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Freenet Project More Stable, In Need

An anonymous reader writes "The Freenet Project is asking for donations to help keep their main programmer, Matthew Toseland. After a long time, finally Freenet, software which 'lets you publish and obtain information on the Internet without fear of censorship' is working fine (and fast) again, since their overload problems are almost completely fixed. They even plan to write a paper about the overload problems. If you want to try, be sure to run the latest stable or unstable snapshot."

147 of 606 comments (clear)

  1. Will code for spare change... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Welcome to the new world of Open Source, courtesy of the GNU Manifesto.

  2. I'm still waiting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    for my free Kevin. There was supposed to be a free Kevin. I'm not donating anything else until I get my free Kevin.

  3. Good stuff by MSBob · · Score: 3, Funny
    I heard Gary Glitter was looking forward to this realease...

    Moderators, please have some fucking sense of humour.

    --
    Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
    1. Re:Good stuff by fenix+down · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sorry, I'm rusty on my male porn stars. Who the fuck is Gary Glitter again?

    2. Re:Good stuff by darth_silliarse · · Score: 2, Informative

      Going way off topic but wishing to enlighten said reader. Gary Glitter is a British pop star who turned dirty bastard... two sites you can visit the official "I didn't do anything Guv" site, and the "I know what you did you dirty bastard" site... hope that helps! Probably not...

      --
      I've noticed that everyone who is for abortion has already been born - Ronald Reagan
  4. What the net was by StuWho · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Freenet is what the web was before big-business began to gather it in its claws - a true forum for free speech. Well worth donating to.

    --
    "If you think nobody cares if you're alive, try missing a couple of car payments." Earl Wilson
    1. Re:What the net was by __past__ · · Score: 5, Funny

      It is also about as fast as the web was with Netscape Gold and a 14.4 modem.

    2. Re:What the net was by interiot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This site and this one seem to be doing just fine. (though that second one is almost blatant trademark infringement, one would think...)

    3. Re:What the net was by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Its not just about what we are allowed to say, its also about what we will be harrased for saying.
      For example, right now, if I was to take my web server, and put up a site claiming that Osama Bin Laden was the new messiah, and that I agree with the destruction of the World Trade Center, and the acts of terror; I would be lucky to see a lawyer, before I landed in Guantanimo; even if I stated on the site that I am not advocating violence.
      Granted, this might be a bit of an exageration, but do you really think I would be left alone? Especially if my site got popular.
      Now, techinically, I should be able to publicly espouse the belief that Al Queda is right, and that the US is the Great Satan, etc. But with the current climate, I'd be nuts to do so. Its not a case of what I can and cannot say, its a matter of me having to censor myself out of fear of begin punished for my views. But, if I can put forth those views, and do so anonymously, I am less likely to censor myself out of fear; and, as such, truly have free speech.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
  5. And this will help I'm sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Hey everyone: Freenet is finally able to cope with the load they've ben having. Let's go post it on slashdot."

    1. Re:And this will help I'm sure by Shane · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It did help, I for one value the freedoms I have and believe freenet is one of the things required to protect these freedoms.

      In short I donated $20.

      --
      -- You can be a geeklord too :)
  6. Donate!!! by OverlordQ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Many may, and probably will, complain that Freenet is slow, doesn't work, etc. This is why Freenet needs your donations. Matt has brought Freenet's speed back up to where it used to be before all the routing problems. I remember when you used to be able to DL movies off of Freenet at reasonable speeds. And it's a given the 'child porn on my computer' argument is going to be brought up with the Free Speech for everything but that! vs the Free Speech Perdiod zealots fighting it out.

    --
    Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
  7. Funny by Phosphor3k · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just installed it and its running slow as shit. Same as last time. Is freenet being slashdotted or is this just hype?

    1. Re:Funny by amphibian · · Score: 5, Informative

      Both. Sorry, somebody misinterpreted what we intended to say :). UNSTABLE is working pretty well, but is still being worked on. Unstable is a much smaller network, so it's easy to make it work well. Stable is not yet working "well", although it MAY have improved a bit recently; it may work better in the near future, as we get rate limiting sorted out. It is not CURRENTLY sorted out, it is in the process of being sorted out. I should know, I'm the project's one and only paid employee.

    2. Re:Funny by peeping_Thomist · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm the project's one and only paid employee.

      So WTF are you doing reading /.? Get back to work, man!

      --
      Anything worth doing is worth doing badly -- G.K. Chesterton
  8. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Penguin2212 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What about the Communist dissidents in countries like China where their government won't let them publish their views? Should they also be deprived of their freedom of expression?

  9. An anonymous reader? by lawpoop · · Score: 4, Funny
    An anonymous reader writes...

    An anonymous reader? Hah! I've traced the pirate back to the ip 234.4.119.181! So much for slashdot anonymity! Which just goes to show...
    You should have used FreeNet[tm].

    --
    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
    -- Pablo Picasso
  10. Since everyone is asking for donations by aiyo · · Score: 4, Funny

    I am also in need of a donation for Free 'Net. Yes thats right, with and small paypal donation you can provide me with free cable Internet access! With your donation you will recieve one picture* of me using the Internet, and a monthly status update on my browsing expierence. Sure you can mod me down and ignore this post, but that doesn't do anything to help the problem of us who pay our own bills.

    *Content of picture my be inappropriate and disturbing. 18 and over only.

  11. How does freenet help... by funny-jack · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...when trying to pull up the freenet website results in something like this (what I see at work):

    Request for URL http://66.35.250.209:80/ denied by WebBlocker (Status: denied Category: questionable/illegal/gambling). This site has been blocked per Company [or country] policy.

    Are there alternate sources to get Freenet in the first place?

    --
    You probably shouldn't click this.
    1. Re:How does freenet help... by PatrickThomson · · Score: 2, Informative

      Freenet is a sourceforge project, so you should be able to get it from there.

      --
      I am one of many. My idea is not unique, nor do I expect my voice alone to sway you. I speak in a chorus of opinion.
    2. Re:How does freenet help... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      it's wankers like you that force programmers with ADHD like myself to set up a hidden secure tunnel to my home machine through your nazi firewall just so i can follow a slashdot link.
      us programmers are badmouthing you to management behind your back (and we're never going to invite you to lunch with the real engineers). tread lightly.

    3. Re:How does freenet help... by Burpmaster · · Score: 5, Informative

      They already thought of that. Freenet comes with the ability to host a distribution page for others to download Freenet from.

      You can download Freenet from my node. (Will be up for 24 hours or 100 downloads, whichever comes first)

    4. Re:How does freenet help... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "Are there alternate sources to get Freenet in the first place?"

      Sure, from the same place you should be getting your seednodes if you're in a dangerous place to be running Freenet: a trusted friend.

      I know it's an incomplete and semi-'chicken and egg' response, but it does apparently work, as there are definitely some folks from China who use this to safely communicate with one another. To me, that's worth all the extra baggage that comes along with running Freenet.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    5. Re:How does freenet help... by WWWWolf · · Score: 2, Informative

      The people who make censorware often also block well-known "loophole" sites (proxies, archives, Google caches, toys that do funny filtering to web pages, etc etc...)

      One way of getting Freenet is to connect to a publicly open freenet node and download distribution package directly from there, then install it and auto-upgrade. I'm not aware of any at the moment, though, but I guess they are out there...

  12. Freenet... by Sentosus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    While I don't have much to add other than I was using the software for months on end, I wanted to point out that free speech is only one of the many valuable resources available.

    What if it was YOU that had your personal information dragged all through freenet from an Ex-Wife or Disgruntal banker? I bet then you would wish for some control to the service.

    1. Re:Freenet... by SheldonYoung · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The inverse is also true. What if YOU had something you needed to say but couldn't?

    2. Re:Freenet... by fenix+down · · Score: 4, Funny

      Disgruntal takes no responsibility for the actions of our bankers taken off company time. If you have a dispute with a Disgruntal banker, we suggest that you take it up with the banker him/herself.

      Oh, and your ex told me about that last Christmas before she left you. You totally deserve it, you fucker. And what the hell were you doing with the owls in that picture? There's all this glare coming off the ice sculpture.

    3. Re:Freenet... by seanadams.com · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What if it was YOU that had your personal information dragged all through freenet from an Ex-Wife or Disgruntal banker? I bet then you would wish for some control to the service.

      No, I would be going after my ex-wife or banker, not complaining about freenet.

  13. Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    is freenet free as in beer or free as in speech or free as in free base or free as in free bsd or free as in free bird or free as free lance or free as in free bsd?

  14. NOT TROLL by Uber+Banker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree. The trouble is we do not all live in countries which draw a liberal line at law enforcement. FreeNET is a great idea spoiled by the rotting compost in our society which puts so many off.

    BTW - if you are unaware - unlike most P2P systems, on FreeNET you do not choose what material to share, rather it gets stored (and served from) your computer according to the network-wide demand. So if someone uploads kiddie porn to the network it may be stored on your computer for others to download. Because of its anonymous nature (well, nearly) it is very attractive for people who may want to bypass local law enforcement - i.e., those that wish to engage in unlawful activities will be disproportionatly drawn to it.

  15. The network is finally working, Great.... by Magila · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...now give me an implementation that doesn't use 120MB of memory and 50% of my CPU. Freenet has been a total resource pig for quite a while now, I'm surprised there hasn't been more emphasis on reducing it's usage.

    1. Re:The network is finally working, Great.... by SheldonYoung · · Score: 4, Informative

      There has been a significant amount of work done on reducing memory and CPU usage during the last couple of months. In addition to a lot of tuning and profiling, a great improvement was made by switching to asychronous IO (multiplexing).

      If for some reason you have a particularily slow computer the resource usage can be reduced by turning down the number of threads and/or connections it uses.

    2. Re:The network is finally working, Great.... by Lord+of+Ironhand · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've heard (though not tried) that Freenet can be compiled using GCJ, the GNU Compiler for Java, to native machine code. In other words, you lose the Java overhead.

    3. Re:The network is finally working, Great.... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      " give me an implementation that doesn't use 120MB of memory and 50% of my CPU. Freenet has been a total resource pig for quite a while now, I'm surprised there hasn't been more emphasis on reducing it's usage."

      What good is a node whose CPU and memory are hardly used, but fullfills no requests because the network is screwed up?

      Priority 1: Create secure, anonymous, decentralized network

      Priority 2: Get network reasonably functional

      Priority 3: Get resource usage reasonably low

      Priority 4: Get network running very well

      Priority 5: Get resource usage way down

      Right now, I'd say they're working towards 3 and 4, and doing a damn fine job at it. When you can design a functional, anonymous, secure, scalable, and fault-tolerant network, and have each and every node use minimal resources, feel free to let the Freenet team know. Until then, either run a node, or don't run a node - donate, or don't. But don't sit there and complain with no useful suggestions, corrections, help, or ideas to offer.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  16. I Tried Freenet Once Before by dupper · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I tried using it every day for a week, and I could only get to the help page and the "Are you sure?" BS of one of the others, and each took almost half an hour to load. Even so, I kept it installed for almost a month.

    I'm glad that they claim to have fixed those issues, because I seriously love the concept, and I'm jumping at the chance to try it again.

  17. Great Idea, but.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Freenet is a great idea for a project, and seems to have some great information on their system, but one thing I hated about it when I remember running it within the last year or two, was the Java VM would eat up memory and CPU like there is no tomorrow. I would be doing other stuff on my system, and notice a very considerable slowdown. While listing my processes I noticed that the JVM was eating like 100-200MB of memory and 50% or more of CPU at times. It wasn't like this all the time, but seemed to happen every couple or few hours. Maybe it was some bug in my setup, but things like this really shouldn't be an issue when you are dealing with a P2P application. I know Freenet encrypts and decrypts lots of information, but on a system with decent specs (2GHz CPU, 1GB Ram), it shouldn't be that noticeable.

  18. 2 Questions by chadjg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm sympathetic to Freenet's idea, as I understand it, but still a little hesitant. I have two questions.

    First, is it relatively safe? Does it do what the directions say it does and no more? Is especially vile content a big problem and will I feel guilty once I get into it?

