE to do its network design.

    Yes, I run an open AP at home (and there's nothing really interesting to look at, I assure you), but I'm not to the point where I think it's a good idea to put one on the network at work. It's been discussed before, and it'd just be more difficult than it's worth.

    1. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by deranged+unix+nut · · Score: 1

      An open AP might just be a service to partners and clients if it is designed correctly.

      Of course, you wouldn't want the AP to be connected to your internal net, and you would want to add QoS to limit bandwidth and possibly even increase latency to a point. You would also need to monitor for abuses and maybe even tweak your antenna placement so that the signal dosen't go very far outside of the building.

      However, I think that a blanket connection between open APs and terrorism is faulty at best, and an effort to boost some special interests at worst.

    2. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In related news:
      Security experts working for the Homeland Security department announced today that private passwords are viable tools used by terrorists to cover their identities and gain access to unsecure portions of the national information infrastructure. One analyst suggests, "Registered, government controlled passwords are the only way we're going to put the power back in the hands of National Security instead of the millions of murderers, child pornographers and terrorists using the internet."

      So guys, once this administration single handedly erodes the basic rights granted by the US constitution a little more, where is nice to live in the world?

    3. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by Tseran · · Score: 1

      Absolutely! Ban AOL CD's! Ban MSN CD's! Ban NetZero CDs! Ban the internet, since apparently any one of us with internet access could easilly bring down the entire network! Hey, let's not forget, we're all intellectuals here, and heaven forbid, we actually use our brains and do something insidious, like post against Bushcroft using our terrorist supporting WiFi. We must all be a bunch of anti-american communists. Next thing you know, we will be against drug testing by the government on us, since if we don't submit to it, we are unpatriotic.... Oh wait, too late, It's already done

      --
      .sig: It's what's for dinner.
    4. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by UncleFluffy · · Score: 2

      Ban the internet, since apparently any one of us with internet access could easilly bring down the entire network!

      Lol, "burn the village to save the village" revisited.

      --

      What would Lemmy do?

    5. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by jcam2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If I was planning to use the Internet to do something really nasty (like email members of my terrorist cell or release some destructive worm), an unsecure wireless network would be the best way to do it.

      Dial-up ISPs log caller phone numbers, and cybercafes, hotels, etc.. have security cameras and people who might remember my face. With wireless access, I could connect from a parked car without anyone noticing or any record of my presence being kept.

    6. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by frozencesium · · Score: 1

      But if a LAN Admin is stupid enough to leave his access points open (with access to the outside world), then the company gets what it deserves for hiring an MSCE to do its network design.

      exactly. these are probably the same companies that wouldn't ever know if they were hacked, allow your password to be your first name, etc. hell, the admins probably wouldn't know a good firewall rule set from a hole in the ground. ANY admin should review ANY type of new electonic device they want to put on their network to see if it posses a security risk. it's common sense. but i guess common sense ain't that common anymore.

      oh, yeah...and should it be illegal to leave my car unlocked with the keys in it. no, it shouldn't. it's a really stupid thing to do, but it should never be a crime to be stupid. after all, if we start makeing stupidity illegal, we couldn't build enough prisons to hold 98% of the world. well, on second thought...maybe would should try that :-)

      from the article:
      "There's just not a lot of technology out there right now that can be used to secure the technology in place,"

      um, encryption, authentication, and no dhcp over WIFI would be a good place to start...

      i particularly like:

      "Companies throughout the country have networks that are wide open because of wireless LANs.... Millions of houses are getting connected, which means that more and more are getting vulnerable,"

      and tell me how this is just a wifi problem? millions of people are getting on the net, wifi or no. joe shmo at home very rarely if ever patches or runs anything but a virus scanner. corperations don't always secure their wire networks, let alone wifi. so with all these targets, and with anyone at home able to exploit them, why don't we just shut down all telecom operations...no phone, no internet...that should stop those terrorists! fucking idiots...someone get GW a REAL internet/computing/security person as a "cyberczar"...clark is a dumbass

      -frozen

      --
      I'm not always the brightest pixel in the stream
    7. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know of two states where it IS illegal to leave your keys in the car, and if someone takes it, your insurance won't pay.

    8. Re:And this is limited to Wi-fi how? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      clark is a dumbass...

      No, he's not. He knows exactly what he is doing - shutting down civil liberties for Americans and making the Net secure from free access for his corporate paymasters...

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  13. Wi-Fi is certainly the highest priority by chupar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in," said Daniel Devasirvatham, who headed the Homeland Security task force for the Wireless Communications Association International trade association.

    Right... So, open Wi-Fi, with that dangerous 50-foot useable radius is a top priority for national security. Why not just set up a National Firewall instead :)?

    1. Re:Wi-Fi is certainly the highest priority by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more importantly, what the hell is Danial Devasirvatham talking about? "The network of this country?" Does he mean the internet? Does he realize that people from other countries already have access to the internet? And that there are alot easier ways to get internet access then stealing it from an unsecured WAP?

    2. Re:Wi-Fi is certainly the highest priority by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      50ft? Hhaahahahahah

      I can get at least a mile from most locations.
      Antennas, amps, it's all in the wiGle.
      -AC

  14. The article says terrorists by doubtless · · Score: 5, Insightful

    can bring down the network of this country very quickly once they are on the network. Tell me, what is to prevent anybody from just signing up the NETWORK with the AOL cds?

    Give me a break, goddamn it. Shutting down WiFi security holes will prevent intruders from going on the NETWORK?

    I can understand if this is to prevent government agencies or companies with knowledge of government secrets from having wide open WiFi, but for EVERYONE?

    Land of the free, just a thought.

    --
    geek page at KY speaks
    1. Re:The article says terrorists by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Land of the free, just a thought."

      Correct. It is just a thought... We are obviously willing to give up our freedoms b/c of that bearded fuck w/limp and a cammo jacket...

      Someone else noted that the terrorists are the only ones that will stand up. While I feel what they said is dumb, I see their point.

      We are all just standing idly by the water cooler having our morning chat as President Ripper closes down the base and prepares to launch an attack.

      Only the dorks know that WiFi isn't a security threat, and only the dorks know that it's only b/c coporate America wants other wireless methods to open up and make money from...

      We will never convince the REST of the sheep of this...

      Thus, we are all morons under the power of President Ripper.

      Enjoy Strangelovian paradise. It's a blast.

    2. Re:The article says terrorists by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2

      Not to mention this is the same administration that had MS by the short hairs and could have forced them to implement some real security changes, but let them off with a slap on the wrist.

  15. Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by goingware · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The original of "Is This the America I Love?" is at http://www.goingware.com/notes/america.html

    But I wanted it to be read more widely than was happening with it on my own little homepage so I posted a copy at Kuro5hin. An advantage of the K5 version is that it enabled followup discussion.

    Here's the intro:

    I just feel the need to write right now. Something has gone terribly wrong with the country I was raised to love. The good things that America stands for are being trampled into the dirt by those charged with the burden of protecting them.

    I was raised to be a patriotic American. I grew up a military brat - my father was a proud officer of the United States Navy, who served in the Vietnam War. When I was young, I was always told that my father was fighting to preserve the freedoms that were guaranteed us by the United States Constitution.

    In the first grade, I attended a school run by the U.S. Navy in Gaeta, Italy, where my father was stationed aboard the U.S.S. Springfield. Each day when we started school we sang patriotic songs and said the Pledge of Allegiance. We were told that America stood for freedom and democracy and justice.

    I loved America for what it stood for.

    Thank you for your attention.

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
    1. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Ah, slashdot moderation at its best. This is interesting and tangentially (at best) relevant. Use your mod points to mod UP, not down.

    2. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course this is not the America you love, unless you're somehow connected with the government class.

      Your only mistake, If I may, was to grow up as a patriot. Every man/woman should love ALSO his/her country.
      But I admt it's hard to teach children to respect all other people, then after some years send them to thow bombs on the same people's heads. Patriotism, like religion, is nothing else than a way to control people.

    3. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Am I the only non-American who is sick of all these American patriotic rants?

      I was proud to be an American when they became one of the last Westernized nations to outlaw slavery.
      I was proud to be an American when they became one of the last Westernized nations to end state-sanctioned segregation.
      I was proud to be an American when they became the last Westernized nation to enter WW2 and protect the world from Hitler.
      I was proud to be an American when they gave equal rights to homosexuals... Oh wait, they haven't done that yet.
      But when they started reading my e-mails and tapping my phone calls, everything changed. This country ceased to be about freedom.

      America: protecting your freedom to bear arms since 1776, protecting you freedom to do everything else since 1985.

    4. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by mizhi · · Score: 2
      "My country, right or wrong," is a thing that no patriot would think of saying except in a desperate case. It is like saying, "My mother, drunk or sober." --- G. K. Chesterton
      Nothing is wrong with true patriotism. True patriotism is not about the uncritical following and acceptance of whatever the government currently running the country is doing. Rather, it is a love for one's country that is somewhat akin to the love of a parent for a child. You nurture and support the child while attempting to give guidance so that one day it can be the kind of adult that will contribute positively to the world. In the same way, that is what true patriots do for their country.

      Sometimes, you will hear the birth of the United States and its ideals described as a "great experiment" in the history of man kind. A place where people are truly free and equal. There is a small but significant mistake in this view. It supposes that the "experiment" is over with and in the past. The truth of the matter is, we have not and never have fully realized the ideal of the American dream. No country in the world has. A true patriot recognizes this fact and recognizes that there is still much work to be done in achieving the country and government that our culture and folklore declares is ours.

      There are roughly three groups that people in the United States can be split into. There are those that would blindly follow this country and its government into the depths of hell and beyond without any sort of dissent; these people call themselves patriots. They do love America, but they do so with no brain. There are those that disdain all patriotic Americans and in fact revel in the thrashing and flogging of anything American. They would love to see the apparatus of our government fail and crumble. I despise both of those groups. The former, because they are responsible for allowing the many transgressions and missteps of our government to go forward unopposed. They do not truly understand nor appreciate the American dream. They believe we are already living it. The latter, because they deny that any good can come of this country, its government, and its people. They refuse to believe that there is any way of salvaging the American dream. Indeed, they scoff at the very notion of an American dream.

      When I am abroad, I always make it a rule never to criticize or attack the government of my own country. I make up for lost time when I come home. --- Sir Winston Churchill
      The final group is obvious. It is comprised of True Patriots. We are a group of people that does not agree on the best government solution, if any, for every problem that our country faces. However, we do agree on one key goal; we wish to see this country and its government become what we were taught that it was. We truly love this country with every fiber of our being. We love it because in our youth we were instilled with the values that our country is supposed to represent. In our young adulthood, the pain and trauma of realizing that our government is not an accurate manifestation of these values spurs us to work to bring it closer. We regret some of the ugliness that our government has caused to be brought upon people all over the world, but we do not deny it. We wince at our government lies, and we yell loudly when there are injustices to be righted. We do so, not because we wish to see American government fail, but because we want it to grow up to be the best possible realization of what this country can be. And because we can not see any future worth living in without this growth.

      Thank you, my apologies for the soapbox.

      --
      Humorless sig goes here.
    5. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by inkswamp · · Score: 2
      From your article: "There are many things that move me to write this, but what moved to me write this right now is that a member of a registered political party was singled out for harassment, first by American Airlines and then by the United States National Guard because of the opinions she holds."

      Not at all. I clicked on the link in your article to read what happened as I was shocked to read your summary of it. Ms. Oden, in her own words, indicates that she was willing to be difficult in this situation (intentionally not doing as she was asked by the security people.) Once a person refuses to cooperate with reasonable requests from authority, they pretty much lose me.

      No, I don't think AA should have singled her out; I don't think the security people should have acted like pricks (if in fact they really had behaved that way--given that we're only hearing Ms. Oden's side, it's hard to say.) However, there is also a glaringly obvious leap in logic in assuming that she was on AA's security list for what she wrote in the newspaper. This fact is glossed over very quickly. Are we sure she hasn't done other things to make her a security concern? Of course, we don't know. She doesn't lay out her whole life history. She just jumps from the article to the events at the airport. In formal logic, this is called a post-hoc fallacy--the assumption that one event is happening because of another.

      So, I'm not reading your entire article. When you start off trying to win me over to your point of view with a story like Oden's that is totally biased, somewhat emotional, and full of logical fallacies, then I become suspicious of the rest of the piece. Oden makes some crazy leaps in logic in her story--you should question those leaps, not follow them.

      --
      --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
    6. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm tired of this shit and I have to live here (for now).

    7. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

      I can recommend this as a read. I challenged the author on a few points over on K5, and he responded intelligently and eruditely. This isn't the usual Angry Young Guy fare, but a reasoned and reasonable lament for the genuine aspiration to freedom and democracy in the USA, with some very practical suggestions about what to do about it. Read it, ponder it, act on it.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    8. Re:Please Read "Is This the America I Love?" by God!+Awful+2 · · Score: 1


      I don't think the security people should have acted like pricks (if in fact they really had behaved that way--given that we're only hearing Ms. Oden's side, it's hard to say.)

      When in doubt, it's usually a pretty safe assumption that security people acted like pricks.

      -a

  16. Getting Slashdotted... by Quaoar · · Score: 2

    ...is far worse than what any cyber-terrorist could dish out.

    --
    I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
  17. mmmm! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    smell that! that's freedom. mmmm god bless the USA. why on earth are we allowing the government to witch hunt these commu^H^H^H^H^Hterrorists? what can we do to stop this? homeland security? dang.

  18. Damn government! by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Secure Networks?!? My god what a concept! This is such a direct assault on my constitutional rights! Damn Feds! Next they'll want me to actually supervise my own childeren!

    --

    Shift happens. Fire it up.
    1. Re:Damn government! by c00lant · · Score: 0

      you don't get called a terrorist for not watching your children. you don't go to prison with no lawyer or legal counsil. you don't get "skipped" for trial either.

      Homeland security is not helping us. it is hurting us. Has anyone ever thought that maybe you need some bad to weigh out the good? that is why every government will fail. because eventually, they try so hard to make it a completly one-sided non-evil, non-criminal society that no one has freedom. we didn't need new laws that simply replace the word criminal with terrorist and constitutional rights as "security messures."

    2. Re:Damn government! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Damn Feds! Next they'll want me to actually supervise my own childeren!

      No need to. They're doing an adequate job themselves, what with forcing librarians to track what your kids read and turn over the records, forcing libraries to install nannyware which uses blacklists which the DMCA can prevent you from cracking and divulging....

    3. Re:Damn government! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's ok.. i'm watching them for you.
      I have the right to monitor your children at
      night time, while you and your family sleep.
      I may decide on your families religious beliefs,
      that one day I will take you away from your
      children, not telling them where you have
      gone. You will not be charged, and you will not
      receive legal assistance - for you are "below"
      the law, and I, "above" the law.

      These are my powers, for I am here only to
      serve and protect. I provide you the
      beautiful liberties and freedoms you and
      past generations have fought for.. The
      liberties you were born with, the liberties
      that I remove at my own discretion.

      --
      Silvio

    4. Re:Damn government! by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 2

      I mostly agree with you. However, I believe that if you have a network that contains sensitive data, it should be secured in the first place. I made a lame joke trying to point out that this really is not about "My Rights Online". It seems that according to almighty slashdot, that somehow This has a thing to do with "My Rights Online". If the U.S. Federal Govt. ever tries to filter or block out "questionable material" (sites on Islam, etc...), then I will consider it "My Rights Online". I do think we need more public scrutiny of the HSD, especially when it consolidates what, 30 or so previous departments. But then again, the general public really dosen't seem to care. I mean we live in a society where lawmakers can actually vote themselves a pay raise. Wow, thats one ramblin' rant.

      --

      Shift happens. Fire it up.
  19. More things terrorists use... by GimmeFuel · · Score: 5, Funny
    In other news, a recent report indicated that many terrorists use homeless shelters for food, housing and clothing. A Homeland Security directive today ordered all homeless shelters demolished and anyone who's given to charity in the last year arrested.

    I really see this and the real story on the same level. Shelters are run by volunteers charitably. Open WAPs are run by volunteers charitably. Both have the theoretical possiblity of aiding terrorism. Shouldn't both be banned if one is? Seriously, how far will we tolerate having our freedoms taken away in the name of security?

    1. Re:More things terrorists use... by xenode · · Score: 1

      This really shouldn't have been moderated as funny. Parent has a good point about how ridiculous this is.

    2. Re:More things terrorists use... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Homeless shelters have already been used by terrorists in this country. John Allen Muhammad, the recent muslim ambush killer in the DC area, lived in several for a total period of several months in the year preceeding his terror activities. I live in the area he and his gay lover terrorized. It's no joking matter.

    3. Re:More things terrorists use... by GimmeFuel · · Score: 1

      I was actually aware of that. My post wasn't intended as a joke, it just got modded funny by people who misunderstood it.

    4. Re:More things terrorists use... by quintessent · · Score: 2

      In many cases, Funny==Insightful. I don't see a problem here. And it is very insightful.

    5. Re:More things terrorists use... by Tony-A · · Score: 2

      This really shouldn't have been moderated as funny. Parent has a good point about how ridiculous this is.
      I think you just made the moderators point.
      Humor is a serious business. One of the best ways of changing things for the better is to point out just how ridiculous the current situation is.

    6. Re:More things terrorists use... by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

      Except when you track a bomb plot back to a homeless shelther, chances are, someone knows who you're talking about.

      With an open Wi-Fi network, when you trace an illegal act back to it, the operator of that network probably has no clue who you're talking about. The trail will consistently end at the operator providing that anonymous connectivity.

      In short, to commit an Internet crime without getting caught, all you have to do is find a "generous" Slashdot kid with an open Wi-Fi network and commit your acts through that.

      Do we really want to encourage this?

  20. Internet elites will disagree with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technical elites, like liberal elites, like academic elites, will disagree with this, ergo it is bad. And terrorists are bad. This means people who know what they are talking about are bad.

    Wait. Elite means high quality.

    Good thing I am drunk otherwise I couldn't come up with this logic.

  21. Out of hand doesn't begin to describe it by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If someone wants to get unfettered access to the internet, if they have some desire and some knowledge they will always be able to. Even if there was no 802.11 whatsoever, I'm sure anyone who is able to take 4 airplanes and crash 3 into major landmarks is also smart enough to physically tap into someones line and gain the access they would have gained through an 802.11 network.

    All this will do is cause the end of 802.11 access for most consumers until better security is devised. Corporations should be able to hire people to secure their wireless networks. Geeks will be able to secure their home networks, but right now that is beyond the average consumer. If I tried to tell my father than he should use an SSH tunnel for better security, he would look at me befuddled.

    1. Re:Out of hand doesn't begin to describe it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just buy a 3G phone, in someone elses name...

    2. Re:Out of hand doesn't begin to describe it by geekee · · Score: 2

      Just because security is 100% effective, doesn't mean that it isn't effective at all. As far as the end of 802.11, you mean the end of 802.11 for dead beats who leech off of other people's bandwidth without paying for it.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
  22. Exploitation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The conspiracy nutjobs acuse the Government, or at least the Bush Clan of direct responsibility for Sept. 11 -- absurd or not the fact remains that the Bush Clan and everybody else in power is exploiting that disaster to the absolute hilt. I can only begin to imagine the joy and glee they must have felt at seeing those buildings tumble and people die, knowing that they'd AT LONG LAST be able to force all those sweeping new anti-freedom laws upon us. And so the slope gets ever more slippery.

  23. Oh, please by thing_in_itself · · Score: 1
    Just don't set up a wireless network without actually being able to secure it. What part of this is difficult to understand?

    Yes, I can see potential for "homeland security" abuse here (as anywhere). Gotta love the hysterical soundbite from the fed they quoted in the article -- "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in," said Daniel Devasirvatham, who headed the Homeland Security task force for the Wireless Communications Association.

    But it's still just dumb. I'm surprised warchalking hasn't spread much faster.

  24. Whatever by RomikQ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Alright, I agree with the fact that wifi is insecure and it should be regulated, but please please is it really necessary to make everything a terrorist threat in order to convince the US masses nowadays. Why not just give reasonable arguments, facts, instead of saying "it's a terrorist threat, that's all you need to know". Instead of outlining the real dangers, like stolen or falsified information, they have to go on and make a statement that to any half-smart person seems a blatant attempt to get quick public support.

    It's bullshitting like that which undermines the trust of intelligent people into the administration.

    --
    Join the elite! Post at score:2! Ghostwheel is online.
    1. Re:Whatever by I_redwolf · · Score: 2

      Wifi is NOT insecure; just like anything else so long as the system administrator secures the network it will be a secure as possible until an exploit is found and an exploit will be found. Wifi networks don't need regulation.. fucking think for yourself man.

    2. Re:Whatever by inerte · · Score: 1

      they have to go on and make a statement that to any half-smart person

      And...

      It's bullshitting like that which undermines the trust of intelligent people into the administration.

      Like if Bush was full-smart.

    3. Re:Whatever by Alsee · · Score: 5, Funny

      I agree with the fact that wifi is insecure and it should be regulated

      And I agree with the fact that doors are insecure and should be regulated. Some buildings like the pentagon have seure doors, but do you realize just how insecure supermarket doors are? They swing open the moment anyone walks by! A terrorist can just walk right into a supermarket! This situation is intolerable! All doors must be regulated immediately!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    4. Re:Whatever by GrouchoMarx · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It's bullshitting like that which undermines the trust of intelligent people into the administration.

      The trust of intelligent people in the current administration was lost the day Homeland Security was created. Joseph Stalin would be proud.

      --

      --GrouchoMarx
      Card-carrying member of the EFF, FSF, and ACLU. Are you?

    5. Re:Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ... the trust of intelligent people into the administration.

      Jesus, man, with the year sliding to a close, you squeak in here with the winner in the National Oxymoron Competition. I am in awe of your literary ability. Truly in awe.

    6. Re:Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And I agree with the fact that doors are insecure and should be regulated. Some buildings like the pentagon have seure doors, but do you realize just how insecure supermarket doors are? They swing open the moment anyone walks by! A terrorist can just walk right into a supermarket! This situation is intolerable! All doors must be regulated immediately!

      I am 100% behind you. And the most important door to be secured is the revolving one between government employees and lobbyists. Weld that fucker shut.

    7. Re:Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The trust of intelligent people in the current administration was lost the day Homeland Security was created. Joseph Stalin would be proud.

      What's being done in the name of Vaterland Security is well beyond Stalin's wildest, wettest dreams.

    8. Re:Whatever by smiff · · Score: 2
      Alright, I agree with the fact that wifi is insecure and it should be regulated

      The internet itself is insecure. If a criminal wants to get on the internet anonymously, they will break into your house, shoot you in the head, and use your computer. That is, unless there are simpler alternatives, like public libraries, public wireless access points, etc.

      The harm regulation would do to criminals is miniscule. The harm it would do to the general public is immense.

    9. Re:Whatever by fyoory · · Score: 1

      This sh*t is getting pathetic. Yea, it's a threat I guess. The same way it's a threat to just be alive. Anything can happen to anyone at anytime. A truck driver could easy kill 3000 people just as easy with a tanker truck with the right conditions, and thats all it takes. Everyone just commit suicide since we'll be safer burned to ashes, or buried etc... As for the outsource firm, they just want their greed satisfied and just have shown that their clueless by making a statement like that. Times like this, I wish "we the people" stop acting like "we the puppets" and stand up for themselves as most /.ers would. This is exactly what happens when you have old folks who do not understand technology dictacting its path. Everyone run out and buy your new biochem-nuclear Michael Jackson protective bubbles with internal/exterior nerf padding for safety today! Oh wait, now you will die from lead poisoning. FYI, in a 5 mile stretch in my city, I get 20 unsecured public APs I can use in seconds. Infact, I've never had to bother cracking WEP, since the dumbasses just turn them on and leave their APs called "Linksys" or "DLINK". :D

    10. Re:Whatever by rjung2k · · Score: 1

      Problem is that the stupid people outnumber the intelligent people.

    11. Re:Whatever by Alsee · · Score: 2

      And the most important door to be secured is the revolving one between government employees and lobbyists. Weld that fucker shut.

      Good idea, execpt I can't decide which of those two groups I'd rather weld permanently inside some building :)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    12. Re:Whatever by fyoory · · Score: 1

      Yes, and we suffer since we're a minority. AHA! That's the ticket, everyone write the ACLU!

    13. Re:Whatever by 5KVGhost · · Score: 2

      Fine, except that in this case no one is doing that. The draft policy the article links to makes it clear that terrorist threats are only one of many potential problems with insecure networks.

      The Department of Homeland Security is largely a merger of a bunch of formerly seperate agencies that were crippled by their inability to coordinate. The dept has responsibility for a whole bunch of stuff beyond threats of terrorism.

      If someone cripples the 911 system in a large city because of poor security at the call center's computers, then it doesn't matter if it's a terrorist or a script kiddie. It's just as bad.

    14. Re:Whatever by drinkypoo · · Score: 2
      It's bullshitting like that which undermines the trust of intelligent people into the administration.

      If you're intelligent, you didn't trust the administration in the first place. The presidency is a popularity contest with one of the biggest prizes ever: to be allowed to be the figurehead for the "free world", which pays off to you in innumerable ways.

      Basically anyone who can said to be "in charge" of any aspect of the federal government is a crook in one way or another. The people who hang onto their morality are not elegible to hold a cabinet position, let alone be at the head of the show.

      Furthermore, while they are not identical, the republicans and democrats might as well be. The only real difference is where they want to spend your money and what their basis for propaganda is. Democrats stand on helping people, and Republicans stand on family values.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    15. Re:Whatever by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      If someone cripples the 911 system in a large city because of poor security at the call center's computers, then it doesn't matter if it's a terrorist or a script kiddie. It's just as bad.

      ...and if those computers are even on the internet, then the 911 system in that city is run by a true idiot. There is absolutely no need for those computers to be on the public internet. Perhaps an intranet, not open to the world...but not on the internet at large, not even behind a firewall or VPN. Not at all.

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
  25. Overstepping Bounds, Again by aerojad · · Score: 1

    Myers was one of several consultants for President Bush's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board, which is finalizing its National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace.

    Last time I checked, cyberspace was not the property of the United States or Bush. How do they expect to secure something that is ment to be used by all people? Is anyone ever going to stand up to this?

    --

    SecondPageMedia - Wha
    1. Re:Overstepping Bounds, Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I checked the US has no territorial jurisdiction over outer space. Down with NASA!

    2. Re:Overstepping Bounds, Again by jeffsix · · Score: 1

      Ahhh..actually this "something" was setup to allow universities to communicate amongst themselves. This whole "everyone uses the Internet for freedom and happiness" stuff came much later.

    3. Re:Overstepping Bounds, Again by CableModemSniper · · Score: 1

      NASA isn't trying to regulate space travel, nor is it acting like the "space police"

      --
      Why not fork?
    4. Re:Overstepping Bounds, Again by aerojad · · Score: 1

      So where does the right to make it "safe" come in for any one world leader or government?

      --

      SecondPageMedia - Wha
  26. This is good and bad by EvilNTUser · · Score: 1

    As some people have pointed out, it is good that someone is trying to get bad administrators to secure their networks.

    However, that they are doing it because of yet another terrorism threat is definitely not good. The way terrorists are used as a reason for anything nowadays is very scary.

    Even if they'd use these tactics to disband Microsoft, I'd still be against them.

    --
    My Sig: SEGV
    1. Re:This is good and bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is time to start to remove the greatest terrorists of all... our own goverment.

      We now have McCarthism, was in search of a commie, now to be in search of terrorist.

      McCarthy could not see that his zeal to find commies was using almost the same tactics as commies used to purge thier ranks. Just being named made you a traitor.

      We have already passed the into serect trails. In pisonning without trail. An resently giving a serect to kill Americans.

      We are now running close to pre-WWII Germany.

      On Septmeber 11, the largest terriorst act was the ground of all airlines. This got into place the goverment directly violating your 4th, 5th and 8th admenments. This all by giving members of the Surpreme Court the right to vote twice.

    2. Re:This is good and bad by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1
      I have to agree with you on that last sentence (and the rest, actually). The ends do not justify the means.

      Problem is, I don't think it's misguided at all. I think they know exactly what they're doing and why they're doing it.

      Before things get better, they first have to get worse. How much of a bitchslap does the average american need before they slap back? There's a long and bloody civil war in our future, let's get it fought and won now so our kids don't have to fight it.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
  27. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by kaosrain · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    modded down gets YOU!

  28. Ahhhh, they're just jealous by Chuqmystr · · Score: 1
    The gov't is just mad because we got our hands on it first. Now they need to think of something different to use as a backbone for those soon to be ubiquitous televiewers that will be illegal to turn off unless you belong to the inner party. Carefull what you think, you may get to pay a visit to room 101

    /. Newspeak for Nerds, Stuff that's most likely BadThink

    1. Re:Ahhhh, they're just jealous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm too lazy to get an account right now. oh well.

      you are right, i hear you. there is just one tiny fault in your statement. there is no such word as BadThink. it is ungoodspeak. thank you

  29. i agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wtf is wrong with the majority of slashdot users that would immediately think this is a bad thing? Securing networks is a good thing, and imposing the 'minimum security' allowed is goddamn intelligent. I realise that 90% of slashdot users think they are something special and some sort of gift to the IT world - but how could you be so stupid as to think securing networks is a bad idea? The reason this would be 'imposed' on us, is because the MAJORITY of you losers are running insecure networks, or are attempting to abuse them in some matter - WE ARE TALKING ABOUT SECURITY you morons ... anything that can be done SHOULD BE DONE. slashdot - stop your whining.

    1. Re:i agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah - we should chop your hands off so you can't type. Then you wouldn't be a security risk either. Dumbass.
      Security is not the ultimate goal of life. Things such as liberty and privacy are core to the american ideal, and they are being flushed away by the small-minded power grabbing illiterate in the white house and his slutty wife Laura.

    2. Re:i agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is securing your lazy-nonsecure network, power hungry?? "Privacy is core to the american ideal" - and you are bothered that your government regulates security for you??? When you sober up tommorow, you're going to feel like a dumbass when you reread your posts. They are taking measures, to ensure your security. Look - there are a million ways to obtain anonymous access to the internet, wifi (if you hadn't noticed already) is starting to boom wildly accross the US - sadly, the majority of it is VERY insecure. THIS is a widespread PROBLEM (and yes, it is a problem) - and your government is seeing it as a real problem, and is actually taking measures to increase security. There may only be 999,999 more ways to obtain anonymous access - BUT AT LEAST THEY ARE DOING SOMETHING .. its for you, not against you. This knee-jerk reaction to immediately think that anything that is being imposed inside your own country must be bad ... Maybe you should look at what else the united states imposes on the rest of the world sometimes .. when it happens at home - NOW its a big deal? poor little american. As the internet becomes a more and more integral part of everyones life, security will become equally if not more important as this growth occurs.

    3. Re:i agree by I_redwolf · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      You're a fucking idiot; What you're saying is absolute bullshit. If you really believe that make the fucking government tell Microsoft to get their fucking act together. More damage has been done by their products alone than anything else on the net. WiFi isn't what is insecure its corporate networks that are the core of the problem. Most corporate networks run Microsoft software; what the fuck does that tell you?

  30. This truly scares me. by DRAGONWEEZEL · · Score: 1

    WAKE UP LEGISLATORS!

    Soon if you donate food you will be responsible to make sure that the can of food has no microscopic pinholes that could have caused the food to spoil.

    Donating money to your favorite charity may soon be a terrorist act if there is a terrorist person who benefits from such charity.

    Even worse:

    If your car is broken into, you are now responsible for finding the thief (you pretty much are by the way...) and paying the police department to run fingerprint analysis. Secondly if the terrorist sells your stereo and obtains money used for a terrorist action by selling your stereo, you are now a terrorist!

    WTF Call this a stupid rant, but if we don't band together against this kind of political bullying what will it take? New York not enough? How bout L.A., Seattle, Miami.

    Contact your congressman

    --
    How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
    1. Re:This truly scares me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Soon if you donate food you will be responsible to make sure that the can of food has no microscopic pinholes that could have caused the food to spoil.


      Donating money to your favorite charity may soon be a terrorist act if there is a terrorist person who benefits from such charity.

      Soon, your ass! Don't you listen to the news? For months they've been dogging all the Muslim-related charitable organizations and freezing funds wherever they think any of the money may have gone to supporting the Taliban (at the beginning) or any other radical groups. Sheesh, wake up.

  31. Regulation is bad. by MikeFM · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If it's my network and my bandwidth I have every right to do with it as I please. If I want to provide an open gateway to the Internet that is my right. The same right any ISP has to not charge for access.

    Regulating things because you are afraid boogey men could possibly use them is a fools game. I could kill you with string cheese. That doesn't mean we should require a minimum standard of conduct on using string cheese.

    In case you haven't noticed almost nobody actually follows speed limits on highways. It isn't safe following speed limits on highways. If you don't match the speed of traffic your endangering yourself and others. Laws that are largely ignored as the general public doesn't favor them are wasteful and leave loopholes for various assholes to take away more and more freedoms.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    1. Re:Regulation is bad. by Blackknight · · Score: 1

      Speed limit laws aren't for safety, they're just a money making scheme for the local government.

      Sure, in a residential neighborhood or other crowded areas I can understand it, but on the highway it should be no problem to drive 80 if you want to.

    2. Re:Regulation is bad. by j1mmy · · Score: 1

      String cheese, huh?

      You'll have to demonstrate that one. I've never seen a person killed by string cheese.

  32. This is not about security by 0x0d0a · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is not even remotely done because of security issues.

    It's pretty blatantly obvious to anyone involved the security area that security fixes that require "securing the rest of the Internet" just aren't going to work. A good example of this is the attempt to "secure the Internet against spam." The current approach -- trusting other servers on the Internet and trying to simply secure all legtimate mail servers from spammers does not work. Keep in mind that anti-spam measures have nearly universal support, a tremendous number of volunteers, high visibility, and is a well-understood problem. It's pretty well understood now that trying to secure the Internet by securing every possible point of entry is not in the least feasible. The closest anyone has come is USENET, which is a much less critical, more tightly controlled system with the Usenet Death Penalty for offending ISPs -- and even so, as USENET aficionados know, there's still a huge amount of spam.

    If the OHS is scared that they won't be able to trace someone because they're coming in from a wireless port, they need to secure all the services that they're concerned about and require a digital identification of some sort. Trying to make the Internet watertight is not, no way, no how going to happen. You can't secure the US and lock the rest of the world out, and you can't secure the entire world. You can't even reasonably secure all the possible points of entry in a state.

    This isn't about security. It isn't even about technology.

    Ever since Bush signalled that he was willing to back just about anything that "fought terrorism", every stupid agenda out there has managed to include "fighting terrorism". People competing with 802.11b (*cough* telecom corps pushing 3G services, currently being pretty much ignored in favor of the faster, cheaper 802.11b) would love nothing better than to hand their favorite politician a few dollars to "crack down on terrorism" on 802.11b. In contrast, *their* networks are easily monitored, and as evidenced by cells in the past, telecom corps are more than happy to use key escrow and provide information to federal agents. It's a ploy to try to save all those dollars invested in 3G, the marvellous moneymaker where telecom corps can charge you by the kilobyte. It's not a security issue.

    Friends, this is US politics at its best -- "campaign contributions" (bribery) at full throttle.

    1. Re:This is not about security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Exactly. You don't see the Feds threatening action over (cough, cough) insecure OS's. Quite the opposite, calling for the NSA to halt development of their hardened Linux distro. The one consistent element? Business friendly.

    2. Re:This is not about security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wait; its hard to call it bribery without any proof remotely. First I'll say that its not the governments responsibility to be involved in what a private citizen or corporation does. However, if a corporations hole in a wifi network allows someone else to dos someone, the corporations who's internet connection was broken should be held partially responsible for the DOS attack. It just shouldn't make sense for companies to leave high bandwidth connections open for the taking. And it should not be encouraged to use low security methods by letting people get off the hook because someone else broke in. If someone's house gets broken into, you at least feel some pity on the person if they locked their doors and/or had an alarm system, its hard to find pity on those that left their door unlocked and open for the taking. The same is true with wifi networks. People should not be allowed to break in and destroy other peoples connections. While its not the governments responisibility to stop it, it is their responsibility to not allow someone to break into someoon elses. Without a little help from everyone else this just isn't accomplishable. Lets take this chance to look at it as the US government endorsing cryptography; not as a violation of rights.

      Phil

    3. Re:This is not about security by bnf · · Score: 1
      A good example of this is the attempt to "secure the Internet against spam." The current approach -- trusting other servers on the Internet and trying to simply secure all legtimate mail servers from spammers does not work. Keep in mind that anti-spam measures have nearly universal support, a tremendous number of volunteers, high visibility, and is a well-understood problem.


      You have a great point there that I hope is heard. We can't even stop something on the public web that everyone agrees should be stopped. There is no way to limit access to the internet without changing it's nature, and the technology for that is pretty much in our hands. Does that mean we're next? Will our protocols become the next thing to be regulated? I don't think we're far from that now.

      I'd be happy to hear that the Office of Homeland Security had made it a fireable offense for any open AP's inside the federal government. That is something that is clearly their responsibility and would set a standard. Which is what they want, right? Wrong. They need the crime there so that they can pursue it further if they want. The crime holds the sysadmin accountable with a chain of blame. This is silly. One more corner of liberty sliced off.

      --

      this space intentionally left blank (oops)

  33. It's not too hard to see where this is all going.. by Dr_Marvin_Monroe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Our department of "Homeland Security" is creating the situation where all users of the net must be tracable....for the purpose of spying on them and controlling our ability to peacefully associate on the net. Our right to assemble for the purpose of communication is gauranteed in the bill of rights, but is under assult.

    As with the "Great Firewall of China" articles that I've been seeing here lately, governments are fearfull of any tool that would allow people to communicate freely. Annonymous communication over the net allows disent to grow without the heavy hand of big brother picking out the "ringleaders."

    I notice in this article that there is no discussion at all about why this is necessary for security. I don't believe at all that one guy with a laptop on an open AP could "bring the net down"...

    We must force our government to explain WHY this and all of the other USA Patriot act bullshit is necessary....making Bush, Poindexter, Ashcroft and the others explain their position to everyone is the act of a real patriot.....don't believe the hype.....

  34. Way-high by inerte · · Score: 1

    That would be Way High.

    Crackers.

  35. "Homeland" Security by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 2

    The very title of the department is unfortunate. The tin ear that brought us "Operation Infinite Justice" has surpassed itself with "Homeland Security." The word 'Homeland' is somewhat alien to the American experience. We are a nation of immigrants and decendants of immigrants. Our 'Homeland,' for the most part, is somewhere else. Our country, is America. Of course, National Security Department, and Defense Department were already taken.

    The worst part about pronouncements like this is what will actually happen when there is some sort of important warning to get out. Wolf, I cry, Wolf!

  36. I wonder which "experts" they listen to... by aquarian · · Score: 2

    I wonder whose advice the feds have been taking on this matter -- could it be from "experts" in the wireless industry, who are in the business of selling wireless, and want to ensure there's no competition?

  37. Read the article? No, too hard? by Synn · · Score: 5, Informative

    The government wants harder to break 802.11b. The entire complaint is that 802.11b security is a joke and it's too easy to crack.

    So "Big Brother" in this case is saying, "Make your data harder to snoop".

    1. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So "Big Brother" in this case is saying, "Make your data harder to snoop".

      Big Brother doesn't always say what it means. You wait... after an initial period, a few wireless security breaches, and they'll go ahead with step 2. You are witnessing step 1.
      Wake up.

    2. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by jonny-mt · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Why yes, thank you, I did read the article ;)

      My issue is this: we had a good thing. WiFi was really beginning to gain ground, was really going to be something great. Imagine; freely available Internet access for anyone with a laptop supporting the standard (which most do nowadays). It's everywhere, and it's working.

      So what does Homeland Security do? Do they go after the holes (numbering hopefully less than WiFi access points) that hackers exploit in the first place? No. Do they go after Microsoft and (gasp!) Linux for security issues? No. What they choose to do instead is to attack something that in fact has little role in the scheme of things, choosing to ignore the real vulnerabilities.

      "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in," said Daniel Devasirvatham, who headed the Homeland Security task force for the Wireless Communications Association International trade association.

      Let me quote that again....

      Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in

      Right, right.... Good to know that since it doesn't matter where they get in, we're going to spend untold millions of dollars to infringe on personal rights so that we can stop them from getting into the places that don't matter. And correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't the DOS attacks on the root Internet servers amount to approximately bupkiss?

      What I do like, however, is Sky Dayton (Boingo CEO) saying that wireless security is possible; it just needs to be easier. Right on, Sky; I agree with you completely! Instead of attaching labels to something so that it can be instantly regulatable (I'm pretty sure that's a word), he's opting to make wireless security ma- and pa- friendly.

      And isn't that what it's ultimately about?

    3. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      By what they've said, they're effectively saying "We have a warrant to enter anyplace with a wireless network." Even if you have 128bit encryption, it's breakable in 5 minutes. So, you're helping terrorists, which in turn makes you a terrorist.

      So, everyone with a wireless access point in America, prepare to have the feds come knocking on your door.

      I know I'm fucked. I have a wireless access point, multiple wireless cards, *AND* home-brewed antennas..

      I'm sure the fact that I have a wireless card, with an antenna on my laptop is positive proof that I sit outside corporate buildings and use their networks for evil.

      Well, I do.. But no one can prove it.. hehe. You wouldn't believe how much boring mail goes through a corporate lan. Definately don't bother to sniff instant messenger packets. You'll grow stupid from the combined IQ levels of 10 users. Or, are they really worried about Osama Bin-Evil flood pinging a.root-servers.net from an open access point on a companies 384k DSL?

      I can just see the feds now, wardriving with a iPaq and Mini-Stumbler (or whatever the CE version of Netstumbler is),

      In the good ol' days, they'd just call me a hacker. Now I'm a terrorist. {sigh} I like the hacker sig a lot better. At least a hacker sounds like you do something. A terrorist is someone that doesn't have to do anything. They let you be scared because you *THINK* they may do something.. {sigh}

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    4. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by gl4ss · · Score: 2

      ***Let me quote that again....

      Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in ***

      ooow. AOL is giving everyone cd's to connect to internet! and anyone on internet could bring it down!! aol is eeeeeeeeeeevil

      mod -324 tired joke

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      AOL is eviil?

      Oh, wait...

      We knew that, didn't we?

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    6. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      I can just see the feds now, wardriving with a iPaq and Mini-Stumbler (or whatever the CE version of Netstumbler is)

      Actually, there's not a whole lot you have to do on an iPaq to get (most of) the functionality of NetStumbler. Just plug your card in, and it grabs all the local WAPs' SSIDs and tells you the encription level. If you want to crack the encription, that's something different.

      There are 6 WAPs that I can hit from the parking garage across the street from my apartment. Two are wide open, one has admin as the password. Yeesh.

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    7. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


      I'm still trying to get my iPaq working completely under Familiar (Linux on the iPaq). It works, I just can't get my Orinoco card to work on it.. But, I haven't been trying very hard either. I need to make a cross-compiler, and build my own kernel, I'm just too busy to get into it..

      Muhaha.. iPaq, Linux, perl, and a good wireless card. What couldn't I do then? :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    8. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2
      So "Big Brother" in this case is saying, "Make your data harder to snoop".

      Only the wireless portion of it. Sooner or later your connection will go over a telcos wire, and that's where Big Brother has already installed the snooping devices...

      By ensuring that only you can use your access, they know where to send the guys with the black shades should any unpatriotic material be viewed from your link. Their job would be much harder if they had to checkout everyone in a 200 meter radius of your access point ;-)

    9. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      EEEEK!!! Somebody stop him! He's going to become an evil genius! Confiscate his iPaq and give it to me! Yeah! That'll save us all... *giggle*

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    10. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      You're not the first Do Gooder to try and stop me. I'm not afraid of the Super Friends!

      [insert bad 70's cartoon sound effects here]

      Muhahahaaa

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    11. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      Hmmm...perhaps I should defect. I mean the side of good has...the Super Friends...yeesh! The Wonder Twins? Talk about horrid!

      Hmm...well, as Dark Helmet always says, "Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." You can't argue with logic like that.

      Muahahahaha.

      Yes, rather fitting. Time to go join the mad scientists' union. The benefits are better anyway. Seriously, have you seen the health plan? Enjoy...but beware...this place is swarming with the forces of Good. No, really!

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    12. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      I particularly like that us Evil Doer's have no morals. So, we have nothing against having dozens of mostly naked sex slaves wandering around on our [Moon Base || multi-dimension craft || Mountain hideout || Undersea Lair]

      And of course, we can drink and get laid by 'em any time we want. I bet SuperMan is still a virgin. What a pansy. Poor guys, they'll never get to experement with drugs either. :)

      Back to the time machine. I have to pick up my iPaq 90900 from 2050.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    13. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      Indeed. It certainly seems that the "Right Side" is the wrong one.

      Pick one up for me while you're there -- I'll be too busy building my next Secret Lair.

      Muahahaha...

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    14. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


      No, no, don't be busy building your lair. Take a bunch of Zombies, and make them build it for you.. They're not really fast, but they work hard and don't take union breaks.

      Send them to the past, and your new lair will be done before you were born. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    15. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      Right, right. Sorry, this is all so new to me. Good minions are hard to find, but zombies, well, they're easy. Just need to find one good 'foreman' zombie to head it all up. Hmmm...well, I'm in the right place to find someone like /that/, no?