    Second, Is it being run efficiently? I really don't know what it would take. One programmer plus a herd of volunteers sounds good, but please do let me know.

    Thanks. I have a new bunch of parts coming in and will soon have more than 500MB of disk space to spare, so this isn't an entirely idle bunch of questions.

    --
    Why do I have this? I don't smoke.
    1. Re:2 Questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      I have a new bunch of parts coming in and will soon have more than 500MB of disk space to spare, so this isn't an entirely idle bunch of questions.

      WHOA! 500MB? Big spender!

    2. Re:2 Questions by Rocinante · · Score: 4, Interesting

      First, is it relatively safe? Does it do what the directions say it does and no more?

      Yes, as far as I can tell (been running freenet sporadically for several years, constantly since last summer). The source is open, and due to the nature of the project there are a lot of slightly paranoid people looking at it. The bandwidth limiting code is actually kind of flaky, but if it's a big concern to you you can always run lower-level traffic shaping software.

      Is especially vile content a big problem and will I feel guilty once I get into it?

      Well, I've never felt guilty about running a node. There's certainly quite a bit of illegal distribution of copyrighted material going on over freenet, as well as a non-trivial amount of actual bad shit (read: child porn) (at least, I assume there is; I've seen links indicating that that's what they lead to, but never followed them). I feel, however, that there are better ways of dealing with such stuff than by making all secure, anonymous communication impossible. It's about as easy to avoid content you don't wish to see on the freenet as it is on the regular old web.

      Second, Is it being run efficiently? I really don't know what it would take. One programmer plus a herd of volunteers sounds good, but please do let me know.

      Um... it's kind of chaotic, but it gets results (in fits and starts, sometimes). The active developers are mostly nice, very smart people. You might be interested in perusing the freenet-devel archives.

      more than 500MB of disk space to spare

      Sorry to burst your bubble, but that will fill up in about a weekend. My local datastore is currently about 12GB, and I'll be putting in a spare 40GB drive soon just for freenet. Don't let this put you off, though; the network has plenty of storage space; what it really needs is more bandwidth. If you have a fast network connection, you should really try it out. It's an interesting project to follow, and could end up actually being very valuable to the world.

      --
      Just trying to open someone's head! I mean "mind!" Open someone's mind, um, to the possibilities! With explosives!
  19. Re:I don't like Freenet by El · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't believe in freedom of speech as an absolute right. It's not. The principle is "You're freedom to swing your fist ends where my nose begins." In other words, the obligation to do no harm trumps the right to free speech. I'm free to call you an asshole, because presumably that does no harm. However, I'm not free to publish your credit card numbers! How does this relate to Freenet? I don't know... most of the anonymous remailers got shut down due to their inability to prevent themselves from being used for criminal behavior. What checks does Freenet have in place to preserve privacy, and yet prevent the distribution of illegal material? Do the developers beleive in an absolute right to distribute copyrighted material, or child porn?

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  20. Freedom of hate? by monstroyer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, I downloaded and installed this java client only to find out the Freenet is not yet searchable. I've read several articles about the freenet over the last few years but have never figured out how to find anything of value (to me) on it.

    In fact, further reading of the FAQ states that if you don't want your node to harbor child porn, you should not run a Freenet node.

    I'm all for freedom of speech but i don't support anyone who would take other's freedom away. Child porn is exploitative and robs children of their childhood. The concept of freedom of speech is only useful if it promotes freedom. For example, supporting the right of Nazi freedom of speech can only lead to the growth of a movement that wants to take your freedom away. Logistically, this makes absolutely no sense to me.

    I'm uninstalling the freenet, sorry.

    1. Re:Freedom of hate? by DAldredge · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And who gets to determine what speech 'promotes freedom'?

    2. Re:Freedom of hate? by el-spectre · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yup, and so you don't use freenet. Sounds logical to me.

      I would be more concerned that knee jerk laws would find you liable for some crime, regardless of the fact that you don't (can't!) know what data is on your machine.

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
    3. Re:Freedom of hate? by demi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But no (reasonable?) philosophy of freedom of speech is absolute. The classic example is shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater; but there are various forms of libel and slander as well. Speech should be free, but that's different from saying you should be able to say whatever you want, in any circumstance.

      The actual problem of deciding whether or not to host child porn is a practical and technical problem that results from providing anonymity, not a philosophical one dictated by the goal of free speech. Once we've decided that anonymity is required for truly free speech (and it probably is) that results in some kinds of abuse: this is a necessary consequence of anonymity, not free speech.

      Freenet's pass at this problem is to handle it strictly democratically: unpopular files will, by virtue of their obscurity, not get distributed (very much), while popular files (presumably, by definition, not obscene) will get distributed plenty. But there's a trap here, which is that unpopular speech is perhaps most in need of protection.

      My own opinion would be that a better system would be accomplished by a framework of authorship and endorsements, a little like Slashdot's moderation system crossed with a web of trust. All content on freenet would be signed (with an anonymized identity). A few users would (voluntarily) take on the task of doing a little filtering and add their (anonymized) endorsement to the file. Most users would view (and could choose to host) only content so endorsed, and could further whitelist or blacklist certain anonymized identities. This allows the various philosophies of hosting and downloading potentially offensive content to co-exist on the same anonymous network. For example, there could be a few standard endorsements like "is not child porn" and I could elect to host only "non-child porn" content, as verified by Alice, Bob and Charlie but not Mallory, because he fooled me once; or Eve, because Charlie doesn't trust her.

      --
      demi
    4. Re:Freedom of hate? by PatientZero · · Score: 2, Insightful
      True, so let's extend the metaphor.

      Freenet is an unlimited (well, very very large) supply of megaphones. If you'd like to use one of the megaphones, the only requirement is that you not stop other people from using the megaphones. As there are more megaphones than people, no one will ever be left wanting. In that vane, if you stop others from using the megaphones (uninstall Freenet), you lose the use of them as well.

      Now, keep in mind that having a megaphone does not guarantee an audience. If you cannot get people to link to your content, your content goes nowhere. The only reason there is child porn on the net is because people are looking for it. Whether or not you run a Freenet node, child porn will be distributed so long as people keep wanting it.

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    5. Re:Freedom of hate? by Catbeller · · Score: 5, Informative

      A few comments.

      The idea that the net, meaning newsgroups, the Freenet overlay, web pages, FTP sites, the idea that all of them are hotspots of kiddy porn -- where did this idea come from?

      Is there a metric? Has anyone done any studies? How could such a count be made, since viewing the pictures, hell, having them on your harddrive, is a federal crime?

      Isn't it mostly anti-free internet politicos and religous agitators the people making these claims? And cops, federal and local, who are making big budget careers out of policing the net?

      Isn't it just pandering to people's fears?

      I mean, it started out small, this meme. After years in the echo chamber of mass communication, "terrorists and pedophiles" are now almost synonymous with file transferers. And, oh yeah, music and video "thieves". Small, now HUGE.

      How many thousands of kiddy shots have any of you actually seen? Downloaded? And how many of that subset of imagery on the net was made lately? Are most if not all ancient 8 MM junk made in the 80's, and long before that? And of all that, how much is actually really being traded around by willing hosts, and how much of it is BEING PLACED THERE BY COPS looking to make some easy bust?

      IS there kiddy porn on the net? Really? Examine the question for a minute. We are, in my opinion, being suckered into believing something is real 'cause everyone SAYS it is real -- like the WMD in Iraq, who dares say it is a pile of vapor?

      And what is kiddy porn? Is a 16 year old in a bikini porn? For most people in this argument, yep. I seem to recall as a young lad that I really liked the Montgomery Ward catalog for its fashionably clad young ladies. Was it kiddy porn?

      I seem to remember that Scott Ritter, the chief American weapons inspector in Iraq, got busted for "kiddy porn" on his hard drive not long after calling Bush a liar about WMD's. He's walking around today, so I guess the highly publicized charges were dropped, after he was suitably ruined, of course. What were those naughty pictures? I'm guessing it was the not-kiddy-porn variety.

      Again and again, WHAT kiddy porn? How would anyone know without downloading it? And if they don't download it, HOW THE HELL DO THEY KNOW IT'S "ALL OVER" THE FREENET?

    6. Re:Freedom of hate? by localman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't shoot the messenger. Really.

      I hate child porn as much as humanly possible. But that doesn't make me hate cameras. Or freenet. It makes me hate child pornographers. They should be found and shot dead. If it is hard to find them, I don't blame the largeness and complexity of the physical world. Or freenet.

      I don't have a solution to child porn, but I don't want restrictions on useful technology because of the sick actions of a few.

      Cheers.

    7. Re:Freedom of hate? by ReyTFox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you can't take the bad with the good, I'm sorry, but you simply aren't tolerant.

      Freenet is the ultimate test of tolerance - will you allow things you(and possibly most people) disagree with, such as those things the parent just mentioned, in exchange for supporting those things that you DO agree with? Or will you say "no deal?" It's hard to say that anyone "wins" whichever side you choose, since you don't know what you're participating in, but in the end it's all a matter of trusting that the elements you like will prevail regardless. If you're a cynical bastard, you'll mutter something like the parent post, and move on with your life. If you're super-optimistic like me, you'll think it's keen ^.^

    8. Re:Freedom of hate? by bear_phillips · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The concept of freedom of speech is only useful if it promotes freedom

      So are you saying any speech that doesn't promote your idea of freedom should be outlawed?

      --
      http://www.windmeadow.com/
    9. Re:Freedom of hate? by imsabbel · · Score: 2, Informative

      If the largest portal of the freenet(which is one of the few links you get after installing) has links in its adult section titled "they claim to have kiddy porn, looks like its true", then there is a problem.
      In the internet you would have to truely search for the stuff, the only things i have EVER seen in Freenet are:
      -warez
      -porn
      -kiddy porn
      -pseudo terroist stuff
      -pseudo "free thinking stuff"
      -pages that dont load even after 30minutes (99.95% od them)

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    10. Re:Freedom of hate? by arodland · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In response to the other bit:

      That's your decision, and your right. That's why that warning is there in the first place.

      There are some people who believe that freedom of speech is the most important thing to support, that when people have the ability to share what information they want, and keep private what they want, that the rest can be dealt with.

      Beyond that, your post degenerates into general uselessness. The idea that allowing Nazis (or anyone else you don't like) to speak constitutes oppression is stupid and wrong. Nobody is forced to listen; if anything, it would serve as a warning for most people of this putative Nazi threat. People are generally not as stupid as you think -- unless they're thoroughly conditioned.

  21. Re:I don't like Freenet by jagapen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Funny, THEMians criticizing the United States' legal system without understanding it. We believe the same thing here, epitomized by the famous hypothetical that you don't have the right to shout "Fire!" in a crowded theater because of the stampede danger.

  22. More Bad joke time by t0ny · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The fact that FreeNet is asking people for money is just dripping with irony.

    Apparently its hard to pay the bills with "free" these days.

    --

    Manipulate the moderator system! Mod someone as "overrated" today.

  23. Native code implementation? by ikewillis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Anyone know of a production quality native code implementation of the FreeNet protocols? I'd love to set up a FreeNet node, however all the systems I have free to dedicate to that purpose are not powerful enough and lack sufficient RAM to run the standard FreeNet Java implementation.

    1. Re:Native code implementation? by amphibian · · Score: 2, Informative

      Lets get the java implementation to "production quality" standards first. I'm not saying it doesn't work, but it's not working as well as it has occasionally done in the past. A P350 should be able to run a node, it will be more able to run a node after some code (improving rate limiting) I've been working on/testing recently has been merged over to stable. However if you have less than 256MB of RAM, it's not clear that you'll be able to reliably run a node at the present time; we WILL hopefully improve on this, but maybe not immediately.

  24. Does Freenet really work? by fembots · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Reading its philosophy, especially the part about "child porn, offensive content or terrorism", it sounds good. However further down in the security section, it's not real anonymity at all.

    So if the government really wants to find out who posted what, it is still possible.

    Can someone please enlighten me? Is Freenet a false sense of anonymity?

    1. Re:Does Freenet really work? by amphibian · · Score: 5, Informative

      Eh? What makes you think it provides a false sense of anonymity? Unless you post from a transient node, establishing whether your node was ultimately responsible for an insert or request is very hard. It's not entirely impossible if you are inserting a large site or a large splitfile, but it is hard, probabilistic, and we plan to deal with that vulnerability in the mid term future. Furthermore for single files it is afaics pretty safe, unless the attacker for example compromizes a large fraction of the nodes on the network.

  25. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by donutz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What about the Communist dissidents in countries like China where their government won't let them publish their views? Should they also be deprived of their freedom of expression?

    Is freenet really going to help them though? I'm asking this as a question, not implying that it won't, but I'm wondering: Can you detect that a given packet or set of packets are freenet packets, regardless of being able to determine what's in those packets?

    If I were the communist China government, I'd set up the country's firewalls to drop freenet packets. There could be benign uses of freenet, but there's definitely uses that don't appeal to the communists.

    Either that...or anyone using freenet gets arrested. In China, they might have an easier time getting away with that than in the US...maybe there won't be proof that you were doing anything illegal...but can you prove that you weren't doing anything illegal?

  26. Freenet is not useful in very oppressive regimes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What about the Communist dissidents in countries like China where their government won't let them publish their views? Should they also be deprived of their freedom of expression?

    If Freenet is so useful to dissidents, then an oppressive government will simply make its use and distribution illegal. They don't need to monitor what's actually being traded on it by specific individuals.

  27. Re:I don't like Freenet by sean1121 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...but I don't believe in freedom of speech as an absolute right.

    Why? When is it ok to silence speech? When it goes against something you belive in? I personally don't agree with your post
    but that doesn't mean that I think you shouldn't be allowed to speak your opinion.

    --
    "The road from legitimate suspicion to rampant paranoia is very much shorter than we think." - Picard
  28. Do I need it? by Fizzlewhiff · · Score: 2, Funny

    I already pay $34.95 a month for my internet. Why would I want to pay more money for a free one?

    --

    'Same speed C but faster'
  29. The real reason freenet hasn't taken off... by braddock · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The version on the download page is ancient. If you read VERY CAREFULLY to the bottom of the download page then you might end up running the "upgrade.sh" script which might actually give you performance. Then after about a day of struggle you may stumble upon the "Nubile Tutorial" so that you actually know how to use Freenet.

    It had always seemed that Freenet leadership is obsessively interested in getting press, yet at the same time embarrased enough by the actual system that they make it impossible for anyone but the most dedicated techies to get started using it. Considering that at startup some of the first content encountered is (quite unfortunately) child pornography collections, I wouldn't be surprised if this is almost intentional to keep the Press talking about the high ideals without seeing the current reality. Maybe it's even best for the project at this stage.

    If freenet is to succeed, and we all desperately need it to, it's going to have to make itself both USABLE and RESPECTABLE. That means new potential users should not be confronted with stomach wrenching content even if such things are available by the nature of the system.

    -braddock

    1. Re:The real reason freenet hasn't taken off... by amphibian · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Windows version auto-updates. Unix users are generally clueful enough to upgrade, or at least to go to the IRC channel and ask why it isn't working, and be told to upgrade. And we have not released any official releases for a while, because there was not a point at which it would have been sensible to do so. Our last major release got MAJOR press coverage resulting in the network being effectively DoSed for weeks! Oh and as regards respectable, we have a LOT of content, the overwhelming majority of what is on the main portals, which is not such filth; last I checked 12 out of 440 URLs on TFE were probably child porn judging by the titles.

    2. Re:The real reason freenet hasn't taken off... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey slick, in case you hadn't noticed, this isn't even a 1.0 release. Could the documentation and hand-holding scripts use a bit of work? Absolutely. Would they have to be changed almost constantly due to the ever-changing nature of the code, the application, the nodes, and the network? Yup.

      When the network and the code base are less volatile, then it makes more sense for people to get working on things to help out newbies. As it is, it's probably best that the AOL crowd NOT join up just yet, as they're not going to be able to provide the level of debugging assistance of your average techie. Stable and unstable are just branchs of development - the entire project is essentially in heavy (some might say 'extreme') beta testing. The difference between this project and so many others is that this one makes progress at incredible rates. Updates can happen several times a day sometimes, and the stable branch rarely goes more than a week or two without a new build. Unstable branch users are advised to update 'daily'. What does that say about the development pace?

      In terms of it making itself 'respectable', I'm not sure what you mean by this. If you mean to say that 'stomach wrenching content' should somehow be removed, well then you've missed the entire point of the project. In terms of not being confronted by such content, I would argue that they're less likely to 'bump' into it on Freenet innocently than they are on the regular internet. At least on Freenet, things are generally labled fairly well, and the major indexes (currently about the only way to learn of 'freesites') pretty much sort out content by hand, ensuring timly and accurate descriptions of what each link contains. If you're offended by particular content, then don't click on the link to view it. If you're offended by the link itself, then go on one of the indexes which censors unlawfull freesites.

      On Freenet, you're not forced to go anywhere you don't want, and you almost can't find something you don't want to find. Seems to me that you're safer on Freenet than you are on the regular net.

      Interesting.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  30. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by kfg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I might point out that child porn and rape are completely disconnected. Some child porn does not depict any actual sexual act, and legal sexual acts may illegal to make images of. In fact, in America, it would be perfectly possible to go to jail for possessing an erotic picture of your own wife.

    In Maine, New Jersey, Vermont, Conneticut, in fact in the majority of states, it's perfectly legal to screw that 16 year old cheerleader, you just can't take her picture.

    You are consfusing the age of consent with the age of majority, a confusion the laws themselves often promote. Perhaps this is the cause of your being modded as a troll by someone.

    P.S. you forgot to include the legal disclaimer that your post is void where advocating changing the law is illegal. The net police shall be arriving with their black helicopters momentarily. Please, do not resist arrest. Maybe you'll get lucky and get to inhabit Thoreau's old cell.

    KFG

  31. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Tracy+Reed · · Score: 5, Informative

    Good luck on firewalling freenet specifically. It is encrypted and on random ports.

  32. distribution of illegal material by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is a fact of life. There is NO way to prevent it when people want it.

    Be it on freenet, the open web, or the US-mail.

    If that offends you then dont contribute time/energy/resoruces/money to freenet.

    Oh, and dont buy stamps, or buy gas or anything else.. As there is nothing in this world that isnt tainted somehow..

    Just get used to it, and move on.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  33. Re:Just a guess here... by funny-jack · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was asking as more of a general question. I personally have no purpose to or interest in downloading Freenet from work. Note my addition of [or country] to the above quote from our web filter.

    My point was simply, Freenet sounds like a great tool to "obtain information on the Internet without fear of censorship," but how do you obtain Freenet in the first place, if you are under said censorship? My workplace was just a convenient example.

    --
    You probably shouldn't click this.
  34. Depends on Sun by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > Freenet contains NO spyware or adware , it's Free
    > Software!

    But it requires the Sun JRE, which is proprietary bloatware.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:Depends on Sun by demi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As far as I can tell, trying to run it with any free java implementation fails--unsurprisingly, since it looks to be impossible, according to Sun's java license, to make a free java implementatino of a java standard post-1.1 (I'm not a Java expert though, and if I'm wrong I'd love to hear it).

      I do always find it annoying when a program that claims to be free software is dependent on something that isn't free. I'm not criticizing the desire to use the Java language for free software, but couldn't they have made it compatible with kaffe or something?

      --
      demi
  35. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by cb8100 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    After installing FreeNET and trying it out , I couldn't care less about its claims to be a conduit for freedom of speech. Along those lines, I also couldn't care less about poor, oppressed people in communist countries who aren't allowed to express their views, if they try to express them via FreeNET

    FreeNET claims to provide an safe haven for people to exchange information without fear of oppression or censorship. What FreeNET is (whether or not by design) is a "harbor house" of sorts for child pornographers, terrorists, and other criminals.

    You may argue (as the FreeNET team does), that a few bad apples are just spoiling the bunch, but next time you log on to FreeNET, count how many of the afforementioned links are available (and towards the top of all the lists).

    As far as I'm concerned (and I am not a lawyer, but I have studied the U.S. Constitution in-depth), free speech extends to speech. It does not extend to breaking laws revolving around child endangerment and molestation and civil rights violations and hiding behind it by claiming it's protected by the right to free speech.

    In fact, having something like FreeNET tied to the open source community could have a harmfully negative impact upon it. Imagine the FUD campaigns if people started pointing to the material available on FreeNET (sure, they'd be baseless arguments, but they'd be playing on people's emotions). Rebuttal to the FUD might be that such material is freely available from other sources, however that argument would fall short in the eyes of the public because FreeNET is forever tied to the open source community

    Just some things to think about before you consider donating (time or money) to the FreeNET project

    --
    My lack of God, it's Trotsky!
  36. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by sploxx · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, the anonymous storage on your PC is a problem for many people. I also do not want to support the most disgusting people by giving storage to them for free.

    But, anyway, you have to make a very important distinction between freenet and the real world:

    Freenet transfers information. Rape nad Murder *always* happen in reality. IMHO, there should go the power of law enforcement.

  37. Freenet. Pull the plug before someone gets hurt. by Tackhead · · Score: 2, Interesting
    > What about the Communist dissidents in countries like China where their government won't let them publish their views? Should they also be deprived of their freedom of expression?

    In China, Freenet is a tool used by mystics and political criminals to spread destabilizing propaganda and destroy the lawful government. The mystics and propagandists hide their subversion by claiming they're only interested in undermining America by hosting child pornography.

    In America, Freenet is a tool used by scuzzball freaks to spread child porn. They hide their scuzzball freakism by claiming they're only using it to support the activities of pro-democracy activists in China.

    Doesn't matter where you live. If you install Freenet, you're providing an attractive nuisance, and because the documentation clearly states that by running a Freenet node, you may be hosting content that is illegal in your jurisdiction, you knowingly make yourself an accessory to any and every crime committed by whatever brand of criminals happens to be living in your nation and trafficking data through your node.

    FreeNet was a superb demonstration of how decoupling the right to speak freely from the responsibilities that come with that right can lead to disaster.

    It was an interesting social experiment, but it's served its purpose, and IMO the time to pull the plug is long overdue.

    Finally, on a practical level, for all the high sentiment about "countries with sane laws" touted by Ian and Matt, if you run a Freenet node, it's your door, not theirs, that will be broken down. If Ian and Matt want to take such a radical stand for free speech, let them host the illegal content, and let them take the risks.

    Foisting that risk off onto a bunch of noobs who think "oooh! P2P shiny! MP3z and b00bies!" without being made fully aware of the legal risk that comes with the phrase "attractive nuisance" in a Western legal system is reckless and irresponsible of the Freenet team. When the first Freenet test cases come down (and these cases will come down as traffic analysis without a warrant is now fully legal under USA PATRIOT, and always was legal behind the Great Firewall), I hope that those charged in the test cases conclude that they have civil grounds to sue the organizers, maintainers, and contributors to the Freenet project into well-deserved legal oblivion.

    Users on the Western nations' monitored networks have it easy - they only get faced with seizure of their hardware, a sex crime record, and 10-15 years. Users of Freenet in China get to supply corneas, kidneys, and lungs to Westerners smart enough not to run it.

    Ian, Matt: You made your point -- absolute anonymity means we'll have to face some things we don't like. Now pull the plug before someone gets killed.

  38. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by moosesocks · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wait a sec...

    Are the dissidents communists, or are those oppressing them communists?

    Your statement makes very little sense. Communism is an economic system - and an economic system has very little to do with freedom of speech.

    (Actually, communism may have more of an effect upon freedom of speech, but in the case of communism as an economy, it actually HELPS it)

    China's government is communist (though it's becoming arguable with the humungous amount of foreign trade going on). However, it is also a dictatorship (and a somewhat fascist one at that) - a dictatorship certainly supresses civil liberties.

    India is communist by popular election. No system of government which supresses personal freedoms as China does would be acceptable to the masses. And you certainly don't see these violations of civil liberties in India today.