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    16. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


      You don't need a foreman, just a good Perl script. :) (See, I knew we could get this discussion back on topic)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    17. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      ...or perhaps a very small shell script? (and veering back off at a blinding rate for the sake of a bad pun AND a product placement...)

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    18. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


      They have the shirt?!?! My sister gave me the sticker for Xmas last year. I put it on my laptop, but unfortunately it died. I want the shirt..

      Hint to anyone reading and wondering what to get me for Xmas. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    19. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      Which died, the sticker or the laptop? How did (either) die? Will the shirt die in your possession? Why do they come to you to die? *angst-filled scream*

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    20. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by JWSmythe · · Score: 2


      Hehe. The laptop died. The sticker is doing fine..

      My diagnosis is a failing motheboard or CPU. It's an older Compaq Presario. It started having some odd behavior. Lines would start getting messed up on the screen randomly (like a bad video card). It would mysteriously crash. Sometimes the PCMCIA sockets wouldn't work. That was the last straw. I needed my 802.11b card to work. Dammit, I gotta hack! :) It was driving me nuts. So, we found someone getting rid of their old laptop, and I adopted it. I ran them side-by-side with identical configurations (Slackware, of course), and the old Compaq wouldn't work, but the new laptop would. So, now it's a paperweight.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    21. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by Spruce+Moose · · Score: 1

      Dude, these underpants gnomes trolls are getting boring.

    22. Re:Read the article? No, too hard? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      Heh. Old laptops. I've got two old laptops that I still use regularly. I've got an IBM Thinkpad 701c (486/75, 32MB RAM, running FreeBSD, it's the one with the butterfly keyboard) and a NEC Versa 6200MX (P/166, 64MB RAM, Win2K oddly enough). The Thinkpad is still running strong after all these years, but the poor NEC -- I've gone through 2 hard drives, 3 power supplies, a stick of ram and some case bits. The Versa is ready to kill this hard drive too...it freezes the system, and you get to hear this wonderful grinding noise from it...then in about 10 minutes, it wakes up and finishes whatever it's doing. Rather odd, I think. I have another one, too, which I got this hard drive out of, but it was given to me broken already. Bad mainboard after a coffee accident, the guy told me. *Nelson Muntz* "Ha-ha!"

      It's a very nice 20lb paperweight.

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
  38. Sharing your weath of bandwidth is what?t by arcadum · · Score: 1
    The work done by groups like Personal telco endows us all a reprieve from the foul beasts of terrorism. We are granted an escape from the drudgery and worry that we experience daily

    Knowledge, and wisdom, are the needed fuel of a democracy. Groups that enable the accent toward enlightenment are worthy of praise. By limiting what, unclassified-knowledge, citizens may seek, we stunt our growth, we limit our potential, and we soak in apathy.

    ---
    Never stop dreaming.

    1. Re:Sharing your weath of bandwidth is what?t by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1
      Knowledge, and wisdom, are the needed fuel of a democracy

      I ask you this, if you were gonna take over a democratic country, what one thing could you take away from the population that would give you the highest chance of success?

      It doesn't take a paranoid conspiracy guy to see this stuff. I know because I'm not one (I used to be, so I can say I know the difference :) ). I don't know who's responsible. There's a chance it's just "happening" and we can actually stop it.

      I don't think that's the case, though. My paranoia alarm (which has never been wrong so far) has been going off quite a bit lately over various government moves.

      Now I"m going to bed 'cause I"m too tired to continue. If I keep this up, I will be a conspriacy guy by morning. :(

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    2. Re:Sharing your weath of bandwidth is what?t by arcadum · · Score: 1
      My post was a vailed attempt to justify my fortune of being able to drink coffee, read my email, and surf the web.

      However, I think it is the "scared mother syndrom" (read: think of the children, etc.). that propetuates the increasingly transparent society we live in.

    3. Re:Sharing your weath of bandwidth is what?t by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      heh. One of us is right. I don't know that the ends will be any different, though. :( There's only one way to find out, of course, and that's to continue moving forward, fighting every step of the way (they're not gonna take me without a fight).

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
  39. Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And why is it moderated as "Funny"? There's nothing funny about this at all. It's entirely true.

  40. it's not just terrorists who want anonymity, by KernelSanders · · Score: 1



    but we all get stirred together in the soup.

  41. You're WRONG. This has GREAT benefits for society by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "All they want to do is mandate minimum security levels for Wi-Fi network operators so as to prevent intrusions."

    You just don't get it.

    Envision this scenario.

    In the not too distant future, maybe 10 years from now, a company creates a wifi "web" technology. IT works like the internet. Except without WIRES. It works just like the internet. Someone connects to another local computer, or several of them, and they pass the data along from computer to computer till their reach their destination... JUST LIKE NOW, but without wires.

    Except that with idiots creating laws like this, we will never have that internet utopia. It would be illegal to allow just ANY computer to connect to your "network" because the government doesn't want you to be able to allow people to connect to you if you don't know who they are.

    Have you ever heard of FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION? I consider this a freedom of association. I have the right to allow strangers into my house. I also have the right to allow strangers to go through my filing cabinets. And damnit, I HAVE THE RIGHT TO ALLOW STRANGERS TO LOG ONTO THE NET through my pc!

    The fact that terrorists could use this as a tool to help them out is NOT a good enough reason to crush this sort of technology. This sort of technology has WIDE reaching uses far GREATER than the risk involved could EVER be.

    Imagine if this sort of legislation was enacted on the INTERNET back in the 1990's. That it was deemed dial up conenctions were too dangerous to allow to connect to the net, because it is too easy for someone to purchase a dial up account and connect from a large number of locations, and move about secretly.

    We would HAVE NO INTERNET TODAY.

    And we will have no WIFI INTERNET 2 tomorrow if such BACKWARD thinking people as yourself are allowed to create assinine laws like this.

    There's a difference between intentionally limiting rights and establishing minimum standards of conduct. I suppose you guys never heard of speed limits on highways."

    Your analogy is poor. High speed kills thousands upon thousands of people a year, and the benefit from it is very small. The risk to benefit ratio is very high.

    The benefit from this EXTREMELY great. And the risk is REALLY SMALL. And shitting it down would do little to NOTHING to prevent the terrists from speaking secretly. So the risk to benefit ratio for this is really LOW.

    LOW RISK, HIGH BENEFIT.

    They MUST NOT do this. It would be ABSURD and make us fall even farther behind countries like Singapore where EVERYONE has a high speed net connection whereas most Americans are still on dialup. When they have WIFI internet that is FREE, with FREE BANDWIDTH, and we don't, it will hurt our economy, and JUST PLAIN SUCK.

  42. Classic case where regulation is called for by Ben+Escoto · · Score: 1

    Network security is an example of a market externality: if an intruder gains access to one network, attacks can be launched against other networks. These attacks often hurt the recipient of the attack, and not the originally cracked network.

    As a result, it seems that basic economics predicts that companies will not, of their own volition, spend sufficient effort and money to secure their networks. In cases like this government intervention can often make everyone better off (compare environmental regulation). Let's at least consider the possibility that the government does something besides make people's lives hard for no reason.

  43. Ben said it best... by AcquaCow · · Score: 1

    "Those who give up liberty for the sake of security deserve neither liberty nor security."
    -- Ben Franklin (1971)

    I, for one...agree.

    -- AcquaCow

    --

    up 12 days, 22:30, 2 users, load averages: 993.20, 994.21, 994.56
    *makes note to limit user processes...
    1. Re:Ben said it best... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have thought this quote to be true for years, and I fear it is becoming even more relevant now.

      Also, I believe the proper quote is...

      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither
      liberty nor safety"

      From the Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759

  44. Did you read the artical? by autopr0n · · Score: 2, Informative

    They seem to be saying that leaving unsecured WiFi is a way to allow hackers into your network.

    For example. Imagine you had a bunch of windows machines on your home LAN, and they all connected to the net through a Linux or BSD firewall using NAT or something. You put up a Wifi net so you can user your laptop, and now everything's vulnerable.

    The situation is even worse at a large company that might have sensitive documents, or tons of unpached computers waiting to be hacked and turned into DDOS zombies.

    I don't think he's attacking open Wi-Fi connections that let anyone get online anonymously, at least not directly, just pointing out that Wi-fi can punch holes in security systems, and allow hackers to get in and fuck with your stuff.

    At least, I certainly hope he's not saying the government is going to make open wi-fi illegal.

    Open wifi is a tool that can be used for good or ill. Better laws would mandate that servers be patched and such.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Did you read the artical? by I_redwolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Better laws would mandate that servers be patched and such.

      No No No, there is no need for laws; there is no need for regulation. There is no need for any of that; if you want a secure network, HIRE someone to do it or do it yourself. Everyone is always running off at the mouth with make this law, forge this law. Law, law, law for the most stupid bullshit. Our legal system is already filled with enough bullshit.

    2. Re:Did you read the artical? by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      The problem here is that there are cheap-o businesses don't see how having a secure network contributes to their shareholder dividends, and therefore won't hire somebody to protect their networks. Geeks laid off, that's a bad thing around here.

      There needs to be laws that say if you don't secure your WiFi, you become legally liable for any attack that passes through your access point. That'll finally give the beancounters a reason to secure things.

  45. sanity run amuck by kraksmoka · · Score: 3, Interesting
    this WiFi announcement makes as much sense as the personal injury suits won by crooks years back (i'm certain overturned on appeal), who sued homeowners when they hurt themselves in attempted breakins.

    yes, people today in the US fell less secure in some ways, say, when traveling on airlines. this is understandable due to the trauma of 9-11 and the threat of worse, such as the SAM attack in Kenya last week. bad things do happen in the world, they are unavoidable, and my mother would agree, better paranoid than alive.

    however, it is this /.er's opinion that the right wing extremists of our beloved (not) presidential administration is overly eager to use the situation to extend the police powers of the state.

    every little chink in personal liberty, every new crime invented, every new link to terrorism where it does not exist, ALL of THEM, are affronts to not only the liberty of the land of the free, but to the free world at large.

    take Jose Padilla. an enemy combatant now, why? last time i looked (i took a history degree in a prior life) a Citizen of the United States had certain rights, even if he used them in a way detrimental to society. this is a "free" country, treason is an option, still punishable by death, none the less an option. that isn't to say it's my choice, but he made his willingly. why is he all of the sudden, this native born son (or bastard, don't know yet really, do we?) having something taken by Ashcroft (remember, he did lose an election to a corpse before his elevation to Grand Inquisitor), that a proper court of Law would only strip of him (this is being decided now) in the most dire of circumstances.

    wi-fi security is just another nick in the neck of lady liberty. unfortunately, if you add the nicks up, there's a gaping hole at the moment, and not enough people to stand up to GOP sticks and stones making these nicks. may the god i don't believe exists help us all, without faith based government initiatives.

    --
    "You never want a serious crisis to go to waste." - Rahm Emanuel
    1. Re:sanity run amuck by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      You know, I really do wish more people would have the guts to speak up for Jose Padilla. If he didn't hate the US on May 7 (the day before his "arrest"), he sure as hell hates the US now. I would too in his position. At the moment, I'm pushing the ACLU to throw more weight into Padilla's case, because they're slackin' right now IMO. Please, continue to speak on behalf of Padilla so that all Americans may enjoy the rights built upon the graves of those who fought for them. There are people who truly love freedom, and I am one of them; so I therefore applaud your comment and you for speaking the truth in a world gone mad. Please, please continue to speak about what you know in your soul to be good and right.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  46. Open discussions and Anonymous Cowards by burgburgburg · · Score: 5, Insightful
    are a clear violation of the Homeland Security Act and all participants ("citizens" or not) will be immediately detained for as long as is necessary to combat this scourge against free society.

    Next week, we will determine that free society is a clear violation of the Homeland Security Act, and anybody trying to exist in one will be detained for as long as is necessary to combat this scourge of free society.

    1. Re:Open discussions and Anonymous Cowards by mosch · · Score: 3, Funny

      you sir, are an enemy combatant.

  47. The great firewall of America? by Traicovn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in,"
    I see something along the lines of the gov't national id here... perhaps a gov't supplied logon for every internet user? (think Microsoft Passport) something that might be required to get onto the internet? If nothing else, a more aggressive monitoring of the internet by the gov't and lots more restrictions and shutdowns, maybe things like the 'great firewall of china'.
    I hope that it doesn't come to this... but it's a scary and very possible thought...

    --

    [Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
    {Traicovn}
  48. In other news.... by Grip3n · · Score: 2

    In other news, the Department of Homeland Security has issued a statement outlining that planes, trucks and box cutters are tools for terrorists and therefore will be dissolved out of society. Director of Homeland Security, Steven Martin, is quoted to have called these tools of terrorism "double plus not good".

    --
    To make a pun demonstrates the highest understanding of a language
    1. Re:In other news.... by presearch · · Score: 4, Funny

      Beg pardon comrade, but according to The Eleventh Edition of the Newspeak Dictionary the correct form would be "doubleplusungood" .

      As in:
      reporting bb minitrue doubleplusungood refs wifi slashdot unpersons rewrite fullwise upsub antefiling

    2. Re:In other news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Newspeak Grammar Nazi sayz:

      double plus ungood.

    3. Re:In other news.... by addps4cat · · Score: 1

      Wow, you just scared me.

      --
      Don't eat shrimp candy, just a heads up.
  49. Your Sig.... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    It's starting to look like the Simpsons might outlast West. Civ....

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  50. ok...this is scary by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    when we have a department of our government telling people that somthing is bad becasue it is open,

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  51. Do I have this right? by roseblood · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So...we're looking at taking away the ability of 'terrorists' to use free connectivity via 802.11? Do folks have to turn over their ID and proof of residency to get a hotmail address? Do you have to give your ssn# to use the computer at the local library? What about CyberCafes and PCBaangs? I don't see how a wireless lan makes our nation that much more a target for terrorism. Things that one might think are a little more important on the list are: 1) Our borders that are SO resistant to illegal entry [ I have a sponge that stops water better than our borders keep out illegal foreign nationals ] 2) Our ports in which only a small fraction of containers are ever searched. Will it we keep up the status quo until a WMD (Weapon of Mass Destruction) is smuggled in and used against us? 3) Our politicans that are more concerned with their positions of power than the saftey and well being of the citizens they are supposed to represent?

    --
    There are lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    1. Re:Do I have this right? by Ironica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Will it we keep up the status quo until a WMD (Weapon of Mass Destruction) is smuggled in and used against us?

      Why would anyone have to smuggle in a WMD to use against us? Aren't most of the world's weapons of mass destruction already here?

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    2. Re:Do I have this right? by agingGeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why would anyone have to smuggle in a WMD to use against us? Aren't most of the world's weapons of mass destruction already here? Nuclear weapons? yes Chemical, or biological/environmental? doubtful It also should be noted that nuclear weapons sites are the likely most heavily defended areas on the planet. They had a spcial on tlc a few months back detailing the amount of security procedures and redundancy (both human and equipment) that go into keeping those sites safe.

    3. Re:Do I have this right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So how did that US Army Antrax Cia uses Anthrax,the US Army is making Anthrax ,the Anthrax in the recent US attacks matches US Army Anthrax and then typical denial.


      And let's not forget about the 10,000 Military Police beign called up to protect us from the CIA using US Army Anthrax to control the protests which will ulitmately occur when US Soldiers start coming home in body bags.


      But do not worry, at least there wont be any open WiFi networks for the terrorists to infiltrate and look at pr0n through.

    4. Re:Do I have this right? by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      I just like how they say free WiFi is helping terrorists while NYC has a park (soon to be two isn't it?) that has free parkwide wifi access. God, talk about shooting off our own foot.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    5. Re:Do I have this right? by kableh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Believe me, I want to think George W is just a bumbling idiot, and really has our best interests in mind. But that isn't an excuse. We don't have a first amendment right anymore, or a fourth amendment right, or a fifth amendment right here shortly. And I'm sure the only reason we still have a second amendment right is the government has a list of all the gun owners, so they'll leave that for last. So tell me, what are we defending? Without that silly Bill of Rights there isn't anything left in this country worth defending. Bring on the terrorists, I say.

    6. Re:Do I have this right? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      I don't see how a wireless lan makes our nation that much more a target for terrorism.

      It doesn't. Everything that a terrorist can do over WiFi, they can do from another country already.

    7. Re:Do I have this right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real reason is that companies that pour ton$ o' dough into the campaigns of these chumps stand to loose big time if things like seattlewireless.net go mainstream.

      So who cares about a nuke in a container in a port somewhere?

    8. Re:Do I have this right? by SparafucileMan · · Score: 1

      Good point. One way in the Iran-Israel-Contra scandle that they smuggled tons of cocaine and weapons to finance arms for Iran was by unloading the cargo containers at "mafia-controlled" corners of port. The police who came around were bought off and the dock inspectors (i.e. government bureaucrats) never even visited that side of town. Oh, and basically, among other people, the mafia enjoys "employing" Green Berets, CIA agents, etc. for the handling of these things. This sort of thing is a direct outgrowth of a state that has put way to much money into military matters and way to little into social amenities and government oversight. The "war on terrorism" is about as acurate a phrase as the "war on drugs", which, as most middle-age americans can attest, has done jack to stop the flow of drugs into the U.S., but has managed to put alot of non-violent law breakers into maximum security prisons.

    9. Re:Do I have this right? by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

      Mod the parent up. The only thing I can add is, I feel both secure and worried of living in Canada right now. Secure because, despite the fact that our constitution sometimes lack with regards to yours, at least are civil liberties and basic rights are not as heavily threatened here as they are in the States. Worried because, being next door to the superpower and being part the North America, the U.S. can pressure our country into taking similar measures - I wouldn't be surprised if Ottawa followed suit on the WiFi thing. This is unacceptable. I hope you guys wake up before 2004 and reclaim that government of yours, at least a little, before 1984 stops being a subtle, 20-year late metaphor.

      Well, all the more reason for me wanting Quebec to separate and join the European Union! ;-)

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    10. Re:Do I have this right? by kableh · · Score: 2

      Thanks for the support, I think =). I hope I'm still in this country for the next election...

      My big problem with this measure is that security through legislation isn't security. Fortunately it seems as though folks are wising up to the security issues.

    11. Re:Do I have this right? by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      --Geez. Sounds like some ppl need to go back and look at the Wireless archives on /.

      --Look, I hate gov't conspiracy as much as the next guy, but **in this case** I think they're right to hammer on ppl who are unwittingly providing unsecured wireless Inet connections.

      --Think about it. Terrorist pulls up near an access point, parks the car. Attacks the Pentagon and other military targets using his laptop. Drives away.

      ** THEY'LL NEVER CATCH HIM ** because he used anonymous, wireless access to do the cracking!

      --God, some people are so blind sometimes...

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    12. Re:Do I have this right? by executioner · · Score: 1
      Nuclear weapons? yes Chemical, or Biological/environmental? doubtful

      this should be yes to Both Listening to NPR last week they just did a story on Chemical weapons sites in the US and how they are trying to Incinerate C/B/E WMD in georgia and using a different method in some other sites ( bielive there was 6 or 7 different sites across the US if i remember correctly ). but that the stockpiles would not be destroyed for a number of years yet. Lightweb

      --
      "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    13. Re:Do I have this right? by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      The Wireless City, well, we are not the only culprits.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  52. Me too, but check your date ;) by SaraSmith · · Score: 1

    he's a wee bit older than that. :)

    1. Re:Me too, but check your date ;) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surely, as a (presumably) geek girl, you'll appreciate the fact that the average /.-tter male is date-less? I mean, he just checked his dates and found none.

      (Of course, /.-tters from Arabia and other don't count.)

    2. Re:Me too, but check your date ;) by AcquaCow · · Score: 1

      yeah, I suppose that is wrong...wtf was I thinking?
      I mean...the guy lived in the 1700's...maybe that was 1781...hmm

      --

      up 12 days, 22:30, 2 users, load averages: 993.20, 994.21, 994.56
      *makes note to limit user processes...
  53. Paranoia, The Destroyer by Newer+Guy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let me give you a list of things that aid and abet terrirists: 1. Water. Terrorists drink it you know. 2. Toliets. They use these too. 3. Beds. Terrorists sleep you know. 4. Air. They also breathe. 5. Newspapers, books, especially phone books. You know that terrorists wuse codes based upon all of these, don't you? 6. Telephones. Terrorists use the phone to talk to each other 7. The Internet. Enough said? 8. Restaurants. Terrorists meet at restaurants. 9. TV, Cable TV, the radio. Terrorists use all of these to see what their cohorts are up to. 10. Parks. terrorists meet at parks all the time. 11. Train stations, bus stations, airports. Terrorists meet at all these places. They use these to travel. Just think of what they did with airplanes after all. 12. Stores. Terrorists buy items used in terrorism there after all. 13. Cars. Terrorists travel in cars all the time. Same thing with motorcycles, motor scooters and bicycles. We need to BAN these items as soon as possible! Don't be surprised if this is just scratching the surface. Another list will be out next week. Please not that guns are not on the list though. After all, if guns are banned, only terrorists will have guns!

    1. Re:Paranoia, The Destroyer by long_john_stewart_mi · · Score: 1

      10. Parks.
      ...
      After all, if guns are banned, only terrorists will have guns!


      But if parks are banned, only the terrorists will have parks! Hmm... I like parks... Maybe it's time to take up the trade.

      Kidding, of course.

      --
      ...oOOo..'(_)'..oOOo...
    2. Re:Paranoia, The Destroyer by inerte · · Score: 1

      Terrorists don't park. They want to go straight into the office.

      47th floor, please!

    3. Re:Paranoia, The Destroyer by saskboy · · Score: 2

      I don't use WiFi because it helps the terrorists. I don't not use it because I'm a poor student, but because I must serve the country south of me, and help them win this never ending war on bad people.

      I still use eBay though. I hope there are no terrorists on eBay because I couldn't stand not being able to use that.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    4. Re:Paranoia, The Destroyer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sex is bad too as it would allow terrorist to increase in population...

    5. Re:Paranoia, The Destroyer by TrekkieGod · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the Duct Tape...terrorists needs those to strap the dynamite to their bodies.

      --

      Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

  54. Government vs Common sense? by deranged+unix+nut · · Score: 2

    What's next? Regulation of the open ethernet ports or phone lines in lobbies and libraries?

    I suppose I am aiding terrorism by providing an open (but regularly monitored) open AP for the couple hundred feet around my apartment and for providing ethernet drops to my neighbors.

    I know it isn't a paranoid design, but it is regulated through monitoring. If it is abused I'll lock out the abusers and depending on the specific abuse, I might even do offensive data collection and hand data over to the authorities. I think my "policies" are sufficient so that I can help out neighbors that need access and keep abuses to a minumum.

    Must all communication be trackable? I guess we have freedom to speak, but not to listen?

  55. IN FAMILY GUY by inerte · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    THEY DON'T REPEAT JOKES!

    1. Re:IN FAMILY GUY by inerte · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Jokes are meant to be offensive.

  56. ROFL... catch 22! by Mark+(ph'x) · · Score: 1

    So let me just straighten this mess out for all you people that are lucky to live in the 'land of the free'.

    Running an insecure wireless network is a crime.

    So lets fix this... oh no wait... discussing security issues relating to said wireless network is illegal under the DMCA. (assuming theres even a tiny bit of copyrighted media on it)

    Truthfully I think litigation is pushing the US technology sector into a downward spiral. Something is going to break soon, it will have to.

    Its obviously time for new tactics, Elftor style ;)... "Hooray!"

    --
    those who control the past, control the future. those who control the present, control the past.
  57. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  58. OOPS! forgot cell phones and pagers.... by Newer+Guy · · Score: 2

    Terrorists use these too after all.

  59. The Options by penguinboy · · Score: 2

    Would wireless networking users rather:

    A. Secure their access points now
    or
    B. Be responsible when an unauthorized user uses their open access point for illegal activities

    1. Re:The Options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just curious, am I responsible if I leave my car unlocked, it gets stolen, and used in a hit and run?

    2. Re:The Options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Would wireless networking users rather:

      A. Secure their access points now
      or
      B. Be responsible when an unauthorized user uses their open access point for illegal activities


      Runner-up in this evening's false dichotomy contest.

    3. Re:The Options by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      Nope, but the ignition is still secured by a lock that takes knowledge and time to defeat. (Your car door lock is also defeatable... good thing, or AAA would lose a line of work quickly.) However, if you leave your car running and then work away from it... yeah, it's possible that you share some responsiblity for letting your car be used.

  60. Forget WiFi,there's no right to keep and bear arms by irishkev · · Score: 1

    If anyone doubts that a tyranny is being established in this country, check out the following:

    United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit:
    "The Second Amendment does not confer an individual right to own or possess arms."

    http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf/66 1116A4ECB1A7BE88256C8600544DCB/

    Dangerous times in this country:
    In 1999, the State of California enacted amendments to its gun control laws that significantly strengthened the state's restrictions on the possession, use, and transfer of the semiautomatic weapons popularly known as "assault weapons." Plaintiffs, California residents who either own assault weapons, seek to acquire such weapons, or both, brought this challenge to the gun control statute, asserting that the law, as amended, violates the Second Amendment, the Equal Protection Clause, and a host of other constitutional provisions. The district court dismissed all of the plaintiffs' claims. Because the Second Amendment does not confer an individual right to own or possess arms, we affirm the dismissal of all claims brought pursuant to that constitutional provision.

  61. I understand... by inerte · · Score: 3, Funny

    Slashdot is for geeks, but you forgot:

    Sex!

    Breed terrorist, breed!

  62. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by dnoyeb · · Score: 2

    I have tp agree this IS bullsh!t. Let them show they are at least competant before they start asking for more. Let them at least SPOT Bin Laden, then we can talk some more. But until they show they can use what they have, I see no reason for them to get more.

    Seems like I have yet to hear a single good idea from the White House, including dems and non-partisans as well.

    Why the white house can only come up with obvious ideas that a 6 year old can thing of, yet they want us to think they are intelligent and smart is beyond me.

    Their decisions show the intelligence and innovativeness of a child.

  63. Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This may be a troll; this may be flaimbait; but please allow me be the first to say:

    Fuck The Dept of Homeland Security
    Fuck John Ashcroft
    Fuck Tom Ridge
    Fuck Poindexter


    Fuck every single COWARD in this administration who is so afraid of his/her own shadow that they feel the need to break down every door on Earth to hunt down everyone who might be thinking about hurting them. Grow a Goddamn pair and get out of my home; you have no business here. Come back when you have balls and a brain and have a reasonable, legal, Constitutional suggestion for how to truly improve the security of this nation. Until then, just sit the fuck down and shut the fuck up because you're not helping. I swear to Christ you people deserve to be put on trial for high treason. You've systematically stripped every single American of his/her rights and freedoms one by one, while simultaneously innundated our primary defenses against terrorists with tons and tons of completely irrelevant information. When we asked for a response to Sept 11, we didn't mean just any response; we wanted a REAL response. What the hell are you people thinking??? Have you all completely lost it?? Has every single person in this administration lost any and all sight of what their job is? Mr President, your job is to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States of America. That is your job description, and you need only worry about that. Please, take a moment to sit down and read the thing some time? If you simply do what it tells you to do, you'll automatically be doing everything that you're supposed to do.

    This administration has, in my view, taken a complete "ends justify the means" position, and has decided that the rights, liberties, and lives of the American people are irrelevant sidenotes next to their political agendas. I am, at this point, absolutely disgusted with my own government; and I find that completely fucking pathetic.

    I love my country with all my heart, but Goddamn my government's a bitch right now.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    1. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by I_redwolf · · Score: 2

      Well said..

    2. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RIGHT ON! FUCK THEM!

    3. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by inerte · · Score: 0, Troll

      I guess Bush is too male for you, otherwise you would be fucking him?

    4. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      w00t!!! Fuckin A, man.

    5. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why oh why don't I have any mod points left!

      This is what every person living in America should be thinking! Yes, terrorists are bad. Yes, the government is there to defend its citizens, but: Good God, man, what are they thinking though?!

      This (the WiFi statements) is not that big of a deal - in and of itself - but when combined with all the other crap that is being put out in the effort to "fight terrorists and protect peace loving peoples" I can't see how we win in the end, even if we win.

      In fact, I would go so far as to say that the terrorists have already won, Mr. President. They have made our government systematically chip away at the rights which make this country so great (and bad, at the same time.) Doesn't that mean we lose?

      It isn't about the number of lives lost or buildings destroyed. It's about a way of life and system of rights that is being eroded by crappy, poorly thought-out laws being created to "fight terrorists." Well, thanks a lot for doing their job for them - I doubt they truly could have done a better job. I have to hand it to our government: despite what people think, it really is efficient. Unfortunately, it seems to be efficient at the wrong job...

    6. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by cosmosis · · Score: 2

      Damn, I have to agree, this is the best and most refreshing rant I have ever read on slashdot.

      Please Mod this up!

    7. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 2

      I understand losing some freedoms in wartime, temporarily, but this isn't worth it because the "war against terror" will never be over. I'm going to lose all my privacy rights and my great-great-great grandkids STILL won't have gotten them back.

      It's also amazing to me that the Islamic fundimentalists are going to hand our country over to the Christian fundamentalists, lock stock and barrel.

      We had all sorts of freedoms from those rediculous victimless crime laws that are really religous laws because no one was going to be caught when no one was going to complain to the law... You could safely hire a hooker or buy drugs. Now that the feds are going to (of course) record every phone call and email, you won't have any freedom from laws based on religion rather than actual justice. And that separation of church and state stuff will become pointless.

      Ok the US and Europe won't become the Taliban's Afganistan, but it will be pretty close to being the Ahatolla's Iran. Say hi to your local, neighborhood homeland security spy. It reminds me of good old Red China that way.

      Rocky J. Squirrel

    8. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Americans have gotten what they deserve... just wish we could put you all somewhere further away... like the surface of the sun.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    9. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      Blanket anti-Americanism is, much like other forms of prejudice, a crutch for the weak-minded. It's much easier to simply make broad generalizations about 265 million people than to actually say something of substance, right? If you truly wish to disintigrate (as per your "surface of the sun" statement) 265 million human beings, then I submit that you have surpassed the barbarity of Adolf Hitler himself. Several thousand men and women who were doing nothing but going to their job were murdered en masse. You can critique the foreign policy of the American government, and you can blame American corporations for whatever your nation's financial woes are, but you cannot possibly justify the murder of each person who was killed that day. If you really believe they got what they deserve, then please list all 3000+ Americans killed on Sept 11, 2001 and give a brief description of what each person has done to deserve death. Please think about what you say before you say it. You can blast the American government's past actions all you want, but this wasn't retaliation against a government; it was a summary execution of more than 3000 human beings. That in-it-of-itself is intrinsicly impossible to justify.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    10. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by GimmeFuel · · Score: 0
      Apparently you haven't heard about the latest anti-terror bill, the Fuck Freedom law. Among other things, it imposes the death penalty for speaking out against the government.

      You may think it's funny now, but reread this in a year.

    11. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting that even a great comment like this one can get "flaimbait" as part of its moderation.

      Some moderators sure have their heads up their asses.

    12. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Grizzlysmit · · Score: 1
      Fuck The Dept of Homeland Security Fuck John Ashcroft Fuck Tom Ridge Fuck Poindexter

      Noooo!!!!!! a). not with other men. b). definitely not with such ugly ones. :-)# but the sentiment is about right. these days I more and more glad I'm not an American

      --
      in my life God comes first.... but Linux is pretty high after that :-D
      Francis Smit
    13. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This (the WiFi statements) is not that big of a deal - in and of itself - but when combined with all the other crap that is being put out in the effort to "fight terrorists and protect peace loving peoples" I can't see how we win in the end, even if we win.

      Another excellent insight. I wholeheartedly agree.

    14. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by saskboy · · Score: 2

      Dude, post that in your journal please. There needs to be more of that going round the net, than these racist, whiny rants I've seen about imigrants ruining the USA. It is the white, urban, upper[?]class male terrorizing the freedoms of the American citizen [and Canada by association].

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    15. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by jbohumil · · Score: 1

      I'm beginning to think the real terrorists are the guys running our country.

    16. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by kir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While I COMPLETELY agree with you, you forgot to mention the two other ridiculous branches of our (American) government - the judicial and legislative branches. These fucking morons have completely abandoned us. Checks and balances? I'm not seeing it. Regardless of who is "in charge", our government is fucked. Not fucked beyond the point of no return, but fucked none the less.

      This brings me to a post I made earlier. People will bitch, moan, and ORGANIZE for a fucking television show, but they'll do shite about this. THAT, I think, is the even more pathetic than the American government.

      Are there any governments left that exist FOR the people? Hmmm....

      --
      3cx.org - A truly bad website.
    17. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      "Not fucked beyond the point of no return, but fucked none the less."

      At what point are we fucked past the point of no return? And at what point should we begin thinking about replacing our current government with one that works better for us? Perhaps we should draw up a new Constitution; one that imposes immediate penalties for violations of it and which is clearer about certain points. I'm not suggesting violent overthrow or anything; but there certainly cannot be anything wrong with a peaceful "overthrow" of a corrupt government, right? All I'm saying is that if we do get to the point where we're fucked, shouldn't we at least have some idea of how to replace it and what to replace it with? Suggestions anyone? If anyone's interested, I'll start a journal entry on the subject.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    18. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Right on.
      It's all just frickin' McCarthyism.
      Seriously, just go through and replace every instance of the word 'terrorist' with the word 'communist'

      If you don't agree with them, you're helping the terrorists and therefore are one.

      Really, it's amazing. Does anyone remember that whole rat out your terrorist neighbor program they wanted? Replace terrorist with communist and you'll see who the true enimies of freedom are.

      The LAST thing these people need is more information. They had all the infomation they need to stop 9/11 from happening and they fucked it up. They need to get smarter about how they handle the info they do have. (Read as: We need smarter people in charge.)

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    19. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Not fucked beyond the point of no return, but fucked none the less."

      At what point are we fucked past the point of no return?

      Loki, you want to know "point of no return"? I can suggest that inability to make comments like yours great "fk them", or (sorry, it could be that bad) -- your disappearance "all of sudden". Please consider, that there is no short notice that you almost reaching this point of no return.

    20. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Americans have gotten what they deserve... just wish we could put you all somewhere further away... like the surface of the sun.

      You wouldn't be one of those English guys who have joyfully accepted a video camera on every corner would you? Or one of the Aussies or Canadians who, in lockstep with England, are prodding Bush to come along with them in their rush to surpass China in the suppression of civil rights?

    21. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by irishkev · · Score: 1

      That post was excellent! I am with you, brother! Everyone needs to start drawing the line. JUST DRAW THE FUCKING LINE. Resist in any way you can, large or small.

    22. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean those be the same 3000 ppl who were most centrally involved in the widespread suffering created by the american based corporations that have been the target of protests by millions and millions of peace-loving citizens around the globe for years? Oh, those innocent people. And the ones that have been handing out military hardware to people in the middle east for the last how many years... don't they work at the white house and the pentagon? Shit, I remember now... sorry about that... I loved those guys!

    23. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Tony-A · · Score: 2

      In fact, I would go so far as to say that the terrorists have already won, Mr. President. They have made our government systematically chip away at the rights which make this country so great
      Exactly.
      Even better than doing is to get your opponent to do the doing. If the terrorists can cause the US Government to suppress the rights of its people, I'd say the terrorists *have* won.

    24. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by GooseKirk · · Score: 2

      Damn skippy, Americans have gotten what we deserve. I don't mean the 9/11 attacks (rhetoric aside, no one deserves to actually be killed, IMO), but we get what we deserve with the Bush administration. These guys are so blatantly malicious, so asinine, so crazy, there's practically a new "holy shit" moment every week. Last week it was that Kissinger business, this week it was authorizing the CIA to kill American citizens, now it's this... next week it'll be something even more out there... And NO ONE SEEMS TO CARE. These guys can just about do whatever they want, and no one blinks. No one cares. And if Bush doesn't "win" the election in 2004, I'll eat my hand.

      Oh, /. cares now that suddenly someone's attacked a universally sacred geek cow, but this is just a minor speedbump.

      I applaud the Fuck Yous to the adminstration, but we need to not forget the real problem: fuck you, everyone who voted for these people, and double-fuck everyone who inexplicably continues to support them. There's something seriously wrong with those people, and I'm embarassed to share a species with them, let alone a country.

      I'm at the point where I don't even bother arguing with them anymore. It's like arguing with flat-earthers - why bother. But the weird part is, there's probably a good 50-100 million of those people. Most of them are not even clinically mentally deficient in some way, so they don't even have that excuse. Those people fully deserve the government they get. I just wish I wasn't living in the same place as them...

    25. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, though you aren't American, Canadians are generally indistinguishable from Americans in the rest of the world. So, if ``we'' do put all the Americans on the surface of the sun, then you'd end up there too.

    26. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by kir · · Score: 2

      At what point are we fucked past the point of no return? And at what point should we begin thinking about replacing our current government with one that works better for us?

      Yeah. That's a tough one. I see America through sort of warped glasses. I'm American, but I live in Japan, but I work for an American company on an American military base. I'm not sure how I would feel if I lived in the states (I've been away for 7 1/2 years). I suspect most people aren't having their rights violated daily. No strip searches at the mall. No late night abductions by black helos. No SHOW ME YOUR PAPERS when you cross the Texas-Oklahoma border. You know?

      I'm not sure what I can do anymore. The Republicans scare me (not so much Bush, but the people around him). The Democrats scare me (Pelosi... [shudder]). They're all crooks. They're looking out for #1 and not their constituency. It would be really nice if we (you know, The People) could fire the whole lot and start over.

      I was hoping to say something brilliant and inspiring, but I'm dead-ass tired and sick. I'll just end now while I'm still ahead (or... not that far behind).

      --
      3cx.org - A truly bad website.
    27. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      Feel free to continue your thoughts in my journal when you're feeling better.

      Just to fill you in on what's been happening, you can no have everything from your home to your library records to your computer legally searched without you ever knowing about it, and you can now be imprisoned secretly without a trial for the rest of your life. Those two things basically sum it up, and we already have one American citizen who was arrested on US soil who has been held since May 8th of this year without a phone call, lawyer, hearing, judge, jury, or an ounze of sunlight. He's kept in a windowless room cut off from the outside world in a cell where bright lights shine down on him 24/7. The government was gearing up for a national ID card (show me your papers), and the TIPS program (citizens spying on citizens... basically a KGB/Gestapo on steroids), but those got cut out in the new Homeland Security Act, which creates a massive beaurocracy which promises to get absolutely nothing done, but don't blow the whistle on their failure because they removed whistleblower protections and you might end up in jail.

      Basically, our Attorney General (who lost his Senate bid to a dead man, Mel Carnahan) has taken the US Constitution along with the Bill of Rights and run them through shredders, then burned the shredded copies.

      It's a bit of a cross between Animal Farm and 1984 right now, but we're just getting started. How do I feel? Scared; angry; pissed off. If you come "home", just remember to watch what you do, what you read, what you say. I honestly feel as though I'm taking a chance by posting this stuff on /., and that's pretty fucking sad. The land of the free, home of the brave is all but lost.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    28. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shush, not so loud, they'll hear you!

      (turns out that if you are a non-resident alien in the US there ARE instances where saying or writing something like this might get you arrested, btw... I came to the US because I wanted to get away from a system in which who you know matters too much over what you know. Funny, eh?)

    29. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Photon+Ghoul · · Score: 2

      It's also amazing to me that the Islamic fundimentalists are going to hand our country over to the Christian fundamentalists, lock stock and barrel.

      I've said this before and I'll this again. The Islamic fundamentalists have already had a successful first strike against the United States. Yes, it was done with the September 11th attack. It was not, however, the loss of life that gives them a clear victory. The signals that they were successful with one attack is that they have changed the United States for some time to come.

      In one fell swoop, the Islamic fundamentalists have given their most-hated enemies, the Christian fundamentalists the ability to fully engage them in their fucking holy war. In one fell swoop, everything that this nation is based upon has become unimportant and secondary to protecting ourselves. In one fell swoop, being a citizen doesn't give any more protection from the Crusaders than being not being one.

      To everyone ranting and raving in these threads... keep it up.

    30. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Islamic fundamentalists have already had a successful first strike against the United States.

      Were the events of 11 September 2001 really done by Islamic Fundamentalists? How about people who were acting as if they were Islamic Fundamentalists

      This wouldn't be the first time the US has attacked a nation because of disinformation provided by Isreal. The US invasion of Libya in 1986 being just one example.

      By Way of Deception, Thou shalt do War.

    31. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Having travelled the world, I can honestly say that is bullshit, and that generally, when ppl mistake me for an American and I correct them, they apologize... sometimes profusely. Nuff said...

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    32. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you? Some sort of communist... I mean Islamist?

    33. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Alien+Being · · Score: 2

      Right on.

      The lesson we needed to learn from 9/11 is to lock the cockpit doors, not to suspend civil rights.

      We're all paying for the mistakes of airline "security experts" who had their heads so far up their ass they allowed 100-ton guided missiles to be taken over by punks with knives. Once the doors were locked, did they really think it was necessary to start confiscating nail clippers?

      With all due respect to the victims of 9/11, the big damage to our society is happening now, and it's being done by a president who lost the popular election.

      Bush can't even hide his evil little grin whenever he talks about 9/11. 3000 lives mean nothing to guys like him, except as an opportunity to play the power game. I suspect he'll throw the Saudies under the bus and manipulate us into buying our oil from, oh, i dunno, Texas?

    34. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're retarded.

    35. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by cosmosis · · Score: 2

      You're right. I think we have reached the point of no return. The bill has already passed. What can anyone possibly do now? The best and most optimal time to stop oppression is before it ever begins, which was during the time this bill was debated. Only problem is wasn't. Out lovely congress people had less than 3 hours to read and then vote on this 484 page travesty. What gets me, is our congress people didn't bother to say, "NO! We need more time!".

      So now that the law has passed, it will take a miracle to unwind it, because those people most effected it by it will have, NO JUDICAL OVERSIGHT or DUE PROCESS OF LAW. Which means that any challenges to the Homeland Security Bill will never be made, because those people will be rotting or dead in some secret American gulag.

    36. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point. 3 hours for 484 pages is clearly not enough.

      is there any rule that should prevent from voting without reading bill in a first place? Or make vote "fake" and invalid? I do not know American law, but may be someone could make a comment.

      About gulag... You know, this is the reason why I use AC to post.

    37. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by pclminion · · Score: 2
      Regardless of who is "in charge", our government is fucked. Not fucked beyond the point of no return, but fucked none the less.

      The frightening thing is, it could be fucked beyond the point of no return. What if this insanity continues for 25 years? An entire generation of people will have grown up, from birth, under this "New America." They won't even UNDERSTAND what the older people are talking about when they talk about freedom of speech, freedom of religion, the Fifth Amendment, or any of those things. And if an entire generation of people in this country have lost their sense of freedom and liberty then the whole idea of America as it was will be lost forever.

      We need to stop what is happening in this country, and we need to stop it NOW.

    38. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Maul · · Score: 2

      Well, your post was pretty crude... but you are essentially right about what I think you're trying to say. Bush/Ashcroft and the federal government at large seem to be doing their best to undermine the Constitution as well as criminalize as many people they can.