    Looks like you're still feeling the ill effects of Senator McCarthy (America's worst politian. Ever)

    --
    -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
  39. Re:I don't like Freenet by the_mad_poster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What checks does Freenet have in place to preserve privacy, and yet prevent the distribution of illegal material?

    That's kind of the point. Illegal != immoral != harmful. It's up to each individual user to determine whether what they're doing is "right" or "wrong". Is it wrong to wail against communism? The Chinese government thinks so. Is it wrong to spread child porn? The U.S. government thinks so. But, what does the USER think. It's THEIR responsibility to do the right thing rather than the government forcing them to do it. I must say, I don't participate in freenet because I'm not convinced that the benefits of using my computer to help spread democratic propaganda away from the prying eyes of the Chinese government outweights the negatives of some sick fuck using it to spread kiddy porn, but that's MY decision, not the governments.

    When you rely on the government to hold people to certain standards, you're just asking for trouble. Look at the gay marriage thing. Does it hurt anybody? No. Still, there are people who say it's right and people who say it's wrong. The government wants to stick it's big nose in the mess now and that's just begging for trouble. They'll try to legislate morality which is just plain nuts. The government is hear to PROTECT and SERVE the public, not be a self-appointed moral watchdog. Freenet is an interesting experiment in putting the power of deciding one's own moral course back in the hands of individuals.

    Unlike the screwball grandparent poster, I like Freenet in principle, I'm just not convinced that I like it in practice...

    --
    Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
  40. Re:Is censorship such a bad thing? by donutz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What I want to say is free anoynomous speech has it's draw backs.

    And this free anonymous speech can be filtered, since it is free, and it is anonymous. Filtered in the sense that I'm more likely to trust something my mom says than some voice I hear whispered in a subway. We've gotta teach our kids to moderate that free speech and figure out if it's trustworthy or not, before they let it convince them to become teenage sluts building pyramids for alien-worshipping monkey gods, or whatever it was you alluded to. Anything you read on Freenet should be treated as an unfounded rumor. Which doesn't do much good for our Chinese dissidents, I guess.

  41. But by Safety+Cap · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The difference is that only popular items becomes memes as they are spread to other servers when requested.

    Things that are not popular eventually go away as the servers they are on smoke them when more popular content is downloaded.

    So, if your server is storing lots of kiddie porn (and there's no way to tell without trying to download it and seeing how fast it goes), then that means many people are downloading it...which means that you are probably living next to child pornographers, and probably have some in your church, synagogue, temple, job, and home.

    Hell, you might even be one yourself and not even know it.

    --
    Yeah, right.
  42. Disappointed in Freenet by tabdelgawad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Full Disclosure: I've never installed Freenet, but I've been following its development closely since its inception. I'm subscribed to the notification of new releases from Sourceforge ...

    And therein lies the problem. The last release on that page is dated July 17, 2003. And by Clarke's own admission in his 'State of the Freenet' letter, it doesn't work very well. He *thinks* this new algorithm will solve the problems, but nobody knows that for sure.

    Projects that deliver results have an easier time attracting donations *and* volunteer developers. Sourceforge lists 4 project admins and (count them!) 60 developers! Is Freenet so hard that this many programmers can't deliver a working version in close to a year?!

    The goals of Freenet are lofty, and for that maybe they deserve more patience, but when does the community just cut and run?

    --
    Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
    1. Re:Disappointed in Freenet by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Err....

      Their page is somewhat misleading....

      The client will happily update itself to the latest 'testing' version.

      Built nightly, I might add---

      These changes (version changes) propagate themselves through the network version.

      In the windows version, you need to click on a menu choice. In the linux version, you need to run update.sh

      There are plenty of interim versions, and they have VASTLY improved the project, and VASTLY improved performance.

      They aren't willing to release a new 'stable', but the project is coming along quickly---

      Tell me, do you think Debian deserves no more patience? Should the community just cut and run?

      It's not that their lazy, far from it---they are just very, very conservative when it comes to issuing new 'stable' releases, and for good reason too----

      Freenet is designed to be safe for use by individuals in countries with an oppressive orwellian state------

      How would the developers feel if a security 'bug' in the latest version got some people imprisoned, or even executed?

      Take a second look, my friend----Freenet is delivering results.

      P.S. Clarke's said that it doesn't work very well. But he KNOWS, 100%, that the new algorithm DOES solve the problem. Because that new algorithm is implemented on MOST of the network already--->Before implementation, at the critical point, 95% of messages in the average node's queue were "out of queue space".

      Now that figure is around 5%, and dropping. The changes WORKED......

      Infact, I think this is an indication that Freenet is growing---the old routing algorithm was not capable of scaling to the number of new users, but the next generation algorithm is working just fine.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    2. Re:Disappointed in Freenet by Loki_1929 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      " Full Disclosure: I've never installed Freenet, but I've been following its development closely since its inception. I'm subscribed to the notification of new releases from Sourceforge ..."

      "I've never driven, or for that matter seen, the 2004 Jaguar XKR, but I looked at it on a website. I've got to say, the thing is a total piece of junk. The radio looks like it probably doesn't give good sound, the seats don't appear very comfortable, and I seriously doubt it rides very well either. Plus, judging by the way the engine looks, it probably doesn't have any power at all. I don't understand why anyone would even bother considering to buy one"

      "The last release on that page is dated July 17, 2003."

      The last major release was then. That being said, the very fact that we're not even at 1.0 means that major changes happen all the time. Had you bothered to look further, or perhaps subscribed to the devl list, you'd see that stable receives updates about once a week on average, and unstable is updated almost daily. Each 'minor' update contains numerous bug fixes, and often contains new routing features or additions to the protocols. The current stable release is 5070, which was released today. The last stable release was put out about 3 or 4 days ago. The rapid, sustained development of Freenet continues to be the fastest I've ever seen, of any project I've ever followed.

      "And by Clarke's own admission in his 'State of the Freenet' letter, it doesn't work very well. He *thinks* this new algorithm will solve the problems, but nobody knows that for sure."

      You're taking the letter very much out of context. Again, reading the devl mailing list would provide you with far better understanding of the issues surrounding Freenet's development, problems, and solutions.

      "Is Freenet so hard that this many programmers can't deliver a working version in close to a year?!"

      This, you discern, without even having tried it? That's incredible. Listen, put down the 3-way call with Kenny Kingston and Ms Cleo, and ask some people who actually run Freenet. Or, wait a week or two for the Slashdot-Freenet overload to die down a bit (takes a little while for the network to adjust to massive influxes of new people), and *gasp* download the program so you can try it for yourself?! In case you're wondering, Freenet has worked to varying degrees since I started using it about a year ago. As the protocols and code is adjusted, things either get really good, really bad, or somewhere in between. When you're doing something this brand new, and making major changes all the time, there's nothing else to be expected. As of right now, stable is working fairly well (was working outstanding a few weeks ago), and unstable is working even better.

      "The goals of Freenet are lofty, and for that maybe they deserve more patience, but when does the community just cut and run?"

      I would assume that most 'cut and run' within a few days of downloading the program at this point. Why? Because it's not a simple AOLesque installation. It requires some configuration, some manual configuration, a bit of knowledge, and a lot of patience. There is a large group of die-hard Freenet users, such as myself, that would need to have serious, prolonged problems with the software before thinking about giving up on it. Most of us have talked with Toad and Ian enough to know that we're not being jerked around, and that this thing is going to move forward to the benefit of many, many different people. They're open and honest about progress and problems, and they both make themselves available all the time. Toad, especially, has gone the extra mile with me on a few different occassions to make sure that I was able to solve problems I was experiencing. I didn't get a 'RTFM', nor a non-response, and I certainly didn't get ignored. My mail to the support list has always been answered with much help from numerous people. I couldn't possibly fault any

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    3. Re:Disappointed in Freenet by arodland · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, it's far, far harder than that. Freenet has never had a release that's lived up to its own standards. But it is in development, and it is pre-1.0, and it is getting really damn close, so it's worth watching. And supporting, by money if possible.

    4. Re:Disappointed in Freenet by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      " When you're buying a car, do you test-drive every model by every manufacturer before you feel you can praise/pan the car?"

      No, but I also don't berate it as garbage because I spent 5 minutes checking it out on a website.

      "Can't you rely on public consensus, friends' opinions, reviewers' articles, etc.?"

      If all those opinions are based on using it for a day or two? No. With the rapid pace of Freenet's development, I truly don't put much stock in anyone's opinion who hasn't used Freenet for at least a couple of months. I understand and sympathize with those who've had problems getting Freenet up and running. Part of it is simply the nature of the beast - Freenet takes some time for a new node to integrate properly with the rest of the network. This is certainly going to be the case with any unmanaged, topographically self-updating network. There are also numerous pitfalls involving the initial setup. I understand people having these problems, and I certainly don't blame them for complaining about it. The fact is that all the nicities of a polished product are non-existent at this point. This is due to the reasons I outlined in my previous post. Suffice it to say that those not technically able, or willing to commit to getting and keeping their Freenet node up and running probably should NOT be using Freenet at this point.

      "And how can I take a *whole* letter out of context?! The letter says what it says."

      The letter gives you the status of things at a particular time, on a particular day. Subscribe to devl and read all the messages from it for a few weeks and you'll get a better idea of how rapid Freenet's status changes. It can literally go from bad to great to mediocre to good in a single day. The regular internet often does the same. The difference here is that an entirely new network using new technology and new concepts/ideas is being built and managed, and it's being done using sparse resources (especially bandwidth) over an unstable medium (the internet).

      "Bottom line: The freenet project was registered on Sourceforge at the end of 1999. It's gotten a lot of publicity and support. Four years later, all we have is a network that works "really good, really bad, or somewhere in between" according to you, and a network whose performance has "inexplicably deteriorated" since "about July 2003" according to Clarke."

      What we have is an entirely new creation, pretty much unlike anything that came before it, which actively helps people such as whistleblowers and dissidents speak out without fear of restribution. What we have is a work in progress that continues to improve thanks to the sustained development of Toad and other developers, and the testing/bug reports of the growing Freenet community. What we have are websites that have been censored out of existence on the regular web (DMCA take-downs, etc) being mirrored so as not to be lost forever. What we have is a working anonymous BBS-like client, anonymous IRC, and numerous tools to make everyday tasks on Freenet a little bit easier. What we have is a network that changes constantly, but which has improved both in speed and efficiency overall, and continues to do so at an every-increasing rate.

      "The developers think they're on the brink of a solution."

      Solutions come and go every single day. New problems crop up, old ones are squashed, new ideas are tossed around, new protocols or features are implemented, tested, and either commited or removed (often for further testing/development), and new attacks are proposed, then annihilated. There is no one solution to Freenet's problems, just as there was no one solution for how we get from planet Earth to the moon, or to Mars. When you're doing something that's never been done before, you hit bumps along the way that backseat drivers can look back on and complain about. Many problems NASA had getting people to the moon can now be looked back on with disbelief. We can certainly see how the fire on the launch pad fo

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  43. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Lord+of+Ironhand · · Score: 5, Insightful
    From the Freenet FAQ:
    I don't want my node to be used to harbor child porn, offensive content or terrorism. What can I do?
    The true test of someone who claims to believe in Freedom of Speech is whether they tolerate speech which they disagree with, or even find disgusting. If this is not acceptable to you, you should not run a Freenet node. There is another thing you can do. Since content in Freenet is available as long as its popular, you can help limit the popularity of whatever information you do not like. For example, if you do not want a file to spread you should not request it and tell everyone you know not to request that specific key. However, keep in mind that freenet is not designed so as to only allow communication between people if a sufficient number of people agree with the communication. Freenet is designed to make communication possible even if there's just one publisher and one reader, and this is already reasonably feasible on the current freenet.

    Personally, I think the only way to stop kiddie porn is at the source. Removing the transport medium will only lead to those involved seeking another medium, and there's always SneakerNet.

  44. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Threni · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > What FreeNET is (whether or not by design) is a "harbor house" of sorts for
    > child pornographers, terrorists, and other criminals.

    You mean `the internet is...`. So why are you using it. Perhaps you should stop using the phone, postal system, visiting libraries etc.

    You can only make the world a better place with information. Ultimately, it is better than ignorance, even if you can pick a few examples of the downside.

    I'm still at a loss as to how the internet can help terrorists. What can they now do that they couldn't do before with phone calls? Likewise for "criminals" in general.
    I think the internet is a godsend for police and other agencies trying to track down child pornographers.

  45. Freenet isnt that free.. by Deleriux · · Score: 2, Informative

    The way it works (afaik) is you host material on your node that you didnt ask to host.

    Now forgive me if im wrong but freenet, to me, and I have used it is freedom of speech by depriving your freedom of choice!

    Think about it, you can do/view and say what you want on their but in return your hosting material you do not have a choice about what its hosting and dont have a choice not to host?

    Thats why I dont use it. Not because it deals with many taboo subjects, but because it is conscripting my machine into helping others view taboo material.

  46. Re:Hold on a sec... by amphibian · · Score: 2, Informative

    Uh, no, we ARE taking a stand here. If you can't see it, that's your problem. The bottom line is if the government or anyone else can force the removal of relatively popular files relating to any of these things, they can also force the removal of files relating to anything else. Furthermore, a variant of Freenet 0.5 is used in China by dissidents; all manner of political speech is illegal there, including for example such dangerous works as the Bible.

  47. won't someone please think of the children? by all+your+mwbassguy+a · · Score: 2, Insightful

    apparently, our biggest beef with freenet is that it is littered with child pornography, and a demand for child pornography leads to more of it being made, and therefore more abused and exploited children. however, freenet is free, as in beer, as is all of the content. so what do the pornographers get from having their collections on freenet, and how does it lead to more child porn being made?

  48. Re:Freenet. Pull the plug before someone gets hurt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > It was an interesting social experiment, but it's served its purpose, and IMO
    > the time to pull the plug is long overdue.

    If it's popular, people will use it. Which third party should pull the plug?

    > Ian, Matt: You made your point -- absolute anonymity means we'll have to face
    > some things we don't like. Now pull the plug before someone gets killed.

    LOL! You drama queen! I love Slashdot! "Oooh, look at my serious face! I am the conscience of the internet, and I have determined that that is a Bad Thing!" What, so things can happen now with the internet which couldn't have happened before? No doubt you're thinking of bomb making or something? That's the example you always here. You know how easy it is to make an explosive? They practically tell you how on the news every time there's an attack on the American troops currently occupying Iraq, or on Israelis.

  49. From the Freenet FAQ... by Safety+Cap · · Score: 3, Informative
    I don't want my node to be used to harbor child porn, offensive content or terrorism. What can I do?

    The true test of someone who claims to believe in Freedom of Speech is whether they tolerate speech which they disagree with, or even find disgusting. If this is not acceptable to you, you should not run a Freenet node. There is another thing you can do. Since content in Freenet is available as long as its popular, you can help limit the popularity of whatever information you do not like. For example, if you do not want a file to spread you should not request it and tell everyone you know not to request that specific key. However, keep in mind that freenet is not designed so as to only allow communication between people if a sufficient number of people agree with the communication. Freenet is designed to make communication possible even if there's just one publisher and one reader, and this is already reasonably feasible on the current freenet.

    --
    Yeah, right.
    1. Re:From the Freenet FAQ... by leviramsey · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The true test of someone who claims to believe in Freedom of Speech is whether they tolerate speech which they disagree with, or even find disgusting.

      There's a huge difference between tolerating something and actively propagating it.

  50. You people should be ashamed of yourselves. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously.

    Nearly all of the posts i'm seeing talk about how horrible freenet is because it may be used for child pornography or other illegal things and then go on to say that freenet should not exist and how terrible they must be etc. etc. I've even seen posts saying (to paraphrase) 'everyone should have free speech except kiddie pornographers and nazis'.

    get a clue and go fuck yourselves! If you want to filter what someone says because you dont agree with it than it's not really free speech, is it?

    Further, these morons arguing against freenet are using the same argument i see used so fervently in defense of DeCSS or any other tool that allows them to pirate music or do something 'cool'...

    'Hey! you cant make this tool illegal! Just because I have a card programmer doesnt mean I am stealing. i have rights, man! Free speech!'

    So, which is it?

    (a) Tool X can be used for illegal things and therefore should be banned.

    (b) Tool X can be used for illegal things. It does, however, serve useful, legitimate purposes. Keep it legal.

    I vote for option B myself.

    1. Re:You people should be ashamed of yourselves. by Famatra · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Very good post, please mod parent up further.

      There has always been a bugaboo, right now it is child porn and terrorism but not long ago it was communism, or the KKK or neo-nazi's or what ever.

      If you do not like child pornography then you are free to set up a freenet webpage and give your views as to why it, and anything else you dont like, is wrong.

      As to the parent, I also agree that people seem to be hypocritical in that they think one type of 'illegal' speech is ok (MP3 copying etc.) but other types (child porno) is bad. Reminds me of that Simpsons episode where Marge is forced to stop trying to censor the violent cartoon industry because she realized she was a hypocrite in wanting Michangelo's David (nudity) to be shown. :)

    2. Re:You people should be ashamed of yourselves. by damiam · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Depending on your definition of "child porn", it is quite possible to be produced with no abuse involved - consenting kids can have sex, or there can be nonsexual nudity. Hell, in many places, it's legal for two 16-year-olds to have sex, but they're not allowed to take pictures of each other. I'm all against child abuse, and the photography/videography thereof, but much of what's considered child porn is innocent. In a world where mothers are prosecuted for having nude pictures of their toddlers in the bathtub, I can see a use for Freenet. The best way to stop child abuse is at the source - go after the people who abuse children.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    3. Re:You people should be ashamed of yourselves. by 7-Vodka · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Don't be so black and white. Free speech does not involve causing havoc by calling in false bomb threats or yelling fire in a crowded movie theater. Neither does free speech involve spam or stalking etc etc ad nauseum.

      We cannot forget that while we need to aspire to freedom of speech as much as possible, it should not encroach on the freedom of others in society.

      If you're sleeping in your house and I start yelling at you through the window like a fucking moron, let's see how you like that.
      If someone is doing brainsurgery on you with a speech-controlled robot and I run past the O.R. purposefully yelling "LABOTOMY LABOTOMY LABOTOMY" that's not free speech at work and should not be protected.

      When free speech is only a cover for destroying the essential FREEDOMS of others, it is not free speech at all, but the cry of a coward to cover up a crime.

      And yes, child pornography is an example of just that. Freedom of speech cannot be used to defend this because you've severely curtailed the Freedom of the child. Directly or indirectly don't try to fool yourself.

      What's even worse, is in your black&white world, you don't even consider the case of when an individual exercising his right to 'free speech' prevents another individual from exercising his right to 'free speech'.

      This can happen in a room, out on a street, online, in print and many other situations.

      Now it is not my intention to set up a straw man, so I will quote you directly:
      So, which is it?
      (a) Tool X can be used for illegal things and therefore should be banned.
      (b) Tool X can be used for illegal things. It does, however, serve useful, legitimate purposes. Keep it legal.

      How about we include many other options.
      (c) We keep Tool X legal, but regulate it's uses and take action against individuals who we deem misuse it like we've done with other things in the past.
      or
      (d) We keep Tool X legal, but reshape it so it becomes impossible to do illegal things with it while still retaining the benefits of the legal aspects.

      Freenet is not a solution to our problems. It's designed to treat a symptom of curtailed freedom of speech, but it comes with side-effects(like yes child porn).
      Why don't we instead concentrate on treating the disease so that we can avoid having our freedom of speech curtailed and also avoid the side-effect of letting people commit crimes.

      By the way, I actually think freenet is a really cool project and am in no way against it's development. I'm just trying to show you that the debate you think is old hat, is in no way settled and should be encouraged, not discouraged like you're doing.

      --

      Liberty.

    4. Re:You people should be ashamed of yourselves. by bear_phillips · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If your company sells hammers they will use to break a window. There is no way to prevent it. So no one should sell hammers.

      --
      http://www.windmeadow.com/
    5. Re:You people should be ashamed of yourselves. by HBI · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Tolerating the existence of it is giving a tacit nod to its production.

      Mere possession of same in the US is a crime, and should be. Then again, I have two daughters and I wasn't so militant about the issue before then.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  51. java is the problem by Splork · · Score: 2, Interesting

    i would've been running a freenet server ages ago except that there is no usable jvm for my machine. annoying choice of language from the start.

  52. Re:Hold on a sec... by __past__ · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Well, this is actually a hard problem. If you want to technically guarantee anonymity to prevent censorship and violations of the right to free speech by technical means, there is no way to distinguish legitimate users from assholes. The software cannot do this, by definition.

    The solution is, of course, easy. Accept that you cannot solve social problems by technical measures. Censorship and political oppresion are political problems, they will be solved by political changes or not at all. A P2P network might be a tool usefull for those working on these change, but it is neither sufficient on its own, nor is it really neccessary.

  53. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Mod+Me+God · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Personally, I think the only way to stop kiddie porn is at the source. What are you doing to do, follow everyone with video cameras until they reveal they are a pervet?

    Removing the transport medium will only lead to those involved seeking another medium, and there's always SneakerNet. The thing is, the internet (server based or direct P2P) is not an anonymous communication medium, people are liable, so the source can be more easily found. Providing an electronic transportation medium to them that is making their life easy and removing the kind of back-tracking that could be done in a conventional internet transfer. Sneaker-net takes us back 20 years when there are organised groups which could be infiltrated by law-enforcement. By endorsing FreeNET you make the paedophile's life easier and effectively remove any possibility to trace tem.

    But FreeNET helps freedom of speech in China you may ask... Well just punish anyone you find with FreeNET on their computer to death! Perhaps the People's Firewall (sic) could reject packets which appeared to be encrypted (or all non-web traffic, as pointed out earlier). 'Tackhead' made an excellent post earlier.

    --
    --

    FreeNET user? Comfortable with the adverse selection?
  54. Re:I don't like Freenet by amphibian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's impossible. If an authority can declare a file illegal, it will be abused. We cannot make the system safe for chinese dissidents publishing files that happen to be illegal locally (most political or religious texts, for example), while being able to censor it in the West.

  55. Child porn by the_1000th_Monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Stick with your decision, but know that child porn isn't exhalted or even condoned on Freenet, and it isn't even specifically accepted as a necessary evil. Freenet merely redistributes in-demand files (as collections of bytes like all others) across a network in a way to prevent the ability of any party to suppress them or know their originator. This is to guarantee freedom of speech and expression. That some combinations of bytes form graphics that any responsible and/or balanced person would find repugnant, doesn't change the fact that they're still just bytes which freenet can't distinguish from "Das Capital", a treatise on democracy in China, a mirror of RIAA subpoenas or the latest episode of Enterprise.

    If you want a system that can censor a particular kind of data, it would require a central authority to make that judgement -- and the entire point of a decentralized network of expression is lost.

    --
    where'd my typewriter go?
  56. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by damiam · · Score: 3, Informative
    ...I don't want to store kiddie porn on my computer. And that freedom of speech BS - did the kids have the freedom not to be raped?

    In the cases of kiddy porn where kids have been raped (which is rather a minority of it, AFAIK), the rape has already happened. Nothing can keep it from having happened. The fact that a video exists does not change anything. Distribution of that video, while it violates the child's privacy, does not tangibly harm anyone. In fact, one could even argue that distribution of such material on Freenet reduces actual child rape, because material on Freenet is by definition free as in beer, so the original "content producer" isn't getting any money for it.

    I'm against child abuse and rape as much as anyone else, but we really need to get our priorities in order. As the Freenet FAQ says, "While most people wish that child pornography and terrorism did not exist, humanity should not be deprived of their freedom to communicate just because of how a very small number of people might use that freedom."

    --
    It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
  57. Kazaa had the same problem by pcmanjon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    An interesting sidenote is that KaZaA (and clients under the fastrak network) had the exact same problem in the begining when it's popularity sprung up....