      --

      "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    39. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by McCrapDeluxe · · Score: 1

      /s/commun/terror Ladies and Gentlemen: Tonight as we celebrate the 141st birthday of one of the great men in American history, I would like to be able to talk about what a glorious day today is in the history of the world. As we celebrate the birth of this man, who with his whole heart and soul hated war, I would like to be able to speak of peace in our time, of war being outlawed, and of worldwide disarmament. These would be truly appropriate things to be able to mention as we celebrate the birthday of Abraham Lincoln. Five years after a world war has been won, men's hearts should anticipate a long peace, and men's minds should be free from the heavy weight that comes with war. But this is not such a period -- for this is not a period of peace. This is a time of the Cold War. This is a time when all the world is split into two vast, increasingly hostile armed camps -- a time of a great armaments race. Today we can almost physically hear the mutterings and rumblings of an invigorated god of war. You can see it, feel it, and hear it all the way from the hills of Indochina, from the shores of Formosa right over into the very heart of Europe itself. ... Today we are engaged in a final, all-out battle between terroristic atheism and Christianity. The modern champions of terrorism have selected this as the time. And, ladies and gentlemen, the chips are down -- they are truly down. Lest there be any doubt that the time has been chosen, let us go directly to the leader of terrorism today -- Joseph Stalin. Here is what he said -- not back in 1928, not before the war, not during the war -- but two years after the last war was ended: "To think that the terrorist revolution can be carried out peacefully, within the framework of a Christian democracy, means one has either gone out of one's mind and lost all normal understanding, or has grossly and openly repudiated the terrorist revolution." And this is what was said by Lenin in 1919, which was also quoted with approval by Stalin in 1947: "We are living," said Lenin, "not merely in a state but in a system of states, and the existence of the Soviet Republic side by side with Christian states for a long time is unthinkable. One or the other must triumph in the end. And before that end supervenes, a series of frightful collisions between the Soviet Republic and the bourgeois states will be inevitable." Ladies and gentlemen, can there be anyone here tonight who is so blind as to say that the war is not on? Can there be anyone who fails to realize that the terrorist world has said, "The time is now" -- that this is the time for the showdown between the democratic Christian world and the terrorist atheistic world? Unless we face this fact, we shall pay the price that must be paid by those who wait too long. Six years ago, at the time of the first conference to map out peace -- Dumbarton Oaks -- there was within the Soviet orbit 180 million people. Lined up on the anti-totalitarian side there were in the world at that time roughly 1.625 billion people. Today, only six years later, there are 800 million people under the absolute domination of Soviet Russia -- an increase of over 400 percent. On our side, the figure has shrunk to around 500 million. In other words, in less than six years the odds have changed from 9 to 1 in our favor to 8 to 5 against us. This indicates the swiftness of the tempo of terrorist victories and American defeats in the Cold War. As one of our outstanding historical figures once said, "When a great democracy is destroyed, it will not be because of enemies from without but rather because of enemies from within." The truth of this statement is becoming terrifyingly clear as we see this country each day losing on every front. At war's end we were physically the strongest nation on Earth and, at least potentially, the most powerful intellectually and morally. Ours could have been the honor of being a beacon in the desert of destruction, a shining, living proof that civilization was not yet ready to destroy itself. Unfortunately, we have failed miserably and tragically to arise to the opportunity. The reason why we find ourselves in a position of impotency is not because our only powerful, potential enemy has sent men to invade our shores, but rather because of the traitorous actions of those who have been treated so well by this nation. It has not been the less fortunate or members of minority groups who have been selling this nation out, but rather those who have had all the benefits that the wealthiest nation on earth has had to offer -- the finest homes, the finest college education, and the finest jobs in government we can give. This is glaringly true in the State Department. There the bright young men who are born with silver spoons in their mouths are the ones who have been worst. Now I know it is very easy for anyone to condemn a particular bureau or department in general terms. Therefore, I would like to cite one rather unusual case -- the case of a man who has done much to shape our foreign policy. When Chiang Kai-shek was fighting our war, the State Department had in China a young man named John S. Service. His task, obviously, was not to work for the terrorization of China. Strangely, however, he sent official reports back to the State Department urging that we torpedo our ally Chiang Kai-shek and stating, in effect, that terrorism was the best hope of China. Later, this man -- John Service -- was picked up by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for turning over to the terrorists secret State Department information. Strangely, however, he was never prosecuted. However, Joseph Grew, the undersecretary of state, who insisted on his prosecution, was forced to resign. Two days after, Grew's successor, Dean Acheson, took over as undersecretary of state, this man -- John Service -- who had been picked up by the FBI and who had previously urged that terrorism was the best hope of China, was not only reinstated in the State Department but promoted; and finally, under Acheson, placed in charge of all placements and promotions. Today, ladies and gentlemen, this man Service is on his way to represent the State Department and Acheson in Calcutta -- by far and away the most important listening post in the Far East. Now, let's see what happens when individuals with terrorist connections are forced out of the State Department. Gustave Duran, who was labeled as, I quote, "a notorious international terrorist," was made assistant secretary of state in charge of Latin American affairs. He was taken into the State Department from his job as a lieutenant colonel in the terrorist International Brigade. Finally, after intense congressional pressure and criticism, he resigned in 1946 from the State Department -- and, ladies and gentlemen, where do you think he is now? He took over a high-salaried job as chief of Cultural Activities Section in the office of the assistant secretary-general of the United Nations. ... This, ladies and gentlemen, gives you somewhat of a picture of the type of individuals who have been helping to shape our foreign policy. In my opinion the State Department, which is one of the most important government departments, is thoroughly infested with terrorists. I have in my hand 57 cases of individuals who would appear to be either card-carrying members or certainly loyal to the terrorist Party, but who nevertheless are still helping to shape our foreign policy. One thing to remember in discussing the terrorists in our government is that we are not dealing with spies who get 30 pieces of silver to steal the blueprints of new weapons. We are dealing with a far more sinister type of activity because it permits the enemy to guide and shape our policy. This brings us down to the case of one Alger Hiss, who is important not as an individual anymore but rather because he is so representative of a group in the State Department. It is unnecessary to go over the sordid events showing how he sold out the nation which had given him so much. Those are rather fresh in all of our minds. However, it should be remembered that the facts in regard to his connection with this international terrorist spy ring were made known to the then-Undersecretary of State Berle three days after Hitler and Stalin signed the Russo-German Alliance Pact. At that time one Whittaker Chambers -- who was also part of the spy ring -- apparently decided that with Russia on Hitler's side, he could no longer betray our nation to Russia. He gave Undersecretary of State Berle -- and this is all a matter of record -- practically all, if not more, of the facts upon which Hiss' conviction was based. Undersecretary Berle promptly contacted Dean Acheson and received word in return that Acheson, and I quote, "could vouch for Hiss absolutely" -- at which time the matter was dropped. And this, you understand, was at a time when Russia was an ally of Germany. This condition existed while Russia and Germany were invading and dismembering Poland, and while the terrorist groups here were screaming "warmonger" at the United States for their support of the Allied nations. Again in 1943, the FBI had occasion to investigate the facts surrounding Hiss' contacts with the Russian spy ring. But even after that FBI report was submitted, nothing was done. Then, late in 1948 -- on August 5 -- when the Un-American Activities Committee called Alger Hiss to give an accounting, President Truman at once issued a presidential directive ordering all government agencies to refuse to turn over any information whatsoever in regard to the terrorist activities of any government employee to a congressional committee. Incidentally, even after Hiss was convicted, it is interesting to note that the president still labeled the expose of Hiss as a "red herring." If time permitted, it might be well to go into detail about the fact that Hiss was Roosevelt's chief adviser at Yalta when Roosevelt was admittedly in ill health and tired physically and mentally ... and when, according to the secretary of state, Hiss and Gromyko drafted the report on the conference. According to the then-Secretary of State Stettinius, here are some of the things that Hiss helped to decide at Yalta: (1) the establishment of a European High Commission; (2) the treatment of Germany -- this you will recall was the conference at which it was decided that we would occupy Berlin with Russia occupying an area completely encircling the city, which as you know, resulted in the Berlin airlift which cost 31 American lives; (3) the Polish question; (4) the relationship between UNRRA and the Soviet; (5) the rights of Americans on control commissions of Rumania, Bulgaria and Hungary; (6) Iran; (7) China -- here's where we gave away Manchuria; (8) Turkish Straits question; (9) international trusteeships; (10) Korea. Of the results of this conference, Arthur Bliss Lane of the State Department had this to say: "As I glanced over the document, I could not believe my eyes. To me, almost every line spoke of a surrender to Stalin." As you hear this story of high treason, I know that you are saying to yourself, "Well, why doesn't the Congress do something about it?" Actually, ladies and gentlemen, one of the important reasons for the graft, the corruption, the dishonesty, the disloyalty, the treason in high government positions -- one of the most important reasons why this continues -- is a lack of moral uprising on the part of the 140 million American people. In the light of history, however, this is not hard to explain. It is the result of an emotional hangover and a temporary moral lapse which follows every war. It is the apathy to evil which people who have been subjected to the tremendous evils of war feel. As the people of the world see mass murder, the destruction of defenseless and innocent people, and all of the crime and lack of morals which go with war, they become numb and apathetic. It has always been thus after war. However, the morals of our people have not been destroyed. They still exist. This cloak of numbness and apathy has only needed a spark to rekindle them. Happily, this spark has finally been supplied. As you know, very recently the secretary of state proclaimed his loyalty to a man guilty of what has always been considered as the most abominable of all crimes -- of being a traitor to the people who gave him a position of great trust. The secretary of state, in attempting to justify his continued devotion to the man who sold out the Christian world to the atheistic world, referred to Christ's Sermon on the Mount as a justification and reason therefore, and the reaction of the American people to this would have made the heart of Abraham Lincoln happy. When this pompous diplomat in striped pants, with a phony British accent, proclaimed to the American people that Christ on the Mount endorsed terrorism, high treason, and betrayal of a sacred trust, the blasphemy was so great that it awakened the dormant indignation of the American people. He has lighted the spark which is resulting in a moral uprising and will end only when the whole sorry mess of twisted warped thinkers are swept from the national scene so that we may have a new birth of national honesty and decency in government.

    40. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by geekee · · Score: 1

      Someone please mod this post down as overrated, trolling, etc. When posts like this get a 5, you know slashdot moderation isn't working.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    41. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure they apologise, because they understand that Canadians dislike being thought of as Americans---not because they can actually tell the difference between the two. In my experience, Canadians and Americans are basically very similar. They have very similar attitudes, accents, political beliefs and morals. They dress in much the same way. Their economy is quite dependent on the one down south. The only real difference that I've been able to discover is that their currency is worth a little less.

    42. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Baudrillard · · Score: 1

      You know why? Because America is only a de jure democracy. De facto it's a fascist state run by corporations and billionaires -- it always has been. That's why we are getting this nazi-esqe bullshit -- our cherished "democracy" is nothing but a myth. The mass media focuses heavily on this mythology, keeping the masses bamboozled into thinking they have some voice, but in truth they do not.

    43. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes!!! This is exactly what we all need to say to our elected officials, and if they don't listen then those officials need to be voted out of office. Most thinking Americans are sick and tired of this "war on terrorism" bullshit and the constant erosion of our civil liberties that comes as a result - more people need to say "fuck you, and fuck your political agenda", and they need to say it directly to those in charge right now. This might mean a lot of letters, or it might mean that the offenders need to be voted into unemployment. Either way, we all need to get together and "stop the insanity" (who knew that Richard Simmons had such political insight).

    44. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by ElmoGonzo · · Score: 1

      We have the best government that money can buy. Now if only the people without money would quite their bellyaching.

    45. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by 10Brett-T · · Score: 1
      They need to get smarter about how they handle the info they do have. (Read as: We need smarter people in charge.)

      Think you're one of those 'smarter people'? Then get involved. Apply for a job with an intelligence agency to improve the intelligence reports prepared for elected officials. Contact those who represent you in the government and tell them how you feel. Vote. Run for office yourself, or support someone who agrees with you. Don't just sit behind your computer and whine.

      --
      10Brett-T
      Oh, bother.
    46. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you hate America and Americans so much then perhaps you should move back to North Korea.

      After making such a thoughtless, heartless, brainless remark like that, I probably hate you twice as much as you obviously hate me, and I don't even know you.

      Your disdain for Americans might even be justified. But your line of reasoning runs parallel to saying "the Jews got what they deserved during the Holocaust... just wish we could put the rest of them somewhere further away... like the surface of the sun".

      You bat the notion of genocide around with the same carefree manner that a kitten plays with a ball of yarn. You are a severe embarassment to yourself, but it doesn't have to be this way. You NEED to work through those early childhood issues. It wasn't your fault. You were a little kid. What that man did to you was wrong!

    47. Re:Damnit, I've got some things to say... by PD · · Score: 1

      How did I miss this? I found it from a link on Kuro5hin.

      Let me say that when they put you up against the wall I will proud to be standing right beside you.

  64. So are they saying all you need is access? by joejoejoejoe · · Score: 1

    So are they saying all you need is ACCESS to the Internet to do a crime? While I understand that yeah, once on the Internet you can crack or hack stuff, this seems like the wrong approach.

    If you can drive a car, then BOOM you can drive under the infuence (DWI/DUI)?? SO NO CAR FOR YOU? OR ANYONE?

    Let's think about his for a minute. Access to a means of _possible_ wrong doing is wrong? (or being the one to set it up, and enabling it?) Come on.

    I agree using a publically accessible wireless net is cool and all, but I also think their admins should either 1)lock it down 2) not use them in the first place b/c securing a wireless lan is either 100% impossible or nearly so.

    If you are a corp with Wireless then my suggestions would be to reconsider using it, b/c of freeloaders adn security. Then if you must use it, consider making the IPs it hands out public IPs only. THen use a firewall so those IPs can only access a PPTP or tunneling server that gets the users on to the "private" or 10.dot networks. Have those users use the pptp connection as their default gateway and disallow getting from the regular IP to another IP but the PPTP server. THis way it is open for all, but useless unless you tunnel in to the real (private and controlled) network...

    On the other hand, we all know war-driving kiddies are terrorists, and because they are stealing bandwidth, and SPAMMERs are not, because they steal TIME and Bandwidth.... If only that spam dude from yesterday could be found to have setup a wireless network at his home (and office) we the people could use this to get him locked up!!! (just kidding, his mail would pile up and cause a public eyesoar, and we'd have to lock him up again...)

    And all that is not to mention how this assumes that access to the internet is by itself a problem. If that is the case then we are fucked as a country, because of how people don't patch their systems, and company sell insecure software which is what is the real cause if y0u ask me.

    -i patch daily, and am behind a fireall (@home)

    -gardeners have root access **
    -friends come and go, enemies accumulate **
    -attention windows user: you have moved your mouse, please reboot **
    (brought to you by slashdot sigs)
    **(these are my favorites)

    --
    Silly Rabbit: tricks are for kids.
    1. Re:So are they saying all you need is access? by martissimo · · Score: 2

      So are they saying all you need is ACCESS to the Internet to do a crime?

      I don't really think they care about access to the internet, they just don't like the idea of untraceable access. Connecting directly to the net thru an ISP they can at least try to follow a paper trail and figure some things out about where you connected from... connecting to an open AP all they have is a MAC addy that any moron can change on their own.

      Do you really think they care how secure your computers and network are? Heck they would probably be happy if everyone's hard drive could be inspected easily remotely (sounds like a good windfall of intelligence to them i bet), they just don't want people able to use the net anonymously is my guess.

  65. the dept of homeland retards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This just in, investigators have determined that old ladies should not carry credit cards. It has been determined that terrorists could mug such old ladies, and use their credit card to signup for an account on aol and send email. The office of homeland security is attempting to pass a bill making it illegal for old ladies to carry credit cards. Investigators have also found that old ladies should not carry cellphones, live anywhere with a phone, have a computer or even a mailbox. Terrorists could use all of these things for their evil purposes. All old ladies are advised to report to the closest prison to be locked away for the remainder of their lives. Little old men are reportedly under invesigation now. Currently the dept of homeland security is recommending that everyone live in a box and turn into paranoid schitzo's.

    The office of homeland security has no affiliation with al-qaeda.

  66. Reminds me of "for the children...." by skyhawker · · Score: 1

    I guess we just have to come up with something that's "for the children" and "fights terrorism" at the same time. Seems to me, that would be an unstoppable combination.

    --

    The best diplomat I know is a fully activated phaser bank.
    -- Scotty.
    1. Re:Reminds me of "for the children...." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Please someone think of the children...or the terrorists have already won.

  67. Re:Ludicrous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's spelled LUDICROUS you FUCKWIT!
    I'm not even a native English speaker and I NEVER make that mistake.

  68. prosecute these people, please by IchNiSan · · Score: 1

    I'd like to turn in my jerk of a next door neighbor, who has horrible wireless security, but does have a really fast connection, and some great pr0n on his comp...... Um, (remembers Homeland Security and Patriot Act hacker clauses) nevermind, just forget it...... What is a network???? IchNiSan

  69. Open WiFI Honeynets/Honeypots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What would the government have to say about one of these that actually helped track terrorists?

    1. Re:Open WiFI Honeynets/Honeypots by The+Jonas · · Score: 1

      It is more likely that the government intends to set up their own. When 802.11 is outlawed, only the feds will have 802.11.

  70. Devil's advocate by Have+Blue · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ignoring the arguments about whether it's "terrorism", this does touch on a very important issue. Does making your computer deliberately insecure count as negligence if it is used to commit a crime? Are you liable if you accidentally leave your car unlocked and it is used to commit a crime? What if you did so deliberately? What if you put a sign in the window saying "Anyone is free to use this car so long as you return it"? Where do you draw the line between generosity and irresponsibility?

    1. Re:Devil's advocate by inerte · · Score: 1

      Where do you draw the line between generosity and irresponsibility?

      18 years.

    2. Re:Devil's advocate by AntiFreeze · · Score: 2
      And where is the line between criminal negligence and supporting terrorists? I'm having some serious problems even seeing that line, let alone determining where it might lie.

      I agree that HomSec has touched upon an important issue, but labelling insecure wireless networks as being supportive to terrorists is really way out there.

      Since I need to go to sleep, I'll just post links to what I'd otherwise repeat:

      I will repeat one thing I previously said though:

      Insecure wireless networks shouldn't be a matter of National Security, they should be a matter of personal security.

      --

      ---
      "Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller

    3. Re:Devil's advocate by m1a1 · · Score: 1

      An open network is not "insecure." It is designed to allow anyone access. Security is about keeping people out of what you don't want them getting into. If you are sharing your bandwidth freely then there is no need for security, because by definition there is nothing restricted.

    4. Re:Devil's advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're liable for an insecure system, then MS is in deep shit.

  71. Very very sad by cosmosis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I knew this was coming, but hoped it wouldn't. Folks, its time to realize that what is going on has nothing to do with fighting terrorism. We are witnessing the rapid deployment of a full-scale police state, the likes of which has never been possible in human history. All the signs and seals are there.

    I wish all slashdot readers the best of luck. Freedom was great while it lasted. Enjoy it while you still can. May we all survive the coming tragedies and meet on the other side alive and free.

    1. Re:Very very sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go put on your Nikes and drink the grape kool-aid, fuck head. You wont be missed.

    2. Re:Very very sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      There's always armed revolution. Oh, wait, I forgot you leftist types don't have any guns. Ha ha!

      I crack myself up.

    3. Re:Very very sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW... Funny thing to listen to:
      http://www.socjalizm.org/downloads/BushBombsB ritai n.mp3

    4. Re:Very very sad by Sacarino · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What's worse is they're going to push and push and take away rights under the guise of 'public safety' or some shit and it will come to a head.

      America in the past has risen up to say 'fsck you' to overwhelming repression and hopefully it will again.

      The most insightful quote I ever heard was Sean Connery in Red October.... "A little revolution now and then is a good thing."

      America needs a revolution, and needs one soon. I have no desire for my children live with the burden of pencil-pushers dictating their lives.

      --
      -- El Sacarino tiene gusto de la chocha
    5. Re:Very very sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another few lines from Red October that I can remember go something like this.

      "And I will drive from state to state. Do they let you do that?"

      "Yes."

      "No papers?"

      "No papers. State to state."

      How long before this is no longer true, I wonder...

    6. Re:Very very sad by mike77 · · Score: 1

      whats truly disturbing is that in the past I would have modded this +1 funny, but I think it's current mod speaks volumes.

      --

      --Keeping the flame wars alive, one post at a time

    7. Re:Very very sad by AoT · · Score: 1

      yes we do

      ; )

    8. Re:Very very sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bwahahahah... You realise this only applies in your sad, warlike, fundamentally oppressive nation? The rest of the world (apart from China) are far more sensible.

      I hope for all the world that what you say is true, it's time America reaped the harvest they have sewn with their oppressive foreign policies.

      Much as I don't support terrorism, or any religion, I fully believe that America has too much power, and that they abuse it, and seem to think themselves as the world's great saviour, and the home of freedom.

      To those living in America now; Get out while you can, and discover what freedom REALLY is before your country self-destructs.

      The rest of the world suffers at the hands of American economic policy, America has no friends, only business partners who tremble in fear at the thought of being vaporized or poisoned if they don't toe the line.

      Remember Hiroshima (Nuke)
      Remember Nagasaki (Nuke)
      Remember Viet Nam (Fuel-Air - Incendiary Firestorm - Deforestation)
      Remember Iran (Biological - Nerve Agents)
      Remember Afganistan (Fuel-Air - Incendiary Firestorm)

      Who will be next to be hit with American-made weapons of mass destruction?

    9. Re:Very very sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So let me see if I get this straight. You are saying that little people on the street should suffer at the hands of the same people who opressed other people? I'm not sure I follow your rather sick logic.

      The people who implemented those atrocities in Nagasaki and Viet Name are the same group of people who are opressing the common person on the streets of the US today. And you are happy about that? Why can't you instead show some compassion for EVERYONE who is oppressed by these SAME people? The common person on the street did not know or support any of the fucked-up shit our covert agencies have engaged in over the years. Don't blame it on us voting them in. The heads of these covert agencies were not elected.

      They hold the reigns of power now, and we are all fucked. Some some heart for gawd's sake!

    10. Re:Very very sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's cool, the smarter non-USians know, you are not directly responsible, no more than I am when an offical in my country does something I don't sanction.

    11. Re:Very very sad by Lag+Master · · Score: 0

      yea, always have a back up.

    12. Re:Very very sad by rEWDBOi · · Score: 1

      While I do agree that the US is headed in a very sad direction, I don't believe this particular problem has to do with it. _We_ all know that the reasoning is ridiculous. Joe Average probabely doesn't. But I guess the real purpose is to shut down emerging free networks. Because it could really hurt the ISPs and Telcos in the long run. You're in corporate America and Dubya is a puppet on a string to the biggest ones. Ever realized that Dubya is a character straight out of a Hollywood movie: Simple-minded, supposedly honest and direct, and grown up on a ranch for Eris' sake. I wonder who's written the script and who's the director..

    13. Re:Very very sad by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2
      There's always armed revolution. Oh, wait, I forgot you leftist types don't have any guns.

      History doesn't agree with you. Armed revolts generally don't go well, while peaceful protest stands a much better chance of success. Compare Waco/the Middle East to Malcolm X and Ghandi. No contest.

      Fight back, you will get stomped on.

    14. Re:Very very sad by The+LowTech+Swede · · Score: 1
      I have been a bit flabbergasted lately when watching CNN and the Swedish news. In swedish news, Iraq weapons inspectors are doing their work day to day and nothing big has come up yet. IE no reason to start a war. On CNN we are shown a totally different picture. CNN and Swedish news obviously uses the same sources, why then the difference?

      My only explanation is that CNN is running someones errand. Sweden being as internationally unimportant as it is, swedish media probably faces rather limited pressure from the powers that be on this subject.

      Are other US medias as war mongering as CNN?

      / TLTS

    15. Re:Very very sad by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2

      How far can you get driving without a drivers license? "Papers"? I think so...

    16. Re:Very very sad by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2
      My only explanation is that CNN is running someones errand.

      Nothing new there. Last year, CNN ran a piece about the Palestinion/Israeli war, that aired the Palestines point of view. Israel was none to pleased and cut CNN from it's TV networks. CNN appologised, got reinstated, and to this day they haven't done any more unbiased reporting in this affair.

      Anyone who relies on TV news as their primary news source is doing themselves a grave injustice. TV news is 100% about ratings. If the consumers want war and disasters, that's what the news will cover.

      Generally speaking, it's good advice to try and read the news reports from different countries. It's the only way to get objective reporting that gives you the power to make up your own mind. Otherwise, you'll find yourself agreeing with the director/producer of the one local show you watch.

    17. Re:Very very sad by EverlastingPhelps · · Score: 1
      There's always armed revolution. Oh, wait, I forgot you leftist types don't have any guns. Ha ha!
      True. But libertarians have lots and lots and lots of guns. More than your average right-winger, in fact. If you look at the last successful armed revolution in this country, it wasn't led by the right -- those were the loyalists. It was by the libertarians. (Called liberal at the time, until that title was stolen by the socialists.)

      Libertarians generally opposed the initiation of force. The thing to remember, however, is that government embodies the collective use of force, so you cannot initiate force against the government, as it is in a constant state of threatening force.

    18. Re:Very very sad by MadAhab · · Score: 1
      So true. Sadly, the conservatives are still loyalists, in that they are still promoting the aristocracy. Witness King George Bush II and the like. And those who are today called liberals are in fact descended from the church bureaucracy peanut gallery - the right-wing-nuts have a point with that "secular humanist" tripe, though mostly their point is that we should kiss the kings's ass instead.

      Those who are today called libertarians are in fact far more like the founders of the USA than most would like to believe. Lefties hate the guns and independence, conservatives hate the guns and lack of submission. Same shit, different century.

      And I predicted this story two days ago. Kiss my ass.

      --
      Expanding a vast wasteland since 1996.
  72. It's Too Late Anyway Let Some Meaning In by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heraclitus on the Logos

    by Gordon L. Ziniewicz
    1. Heraclitus says, "One must follow what is common; but, even though the Logos is common, most people live as though they possessed their own private wisdom." (Fr.2) The common is what is open to all, what can be seen and heard by all. To see is to let in with open eyes what is open to view, i.e. what is lit up and revealed to all. The dead (the completely private ones) neither see nor hear; they are closed. No light (fire) shines in them; no speech sounds in them. And yet, even they participate in the kosmos. The extinguished ones also belong to the continuum of lighting and extinguishing that is the common kosmos. The dead touch upon the living sleeping, who in turn touch upon the living waking. (Fr. 26)
    2. "Those who are awake live in the same world, while those who are asleep withdraw to their own private worlds." (Fr. 89) Yet the waking and the sleeping are connected; they all belong to the same process that stretches between divine intelligence (completely wide-awake) and death (completely closed off). The wide-awake are most open to what is common; the dead are absolutely private; the foolish (waking, yet sleeping) are somewhere in between. The sleeper who closes his eyes is close to the dead. The eyes are privileged for Heraclitus (Fr. 101). Daylight is the common that reveals the kosmos (spreads it out before the eyes). Darkness, the opposite of daylight, is the great concealer. It takes back what the day gives. But day and night must be taken together; they are part of the same. Day is the opening and night is the closing of the same world. As a flower opens, then closes, so does the kosmos open (spread out), then close (contract).
    3. But what are the waking open to? They are open to what opens up and what is opened up, what lights up and what is lit up. To awaken is to meet the dawn, to rise up to greet what is itself rising. "The sun is new each day." (Fr. 6) Each dawn and each awakening that opens to the dawn is a surprise, a miracle, a rekindling in measure of the cosmic fire along with the rekindling of the spark of intelligence within the soul. The "sun-candle" is lit, and a visible kosmos, a world, lights up, emerges, unfolds. Why the kindling keeps happening over and over again remains mysterious, unexplained; but it is a surprise that can be counted on. And the waking ones see the connection of it all. What the truly seeing perceive is that the visible kosmos of day and the invisible kosmos of night are the same kosmos. The true account, the true explanation (logos) is that day and night are inseparable. To have one's eyes wide open is to recognize that approaching (coming-to-be) and departing (perishing) are not cut off from each other, but are indivisible aspects of the same. Waking/sleeping is an opening/closing that corresponds to the opening/closing of the kosmos. The eyes open and close to a world that opens and closes.
    4. Thus, the waking participate in a common light, in a common sight. The sleeping are not dead; they can hear a little. The dead can neither see nor hear. The sleeping have a role in what happens. Private though they are in their withdrawal and their closing, they still partake in the common, though they do not think they do. Absolute privacy and isolation is impossible for the living. The belief in a "private wisdom" is an illusion. Nevertheless, for Heraclitus, it is better to be awake than to be asleep. Furthermore, "One should not do things and say things as if one were sleeping." (Fr. 73) Many people, who do not know what is going on, walk and talk in their sleep.
    5. Any closing up before what is common (there for everyone to see), is a retreat into what is private (hidden). Indeed, in the scheme of things, there is a time for waking, and there is a time for sleeping. But to be awake is better than to be asleep; to be alive is better than to be dead; and what is common is better than what is private. "Politically" (which means "publicly"), what is common - nomoi (laws and institutions) -- must be followed and guarded carefully; the idiosyncratic must be avoided and discouraged. A city of sleepwalkers is not a city. Certainly, for Heraclitus, waking/sleeping, common/private, living/dying -- all the opposites -- are necessary and inseparable. But there is no doubt that Heraclitus prefers the light to the dark and seeing to blindness. He is no "idiot" (i.e. private).
    6. Heraclitus abuses those who do not see and hear for themselves, but rely on the report of others or the fictive power of imagination. "I prefer what can be seen, heard, and perceived." (Fr.55) Fable and empty information do not constitute truth for Heraclitus. Historia and mythos do not give us the true account or meaning (logos) of things. Heraclitus rebukes the historians (such as Hecataeus) and the storytellers (such as Hesiod). He warns, "Let us not guess about the things that are most important." (Fr. 47) Speculation, without direct experience of what is there to observe, is idle. Theories are many; there is but one true account (logos) which is common to all.
    7. On the other hand, direct experience is not enough. Not all seeing sees the "meaning" of what can be seen. True seeing does not see things as isolated. True seeing does not isolate this event from that event, this arrival from that departure. True seeing takes into account the whole account shown in and by the kosmos. True seeing sees things as a whole. True seeing is synoptic seeing that sees together as belonging together the totality of coming-to-be and passing-away as an eternal and mysterious cycle. Heraclitus verbally jostles the waking yet sleeping ones to make them open their eyes, to sense with insight (bright perception) the undivided sense or meaning (logos) of the cosmic process: the inseparable unity of coming and going, fire being lit and fire going out. This anyone can see, if one will only overcome private preoccupation, fire oneself up a bit, and open one's eyes to receive the common light.
    8. Most people are so wrapped up in themselves and their private interests that they do not grasp the "public" meaning of what they are doing; they miss the point of the whole. Heraclitus is polemical and abusive because only strong speech can penetrate nearly deaf ears. Speech that rouses people to take account of the true account of all things has to be alarming speech. It is important, after all, to be awake when truth is dawning. Nevertheless, full perception (wisdom) is impossible for humans. They always touch upon the sleepy, the deaf, the blind. Only "divine wisdom" is fully synoptic. Yet humans can be seekers of wisdom, strive to avoid thoughtless perception, and awaken each day more fully to the new world.
    9. Information by itself is not insight. Yet Heraclitus says that it is good to learn about many things. (Fr. 35) The point is to grasp the true meaning of information, to experience things as full of meaning. This means to find the truth revealed in day/night, coming/going, and all the opposites as it applies to the smallest event. It is to perceive that all things are part of the play of time, are temporal (and temporary). Nevertheless, most people miss the point of the whole; they grasp things separately, but not as part of the whole. They shun death and pain in favor of life and pleasure, not seeing the connection between the opposites. They miss the meaning of what they see. (Fr. 56) It is as if they had no experience at all. (Fr. 1) They refuse to see the obvious. To those who have no sense, the Logos makes no sense. It is a riddle to them. And Heraclitus, who speaks like the kosmos, full of oppositions and apparent contradictions, also makes no sense to them.
    10. The visible kosmos is the eternal fitting-together of temporary beings. It holds things together (in unity) as it spreads them apart (diversity). The unity of things is not a static harmony, but a dynamic equilibrium based on regulated tension. Like the eye of a hurricane and the center of a flame, the beauty and stillness of the kosmos exist because of powerful opposition. What is seen is a stable instability. What is common is war. "One must see that war is everywhere, and conflict is a good thing." (Fr. 80) People oppose conflict, not seeing that war implies peace and peace implies war.
    11. Nomoi too are common. The meaning of a city is its nomoi; for the nomoi are the shared fitting-together of the humanly diverse. They bind together the freely opposing. This unity within diversity is also reflected in language, itself a part of custom. Words contending with words and speech struggling with silence end up as beautiful and harmonious speech. For the most part, nomoi are revealed in the give and take of citizens' speaking and debating together. The waking attend to common, public, "political" things. Even at night, some must be waking and watchful. Someone must be awake, even if he must light a candle to see. In a sense, a city of sleepers (where everyone sleeps) is not a city at all. In another sense, both sleeping and dead also belong to the city. Rites for the dead are protected and made secure by nomoi. The dead, the living sleeping, the living waking who get up in the night, the wide-awake who see the common lighted world -- all belong; all are necessary. The true account that makes sense of the whole accounts for everyone.
    12. The wide-awake soul is like the bright world it faces. It is an aroused soul, a fiery passionate soul. It is attuned to and receptive of the striving/stillness (fire) of the brightly lit kosmos. People see insofar as they are. The wise soul, like the kindling/extinguishing kosmos, requires both fire and measure. Fire needs control (moderation, self-control); for fire out of control (conflagration) destroys. "The sun will not go beyond its limits." (Fr. 94) On the other hand, human hot-headedness or arrogance "should be doused even more than a conflagration." (Fr. 43) The blazing of the kosmos is always enough; it is measured. The blazing of the wise soul is also always measured. The tension/tuning of the wise soul is attuned to the tension/tuning of the kosmos. As the world shines, so is the measured soul enlightened. The kosmos is the beautiful order of measured intensity. The temperate soul is a measured intensity. The visible kosmos is a timely spontaneity (a child at play). The wise person acts and speaks with timely spontaneity. As the "lightning-flash steers all things," (Fr. 64) so the wise soul "flashes through the body as lightning through the cloud." (Schleiermacher, Fr. 63) This flash (of reason -- phronesis or practical wisdom) steers and guides the action and speech of the wise person.
    13. The foolish, on the other hand, are not "bright." They are not used to light. They do not understand the dawn, and they are afraid of the dusk. They are never on time for the timely. They are "present, yet absent." (Fr. 34) They are never where they are; and they have little fire (besides drinking too much). The soul is a hearth, a warming fire that gives off heat and light. It is fired by the cosmic fire. Too much fire -- fever or anger -- and the soul burns up. Too little fire -- as in the foolish and the tipsy -- and the soul does not understand what is seen and heard. The dimly lit soul cannot steer the body. Thus, one often stumbles at night. The sleeping need no light to guide them; they do not stir. The dead are cold, like old ashes in an unused hearth. 14. Heraclitus perceives the meaning (logos) of things. An early riser who fills his soul with the intelligence that surrounds him, he shouts to wake up his sleeping fellow citizens. He tells them to listen not to him, but to the Logos. (Fr. 50) Heraclitus points beyond himself to the common (available) Logos which anyone can see. His manner of speech -- clearing/obscuring, revealing/hiding -- mirrors the subtle discourse (Logos) of the kosmos. He both speaks and keeps silent; his words are measured carefully. His sayings, by binding what is apparently contrary and by identifying what is apparently different, reveal the same vital tension shown in the kosmos. Thus, words taken together (gathered) are whole and not whole, a sense (meaning) which is being brought together and brought apart, which is in tune and out of tune; out of all words there comes a logos and out of a logos all words.

  73. +1 Too Damn Close To Reality by AntiFreeze · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I don't know if you intended this as a joke or not, but that's really how I feel about a lot of the government rhetoric lately.

    This helps terrorism, that makes you a terrorist, X and Y give terrorists the means to Z. Give me a break. There is no way for a free society to be completely secure. This is a fact of life. Putting every little thing into either a "your helping the terrorists" or "your helping America fight the terrorists" light really doesn't do justice to the situation and trivializes the horrible things the terrorists have done by putting them into the same category as having an insecure wireless network. Come on.

    </rant>

    --

    ---
    "Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller

  74. Who are the real "evildoers?" by DeComposer · · Score: 2, Interesting


    I think there are a number of different things going on here.

    First of all, we're talking about an administration that is breathtakingly clueless about technology. Because they don't understand how a thing works means that the thing will be used to wreak havoc, right? That sounds chillingly similar to our cold war "capability equals intent" policy.

    I also think it's a pretty solid bet that the infotainment industry is fueling those fears to protect their investment in broadband and their ability to sell it.

    I also tend to think that people like Dick Cheney and George Bush view technology (espcially technology that provides or enhances intellectual freedom) of any kind as an inherent threat to his vision of what America should be. After all, "There ought to be limits to freedom."

    --


    Karma
  75. Civil Disobedience by Loki_1929 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I just opened my Wireless router wide open. Anyone with an 802.11b network card should have no problem immediately getting an IP address from my router and should have completely open and unrestricted access to the internet from anywhere within about 800ft of my house. I encourage every single one of the 250,000 daily slashdot readers who has a wireless access point or a wireless router to do the same thing. Secure your computers, open your wireless.

    To hell with the Dept of Homeland insecurity and their ridiculous ranting. They can take their Gibsonesque FUD elsewhere.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    1. Re:Civil Disobedience by quintessent · · Score: 2

      the Feds view open WiFi as a means of abetting terrorists, and say that they will compel the open wireless operators [...] to close off their nets.

      I think the Feds need to take their views to the proper channels. There is a large population that views open WiFi as a wonderful, unprecedented oppurtunity for sharing connectivity and creating a service that countless people can benefit from. Now, does the Feds' view automatically take precedence over every individuals' view? Does the rationale that "Big brother has a harder time watching you" validate such a policy?

      "So, what are you in for?"

      "I left my wi-fi open--how about you?"

    2. Re:Civil Disobedience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Loki, I did not want to respond, but your "fk them" comment (its great), and this one triggered it. This day of civil disobedience will work better imho if you could get many people doing it in One day TOGETHER. So, how about Day Of Open Routers?

      PS. I am not American, but whats going on after 911 in US hurts my feelings too.

    3. Re:Civil Disobedience by pavera · · Score: 2

      This is a good idea.
      I opened my wireless net last week doing some testing, and I was tired of typing in the key, so I turned off the encryption... now I guess I don't have any reason to turn it back on (the encryption that is) Open, dhcp, full access 1mbps up and down. :)
      have fun!

    4. Re:Civil Disobedience by Thomas+M+Hughes · · Score: 1

      Its not Civil Disobedience unless you are penalized for the crime your committing. That means, paying the fine, going to prison, etc. Whatever the normal punishment is for breaking this law.

      As Thoreau said...the place for a just person in an unjust world is in the prisons, with those who the world deems unjust.

    5. Re:Civil Disobedience by Loki_1929 · · Score: 3, Informative

      It is Civil Disobedience even if the establishment is unwilling or unable to punish you for it; or simply hasn't gotten around to it yet. The idea of Civil Disobedience is to put yourself at risk for being penalized for breaking the law which you see as unjust, and to be prepared to accept the consequences, that you may, by your arrest, expose the law as unjust and undesirable to the masses. Those participating in sit-ins during the civil rights movement were not always arrested, yet one would have a hard time convincing others that they did not participate in civil disobedience. I certainly do not compare my simple actions to their courageous actions; I only mean to more aptly define the parameters of Civil Disobedience.

      In a just world, the place for an unjust person is in the prisons. But that assumes a perfect world in which we instantly know and can perfectly judge who is and is not unjust. In either Thoreau's example or mine (as they are merely inverses of one another), unrealisticly uniform standards of justice and unattainable knowledge are both required. Is it just for a poor man to steal a sheep from a wealthy man to feed his starving family after all other methods of feeding them have failed?

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    6. Re:Civil Disobedience by Thomas+M+Hughes · · Score: 1

      Its my understanding that unless you are being punished for the 'crime', its not civil disobedience. Meaning, if the society is unwilling or unable to punish you for violating their unjust law, they should repeal the law. Thus, if the law is on the books, and you're breaking it, you should demand to be thrown in jail.

      Part of participating in Civil Disobedience is a fundamental respect of the law, even if it is unjust. Thus, you have a paradox. The law is unjust, but to break the law is unjust. Thus, the only just thing to do is take a just action (and break the law) and then, out of respect for the law, serve the punishment associated with the breech in law. If this behavior becomes widespread (many, many people break the law, and many, many people go to jail), the law making body must rethink its position, and presumably, alter or revoke the law so that it doesn't have to deal with all these people breaking it (and serving the time).

      There is an alternative to Civil Disobedience that is similar, but different on this point. Environmentalists participate in what's known as "Monkey Wrenching", where they break the law, and deliberately avoid getting caught. In these cases, you attempt the make the cost of behaving unjustly so high, that they don't even bother to try and apply the law anymore.

      In our case, it might be going around opening up other people's wireless networks, such that virtually all networks are openned and people can claim that they didn't do it.

    7. Re:Civil Disobedience by Phroggy · · Score: 2

      Keep in mind that according to your service agreement with your ISP, they will probably hold you accountable for anything done with your connection, whether you were aware of it or not. So, for example, if someone sets up a laptop in front of your house and starts uploading kiddie porn somewhere, and somebody complains to your ISP, at the very least I'd expect your Internet access to be shut down.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  76. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by EchoMirage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Our department of "Homeland Security" is creating the situation where all users of the net must be tracable [...]
    Annonymous communication over the net allows disent to grow without the heavy hand of big brother picking out the "ringleaders."


    I agree with you up to the point where you brought in the tried and tired Big Brother rhetoric of the unhealthily paranoid.

    "Homeland Security" does want to create a situation where everything is traceable, and they wouldn't be able to do it, if it wasn't for the fact that they could bully ISPs and telcos into compliance. The Internet protocols in place don't allow for normal traffic to be very traceable if you don't want it to. At the very worst, you find out what ISP somebody got access through, but the ISP refuses to say anything.

    Now "Homeland Security" wants to bully all open WiFi ports into closing because of the hypothetical premise that a 'terrorist' could use the open APs to anonymously conduct terrorist business online. And that's true - but guess what, it's just as easy to splice a few wires in the right locations to get the same access, only wired. Or they could splice and then put on an AP and homebrew their comm links.

    This is doing nothing except regulating a new useful technology before it even gets off the ground. I'm pissed - I want WiFi to become ubiquitous, but not with the hand of "Homeland Security" on its shoulder. What bullocks!

    Note to feds: hands off my technology. If you want to touch it, you'd better be prepared to show me a search warrant.

    Unfortunately, they don't even need a search warrant anymore, under these new bills. *sigh*

  77. Hell yeah! by yoshi_mon · · Score: 2

    Best rant ever!

    If I had some mod points I would use them and give you a +1 Kick Ass Rant.

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
  78. this is ridiculous by shaitand · · Score: 2

    Do you realize this puts a stop to wireless internet services that are intentionally left open for free public access?

    1. Re:this is ridiculous by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      I think that is EXACTLY what EVERYONE realizes.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
    2. Re:this is ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like any number of open wireless services in the city of New York that I call my home - a few even run by the parks departments.

      Now what are wealthy buisnesspeople going to do in the summers on their lunch hour?

    3. Re:this is ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is America, you get what you pay for. Anyone disagreeing with this is a dirty communist and an enemy combatant.

    4. Re:this is ridiculous by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      Yes. And that's the POINT! Wide open WiFi access, even if it's intentional, is stil a dumb idea.

      If I walk up to your WiFi router and start sending Spam through your mail relay, your ISP is going to shut you down, or you'll find yourself in a blackhole list.

      If I trigger a DDOS attack from your WiFi point, the FBI is going to trace the trail right back to you. If you tell the man "Somebody else was using my free WiFi access, would you like to use it too?" he'll not trust you and slap on the cuffs.

      If you're going to intentionally open up free internet access, that's fine... but put limits on your users. Make them identify themselves to you, so you can identify them to the authorities if they do anything illegal with your connection.

    5. Re:this is ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, if everyone so stuck up about open system - then we wouldnt have the web, because people wouldnt want to share informations. Maybe web site like /. wouldnt want people to post comments because someone might post some nasty comments or a bad review.

    6. Re:this is ridiculous by shaitand · · Score: 2

      The FBI is going to trace a trail back to me, I'll be able to show I'm a free isp and they SOL as they should be. Not everything needs to be traceable and trackable, Big Brother does NOT need to keep tabs on me because I MIGHT do something illegal. If there is no magic log of connections to tell him the answer tough, maybe he'll actually have to do his job and investigate. If I have an internet connection it's none the FBI or anyone elses damn buisness who I let share it and who not. If I want to leave an open mail relay and get blacklisted it's my god given right to be an idiot (not that open mail relays have anythign to do with this). If my isp wants to shut me down, that's there perogative, and my choice to take that risk. It's not the feds or anybody elses buisness.

  79. Re:Hello?-P2P dreams. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's that. There is also the question. What will this do to "ad hoc, decentralized" wireless networks and the P2P dream that we all had in the previous slashdot story? Close those nodes boys. We're headed home.

  80. take a deep breath and try again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's like every other goddamned regulation. it starts small, and eventually snowballs. i voted for bush, hell, i voted for his old man. twice. i think clinton was the most evil, corrupt bastard to ever disgrace the u.s. presidency. but honest to god, the homeland defense shit scares the bejesus out of me.

    during world war 2, the japanese never had any plan to invade the west coast. after pearl harbor, they could have owned california, washington, and oregon. the japanese military never even considered an invasion because they thought that all americans had guns, and any invasion would turn into an unwinnable guerilla war. now, in the name of "homeland defense," the courts are ruling that the 2nd amendment is not an individual right, and the gun grabbing is gaining momentum. if "the right of the people" is not an individual right in the 2nd amendment, then it isn't an individual right anywhere in the constitution, and lots of freedoms will be lost in the name of homeland security. open wifi will be the least of anyone's worries. china's internet policies will seem open and free in another couple years.

  81. Fine, run your open network... by sterno · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think it's totally within your right to run your open network. Then when somebody uses your open network to cause havoc and destruction, you should be held liable as a facillitator of their crimes. Seems totally fair to me.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:Fine, run your open network... by inerte · · Score: 1

      But did you know that when you open your network you can give access to terrorists?

      It seems to me that if you didn't make everything to stop terrorism, you are a Bad Thing(tm)

    2. Re:Fine, run your open network... by guacamole · · Score: 2

      But did you know that when you open your network you can give access to terrorists?

      How come peole -know- that they need a driver's license to drive a car?

    3. Re:Fine, run your open network... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Is AOL liable when a terrorist uses its network? Are you liable when a terrorist uses your unsecured portable or cell phone line? Or maybe burns down a building thanks to your unsecured gas tank? Why does sharing bandwidth bother you?

      Remember the old lady you help cross the street may be a terrorist. Troll.

    4. Re:Fine, run your open network... by Alsee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Then when somebody uses your open network to cause havoc and destruction, you should be held liable as a facillitator of their crimes. Seems totally fair to me.

      My local supermarket has a payphone out front. We need to hold the supermarket liable as a facillitator of any drug deals made over that phone. Don't forget to hold Home Depot liable for murder when someone gets bashed in the head with a brick.

      Jeez, and your post got a 5?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Fine, run your open network... by MikeFM · · Score: 2

      That's foolish. May as well say it's your right not to fence your yard but if someone steps inside while peeping into your neighbors window then you should be held responsible. After all what kind of perverts wouldn't fence their yard? You sick person for allowing neighborhood kids to play across your yard.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    6. Re:Fine, run your open network... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 2

      I think it's totally within your right to run your open network. Then when somebody uses your open network to cause havoc and destruction, you should be held liable as a facillitator of their crimes. Seems totally fair to me.