  58. Screw the children! Think of yourself! by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's not so much motivating the production of more porn, though that's also a concern. The problem is that the way freenet works, you might have child pornography on your system even if you have never intentionally downloaded it. Freenet mirrors chunks of files that are in high demand on many nodes. You would never even know any of the chunks your node stores are porn, since freenet storage files are encrypted. By U.S. law, possion (even unintentional posession) makes you just as guilty as perverts who download it intentionally and the sick bastards who made the porn in the first place.

    If the encryption functions are pooorly written, or if a pornographer's key is compromised, you could enjoy a one-way trip to federal "pound me in the ass" prison.

    --
    0 1 - just my two bits
    1. Re:Screw the children! Think of yourself! by STrinity · · Score: 2, Informative

      By U.S. law, possion (even unintentional posession) makes you just as guilty as perverts who download it intentionally and the sick bastards who made the porn in the first place.

      It's even worse than that -- you aren't merely in possession, but distributing it.

      --
      Les Miserables Volume 1 now up with my reading of
  59. Try Unstable by ph43thon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I still have problems using the "stable" branch. I frequently get horribly slow access.. and very little content seems to be available. Go to the Next Generation Routing page for instructions on getting the Unstable branch. Browse this. First, install the normal, stable Freenet then replace Freenet.jar and seednodes.ref with the appropriate "unstable" files.

    Browsing common pages is much more reasonable. If you're behind NAT, make sure to read this

    see if you can request this:
    SSK@l4Kq8dXYucgTzJlhEHOiBWj~A~sPAgM,WvqLp6tz7psphr 79zB30tA/

    Make sure to remove the inserted space.

    p

  60. Other more worthy projects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Freenet gets all the publicity, but have you looked into GNUnet?

    It solves some of the problems with Freenet. GNUnet's number one goal is security/anonymity.

  61. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by paganizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let us say that I'm a member of a organization that is strict Constitutionalist, or in other words, believes in a LITERAL interpretation of the Constitution of the U.S.; Or I was a fundy Mormon (Polygamist). Or a member of ELF.
    That would make me a terrorist to the current administration.
    Let us say also that the Administration was making use of advances in Science to monitor dissidents communications, purchases, library visits, how many times you go the bathroom each days, etc.
    Freenet is a neccesary evil, much like lawyers.

    --
    Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
  62. Re: Not On My Computer posts. by topynate · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Those who think that freedom of speech is great, and all, but they don't want child porn on their computer, think of this:

    By the most sensible definition of location of data, the child porn is not on your computer.

    What you have on your computer is indistinguishable by all known statistical tests from random noise. The sum of this pseudo-random data on all nodes, viewed in a particular way, i.e. through a suitable client, is the Freenet network. The child porn is there, all right - if you're sick enough to seek it out. But the nature of Freenet means that no mapping can be found between data in it, and encrypted data on nodes. That's the whole point. So why worry? If there was a scheme by which you mailed your hard drive to some island and they added it to a pool of storage anyone could access, would you have the same qualms about your disk being possibly contaminated?

  63. What about Mute? by garbagedisposal · · Score: 2, Interesting

    http://mute-net.sourceforge.net/ ?

  64. Re:Just a guess here... by paganizer · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm probably going to regret this, but I try to mirror some of it.
    http://www.vrhome.com/freenet

    --
    Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
  65. Voicing My Support (Money Talks) by localman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't use Freenet, and I don't currently have anything controversial to say. But I believe, that the principle is important. I signed up for a $5/mo recurring contribution.

    That's nothing compared to what I spend on stupid crap that the monolithic media corporations have convinced me I need to be happy while they work to take away my freedoms.

    And just preemptively: I don't think everything should be free. I don't download songs illegally. I am an creator/artist who has been paid for my creative/artistic work on occasion, and would like to make that my life, though I've yet to be able to do so. Still, I think the current lack of consumer rights is appalling.

    I am glad to support this project that gives us the technilogical means to work around the crap that's become acceptable in our free country.

    Cheers.

  66. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by stdarg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Turning off freenet isn't the only solution... One of the principles of freenet is that more popular content is more widely replicated. Little used content falls off the network. If you'd like to see less child porn then you can do two things:

    1. Don't download it "just to see", because that makes it more popular.

    2. Produce some of your own nice, legal, interesting content to displace it.

    The fact is, most internet users are not into child porn. If more people use freenet, the proportion of child porn will obviously decrease.

  67. Re:bullshit by paganizer · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm not involved, but I'm a regular user.
    It's not working as good as it has. just prior to the v0.5 release, and the first 4 releases of v0.5 were pretty much ideal; after that... pffft.
    It's getting better, if a site can get inserted, you can pull it up 100% of the time, but getting a site inserted is still a nightmare.
    It's pretty good for file sharing using Fuqid, and if you wanted to download MacroHard source, cash register software, the dirt on Kerry, it's all there.
    FROST was killed by it's abandonment by Jantho, the guy who came up with the idea; as he was leaving you had a pretty rocking little usenet-like interface searchable interface for freenet, but the guys who took it over killed it deader than a doorknob; the old version still works, and works well, but apparently i'm the only one who knows it.
    so, if you want to use it for file trading, use IIP to contact people for keys, and the web interface to see the sites from people who have enough skill or luck to insert frequently.

    --
    Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
  68. How about bandwidth controls that work. by expro · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I believe in the principles of Freenet.

    I am willing to dedicate disk space

    I am on a broadband connection where I can affort x GB / week.

    I have tried freenet carefully setting the supposed bandwidth controls. At first everything was fine, but as days and weeks went by my node got more and more popular. Eventually it was way above the limits I had set and I could find no way to throttle it back to a reasonable rate, so I was forced to remove the service. This was far more problem than even it's slow speed -- it made it impossible for the average user to use. Normal users get into trouble if their bandwidth usage keeps going up without limit. I also run web pages that eventually become unusable if they get too much competition. That is the make-or-break feature for me. I must have bandwidth controls that put a real cap on bandwidth.

  69. Offtopic by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hey, Toad. You must be busy as hell on here today. The good thing is that I would assume some donations are flowing into the project now. With the help from this, perhaps you and Ian can feel a little better about putting off the 0.6 release for a little bit in case further testing is required. Just don't get all Duke Nukum Forever on us with it. ;)

    Take care, and keep up the good work. You folks have been doing an outstanding job, especially recently. Don't let the nay-sayers and trolls here, or anywhere, get you down. So far as I can tell, you guys are coding your way into uncharted waters, and it's downright impossible to get much of anything right the first time around when dealing with something so totally new. Just keep chugging along with the development, and you'll always have plenty of folks ready and willing to run nodes for you guys.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  70. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Visaris · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I couldn't care less about its claims to be a conduit for freedom of speech."

    "It does not extend to breaking laws revolving around child endangerment and molestation and civil rights violations and hiding behind it by claiming it's protected by the right to free speech."

    Personally, I think you're totally crazy. A digital camera and a CD burner might seem like ideal tools for publishing child pr0n. Should they be illegal? Should I say that I couldn't care less about their non-infringing uses? You're just another hypocrite who hates the DMCA for it's effects on non-infringing uses, but at the same time is more than happy to kill a project like FreeNET because it can be used in ways that are in violation of your laws and morals. I don't want to start a war here, but what is wrong with you people!?!?

    --

    I am a viral sig. Please help me spread.
  71. Re:Jesus Christ... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    " Freenet will blatantly be used for child porn, and probably already is."

    They state as much in the FAQ. The downside of an uncensorable system is that some people will use it for things you and I would prefer to censor. ;) The problem is that if you or I can remove child pornography, then the Chinese government can remove dissenting remarks, a corporation can remove documents posted by a whistleblower, and a politician/other important person can remove damaging facts posted about them. Freenet is an all-or-nothing venture.

    Aside from that, the same can be said of the internet itself. The same can be said of the real world, as well. Shall we destroy the internet and the real world to prevent disgusting things from happening or being posted? Or should we address the problems behind the content, such as the abuse of children? We can continue to ignore the problems that are out there by censoring them away, or we can recognize that there exists a major problem, and then go on to solve it.

    "While I'm sure there are lots of chinese people who will find value in it, "

    Well, yes... considering the fact that it saves their lives . Quit living in your tiny little world and open up a little bit, just for once, hmm? Just recently, a Chinese dissident was jailed for posting "subversive" materials on the internet. Had this person had access to, and used Freenet, they would still be promoting democracy, instead of wondering how many times the guards will be back for torture sessions this week. People in China and other places DO use Freenet to communicate safely with one another. In places like China, North Korea, Zimbabwe, etc, speaking out means you're going to die. How it is you can simply brush aside the fact that Freenet saves peoples' lives every single day is beyond me.

    " there are lots of child pr0nographers rubbing their dirty little fucking hands with glee. "Oh look, something free and uncensored! Better puts some child porn on it! (uploads)."

    Again, the same can be said of the internet. How many sites have been busted for selling access to child pornography? How many years did those places operate with impunity? How many others continue to go undetected by law enforcement? How many others pop up on the regular internet every single day? Obviously there are those who use Freenet for things that disgust most of us, but those people will find ways to distribute that content regardless of Freenet's existence. The capture of one, or ten, or a hundred, or a thousand does little to stem the tide. Until we address the underlying problem, the content will always exist.

    "Yeah, free speech is nice, but at the same time providing free speech to child pornographers and Nazis is both hypocritical and wrong."

    Your definition of hypocrasy is flawed. Hypocrasy is to pretend to be or believe something which you are not, or do not believe. It would be hypocritical of Freenet to advertise free speech, and then censor that with which it does not agree.

    What you mean to say is that you don't like those who would produce or distribute child pornography, and you don't like Nazis, and you wish that they would be quiet and go away. Guess what - I wish the very same thing. The difference is, I'm not willing to call for the downfall of something that saves lives every single day simply because some people use it to say or distribute things that turn my stomach. It's people like you who think that censorship stops at things with which they disagree. In fact, there will always be someone wanting to censor the very things you hold most dear, because they find it offensive. Do you believe in God? There will always be an athiest who doesn't want you 'indoctrinating' their child, and thus wants you banned from saying the word under any circumstances. You don't believe in God? There will always be someone who finds the very thought so utterly repulsive that they want you jailed for even menti

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  72. Lets start by censoring Slashdot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Lets start by creating an official government of slashdot moderators who can and will censor all speech which they personally do not like.

    I'd like to be on that government so I can censor your post as my first action. What you seem to not be capable of understanding is that FreeNet exists not as a habor for kiddie porn and terrorists but as a harbor for each and everyone one of us humans on planet earth.

    It just so happens that decent people are so afraid of the bad people that they are willing to sacrifice their Freedom for security. You want the government to rule over you, you do not care about freedom and I don't see how you or people like you are any different than the Chinese.

    You must understand that forces within our government currently want to control every aspect of the internet, companies like Microsoft and the RIAA want to control the internet, and the only group of people who want to stand up for YOU the internet user is FreeNet.

    Look, if you want censorship on Freenet, ask Ian Clarke to build personal Freenet filters which can filter out all content you dislike. This is the solution, personal filtering of the net. This is the same solution we use in the real world, we personally filter ourselves out of bad environments and away from bad people.

    There are plenty of murderer killer rapist people who you could hang with in the real world, and no one stops you from joining them. It's up to you to decide for yourself right from wrong, not the government, not the internet government, not Ian Clark, not the technology. It's not the gun that kills people, its people who kill people. Remember that its not the FreeNet that rapes kids, or launches terrorists attacks, its the people.

    FreeNet WILL become a Haven for hate unless YOU actually make use of FreeNet. It's your choice, but either way FreeNet will be created so you can either help put good content on it, or you can let all the bad people claim it and whine and complain how its a haven for them instead of for you.