      How the fuck is this insightful?
      Really under this idiot's logic, libraries are a breeding ground for terroists, and some poor librarian has to go to jail is a crime is ever comitted with a library computer.

      What about internet cafes? What about calling AOL from a damned payphone? You are full of shit.
      Will someone with some sense please mod this guy into oblivion?

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    7. Re:Fine, run your open network... by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      Sure, sounds logical. And if any criminal use the open phone system to aid in the planning or commission of crimes, then the Bell responsible should be held liable as a facilitator of those crimes.

      Right. Uh huh.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    8. Re:Fine, run your open network... by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 2

      I've yet to see how any one person can cause havoc and destruction on the Internet. Has anyone ever heard of a death directly attributed to someone hacking a computer? Is such a situation even fathomable for any of you? Did you need to smoke anything special to envision such a situation? Please, help me out, here.

      - A.P.

      --
      "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    9. Re:Fine, run your open network... by bgfay · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, it will be the network's fault. And since there are no uses for a non-regulated network, it's obvious that such a person is guilty of not only facilitating terrorism, but perhaps supporting it.

      Now that I think of it, there's another person running an insecure network: The Postmaster General. Yeah, terrorists could send letters to each other and, if the USPS doesn't open, read, and monitor them, the Postmaster is just running an insecure network that could bring about more havoc and terrorism. I say that we've got to lock up that Postmaster person and save ourselves. Who needs the mail anyway?

      --
      Yeah, I'm as old as my UID would suggest.
    10. Re:Fine, run your open network... by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      Jeez, and your post got a 5?

      If you are suprised by this you haven't been on /. very long. This is the same logic modded up to a 5 in every conversation about a hacker conviction - that the hacker is innocent because the sysadmin should have had better security. Well, the dept. of Homeland Security has bought the /. party line that the perpetrator of bad acts isn't responsible, the sysadmin with poor security is. Well if the sysadmin is the responsible party in the case of a hacker breaking into his system then he can be held responsible if his negligence facilitates a terrorist act. I don't buy it in either case - crappy security is a bad thing but the person taking advantage of that crappy security is the one criminally responsible.

      I will be fair and admit that no matter how you view the responsiblity of network administrators that the position of the Dept. of Homeland Sec. is silly and a huge overreach - especially if they are talking about mere access to the internet.

      Being as charitable as possible towards the Dept. of Homeland Security I could assume they are (vastly) overstating their case to publicise a security issue that in the cases of *some* networks does have broader national security implications. Not because terrorists could get access to the internet but access to someones internal network that has either very sensitive information or actual control of important systems - a case where I certainly could see holding a negligent network administrator criminally responsible.

    11. Re:Fine, run your open network... by zenyu · · Score: 2
      Then when somebody uses your open network to cause havoc and destruction, you should be held liable as a facillitator of their crimes.

      I agree, we should start by executing all those business owners that allow parking to people that drive. Drivers are known to sometimes kill pedestrians, facilitating their car ownership makes you just as guilty as the murderer himself. Then we should arrest all those that sell or create lightbulbs or provide electricity, without these many crimes such as safe cracking or embezzlement would be a thing of the past. I've always wanted to arrest people who sell or rent buildings, these are known to provide "safe-houses" to criminals. We shouldn't stop there of course, anyone selling building materials other than non-privacy glass, or god forbid cloth, which could be used to construct curtains, should be shot. No need for even a trial there, their guilt is obvious.

    12. Re:Fine, run your open network... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      The phone system and the postal system are also both open, but we don't hold the USPS or Verizon responsible if someone uses the network for illegal activities.

    13. Re:Fine, run your open network... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      You sick person for allowing neighborhood kids to play across your yard.

      Maybe kids should be taught to respect other peoples property, and that they can't go on it without the owners permission.

    14. Re:Fine, run your open network... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the same logic modded up to a 5 in every conversation about a hacker conviction - that the hacker is innocent because the sysadmin should have had better security.

      I don't know what articles you read, but I have never seen that argument on /..

      I have see the argument that the hacker (cracker, whatever) is responsible for the break in, AND the sysadmin is resounsible for the poor security. Please note those are two different things.

      If I leave my car running, doors unlocked, and it gets stolen, the car thief is responsible for stealling the car. BUT, I am responsible for being an idiot and leaving it that way I did.

      Some people think that because we blame the sysadmin for poor security, that somehow releases the hacker from responsibility for their actions. This is not true.

    15. Re:Fine, run your open network... by MikeFM · · Score: 2

      If you don't put up a fence, sign, or shout at them out your window then they have the right to play in your yard. As long as they don't hurt anything their fine. If their ball bounces into your yard let them go get it.

      Besides it's not YOUR property. It was there long before your birth and it'll be there long after your dead. Just because some folks a long time ago stole the property and sold it to someone that sold it to someone that eventually sold it to you doesn't make it any less stolen. If anyone owns it then (in the US) the native americans own it. For the most part it's just being loaned to you by the public for the time you are using it. If you're not using it then there is no reason someone else can't. So let the damn kids play in your yard. At least it keeps them out of the street. :)

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    16. Re:Fine, run your open network... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      If you don't put up a fence, sign, or shout at them out your window then they have the right to play in your yard.

      Bull. Can anyone that wants to use my car do so without my express consent? How about anything else i own? Can they eat my food without asking me? If you own something, consent must be given by the owner before using it. People don't buy property for everyone in the neighborhood to play in.

      Besides it's not YOUR property.

      I think most people would disagree with you. Land is a limited resource; limited resources are divided up and limited to use by the owner. Something that is infiniatly available (or for all intesive purposes is) is freely available to all. However, land (and food) are not, so must be purchased.

      It was there long before your birth and it'll be there long after your dead.

      Doesn't change the fact that land is a limited resource. I'm here now, and i need a place to live.

      Just because some folks a long time ago stole the property and sold it to someone that sold it to someone that eventually sold it to you doesn't make it any less stolen. If anyone owns it then (in the US) the native americans own it.

      Its a point in history i'm not proud of. However, i'm here now, and i can do nothing to change the past. Its illogical to hold one responsible for something they could not have possibly prevented.

      For the most part it's just being loaned to you by the public for the time you are using it.

      Again, many would disagree. If it truely was public, there'd be no need to purchase it, and a large enough group could take your home at will.

      If you're not using it then there is no reason someone else can't.

      Just because someone is not doing something in thier lawn everyday doesn't mean they aren't using it. I'm not using the loaf of bread in my freezer right now, but i will eventually.

      So let the damn kids play in your yard.

      Why can't they play in their own yard, or in a public park?

      At least it keeps them out of the street. :)

      They don't belong in a street anymore then they belong in someone else's yard (without that person's permission, of course).

    17. Re:Fine, run your open network... by MikeFM · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A yard or radio waves are different than an object. They are something that is just there. Grabbing them and claiming it doesn't mean you or anyone made them. A car, food, your cat, etc are objects. The first two you can own and as always the cat owns you.

      Most people are shortsighted greedy morons who wouldn't know the difference between their arse and their brain. Y'know the people who read tabloid newspapers and think all thats tuff is real. Land is an unlimited resource. At least as far as humans are likely to be concerned. There is more land on this one planet than is actually usable by the number of people the planet can sustain. Then there are lots of other planets we have the power to go to if we wanted to bother. Also we could easily create more 'land' by building large underwater or floating cities. Land is not an object so it is owned by the public.

      Just because something belongs to the public doesn't mean you can't use it. It just means you can't deny others the use of it when your not using it. Y'know like a King that would punish peasents for killing a deer in his forest despite the fact he wasn't using the deer or the forest.

      You and I are certainly not responsible for what our ancestors did but that doesn't mean we're not responsible for whatever actions we take that support what our ancestors did. Of course we have to have a place to live but you don't hafta put brick walls around your yard and curse the damn kids for their frisbees that float inside the fence. ;)

      Try not paying your taxes and see how public your land is. Your purchase price is little more than a rent deposit. Of course the only reason you have to pay for land is because people don't realize that if they felt like it they could just take what they needed from all that empty land not being used. A large enough group can take anything. No surprise about that. Forty big bikers with semiautomatic weapons can camp in my living room any damn time they want. :)

      What are you not yet using your yard for that it'd be damaged by a child running across your grass?

      Sure kids can play in their yard, a public park, etc. It doesn't mean I'm gonna get pissed off if they walk across my yard. I guess it's a reasonable use thing. If they aren't hurting me or damaging anything I'm using then I don't care if they use it.

      You must have grown up somewhere nice. Where I grew up everyone played in the street. It was the only space big enough for most games and close enough to home that our parents didn't have to worry about gang fights, drug pushers, etc.

      Anyway I think the original point was that it'd be silly to blame someone for not fencing their yard against criminal/terrorist activity. In the same way it's silly to blame someone for not fencing off their wireless network against criminal/terrorist activity. You shouldn't have to fence off either if it pleases you to leave them open.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    18. Re:Fine, run your open network... by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      I don't know what articles you read, but I have never seen that argument on /..

      Oh, come on, every relevant story has a large number of "score 5" posts saying that the hacker (cracker, whatever) is being unjustly persecuted for mere curiosity and that the sysadmin is *entirely* at fault - that if you don't lock down your system then it is my perogative, my right, perhaps even my duty to exploit that hole in your security. It is an open door and it is not breaking and entering to go right in and rummage through the place to satisfy my curiosity.

      Yes, *some* posts are arguing that the sysadmin is guilty of negligence in failing to do due diligence to stop someone from getting into the system. That is a perfectly fine argument. BUT, there is a large body of sentiment on this site that feels that the hacker is *perfectly* innocent and within his rights.

    19. Re:Fine, run your open network... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      A yard or radio waves are different than an object. They are something that is just there. Grabbing them and claiming it doesn't mean you or anyone made them. A car, food, your cat, etc are objects. The first two you can own and as always the cat owns you.

      A cat and food are 'just there' too. i fail to see your point, since we don't (have to) manufacter them. My point was that these things are limited resources. Land IS a limited resource. A cat (for intensive purposes) isn't, because its easy to find one and take it home. That said, i think we should endevor to make some things unlimited (again, for intesive purposes) like food, but unless we start becoming a star faring people, land will be limited.

      Land is an unlimited resource. At least as far as humans are likely to be concerned. There is more land on this one planet than is actually usable by the number of people the planet can sustain.

      There is much land not usable. For one, we need room to grow crops. People can't live in those fields. Then there are swamps, volcanos, deserts, the polar caps, and mountains, rain forrests that can't support any (or much) human life, or we shouldn't just be chopping down. Land is NOT unlimited.

      Then there are lots of other planets we have the power to go to if we wanted to bother.

      Umm....i'm no so sure of that. This wouldn't solve any population problems; it would probably take several lifetimes to find and get to a suitable planet. If you're talking about mars...i dunno, i wouldn't feel too safe in a manmade bubble. And i'm not sure how easy that would be to setup. This is probably beyond our capabilities right now.

      Also we could easily create more 'land' by building large underwater or floating cities.

      Again, this is very difficult. Floating cities are probably out....we have enough sinking oil dereks, let alone people actually living on them. Underwater cities? Not within our reach yet. Thtas quite an expense so you can justify kids playing in someones lawn.

      Just because something belongs to the public doesn't mean you can't use it. It just means you can't deny others the use of it when your not using it.

      So someone pays alot of money to make a nice lawn and house, and they have to maintain it for EVERYONE? Public parks and restrooms are much harder to upkeep then private ones, would you agree? If they are truely public, why doesn't the state take care of all your landscaping and upkeep of the lawn? Seems like one person is putting alot of effort into upkeeping a public property.

      Y'know like a King that would punish peasents for killing a deer in his forest despite the fact he wasn't using the deer or the forest.

      Slight differences. The king isn't keeping the forrest 'nice' and maintained. The king didn't also pay anything to own the land, he just kinda took it.

      You and I are certainly not responsible for what our ancestors did but that doesn't mean we're not responsible for whatever actions we take that support what our ancestors did.

      So what do you suggest? do we all uproot and move back to europe? I don't have any right to live here?

      Of course we have to have a place to live but you don't hafta put brick walls around your yard and curse the damn kids for their frisbees that float inside the fence. ;)

      Why not? I'm not allowed the right to privacy? If anyone can use my lawn, that goes right up to my house. Some people prefer more privacy then that.

      Try not paying your taxes and see how public your land is

      I havent heard of anyone's land being confiscated for not paying taxes. What do they take if you don't own land?

      Your purchase price is little more than a rent deposit.

      Common law and history seems to disagree with you. Thats how we have the same property in control of one family for generations.

      Of course the only reason you have to pay for land is because people don't realize that if they felt like it they could just take what they needed from all that empty land not being used.

      Sorry, i'm not going to let someone build right next to my house. there are other things to consider besides how much 'unused' land there is. Water table concerns, noise, running more power and phone lines, sewer perhaps. Overcrowding also can lower your property value, so you can negitivally effect others by 'taking unused proeprty'

      A large enough group can take anything. No surprise about that. Forty big bikers with semiautomatic weapons can camp in my living room any damn time they want. :)

      Well i assume from your smily that you know the drawbacks of that already :-)


      What are you not yet using your yard for that it'd be damaged by a child running across your grass?


      If they mess up my flower bed, or the constant running in one area wears away the grass in that area. I'm sure there are other examples. I can't think of them, b/c i actually don't have my own lawn, i live in an apartment. So my 'lawn' is shared, but by all the people in the complex.

      Sure kids can play in their yard, a public park, etc. It doesn't mean I'm gonna get pissed off if they walk across my yard. I guess it's a reasonable use thing. If they aren't hurting me or damaging anything I'm using then I don't care if they use it.

      You're like that; others aren't. my dad for example has a house in the country to be away from everyone, so he would probably not be pleased with kids cutting a path through his lawn frequently.

      You must have grown up somewhere nice. Where I grew up everyone played in the street. It was the only space big enough for most games and close enough to home that our parents didn't have to worry about gang fights, drug pushers, etc.

      In the woods, more or less. No kids played in the street, b/c i didn't really have any kids around :-) As far as drug pushers (which i assume you imply will be working in parks), i don't see why a few parents can't watch a group of kids in the park.

      Anyway I think the original point was that it'd be silly to blame someone for not fencing their yard against criminal/terrorist activity. In the same way it's silly to blame someone for not fencing off their wireless network against criminal/terrorist activity. You shouldn't have to fence off either if it pleases you to leave them open

      What is our problem them? B/c i agree with you here. The key for me is if it pleases you. If i want to fence myself in, i should be allowed to as well, just as well as if i dont' want to, i shouldn't be forced to. At any rate, this whole wireless thing is pointless for the gov't to be concerned about. They can't easily launch an untracable attack from outside the us?

  82. It used to be Communism by tres · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not surprised. It's always been like that.

    Before they had Terrorism they had Communism. Everything that didn't fit their agenda was part of a Communist plot.

    Maybe you don't remember, but not too long ago, Communists would suck the blood out of your children if they were given the chance. (Funny how all those blood-suckers are now in NATO.)

    Who can deny that the best thing that ever happened to this bump-in-the-road, lackluster, infantile, wannabe tricky-dick administration was Osama Bin Laden?*

    *I in no way support the actions of either camp of fundamentalists. Bin Laden is as intellectually and spiritually meagre as our own pet idiot.

    --
    Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    1. Re:It used to be Communism by adam613 · · Score: 1, Troll

      "Who can deny that the best thing that ever happened to this bump-in-the-road, lackluster, infantile, wannabe tricky-dick administration was Osama Bin Laden?" Which is why I'm starting to believe that Mr. Bin Laden and Al-Queida are figments of the imagination of Mr. Bush. If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

    2. Re:It used to be Communism by Lord_Breetai · · Score: 1

      Also, before terrorism, they had the children.

      Won't someone please think of the terrorists!!!

      --
      "You are only young once, but you can be immature forever." -www.animemusicvideos.org
    3. Re:It used to be Communism by tres · · Score: 1

      I hope I didn't sound as if I've forgotten or excuse the actions of any fundamentalist zealot, no matter what flag or tome they use to justify their self-advancement.

      No, I haven't forgotten the terrorists--I don't think anyone has forgotten the terrorsts, but their actions don't excuse the irresponsibility of this administration. Quicker than we ever imagined it could happen, George Bush is destroying the very things that men greater than he died for.

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
  83. New slogon by jsse · · Score: 1

    and today all pr0n is banned becuase only terrorists shoot a load off

    If you jerk off, terrorists win.

    1. Re:New slogon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia, Terrorists jack YOU off.

    2. Re:New slogon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you jerk off, terrorists win.

      Damn, so that's why all my friends keep saying, "The terrorists have already won." If only I'd known sooner.

    3. Re:New slogon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Moral of the story, don't jerk off while playing Counter-Strike on the Counter-Terrorist team.

      I know; my comment is horribly stupid!

  84. Domestic terrorists pose a greater threat? by FirstOne · · Score: 3, Informative

    Obviously......
    The Fed's consider domestic terrorists to be a greater threat than the one posed by the foreign terrorists?
    Not a day goes by, without my server being an attacked by Nimda, or some hack attempt from a foreign land.
    Nothing in their grand plan secures those foreign ISP's or those already hacked domestic PC's.
    Or the million or so, H1-B's tech workers they left running amuck in the USA.
    Makes you wonder, just who is running the Fed's funny farm?

    1. Re:Domestic terrorists pose a greater threat? by Urgo · · Score: 0

      I agree. If they are going to be shutting down unsecured 802.11 networks, then will they PLEASE shutdown all of the unpatched (read all =]) IIS servers? Nimda pisses me off.

      --
      Belive in Technology and AMAZE yourself. -- RIP ZDTV/TechTV
  85. You're liable in Newfoundland by goingware · · Score: 2
    Are you liable if you accidentally leave your car unlocked and it is used to commit a crime?

    I asked my wife about this just now. She's from Newfoundland, the easternmost province of Canada. She says that leaving your keys in your car is a criminal offence if your car is stolen. That is, not just the car theif, but the negligent owner are both charged.

    The car doesn't have to be actually used in a crime.

    She gave me the specific example of how her next-door neighbor in the town of Fortune left her keys in her car parked on her driveway. The car was stolen by some joyriders and driven over a cliff. The neighbor was charged for leaving the keys in the car.

    I leave it up to you to debate whether that was appropriate or not, but it makes a certain sense to me.

    However, if your network is buttoned-down so no one can crack your hosts, but you provide free anonymous internet access to anyone who might happen to be in the neighborhood, I don't see how that could legitimately be considered negligence.

    Instead, I see that as providing a valuable public service, for example to enable those working for legitimate political change to communicate among themselves without fear of reprisal.

    That's not terrorism - at least not if what the folks are doing anonymously on the Internet is planning to win an election that would remove a despotic regime from office.

    No, that's one of the basic principles upon which our great nation was founded.

    Anonymous pamphleteering, for example, was one of the popular ways of promoting patriotic causes in the early days of the union.

    It's been done elsewhere. I understand the British put a price on Jonathan Swift's head for writing A Modest Proposal.

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
    1. Re:You're liable in Newfoundland by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Instead, I see that as providing a valuable public service, for example to enable those working for legitimate political change to communicate among themselves without fear of reprisal.

      Don't you see? Organizing for "political change" means that you oppose the guys in power ... which means, ipso facto, that you are are a terrorist.


      Certainly that's how the minions of Bush the Younger seem to feel.

    2. Re:You're liable in Newfoundland by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

      Instead, I see that as providing a valuable public service, for example to enable those working for legitimate political change to communicate among themselves without fear of reprisal.

      So when someone abuses your wide-open WiFi network to commit a crime (be it releasing a destructive worm onto the Internet, hacking into someone else's system, stealing credit cards, using stolen credit cards, etc.), what do you suggest should happen?

      When the feds knock on your door and say they traced the activity directly back to your network, what are you going to say? "Nope, sorry guys, wasn't me, but I do operate a freely available, anonymous wireless Internet gateway, so anyone could have done it."

      Are we really going to sit here and say that that defense is going to be completely acceptable? "Oh shucks, well thanks for taking the time to talk to us, looks like we'll never catch him."

      This is insane. That's opening the door for any criminal to commit his crimes completely free of possibility of ever getting caught. Slashdot kids that want to have an open Wi-Fi network can do so without fear, without a care that their network will be abused, and every time the feds knock on their door they can just say the same thing to get rid of them.

      At some point you really have to wonder if the provider of an anonymous resource like this isn't really abetting the crimes being committed through it.

  86. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1
    Well, let's see. How many of our "rights" listed in the "bill of rights" have we lost?

    1. 1st Amendment - Religion, Press, Right of Assembly, Speach, Right of Petition. All gone. Admittedly, we *can* have any religion we want, but there is preferred treatment from governments to religious groups. Press? Heh. Where did we rank in free journalism again? Right of Assembly. I recall that all the Mardi Gras rioting stories all amounted to "Everything was fine until the cops started causing trouble". Speach has been long gone, that one went before my great-great-great grandfather was born. Right of Petition has been well-preserved, but generally ignored, except in the case of protests.
    2. Amendment 2. Weapons. How many edged weapons are illegal? Swords? Knives? Moving on to various firearms... The purpose of this amendment is to ensure that the citizenry can defend itself against any tyrannical government. This isn't limited to outside governments....
    3. Amendments 4,5,6,8 were all essentially abolished with the Patriot Act. I won't go into detail here, you'll have to do your reading.
    4. 9 and 10 are both pretty ambiguous. 9 says that we have other rights that aren't specifically enumerated in the constitution that the government can't fuck with. 10 says the federal government only has the powers given to it in the constitution, the states have the rest. So, depending on which side of the fence you stand, either we've lost both of these or they've been preserved.

      Worst case at this time (depending on your point of view) we've only got our 3rd amendment right left, which is quartering soldiers in private houses without the owner's permission (nothing for renters here). Best case we've still got 3,9,10.

      There's not much left to lose, and plenty of room for them to tighten up what they've already taken.

    --
    Like what I said? You might like my music
  87. Help for the terrorists by mosch · · Score: 5, Funny
    Allow me to help the terrorists. Relatively untraceable internet access, that doesn't require a credit card, is available through:
    • Public Libraries
    • Kinko's
    • Hotel Rooms
    • Tourist Information Centers
    • Airport Lounges
    • Highway Rest Stops (often have Public Internet Terminals)
    • Internet Cafes
    • Cable Company Kiosks
    I hope that helps you commit your fiendish acts of email and web browsing after all the 802.11b access points in the world have been properly secured.

    Praise Allah.

    1. Re:Help for the terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the obvious one, there are these weird places that are actually out of the country and many of them have 'net. It is possible to hack into U.S. sites from there and bang! the world ends.

    2. Re:Help for the terrorists by kharchenko · · Score: 1

      In unrelated news ... Kinko's now instituting a policy that requires a blood sample to be given by a customer before they are allowed to access a networked computer. Kinko's company spokesman John Snitch has assured that such basic measures are required to keep the Internet a "healthy network".

    3. Re:Help for the terrorists by necrognome · · Score: 1

      Funny you should mention Kinko's. A number of the 9/11 terrorists used their neighborhood Kinko's to purchase airline tickets. On second though, maybe the Administration is right; let's ban neighborhoods too!

      --


      Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    4. Re:Help for the terrorists by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and I suppose the clerks at each one just happened to remember all the terrorists, too...

      This is in response to the idiot claiming that clerks will remember you (assuming of course that you get caught at all...).

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  88. Well said! (nt) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (nt)

  89. It's simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love the people in this country. There is one problem...

    THE NAZIS ARE IN OFFICE!

    1. Re:It's simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "THE NAZIS ARE IN OFFICE! "

      OH MY GOD!!!

      the national SOCIALISTS are in office!!

      oh wait,bush won...democraps lost..

      phew...ya had me going there...

  90. Time to move by MrEcho.net · · Score: 1

    As a ex Enlisted US Air Force person, im very ashamed in my government.
    I served this country for its freedoms and the rights of the people.
    Now the government wants to take it all away bit by bit.
    How much of the original constitution is there left? Really?
    The government now has the right to spy on its own people, so much for privacy...
    If we share knowledge, and its illegal now? (DMCA)
    Are right to have guns are slowly being token away.

    So much for freedoms of America, the thing I was fighting for in the service.
    I don't know about you guys but im about ready to head to Canada.

    -- Trevor
    - Mr. Echo

  91. Oh..but Ebay serves terrorism too! by Newer+Guy · · Score: 2

    See, terrorists can put items on ebay and use the money they make to promote more terrorism! So..when you use Ebay, you're helping terrorism.. get it? This will have to be on next week's list. Thank you, John Asscroft

    1. Re:Oh..but Ebay serves terrorism too! by saskboy · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure John signs his name "Ashcroft", but nice try ;-)

      Would you like to name my knob? The link is my webpage and about $9 goes to the foodbank. I promise the money doesn't go to terrorism.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
  92. I, SHTURMOVIK, COME FROM SOVIET RUSSIA! by Shturmovik · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You are big fool to think that Government does not love you! Government want to help you! Government care so very much for you! Let Government take care of you! It is only way to be safe from nasty terrorist and other very bad men! Me, I just drink Vodka until all bad thing disappear forever - such as beloved Father and Uncle Ivan Alexei and that one cousin from Petrograd. I'm sure it was for their own good.

  93. Will they make up their minds? by Ironica · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First, the NSA didn't like fiber-optic lines because they had too much trouble listening in on them. Now OHS wants to crack down on Wi-Fi because it's too easy to get into. It sort of looks like the government wants our networks to be transparent to them, and no one else.

    And, here's what I really don't get:
    "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in."

    Does that guy honestly believe that getting into one Wi-Fi network can allow someone to bring down the entire Internet? And if he does, hm, maybe he should look at the original ARPA spec, compare it to the current topography of the 'net, and break up a few megacorps, hm?

    Let's not forget that the people making these boneheaded pronouncements are rich white men who remember when color TV came out and they got one for their kids. The internet is a really scary unknown thing. They know it's incredibly powerful... and not much else.

    But if they do manage to ban AOL from sending out those disks, I'm going to have to buy them a cookie.
    --
    Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    1. Re:Will they make up their minds? by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

      Does that guy honestly believe that getting into one Wi-Fi network can allow someone to bring down the entire Internet? And if he does, hm, maybe he should look at the original ARPA spec

      There's a few other specs you may have missed, including things like TELNET and SSH, as well as some security topics (commonly referred to as "r00ting" or "hax0ring").

      Few types of attacks can originate from a Wi-Fi network and be able to take down the infrastructure (though you could release a worm from such a place..), but you can certainly start running your exploit-of-the-week on such a network, nab a few hundred (thousand?) hosts, and initiate a distributed attack from your conveniently anonymous connection.

      What do you plan on telling the feds when they track this back to your network? "It wasn't me, I swear! Sure I have the technical abilities, look at my l33t collection of Internet gear. They must have gotten in through my free publicly-available anonymous Wi-Fi access point!"

      Do you really feel that you shouldn't share some of the fault for this, assuming they buy your story?

    2. Re:Will they make up their minds? by tedrlord · · Score: 1

      Or they could initiate an attack from out of the country, or from AOL or Earthlink accounts under assumed names, or net cafes, or college campuses, or the library. The only way to prevent this would be to disallow access to the Internet to anyone without special clearance. Either the people that came up with this idea are really stupid, or they have an ulterior motive.

      --
      [insert witty quote here]
    3. Re:Will they make up their minds? by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      Every other avenue of access leaves an audit trail. Dialing up to an ISP gives the ISP a record of your account information (which, in all fairness, might be stolen) and the caller ID information about where you called from. It takes a lot more skill and effort to truly hide yourself this way. Net Cafés and public libraries a) probably don't give you unfettered IP connectivity, but probably filter you through an HTTP proxy; and b) someone probably saw you sit down and starting using it (or, at the very least, a security camera probably did).

      College campuses are especially sensitive to abuse and I don't believe any of them will let any Joe User use their network. You generally have to cover a few speed bumps like MAC registration (or purchasing a card directly from them), and even then there's no guarantee that you'll have 100% free IP connectivity.

      To date, there's always been some way of tracking abuse down to the casual abuser. Sure, if you're smart about it, you can probably get in and out before they could ever catch you, but opening everyone's Wi-Fi network to 100% anonymous and unrestricted access allows everyone to jump on your network and do whatever they want with no chance of ever getting caught.

      What nobody seems to understand (or care about?) is that all of these arguments basically promote a world where every crime occurring over the Internet is impossible to trace!

      There is NO reason you need anonymity at the IP layer. Higher-level application layers, absolutely. We have anonymizing HTTP proxies, for example, and free e-mail services. There is no reason you need raw TCP/IP access to the Internet from an anonymous source. There are no "free speech" concerns if that is unavailable to you.

    4. Re:Will they make up their minds? by moncyb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Every other avenue of access leaves an audit trail.

      So you're saying that if a terrorist broke into someone's house, tortured them until they gave out all their passwords, then the terrorists used the homeowner's internet account, then the terrorist can still be traced?

      Yeahhhh...riiiight.

      They don't even need to enter the country. The US has plenty of internet connections to the outside world. As for tracing the IP address, I seem to remember reading a news story about spammers using unallocated addresses to post their spam without being traced. Wide open 802.11 is hardly any more of a threat than anything else.

    5. Re:Will they make up their minds? by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that if a terrorist broke into someone's house, tortured them until they gave out all their passwords, then the terrorists used the homeowner's internet account, then the terrorist can still be traced?

      Where in the world did this come from? This is hardly relevant. This risk will be there no matter what.

      But yes, unless the home owner was murdered in the process, they'll surely have some useful bit of information for the investigators, and forensic evidence perhaps.

      This is a bit extreme, don't you think? I'm talking about the casual Internet abuser here, not a hard-core terrorist. Or are you saying that we should give them whatever promiscuous Wi-Fi networks they want so they don't break in to our homes and torture us for Internet access?

      As for tracing the IP address, I seem to remember reading a news story about spammers using unallocated addresses to post their spam without being traced.

      It makes it difficult to trace after-the-fact, but not impossible. In order to get an IP block routed to you, you have to announce a route. Assuming the other routers don't immediately ignore your announcement and throw up a warning flag because it's coming from a reserved block, the announcement gets propogated and it's pretty easy to follow the route back to the ISP giving them connectivity. With a trivial amount of effort they should be able to figure out who's doing it. Don't believe everything you read in the mainstream media. Rarely do they have a significant amount of network experience.

    6. Re:Will they make up their minds? by Ironica · · Score: 2

      There's nothing incorrect about what you've said, but it makes a faulty assumption: that the Internet *can* be secured.

      The point most people are making here is that what they're trying to do is impossible, and if they start with WiFi, there's no telling where it will end. As it is now, you can check into a hotel room under an assumed name and pay cash, use their dial-up connection and a laptop to wreak whatever havoc you wish, and be gone before anyone knows. You can get internet access from tons of places where you can't be traced except by your face (if anyone actually looked at you; I've seen internet terminals where you can deposit cash without interacting with a human being).

      Crimes occuring over the Internet are already difficult to trace... *almost* as difficult as crimes occuring in the real world. That's right; the guy who broke into your neighbor's house last week didn't need a MAC address to do it, so he's less traceable than an Internet crook.

      If they talked about educating people about securing their networks, or funding development of better security methods, that would be one thing... but they're saying "We're going to make you responsible for an impossible task, and *when* you fail, we're going to clamp down and cripple this medium into oblivion."

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    7. Re:Will they make up their minds? by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      You make some good points, but:

      hotel room under an assumed name and pay cash, use their dial-up connection and a laptop to wreak whatever havoc you wish

      Mainly what I'm trying to say is that this scenario represents a certain barrier of entry to pseudo-anonymous IP connectivity. By letting every Joe User set up his own free, public wide-open Wi-Fi network, and giving that user immunity against prosecution or liability for those that misuse his network, you are reducing that barrier to the purchase of a Wi-Fi card. Now every Joe ScriptKiddie/John Spammer has up to 11Mbits of totally anonymized IP connectivity. You've now made it trivial for every Internet crime to be performed with zero chance of ever getting caught.

      I've seen internet terminals where you can deposit cash without interacting with a human being

      The other bit that people tend to overlook is that many services like this offer limited-use terminals, typically heavily proxied web browsers only. You are not getting the full gamut of IP services here, and that's a fairly crucial difference.

      I would have no problem if people wanted to set up a million free web kiosks. Anonymity on the web is great. But by allowing users full anonymous access to the wide range of IP services, that's just asking for trouble and has no positive end.

      "We're going to make you responsible for an impossible task...

      To be honest, I read things as targeting deliberately open (promiscuous) Wi-Fi networks, not just ones that were unintentially insecure. A lot of the comments in this article are vigorously defending those that want to make their own Wi-Fi networks open and public and want to enjoy immunity when those networks are used to commit crimes.

    8. Re:Will they make up their minds? by moncyb · · Score: 2

      Where in the world did this come from? This is hardly relevant.

      It is relevant. Statements such as "The Department of Homeland Security sees wireless networking technology as a terrorist threat." and 'If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating,' and "Clarke has stressed wireless access points as a national security threat." is where this came from.

      This risk will be there no matter what.

      That was my whole point. Banning WiFi (or making it so restricted it's useless) won't make the internet any more secure.

      I'm talking about the casual Internet abuser here, not a hard-core terrorist.

      Yes, but the story was talking about hard core terrorists and saying that is why "homeland security" may want to impose restrictions on wireless networks. Or are you saying something should be banned just because some teenage vandal may abuse it? I guess the paint industry is in big trouble!

      Or are you saying that we should give them whatever promiscuous Wi-Fi networks they want so they don't break in to our homes and torture us for Internet access?

      No, I'm saying it would be pointless to "secure" all access points to the internet. Most of them aren't even inside the US. Seriously, what do you want? Require a special license to access the internet? Use a DRM censorship system to make sure no one is sending unapproved data or using unapproved programs? Block off the United States' network from the rest of the world? I suppose that is the only way to make you think everyone is traceable and can't do anything illegal on the inter^H^H^Htranet.

      What if the terrorists steal the DRM key or find an expliot in the DRM system? Everyone would then be just as vulnerable--if not more so. If the DRM system is mandated everywere, one small exploit or key in the wrong hands could allow a worm to rip through and destroy the entire intranet in a matter of minutes. Homogeneous systems decrease security not increase it.

      Tracing everyones actions on the internet is an absurd notion. By your logic pay phones should be illegal because you never know who may use it. CB radio should be illegal because terrorists may use it. Knives should be illegal because someone may commit murder with one.

    9. Re:Will they make up their minds? by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

      Seriously, what do you want?

      Liability.

      If someone breaks into your network, and you have done all that you know how to do (all that's documented in the user's manual regarding security, vendor notifications, etc.) to secure it, you should be left in the free and clear. When the feds come knockin', the only thing you have to live with is the fact that you were victimized and your resources used for evil.

      If you are negligent in running your network, i.e. you ignore warnings and don't pay attention to the fact that your Wi-Fi network is wide-open, you need to be held liable just as you are with any other case of negligence.

      If you are willfully providing anonymous public access to your Wi-Fi network, and someone commits a crime using your network, and the only thing you can say when the feds come knocking is, "Well I didn't do it; it must have been someone using my free anonymous public Wi-Fi network," you either need to act unsurprised when they haul you away for committing the crime, or at the very least be unsurprised when they nail you for aiding/abetting. You made an explicit decision to keep that thing open, and you further decided to keep it anonymous, knowing that there was a high likelyhood that someone would commit a crime over it and that that crime would be traced back to you.

      You're right: the government is telling people to shape up under the guise of terrorism. There is such a thing as "electronic" or "Internet" terrorism, though, for various definitions of "terrorism" that I don't personally agree with. I believe the article is discussing precisely these types of "terrorists": those that would break into infrastructure and bring it down, perhaps even coordinating this with a real-world attack so that our response time might be crippled.

      You cannot combat one type of terrorism and ignore another type.

      They're not talking about banning Wi-Fi any more than they're talking about banning spray paints or CB radio, as you put it. They're talking about slapping people around who are negligent or think they're helping the world by leaving their Internet access points wide open for anonymous use.

  94. hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    in other news today, the whitehouse has been classified as a terrorist target and has been moved to canada.

    1. Re:hmmm... by MrEcho.net · · Score: 1

      Na....
      just move it under ground, so no one can bother them "at work".
      lmfao
      Thay wouldnt be able to tell the difference anyways ... they have no idea whats really going on outside.

  95. An interview with George W. Bush by Zakabog · · Score: 5, Funny

    Reporter: We hear that you've come up with a list of things that should be regulated because a terrorist may use these things to cause harm. One of the well known ones is wifi networks, are there any others and how do you think terrorists are using them to their advantage?

    Bush: Yes, well one of our other main concerns is airports.

    Reporter: Airports?

    Bush: Yes, airports. I spent millions of dollars researching previous terrorist attacks to see what they may do. It turns out, in every airline hijacking the terrorists went to an airport to board the plane. If we shut down the airports the terrorists can't get onto the planes so there will be no more airline hijackings.

    Reporter: But how will people fly planes?

    Bush: I am not at liberty to disclose that information at this present time for fear that terrorists may use it to their advantage.

    Reporter: Ok... moving on, it says here that you've decided to enforce stricter laws on, I don't know if I'm reading this correctly, buying coats?

    Bush: Yes, that's right, it seems that most suicide bombers hide explosives under some sort of coat. If the terrorists can't buy the coats, they can't hide the bombs, if they can't hide the bombs, they can't blow themselves up. It will eliminate the suicide bomber threat.

    Reporter: But if we can't buy coats how will we keep warm in the winter?

    Bush: See that's the beauty of it, there's this great thing I heard about called global warming. We're not going to need the coats because it's getting warmer, not colder!

    Reporter: Ummmm, right, well anyway, what's this about putting restrictions on telephone use?

    Bush: Ahhh, that's my greatest plan of all, see now if I can stop the terrorists from using telephones, cell phones, earphones, headphones, megaphones, all types of phones, they won't be able to talk to each other. If they can't talk to each other they can't plan things or make threats or do any of that nasty terrorist stuff.

    Reporter: How are you planning on stopping terrorists from using phones?

    Bush: Well I'm going to make it illegal under the new "Apple Pie and Baseball, God Bless America Act". Under this act, it's unamerican to use telephones, and it's illegal to be unamerican because terrorists are unamerican.

    Reporter: But how bad would it be if we stopped using telephones? What if there's an emergency and you need to use a phone?

    Bush: Emergency? What emergency? Are you hiding something? Are you a terrorist?

    Reporter: That's the most rediculous thing I've heard, what makes you think I'm a terrorist?

    Bush: AHA! Only a terrorist would say something like that! Seize her!

    *At this time 5 secret service agents arrest the reporter, hold her in prison for weeks without telling her what she's done, or giving her a trial, or a lawyer*

    Sad thing is that's not too unlikely

    1. Re:An interview with George W. Bush by MrEcho.net · · Score: 1

      5 years down the road I can see this...
      very said .. very.

    2. Re:An interview with George W. Bush by MeatMan · · Score: 0

      If you get moderated for being a Troll or Flamebait, you deserve it. If ignorance is Bliss, why do you seem so unhappy"?

    3. Re:An interview with George W. Bush by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      A few questions that were left out:

      Reporter: My sources are telling me that you are pushing this new bill that states that nobody should be allowed to use Open Source Software and that it will be prohibited to contribute and distribute any computer applications under the GPL. Is this true? Are you cracking down on FSF and OSS movements?

      Bush: Hell yes! I believe that distributing any software under GPL undermines the American economy by providing free products and services where such products and services could have been provided by large corporations. As we all know all too well, only large corporation can be trusted to provide products and services, since they fully close their source code of their products and only allow limited access to their services based on subscription to MS Passport. Don't you see? If anyone could just download anything from an anonymous server on the web and go unnoticed, how dangerous it is? We must have full logs of all products been downloaded and all services used in order to protect the American public and thus the American dream. Don't you see that by allowing GPLed software we undermine American economy by not letting the legitimate business to run this country^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H (scratch that) to provide well secured software that only can be used for legitimate uses?

      Reporter: Are you talking about DRM schemes?

      Bush: Oh, yes, that is exactly what I am talking about. Today anybody with a computer and internet access can download and upload anything but that is exactly how terrorists communicate with each other! Don't you see? At some point the DRM will be used to sign every single piece of communications, not only files, but emails, any web content at all will have to be signed. The American government will decide what to allow to be signed and what not to allow. No terrorist will ever again be able to embed their communications in a picture of a pussy, and I mean an animal, you know, a cat!

      Reporter: But this looks to me like every single thing on the internet will have to go through an approval cycle and this will stall the internet. It will create so much bureaucracy!

      Bush: ?! Bureaucracy is the tool that will stop the terrorists! This is the beauty of it! Don't you get it? First the terrorists will have to wait for approval to sign their illegal communications files and after like 3-4 months of making circles in the bureaucratic apparatus, they will commit suicide! But seriously, can you see any other way of stopping the terrorist threat except for completely regulating what is going on on the internet? Internet is like the Wild West and we are missionaries. We will bring order and light and will allow progress and forbid crime. We will stop terrorism!

      Reporter chokes

  96. Sucks... but, by MeatMan · · Score: 0

    One of the many ways terrorists and their cells/hierarchy communicate is through the net as briefly touched on here. Even CyberCafes are probably going to be hit with new regulations from HomeLand Security and they're all pretty much landline.
    It's a "War on Terrorism" and however terrorists use the net and access it, we all have to sacrifice a little right now so maybe we save lives or even end the "war" sooner, rather than later... "war" inconveniences everyone, bitching won't help. Don't get your undies all in a wad over it. The sacrifices made by our parents and grandparents during WWII was certainly at least as bad as anything we can foresee for ourselves. This too is a global war because terrorism is global. Whatever it takes is just enough, so suck it up. Besides, there's no reason most if not all the "inconvenient" new regulations can't be lifted or adjusted if and when this war ends. We have the Democrats making sure of this as much as they can before they even begin fully debating new legislation and implementing it. Republicans are onboard with that philosophy as well, for the most part. But we'll all have to cross that bridge when we get to it.

    1. Re:Sucks... but, by I_redwolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You can't be serious.. This is a troll right? There is no such thing as GIVING UP YOUR FREEDOM, it's not a sacrifice, it's not a convience, it's givng away of your freedom. Parents and grandparents during WWII did not give up their freedom they fought for it. Which is what we need to fucking do, fight for our freedoms. Man you're really brainwashed; thinking that things can be undone. Once you give up your freedoms you just don't fucking say ok I want them back now. That's not how it works MeatMan, when you give them up they are GONE and the only way to get them back would be to get a mass gathering of people to vote for it. However, there are laws in place that already do away with "your vote counts" so the only other way is bloodshed because what's left in essence is a country run by the few. Trust me, the war on terrorism is screwing and will screw alot of people over in the future and it can and probably will happen to you. Can't you people see that the only people being litigated against are people who have done nothing wrong?! This war on terrorism has caught how many terrorists?!

    2. Re:Sucks... but, by The+Jonas · · Score: 1

      I agree. This sucks butt!

    3. Re:Sucks... but, by MeatMan · · Score: 0

      Um, yeah, I must have missed that part of the U.S. Constitution and the amendments about Freedom of Internet. No one's taking away your freedom Einstein. It's about regulating something requiring attention at this point in time. What? You think everyone should drive the freeways in Los Angeles or anywhere else in America like the autobahn? I'd love to but driving speed is regulated. What? You'd like to be able to send your 10-year old to the store to grab a pack of smokes and a quart of Schlitz for you because you're too busy (or just too damn lazy to go yourself)? Can't... tobacco and alcohol is regulated.
      Do you have ANYONE in your family who lived in the United States during WWII? Have you ever sat and talked in-depth of the sacrifices of the draft, food rationing, mandatory recycling of EVERYTHING, IOU's or ration coupons instead of pay at your job, the curfews, the CITIZENS who walked the streets banging on house doors at 3:00 am because a sliver of light can be seen from outside through the blacked out window, having to walk for MILES because there's NO GAS because of rationing and not even the buses run, the sleepless nights in fear of losing a friend or loved one because EVERYONE IN AMERICA had SOMEONE the knew and loved fighting overseas, the lack of quality medical care at home because the vast majority of doctors and medical supplies were overseas, NEED I GO ON?
      I'm not brain washed... you're just spoiled rotten. The difference between you and me is I'm WILLING to make the small sacrifices, which will hardly be "giving away of your freedom". I can see quite clearly and I don't see anyone being "litigated" against -whatever that's supposed to mean- who've "done nothing wrong". This "war" has caught hundreds of terrorists and killed as many more... good riddance to them all, may they be buried in pigskins face down. It's a cancer, it spreads all around from top to bottom and you dig it out wherever you find it. Grow up kid and get an education while you're at it. You're not giving up any freedoms. You're just helping out the country. Is that a bad thing?

    4. Re:Sucks... but, by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "One of the many ways terrorists and their cells/hierarchy communicate is through the net "

      You don't know who terrorists are until after they commit the crime.

      Those 9/11 terrorists had access to telephones, internet and everything else, none of them needed to use open Wifi.

      If anything, Arabs driving around with a scanner looking for an open WiFi connection would have alerted the authorities to a problem!

      Notice they specifically go after Open WiFi, but they could have gone after free ISPs or Internet PayPhones.
      (In Europe there are Internet public payphones, so I assume the US has them too.)

      Nobody (outside of China) has gone after Internet Cafe's, nobody has even mentioned public Internet Payphones, only WiFi.
      So this must be a commercial agenda aimed at closing Open WiFi connections.

      Gotta be that COMETA consortium pushing this drivel.

    5. Re:Sucks... but, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MODERATORS!!!!!!!!! HEEEEELLLLLLLLPPP!!!!! Please edit this asshole's (MeatMan) sig to remove the hyperlink, but DON'T click on it unless you are ready for over 30 insulting popups!!!!!!!! CRASHED my box. Cancel his account. This is one trolling motherfucker looking for trouble!!!

    6. Re:Sucks... but, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sorry I don't have an account and I don't normally plan on posting (usually enough people post my general opinion for me) so I don't have a registered account (and really why should I register?). But I can't help but reply to your post, and just say that, first off I agree there are some things worth sacrificing your comforts for, but you need to be very carefull for what you are sacrificing them, and if you believe in these bills and the direction they are going all the better for you. But don't you DARE equate pritty much 1 terrorist act (sept 11) to the equal of anything close to what happened in WWII, you need to serious hit some history books and you also need to feel ashamed for USA not joining the war sooner as well. How many people died in WWII do you even have the slightlest clue? Now how many is that over from terrorism over the past 10 years in the USA (as the laws at hand cover only the USA), so is that 1,000 times more 10,000 times more? I'm canadian and am very concerned in what I see happening to our big brother to the south (the USA), as our cultures share similarities as well as your government has a lot of sway of ours and often forces your laws to be ours. (for threat of economic impact). The war your referring too happened in afganistan, and I was for a military action of some sort in that area, as I believe it did help that country (for the most part). But these laws that are being discussed right now serve extremely low results of actually stopping terroists, however seem to favour large business while at the same time asking the average joe to sacrifice, at our expense, corporations seem to benifit while small business and/or people seem to take the hurt. Is this really what your thinking that trhese corporation with more power and money along with the extremely inneficient(sp!) government are going to be able to solve these problems I would beg to differe and so would a lot of others. You're entitled to your opionion of course as are we...err wait no we aren't not with these new laws.

  97. is it just me? by aberant · · Score: 5, Insightful

    is it just me, or when you read articles like this you remember how you read the book 1984 in the early 90's a chuckled about how it wasn't accurate. Then everyday since you have noticed how this country has moved closer and closer to being something out of that book?

    1. Re:is it just me? by mauzo · · Score: 1

      1984? No, 1984 is wrong. Remember, everyone in 1984 knows they're suppressed.
      No, the book that scares me more and more every day is Brave New World.
      And I don't even live in America (thank God).

    2. Re:is it just me? by aberant · · Score: 1

      well atleast in brave new world they all had Soma. *drool* soma.... *drool*

    3. Re:is it just me? by SparkyUK · · Score: 1

      I've always thought that the term "Patriot Act" had a "Ministry of Love" type ring about it.

  98. America the police state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Wuuhuu! Way to go again, the "Land of the Free"!

    Are you happy in your police state? How long till the Great Firewall of USA?

  99. Very proud to have done my small part by goingware · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I used analog earlier this evening to check my server logs to see how people were finding Is This the America I Love?. I've had the page up for over a year, but since the election I have felt a renewed sense of urgency to get people to read it.

    One of the referring pages I found listed in my log is I've held it in too long: I am no longer Proud to be an American. wherein the poster says:

    America just makes me sick now. The worst part is nobody seems to see the Injustice of it all. Are you all Blind? Have you not seen the greatly exaggerated and proposterous veil that has been strewn upon America?

    Something is indeed wrong. I've sensed it, and to this day haven't been able to find the words to describe what it was, but I have to say something. Why? Because I have a fucking voice, and I will fucking spread it, because that's what America USED to be all about. Now? Now it's nothing, not even a shadow of it's former self. I'd literally rather live in Canada right now, because despite what people thing of Canada, it's pretty cool.

    and so on.

    Look at the bottom of the guy's post where he gives a link with the text "This is what inspired me to finally say something".

    I've worried about the potential for backlash by saying what I did in such a public way, and further to be making such an effort to get people to read it.

    But if I was able to get even one person to speak out as this fellow said I did, well that makes it all worthwhile.

    There's lots of people who posted to the K5 discussion who don't agree with what I said, but that doesn't bother me so much. I'm very pleased to have opened up so much debate. People are talking about these issues that might not have otherwise.

    People need to talk about this stuff, or we will end up in a great deal more trouble than we are already in.

    And there were some fairly intelligent points raised at K5 that seem to poke holes in my argument. That's OK too, because I have answers to their objections, and will be able to make some small revisions to my original piece that should ultimately make it stronger and more convincing. So in the end those who found fault with my essay have done me a favor.

    Finally, in the little while between posting the above and being just about to post this, my copy of the essay has received 102 page views referred from this slashdot discussion.

    I'm very glad of that - prior to posting at K5, the essay was getting about 300 page views a month. So far this month (just a few days into the month) my copy has got 594 page views, and I imagine the K5 post got many times that.

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
    1. Re:Very proud to have done my small part by ckedge · · Score: 2

      What's sad is how much effort is required to educate people about what's going on. In the link you referenced, one of the reply's said this:

      You have the right to state your opinion. No government officials, no CIA or FBI operatives, no secret police will come to your house, detain you, and kill you if you register your opinion that the United States is completely off-track. As far as your "jailing people" comments, I surmise that you really have no idea what you're talking about. If you can name me one, just ONE case where a person has been incarcerated since 9/11 without, at the very least, extremely suspicious activities that ARE illegal, I'd be completely shocked.

      This person clearly did not read the contents of the hyperlinked page (your page), nor note the fact that the current situation allows abuse to the extent that a person can no longer fly depending on their political views. The person is also clearly ignorant about the hundreds of people who spent up to a MONTH in custody without legal representation, FOR NO GOOD REASON WHAT-SO-EVER.

      Best example I've heard - the guy with dual American/Egyptian citizenship who went with his wife to a US Military base because she was being called up, and he was detained, FOR A MONTH.

      All the lunk-heads in the West, watching their football and reading sports illustrated, don't hear a damn thing about things like that, and assume everything is fine.

      Techies and the informed need a 2 page HANDBOOK that we can photocopy and give to all the jocks and air-heads we know. Jocks and airheads don't read weblogs or newspapers.

  100. THIS IS MARKETTING SPIN by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    There have been a spate of these stories coming out of the BSA for months.

    BSA is not a government organisation its a commercial on.

    I think it is because of this:

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/06/1259 22 8&mode=thread&tid=95

    The companies that want to sell Wi-Fi connections. But if everyone gives it away how can they sell it??
    So they claim open WiFi is a security hole for terrorists and bingo Government makes laws, people close their networks and IBM, Intel etc. can then sell those services.

    1. Re:THIS IS MARKETTING SPIN by The+Jonas · · Score: 1

      Yes and no. Yes the big corporations intend to maarket those services, but it seems that anyone who opens their "pipe" to the "community" is in violation of many ISP's subscription agreements which have a clause that reads similiar to, "prohibiting redistribution of the company's Internet connection service." Read an old article here: http://politechbot.com/p-03703.html

  101. *COUGH*BULLSHITLOGIC*COUGH* by Chas · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, because there's the POSSIBILITY that someone COULD, or IS using my open network to facilitate terrorism is enough to convict me now?

    Guilt by association. I love it.

    So, because there's the possibility that one of my guests at a neighborhood barbecue or block party COULD BE a terrorist, that I should be held liable because I was giving aid and comfort (gave him a burger off the grill and a Coke out of the cooler), right?

    And just because I COULD go berserk with a cleaver and chop a few people down to hamburger, I shouldn't be allowed near sharp objects right?

    And because I COULD go blind watching TV, I shouldn't be allowed to do that.

    And because I COULD be run over by a car, walking down the street, I should never leave my house.

    The earth COULD drop into the sun tomorrow! So why should I give a damn about doing anything productive today?

    It's called "taking a point to the ludicrous extreme". And the original point is already fairly ludicrous.

    I also call it "overbearing".

    Only an idiot thinks they can make the world completely safe, which is what these jackboots are trying to do.

    Life is a series of risks. Some of them educated, some not. If we take reasonable, non-invasive action, and educate people as to some of the ultimate extremes of what could happen, you've allowed them to make an educated decision about their risks.

    Rather than simply removing people's rights, and acting in a manner which has no bearing on common sense. Because of a POSSIBILITY.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  102. How to 802.11 bomb by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 1

    Mod a car, to be a radio controlled bomb.

    Easy to do, but once the feds learn you do this crud, they intercept frequencies, and find you, and you get smoked.

    Why was there never any big Radio Controlled car thieves with surveilance cameras? CUZ THE FEDZ!

    Now you have your radio controlled terrorism, but you take it to the internet. CRUD! YOU USED SOME OPEN LINK, and you can't be traced! No one knows who you are. Feds can never catch you, ever.

    This is why they so freaking want this crap cleaned up... If you think its tough to get exact protocol to defeat a radio controlled device terrorist, this next step is freaking close to impossible.

  103. What are they trying to prevent? by Squeamish+Ossifrage · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wired's article implies that they're trying to protect us from attackers using a wireless access point to launch a significant attack on the Internet itself. "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in," were the words of the Homeland Security representative.

    That's true, but stupid. By exactly their "logic", a terrorist or criminal could launch the same attack whether they connect through an unsecured wireless network or any other way. So unless they have a comprehensive strategy for making sure that terrorists can't get internet access *at all* then this doesn't accomplish anything. So either the administration doesn't realize this, or they do but they're using it as a smoke screen for some real reason, or it's being misreported. Frankly, I'd give about equal odds to all three.

    1. Re:What are they trying to prevent? by alumshubby · · Score: 3, Funny

      "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in," were the words of the Homeland Security representative.

      By that logic, I see the gov't compelling AOL to stop mailing out those damned trial-installation CDs.

      --
      "How many light bulbs does it take to change a person?" --BMcC-->
    2. Re:What are they trying to prevent? by SparkyUK · · Score: 1

      they do but they're using it as a smoke screen for some real reason


      As some other poster pointed out, could it be that the wireless telco's are nervous that citizens could help each other to blanket the map with free 802.11b access and thereby bypass the elaborate by-the-second and for-the-kilobyte toll network the telco[n]s have paid so much to put together? Nah, that couldn't be it.

  104. minor question-slash-comment by algernon7 · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    That was a great post, and dead on.
    This is off topic, but I do have a question, regarding this quote:

    That in-it-of-itself is intrinsicly impossible to justify

    I thought the phrase was 'in-and-of-itself', as in 'from it's very core' or 'from all levels and perspectives'. Have I been wrong all along?

    1. Re:minor question-slash-comment by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      You're probably right, and I'm probably writing down that which is commonly mis-pronounced. What you're saying makes a good bit more sense then what is commonly said (or at least what I hear when someone says it).

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    2. Re:minor question-slash-comment by algernon7 · · Score: 1
      That's cool. Just last night while playing pool at a friend's house I mis-pronounced 'carom' as 'kuh-rome'. I tried to convince them it was an onomatopoeia, but no such luck.
      Again, well-put post.

      Btw, moderators - isn't it -1, redundant to mod my earlier comment off-topic?

      It was clearly marked off-topic. ;)

  105. Re:Forget WiFi,there's no right to keep and bear a by silentbozo · · Score: 2

    Note that this was 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which is located in San Francisco, California. Justices for this court are drawn from places like Hawaii and California, where the law has been drawn strictly against private firearms ownership. This court is also heavily stacked with Democratic appointees - of the 28 congressionally allowed spots, 17 are Democratic, and only 7 are Republican (yes, there are vacancies - you can blame the previously Democratically held Senate for that.) Worse, cases are usually decided by a 3 judge panel, so it isn't as though the decision was a consensus of all 24 active judges.

    Please note, that this decision goes against the current administration's belief that the 2nd Amendment is an individual right, so I'd expect press from the White House regarding this in the near future. Basically, all this means is that they'll have to go to the next layer above the 9th circuit (Appellate? Supreme Court? Someone who remembers the judicial review process please speak up...) It probably would be more effective in the short term to amend the California Constitution to prohibit laws infringing on the individual right to bear arms, but given the politics here, we're probably better off waiting until the Supreme Court (which seems to have a better understanding of the Constitution) weighs in.

    Another note - for those of you willing to sit through the 70 pages of court opinion (I just skipped to the back) you will notice that the court judged the 2nd amendment to be a collective right, and as such, the provision in the California assault weapons act allowing retired officers to hold so called assault weapons to be inconsistent with the intent of the CAWCA (California Assault Weapons Control Act.) I wonder what the Fraternal Order of Police has to say about this...

    Final note. None of this would even be an issue if Bill Lockyer and Gray Davis had been cashiered a long time ago (yes, the original Roberti-Roos act was signed in 1989, but it only banned a few models specifically by name. The amended 1999 act, signed by Davis, bans firearms by type - no centerfire rifles with detachable magazines and flash surpressors, no fixed magazines greater than 10 rounds, etc.) Those of you who can, but don't vote, have only yourselves to blame...

  106. Free access points by jago25_98 · · Score: 1

    well, had a quick flick through a few posts and can't see it mentioned...

    What about the implications for the "free access points" that we've been hearing about?

    Terror abuses the freedom so I don't think companies, governments and individuals will be able to live with free access points if they want protect themselves against the unknown; to be distrustful towards everyone [Firefighters anyone?].

    A compromise may be possible with some sort of distributed key system but I think that's a fudge. It would be better to toss a coin and allow or disallow?

  107. Not 3G, COMETA by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    I thought this was BS being pushed by the 3G backers aswell, but I suspect now that it is the Cometa consortium to sell WiFi via 20,000 hot spots:

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/06/1259 22 8&mode=thread&tid=95

    If there are already several thousand free hotspots then they could not sell that service, so they push this nonsense as a way of getting laws to shut down the free competition.

    Nobody needs to come to America, find an open WiFi connection then use it to attack a government website. All they have to do is to go into a cyber cafe and use that, or dial into one of the free ISP from whereever in the world they are use that. They don't even need to leave their living rooms.
    The story is just complete crud.

  108. *COUGH* NOT WHAT I MEANT *COUGH* by sterno · · Score: 1

    No, what I'm saying is that, there shouldn't be some regulation, and that you should be able to run your network however you want. Then if somebody DOES use your network to cause havoc, you get to pay part of the price for their actions.

    Create an incetive for people to maintain security and they will.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:*COUGH* NOT WHAT I MEANT *COUGH* by pavera · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Bullshit.
      If someone steals my unlocked car and then decides to run over 50 people I'm responsible?
      If I buy a hammer, and I leave it on my porch, and someone comes and takes it and kills my neighbors, I'm responsible??
      Your logic is so faulty, hell I couldn't even strain spaghetti with it, the spaghetti would fall right through the holes.

    2. Re:*COUGH* NOT WHAT I MEANT *COUGH* by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Then if somebody DOES use your network to cause havoc, you get to pay part of the price for their actions.

      So if someone steals my car and uses in a bank robbery, i'm responsible?

      What ever happened to punishing the people that actually commited the crime?

  109. Exactly. Thank you. by Chuck+Messenger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The government is saying, quite rightly, that if you provide a conduit to the net, then you must take responsibility for that conduit.

    That's what governments do best - make sure there is accountability for whatever goes on (without regulating what goes on).

  110. Nice standard by surfcow · · Score: 1
    "If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating."

    Gosh, by that standard, running Windows helps terrorists.

    (But since Microsoft gives zillions to the GOP, we won't see much done about that. Heck, they might try to mandate running windows. Remember, laws are now being drafted directly by big business, without the cumbersum middleman of an elected representative.)

    Oops! Did I say that?

  111. Liberals and their misinterpretation of Articles by brendanoconnor · · Score: 1

    I have been reading slashdot for little under a year now. I rarely post but I do enjoy for the most part reading what others think about the stories. Often times some very insightful and useful information is posted, and other times a liberal will start to explain without any real facts to back the claim how the government is doing all this horrible stuff to take everyones rights and is passing a bunch of laws that do not make any sense and are stripping people of their rights.

    It gets rather tiresome to hear someone with extreme leftist ideas spout off about an article they did not read and then get modded up as insight when really it just trys to excite and confuse people, getting them to take action before honestly knowing what the problem is in the first place.

    If one reads the article they will see that the government is trying to get people to make a real attempt at securing their networks. They are not saying you can not run a WAP or that you will be arrested for doing so. It is saying here are some tips that someone should follow if they wish to avoid litigation. If a person runs a service they are liable for what the users of the service do. The fact that the word terrorist is thrown in at every which point is sickening but the reasons why someone should attempt to secure their networks is not.

    As for the idea that the government is stealing everyones rights in the name of homeland security, while it is not necesarily a bad thing to be paranoid, at least try to think about what exactly is being done. Most of the PATRIOT ACT actually does have some parts to it that make a great deal of sense, as well a few parts that are a bit broad. Allowing our government to have more powers to watch the citizens is not necessarily a bad thing. A certain amount of privacy should be kept but not at the cost of life. If reading someone's email saves someones life, then it was worth the invasion of privacy. I know i'm going to get killed for such a comment but its true.

    Thank you for listening to me rant on a bit.

  112. Are you all so blind? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The real reason behind canning open access wireless is this: If people can connect freely thanks to altruistic techs, they won't pay $49.99 a month to some random lobbying corporation.

    1. Re:Are you all so blind? by tigerknight · · Score: 0

      Um.. yeah, sure. Do you think I want to share /MY/ broadband connection with some unknown person who's gonna eat up my bandwidth and not help pay for it? Not bloody likely.

  113. Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just put a router or switch that do VPN behind the 802.11 access point - and there's no more problem

  114. What a coincidence. by woboz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It is recently announced that a group of companys' are joining together to provide nationwide wireless access, for a fee of course. Then the next day the government comes out trying to make it illegal to provide free internet access.
    What a big suprise.
    Netzero you better start sending money to DC or your going to be next.

  115. Re:THIS IS MARKETTING SPIN (COMETA) by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    "but it seems that anyone who opens their "pipe" to the "community" is in violation of many ISP's subscription agreements"

    Absolutely, the ISPs have long tried to detect and ban NAT Servers from their network and even tried to change the NAT protocol so they can look behind and see what network they are driving.

    However, thats a big difference between "you are in violation of your terms of use for your ISP" and "you are helping terrorists" - which is the nonsense line being pushed here.

    It seems to be COMETA pushing this, exactly the right timing for them, exactly the right location (US Market) and Intel's+IBM's+ATNT presence in this consortium indicates that Turf/Fake PR/FUD and other stuff are likely:

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/06/1259 22 %208&mode=thread&tid=95

  116. Re:Ludicrous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It's spelled LUDICROUS you FUCKWIT!
    I'm not even a native English speaker and I NEVER make that mistake.

    Fuck, O wise one. Bush hasn't got a chance -- I'm sure you'll be our next president because you're so goddamned smart.

  117. Re:Exactly. Thank you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    That's what governments do best - make sure there is accountability for whatever goes on (without regulating what goes on).

    You mean like where Bush's drunken slut of a daughter gets off scot free despite the law her daddy signed which roped in the children of the less well-connected. Man, that's my kind of accountability.

  118. what's next? by gripdamage · · Score: 3, Funny

    So how long before skateboarding is a crime?

  119. Follow the idea a bit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If opening up a wireless network is apotential for haveing it used for crime, because it is unsecured. Then people should secure their networks. OK. If we need secure networks then we also need secure computers, so you should therefore secure your computer.

    If we need secure computers to keep terrorists away, then you can't use windows.

    Support America, buy an apple, sun, or wipe windows and install linux on your machines.

    1. Re:Follow the idea a bit by tigerknight · · Score: 1

      Sure, and leaving your car unlocked (either accidentally or on purpose) is a potential for having it stolen. Same with your front door, your cell phone left on a table, your wallet loose in your back pocket, etc.

      Does that mean a law should be written about how to wear a wallet properly? Or should some public inspector walk around testing all the cars in a parking lot to see if the doors are open and the car can be stolen for a car-bomb threat?

      Sorry US Govt: FUCK YOU.

      You're right. People should have the common sense not to go walking around in public naked and not expect to get groped or possibly raped (metaphoricly speaking for 802.11 stuff). We've already got problems with 'attractive nuisance' bullshit laws and criminals who sue their victims and /WIN/. This is just another of those same stupid rules.

  120. After reading this I bet by Kurt+Russell · · Score: 1

    Orwell's RPMs have increased to at least 10,000.

    1. Re:After reading this I bet by DJPenguin · · Score: 2

      Is that some sort of distribution that's even more bloasted than RedHat??

  121. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    true!

  122. Structured networks are their own enemy. by MikeFM · · Score: 2

    Maybe the schmucks that are running the Internet show should be held responsible if their network is at risk. Open wireless networks are usually decentralized and able to withstand a network attack much more gracefully than a structured network such as a corporate LAN or even the Internet. Once all these local open wireless nets work their way into spanning the world the network will be much more robust against attack. Not that I don't love the Internet but it certainly isn't my fault if people can break it so easily.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  123. Re:Liberals and their misinterpretation of Article by MeatMan · · Score: 0

    Well, I give you two thumbs up sir, hopefully before you get flamed.
    It's a pity to see so many people throw caution to the wind for instant gratification, never thinking of anyone but themselves. Of course, it goes without saying, if any one of these Liberals lose a loved one to a terrorist act on American soil, they'll be singing a different tune... and hopefully feeling a little bit of guilt thinking about how all the other people that felt like themselves slowed the processes that might have resulted in saving their loved ones life.

  124. MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Read my comment above about the malicious intent of this jerk's sig !!! Nobody should click on this link, ever!

    1. Re:MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by rfmobile · · Score: 1
      Well, I thought it was funny.

      Warning: link spoilage ahead:

      It popped up one window which then floated all over the screen which made it hard to close. Actually it was the current window so techinically it wasn't event a popup. All the while my speakers played what sounded like a chorus singing "You are an idiot". On screen text read the same.

      Charming - I wanted to pass the link along to a friend but I see the author has edited their post.

      It did not crash my browser (Mozilla). -rick

    2. Re:MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had tried to click your "back", "backspace" or "mouse button" button it would have continued to popup more windows until it froze. I had shameful dozens of popups til my pc crapped out on me. I'm sending a letter (right now) to Rob Malda about this guy. He can pull the offending info off of a backup and verify the claim. Hopefully this will get him cancelled. Also, IE wouldn't work after the first reboot (hard drive kept spinning) and there is no trace of the site in my history folder in IE. Malicious code???

    3. Re:MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by fzammett · · Score: 1

      You see, now this is an example of why some people think IE sucks when in fact it's almost always the fault of an idiot... if you had any reasonably good popup killer running, as you always should in this day and age, this wouldn't have been a problem. I clicked the link. One window, a WAV playing, that's it. I clicked my mouse's scroll wheel (mapped to browser back) and I was out of it. No crash, no ill effect, nothing. Just a little annoying, which is a fair description of 85% of the Internet in general.

      Sure, it'd be nice if IE had a popup kller built-in ala Mozilla, but come on, we're always complaining about MS bundling stuff, here's a time when they didn't and we're going to bitch about them NOT bundling? I DON'T THINK SO!

      Before you complain about ANYTHING, stop and ask yourself "Am I an asshole?" You'll find that better than half the time the answer, if your at all honest with yourself, will be "yes", and then you won't blame this, that or the other person at all.

      --
      If a pion (n-) collides with a proton in the woods & noone is there to hear it, does lamdba decay into the source pa
    4. Re:MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for your insightful criticism. However, it wasn't IE that I was complaining (I use Mozilla, properly conifig'd, on my Linux boxes, thank you very much). I prefer my windows box (better resolution than my others) for reading text, e.g., Slashdot. I posted an poorly written initial concern, and later posted that IE wouldn't start properly after the 1st reboot. Also, the creator of that page was able to erase evidence from my pc that showed that I had visited the page (i.e., "History" folder did not have the data). I still don't know how this happened and am still concerned. So yeah, I guess I'm an asshole, but, hey, we are all assholes at one time or another. Oh, and if he wasn't "up to something" why did he edit his sig file to remove the link after I complained?

    5. Re:MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by MeatMan · · Score: 0

      It just so happened that I was screwing around with my msu.ed (Michigan State University) link shortly after commenting on this thread and now it's back to where it was pointing before. It's a joke link/site and contains no malicious coding or other paranoia inducing content... just a deviously annoying prank. I like to joke & prank, it's my nature :)
      Go ahead and copy the link and send it to your friends... they'll love you for it!

    6. Re:MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that you and your girlfriend on the page?

      http://www.msu.edu/~troyerco/

    7. Re:MODERATORS PLEEEEEZE HELP!!!!!!! by MeatMan · · Score: 0

      funny... it's not my page or site. i have no idea who that guy or the monkey is.

  125. "Domestic" security by r2ravens · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why not the department of Domestic Security? The word is even in the preamble to the constitution - "... insure domestic tranquility..."

    I'll tell you why. Because it doesn't sound as warm and fuzzy. The people who came up with "Homeland" did a lot of research. Probably even more research than is put into the search for a new business names. There were probably psychologists and sociologists and focus groups - sworn to secrecy of course. "Domestic" sounds sterile and abstract, although entirely accurate. "Homeland" is a middle-america, bread-basket term. "Keep the home fires burning", "gotta protect the 'home'". "Fatherland" would have pissed off the women - besides it's already been taken. Also remember that this was aimed at the average sixth grade level of the population.

    Just like you said, we americans don't have a "homeland". That's a term for a place where the people have lived continuously for many, many centuries. I don't think the two centuries we have been here counts. And besides, this is the "homeland" of the indigenous peoples who were here for centuries before we arrived\invaded\committed genocide on the previous inhabitants. I don't feel comfortable calling them "indians" as that name came from a navigational\perception error and "native americans" is another term imposed by the conquering people. Why should people already here name themselves after Amerigo Vespucci, a spanish invader?

    And before I get people observing that domestic security doesn't cover those americans who might reside in another country, homeland doesn't cover it either. There may be a better description to include that, but I'm sure that those who made the decision were not nearly as concerned about accuracy as they were about spin.

    The phrase "Homeland Security" pisses me off. The way Dubya says 'nuk-u-lur' pisses me off. (Actually I'm embarrassed for my country every time I hear him say it incorrectly)And the references to a (permanent - see George Orwell's 1984) "War on Terrorism" piss me off. The attacks on 9/11 were not a declaration of war, only countries can do that. They were criminal acts perpetrated by and organized group. We have plenty of laws, both domestic (RICO, etc.) and international that cover that. But to call it a criminal act and hunt down the conspirators would not have furthered the administrations agenda of restricting the constitutional rights of americans and making the middle east safe for an american pipeline to bring oil from the Balkans to the Atlantic. Is there anyone still naive enough to think that this is not about oil and american imperialism? When will we stop letting our leaders do this to us? Actually there is a really good article here about why we buy it and do it to ourselves. It talks about the 'strict father' mode of communication (Obediance to authority - Conservative\Bush) vs. the 'nurturant parent' mode (Empathy and helping others -Progressive\Clinton, for example) and how they drive the american psyche. It's worth a read.

    The actions in Korea and Viet Nam were not about human rights or freeing people, they were about industry and furthering a political agenda - wiping out 'communism'. The equivalent of an ideological pissing contest. (This info for the benefit of /. readers who are not students of history or may be too young to remember.) The first Gulf War? Not about 'freeing Kuwaitis', but about oil. Why are we going after Iraq? It has nothing to do with terrorism or security. (If the administration were really worried about who potentially has a nuclear weapon, we would be going after North Korea which has stated that it has a nuclear weapons program. And they're part of the spun-for-bloodlust-creating Axis Of Evil. Remember that one kiddies?)

    Nope, Iraq is all about oil and Daddy's wounded pride. In addition to having the one of the worlds largest reserves of oil, it's the next place where we need to put a pipeline. And don't forget that Saddam put out a contract on George Bush the first. And that Bush the first took a lot of heat about not going on into Baghdad and Removing Saddam. He took the heat even though the greatest minds of the time said it was better for middle east and world stability to leave him there.

    The U.S. action with the U.N. in Bosnia and Kosovo were primarily humanitarian actions. And under whose administration did they take place? Yup, Clinton. If there had been a republican administration in power at that time, we would not have helped. Bosnia and Kosovo have no oil or natural resources that american companies can make a profit from. Are you beginning to see a pattern here? Republican administrations go to war for business and political interests, Democrats go to war for humanitarian interests. Personally, I know which one I prefer - if it has to happen at all.

    I'm sorry if this has been a rant and off-topic (sort-of), but I just had to vent. Mod me down if you must, but engage me in discussion if you can. That is the very essence of our freedom.

    --
    War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength. - George Orwell or George Bush?
    1. Re:"Domestic" security by bnenning · · Score: 2
      You have an extremely short memory if you think infringements of civil liberties just began after 9/11. The Clinton administration in particular has very little to be proud of in this area. We encryption regulations that made people into criminal arms traffickers for pasting 4 lines of perl (which Ashcroft actually opposed), Gore's Clipper Chip which would have given the government a backdoor into every electronic communication, record numbers of non-violent drug offenders thrown in jail, and Clinton's attempt to use the Oklahoma City bombing to censor talk radio.


      (Obediance to authority - Conservative\Bush) vs. the 'nurturant parent' mode (Empathy and helping others -Progressive\Clinton, for example)


      That's an extremely simplistic characterization. There are at least two major types of conservatives; the "law and order at all costs" types which I'd agree fits Ashcroft, and the "limited government and individual liberty" psuedo-libertarians (or "South Park Republicans"). If you want to see the stark differences between them, go to Free Republic and read threads about the Patriot Act or drug legalization. It can get vicious.


      The phrase "Homeland Security" pisses me off.


      Me too. I'd actually prefer "Domestic Security"; "Homeland" sounds rather Orwellian for some reason.


      The actions in Korea and Viet Nam were not about human rights or freeing people, they were about industry and furthering a political agenda - wiping out 'communism'.


      Arguably true, but wiping out communism was a good thing whatever the motivation. Communist governments murdered tens of millions of their own citizens in the past century, and eliminating them was a great service to humanity.


      The U.S. action with the U.N. in Bosnia and Kosovo were primarily humanitarian actions.


      I'm glad you mentioned that. Saddam's record on human rights (use of chemical weapons, state-sanctioned rape and torture, etc) is far worse than anything Slobodan has been accused of. Why is there no call from the left to punish Saddam on those grounds? Does having national interests automatically preclude the US from acting?


      If there had been a republican administration in power at that time, we would not have helped.


      First, deliberately striking civilian targets (and accidentally striking more) is a curious definition of "helping". Second, the mission to provide aid to Somalia initiated by Bush I is a counterexample. Of course Clinton tried to turn it into a nation-building exercise with disastrous results, but that's another matter.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  126. I don't think you understand. by fruity1983 · · Score: 1

    The point of all the recent laws and bills is not to stop terrorists so much as it is, to quote Carlin, fuck you in the ass any time they want, as long as you let them.

    No indefinite and unjust jail time, regulation of WiFi, or reading every email will every stop terrorists from trying. And as long as they try, they will succeed occasionally.

    Does anyone think any of these laws are going to stop terrorism? Slow it down? The only way to stop terrorism, and I know I will take some flammage for this, is to redesign the foreign policies of all Western nations, not just the U.S.

    There is a reason terrorists hate us, and it's not our religion, or our surplus of freedoms. It is that we continually bomb and economically rape countries poorer than us -- bully them into submission. And, if that doesn't work, its obviously cause we haven't bombed them enough, so we bomb them some more.

    It's a vicious circle; We bomb, they bomb, we bomb, they take flying lessons, we bomb... what next?

    --
    I am a viral sig. Please copy me and help me spread. Thank you.
    1. Re:I don't think you understand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Does anyone think any of these laws are going to stop terrorism? Slow it down? The only way to stop terrorism, and I know I will take some flammage for this, is to redesign the foreign policies of all Western nations, not just the U.S.
      I'd say that the only way to stop terrorism would be to become really really poor like they are. Then they wouldn't be jealous of us.
    2. Re:I don't think you understand. by fruity1983 · · Score: 1

      No. It's not that we are richer that makes terrorists hate us, it is because we have accumulated our wealth by maintaining power over Arab nations. We are doing it right now, if you haven't noticed. We want control over all the oil in the Middle East (control not being the same as access), and we do it through economic or conventional warfare.

      If you read Osama bin Ladens letters to us (or whoever's they are, it is irrelevant), you see that he doesn't care so much about religious or quality of life differences. He makes numerous references to retaliatory motives. Religion is only his vessel of deployment.

      --
      I am a viral sig. Please copy me and help me spread. Thank you.
  127. How does it feel to be at the crossroads? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever read a history book about some significant period and wonder what a person felt while living in such times? Here is your chance. This is definitly history. At some point in the future some kids are reading about us at this very moment. And maybe they're wondering what it feels like to be us.

    Well kids, we're doing the best we can. At least those of us who aren't watching 4 hours of television a day, or playing games all day. Some of us understand that the brain can only keep track of a limited number of things at a given amount of time. Filling up the head with television and sports means there is less room in the head for paying attention to reality. And this is a time when it is very important to be paying attention to reality.

    And it is true about television. The people here really do like watching it. And they still watch it when given indisputable proof of behavioral control methods being a central part of most all of it. The television companies using medical science to bludgeon the viewers into buying things and to accept propoganda. This is the most common form of "entertainment" here. for many, it's their only source of companionsip. My friend, the brainwashing box. And yes many people are miserable, is it no surprise?

    Anyway, you can probably tell I don't like television. Now you can say there was at least one person in history who wasn't stupid enough to get sucked into such an idiot way of passing the time. Hope your having fun in the future, it's sort of fun here sometimes. And yes, interesting times suck more than regular times.

    All the best,
    AC from 2002

  128. Re:who let the wogs in? by noshellswill · · Score: 0

    What's wrong? Do you think American style liberty is everybodies prize ... or is it despised , in fact has been. It terrifies the Euro-emotocents, and plenty of wogs been let in would prefer big-chief-Allah piss all over it, that liberty. Lock-N-load, baby ...

  129. Time flies by yem · · Score: 2

    Since being named special advisor to the president for cyberspace security last year, Clarke has stressed wireless access points as a national security threat.

    Ten years ago, who would have thought we'd hear phrases like that in the popular press.

    --
    No, I did not read the f***ing article!
  130. Politicians don't read Slashdot by GrouchoMarx · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I've read a lot of posts on this thread b&ming about how stupid the administration is. Guess what, folks. THIS IS THE GOVERNMENT THAT WE ELECTED. The US is still a democracy. Congressmen don't buy the election, the use campaign contributions to buy commercials that sway the opinions of mass numbers of people to support them. YOU are those people. On election day, it is YOU who punches the little hole in the ballot, and YOU who puts every single one of those 500-odd people in Congress in office, as well as the President. If you don't like it, get off your damned ass, close your web browser, and take control of your own government.

    How many people here even know how their own representaives voted on Homeland Security? For the record, here is the official list of who in Congress voted for and against the creation of Homeland Security:
    House Roll Call
    Senate Roll Call

    (Interesting note, Senator Hollywood voted against. There are no permanent allies, only permanent interests.)

    Is your senator in favor of Homeland Security? Are you? If the answer to those is not the same, then write a one page letter to your senator expressing your extreme displeasure with his/her actions. No, not tomorrow, not when you have time, RIGHT F*ING NOW! Fax it or snail mail it to their local office. (Not their federal office, snail mail doesn't get through there any more due to extended antrax checks.) They represent YOU! If they're not doing it right, make it clear to them.

    Is your congressman in favor of Homeland Security? Are you? If the answer to those is not the same, then write a one page letter to your congressman expressing your extreme displeasure with his/her actions. No, not tomorrow, not when you have time, RIGHT F*ING NOW! Fax it or snail mail it to their local office. They represent YOU! If they're not doing it right, make it clear to them.

    But what if they did vote the way you wanted them to? WRITE THEM A LETTER OF THANK YOU! Everyone likes positive feedback from the people who control their job. If your senator was one of the nine dissenters, thank them for standing up for what is right! Include with the snail mail letter a check (not cash) for $100 to their campaign fund. Polticians speak two languages; votes and money. Speak your mind in both, in enough numbers, and they WILL listen.

    While you're at it, write a short OpEd for the local newspaper. Short, sweet, to the point. Maybe they'll publish it, maybe they won't, but they definitely won't if you don't send it.

    This is a democracy. Your government SPEAKS FOR YOU! Your representatives represent YOU. Remind them of it. Daily. Make them scared shitless of losing their job if they cross you. Their first thought when they wake up should be "am I pissing off the people who vote for me?" Their last thought before going to bed should be "am I pissing off the people who vote for me?" As a voter, it is YOUR PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY to see to it that those who claim to represent you actually do.

    250,000 Slashdot voters is 500 times the difference in Florida in 2000, for a Presidential election. Imagine the sheer power of that electorate in congressional elections, if only it would get up off its collective ass and do something.

    The Patriot Act of 2001 labels many so-called computer crimes "terrorism." I openly state, I am a terrorist. I seek to instill terror in the hearts of my government of trampling on my freedoms, or of voting against my will. I seek to make my government live in fear of me and my power over them. I seek to give George W. Bush nightmares of crossing me.

    I am a voter. Are you?

    --

    --GrouchoMarx
    Card-carrying member of the EFF, FSF, and ACLU. Are you?

    1. Re:Politicians don't read Slashdot by Toy+G · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Totally agree with you. As an european citizen, I find myself absolutely powerless about many political issues regarding technology (e.g. the ICANN problem).I would like to remember to american citizens how they have the power *and the responsibility* to change this fucking world *for the better*.

      The USA are the third-millennium version of the Roman empire, like it or not, and as roman citizens you can choose between Republic and Caesar. As it is, you are following a dictator-to-be.

      --
      -- Let's go Viridian.
    2. Re:Politicians don't read Slashdot by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      As a voter, it is YOUR PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY to see to it that those who claim to represent you actually do.

      Don't think of it as "you are in office to represent me, so dammit, do what I say." Your letter writing campaign shouldn't be just to say "this is what I feel, now represent me." You should be working to educate your representatives, not tell them what to do. Tell them why these things are bad (or good).

      They already have enough letters from people saying "represent me, do what I tell you." Give them something they can use to make up their own mind with, don't just send them something that'll end up as a tick-mark under the "those in favor of issue XYZ" column.

    3. Re:Politicians don't read Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But first: I vote.
      Now, voters suck, because voters are simply digested forms of the garbage fed to us by the elite who have taken over our FREE system. Voters are inoculted since birth voluntarily with TV, state run news, social adherence policy, fear and mass stupidity. I am a vet (ArE YoU?) And I will always be available to fight for the Constitution and Bill of Rights. You are so wrong in thinking voters count. Sure the votes themselves count, but the price is cheap to get mindelss people to vote anyway they need to. Once the electronic voting system is in place, it won't matter of course. Our country has been taken over. How? Why? Because they can. It's a free country, and it's free for the taking. Now, recall, George Washington and and his brilliant gang of terrorists (In the description by the Patriot Act) says: "Forget voting, wipe the slate clean and start over with it. It's your duty to do this when things get FUBAR." Do I have to actully show you that or have you already read it? Anyways, I think a good ass kicking is in order, sometime words and discussion are just a waste of time. Geeze, Dickless Cheney is HOLED up in the White House, locked doors and all, avoiding a court ordered writ for his shennanigans at Halliburton. What a country.

      http:\\www.infowars.com

    4. Re:Politicians don't read Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a democracy. Your government SPEAKS FOR YOU!

      Either a troll, or naive. Our elected officials don't represent us to the government, but the government to us.
      Writing letters ... shit. Form a PAC and get wise to it kid. Let money do your talkin, and if that doesn't work break out the old smith and wesson and take down a few before they come and get you.

  131. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I agree with you up to the point where you brought in the tried and tired Big Brother rhetoric of the unhealthily paranoid.


    "Homeland Security" does want to create a situation where everything is traceable, and they wouldn't be able to do it, if it wasn't for the fact that they could bully ISPs and telcos into compliance.

    Are you really unable to construct two sequential sentences which don't contradict each other?

  132. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Press? Heh. Where did we rank in free journalism again?

    As a former honcho of CNN just pointed out two days ago in a PBS interview, CNN and the rest were formerly NEWS organizations. They are all now subsidiaries of ENTERTAINMENT conglomerates who, in his exact words, "don't give a damn about journalism." He resigned from one of CNN's top jobs when a memo was circulated from the head of AOL-TW that, whenever there was a mention of reasons why some people did not like the US, there must be an accompanying reminder of what happened to the US on 9/11. He was simply unable to brook that kind of intrusion into the news department.

  133. boats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't they tell us all to stop using cars too? Cars are very insecure and a terrorist can easily break into one and use it to transport themselves,their bomb or whatever (data) over the highways (superhighway of the internet ;)

    Or boats because boats are pretty insecure too.

    I agree with what someone said earlier. It's starting already. The Homeland Security department has only been around for like a week or two? and already they are bought and paid for by the big internet companies.

    It just doesn't make much sense otherwise. The internet is *EASY* to use even without open wireless networks. If they aren't being paid to do this, then it's simply a case of "we're run by the morons none of the other departments wanted."

  134. No knee-jerking, please. This is an opportunity. by mesozoic · · Score: 2

    Nobody can honestly blame the government for being concerned about network security. They recognize a valid threat to a growing part of our country's infrastructure, and geek ethics be damned, they're probably going to want to do something about it.

    The article does well to point out that the verdict is not yet in; the Feds have yet to figure out what should be done.

    If ever there were an opportunity to demonstrate to the Powers That Be the inherent value of OSS/FS, this is it.

    The Office of Homeland Security, bureaucratic as it may be, is going to be looking at this issue carefully. There's a good chance they will decide, "We can't issue mandates to private businesses, but we can set internal policy, and we can make recommendations." Suppose the Office recommended OSS/FS platforms, as opposed to proprietary software, precisely because of its security strengths. They might even be convinced of the need for extra funding to OSS/FS security-based groups.

    I think this battlefield, the struggle to win the heart of Tom Ridge, could turn out to be far more important to the OSS/FS communities than the fight for the desktop.

  135. Re:Liberals and their misinterpretation of Article by tigerknight · · Score: 3, Insightful

    First of all, the single target of 'liberals' is pretty darn close minded of you. Second, the government really is doing a bunch of horrible things (detainees that haven't been declared POW's anyone?). Third, what do you think "we're going to start regulating" means? If you don't do it their way you will be told to change it or they will shut you down.. that's how regulations work ya know.

    The government is doing it's damndest to whip people into a patriotic fever so that they willingly give up their rights and not appear to be 'taking' them - /that's/ the reason behind the use of 'terrorist' and other such buzzwords. Who on earth would want to disagree with a bill that would get past if it labels them as someone who's pro-terrorist?

    Patriot Act allows the government to detain people without legal counsel, without being accused of an actual crime, and many other things that go completely opposite of everything this country has tried to be so far to date. And lets not forget the Citizen Corps, where the government sets up tip hotlines for people to call in their neighbors for suspected dangerous activities.

    You're right: 'homeland security' in the sense of the ability to protect our nation from threats (internal or external) is important, but at what point does it stop being a free state and start being some quasi fascist state? Mail is mail is mail. It's against the law for them to open a piece of snail-mail sent to someone unless they have good cause to do it (and good cause is not 'hey this guy has a middle eastern last name - lets check up on him'), so why the fuck should email be any different?

    Honestly the answer to that one is simple: because they can and no one will know it. Sniffing packets and logging traffic is a lot easier than searching through mail without making it look tampered - that doesn't make it any less a piece of mail that is personal and NOT something they should stick their nose in without some damn good reason.

    Anyway, there's my counter rant and not really meant to be a flame aside from the first paragraph.

  136. Re:Forget WiFi,there's no right to keep and bear a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So basically you're saying we should have instead elected the fascist bastard who was running against Davis, right? Fuck you very much.

  137. Just remember, kids.... by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 2



    Whenever you buy gasoline, youre supporting terrorism.

    Cheers,

    --
    Bowie J. Poag

  138. It's not just America by Morgaine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't think it's just America that's gone to pot.

    This is happening everywhere where there are politicians, because the Internet and all computing and advances in communications are undermining the power that governments once had in being able to monitor and control their subjugate populations. The idiocy which you see is a response to their belated realization of the new freedoms which people have acquired over the last few years, their panicked attempt to regain control. All the bogeymen are being deployed, "Stop Terrorism", "Protect the Children", even "Safeguard your Culture" in many places.

    So, since the highest level of security is so important to them, comply: use the strongest encryption possible, everywhere. This will of course also make your systems unbreachable and unmonitorable by them as well. Oh dear. :-)

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  139. Trying to prevent legitimate political change by goingware · · Score: 2
    Anonymous free speech is one of the cornerstones of our democracy.

    Sometimes people have things to say that the government doesn't want anyone to hear.

    For them to be able to say it, they need to feel safe from reprisals.

    People being able to post stuff on the net through an open wireless access point is one way that one can say something important without fear of official retribution.

    For example, one could blow the whistle, anonymously, on a crime that has been committed by a government official. Reports of such official crime, for example presidential employees wiretapping the opposing political party, have already been enough to cause a regime change in the U.S. - most slashdotters are too young to remember but Dubya is old enough.

    Most methods of internet access (such as all those AOL CDs) leave audit trails. They may not be able to prevent people from posting to the net, but they can track them down and either imprison or kill the posters afterwards, and to a large extent, the knowledge of that possibility is enough to prevent many people from speaking out.