  73. if certain people by Spetiam · · Score: 2, Interesting

    feel so strongly about enabling criminally free speech (kiddie porn, etc.), then they should feel strongly enough about it to be able to do so without my money or anybody else's

    what i would really like to know, do they feel so strongly about free speech that they would be willing to take responsibilty for what's said. someone correct me if i'm wrong, but all other civil rights movements seem to have involved people with conviction (openly) defying unjust laws/etc and being willing to take responsibilty for their actions. freenet seems like it is (or is becoming) all about shirking responsibility or shifting it off onto someone else.

    having said that, i think freenet is a fascinating project. but until i can control what i'm hosting, i think it's unacceptably flawed.

    someone mentioned in a different thread the MUTE project, which i find more acceptable because i have direct control over what i share

    mods: this is not a troll, just my take on the subject
    1. Re:if certain people by teamhasnoi · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I think the point you're missing is the importance of the anonymous part. There are lots of places (including the US), where you can be 'disappeared' for expressing a certain view.

      I don't think Freenet is about 'avoiding responsibility', I think it is about protecting yourself from those who find your opinions 'distasteful'.

      Yup. Sadly, that may include pictures of porn. And it may include photos and reports of people getting killed for going to a democratic rally.

      Porn will be made and distributed with or without Freenet. What about censored, unpopular, unjust information?

      It's easy to sit back in your Aeon chair and say, "Well if they can't be bothered to run over to the local AP wire office, then their story must be false."

      That's exactly what the government wants you to think, no tinfoil hat needed.

  74. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by sessamoid · · Score: 3, Funny
    Personally, I think the only way to stop kiddie porn is at the source.

    I agree. We should outlaw kids.

    --
    "No, no, no. Don't tug on that. You never know what it might be attached to."
  75. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Which only fuels the kiddie porn market. That law is a bad law, its like the drug war and it only makes a minor problem into a bigger more harmful problem. I don't care if people jerk off to fake kiddie porn, I mean really thats their own imagination. However real kids who get raped and put on the net, thats wrong and it does serious harm to the kids. There is a difference between fantasy and reality and we must figure out how to deal with reality.

    --
    People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
  76. Re:Freenet. Pull the plug before someone gets hurt by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Interesting
    > > Ian, Matt: You made your point -- absolute anonymity means we'll have to face some things we don't like. Now pull the plug before someone gets killed.
    >
    > What, so things can happen now with the internet which couldn't have happened before? No doubt you're thinking of bomb making or something? That's the example you always here. You know how easy it is to make an explosive? They practically tell you how on the news every time there's an attack on the American troops currently occupying Iraq, or on Israelis.

    Boy did you miss the point. (Or you confused me with someone else.)

    Seriously, I couldn't care less about Joe "One-beer-short-of-a" Sixpack downloadin' his good ol' self a copy of the Anarchist's Cookbook and promptly evolving himself out of the gene pool.

    But I am worried about the one really unlucky Joe Sixpacks who get chosen as the first few test cases in the West. Some poor slob who think Freenet's just another way to "freely" swap MP3s with reduced risks of getting a nastygram from RIAA, but who wakes up to black-masked agents screaming "FEDERAL AGENT! WE KNOW YOU'RE HOSTING ILLEGAL PR0N! DON'T MOVE, YOU PERVERTED FREAK!"

    The reference to someone getting killed is the fact that Unlucky Joe Sixpack isn't the worst case. The worst case is the prototypical pro-democracy dissident in China -- who (just like Unlucky Joe) thinks he and his friends are free to communicate using Ian and Matt's shiny toy, only to wake up to the sound of a round being chambered, and to never hear anything else again.

    Take a close look at how Freenet nodes operate, and realize the minimal amount of traffic analysis that would be required on the part of any government agency to identify node operators and direct queries to guarantee that for any value of "contraband" required, some data corresponding to "contraband" exists on the node of the person selected to be the test case.

    When Freenet was created, the technology to perform such an attack didn't exist in China, and the legal infrastructure of the West made any evidence gleaned as the result of such monitoring inadmissable. Neither of those two things are true any longer.

    On a moral level, Freenet was a success: it proved the point that arguing for absolute anonymity really does mean having to deal with things you might find repugnant. (And I agree with its creators' stand -- if you can't deal with the ramifications of absolute anonymity, you have principled, not merely practical, grounds not to be a part of it.)

    On a practical level, however, due to its susceptibility to traffic analysis and other forms of attack by a sufficiently well-motivated and well-funded opponent, and given that a sufficiently well-motivated-and-funded opponent exists on every chunk of addressable IP space on the planet, Freenet is a hazard to anyone actually using it.

    Freenet is not Kazaa. The risks you face from running a Freenet node are far, far, far greater than what you risk from running a Kazaa node. In the case of the perverts, I'm OK with that. But I'm not OK with that when it's MP3 downloaders getting the perp walk for sex charges, and I'm very very not OK with that when it's the Chinese democracy movement getting a perp walk to the organ bank.

  77. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...I don't want to store kiddie porn on my computer. And that freedom of speech BS - did the kids have the freedom not to be raped?

    Yeah! And I'd rather not have kiddie porn travelling by mail. If we need to end the postal system, so be it, it's for the children. Come to think of it, those vile kiddie pornographers are using encryption to hide their behavior. Let's ban encryption too. Some are even using the Internet, let's ban that. And they're using cameras to take those pictures, time to ban cameras.

    Hmmm, now that I think about it, human beings are a common threat in the sexual abuse of humans. We better get rid of people ASAP.

    Ultimately your argument is, "But what about the chiiiiiildren!" There are lots of tools used by criminals. Yes, child pornographers use Freenet. It's unfortunate, but it's not the fault of the tool. Terrorists use airplanes and box cutters, but no one is trying to ban them.

  78. Europe: Nazis and pedophiles by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've even seen posts saying (to paraphrase) 'everyone should have free speech except kiddie pornographers and nazis'.

    Sounds pretty European to me. A lot of European countries *really* still have a lot of social crap left over from after World War II. Garmany and France, in particular, are incredibly uptight (at least from an American standpoint) about Nazi-related stuff. The UK has some kind of pedophiliaphobia. I mean, sure, nobody likes the worst-case sort of sexual content related to kids -- kids getting abducted and raped or similar. However, the British are absolutely rabid about avoiding any kind of surfacing of pedophilia. Really unusual.

    Arguing that a lot of Europeans should loosen up about Nazism is probably a fun debate, but it doesn't have as much impact in the US, so I'll argue the child pornography standpoint.

    Frankly, I never really saw how banning child pornography has significant social benefits (especially since posession and distribution of blood sport content *is* legal). Sure, there can be all kinds of bad things associated with child pornography -- people worry about their kids getting abducted and raped or something -- but I don't see quite how eliminating distribution of such material on Freenet does anything to avoid real life sexual abuse.

    The first argument I see in favor of censorship of child pornography might be that if there is a profitable industry for producing child pornography, then children will be involved in production of that pornography (as opposed to actors/actresses appearing to be children, or CG doctoring, or pornographic animation containing depictions of underage sex). This may lead to one of two potentially bad things: first, children may be nude in videos. In the Victorian tradition, being seen nude (particularly females) somehow "degrades" or damages future social standing. I've nver seen this as an immutable -- our society happens to have a nudity taboo, but it is arguable as to whether that is at all beneficial to society. The second bad point is that children may be physically injured in the production of such content. There are laws already dealing with injuring children -- I'm not sure why a special point needs to be made for pornography-related content.

    The second issue might be that distribution of child ponography tends to exacerbate pedophiliac behavior. This is certainly a decent thought, but I'm not sure how grounded in reason it is. We in the United States allow distributing movies showing images of people being shot (actually, I just posted regarding this earlier today). It doesn't seem that the violence present alone (see my complaints about cartoon violence, which are different) significantly have had an impact on the increase of violence. Why would we think that sexual content alone would drive someone to engage in a sexual act?

    Anti-child pornography laws are one of the few near-global laws, and I'm a bit curious why, as they seem to be the product of fear and emotion rather than a particularly reasoned decision -- at the very least, they are inconsistent with decisions about censorship that we have made in other content areas.

    I'll let others wonder why the US can get away without censoring Nazi content and yet doesn't have massive Nazi surges, yet France feels the need to prevent people from having Nazi content.

    1. Re:Europe: Nazis and pedophiles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'll let others wonder why the US can get away without censoring Nazi content and yet doesn't have massive Nazi surges, yet France feels the need to prevent people from having Nazi content.

      No need to wonder. The United States defeated the Nazis (not meaning any slight to our allies) but France was defeated by the Nazis.

      Viewing Nazi emblems and regalia and memorabilia reminds the United States of its' victory.

      Viewing Nazi emblems and regalia and memorabilia reminds France of its' ignoble defeat and years spent licking the boots of the Boche.

    2. Re:Europe: Nazis and pedophiles by Famatra · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "God, you are a sick person. Suggesting that child porn is somehow "not a big deal" is sick."

      Like how black people marrying white people was 'sick' or how gays were (are?) 'sick', how women in the workplace made people 'sick'?

      Sick is a little vague, give your reasoning why you think child pornography is wrong.

  79. Re:Good. by Open+$ource+Advocate · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Isn't the goal to have as much software availible to as many people as possible?

    Of course it is. It is also the goal to have as much food available to as many people as possible. It is our social responsibility to ensure that the entire world is fed, even if that means us giving up some of our free time to labor in the fields.

    Open source is the only way to provide software to the world. Not everyone in this world is a rich white American.

    Yes, similarly a related concept known as Open Farms is the only way to provide food to the world. Not everyone in this world is a rich first world nation citizen. The concept is remarkably similar to Open Source. Farmers work in their fields for no pay, producing crops. They then give those crops out for free to anyone who needs them. They don't make money from selling their produce, but they can make sure their families don't go bankrupt by supporting them in other ways -- selling vegetable washing services, vegetable product support, offering cooking classes, etc.

    Granted, the farmers won't make as much money as before but the needs of the world come before the rights of any individual farmer. And nobody's forcing them to be farmers either. After all, everybody in this world needs food and they will steal it if there were no free food available.

    --
    Have you read the GNU Manifesto lately?
  80. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Which is why those movies Traci Lords made when she was 16 are such hot sellers down at the video store on the corner, right?

    She was over the age of consent. The movies are child pornography.

    Check your own facts. Yours are in error as regards to law.

    There is no such legal thing as "kiddie" porn. Only child pornography. The age in question is 18. Parent poster also used the term child porn, not "kiddie."

    Personally I myself do use the term "kiddie" porn to distinguish between items depicting prepubesent children and the underage, but sexually mature. I think it's a valid distinction.

    But that distinction is social, not legal.

    KFG

  81. Re:Freenet. Pull the plug before someone gets hurt by jmpvm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Take a close look at how Freenet nodes operate, and realize the minimal amount of traffic analysis that would be required on the part of any government agency to identify node operators and direct queries to guarantee that for any value of "contraband" required, some data corresponding to "contraband" exists on the node of the person selected to be the test case.

    Leaving your argument aside, you don't actually know how freenet works.

    'Direct' requests to a node are not necessarily answered by that node. There is no way for a particular attacker to know whether the node it requested the data from answered it directly from it's data store or routed the request to another node which subsequently answered it.

  82. Isn't that how it's always been.... by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Unstable is a much smaller network, so it's easy to make it work well. Stable is not yet working "well", although it MAY have improved a bit recently; it may work better in the near future, as we get rate limiting sorted out.

    Small works well. Then, every time there's something that spurs a lot of interest, the performance is abysmal. Now I'm sure the same excuse that this is just temporary growing pains will come up again, but I for one have lost faith in that.

    To me, it looks like Freenet has got fundamental scaling issues, as it would appear from the circle of people I know, that Freenet regains its past performance about the same time that the numbers using it are back to where it was.

    It's very easy to make something work well on a small scale - small enough, and even a dumbfire search (pick a route at random) works. Rate limiting, load balancing and getting the most out of each node is good, but I don't think it'll solve the real problem.

    I'm not saying I have the answers to make it so that it *does* scale well. But I think I've understood enough of what Freenet does to realize it *won't* scale well. Ah well...

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  83. I can't believe this is Slashdot by teamhasnoi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This story's turned into a child porn witchhunt. Every insightful post I've seen on the value of free speech is replied to by some AC idiot,(who is using the cover of anonymous posting to post his drivel - how ironic) who says that if he can't control the free distribution of information then it shouldn't be distributed.