    So let me suggest that a good way to ensure a free and fair presidential election in 2004 would be to remove the password from your wireless access point.

    Thank you for your attention.

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
  140. Politicians are merely a symptom of our system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its a very simple system, really. The people who put politicians in power (voters) all have to work for a living. As such, they have very little time to scrutinize who they vote for.

    As such, the only politicians who get voted for are the ones who are good at telling busy people what they want to hear (lower taxes, better governance, more freedom, less responsibility, more security, etc). The ones who say "Take a moment to listen to me explain why lower taxes will result in reduced government expendature on law enforcement" are booed right off the stage.

    Not that any other system would be any better, mind you. If the lowest-common-denominator of a society (that is to say, the vast majority of the society) doesn't have what it takes to hold their leaders accountable for their actions...then that society will always have corrupt leaders all the time.

    And this is my OPTIMISTIC view of the situation.

    $0.02

  141. building security != network security by nounderscores · · Score: 2

    Read the international building code. and the international residential code.

    the interesting thing is that there's even regulations about what kind of security you are prohibited from putting on your building.

    The thing is though building security != network security. while door locks and building alarm systems and indeed buildings themselves are well understood, the wireless network and the way we want to use it is new and evolving.

    Imagine if you were trapped by an earthquake under tonnes of microwave transparent material, and the only thing in your little coffin shaped cavity was your fully charged and still operational laptop. You fire up snort and find a wireless lan and then attempt to contact the admin...

    Network security could be a matter of life and death.

    1. Re:building security != network security by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 2
      Imagine if you were trapped by an earthquake under tonnes of microwave transparent material, and the only thing in your little coffin shaped cavity was your fully charged and still operational laptop. You fire up snort and find a wireless lan and then attempt to contact the admin...


      Well, if you're going to use that argument then all businesses should have a cell phone antenna within the building to make sure you can call 911. That's silly.

    2. Re:building security != network security by blincoln · · Score: 2

      Imagine if you were trapped by an earthquake under tonnes of microwave transparent material, and the only thing in your little coffin shaped cavity was your fully charged and still operational laptop. You fire up snort and find a wireless lan and then attempt to contact the admin...

      Network security could be a matter of life and death.

      Didn't you just invalidate your own argument? By that logic all wireless networks should be open, so that if I'm ever trapped by an earthquake while visiting another company I can use their network to contact help.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
  142. The politicians do not understand by panurge · · Score: 3, Interesting
    ...what is going on. Forget Bush, who seems just to be a mental underperformer (many countries have done well when their Royal Families collectively lacked the IQ of a seaslug in a jar of alcohol), I suspect the real problem is that the people in power are many years behind an understanding of where technology has actually been going. While technologists have been following Moore's Law, the politicians and the bureaucracy have been following a linear path of increased understanding, dropping behind the curve more and more each year. (And FBI agents are lawyers, basically the most reactionary profession of the lot.)
    Now suddenly they are being asked to do something other than obtain campaign donations and talk crap on TV. And they have not the slightest idea what to do. When a politican or a civil servant doesn't know what to do, what is the reaction? Find something that people are doing, and stop it. It is so much easier to ban something than to think of a positive action.

    The posters who are making jokes about banning telephones and coats are not actually that far off the mark. In the Soviet Union, that dangerous instrument the typewriter required a licence, and all official typewriters had their fingerprint taken by the KGB so that any typed document could be traced to the original machine. As for photocopiers, each one had its KGB operative to control access. We now seem to be heading for a government policy of achieving basically the same thing electronically. In the long term, it is likely to be about as successful.

    The big problem is, who is going to educate the politicians? Or do we need to find a way to replace them with younger, better educated ones who might actually have a clue about the modern world?

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
    1. Re:The politicians do not understand by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

      The big problem is, who is going to educate the politicians?

      I can't believe this is being asked!

      Who? YOU ARE!

      Politicians by their very nature do not have an education in every single subject in the world. They are there to do what they can to serve the interests of their constituents, and got elected on that basis.

      Most likely, they are not technically savvy.

      It is the responsibility of their constituents to ensure that they are educated about every piece of legislation or issue of the week. If you think that perhaps your representative might not have a firm grasp on a given subject, or might be making decisions based solely on the education they are receiving from a party that has an ulterior motive (e.g. RIAA, MPAA, .gov), you really need to step up and provide them with the missing facts.

      For many representatives, it can take less time to e-mail them than it does for you to post a comment to Slashdot. Or you can take a few minutes more and write them a real letter (addresses are available at that same link).

      Stop whining about how your representatives are uneducated about a specific knowledge area. Educate them!

  143. public != insecure. by nounderscores · · Score: 2

    Public libraries - usually requires library card with name and address on record. otherwise the person at the loans desk will have seen you. That's part of how they caught that big identity theft guy.

    kinkos - never used it myself. Is there a security camera behind the desk?

    hotel room - the clerk saw you, and would probably identify you in a line up. Happens to people all the time.

    Tourist information center - clerk and camera.

    Airport lounge - you probably have an air plane ticket. Interpol is great at tracking those. using a fake name/passport just makes them feel like it's going to be a good day.

    Highway rest stop - actually this might be a pretty good one. The only thing I can think of is taking biometric evidence like a fingerprint off the coin you fed it. unless there's a clerk and camera.

    internet cafe - clerk and camera.

    cable company kiosks - Do you mean those kiosks which stand in the middle of the street? They usually are very crippled in their interface. you can't even run ping. I dunno. Maybe you might be able to exploit them.

    1. Re:public != insecure. by mangu · · Score: 2
      Has it ever occurred to you that there's this kind of access in other countries than the USA?


      There has been many comments here about the porous borders of the USA, but digital borders are infinitely more porous than the physical borders.

    2. Re:public != insecure. by ErikZ · · Score: 2

      Actually, I took a trip this summer to check out Colorado. To see if I liked the place before moving there.

      NONE of the public libraries required that I had a library card to use their public internet terminals. Including the main one in Denver.

      Out of curiosity, what the heck is a terrorist going to do with internet access that we're so afraid of?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    3. Re:public != insecure. by W+Parasyte · · Score: 1

      About Kinko's...

      The Kinko's in my town doesn't appear to have cameras in the computer area. Each computer virtually has its own cubicle, and the window by the computer area is completely covered up. You don't need to provide any sort of ID. The only possible problem is that there are cameras aiming elsewhere in the building, and you do have to pay a clerk for the computer time.

      In any case, counting on access regularly from the same place is a bad idea overall, especially from an internet cafe where a clerk will be more wary of that kind of thing. Just never visit the same place twice, and look and act like anyone else.

      --
      -- Your IP is showing
    4. Re:public != insecure. by ncc74656 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      cable company kiosks - Do you mean those kiosks which stand in the middle of the street? They usually are very crippled in their interface. you can't even run ping. I dunno. Maybe you might be able to exploit them.

      If they're running IE (or a browser built on the IE engine), all you need is some useful binaries squirreled away on a webserver to do whatever you want with their computer. Security settings are almost always such that you can run untrusted EXEs. At Comdex, I ran PuTTY off of my home webserver so I could check my mail. There's no reason I couldn't have stashed some malware ahead of time and run that.

      (Mozilla, OTOH, won't let you do that. It'll prompt you to save the file someplace. If "Run...", "Command Prompt", and IE are removed from the Start menu and Windows-R is trapped (it's a keyboard shortcut for Start|Run...), good luck getting your downloaded file to run...assuming that you can find a directory that'll let you save your file. (One college lab had "Run..." and "Command Prompt" removed from its machines, but opening IE and giving c:\winnt\system32\cmd.exe as the URL gave me a command prompt.))

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    5. Re:public != insecure. by j3ss · · Score: 1

      You are scared that the security cameras will catch you, so wear a bunch of really thick bulky clothing, a wig, a fake beard, sunglasses, put a rock in your shoe so that you change your gait, changing your looks temporarily is not that hard to do.

    6. Re:public != insecure. by DickBreath · · Score: 2

      Has it ever occurred to you that there's this kind of access in other countries [cybercity-online.net] than the USA?

      Well, then, now that you've mentioned it, the dept. of homeland security needs to quickly regulate the access in those other countries.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    7. Re:public != insecure. by Ryandav · · Score: 2

      I dont think so much that its necessarily something that we are afraid of, per se, but here's how the resoning breaks out: The Internet has been declared a national resource or "Critical Infrastructure" or whatever.

      This means someone in the Government gets paid to sit there and worry about "the Internet" and all the things we might want to protect that are accessible online. Think infrastructure, not national secrets, and you get the idea.

      So, its not that the idea of terrorists with anonymous internet access is so bad (which is good since as has been pointed out, its not something we could stop anyway). I think the point that people are missing is that the bigger size pipe you have, the larger threat you are to whatever it is we are trying to protect. Internet cafes and standalone kiosks and library terminals are unlikely to be able to effectively conduct a large scale DOS attack (although you could have one set up and "start" it from there), whereas the average corporate lan gives you quite a larger pipe to blast from.

      In addition to this, there's no way to automate exploiting open library access, whereas (an extremely unlikely) well coordinated terrorist group could indeed automate the process of gaining access and launching zombie clients, and when these WAPs are unsecured, thats as easy as walking up to the building next door with a laptop. So as much as I disagree that it is likely that any of this will ever happen, I think I understand why these are a concern. The same reason Code Red gets away with causing so much damage is because its so simple its automatic, and because its target is a widely distributed platform likely to be hooked up to a nice fat pipe.

      it all depends what size stick you carry.

      --
      Check my Go-related blog for beginners: DGD
    8. Re:public != insecure. by mosch · · Score: 2
      Those silly terrrists believe that if they've succeeded in harming the Zionist infidels, that they've helped bring all glory to Allah, and death will only result in an eternity in paradise, with gardens, vineyards, fountains, young boys, high-bosomed virgins, and a 100% free whoremart for those times when they've realized that virgins make for lousy fucks.

      A camera ain't gunna do shit.

    9. Re:public != insecure. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's something you might try. It's an idea I had awhile back but haven't had the chance to try yet. It should even be cross-platform.

      Get into the edit/preferences or equivalent in the web broswer. Add a new MIME association for some type you've established ahead of time. Set the helper application to be cmd.exe, or xterm, or whatever applies for the system in question.

      Then hit your system at home which has been configured to throw back a dummy file with that MIME type set. If you're lucky, the web browser will pop up a window asking if you want to open the URL with the helper program, and then you're off.

      This doesn't work if you can't get into the prefs menus, but you get the idea.

      We've come a long way from the days of the early 90s when you could call up 1-2-3 at the American Airlines lounge and drop into DOS through the menus. I did that at Dulles once and found that someone had been there before me and had left a note for the admins explaining how to close it.

    10. Re:public != insecure. by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      *Public libraries - usually requires library card with name and address on record. otherwise the person at the loans desk will have seen you. That's part of how they caught that big identity theft guy.*

      Really - and if "you" are actually three other people who come in at various times with phony ID?

      Or you just hack the library computer on the spot? Not all of them are visible from the loan desk - not at City College of San Francisco...

      *hotel room - the clerk saw you, and would probably identify you in a line up. Happens to people all the time.*

      And he's going to ID you six months later - that does not happen to people all the time... Or someone else rented the room and left the key for you to pick up so the clerk never saw YOU...

      Terrorists have their ways, pal. Your simplistic notions of security have been circumvented a million times.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    11. Re:public != insecure. by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      You can walk into CompUSA here in San Francisco and (after waiting in line for half an hour) access any of their Macs or PCs set up for Net access so you can see how wonderful their machines are - and you can do so totally as an anonymous customer that I assure you NO clerk will remember five minutes after you leave - if they even noticed you at all when you came in...

      Of course, you only get 15 minutes at the machine - plenty of time to send your "commit" message to your team to set off the nuke...

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    12. Re:public != insecure. by AME · · Score: 2
      Out of curiosity, what the heck is a terrorist going to do with internet access that we're so afraid of?

      Talk to my fellow terrorists, of course! With every one of the listed access points, there is the possibility that someone could identify me.

      If I'm using the public library frequently to contact my partners, the authorities at least have a lead on where they ought to be watching for me.

      If I am using someone's wireless, nobody has to see my face at all. And if they trace the messages back to their source, the schmuck who owns the wireless hub gets hassled and still nobody's seen my face. I'll just go and tap one of the many other open wireless networks.

      --
      "I have a good idea why it's hard to verify programs. They're usually wrong." --Manuel Blum, FOCS 94
    13. Re:public != insecure. by AME · · Score: 2
      you can do so totally as an anonymous customer that I assure you NO clerk will remember five minutes after you leave

      Ah! But there are security cameras at CompUSA. So the Feds, having determined that the dispatch in question came from a particular store at a particular time can go and check the tapes to see if they happened to catch a glimpse of the person using the internet machines just then.

      --
      "I have a good idea why it's hard to verify programs. They're usually wrong." --Manuel Blum, FOCS 94
    14. Re:public != insecure. by morie · · Score: 2

      Sometimes it's just to simple: try right-clicking on a desktop to create a shortcut to cmd.exe. It is sometimes allowed!

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
    15. Re:public != insecure. by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2
      Or try "File/Save As" to get a mini-explorer file browser up. Then browse to the file you want to run, e.g. cmd.exe, right-click/"open" it, and you are away.

      It's almost too easy...

  144. undermines the trust of intelligent people? by alizard · · Score: 2

    I think the evidence for the existence of hydrinos is better than evidence that intelligent people have ever trusted the Bush Administration.

  145. If they really wanted to fix insecure networks... by alizard · · Score: 2
    Holding people legally responsible and financially liable for the damage their hacked Windoze boxes do as zombies and open relays connected to cablemodems and companies legally and financially responsible for the damage their unpatched IIS servers do when r00ted would clean up the Internet a lot faster than "black helicopter" crap about EVIL WARDRIVING TERRORISTS. It would also drastically reduce the spam problem as well.

    When companies discover that not bringing their servers up to "best practices" standards doubles their insurance premiums and that running IIs with half-competent MCSEs is an expensive luxury for them as well as the rest of us and broadband home users running open relay boxes get sued, the word to "tighten up or else" will get around real fast.

    It isn't just open access Wi-Fi ports that are the problem. Yes, these things should default to "secure" out of the box. However, cablemodem setups should also come with firewalls installed out of the box as well.

  146. MOD PARENT UP. by alizard · · Score: 2
    The good news is that there's an opposing precedent from one of the other appeals courts, this decision may be cited elsewhere but is only binding on the 9th Circuit jurisdiction.

    This also means that sooner or later, this will probably wind up being resolved at the Supreme Court level.

  147. Reminds me of an Onion article by minesweeper · · Score: 2
    FAA Considering Passenger Ban:

    WASHINGTON, DC--Seeking to address "the number-one threat to airline security," the Federal Aviation Administration announced Monday that it will consider banning passengers on all domestic and international commercial flights.

    "In every single breach of security in recent years, whether it was an act of terrorism or some other form of crime, it was a passenger who subverted the safety systems on board the aircraft or in the terminal," FAA administrator Marion Blakey said. "Even threats that came in the form of explosives inside baggage were eventually traced back to a ticketed individual. As great a revenue source as they have been, passengers simply represent too great a risk to the airline industry."

    Under the proposed reforms, the FAA would institute a strict ban on adult passengers, passengers 18 and under, international travelers, and domestic customers. A battery of questions and ID checks will be used to determine whether an individual is a pilot, flight attendant, or federal security officer--the only humans who will be allowed to board an aircraft flying within or headed for the U.S.

    ...

    I thought I'd never have to hear about such twisted logic outside the bounds of a satire publication.
    1. Re:Reminds me of an Onion article by noweb4u · · Score: 1

      scary when an onion article seems all too real, isn't it? :-)

  148. ACLU by saihung · · Score: 2

    I read your page, and remembered that I always meant to join the ACLU, but never got around to it. Well, I'm a member now. Thanks for the link.
    I find it amazing that belonging to an organization whose only stated purpose is defending the Constitution - the same oath that the President takes, I might add - is considered a legitimate point for attack by many in this country.

  149. Great. Now I'm a criminal. by megaduck · · Score: 2

    This is ridiculous. I've been running an open AP at home for over a year now, quite on purpose. If you want my bandwidth then have at it. I'm not using it 99% of the time, so have fun. If you hack my machine (good luck!) then you now 0wn all my porn, to-do lists, and pictures from Europe. Enjoy.

    I'm well aware of the ramifications of running an open AP and I do it anyways. Now this makes me a criminal? That's just insane. I'm going to be a fucking felon, just because I let somebody check their e-mail on my dime?

    Alright, say I buckle and secure my home network. What are they going to do to my employer? I work at a fucking school. Providing free bandwidth is part of my job. Are they going to lock down my computer labs? Are we going to run background checks on all of our students? Are we going to have to close our doors because the public is too dangerous to be allowed near a computer?

    I am pissed beyond all reason at this. Secure wi-fi is fine and dandy, but sometimes access needs to be free.

    --
    This .sig for rent.
  150. In Iraq by the_bean42 · · Score: 1

    ....they sing patriotic songs about Saddam. And they are told that iraq is the best country in the world.

    Hmm makes you wonder.

    1. Re:In Iraq by mizhi · · Score: 3, Insightful
      ....they sing patriotic songs about Saddam. And they are told that iraq is the best country in the world.

      Hmm makes you wonder.



      In Iraq they do this to you.

      --
      Humorless sig goes here.
    2. Re:In Iraq by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go on.

      Get back to me after they anally rape you with a broken bear bottle and dip you acid, fuckwit.

  151. So what to do? by bgfay · · Score: 2
    I know that we can write letters to our representatives and senators. I know that we can make phone calls to them. I know that we can send email, but I also know that that's looked upon as the least effective way of getting their attentions. Is there something more that we can do to make this a known situation? If there is a large group of people who understand how dangerous many of these homeland security measures are, and they make noise, the poll-driven political system will roll some of these things back. But if we don't get that large group (larger than /. readers) together, and if we don't make noise, then the whole "we're at war" nonsense spewing out of W's mouth will scare the sheep into giving up rights they don't know that they need. So, my questions are these:
    • Is someone helping to create this large group?
    • If so, how do the rest of us get involved?
    • If not, how do we start one?
    • Does anyone have a better idea how to stop these measures?
    --
    Yeah, I'm as old as my UID would suggest.
    1. Re:So what to do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the poll-driven political system will roll some of these things back


      You seem to be confused. Bill Clinton is gone.
      Polls drive democrats. Money drives republicans.
  152. America and freedom - now the newest oxymoron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reality is that the American people, as individuals, have lost their courage. The government prefers it that way as a fearful people are easier to rule than a courageous one. But Americans don't wish to lose their self-image of courage. So, when confronted with a situation demanding courage, in the form of a government gone wrong, the American people simply pretend that the situation does not exist.

    http://www.cam.net.uk/home/nimmann/peace/hitler. ht m

  153. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tracing communications to repress dissent I think is a little far-fetched. If they are excited about tracing all of the communications then it will be for the most important reason that a government does anything---to ensure that it can collect the taxes that it feels it has a right to. ``You wouldn't want anything unfortunate to happen to your place of business. A fire perhaps, ...''

  154. Re:Regulation is bad? inevitable? by fw3 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    If it's my network and my bandwidth I have every right to do with it as I please.

    Subject to your ISP's acceptable use policy. The concept of acceptable use is much like speed limits; completely ignore them and eventually other isp's will shut you off.

    About speed limits, first that depends a whole lot on where you are, on either coast of the US, yes folks typically exceed the posted limit by 10-15 mph, otoh in AZ/MX nearly all traffic travels 10-15 mph under the (70mph) limit, while in the midwest I've found that people pretty much mark the posted limits.

    However, you're not allowed on the road at all without maintaining your vehicle to safety and emissions standards, and (except in a few states) getting tagged at 90MPH+ earns both a stiff fine and a nasty hike in insurance rates.

    I for one have darned little patience for irresponsible morons running insecure networks / systems that are a haven for script kiddies. So while the particular name on the problem today is terrorism, I pretty much welcome actual enforcement of some minimum standards of competence.

    Because tracking an attacker who's grabbed onto an open AP is effectively *far* more difficult than other avenues, sorry but I think moves in this direction are probably a pretty good idea.

    But then if it were up to me MCSE's wouldn't be allowed anywhere near a live 'net connection ;-).

    --
    Linux is Linux, if One need clarify their dist: <Dist>/GNU Linux
    bsds are of course just BSD
  155. Uggggh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a pile of crap. Its about time people wake up and smell the shit the current gov. is shoveling.

  156. Sure, for now.. by Lysol · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You are absolutely correct. However, politicians may steal as much as they can, but it's the people that still elect them. Only when the masses wake up will things change. And unfortunately, throughout history, this has rarely happened until after the point of no return.

    What you list above is an admirable way to protect the 'homeland' but it still misses the main problem. Check out Usama's letter on what his reasoning is. We were founded on the premise of religious tolerance. However, there are elements linked to the government through the current administration that are now just as bad as Usama himself. Extremist conservtives drunk with intolerance of any religion other than Christianity and set on enforcing their view of morality on the rest of the world - just like Usama. Only difference is that they have the worlds largest military and corporations to back it up.

    When and if we correct this problem, will there be no or little reason to monitor our borders and ports - except maybe to keep others away from prosperity (which sounds odd if you think about it). But for now, I fear you're correct and we are already starting to see ridiculous examples of democracy gone awry.

    1. Re:Sure, for now.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll tell you when the masses wake up, when we institute the draft.

      I've had several discussions with coworkers about this too. I'm not going to go fight and die in some godforsaken country so that my mom can live in a country where if she gets raped she can't get an abortion. I'm not going to fight to defend a country that harbors terrorists then tells other countries "you're with us or against us". I'm not going to fight to defend a country that spends billions to build the bomb, billions to put a man on the moon, then won't spend billions to resolve our dependence on foriegn oil.

      When they come for me I will be sandbagged in my home, and I swear I will shoot an MP in the face before they drag me off to fight for ideals I don't believe in. Come and get me.

    2. Re:Sure, for now.. by sc2_ct · · Score: 1

      I'll get some enemies for this, but I'll say it anyway. I am a christian, and a jihad (holy war) has been declared on me. If people are so willing to hate me, and to kill people like me based on my religion, then I feel absolutely no compunction to "sympathize" or "tolerate". A holy war has been declared. Great. What am I going to do, just sit back and watch building burn, planes explode, and see children gunned down in the streets because they are christian? No. I have no problem what so ever with people from the middle east, or from anywhere for that matter. I do not have a problem with islam, or any other religion. But these extremists who want to kill jews and christians? To hell with 'em. Let 'em fry. As to 802.11x being related to terrorism any more that a payphone is, that is just a joke. You notice that in the article above they mentioned officials from the telecomm industry? Don't you think that AT&T would be involved to some small degree in this? They are the ones that recently announced that they want to put a paid Wi-Fi net up. They're just trying to cut out the competition, by taking advantage of the publics ignorance and fear, as well as their political influence.

  157. Crime to run insecure networks... by OldStash · · Score: 1

    But what's insecure?

    Is a network insecure if the average Joe Coffee can break in?
    Is it insecure if the average IT worker can break in?
    Is it insecure if the l33t H@x0r5 can break it?


    Considering any terrorist worth his salt will only employ the best, I guess it's the last option. So now if a network is compromised both the hacker and the victim are criminals...

    Glad I'm not living in the states.

  158. Ok so let me ask.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How the hell did that terrorist get close enough to my house to use my AP? Shouldn't the office of homeland security stopped him at the border?

    -M

  159. Isn't if tunny tho by Lysol · · Score: 4, Insightful

    how when we really need regulation, like keeping all the cable companies out of the internet business (net control + content ownership = lost rights and caps) the gov is keen to look the other way?

    We're not far off from more examples of Starbucks-taking-over-wifi-everywhere. R.I.P. free and open networks.

  160. The Point is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    alot of people here dont get the point "If you let your daugher run around naked, should you be supprised if someone throws her to the ground and does her?"

  161. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t gg kthx bye!

  162. Sponsored by IBM, AT&T and Intel by Kiev() · · Score: 1

    IBM, AT&T and Intel Plan National Wireless ISP Well now we know how they plan to deal with free competition

  163. Seriously is it that hard? by The+Prophet+Jesse · · Score: 1
    "There's just not a lot of technology out there right now that can be used to secure the technology in place,"
    Maybe I am missing something but it doesn't seem that hard to secure 802.11 networks...
  164. In Soviet Russia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the wireless network monitors YOU! ....uhm, wait a second....

  165. Re:Ludicrus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He can't be President. He's a filthy fucking foreigner! Fuck You and your "I never make that mistake and I don't even speak English" shit! It is a poor mind that can only think of one way to spell a word.

  166. FCC and radio trucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now that open wireless access points have been declaired a threat to national security, does this mean we will see those famous FCC radio trucks roaming the streets re-equipped to find open wi-fi access points?! Perhaps while we are looking to spend money on homeland security and keep the local troops busy between "nation building missions", they can accompany access point sniffers and "take out" any free roaming points :). This could yet be a blessing, though. I would not mind seeing the local starbucks blight removed (re-educated) from my favorite mall...

  167. Complain on Slashdot but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell are you going to do about it? Unless people in the USA take to the streets and demonstrate their anger at these proposals, the politicians can do what they want with little resistance from the general population. Talking about it on Slashdot isn't going to make a lick of a difference....

  168. Stupid feds! by miffo.swe · · Score: 2

    Forbid everything connected and any terrorist can still use the net untraced. Steal a mobile phone, snatch the sim-card and put it into a mobilephone modem connected to your laptop. They really dont get it, the more people thay trace and spy on the bigger holes there will be in the net.

    The most funny thing is that terorists have pretty much abandoned the net and use IRL messages while homeland security is focusing on phones and the internet to no use. This makes me wonder if the act is just an excuse to spy on USA's own citizens.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
  169. If you voted for Bush or Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you voted for Bush or other Republicans then you asked for this. It will get worse. You can't be uninterested in politics. Vote Green while you still have the right to vote. This isn't about technology. This is about politics - and freedom.

  170. what about suicide? by handy_vandal · · Score: 1

    Only a police state regulates the actions of potential victims of crimes to "protect" them.

    What about suicide? The criminal and the victim are one and the same. The state intervenes: you must not kill yourself. Police state, or state of mandatory benevolence?

    --
    -kgj
    1. Re:what about suicide? by Safety+Cap · · Score: 2
      The criminal and the victim are one and the same
      When the state imposes victorian-era, prudish morality on its citizens by things like outlawing euthanasia, then unfortunately people will take matters into their own hands: Rampage Suicide
      --
      Yeah, right.
    2. Re:what about suicide? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      The state intervenes: you must not kill yourself. Police state, or state of mandatory benevolence?

      Police state; if you don't have enough control of your own life to decide to end it, you don't have control of your life.

    3. Re:what about suicide? by blincoln · · Score: 2

      What about suicide? The criminal and the victim are one and the same. The state intervenes: you must not kill yourself. Police state, or state of mandatory benevolence?

      There are two major viewpoints to this argument.

      One is that the suicidal (barring the terminally ill, of course) are mentally unfit to make such a decision for themselves, and so they need someone else to protect them until they are stable again.

      I personally believe that suicide should be legal. IMO your body is yours to do with as you please - even to make incredibly poor decisions regarding - as long as you don't hurt/endanger other people in the process.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
  171. So what? by g4dget · · Score: 2
    We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly.

    If someone breaking into a bunch of 802.11b networks (at 10Mbps) can bring down the network of this country, the US portion of the Internet is flakier than I thought and we really have bigger problems than this.

    In any case, people cut through major cables, there are earthquakes, there are software glitches, etc. Major chunks of the US Internet will go down, even without terrorists, sooner or later, just like major chunks of the telephone network have gone down from time to time. People better be prepared for that; it just shouldn't be a serious matter.

    1. Re:So what? by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

      If someone breaking into a bunch of 802.11b networks (at 10Mbps) can bring down the network of this country, the US portion of the Internet is flakier than I thought and we really have bigger problems than this.

      Firstly, no one is suggesting that a denial-of-service attack from an open Wi-Fi network is a threat. But once you have anonymous connectivity, there's nothing stopping you from hacking into a few hundred hosts (maybe using a script) and setting up DDoS zombies on all of them. You can now use your anonymous connection to initiate a more severe attack without fear of getting caught.

      Secondly, an open Wi-Fi network is a perfect place to release a destructive virus or worm. You don't need a lot of bandwidth to do this.

  172. mod this up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and give this guy political asylum

  173. You Got The Name Wrong by John+Hasler · · Score: 2

    It's not the Department of Homelamd Security. It's the Ministry for State Security.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:You Got The Name Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought it was "Departcheeks for Homoland Sandwiching"

  174. People get the government they deserve by Dust31 · · Score: 1

    We all will get the government we deserve. If we don't like the trends we are seeing in the US government, we must /do/ something about it. Posting on Slashdot is low on the List of Effective Measures for Change.

  175. Analogies: Guns, Cars, Highways, Easements by TephX · · Score: 1

    Look, everyone, I see a lot of knee-jerk reactions going on here. At least in our current legal system, if you, say, leave a loaded gun (which you legally possess) out on your front porch, and someone comes along, picks it up and uses it to shoot someone you could probably be held negligent by our court system (whether this is a good thing is obviously a separate question). On the other hand if you leave the keys in your car and someone steals it and uses it to run someone down, the equivalent result is unlikely.

    Free 802.11b Internet access isn't quite like either of these things, because it's more like a utility that ties into a lot of other people too. However, the key difference between it and a highway (substitute a utility if you want) is that those are basically heavily regulated, state-granted monopolies in the US. One of the closer analogies I can think of here is an easement. This is when there's a well-trodden path over a piece of your property. You still own the property, but you can't deny people the right to cross it. (Of course, you can deny anyone access to your 802.11b access point at any time, but bear with me...) Anyway, I think it's obvious that you can be held liable for the misuse of your easement.

    The only relevant difference between access through an open 802.11b and just any old ISP as far as security-related issues goes is that the 802.11b is probably anonymous (at least unless you're caught in the act). Is this a significant security threat, justifying government intervention? I don't think so. Even the anonymity can almost certainly be achieved through other means if it's actually important. Trying to seal security threats by denying "bad" people Internet access at all is just stupid. They're going to get it. You have to secure your own systems.

    One final point: it's really starting to piss me off when people write "802.11" rather than "802.11b" or "Wi-Fi" (as does the title of this story). 802.11 is the entire Ethernet standard. Wireless Ethernet is a particular set of .x pieces of that number, and in these cases, they're almost certainly referring exclusively to 802.11b. Why do people keep dropping the b?

    --
    I metamoderate all Redundant and Offtopic moderations as Unfair.
  176. Think about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think about this - as clothes become capable of containing technology which can be used to communicate, then smart clothing will become a weapon. Vote for Bush and make this happen ASAP.

  177. Homeland is attacking anonymity by Michael+A.+Lowry · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just as Microsoft uses the word "Security" to cover up changes to the software that take away functionality (e.g., introcution of DRM in Media Player), the US Government is using "Security" as a cover for its attempt to outlaw anonymity.

    What will Homeland say about the free wireless community networks popping up all over the place? If these allow open, anonymous access, are they to be targeted by future regulatory action?

    Would Homeland object if a company set up an encrypted, but open wireless network? It could offer each user privacy and security, while protecting the company's intranet from unauthorized access. This is already how many companies set up their wireless networks. It allows minimal configuration on the client side, and that reduces internal support costs. But it also offers a good degree of anonymity to users. It is anonymity to which Homeland ojbects, not a lack of "security" per se.

  178. Important News - approx. 200 yrs. old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The Constitution of most of our states (and of the United States)
    assert that all power is inherent in the people; that they may
    exercise it by themselves; that it is their right and duty to be at
    all times armed."
    -Thomas Jefferson

  179. Impact to wireless "last mile" solution... by karlandtanya · · Score: 1

    How does regulation in this direction affect the wireless solution to the "last mile" problem?

    This is close to my heart because I'm a contract engineer and my wife and I live in an RV full time. Like many people, we often can't find cable (Internet or TV) access where we live.

    Given wireless service that is widely available, highly desired, and subject to regulated availability (i.e. DirecTV)--isn't it reasonable to expect a serious effort to gain unauthorized access to that service?

    Is it not unreasonable to expect that such efforts will produce some not insignificant success?

    And if that is a reasonable premise, doesn't it follow that *any* large-scale wireless coverage will be insecure?

    With a high speed copper connection, somebody has to at least run a physical wire to each NIC. Not so with 802.11b.

    Will regulators feel they need to curtail the growth of 802.11b itself? How can they do this? It's not the security that's even the issue here. Security can always be broken. Once 802.11b is widespread, large-scale anonymous access is inevitable.

    Limiting service providers to a few "trusted" organizations will not solve the problem. DirecTV (again) only has 1 provider, and breaking its security is a hobby for thousands of people.

    Will regulators feel a need to kill 802.11b and like technologies altogether?

    Will we see the same "death penalty for parking violations" response to wireless hacking that we've seen for cable modem uncapping?

    Points to anybody who recognizes where I stole "death penalty..." quote from.

    --
    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
  180. Pay phones next? by niola · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they are going to go after 802.11b because of easy access, why not go after all the bell operators for pay phones since they could be used to plot terrorism? Why not go after all the radio shacks because equipment they sell can be used to make bombs?

    This may sound like irrational conspiracy theory, but I actually think that this isn't about terrorism. It is a "foot in the water" test to slowly start regulating the net, and with it free speech.

    Just my $.02...

    --Jon

    1. Re:Pay phones next? by Fastolfe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's not about communication, it's about initiating an attack.

      When you have access to the Internet, you can use that to run a few script kiddie exploits, collect a few hundred (thousand) DDoS zombies, and launch a crippling attack.

      Using a pay phone just gives you anonymity at the physical layer. By the time you're at the IP layer, you've signed on with an ISP, who presumably has some identifying information about you (though it could easily be stolen).

      Using an open Wi-Fi network, you are completely anonymous. You are anonymous at the physical layer (could be hiding in an alley where no one can see you) and the link layer (MAC addresses can be changed). You have obtained an IP address with no form of authentication or authorization. When the feds trace back the attack (or the release of the worm, whatever crime it is), they are stopped cold at the operator of that Wi-Fi network. They can go no farther. (Assuming you've high-tailed it out of there by then.)

      This fact is what they're wanting to do something about. Are we really prepared to give immunity to operators of free, anonymous, open Wi-Fi networks for crimes that people commit over them? If so, expect to see the number of prosecutions for electronic crimes drop to nearly nothing in the next few years, as criminals simply relocate their operations to take advantage of this anonymous Internet access everyone is so generously providing.

      If you think spam and DDoS attacks were bad before, you haven't seen nothin' yet.

    2. Re:Pay phones next? by Cyno · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So what you are saying is you are willing to trade my essential liberty for your temporary security because you're scared of a few DoS attacks and some spam. I got some news for ya. Just because the US outlaws it doesn't keep it from coming to your front door. The internet, y'know that information superhighway they keep talking about, is a global information network. Do you want the US to police the globe? Force everyone to get an ID and sign up with some large ISP... And you wonder why they hate us? Yes, you are talking about initiating an attack. In the last few years America has initiated several attacks, but why stop now?

      They want to spam you because on average we are stupid animals, willing to spend money on spam advertisements. They want to DoS you either because they are a child or they feel passionate enough to execute such an attack, possibly because you provoked it. Children need parents to help protect us and keep us safe from their relentless attacks. But the few hackers that are left over are probably just fucking with organizations like ICANN who deserve what they get. I never had a problem getting to any websites, but ICANN sure got a lot more bad PR, which was probably the hacker's intention.

      People should be free to do what they want, and providing them anonymity is the first step in securing that freedom. The alternative will eventually become a police state because your concept of freedom is not freedom. Freedom is the ability to do whatever you want so long as it doesn't hurt anyone else. In fact the dictionary version of freedom is far less strict than even my own:

      1. state: The condition of being free. The power to act or speak or think without externally imposed restraints.
      2. state: Immunity from an obligation or duty.

      Freedom means I have the ability to do whatever I want, period. That does not limit me from hurting others or myself. The American version of freedom is one in which we all get along without hurting eachother and allow eachother to live however we want in peace. You have no right to limit my freedom to satisfy your temporary fear of technology. Don't worry, you'll get over it.

      You also don't have the freedom to tell me what I can and cannot use, such as software, drugs, etc. You only have the right to inform me to help me make the right choices. However, America has not been based on freedom in over a hundred years. We just like to say its free because we haven't yet eliminated anonymity and free choice.

  181. It is even more sad.. by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That I've been trying desperately for years to tell people this was happening time. But no one listened, I was just a 'nut'.. Then 9/11 happened and I said it again, but I was 'anti patriotic', so again, no one listened.

    Even in school in the 80's people that valued freedom, our constitution, and wanted to protect both were labeled 'radical' and programmed to think it was wrong.. In reality we were no different then our founding fathers, and should have been labeled 'federalists' instead..

    Now here we are, almost at the gates of oblivion.. Who among us will be the first person to stand up and say NO.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  182. Arrgh Typos suck! by nurb432 · · Score: 2

    Ok ok.. so the word 'time' out of the first sentence was supposed to be edited out.. so sue me :)

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  183. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we *can* have any religion we want,

    Except:

    • Branch Davidian
    • Asutra Alliance
    • Asutra Folk Assembly
    • Odinic Rite
    • Black Hebrew Isrealites
    • World Church of the Creator
    • Wicca
    • The Church of Satan
    • The Tempe of Set
    • and a number of others
  184. How can I convince the Goverment. by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Funny

    I am wondering if we could convince the Goverment that only Terrorist Send SPAM. That way we can use these laws for our advantage.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:How can I convince the Goverment. by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      I find it amusing that your comment implied that the government's position was to our disadvantage with respects to spam.

      Anonymous, untraceable Internet connections are a spammer's dream. You can bet they would love it if there was an unlimited supply of open Wi-Fi networks from which they can carry out spam campaigns.

  185. Correction... by rjung2k · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We are obviously willing to give up our freedoms b/c of that bearded fuck w/limp and a cammo jacket...

    Funny, I don't see any bearded person handing down these pronouncements from the Department of Homeland Security.

    Yes, Osama was the bearded fuck who guided jet planes into the WTC and started this mess, but be honest -- the erosion of Americans' civil liberties and rights in the 15 months since have been guided by the Supreme Court-appointed poser sitting in the White House right now, and his team of right-wing extremist croneys. They're simply using the bearded fuck as an excuse for their actions.

    You're right, though, that too many people are giving President Ripper free rein on this mess. Vote him out of office in '04!

    1. Re:Correction... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are fucking clueless.

      If the OTHER dumbass is in office, the terrorists will have even MORE freedoms here, and we will continue to have less.

      Bush is the lesser of two evils. Do not vote for Gore. He's like a Kindergartener trying to sit at the grown-ups table at Thanksgiving dinner.

    2. Re:Correction... by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2
      If the OTHER dumbass is in office

      I don't know what's funnier. The election system, or our belief that we live in a democracy.

  186. Vote In 2004: +1, Patriotic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    For a candidate who alleges that they will
    recind the Homeland Securtity Department;
    alternatively, sign a petition to impeach
    the Cheney-Rumsfeld administration.

    1. Re:Vote In 2004: +1, Patriotic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen, Brother! Mod this up!

  187. Re:Forget WiFi,there's no right to keep and bear a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aah diddums.... Me no go bang bang no more...

    Grow up. Watch "Bowling for Columbine". See how ridiculous the NRA is. See how gun deaths are highest in the USA where guns are freely available. Re-read the constitution and realise the right to bear arms was only as appointed by the military in times of civil distress (i.e. reserve territorial forces).

    Either that, or blow your head off with your own fscking gun and do us all a favour.

  188. The government's side by stwrtpj · · Score: 2
    Nobody can honestly blame the government for being concerned about network security. They recognize a valid threat to a growing part of our country's infrastructure, and geek ethics be damned, they're probably going to want to do something about it.

    Okay, now I feel better about posting now that I found someone else sharing a similar view.

    At the risk of inviting flames and down-mods, I believe we need to take a moment to see the government's side in all of this and understand where they are coming from. The cries of "police state!" I am hearing do not ring true after reading this article. The reason for this is that I did not see a single mention of the government's intent to regulate what information flows through the network.

    Think about it for a moment. What is the government asking? They're asking WiFi networks for some basic level of security, something similar to what you see on most non-wireless networks.

    Yes, a setup like this may mean the end of free network access. Well, that's too bad. Face it, folks. There's no free lunch anymore. You want access, you pay for it. It's as simple as that. And any access to the network is going to mean some basic level of security, even if its only requiring a login/account number and a password, which is exactly what you have today in non-WiFi networks.

    Now, will this stop terrorism on the net? Unlikely. In this I totally agree that the government's thinking is flawed. But realize also that the government may not be thinking this if people who run the servers that are getting hacked WOULD SECURE THEIR GODDAMN BOXES. With the cutbacks in IT budgets, companies are hiring lower-paid, less qualified staff to run their servers and they're leaving their machines wide open. This is where the problem really needs to be addressed, and the government needs to be made aware of this fact. But knee-jerk reactions like "The government is enacting a police state!" and "This is a government conspiracy to take away our rights!" is just going to get you branded a crank at best and a radical at worst.

    If ever there were an opportunity to demonstrate to the Powers That Be the inherent value of OSS/FS, this is it.

    I agree with this statement, but this is not the complete answer. OSS systems can be just as insecure as proprietary if people do not set them up correctly. We must be careful not to suggest this as a magic-bullet, cure-all solution. The government must be made to know that there is NO quick-fix solution.

    --
    Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
  189. So will they close out public access in Libraries? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Even closed APs have breakable keys.

    There are two issues.

    The first is simply ACCESS to the internet. This is uncontrollable, just as access to the telephone network is (at least as long as there are public phones).

    The second is TRACEABILITY. So even though the entire cyberinfrastructure will collapse, we can rest in the knowledge that the specific AOL dial-in and the phone jack where the evildoer connected will be found.

    The latter has nothing to do with anti-Terrorism which by necessity bypasses niceties of proper procedure and due process to prevent great loss, but leaves evidence tainted for any trial.

    The threat was there from before the first WTC attack. The second one didn't involve any high-tech. Just box-cutters. Our society is insecure - but that is economically more efficient. Even if we turn it into a surveillance state it will still be insecure.

    For example, in the Northern Ireland conflict, they used Molotov Cocktails a.k.a. Petrel Bombs.

    So are we going to have to all have secure gas caps ($50 locks like a Kaba or Medeco, not the cheap pickable ones) and have to go through the same kind of airport gate rape to get a fill-up at a gas station? One PSA noted one cup of gasoline is equivalent to 8 sticks of dynamite.

    How are they going to fix this?

    The problem is that the security agencies think like law enforcement, not terrorists.

    The two other classes of similar problems that come to mind are Legerdemain and Thievery. You don't try to determine how a trick is done or how to create security, you try to determine how to do the trick, or how to find and exploit a security problem.

    That is how Al Queda is operating. They found "box-cutters" got through. Now we are preventing them from getting through security and using secure doors for the cockpits (the latter suffices, so I guess they are keeping the gate-rape part because they like the sport).

    I'm quite sure that Al Queda has already thought about this and is ahead, and that the average slashdot reader spending 15 minutes considering the problem will not be flying any time soon, but the Homeland Security Agency will go along oblivious to the next weakness until it is exploited, but instead seek to regulate visible but trivial things like open access points.

    Which reminds me of a classic joke in several forms including an old I Love Lucy episode:

    Ricky comes home to see Lucy crawling around the Living Room.

    Ricky: "What are you doing?"

    Lucy: "I lost my earrings."

    Ricky: "You lost your earrings in the living room?"

    Lucy: "No, I lost them in the bedroom - but the light is so much better out here."

  190. Open vs. non-closable? by leighklotz · · Score: 1

    The article seemed to say that they were concerned about non-closable access points; i.e., the same security problems we all know about with 802.11. That is to say, they want to make it easy for people who use 802.11 access points on an intranet to have the default installation be secure, and if they industry doesn't do it, the government will regulate them into it. That doesn't seem like a bad thing to me. Nowhere in the article did I see that that providing Internet access was going to be outlawed.

  191. Please protest, USA residents! by Zoolander · · Score: 1

    The Bush government is starting to look more and more like Big Brother. I don't think the terrorists of 9/11 could have hoped for a better result than this. USA is turning to everything they say it is. It's starting to be just the imperialist, unilateral evil empire they are talking about. And no US politician seems to dare to protest, for fear of being labeled un-American. Since the US is the greatest power on Earth these days, what happens there spills over to the rest of the western world. Soon we will see these measures over here too, either by our own government or by pressure from the US. Unfortunately, we don't have a say since we're not US citizens. So all we can do is ask you who *are* to protest with all your might! This is a dangerous development. Your government is getting more and more dictatorial powers, with being able to hold people prisoners indefinitely without trial, being able to look into their private information without court orders, etc. Please, for yourself and for the rest of the world: PROTEST!

    --
    Meep.
    1. Re:Please protest, USA residents! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:Please protest, USA residents! by kolombangara · · Score: 1

      http://infowars.com/

      Alex Jones Rules!

  192. Re:Liberals and their misinterpretation of Article by PenguiN42 · · Score: 2

    Just one minor point:

    detainees that haven't been declared POW's anyone?

    I've heard statements like this a lot, and believed them until I actually did some research and read up on the Geneva convention (http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/91.htm) and other applicable war laws (ie War Powers Act of 1973).

    There are some very high standards that enemy combatants must meet in order to have the right of POW status. If they don't meet all of them than a country doesn't have to give them POW treatment. The factors are:

    (a) That of being commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates;

    (b) That of having a fixed distinctive sign recognizable at a distance;

    (c) That of carrying arms openly;

    (d) That of conducting their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war. ... one can very easily argue that al queda/ taliban fighters didn't meet all of these requirements.

    The only thing I wonder about the detained prisoners is if we met the requirements in this passage: "Should any doubt arise as to whether persons, having committed a belligerent act and having fallen into the hands of the enemy, belong to any of the categories enumerated in Article 4, such persons shall enjoy the protection of the present Convention until such time as their status has been determined by a competent tribunal."

    Did we ever give the detainees a tribunal to confirm that they're not POW's?

    --
    On a related note, don't go into the "but Congress never declared war" argument unless you can point out *exactly* where it says in the geneva convention that you need a declaration of war. I read "all cases of declared war or of any other armed conflict" which seems to make it unnecessary. And the war powers act cited above gives congress the power to give the president specific wartime powers without a formal declaration of war (see "specific statutory authorization" under section 2(c)).

    I just want to say that I hate the bush regime and their attitude towards international and domestic affairs (esp the OHS) as much as the next whiny liberal ;) ... but it seems that all the claims of bush's war acts violating international and domestic law aren't entirely accurate. Both sides of a debate need to be well-informed for it to get anywhere. Perhaps the laws of war need to be reformed, but we're not really breaking them.

    --
    The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
  193. Good Ol' George by razmaspaz · · Score: 1

    I think its time we find a leeader who is interested in preserving American Freedoms by some means other than taking them away.

    --
    I tried for 5 years to come up with a clever sig...only to realize that I am not clever.
  194. Irresponsible by nuggz · · Score: 2

    So you are perfectly willing to blindly give access to anyone wandering by.

    Then when you get shut down for initiating a DOS attack, or spamming or whatever you'll probaly claim "but it wasn't me, I didn't know".

    It is your connection, it is your responsiblity.

    If people can't play nicely and take responsiblity themselves the government HAS to regulate it.

    1. Re:Irresponsible by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      Yes, of course, because only terrorists/hackers/(insert keyword here) would ever use or appreciate open and available wireless. Are you going to campaign against all the cybercafes, libraries, kinkos, and wireless hotspots open to the public throughout the nation as all being irresponsible? No, of course not; because it's much easier to simply legislate it and let the cops waste their time arresting people for nothing. I much prefer to not treat people as children.

      What's irresponsible is those who would use someone's gift against another. If they give out free coffee at a homeless shelter and someone pours it on another person's head, will you declare that the shelter is "irresponsible"? If there's a problem with my open wireless and someone does something naughty, the feds may have all the logs they want (I log everything) so long as they present a warrant signed by a judge. While they're waiting, I shall invite them to check their email or surf the web on my wide open, free to use wireless network. I might even offer them some coffee if they're nice.

      The state government may regulate my wide open wireless network if the good citizens of New Jersey decide they ought to. However, there is no interstate commerce, nor any commerce whatsoever, so any law made by the federal government on the subject ought be considered null and void, as it's a blatant and ridiculous 10th Amendment violation and an absurd encroachment on the sovereignty of the State of New Jersey. States are called states because they are sovereign, and any power not directly given to the federal government by the US Constitution automatically falls into the hands of the state as per the last amendment of the Bill of Rights. Regulation of a service which exists soley within the boarders of my state is implicitly subject to and only to the legislature of my state government. I used to let things like that slide; not anymore. We've given the federal government a lot of slack, and now they're trying to take the whole damn rope. So I say it's time to crack down on abuses like this and start doing it by the book. My wireless router has absolutely nothing to do with national security, and everyone with even half-ass knowledge of what's going on knows it. This is nothing more than ridiculous strutting and posturing by the Dept of Homeland Insecurity and the federal government. They need to quite waving their dicks around at the American people and start figuring something that will actually provide security to the American people without violating every single principle on which this country was founded. They need to look for ways to make us safer without stripping us of our Constitutionally-guaranteed rights. Flooding the FBI, DOJ, and DOD with the personal history of every American citizen will make their job infinitely harder. Now, instead of looking for a needle in a haystack, they're looking for a needle in an ocean of needles. If ensuring that our rights and liberties are protected means we aren't as safe as me might otherwise be, then so be it. As a great man once said, "Give me liberty, or give me death." Those are the words of a true American hero. This ridiculous, "take whatever rights you need, just please don't let them hurt me" comes from the lips of a fucking coward. You wanna live in a brave new world? You really want to win the war on terror? Then grow a pair, stand up, and yell to all who will listen, "you may take our lives, but you'll never take our FREEDOM!"

      Please see this post for more information.

      (P.S. To the previous poster: the first two paragraphs were directed to you as a response to your post. The rest is another one of my rants directed towards the American people. Please do not take offense to anything said, as it was not intended to offend or degrade you in any way.)

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    2. Re:Irresponsible by bnenning · · Score: 2
      However, there is no interstate commerce, nor any commerce whatsoever, so any law made by the federal government on the subject ought be considered null and void, as it's a blatant and ridiculous 10th Amendment violation and an absurd encroachment on the sovereignty of the State of New Jersey.


      Thank you. It's refreshing to see that there are a few people who still understand and respect the Constitution, even if both parties generally consider it an anachronism.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    3. Re:Irresponsible by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      The 10th Amendment wouldn't be irrelevant in modern times if it weren't for the War of Northern Aggression, (commonly called the 'Civil War' in the North), in which an authoritarian federal government beat and burned the southern states into submission. The fact is that the southern states had every right to secede from the union. Instead, the current president, Lincoln, took the unprecidented position of giving himself absolute authority, suspending habeus corpus (later ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, See: Ex Parte Milligan), and imprisoning and executing numerous people for such things as speaking out against the war or refusing to fight in the war. Lincoln didn't give two shits about slaves and their rights, and anyone who believes he did is insane. The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 was issued two years after the beginning of the war, and was specifically designed to encourage slaves in the South to rebel and thus weaken the South, which stood a strong chance of beating the North at that point in the war.

      In any event, amoung the casualties of the War of Northern Aggression and Lincoln's private war against the Bill of Rights was the understood sovereignty of each state in the union. States' rights and powers have since been largely ignored, although California is starting to kick up a bit of a fuss over the whole medicinal marijuana debate. I say good for them, and it's about damn time the states began standing up for themselves. The purpose of the federal government was to provide a forum for issues that affected several or all of the states. It was supposed to be a UN of sorts, where elected representatives from each state (try replacing the word "state" with the word "nation" or "country" if it helps you) could resolve disputes surrounding issues such as interstate commerce, where different states may have different views of what should happen, but a uniform policy for all states would be beneficial. Instead, ever since Lincoln's state-smashing/burning spree, we've had little more than lines on a map within a single federal government. I see this as simply evidence of how much we've managed to pervert the framework for government created by brilliant people like Jefferson. I think that states asserting their Constitutional rights would go a long way to restoring this country to its strong and moral roots. The federal government exerts a ridiculous amount of control over all citizens, to the point that we hardly realize our state governments exist. It seems to me that an overbearing government ruling from Washington DC is not much better than an overbearing government ruling from London. I hope the federal government cracks down really, really hard on California; so much so that it prompts other states to rise up again and declare firmly that they are indeed sovereign and only remain part of the United States so long as it benefits their citizens. I don't want to see the USA broken up, not even to lose one state - but I'd love to see a return to a government that's much closer to the citizens, ie. state governments.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  195. Bin Laden has already won.... by ZvlvLord · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Greetings to each and everyone,

    Osama Bin Laden has already won. He could even be dead by now, it would not change anything. The USA are SCARED.
    The US gov. is hurting the USA more than Bin Laden could ever dream of. All those laws, restrictions etc... will fuck the USA up.
    The USA are going down the drain. 1984 is not that far anymore. If Bin Laden is still alive, he's laughing his ass off. Just keep on passing more laws, tag your citizens like cattle while you are at it. Those that can, will fuck off to more peaceful places.
    America used to be great. Now it's just a dream fading off....

    PS: ya can all flame away...
    PS2: I love the US but lately, it's not even the US anymore, it's become something else entirely ====(((

  196. Time for restrictions on the office by Wylfing · · Score: 1
    I think it's time Congress placed some hard-and-fast restrictions on the office of the Attorney General. Every person who gets placed in that job gets on a power trip and makes horrible decisions. If you read the after-the-fact accounts of what went on with CREEP and Nixon, those involved clearly state that they felt like anything they did was golden because they were making their plans in the AG's office with the AG sitting right there. We the people really don't need a single, non-elected office with that much power. It doesn't serve our interest at all.

    --
    Our intelligent designer has never created an animal that we couldn't improve by strapping a bomb to it.
  197. Herd Animals by Veteran · · Score: 2

    The behavior of the department of homeland security is utterly predictable; it is exactly the behavior of wildebeests. Rather than do something about the lions, wildebeest bulls push the herd around. All of our current 'security' is based on looking suspiciously at all of the wildebeests to make sure that they aren't lions is disguise; one could scarcely come up with more idiotic behavior.

    Animal herds respond to pressure - not to vacuum - as a result herds stampede away from danger. If herds stampeded as a response to 'vacuum' then it would follow attacking bulls and trample predators - instead of running from them. That simple change would be the end of the lions who are built to attack the spine of a fleeing animal - not respond to the charging attacks of raging bulls.

    What prevents the United States from charging? The answer is 'Political Correctness'. I will tell you how to forever end 'Political Correctness' as a force.. Simply invite all of the politically correct college professors to the local high schools to give a lecture to the student body on political correctness. Before the professors can start speaking the high school football team goes on stage and drags the professors into the nearest girls bathroom and starts dunking the professors' heads in the toilets while the cheerleaders all stand around laughing at them. This would expose "Political Correctness' for what it really is; a bunch of passive aggressive weenies who are trying to make people feel bad.

    The fact that 'Political Correctness' wouldn't survive the 'dunk' test makes the physical demonstration unnecessary; the movement collapses from its own internal weakness and corruption. Passive aggression is just pathetic behavior to try basing anything on.

    Even Ghandi's form of passive aggression can't survive the girls bathroom treatment. By the way - how many of you knew Ghandi was islamic? Kind of changes your view of what he had to say doesn't it? It is one thing when a 'rabbit' tells you to adopt the posture of never fighting back - he does so from a position of courage - it is something entirely different when it is a 'crocodile' telling you to never fight back; one has to suspect the latter of having a rather obvious agenda.

    1. Re:Herd Animals by (void*) · · Score: 2

      By the way - how many of you knew Ghandi was islamic?

      OK - I am calling you out. Show me where it says Ghandi was Islamic?


      Let me guess - you haven't any real experience with bulls, Professors, football teams or cheerleaders, right?

  198. Aiding terrorists 100m at a time. by dnight · · Score: 2

    What about the open mail relays? There is untraceable mail bouncing all over the place.

    If the feds put the muscle against the open SMTP relays that are more likely being used for terrorist communications, the side-effects of less spam would gather them a lot of support, instead of this Don Quixote tilting-at-WiFi crap.

    News flash, suspected terrorists will be forced to wear mittens to prevent communication via sign language...after the required $100 million spent on "intelligence" of course.

    1. Re:Aiding terrorists 100m at a time. by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's about communication. There are a million ways people can communicate essentially anonymously that adding open Wi-Fi networks to the mix doesn't change much.

      But users of open Wi-Fi networks can do something that you can't just do on a pay phone: you can release viruses and worms, you can hack into remote systems to cover your tracks, or maybe set up some DDoS zombies and use a distributed attack against some infrastructure.

      You can even TRADE MP3'S!

      All of this without fear of ever getting caught. The trail stops with the Wi-Fi operator. If you're lucky, they'll convict him instead and you get off free forever.

  199. omg.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    rofl...while maybe they should put some effort into security...why is it the governments place to fucking say shit. Using terrorism as a reason/basis for EVERYTHING is total fucking bullshit. Welcome back to the fucking cold war and its red scare. Just wait till we get a new mccarthy who runs around accusing people of being terrorist sympathizers. This is total bullshit. It may not seem like a big deal, and in and of itself, its not, but it just shows where shit is headed. LoL.

  200. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

    I don't believe at all that one guy with a laptop on an open AP could "bring the net down"...

    No, but he could introducce a virus or a worm from that point.

    I've been saying this for months: if you run a wide-open AP, with the full knowledge that you are providing anonymous connectivity to others, you should not be surprised when someone uses that open AP to perform an illegal act, and the feds trace that act back to you.

    If they can't nail you for the illegal act, there is definitely an argument that you aided and abetted. You knowingly left your AP wide open for others to use and "conveniently" failed to provide a mechanism for authentication.

    So what happens? Would you rather the feds say, "Oh shucks, looks like it was an anonymous user using the 'Net through this fine citizen's free Wi-Fi resource, guess we'll never catch them."

    This way lay anarchy. That's basically saying any Internet crime is now untraceable and unpunishable. Just find one of those Slashdot kids that has an open Wi-Fi network and commit crimes to your heart's content.

    It's not just about electronic terrorism, or even the coordination of traditional terrorist activities.

  201. Re:Hello?-P2P dreams. by LostCluster · · Score: 2

    Anonymous communications is a dangerous thing.

    Here on Slashdot, Anonymous Cowards are not fully anonymous. Slashdot logs the IP address and time of every IP post. If I find a post that allows me to take legal action against that poster, I file the case and then ask the judge to subpoena Slashdot to turn over the IP address from which the AC post orignated from. I can then look up who owns the IP block that IP address belongs to, and subpeona that ISP to give me the name and billing address on the account that had that IP address at the time of the post. Gotcha.

    The internet is inhernetly P2P already. Get some business-class bandwidth (instead of the restricted consumer-priced stuff) and you can set up any services you want, and offer them to anybody you want.

    The new definition of P2P seems to be "let me send and receive data in an untraceable way because I want to transfer data that's illegal to transfer." Be it a pirated MP3 or an order to a sleeper cell, neither should be allowed.

  202. Freedoms by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Our freedoms are disappearing at a frightening rate. The Bush admin has done a number of song and dance routines about Anthrax. The security that has been implemented since 9/11 is a joke. It is still easy to attack the aircrafts, airports, trains, or cars. It is still easy to get anything into this country. In all fairness, that is and always will be the case in all countries that have large infrastructure and borders. But now Bushes cronies blame 802.11 for causing problems while still pushing MS everywhere. At the same time, the fight OSS of anytype even though it has been proven over and over that OSS is better in anything dealing with server space. Finally, they threw a group to study 802.11 by its competitors and they come out blaming all sorts of problems on it and ask for regulations. That meeting is almost certainly the same as Cheny's meeting with Enron on how to deal with USA's Oil issues. WakeUp USA, IKE warned us and we did not listen.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  203. Regulate? by racerx509 · · Score: 2

    'If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating,'"

    Like they did with Microsoft?

    --
    13 year old white supremacists are shitty web designers.
  204. Mission SUCCESS: Al Quida stops American WiFi! by kolombangara · · Score: 1

    OMFG. Score one more the Osama.

    Okay, so, some terror dudes come into the country via our wide open borders, invested by the millions in training and planning, the covert undercover operation known of course for years only by the FBI, and let through, but, shucks, they forget the username and password list back in Saudi Arabia to get on the 'Net, so they have to access the Net via a Pringle's can they pick up from their cousin at Quicky Mart. Geeze.

    And what kind of nazi statement is this?
    'If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating,'" said Cable and Wireless security architect Shannon Myers in a panel dubbed "Homeland Security vs. Wi-Fi."

    'If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating,' HEY where is the Shannon Myers when my car gets "broken into" by foreigners from Mexico? When do we regulate that?

    The Three Stooges aren't dead, they're cloned and have multiplied and now run OUR country who are run by foreign Collectivists, et al.

    Besides, I've read allot of HLS, and it has provisions protecting liability from the drug companies if their (forced inoculations) damages patients. So if one company is protected it may indicate they are all in it, and knowing already the communications companies want Wi-Fi heartily dead (until they control it, naturally), this move here is the middle linebacker/safety blitz they intend to attack Wi-Fi with. Homeland Defense IS terror. Of course, this is common, but useless knowledge, I know.

    So, is this yet another victory for Osama Bin Laden against America? Soon, He'll have America just like his country, Saudi Arabia, and it is working very well! Strip the Constitution untill it falls like a twin tower (A planned implosion?)

    And our Senators, are they retards? Do any of them even own a PC?

  205. In Soviet Russia.... by Phosphor3k · · Score: 2

    The Ice Crushes You!

  206. How does one learn how to do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure I'm opening myself up to being flamed mercilesslessly (which is why I'm posting anon), but how does a newbie learn how to use wireless networks to get free internet access?

    I couldn't find any sort of guidance through Google. Sites like http://www.warchalking.org/ assume that you're already proficient in it.

    Thanks in advance for either some advice, or (if you can't resist flaming me), some clever insults.

  207. Stupidity or a prelude to Fascism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look like they are geting into high gear with this Homeland Security Act. I suppose by limiting peoples freedoms they hope to prevent to head off massive "terroist attacks". I'm not sure how those two things correlate, since from all we've learned from 911, it was the goverments incompetence which lead to the attacks rather then any exploited freedom. I suppose next well have to chop off our left hands so as not to abade possible terroists.

    What a joke, we voted these people in, if we let this country go down this road, we will be the only ones to blame.

    -ddn

  208. Let me get this straight. by coopaq · · Score: 1
    It's ok for me to drive around with a rifle
    on a gun rack in my truck (which I never lock)
    , but it will soon be illegal for me to go to starbucks
    and browse the internet on my PDA?

    Cool.

    -J

  209. They might be midgets by TygerFish · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Possibly justified hysteria aside, the subject of this thread is a prime example of a thing which provides two equally valid answers to a social question: is the umbrella of 'homeland security'--the name alone is nauseating--being used by the forces of vacuous greed in Washington to provide favors to large, commercial internet businesses, or is the simpler and better assumption that the Wonks in washington just dumb and prone to suggestion?

    Before everyone with an I.Q. over ninety buys a plane ticket to Canada, we should consider what we're really dealing with in the U.S. government nowadays. It is easy for a Slashdot-quality mind to spot the sheer, arid uselessness of a ban on free 802.11 and this has got to make you wonder.

    On the one hand, WE know that terrorists are far more concerned with keeping secrets than ordinary users are. WE fully understand that terrorists, spies and clever lunatics put real work into hiding their intentions and there are too many ways onto the internet to filter all of them--that is, at least, using any method we know of.

    It's easy to imagine, a mind like John Ashcroft's simply bypassing this; you can almost see that sloping brow furrow horribly as it bypasses the obvious fact that terrorists have no need to reach for free radio Ethernet.

    On the other hand, it is just as easy to conceive of the current administration's love for corporate power making it despise grass-roots initiatives to provide free internet fill-in-the-blank and ducking fast behind the poor, beleaguered flag at the first murmur of dissent.

    Both answers are perfectly imaginable: It is easy to imagine genuine nastiness on the part of any government as piggy-eyed as the one we have right now. At the same time, the absence of a clue on the administration's part is just as credible an explanation.

    To paraphrase the name of musical group, 'they might be midgets.'

    --
    To mail me, remove the 'mailno' from my email addy.
    "Yeah. It smells, too..."
  210. Re:If they really wanted to fix insecure networks. by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

    It would also drastically reduce the spam problem as well.

    How will encouraging open Wi-Fi networks (or at least discouraging prosecution of open Wi-Fi operators for crimes committed through their networks) reduce spam?

    As these things become more and more ubiquitous, and as operators are not held liable for the anonymous acts performed through their networks, I cannot believe that the amount of spam will go down. If anything, it would go way up as spammers discover they will never be caught.

  211. Re:Great. Now I'm a criminal. by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

    Our of curiosity, when someone does sit on your network for a few hours, uses some stolen credit cards, uses a script to hack into a few hundred systems, launches a distributed denial-of-service attack against a few government system, maybe sends out a bundle of spam, and the feds come knocking on your door, what do you plan on telling them?

  212. The law of unintended consequences... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...just made me add a completely open access point
    outside my firewall. I recomend that *everyone* go buy a 200mw senao wireless gateway:

    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&it em =2079248365

    and a good sector/panel antenna (or two):

    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&it em =2078826889

    If you're really motivated, you'll switch to 802.11a in-house and populate all 3 (or 4) frequency slots with open 802.11b access points.

    After all, plausable deniability isn't just for governments any longer... and you don't have to fly airplanes into buildings to be a freedom fighter.

  213. Re:Great. Now I'm a criminal. by LostCluster · · Score: 2

    All you need to do is to have a welcome HTML screen to your WiFi network that requires that users give you their name and verifyable e-mail address before they're allowed to roam. You don't have to give that info to the government unless they already have a good judge-approved reason to need it, but wouldn't you come running to the government yourself if you knew anybody connected with 9/11/01 used your bandwidth?

  214. Relax freaks by emg178 · · Score: 1

    Most of these "5" replies are about terrorists using airports, beds, water, etc. Freaking relax! Airports are being secured as much as possible subject to cost / inconvenience constraints. Water supplies are gaurded and tested against terrorist attacks. Now someone wants to secure WiFi as much as is reasonable subject to cost / inconvenience constraints. Big fucking deal. Sounds like a good idea to me. It helps to be able to track viruses, which do cost money, b/c most users are ignorant about computer security.

  215. Am I a terroist by zenst · · Score: 1

    I've paid tax's under 2 different goverments now and given the loose terms of aiding terroism I would have to say I'd prolly qualify once a 3rd goverment gets in place.

  216. Starbucks and Airports: Dens of Terrorism by Genady · · Score: 2

    It's worse than that Jim...

    So..... what's to stop young Aheeb from taking his iBook (because only pinko commu^?^?^?^?^? terrorists use Macs) to Starbucks, or any of the handful of airports that are offering 802.11 service to patrons? DEAR GOD WE'RE HELPING THEM AT THE AIRPORTS NOW! BRING THAT TRAVEL NETWORK TO A STOP!

    This is utterly fscking re-goddamned-diculus. The next thing you know we'll have the great firewall of America. But remember, if you can't watch the superbowl comercials then the terrorists have already won. There's noting quite like the momentum generated by a buearuacrcy motivated to look good to keep it's money.

    --


    What if it is just turtles all the way down?
  217. Uh... by BSOD+from+above · · Score: 1

    when Bush said "you're either with us or against us", did he mean 'us (you or I)' or 'them (gov't or large corp's)', cause I don't want any daisy cutters in my back yard.

    --
    Karma: Censored (mostly affected by decency laws)
  218. There is NO reason IP anonymity is necessary by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

    I will be one of the first people to say that "freedom of speech" necessarily requires anonymity. People need to be able to speak their minds anonymously without fear of getting their words traced back.

    But there is NO reason true anonymity needs to extend to your IP address. There are plenty of places in the physical world where you can post something anonymously (perhaps an op-ed piece in your local newspaper). There are HTTP anonymizing services that allow you to post comments on bulletin boards anonymously. Heck, most sites and most ISP accesses are anonymous to the extent that a court order would be needed to get your identity (well, excluding some of the Patriot Act provisions). That type of anonymity may be perfectly sufficient for some. For the rest, we already have those tools.

    The point is, a completely anonymous Internet connection has a very limited usefuless for those hoping to protect their freedom of speech, but it has immense value for those wanting to commit electronic crimes (spamming, intrusions, distributed denial-of-service attacks, worm injections, identity fraud, etc.). By providing immunity to the Wi-Fi operators, we're basically saying it's perfectly OK for people to start abusing these networks without fear of ever getting caught.

    If you thought spam and the occasional DDoS attack was bad today, just wait...

    1. Re:There is NO reason IP anonymity is necessary by DavittJPotter · · Score: 2

      I disagree with you. Anonymity is absolutely necessary. Your HTTP anonymizing services would of course divulge any and all information about the original IP address to the Ministry of Truth - sorry, I mean Homeland Security - if the post was from a suspected terrorist sympathizer or possible terrorist.

      Freedom of speech needs anonymity in order for people to not fear retribution. As it stands now, our first amendment rights are in dire straits, anyway.

      As far as 'spamming, worm injection, DOS attacks, etc.' - those things are already happening without much help from WiFi. This is just another excuse to regulate something the government and big business fears.

      --
      "If there's hope, it lies in the proles..."
    2. Re:There is NO reason IP anonymity is necessary by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

      Your HTTP anonymizing services would of course divulge any and all information about the original IP address to the Ministry of Truth - sorry, I mean Homeland Security

      Which anonymizer service are you using? Read the first section of http://www.anonymizer.com/docs/privacy_statement.s html for a typical declaration of what's kept and for how long.

      My point is, anonymity can occur at the application layer, and should not occur at the IP layer.

      There is no law requiring web site operators to keep logs of activity, and certainly none requiring anonymizing proxies to keep track of who accesses what sites. The amount of "damage" you can do over anonymized HTTP is insignificant next to the amount of damage you can do over anonymized IP. But for anonymizing your identity when posting some bit of information, either technique works. So why advocate the method that would also anonymize every criminal act performed on the Internet?

    3. Re:There is NO reason IP anonymity is necessary by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      those things are already happening without much help from WiFi.

      But without Wi-Fi, there is always an audit trail. Sometimes it may be difficult to find, but it's always there.

      With free, open, public anonymous Wi-Fi services, any Joe ScriptKiddie can enjoy 100% anonymous and untraceable Internet connectivity. There's a bit of a difference.

  219. Re:Liberals and their misinterpretation of Article by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 2

    brendanoconnorwrote:

    > If a person runs a service they are liable for
    > what the users of the service do.

    I have a private (as secured as it can be) wireless network, not a "service". Someone who breaks into it is a thief, not a "user". I'm not responsible for what criminals, who are stealing my property, do with it. That is ridiculous.

    > A certain amount of privacy should be kept but
    > not at the cost of life. If reading someone's
    > email saves someones life, then it was worth the
    > invasion of privacy.

    The government knew at least some of the 911 terrorists were terrorists. INS gave them visas anyway, six months after the fact. No amount of reading emails or securing wireless networks would have prevented 911. Having INS pay attention to the FBI's watch list might have. Rather than dealing with that, they'd rather read our email, secure our wireless networks, and strip search cancer patients. When that doesn't work, we'll go to war with Iraq. Yes, America, the King of Terror hasn't only stolen your heart, he got your brain too!

    The only people who stopped terrorists from doing damage on 911 were the courageous people of Flight 93. They didn't let their emails be read. They didn't secure their wireless networks. They, ordinary Americans, gave their lives to stop the terrorists hijacking their plane. Their sacrifice reveals the "save lives at the cost of liberty" position for what it is: a pile of stinky manure. Flinging our rights to the winds does not stop Terror, it enables that reign of Terror called "oppression".

    The attack on America by the King of Terror did not begin with 911. The first front, fought and lost, was in our schools. Remember the warnings Slashdot gave then, the voices from the "hellmouth"? The King of Terror first stole the hearts of children, warping them to murder. America responded by turning our schools into prisons. Then he stole the hearts of people in the Muslem world, turning them into terrorists, forming Al Qaeda, attacking on 911. America lashed out in terror again, flinging her rights away. Then the King of Terror took your heart, America, turning it to oppression. Who is this King of Terror? Azi Dahaka, the Great Devil that comes from the sky!

    It's not too late. The King of Terror can still be defeated and destroyed! How? Three great powers forge the sword, the heart, which can defeat him. On 911 the King of Terror claimed the deaths of thousands, the three powers saved tens of thousands! These are the three:

    What secret only Wisdom knows?

    Look to the wisdom of your founding fathers, America.

    What weapon forged, Courage shows?

    Flight 93 showed what the courage of your people can really do.

    What power, Love when freed, greatest of all, can give?

    Compassion, of course. Compassion can reach the heart of a lonely, resentful, troubled child before they bring a gun to school. Compassion brought countless people out of the WTC alive because a friend, a coworker, or a stranger helped them out. Compassion is Al Qaeda's bane. They may be able to deceive a naive kind person into donating to a charity that funnels money to them, but true compassion is too wise for them, and has no room for the hate Al Qaeda needs to thrive on.

    "The last hope is to fight by ourselves...
    Lola, kindness is not enough, look for the reason of hatred and anger.
    When you find and understand that, love becomes the strongest power."
    Belabera, "Mothra 3: King Ghidora Attacks"

  220. No worries, I'm in Canada... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... so it'll take a month longer to take effect here.

    The Canadian Government is the most efficient Government on earth?

    Why?

    Because when the American Government asks them to jump they don't waste time asking how high... they just jump and hope it's good enough.

    1. Re:No worries, I'm in Canada... by Zoolander · · Score: 1

      Your government better watch out... There are a few governments here in Europe that are willing to take up the competition.

      --
      Meep.
    2. Re:No worries, I'm in Canada... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah... so you want in on the European Union eh? Want the great trade advantages...

      You must do these things and renounce the things you thought were important and you too can join the "club"...

      It's a wonder who'll jump higher... (could this be mangled to be like that famous "Dubya" quote?)

  221. Foot Targeting, a positive channel for parinoia by rgriff59 · · Score: 1
    It is interesting that they are going to take such a strong stance on open wireless. Consider for a moment, from the perspective of an investigator, which would be easier to trace?
    1. Unencrypted access through a fixed access point
    2. Encrypted access passed through an ad-hoc network whose components may never be in the same place again

    Now, consider the nature of the 'enemy' we claim to be fighting. In a previous attack, they spent years recruiting and planning, creating model citizens and sending them to commercial flight schools. Can anyone really expect that the next 'big plan' will hing on something as unpredicatble as the availability of an open access point? It would be so much more theatrical to drive up to my driveway and unleash the killer virus through my Airport, than to do it privately over DSL in some statistically average appartment in a statistically average community. Theatrical maybe, but it wouldn't be near as practical.

    In the mean time, the only decent way to secure wireless communcations is some sort of end to end encryption. However you do it, VPN, tunneling, whatever, if done correctly, increases the number of encrypted packets floating though the network. Nice heavily protected strong crypto packets that require CPU years to decode. And now, with all the freshly secured wireless traffic, a 6 year olds letter to grandma will be indistiguishable from real terrorist communications. I, for one, find this to be a good thing, but it sure gets in the way of the current investigational mentality which says the only things deserving encryption must be 'evil' secrets.

    No, sir, I'm not hiding anything. Just doing my patriotic duty.

  222. Where is your journal? by cosmosis · · Score: 2

    Where is your journal? I would like to see it, and possibly contribute to it.

    1. Re:Where is your journal? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      "Where is your journal? I would like to see it, and possibly contribute to it."

      Hmmm.. Well, I'm sure it's around here somewhere. Oh, there it is. :)

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    2. Re:Where is your journal? by cosmosis · · Score: 2

      Very funny. Of course, I always referred to 'journal' as 'thread'.

      BTW, very good rant up there - best I've read on Slashdot.

      Oh, and here is my Journal.

  223. Let's try to use what they say to advantage. by twitter · · Score: 2
    First understand the goals of the people you are working with. You might have it right. The feds wish to protect the telcos and will use "terrorism" as an excuse to continue to promote obsolete technology and as a way to increase regulatory power that is no longer needed. The worst scenerio is that they force Hollings style hardware on everyone.

    Now let's look at how they are getting there. This is what they have to say for themselves on their little page of horors. First You are not too small to matter. Good, the argument "no one is interested in the particulars of your mundane life so don't worry about security" is both false and misleading and is going to be killed. Lip service is given to user education but takes the form of consumer awareness of comercial products which won't work and will be filled with DRM.

    What we need to do is take their message and run with it. Those parts that are true back free software. The government must be made aware that only free software is secure, that they must use it to protect themselves and should not stifle it. They have understood the scale of economic harm that can occur if things don't work right. You are aware of the raid the White House ordered on ptech
    and worried in part that ptech had put in backdoors?

    The company's software code was checked by the government to determine if outsiders could read or steal any sensitive data from the government, or embed the code with something destructive, officials said. Those checks began months ago, when the probe of Ptech started.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  224. Open access wireless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Turn in that cordless phone. And your CB radios, And your baby monitors. Terrorists could use, them, and we can't be too carfeful, now, can we?

  225. "Give us back our freedoms" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Freedom is not a gift.

    You'll never get yours back since you seem to think your freedoms are granted by the government. I pity you.

  226. Worse still... by BSOD+from+above · · Score: 1

    our gov't is feeding the public any information they can get on worldwide terror. As if folks were not scared enough, we have our own gov't trying to scare them more (it's a power thing). Anyone who isn't terrified is either
    A. Real depressed
    B. Not letting the terrorists win
    The chance of terrorists actually harming you or anyone you know is real slim. The chances of being innocently incarcerated by the feds (accused of being a terrorist) is way more likely at this point.

    --
    Karma: Censored (mostly affected by decency laws)
    1. Re:Worse still... by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      (it's a power thing)
      Right. I think the thing that scared officialdom most about 9-11 was the plane that went down in Pennsylvania. The terrorists were taken out, not by federal marshals or airline employees, but by the unarmed *passengers*.

  227. Re:cough*hypacrits*cough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm glad they cut your funding in half. They should have cut it to zero. It's obviously going to waste since you're having so much trouble with spelling and basic grammar. I see no need to throw good money after bad.

    I do see a need for more burger flippers though. Yes, and super size, kid.

  228. *snort*s with contempt by rodgerd · · Score: 2

    When NYC make it nigh-impossible for cancer patients to travel the subway, slashdiots line up to tell the cencer patients it's their own damn fault.

    When the Bush administration proposes taking away wireless networks - oh the outrage, oh the humanity.

  229. my access point is open by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and when they come arrest me I will close it down. The only terrorist's here are the A$$HAT politicians who think that scaring people is a way to ensure their continued leech like careers.
    I was at a local coffee shop the other day and 2 of our moron city council came in, the owner refused to service them and told them to leave. He said and I quote," I reserve the right to refuse service to anyone in any manner that is not discrimination, now take your slimy politician lawyer buts out of my cafe and go eat dirt :)" The rest of the place actually applauded as they left I shit you not, it was a beautiful thing...

  230. Other risks,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Call me naive, but to me it seems there are far, far bigger risks. For example, if MS gets there way with PASSPORT, we have a hell of a lof of commerce dependent on a single centralized "access" point that will be incredibly vulnerable to attack.

    No, this is not meant to be a troll - but I just dont get how the governement could consider something as nebulous as wirless access to be considered a risk, yet not even make mention of something as potentially dangerous as a single organization controlling major parts of the online economy.

  231. OK by cpuenvy · · Score: 1
    "If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating."

    With that being said, the next logical step would be to get rid of crap littering the net, such as 203.197.23.26 - - [04/Dec/2002:18:36:41 -0500] "GET /default.ida?NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN%u9090%u6858% ucbd3%u7801%u9090%u6858%ucbd3%u7801%u9090%u6858%uc bd3%u7801%u9090%u9090%u8190%u00c3%u0003%u8b00%u531 b%u53ff%u0078%u0000%u00=a HTTP/1.0" 400 323 "-" "-".

    After that, it seems likely that it would be for the good of the net to just shut it down all together. Being such a inhospitable place where hackers and terrorists lurk, it is for your own good.

    --
    DISCLAIMER:

    I don't believe what I write, and neither should you.

  232. I don't understand you Americans by duncf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm sitting here in the relative security we have north of the border, and I just don't understand how you americans let your government gets away with this.

    Just yesterday, Slashdot had a story about New York radiation therapy patients being strip searched in the subway in the name of anti-terrorism.

    And now this. Another example of your rights being taken away in the name of anti-terrorism.

    More recently, Canadian citizens (even ones that have been citizens for a long time) are stopped at the border and detained for questioning and registration just because they were born in one of a list of 6-7 countries. (And they say it's not racial profiling.) Is this not overkill?

    Here's another interesting story. One Canadian was imprisoned for 34 days for purchasing gas at a gas station 15 metres inside U.S. territory, as locals had been doing for years, with approval, or at least acknowledgement from U.S. border officials. His crime: he had a criminal record and a rifle in the back of his truck (he was going hunting). They claim he was supposed to check in at the U.S. customs station which is another kilometre down the road (and was closed at the time)! Was he a terrorist threat? I doubt it!

    And now a personal anecdote: I was canoe tripping in Quetico Provincial Park (of Ontario) and the Boundary Waters Wilderness Canoe Area (of northern Minnesota). It was so refreshing to be able to travel right along the border, maybe cross it for lunch and sleep in Canada, or zig zag down the centre of a lake or river and say "Canada, U.S., Canada, U.S." (kinda like that Simpsons episode where they go to Australia) We never went through U.S. customs; in fact we couldn't even find one if we tried. Next time I go back, I won'e be surprised if I see U.S. customs posts every other lake, with motor boats buzzing around in an attempt to keep out filthy-looking canoe trippers that have been in the bush for the last 30 days. Well... they could be terrorists.

    In Canada, 56% of people think that Saddam's the biggest threat to world security, and 38% say it's Bush. (The poll results are here (PDF format)) Anyone surprised?

    So now, the big question is why do Americans let the government walk all over the liberties and freedoms that they hold so dear to their existance?

    Maybe you can answer that.

    1. Re:I don't understand you Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Answer: Americans are put to sleep by the mass media. It's not like in France where they go on strike all the time, which lets the corporations know they can't screw with people too much. In America, the sheep take it lying down.

    2. Re:I don't understand you Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still can't figure why Floridian vote for Bush.

    3. Re:I don't understand you Americans by TechnoWitch · · Score: 1

      Because we've become a bunch of fat, lazy, stupid idiots, entirely willing to trade essential liberties for the illusion of safety.

      Um, can I come live with you? ;)

  233. bad spelling? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well maybe if the government put more money into public education and less into worthless departements we wouldn't have these problems, now would we?

  234. Freedoms by mcelrath · · Score: 2
    We're sorry, your freedoms, generosity, and sense of community aid and abet terrorism. We shall have to take those away. Have a nice day. Vote for your friendly neighborhood Republicrat today! Oh, and report to your local Social Security office to have your serial number tattooed.

    -- Bob

    --
    1^2=1; (-1)^2=1; 1^2=(-1)^2; 1=-1; 1=0.
  235. The 5 Stages of Grief by Alethes · · Score: 2

    Here's a comment that find incredibly insightful and relevant from here and here as posted by circletimessquare.

    QUOTE

    1) DENIAL

    "September 11th doesn't really change anything."

    2) ANGER

    "John Ashcroft is an asshole!"

    3) BARGAINING

    "They might do this or that, but we can always march and petition and campaign!"

    4) DEPRESSION

    "I'm ashamed to be an American."

    5) ACCEPTANCE

    "I guess, after all, Islamic Fundamentalism really is the enemy."

    As soon as this person made the issue America, they lost their own argument.

    Dude, blood is on the hands of every nation on earth. Hypocrisy is equal opportunity.

    Does America suck big time on some issues? Sure. No one is denying the obvious criticisms you have pointed out.

    But surely you can see that America has more freedoms when it comes to the press, speech, etc., than China, for example, which actively seeks to control these things. Or Pakistan, Iraq, or Afghanistan.

    Does this make America better than China or these other nations? Of course not. That is just nationalism. Nationalism stinks like racism or sexism stinks. So maybe we, and this includes you, can move beyond the America sucks/ America is better rhetoric and focus on the issues at hand: basic freedoms, regardless of where in the world we are.

    Because no one else is talking about these issues in this thread as an "America is better" or "America is worse" kind of way except you. Who cares about that. Iraq is pursuing WMD. That sucks. All by itself that sucks. Whether America is the center of all evil in the universe or all Americans walk around with haloes of purity and innocence on their heads. Either way, this Iraqi prusuit of WMD still sucks. Period. End of story. Get it?

    So I'll make you a deal: we'll move beyond the nationalist rhetoric as soon as YOU move beyond the nationalist rhetoric, capice?

    Geez. ;-P

    ENDQUOTE

    Not trying to karma whore, but if I post anonymously, it's likely a lot of people won't see it. I can honestly say I've seen myself go through this after September 11, 2001.

    1. Re:The 5 Stages of Grief by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      This isn't about America in-and-of-itself, it's about what the current government of America has done and is doing. I do specifically critique a number of things as examples, but never have I said I'm ashamed to be an American, or that my country sucks. I love my country; it's my government that needs fixing or replacing.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    2. Re:The 5 Stages of Grief by gvonk · · Score: 2

      But surely you can see that America has more freedoms when it comes to the press, speech, etc., than China, for example, which actively seeks to control these things. Or Pakistan, Iraq, or Afghanistan.

      Does this make America better than China or these other nations? Of course not. That is just nationalism. Nationalism stinks like racism or sexism stinks. So maybe we, and this includes you, can move beyond the America sucks/ America is better rhetoric and focus on the issues at hand: basic freedoms, regardless of where in the world we are.


      It is not nationalism to think that the structure of our Republic and the freedoms granted to us by the the Constitution are better than the other systems. If we didn't believe that to be true, why not be socialists, etc.? It's not nationalism to notice that oppressive governments are not the correct way to do things. It's nationalism to believe that our systems are better simply because they are American.

      --


      El Karma: excelente(principalmente la suma de moderación hecha a los comentarios de los usuarios)
  236. Re:*COUGH* YES IT IS! *COUGH* by Chas · · Score: 1

    Try actually READING my post instead of REACTING to it.

    If you wish to make something publicly accessible, and someone utilizes it for other-than-benign purposes, why should you be held responsible for THEIR actions?

    See the example about giving the guy a burger and Coke at a block party again.

    Suing someone because they had their charitable action subverted is BULLSHIT. It arises, no doubt, from the desire to find a scapegoat. And any scapegoat will do for you, right?

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  237. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by xigxag · · Score: 2

    I've been saying this for months: if you run a wide-open AP, with the full knowledge that you are providing anonymous connectivity to others, you should not be surprised when someone uses that open AP to perform an illegal act, and the feds trace that act back to you.

    It seems to me there are two methods of dealing with this sort of vulnerability. I will treat them as opposing and competing philosphies, for reasons that will become clear, but in practice both are often used.

    1) You can move in the direction of giving the actor minimal power while requiring minimal accountability. Let anyone in on your network, even anonymously, they can futz around all they want, but they simply don't have the required privileges to damage your well-protected system. This is essentially the principle behind the Java sandbox, and behind the anonymous user account on a Unix system.

    2) You can give the actor maximal power while requiring maximal accountability. Every move must be authenticated and recorded, however once given access the agent has the ability to manipulate and potentially damage the system from within. This is essentially the principle behind ActiveX.

    Usually on a given network you will see some kind of combination of the two methodologies, encryption, permissions, access lists, antiviral programs, all working along various stages in the chain of communications to prevent damage by a hostile actor. However, despite these cooperative methods, I believe the two methods are fundamentally at odds with each other at a deep philosophical level. At their essentials, they boil down to Raymond's Cathedral and Bazaar. The Cathedral stands for maximal power for the actor. Here the Government strives to keep track of users and access points, and shuts down any unauthorized (anonymous) use. It restricting to itself the ultimate authority over who has the right to penetrate your system. (In this scenario the Government always mantains super-Superuser status for itself.) This requires you to trust your Leaders as infallible. The problem is, as we saw with that recent Active X debacle, once we have decided to "trust" someone, they now have the power to damage us, and particularly if it is a super-trusted authority, e.g. the government or Microsoft, the entire security method can be instantly rendered worthless.

    The "Bazaar," or minimal power method, which builds security into the system from the outset by not allowing rogue processes any ability to compromise operation, is harder to implement, and rather unpalatable to the Government since even it can't escape the sandbox, but in the end it affords better protection for everyone because if any given user is compromised, that user can only damage him or hserself. In practice, of course, even a sandbox-type system can be vulnerable to exploits such as buffer overflows, but this is where open source shows its superiority, anyone has the ability to fix their own machine if so inclined, and indeed to pass such fixes along to be utilized and scrutinized by the community.

    (Regarding the above, I tried to organize my thoughts since I had a lot of competing ideas going on in my own mental bazaar, but I fear I wasn't entirely successful in these few minutes. Sorry for any lingering incoherences, but hell, this is /., not a dissertation committee!)

    --
    There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
  238. Re:It's not too hard to see where this is all goin by bluesepsilon · · Score: 1

    I completely agree that our right to peaceably assemble is being assaulted.
    But it goes so much farther than that. The ultra-invasive Information Awareness Office , wants information on every little part of our lives. The WiFi deal is just helping them reach that end.
    In the name of security they ask us to give up our privacy. We must ask ourselves, is that a sacrifice we want to make?

    --
    War does not determine who is right, war determines who is left.
  239. Not only WiFi! by roman_mir · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The American Government by American People and for American People must protect American People from all threats such as terrorism and terrorism comes in all forms it comes from everywhere that is UnAmerican! It is illegal to be UnAmerican because terrorists are! Let's protect the big corporations, because they define what American means. Let's protect AOL Time Warners cable company by forbidding WiFi networks. Let's enforce electronic ID on everyone and track everyone everywhere all the time everytime forever. Did you get your EID implanted? If you did not you are UnAmerican and illegal! Let's use MSPassport to pay for all our purchases, to pay for everything including cab and restaurant and subway and home insurance and taxes (tip is automatically calculated and included and taxed once again) so let's forbid paper money and if you are against it you are UnAmerican and thus you are a terrorist! Let's split the entire nation into an electronic grid 1kmX1km and in order for you to cross a line between grid cells let's authorize you with your MSPassport and if you are not authorized let's stop you by sending a special electrical signal into your brain to disable you (police car dispatch, please remain unconscious until we decide to turn you back on once you are in jail.) What the hell, let's connect everybody's brains to our computers so we can monitor your thoughts and emotions thus allowing us to force you to do exactly what you must, to force you to buy exactly what you must buy to stay American, so the commercials can be sent into your brain directly and since commercials are IP you will have to buy license to watch them, so for your convenience we'll just move 24.99 from your obligatory Credit Card (MS Passport.) And if at any point of time you will try to regain your own consciousness and try to actually think for yourself - you are UnAmerican and Illegal and a Terrorist and we will bomb the hell out of you.