    Guess what? Before you ask or accuse, I don't like the idea of child porn. Duh. Does anyone other than the small minority of people who have some deep seated issue? Quit parroting every politico seeking reelection.

    Just because you find ponography (to you) of any sort, doesn't mean that something like Freenet is bad or not needed. There is an ever increasing inabillity to exercise free speech every day. Read your ISP's TOS. Try and get a letter to the editor printed that is critical of the paper. Try to buy an ad during the SuperBowl.

    Why isn't this figured out by now? I kill someone with a hammer. Oh, outlaw hammers! Nevermind that with that same hammer I could help fix a poor family's house. I know, "But you still killed someone with the hammer!"

    It's rather obvious to me that those who would filter free speech are the world's biggest pussies. Frankly, I enjoy and use my human! (NOT GOVERNMENT GIVEN) right of free speech every day.

    Those who would filter it miss the whole point, and miss the irony of the fact that they are encouraging the removal of any personal responsibility, free action or speech.

    Yeah! Freedom of Speech is great as long as I like it! You can recite that over and over, when you're in prison for saying something that your new leader didn't like.

  84. i hate freenet by shren · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When they need support or money, they're the last best hope for freedom online. When you want them to actually produce something that looks like results, they're a research product and they claim that any useful code they produce is only a biproduct.

    I wish slashdot would quit passing them free publicity. Better projects have gotten farther without getting a dime.

    --
    Maybe the state's highest function is to grind out insoluble problems. (Zelazny, Hall of Mirrors)
  85. child porn by cerebralpc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My daughter just turned 1 yesterday.
    I really don't like Freenet's attitude on child porn.
    While most people wish that child pornography and terrorism did not exist, humanity should not be deprived of their freedom to communicate just because of how a very small number of people might use that freedom.
    This attitude just isn't good enough. It just isn't.

  86. That is... by Kjella · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No, I would be going after my ex-wife or banker, not complaining about freenet.

    ...of course assuming you know who did it. Won't do much good if you don't know who. And even if you "know", you need to prove it. Neither of which Freenet is going to help you with.

    Basicly, Freenet is open to libel, slander, fabrications, pump&dumps, fraud, disclosure of trade secrets, personal information and whatever else you can imagine that involves misuse of information.

    It's not just the kiddie porn. And if you want to combine the two, imagine photoshopped kiddie porn of you and your kids. Wouldn't be able to stop that either.

    Freenet is merely one of many ways to achieve the same though. You might want to ask some of the free webspace providers if they ever had cases of encrypted/password protected files being traded over their webspace.

    The uploader doesn't know the downloader and vice versa, and the hoster doesn't know the content. Throw in some anonymous proxies and basicly noone knows nothing.

    Freenet just claims to be a little better at it than that. And a little simpler rather than having people find proxies on their own. It is merely so disturbingly visible to people - kinda like Napster was, despite all the mp3 trading on irc/ftp/usenet before that.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  87. Still slow by retro128 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I downloaded it and installed it (again), and it's still incredibly slow. If there's any speed improvement, it went from 20 minutes to load each page to 15. I had an easier time getting pr0n out of the 'Net in 1992 than I do getting text in Freenet.

    I respect the goals that Freenet is trying to accomplish. And contrary to what some people say in here, it's not the spread of child porn. The ability to say things without fear of reprisal is important. Not just from the government, but from corporations, too. How many times have we heard about a big corp coming down on a whistleblower?

    That said, I believe anonymous systems are important to the future of communication, especially with the orgy of civil surveillance that's going on in the US right now. But regarding Freenet specifically, I have to wonder what the point of anonymous system is if it's completely unusable.

    --
    -R
  88. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In which case I entirely fail to grasp the point of your previous post, which in some regards contradicts this one.

    In this one you also confuse issues of 16 and under 16.

    I might add that so long as your morals are not in contradiction to the law you are certainly free to apply them as you will.

    My own morals, for instance, prevent me from eating meat. I do expect those morals to apply to you, however.

    KFG

  89. Pull the plug? no my friend by yosemite · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I *agree* there is a level of implicit guilt in running a freenet node, Even if traffic analysis was not an issue there is always the "Gosh that person must be guilty if they have something to hide". I agree that: by that rational, everybody in the country is guilty to a degree. In some places in the world and times in history, a person could be considered guilty just walking down the street(hopefully not yet here)! After all, we are all "creatures of sin"/"working to overthrow the state"/"terrorists"/"ad infinitum", any excuse for a totalitarian society to oppress it's citizens will be taken. I am sure you can see where I am going right? In my opinion it is better to stake out a stand against an intrusive government(that is what this is all about right?) with an issue like freenet rather then having to fight for your right to walk down the street.

    Do NOT underestimate the intelligence of these so called "n00bs", people are capable of making their own decisions. Look at file sharing in general, it is associated with a strong youth/anti-authoritarian streak in america today. Do you think that simply because people are not technically literate they do not see the content on p2p/freenet and understand that the material is dangerous to themselves?

    Are you saying they, the masses, do not see what they are doing?

    Why do they still use those technologies? because they psychologically don't give a flying fuck what the government says. We are a morally bankrupt society that will take what it can get and always eyes politicians and the government with a certain distrust.

    Fuck it, I say do foist these technologies onto the noobs, they can make a decision on their own,let it pervade the technosphere, let the information flow where it will.

    Oh, by the way
    "it's your door, not theirs, that will be broken down. If Ian and Matt want to take such a radical stand for free speech, let them host the illegal content, and let them take the risks."

    What does it matter to you what people do? Your commentary almost sounds like those opposed to peer2peer networks in general. Are you opposed to p2p? Are you opposed to freedom of information? Should there be restrictions on what a person can KNOW?

    Now pull the plug before someone gets killed.
    people are dying every fucking day.

  90. Re:The problem I have with FreeNET is... by Tracy+Reed · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hope they are prepared to reject anything that looks encrypted. SSL, ssh, VPN protocols...

  91. "What FreeNET is... by Chordonblue · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...(whether or not by design) is a "harbor house" of sorts for child pornographers, terrorists, and other criminals."

    Oh, you mean like the Internet? Or maybe you mean SCO's definition of Linux? Or maybe how China looks at any sort of freedom of expression that isn't sanctioned by the gov't?

    I'm NOT taking anything to extremes here - as I sometimes do to prove a point - these are all realistic and reasonable examples. I could also mention guns (if you outlaw guns than only...) or even democracy itself (even well educated people can make stupid decisions!)

    Child porn and other filth exist because there is demand for it. Arrest the bastards responsible when possible - what else can be done? Should we also ban digital cameras and/or color printers because of their possbile infringing uses? There is a point at which we must realize that technology will bring us both good and bad consequences - but this does not mean that it is necessarily evil.

    Is your argument about Freenet that it can be used to distribute bad stuff, or that YOU can't find any other legitimate use for it?

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  92. Excellent point by Quizo69 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Kiddie pron and terrorism. Music and movie sharing. All the usual suspects are dragged out whenever [lobby group] needs to implement a new measure to watch you online and offline.

    Your point about even viewing kiddie pron being a crime is at the heart of why their "studies" are fundamentally flawed. Anyone who has any "evidence" that kiddie pron is a massive problem is themselves guilty of viewing it, possibly downloading and categorising it. How did they do their study? By guessing how much is out there?

    To me, kiddie pron seems an invaluable tool to frame someone (as with Scott Ritter) such that the court of public opinion will convict them regardless of the real truth of planted evidence. The fact that no one acknowledges this scares me, because it means no one will question when some is found on someone's computer, whether it really WAS downloaded by the person found with it.

  93. I just was running the unstable version... by herrvinny · · Score: 2, Informative

    And it's really pretty good. It was fast, efficient, and had no hiccups. For those of you running stable edition, and complaining about speed problems: switch to the unstable version. Unstable Freenet for me really sped things up. I would have to recommend it.

  94. Re:Freenet. Pull the plug before someone gets hurt by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Interesting
    > 'Direct' requests to a node are not necessarily answered by that node. There is no way for a particular attacker to know whether the node it requested the data from answered it directly from it's data store or routed the request to another node which subsequently answered it.

    And this protects you from the following scenario, how?

    "Your Honor. Agent Smith clicked on this link, which he reasonably believed to contain illegal content. A request went out from his machine to another machine on the network. Some packets got sent back from different machines. Illegal content was stored on our hard drive. Our client happens to have been modified to record the IP addresses of each encrypted chunk of every file as it's being downloaded. Our logs tell us that the 12 chunks that make up the illegal content came from the following 12 machines. With data shared from a source we're not necessarily going to talk much about, we were able to determine that 12 of these nodes were relaying requests (trafficking) but that 8 responded to requests from within their datastore (possession).

    In order to prove that the owners of all 20 of these machines are cooperating as part of an illegal content distribution ring, we require a warrant that enables us to seize their equipment."

    At this point, your life is over. You just don't know it until the flash-bang hits. All that's left (in the West) is to determine who get part of their life back after six-digit legal fees and several years in the legal system, or whether you get the Grand Prize of 15-20 in the Federal pound-me-in-the-ass pen. (The Chinese get no such choice; a healthy supply of organs is a nice source of hard currency.)

    "After we have the warrants, we plan to take the copies of the hard drives from all 20 machines, set them up on a 21-machine lab LAN, and with a few fancy routers, re-create the network as it existed at the time of the crime. By clearing the datastore on our 21st machine and requesting the same key we did in the warrant, we intend to prove that all 20 defendants are engaged in a conspiracy to distribute illegal content. If we get the content from an air-gap isolated LAN, we've proved our case - the 20 defendants' machines collectively hold the illegal content and distribute it to anyone requesting a key."

    Furthermore, a smart adversary will file based on a bunch of "popular" keys that are likely to be stored on any subset of 20 nodes based on its traffic analysis and/or profiles of time-taken-to-respond-to-request certain requests versus certain nodes as sampled over time without even making a request itself, simply by passively monitoring data from many chokepoints on the network for a sufficiently long period of time, but even if the adversary is dumb and only gets a warrant for a key it requested and is somehow unable to recreate the content in the crime lab, you're proven Not Guilty.

    Big deal. It doesn't matter if you don't get the Grand Prize of 15-20 years. The damage (to your gear, your reputation, and your career) is done when the warrant is signed, not 6 years later when the dust settles.

    If you want to run a Freenet node because you believe in anonymous free speech, and you understand that you could well become the test case for Ian and Matt's political stance, go right ahead. If you agree with Ian and Matt's stance, go right ahead -- it's a free country, which means you're allowed to do things that are of untested legality. You just have to be prepared to face the charges when people with differing legal opinions, differing political agendas, and overwhelmingly superior firepower decide to bring the matter before the courts.

    I have a principled objection to running a Freenet node. My gear, my network, my rules. Freenet doesn't allow me to enforce my rules. So I enforced my rules the only way I could -- by not installing it.

    There's also a practical objection

  95. Freenet Rulez! by elrond1999 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've not installed Freenet in a year, but it seems from the mailinglist that the activity is increasing.

  96. Re:Questionable content by Rocinante · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I figure I'm about as culpable as anyone running a router on the regular public internet. My node will route any requests it recieves, regardless of content; in the normal course of operation, I can't even tell what is locally stored on my hard disk. I'm no lawyer, so I don't know the ins and outs of common carrier status; I have no idea if this line of argument would hold up in court. It's basically the legal theory that the whole freenet project rests upon, though. And, yes, if the feds decided to crack down on freenet, I would be happy to stand up in court and argue for free, anonymous, uncensorable communication.

    --
    Just trying to open someone's head! I mean "mind!" Open someone's mind, um, to the possibilities! With explosives!
  97. Re:Maybe if it weren't in Java by salimma · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It is almost ready. It seems that gcj from the pre-3.4 GCC suite is getting quite usable; it is also capable of compiling IBM's Eclipse IDE properly.

    And will be available on Fedora Core 2 soon. Yum.

    --
    Michel
    Fedora Project Contribut