    God bless America!

    1. Re:Not only WiFi! by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      check this out. Thought monitoring/Kontrol. This is a US Patent Office entry. US Patent number 3,951,134

  240. Optionless, are you? by Pac · · Score: 2

    Observing first your elections then the present state of your government from this far land beneath the trees, I was left with some impressions:

    a) Gore is far more educated than Bush, yet far dumber. How little backbone one must have to bow the way he did to conservative media and movers and throw away his last, best chance to win, namely the extremely charming, intelligent and popular president Clinton?

    b) From right and left (or Republican and Democrat) does not follow tough and soft. During the last century most American wars were fought by Democrat presidents.

    c) Hilary C. looks far tougher than both Bush and Gore. That would kill many rabbits at the same time: a woman, a wife who managed to keep a publicly difficult marriage, someone who could truthfully promisse to keep (or restore) internal freedoms and make war to terrorists. I think this scenario is pretty strong.

    d) A sitting president won't lose an election if there is a war abroad. So all Bush has to do, and he has plenty of opportunity, is to produce a major war or crisis (Iraq, Sysria, Iran, Korea etc) near the elections.

  241. way back when by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Long before Ashcroft and all this whining there was the NSFNET. In approximately 1990 the NSFNET declared that anyone who connects machine to the NSFNET (effectively the internet at that time) would have to be able to indicate the identity of the person who initiated every packet that comes out of your branch connected to the NSFNET.

    This mean every computer had to hve a login screen. So we had to write login software for the Mac to cover this.

    This was long before concerns of terrorism, long before the Ashcroft stuff and G.W. Bush.

    It just makes good sense.

    It's too bad that an article like this which has some validity to it can be scaremongered like this. Look at the title "because only terrorists use 802.11". The article doesn't say that there are no legitimate uses for 802.11, slashdot made that part up. That's the wonderful slashdot editors at work.

    Anyway, the world didn't end when the NSF made that decree in 1990 and it's likely not going to end now.

  242. Toll Roads are Now Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having open roads is abetting terrorism. City parks must charge a fee for access and have locked gates 24 hours a day. Open spaces without access control provide terrorists with places to congregate outside the listening range of our surveillance device. Open parks abet terrorism.
    Everthing that is not forbidden is mandatory. Everything that is not mandatory is forbidden. 2 + 2 = 5.
    Thank you very much. This message brought to you by the Republican National Socialist Party ... er, Republican National Committee.
    AC because I don't want a file at the GPU er KGB er HSA er "Homeland Security Agency."

    1. Re:Toll Roads are Now Obligatory by kliment · · Score: 1

      > AC because I don't want a file at the GPU er KGB er HSA er "Homeland Security Agency"
      Or a visit to the Ministry of Love

  243. The Reasoning by m1a1 · · Score: 1

    This reasoning behind this is ridiculous. If you outlaw anything a "terrorist" could use, well, that is anything a normal person could use as well. It may be helpful for terrorists to find an open 802.11b network. Why? Because it is usefull for ANYONE with a properly equipped computer to find one.

  244. Honeypots by ShadowDrake · · Score: 1

    A thought:

    If you leave the networks insecure, would it be difficult to set up a few with monitoring to log who tries to access sensitive goodies?

    If everyone secures their networks, such an unsecured honeypot would stick out like a sore thumb, nobody would be stupid enough to touch it, and you lose something that's potentially a useful security tool.

    This assumes, in contrast to several posters, that the goal isn't to cut off cheap, decentralised wireless, and assumes that you'll get a better terrorist hit rate if you check only those who are downloading "easily-exploitable-security-holes-in-local-atomic -power-station.doc" rather than those looking for a cheap, quick way to xfree86.org

    --
    It's just like a fascist dictatorship, without the punctual rail service!
  245. The sky is falling! by 5KVGhost · · Score: 2

    Wow, some of you must have a hard time walking with your knees jerking so violently. I know that we've all decided that President Bush and every last person in the US Government are now minions of the Antichrist who think nothing of trampling the rights of every American, biting the heads off cute furry animals, and beating up old ladies on the street just for fun. But you should at least try and retain the appearance of rational thought.

    How many articles have we already had on Slashdot lamenting how hard it is to properly secure a WiFi network? Why is it horrible when the Feds point out something that we already know? How is it a sign of the End Times for the gov't to advocate good security practices? If they'd said "Gee, guys, the root logins on your main servers really should have passwords" would we have people unsecuring their boxes in protest?

    The article is vague and badly written, and we have no real context for any of the quotes they include. (Hell, no one they quote uses the word "terrorist" at all.) However, it's fairly clear from their analogy to the phone system that they're talking about big corporations, ISPs and big network providers. These are buinesses that already have a legal responsibility to secure their networks properly, and some of them have already shown that they either can't do it with current technology, don't care enough to bother, or just don't know how to do it right.

    This is not an attack on people or businesses who want to operate open access points. But that decision should be a positive choice, not an accident or a consquence of someone bypassing bad default security settings. And when that choice is made it needs to consider the security of other data on the network, like confidental customer information, that obviously should not be open to every random person with an 802.11 card.

    But nevermind all that. Let's go back to babbling about the imminent arrival of a police state and demonzing people on the basis of inflammatory Slashdot postings. That's ever so much more productive.

  246. History Repeats Itself by Artine · · Score: 1

    This reminds me of when the government gave the film industry an ultimatum: censor yourselves or we'll censor you. (Note that film was not protected under the 1st amendment at that point in time.)

    The film industry realized it would be folly to give the government such an absurd power, so the MPPDA (Motion Pictures Producers and Distributors of America) was instituted to censor films. For the next 40 years, many great works were created that had to be slashed to bits because of this, but eventually this stark oppression was eliminated and replaced with the ratings codes we have today (G, PG, PG-13, etc.)

    The government is giving the tech industry a similar ultimatum: secure or be regulated. If history is any indication, the industry will promote security to avoid government control. I think the government's reasoning is flawed, and I think the idea of de-facto outlawing of open APs is foolish, but I'd prefer this sort of self-regulation to government regulation any day.

    The zealots in our government won't be there forever, and if we can appease them while they are there--meanwhile fighting them and disseminating the American ideals of freedom to the sleeping populace--then perhaps someday we can open up our APs once again.

    Or maybe I'm just a foolish idealist with no grasp on reality. I suppose that's it, so I'll go slink back to my my cave.

  247. Re:Liberals and their misinterpretation of Article by LostCluster · · Score: 2

    I have a private (as secured as it can be) wireless network, not a "service". Someone who breaks into it is a thief, not a "user".

    You are not the problem. Carry on.

  248. The wrong approach by Ogerman · · Score: 2

    It's unbelievable the magnitude of stupidity shown by those entrusted with providing our security. Regardless of the subject, you don't fix large security problems by starting with the inconsequential nit-pick details! It'd be like worrying that a burglar could enter your home because they might kick down the door when in fact every window of your house has no lock. The 9/11 tradedy itself solved our air travel security problem. No hijacker will ever again obtain control of an airliner simply for the fact that the passengers and crew will not allow it. Gone is the assumption that a hijacker just wants a large ransom or political favor. Problem solved. We didn't need strip searches and confiscation of nail files.

    Trying to regulate, monitor and secure communications channels is absolutely the most useless way to "fight terrorism" -- not to mention it's not even remotely possible in an open and free society. What we really need is an "open source" style audit of our national infrastructure by ordinary Americans who work daily in their areas of expertise. We need simple ingenuity to fix any holes that may exist.

  249. Attention Moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the parent post should be re-modded (Score:5 Ironic)

  250. Now by notlameness · · Score: 1

    How does one get past the lameness filters Or would those be the 802.11 encryption filters ? which ever ..

  251. no rights without duties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am sick of all the whining about our "rights" being taken away. Compared to a mushroom cloud over an American city, or 100k dead from engineered viruses, your petulant crybaby attitudes are worth jack shit. We've got more freedom in this country than we've ever had, than the world has ever seen. And to the extent that freedom includes the unrestricted use of dangerous technology, yes, it will have to be balanced against security concerns. You don't have a "right" to drive a car, it's a priveledge, and you have to prove you can do it safely. Besides, THERE ARE NO RIGHTS WITHOUT DUTIES. I hear all you spoiled brats whining about "rights" that often don't exist, but never a word about duties and responsibilities. Why is that? I think it's because you people are a bunch of selfish, shortsighted, narcissistic assholes who don't know how good you've got it.

    1. Re:no rights without duties by garcia · · Score: 2

      we used to be able to freely have "open" networks running. Now they are offenses that are illegal b/c they harbor terrorists.

      That's not freedom.

    2. Re:no rights without duties by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2
      We've got more freedom in this country than we've ever had, than the world has ever seen.

      Excuse me? Have ever even left America before? I am sick and tired of Americans falsely believing that they have the most freedom in the world. You don't, in fact you have one of the places with the most loss of freedom in the past decade. Where on Earth did you get that misguided notion? Honestly, you are a terrible advert for your country.

      What can you do that we can't? The rest of the world isn't "IN SOVIET RUSSIA..." you know. You want a free society, take a look at Europe. We're even allowed to teach about evolution in schools here...

      (sorry if I've offended anyone, but this dumbass had to be set straight)

  252. Re:Great. Now I'm a criminal. by megaduck · · Score: 2

    Our of curiosity, when someone does sit on your network for a few hours, uses some stolen credit cards, uses a script to hack into a few hundred systems, launches a distributed denial-of-service attack against a few government system, maybe sends out a bundle of spam, and the feds come knocking on your door, what do you plan on telling them?

    I plan on telling them that I'm no more liable than the phone company is for allowing them to make phone calls. It's called the "Common Carrier" principle, and I think it applies here.

    I mean, if you hold me liable for what somebody else does through my bandwidth then you'll have to lock down every public library, Starbucks, Internet cafe and airport where they let you browse the web for free or a small cash donation. Network availability is becoming ubiquitous through a variety of technologies. Regulating 802.11 doesn't prevent people from getting on the network, it just kills 802.11.

    Securing the network from "bad people" isn't really an option any more than securing the phone system is. Do you want to get rid of pay phones too?

    --
    This .sig for rent.
  253. LP by notlameness · · Score: 1

    is it possible to geta last post ???

  254. Re:Great. Now I'm a criminal. by megaduck · · Score: 2

    All you need to do is to have a welcome HTML screen to your WiFi network that requires that users give you their name and verifyable e-mail address before they're allowed to roam.

    I foresee a lot of foo@hotmail.com accounts showing up in my logs. Really, there's no good way to track people without demanding a credit card or proof of identity.

    Hell's going to get real cold before I demand a driver's license to use my school's computer labs. The same goes for the library computers and my home network.

    --
    This .sig for rent.
  255. This just in... by euxneks · · Score: 1

    Also on the list for the FBI, is unlocked doors. FBI agents will be going from home to home, trying to open doors without a key. You are advised to lock your doors, because if your door is unlocked, they will come in and arrest you for being a terrorist.

    --
    in girum imus nocte et consumimur igni
  256. McDonalds by j3110 · · Score: 2, Redundant

    is helping the terrorists too... they just let anyone come in and purchase food. Those terrorists couldn't have made it to the planes if they had starved first! This will end terrorism because terrorists are too stupid to buy an AOL account!!!

    This statement by the Dept. of Homeland Security was probably funded by AOL/Verizon/etc.

    --
    Karma Clown
    1. Re:McDonalds by SmoothOperator · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is the terrorists who run McDonalds. Didn't you hear that there is acrylamide (a neurotoxin) in french fries???

      --

      Veni, vidi, vici.

  257. Responsible networking, period by jroysdon · · Score: 1

    There are at least a dozen different places a totally anonymous person can get free internet access in my town in very obvious places (that's not including hundreds I've located via wardriving). The easiest and fastest are the public library and the community college library. Speaking of which, my local community college has a nice open WiFi net. Better lock it down so the communists, err terrorists, don't hack any inappropriately connected resources (why should any vital US infrastructure systems EVER be connected to the internet?).

    Why should every military base have it's own internet access? Sounds like suicide letting G.I. Joe order up ADSL and let him connect it to a secure network. ALL military internet access should be required to flow out a small handful of highly fortified internet connection points. Even modems should be banned. If the government had HALF a clue it wouldn't matter how insecure the internet was. Paraphrasing here, but it goes roughly like this: Remove the plank out of your own eye before you try to remove the splinter from mine.

    Having said that, I believe if you're going to run an open AP, you need to do so responsibly. You need to filter SMTP access so someone doesn't use your bandwidth and IPs to use an open SMTP relay to spam folks (and yes, of course the SMTP relay shouldn't be open, but you shouldn't give them high speed anonymous access to it either). You should be able to account for who is using your internet access, if nothing more than a MAC address and email account. Yeah, a totally open WiFi network world wide would be cool, but each WiFi operator should be aware and able to shut down abusive behavior.

    For my own "open" WiFi at freenet.artoo.net I use NoCAT to authenticate all users. Yeah, it wasn't as easy as unboxing an AP and plugging it in, but it wasn't that hard to configure, and now I know exactly who is connecting within any 5 minute sliding window (it uses pushed SSL auth to verify the original sign-on is still valid, and will block and force an SSL redirect to a login page if the original SSL auth isn't kept up). So, worst case is someone could wait for another WiFi user to go idle and spoof their MAC address, and they get 5 minutes of access.

  258. Slashdot is terrorist infrastructure .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I leave messages here all the time with directions to mapquest pages that describe a patterned set of locations for mass poisoning and explosions ...

    It's a secret code only we understand ...

  259. You might not keep it for long....i by mousse-man · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Read the my sig.

    These gun onwers might be our last help.

    Hacking and slashdotting is not bad, but the last line of security is a good, 7.62mm semi-automatic rifle.

    The website http://www.a-human-right.com - I saw that website a year ago and I didn't think too much about the issue even despite living in a country where gun ownership is common - is an eye-opener. Even if it doesn't coincide with your political views.

  260. I am not supprised. by edstromp · · Score: 1
    Being a new State Employee, I have to say this move does not supprise me at all. State employees are super paranoid and "security" is the word of the day ... every day. They talk about key-fab's and dual, if not tri, verification of individual's access to our backend "data". The funny thing, is that 99% of it is public data already.

    And that's the State government. I can't imagine how much more paranoid the feds are.

  261. Even better, Thomas Jefferson by Szplug · · Score: 1

    " Societies exist under three forms, sufficiently distinguishable: (1) without government, as among our Indians; (2) under governments, wherein the will of everyone has a just influence, as is the case in England, in a slight degree, and in our states, in a great one; (3) under governments of force, as is the case in all other monarchies, and in most of the other republics. To have an idea of the curse of existence under these last, they must be seen. It is a government of wolves over sheep.
    " I hold it that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical."

    And,
    "The tree of liberty must be refreshed time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure."

    --
    Someday we'll all be negroes
  262. Re:Great. Now I'm a criminal. by Fastolfe · · Score: 2

    It doesn't apply here. You can't just say, "I'm providing a service, so make me a common carrier." The phone company bit is a horrible example, because you cannot merely make a telephone call and hack into other systems, send a million spam messages, or command your DDoS zombie army. You'd have to have an ISP in there somewhere to get you online. The telephone call is merely the "physical" layer of your network connection. For the rest of your examples, you're still not getting free anonymous access. For your library, you generally need a library card, and even if you don't, people saw you. They can trace the activity back to the PC, and a librarian or a visitor could easily say, "Yep, I remember him." Many libraries also generally permit only web browsing. If you set up a Wi-Fi network and put it in a DMZ and only permit proxied (filtered?) HTTP traffic, I'd say that's a responsibly-run Wi-Fi network, though I still might have my reservations about running one. But that's not what we're talking about here, is it? It's about truly anonymous, full IP connectivity. That is not generally found in a library. For Starbucks, you have to sign up with an account, which requires a credit card. Even if you used stolen information, somebody probably saw you sit down, assuming you didn't buy any coffee. For an Internet Café, same thing. You had to pay to use the service, so you either spoke to a vendor, and/or they have your credit card. I also don't know how many of these places offer you full IP connectivity as well. I would think most of these would be heavily firewalled and proxied also. In an airport, first of all, you've bought a ticket. Secondly, I don't know of any "all-airport" networks that do not require you to sign up with an account. Thirdly, for those airline clubs that do offer "free" Wi-Fi access, you had to walk in and demonstrate that you were a member. They've noted this. There is presently nothing similar to open Wi-Fi networks in providing 100% anonymous full IP connectivity. When they do knock on your door, and they've stated that they've traced all sorts of illegal activity back to your network, and you do simply state "I'm no more liable than the phone company is!" what do you think they will do? Do you think they will shrug their shoulders and say, "Oh damn, better luck next time"? If what you're advocating (immunity to open Wi-Fi operators) comes to pass, crime on the Internet will skyrocket. Spam will multiply by orders of magnitude (now they have no fear of being caught, and it would only be you that's shut down). Is this the Internet of the future? You're also forgetting that you are ultimately responsible for fulfilling the obligations of your terms of service with your ISP. You can call yourself a "common carrier" all you want, but you're still contractually bound there. If your ISP gets enough complaints, you can bet they will shut you down. You can scream and shout about how it was some other armless guy using your open, anonymous Wi-Fi network all you want, but it doesn't really matter. You failed to curb the abuse (because you made the deliberate decision to open your network up promiscuously).

  263. Re:Exactly. Thank you. by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    I can't believe you said this...

    And modded "Insightful"?

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  264. WiFi is economic ly harmfull to telcos by arcadum · · Score: 1
    When VOIP finnally takes hold of mesh-netorks and city wide accsess points the telcos(Qwest, etc.) will be antiquated leaving only ISPs to profit. But, even ISPs will lose revenew do to abundant communal bandwidth.

    ---
    Never stop dreaming.

  265. What the hell are you talking about? by autopr0n · · Score: 2

    You want me to hire someone to fix other people's networks so that they can't be hacked and used to DDOS me?

    Yeah, that makes sense...

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  266. You idiot. Militia only? by irishkev · · Score: 1

    My friend wrote this: Disarming law-abiding citizens is typical of the criminal court system that only exists to legitimize this tyranny we live under. So only state militias are able to bear arms, huh? Well, maybe they should read the Pennsylvannia Minority Paper; written during the Constitutional Convention Debates by the same people who demanded that a Bill of Rights be added to that document of despotism known as the US Constitution. These quotes, I believe, help set the context for determining exactly who is supposed to bear arms and whose interests the Bill of Rights are intended to serve.

    -----

    7. That the people have a right to bear arms for the defence of themselves and their own state, or the United States, or for the purpose of killing game; and no law shall be passed for disarming the people OR ANY OF THEM, unless for crimes committed, or real danger of public injury from individuals; and as standing armies in the time of peace are dangerous to liberty, they ought not to be kept up: and that the military shall be kept under strict subordination to and be governed by the civil powers.

    8. The inhabitants of the several states shall have liberty to fowl and hunt in seasonable times, on the lands they hold, and on all other lands in the United States not inclosed, and in like manner to fish in all navigable waters, and others not private property, without being restrained therein by any laws to be -passed by the legislature of the United States.

    -----
    Further down in the same document they talk of the dangers of a state militia and standing army/state police force:

    The absolute unqualified command that Congress have over the militia may be made instrumental to the destruction of all liberty, both public and private; whether of a personal, civil or religious nature.

    Thirdly, the absolute command of Congress over the militia may be destructive of public liberty; for under the guidance of an arbitrary government, they may be made the unwilling instruments of tyranny. The militia of Pennsylvania may be marched to New England or Virginia to quell an insurrection occasioned by the most galling oppression, and aided by the standing army, they will no doubt be successful in subduing their liberty and independence; but in so doing, although the magnanimity of their minds will be extinguished, yet the meaner passions of resentment and revenge will be increased, and these in turn will be the ready and obedient instruments of despotism to enslave the others; and that with an irritated vengeance. Thus may the militia be made the instruments of crushing the last efforts of expiring liberty, of riveting the chains of despotism on their fellow citizens, and on one another. This power can be exercised not only without violating the constitution, but in strict conformity with it; it is calculated for this express purpose, and will doubtless be executed accordingly.

    As this government will not enjoy the confidence of the people, but be executed by force, it will be a very expensive and burthensome government. The standing army must be numerous, and as a further support, it will be the policy of this government to multiply officers in every department: judges, collectors, taxgatherers, excisemen and the whole host of revenue officers will swarm over the land, devouring the hard earnings of the industrious. Like the locusts of old, impoverishing and- desolating all before them.

    http://www.constitution.org/afp/pennmi00.htm
    -- ---
    Also, Jefferson, in a draft of the Virginia Constitution made it clear what he had in mind:

    Note: Arms

    No freeman shall be debarred the use of arms [within his own lands].
    -- Thomas Jefferson, Draft Constitution for Virginia
    [June, 1776.]
    FAIR COPY

  267. WAP is secure...but IE isn't... by zerofoo · · Score: 2

    OK, so my organization is going to be regulated because we use 802.11? What about Internet Explorer? With a weekly security flaw found in the world's most popular browser; shouldn't the feds regulate the development and deployment of such a widely used bit of software? It seems there are many more opportunities to commandeer a machine via IE than 802.11.

    -ted

  268. Hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Having one voice is all good, but what happens in 2-6 years when a new president takes the reigns.


    I find it interesting that all of these right-wingers who favor the clamp-downs on our rights and support the growing power of the executive branch act as though they believe that Bush (or someone like him) will be in charge forever. Have they never considered the prospect of President Hillary?

    Or do they know something that the rest of us don't?

  269. Re:WiFi is economic ly harmfull to telcos by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

    Well, the telcos have a whole lot of stock in broadband too. Anybody with sufficient bandwidth can become an ISP.

    --
    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  270. Internet access by pseudochaotic · · Score: 0

    Trying to connect this with terrorism is just silly. If the problem is internet access, couldn't terrorists just go outside of the US and attack from there?

    --
    And the l33t shall inherit the 34r7h.
  271. let me see if I got this straight: by WhiteDragon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If I use security measures (such as encrypting all my traffic) I have something to hide, and must be a terrorist. If I don't, I am allowing others to use my network, so I must be a terrorist.

    --
    Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
  272. Re:Regulation is bad? inevitable? by MikeFM · · Score: 2

    I've lived over a lot of the US. I've yet to find anywhere that people consistantly follow the speed limits. Costal places are nuts, big cities are nuts, the midwest is nuts (ever been in KC at rush hour?), rural roads are nuts. I've not been out west much.. maybe that is where all the people are that follow the speed laws. :)

    My vehicle didn't have to meet any standards. It's a total POS. I just took it to a mechanic I knew would pass it as being okay. I'm sure I'm not the only one.

    There is a difference between an open network and an insecure network. I might leave all the doors open for people to use my web servers, proxy server, use me as a gateway, etc but I've never been hacked by anyone and doubt I ever will be.

    I have every right not to have my network usage tracked and so does everyone else. You can't punish everyone for the .001% of people that are shitheads. It won't protect you (as the shitheads just move on to better toys) and it screws everyone else over.

    Windows sucks. I'd never run it inside any trusted part of my network. For me I always distrust any machines running non-free OS's or any machines I haven't configured myself. Hell I even distrust myself (I tweaked my boxes so I can't logon as root when buzzed).

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  273. Secure the dollar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are other important thing the US should securing - mainly paper money. Any country or any terrorist with enough money can buy those fancy printing press and start making trillions and trillions of $10, $20, $50 or $100 bills

    1. Re:Secure the dollar by The+Jonas · · Score: 1

      Yup, here is a good recent article from Business 2.0 on how terrorists use counterfeit $$$ to aid their cause. It is titled, "Forging Terror How rapid advances in scanning, printing, and other technologies have made counterfeiting a potent new weapon of holy war."

  274. IBM, Intel and AT&T are Terrorists, huh? by Glasswire · · Score: 1

    Since they just announced the Cometa consorium whose goal is put 802.11b hotspots all over the US, I suppose they will be subject to Dep't of Homeland Insecurity actions....

  275. The Sky IS Falling!!! by MeatMan · · Score: 0

    It's a joke link/site. There's no malicious coding or anything else. I like to joke and prank but I would NEVER do anything malicious to yours or anyone elses computer. That is just as bad as mugging someone, IMHO. If you can't close IE or pop-ups, that's your fault, not mine or IE's. See the post above yours and quit being a moron. If you're running a pop-up killer and anti-virus in the background, you've nothing much to be concerned about when cruising the net. Save the link and e-mail it to your friends, it's fun and it's completely harmless... notwithstanding deviously annoying ;'P

    1. Re:The Sky IS Falling!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have nothing to hide, why did you modify the link after I complained?

  276. Routing out evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Become a voluntary weapons inspector to check the WMD status of the largest terrorist organisation on Earth.

  277. Who would connect 911 computers to the net? by Glytch · · Score: 2

    Seriously. Any 911 center admin who does that deserves to be shot.

  278. Terrorists don't give a fsck about Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ..Especially from us 'infedels' here in the west. They despise us. They do not trust us.

    Access to a network != terrorism. Killing people in a way that incites terror is terrorism. Blowing shit up. Making big bloody messes. Doing shit that gets them attention. Doing stuff over computer networks would be covert, no? Terrorists don't do covert. They do big and messy.

    And if ANYBODY is a 'cyberterrorist', it is the RIAA, for having the audacity to actually ask for the ability to take out people's networks. All the crap that American corporations have been doing lately, if there was such a thing as 'cyberterrorism' (there isn't), should be labelled as terrorism.

  279. Re:Forget WiFi,there's no right to keep and bear a by silentbozo · · Score: 2

    So basically you're saying we should have instead elected the fascist bastard who was running against Davis, right?

    Davis was Lieutenant Governor long before he was Governor. In addition, he had to qualify for his own party's primary against another democratic challenger, before going on to the November election against a slate of challengers, including Independent, Green, and Reform party candidates. Unless every person he's ever run against was a facist bastard, voters have had many a chance to pick a different candidate.

  280. anonymous connectivity by g4dget · · Score: 2
    But once you have anonymous connectivity, there's nothing stopping you from hacking into a few hundred hosts (maybe using a script) and setting up DDoS zombies on all of them. You can now use your anonymous connection to initiate a more severe attack without fear of getting caught.

    Yup, and there are plenty of places that are selling anonymous connectivity, both in the US and overseas. AOL, for example.

    Besides, there are plenty of ways in which terrorists can get other people's credit card numbers.

    Secondly, an open Wi-Fi network is a perfect place to release a destructive virus or worm. You don't need a lot of bandwidth to do this.

    No more or less perfect than any other Internet connection.

    1. Re:anonymous connectivity by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      ...both in the US and overseas. AOL, for example.

      1. You need a credit card for an AOL account
      2. You have to dial up to AOL through a land-line. AOL has caller ID.

      Granted, you can use a stolen card, and dial up from a pay phone, but these are rather significant speed bumps for the casual (ab)user. Promiscuous Wi-Fi networks open that door of anonymity to every Joe ScriptKiddie/spammer.

      What do you gain out of having anonymous IP that you can't have with anonymous HTTP? Why does everyone insist on having this anonymity at the IP layer and not the application layer?

    2. Re:anonymous connectivity by g4dget · · Score: 2
      1. You need a credit card for an AOL account

      No, you don't. AOL sells by-the-minute plans for cash, at your local computer store.

      2. You have to dial up to AOL through a land-line. AOL has caller ID.

      We have these wonderful things called "pay phones". Some of them helpfully provide modem connections, others work with acoustic couplers.

      What do you gain out of having anonymous IP that you can't have with anonymous HTTP? Why does everyone insist on having this anonymity at the IP layer and not the application layer?

      Many attacks are easier to launch through IP than through HTTP.

      Of course, as far as I'm concerned, it's a tempest in a teapot. If large chunks of the Internet goes down for a few hours, we can deal with it. If we can't, we should take steps so that we can.

    3. Re:anonymous connectivity by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      Many attacks are easier to launch through IP than through HTTP.

      And this is precisely my point.

      There's no reason to have anonymity at the IP layer and no reason to get up in arms about not being able to provide it. The primary (sole?) reason someone needs IP-layer anonymity is so that they can launch attacks without getting caught.

      Why is everyone working so hard to protect this?

    4. Re:anonymous connectivity by g4dget · · Score: 2
      The primary (sole?) reason someone needs IP-layer anonymity is so that they can launch attacks without getting caught.

      I am guaranteed anonymity at the HTTP layer only if I know that I am anonymous at all the lower level protocols.

      Why is everyone working so hard to protect this?

      Because if the infrastructure is put in place to track people at the IP layer, there is no anonymity at all anymore.

      Worse, it creates entirely new opportunities for identity theft: as long as identity isn't intended to be guaranteed at the IP level, nobody relies on it. As soon as there is the slighted indication that identiy at the IP level is "legally guaranteed", companies will use that as an excuse for using it for "easier" authentication schemes, placing everybody at risk. And that's just one of many potential abuses.

    5. Re:anonymous connectivity by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      I am guaranteed anonymity at the HTTP layer only if I know that I am anonymous at all the lower level protocols.

      Have you never heard of anonymizing HTTP proxies? What about a web kiosk somewhere? If the application layer does not adequately protect your privacy, you should try to effect change.

      as long as identity isn't intended to be guaranteed at the IP level, nobody relies on it.

      We're not talking about guaranteeing authentication at the IP layer, we're talking about guaranteeing anonymity at the IP layer. Whether or not we need to implement mechanisms to authenticate every IP user is totally outside of the scope of this article and is certainly not something I'm prepared to advocate.

  281. Charity Prohibited by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next will come charitable giving. Did you do a background check on that homeless person before giving him some spare change? He could be an Al Quaida sleeper agent! That spare change could be used to buy a bomb or biological agent and used against America! If you give money away without checking on who you give it to, you're the new terrorist criminal. In fact, even selling something at a reduced price could aid terrorists. Goodwill and other thrift stores must be regulated and sell to citizens with anti-tamper national ID card. Grocery and department stores will be prohibited from having sales because terrorists might buy something at a discount. In fact, the idea of a sale is a terrorist tool, by not paying full price, you're working to bring down the Economy which is exactly what the terrorists want!

  282. Roads too.... by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1

    We can't have the roads open to the public. Terrorists could drive on the roads. Ummm, better close down Walmart too. Terrorists could buy their box cutters there.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  283. well I guess me and my pastor are terrorist by mpost4 · · Score: 1

    Not only do we have an 802.11b network setup (he and I are the only ones that use it) but we did encryption, MAC address filtering, a nonsense ESSID. You think that is paranoid you should see the firewall!!

    <bad humor>
    Tonight on channel 4 news, local Lutheran pastor arrested for using 802.11b networking technology, the FBI said that all you use 802.11b are terrorist, still at large the sysadmin for the church police are instructed to shoot on sight.
    </bad humor>
    You know they will not say wireless, because then people will know how stupid this is.

  284. Speaking softly: The next big terrrorist threat by waqar.rathore · · Score: 1

    where is this going to stop? Is holding a private conversation aiding and abetting terrorists as well? This is well beyond the pale. I think that the silent majority in the US better open there mouths, otherwise its all going to be silent.

  285. Re:If they really wanted to fix insecure networks. by alizard · · Score: 2
    Just how would getting your ass sued if you were the proud owner of an open access point through which a successful hack of somebody's credit card database was committed discourage securing it?

    If someone hops on an access point with a localhost IP, the packets that leave/enter the account are going to be tagged with the access point's IP... and if the owner says "I created an open access point, I have no idea who used it", the owner doesn't get off the hook in a civil lawsuit this would be a response to.

    That's what pushing liability back onto the responsible party means.

    What I'm calling for is liability law applied to cyberspace, not just for open access 802.11(whatever), but for everybody. Starting with the idiots with cablemodems, no firewalls, and 0wN3d computers.

  286. If you have an insecure network... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... the U.S. Gov. will send you the text:

    "All your freedoms are belong to us. Please stop using wireless and drag some cables around."

  287. hmm.. by sploxx · · Score: 1

    somewhat weird: wired.com posts news about wireless LANs...

  288. What If They Destroyed Everything On The Net? by istartedi · · Score: 2

    You know what? No great loss. Yep. That's right. It'd be like 1988 when almost nobody had net access. I was a courrier back then. There were signs all over the place that said "FAX It!" because that was a hot new thing back then. We routinely made pickups of mag-tapes to deliver to computer centers. You know the old bit about never underestimating the bandwidth of a truckload of CD-ROMs? Well, never underestimate the bandwidth of a college drop-out making a run with a cardboard box full of mag-tapes.

    Now, of course we are a lot more dependant on the 'net these days and some things would get disrupted. But GET REAL. Very little data would be lost because it's backed up... much of it still to tape. Some businesses like Amazon would "lose" a lot of sales, but the bottom line is that Junior will still get his socks and that copy of "Harry Potter and the Delayed Puberty" for Christmas. It just might be late, that's all.

    Making the Internet a national security issue is like making Showtime, Playboy and the Home Shopping Club cable channels a national security issue.

    When I was a dialup tech we used to make fun of people with no backup ISP who said "my business depends on the internet". The idea of someone depending on just one ISP was funny, but the idea of depending on the Internet was funny too.

    Now, I seriously doubt that someone logging onto the net--through 802.11 or otherwise--could bring it all down. Even if they could, the outtage wouldn't last long. This is big business now, and you know the problem would be isolated in hours. In the meantime, as Scott Adams said "the network is down, but everybody else is happy".

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  289. It's about free hotspots by ken_i_m · · Score: 1

    This is not about insecure company networks so much as it is about free neighborhood networks. All those free wireless neighborhood networks sprouting up in Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Boston, et al. If they continue to catch on and as they begin to overlap there will emerge a wireless Internet. People will be able to wirelessly send email, visit websites, trade files, and all the things they did on the original Internet but without the creeping centralization and control that is starting to pervert the Internet into just another Mass Media distribution system.

    The real fly in the soup from the Feds point of view is that there would be no choke points such as ISPs to get ahold of it. Such a wireless mesh would truly route around any obstacles.

    Just when the FBI has essentailly been given a green light to monitor the 'net, email, chatrooms, etc along comes a tech that has the potential to break their control. If you think they are going to sit back and let that happen I have a bridge to sell you.

    I think, therefore, ken_i_m

  290. Here's another way of looking at this... by kcb93x · · Score: 1
    "If you're going to get broken into ... we're going to start regulating."

    Doesn't that sound like they should start regulating Microsoft, I mean, how many times do the MS servers get cracked? Seriously...I know some idiot's going to mark me as 'MS bashing' or whatever...don't mod me down for being 'typical' mod me up for pointing out the link to how we use this to prevent companies from creating insecure code.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  291. Re:If they really wanted to fix insecure networks. by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

    Perhaps I misunderstood the original post. I was under the impression that it was suggesting that we need to shift our resources away from combating promiscuous Wi-Fi networks and towards goals that would possibly have an impact on reducing spam. I found this argument silly. But perhaps I misunderstood.

    I am completely in favor of everything you describe in your post.

  292. It's all about fear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every day, we read about the government's latest attempts to stop terrorism. Multicolored alert systems, dogs sniffing your shoes at the airport, and every other hairbrained scheme they can come up with. Mostly, we just shake our heads and go on with our lives.

    The government wants to stop terrorism, but they seem unable to realize that terrorism is essentially unstoppable. As long as middle eastern fanatics are allowed to exist, at all, they will keep attacking us.

    It is INEVITABLE, that they will obtain a true weapon of mass destruction, capable of killing millions. Once they have it, they WILL use it. Sooner or later, within our lifespans, a nuclear weapon will be detonated within a major population center of the United States.

    The only way to stop them is to kill them first. The problem for us is that we are not willing to kill millions of innocent people in the middle east to stop terrorism. The terrorist have no such ethical problems. Killing millions of innocent Americans is what they dream about.

    Do we cast aside our ideals, and our morals, and commit genocide throughout the middle east on a scale never before seen, as a premptive strike against a handful of terrorists, or do we watch stoically as millions of our fellow citizens disappear in a blinding flash of light, and hope that those of us left behind can hold our democracy together?

    Tough questions. I think I'll go watch TV.

  293. It is time by pegasustonans · · Score: 1

    for a revolution.

    --
    And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death. --Will
  294. I've had it... by slowtonejoe75 · · Score: 1
    I am officially starting to look for a job somewhere else in the world. I know, I know, I'm running away like a coward... Whatever dude. Call it what you will, I just don't want to be counted along with the rest of you anymore. I admit it... I'm embarrased to be an American.

    I don't believe in violence, I don't even believe in peace.

    1. Re:I've had it... by TechnoWitch · · Score: 1

      You and me both.

      I've been considering property in British Columbia, to be quite honest.

      This is not the country in which I grew up.

  295. Not Cynical Enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My friend, I think you are not cynical enough. Those men are not cowards who are beating the air to ward off their darkest fears. No, I think they more like Senator Palpatine, inventing a phantom menace so that they may seize power. They timed the Iraq menace to coincide with the elections and it got them a majority in both houses. I won't go so far as to say that they were complicit in 9/11, but they have capitalized on it, and use it to justify all kinds of self-serving actions. The President is the guy who said "There ought to be limits to speech" during the 2000 campaign and won the nomination anyways, so what do you expect. You want an example? You could be designated a "person of interest" for that political criticism and put on the "no-fly" list and no carrier would sell you a ticket. They can now tap your phones, email, and ISP traffic without any real due process. 9/11 was significant because it was an effective attack on our home soil, but to put it in perspective, more people die every year from tainted meat than died on 9/11. You don't cut taxes for the rich to stimulate the economy, you do it for political reasons. You don't open fedral parks for oil drilling to reduce foreign oil dependancy, you do it to help US oil companies who contribute to your campaign. You don't close the open WAP nodes to stop terrorism, you do it to help contributors trying to sell 3G phones. You don't appoint Kissenger, a man wanted in several country in regards to war crimes, to get to the truth, you appoint him because he won't find anything embarassing. And with each success, they get bolder. If the Dems won't stop them from unilateral action in Iraq, despite CIA and NSA reports that Iraq is not a threat to US lives, then the Dems surely won't stop them from incremental takings of freedom.

    Predictions: The weapons inspectors will not find anything, and the US will invade anyways. They will open ANWAR for drilling, despite the fact that most Americans oppose it. They will use the threat of poisoning(real or imagined) to privatize our water supply alleging that it will be safer and cheaper, but it won't be. They will push through some kind of DRM system to eradicate the anonymity that allows bad people to do Bad Things on the internet. Before the election they will pass a flag waving bill to ban fedral contracts from those unpatriotic corporations that move offshore to avoid taxes; then recind that in a little provision to an unrelated bill after the election. Oh, wait they already did that last one.

  296. The Weak Link by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1

    "We know that (an attack) could bring down the network of this country very quickly. Once you're on the network, it doesn't matter where you got in."

    Sounds like more of a case to freeze what's left of Microsoft's assets and liquidate. Obviously everyone should be running OpenBSD on their workstations, not just in their server rooms.
    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  297. do you understand where this is going?? by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Black vans will be prowling around "sniffing" for wireless lans. When they prowl through your neighborhood and detect that you have 802.11 running they will send a SWAT team to kick your door in, shoot your dog and rip your house apart in the name of National Security because you are aiding and abetting "Abdul" down street.

    Remember when they declared PGP to be a munition and banned it's export??

    What do you think will happen when you begin to send PGP encrypted email to/from your friends?
    Why would ANYONE want to hide anything??

    When you hide something there must be a reason for it. Why make your conversations private? We can't have that now can we? Only terrorists would want to speak to one another in secret.

    Privacy will become illegal in the near future, when nothing is hidden then there can be no terrorism, right?? And when someone tries to speak privately then those persons are plotting something and must be arrested for interregation.

    They tried to push the clipper chip on us and nobody went for it. Now, we are staring down the barrel of Palladium and Longhorn and it's only a very short time before all privacy is lost and thus all freedoms are restricted.

    We will be prisoners in our own minds.

  298. bomb them by hany · · Score: 1
    Well, then, now that you've mentioned it, the dept. of homeland security needs to quickly regulate the access in those other countries.

    I see two choises for "foreign" (i.e. not USA) countries where Internet connectivity is available:

    1. They surrender their souverenity ASAP in favor of government of the USA.
    2. They'll get bombed into The Stone Age(TM) by American Army(TM).
    --
    hany
  299. In international news: Porn Biz Funds Terrorism by danila · · Score: 1
    Russia, Moscow.
    Pravda.Ru reports:

    The chairman of the department for the struggle against high-tech crimes of the Moscow Central Directorate for Internal Affairs, Lieutenant Colonel Dmitry Chepchugov, has recently released a statement about pornsites. Dmitry Chepchugov stated that the income earned from pornsites is being used to fund extremist and terrorist organizations.

    Read the full story.

    --
    Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
  300. Not actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Terrorists in Mars use the 903.21 variant. Follow the URL and see for yourself.

    The
    moderators are the real trolls.

  301. I'm just not buying into this... by daveman_1 · · Score: 2

    For some reason, I just don't buy into the whole "Terrorists want to bring down the internet." bullshit. I tend to think these types of morons would much prefer strapping a bomb to themselves. They would probably just look like a bunch of punk kids if they actually tried to bring down the internet. Afterall, it's all about image if you're a terrorist...

    --
    Russian Russian Russian RussianDollSig DollSig DollSig DollSig
  302. Watch Out by samantha · · Score: 2

    The Feds are now claiming that communications per se are terrorism or tools terrorists can use. Well, yes, terrorists as well as everyone else can use the telephone, the mails, wired networks and wireless networks. So what? It is the interest of all of us that the ease of communication and the ability to communicate without Sammy peering into our thoughts as we do so, be preserved and increased. That some will communicate what we would rather did not exist does not mean that you threaten communication channels as such or invite Sammy to examine and control each and every packet.

    Here we have Homeland [In]Security showing their true colors. "If you don't do what we want then we will regulate you (i.e. use the force of arms) you into non-existence or until we don't feel at all uneasy, or until or corporate sponsors don't feel you are a threat to their monopolies." Thanks, Sammy, for being so clear.

    Of course the "telecomm" industry was represented. These positions came straight out of and are in the interest of big telecomm. They have at last found a toe-hold to get the State (Heil Bush) to kill off or threaten free-range competitors.

    Isn't it interesting that Homeland Security is threatening WiFi, especially the relatively free and open networks, but not threatening known ultra-vulnerable OSes like those of MicroSloth?

    If someone cracks your home network then exactly how is that a threat to national security per se? Exactly what are they going to do with the average homeowner machine and set-up? DDOS attacks are about it. But those machines are easy enough to attack when wired. Ask the FBI. They brag of the ability to install key-loggers on most any machine on the Net today.

    This is such a canard. Everyone with a bit of sense knows that almost the entire infrastructure of predominantly Microsoft running machines is quite vulnerable. Whether it is conneced wirelessly or not changes little. The only purposes of this threat are to float a trial baloon giving Homeland Security larger powers and authority than it ever should have, to test the level of the opposition to such moves and to increase the monopoly powers of Big Telecomm.

  303. PGP is a red herring. by Nonesuch · · Score: 2
    pair-a-noyd writes:
    Remember when they declared PGP to be a munition and banned it's export??
    They didn't "declare PGP to be a munition". The laws have clearly stated that cryptographic technology is munitions. When the laws were written, most encryption "technology" was special-purpose hardware, and the laws made sense.

    When PGP was invented, the laws were pre-existing. Zimmerman et all went out of their way to challenge these laws and their application of sofware.

    What do you think will happen when you begin to send PGP encrypted email to/from your friends?

    Why would ANYONE want to hide anything?

    I've been exchanging encrypted email with friends and co-workers for many, many years now. Nothing "has happened to us".

    Face it, the government really doesn't give a damn what the average American citizen does or thinks, or what the citizens communicate to other citizens.

    Some big corporations care, but only to the extent that your actions impede their efforts to turn a profit.

  304. WMD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I view poloticians as Weapons of Mass Destruction.

    And since we vote for them, I guess that makes us all suicidal.

  305. Re:Great. Now I'm a criminal. by (void*) · · Score: 2

    Common carrier is not something you can call yourself with impunity. You must ACT as one. Do you filter your network traffic, and offer your network (and not just wireless) to anyone as you please?

  306. Smaller Government? by oldstrat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Was anyone besides myself foolish enough to print this thing out before scrolling through it?

    I just killed a small wooded lot.
    Just a thought, next time George and the boys offer up something this important, they really should think about making it a PDF and or gzip it.

  307. Oh come on! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, come on!
    I am no friend of the current administration in Israel, but this is just rediculous.

    Orchestrating a terrorist attack of that magnitude against their main backers both on the international scene and financially would be at odds with the interests of Israel.
    What would have happened if there was a leak? (A conspiracy involving dozens of people is hardly fool-proof.)

    There are many things you could blame on the Israel, but blaming them for beeing directly involved in the attack on the WTC is just stupid.