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Hatch Pushes INDUCE Act

An anonymous reader writes "According to CNET the Senate is leaning strongly in favor of the INDUCE Act sponsored by Senator Orrin Hatch. It looks like the RIAA is making significant progress manipulating the marionette strings in Congress. MP3newswire.net states that if such laws were to pass, the record industry would become the new AMTRAK. 'Bloated and inefficient as always, but now a drain on taxpayers wallets and liberty as well'." Infoworld has a story as well. Reader CryptoEngineer writes: "Marybeth Peters, of the US Copyright Office testified recently before the Senate Judiciary committee in support of the INDUCE Act, which has been discussed here before. In summary, she thinks its not strong enough. Among other things, she proposed scrapping the Betamax decision, which makes it legal to timeshift TV shows with a VCR. Analysis here."

739 comments

  1. Powerful incentives (and interests) by SIGALRM · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Senate is leaning strongly in favor of the INDUCE Act sponsored by Senator Orrin Hatch
    Senator Hatch has a powerful incentive [opensecrets.org] in attacking P2P networks (see #'s 7, 15, 18).

    Oddly enough, by the same logic he's using in this legislation prescription drugs should be illegal because they can be abused as well. But since the rest of his top contributors are pharma co's he isn't likely to raise that as an issue is he?
    --
    Sigs cause cancer.
    1. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by cheeseSource · · Score: 5, Funny

      Orrin Hatch should be beat upside the head with a mackrel.

      That's just my humble opinion though...

      --
      (Sponsored by cheeseSource for President 2012)
    2. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Are you sure his incentive isn't simple in being an artist himself? http://www.hatchmusic.com/

      Tonight at Saltair, on the anti-P2P tour, Orrin Hatcn and Metallica!

    3. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      SBC is a disincentive, not an incentive. Media piracy helps SBC, because they sell high speed internet access.

      Depending on how vaguely INDUCE is termed & interpreted, (I have no idea about this.) SBC's current business practices could be considered illegal under the INDUCE act, and they may be required to change or face consequences. Dunno.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    4. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by antarctican · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You know, I would like to see this pass, I would even like to see the Betamax decision overturned. Why you might ask? Because of the wakeup call it will create.

      Right now it's only a small fraction of the population fighting this, or that even is paying attention. However when the RIAA and their lawyer start suing and the VCR becomes illegal.... the public will finally wake up. The sleeping lion which usually let's the government pursue it's own agenda at will, will begin to fight.

      There will be calls such as back in the revolution days, only this time it won't be led my traitors to the Britain (hey, I'm Canadian, the yanks were traitors in my eyes ;) it will be those fighting for these freedoms they've become accustom to. It will force some hard decisions on the direction you want for your country, do you want to be ruled by a corporate agenda or by the freedom that America supposedly stands for.

      If the RIAA pushes too far it could become the largest cultural revolution seen in a century.

      That, plus all the tech companies dealing with this technology will move north and I'll never want for a job - there will always be a black market for time-shifting and the like equipment down south. ;)

      Instead of us whining on slashdot, we need to inform and mobilize the masses. They need to know what their rights are now and what is being done to take them away. They need to have the will to pull in the line of their government, order them on the direction to take. Maybe even get rid of the Democratics and Republicans, two parties that claim to be different but are both the same cultural poison. Come on, give Nader a chance, he has some great ideas. :)

    5. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by ballookey · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I'm just going to cut and paste from my blog this morning:

      What's next? Are you going to make Adobe Photoshop illegal? I mean, I could use Photoshop to fake legal documents - sure they've made copying currency harder, but it's a lot easier to create fake insurance documents, phony immigration papers, false birth certificates and vehicle registrations.

      But do I do any of that? NO. I use it to make a living. I use it to create works of art, which in case they forgot, is one of the things that makes human beings noble and worth anything at all.

      I'm sure that a lot of people use it for nefarious purposes. Adobe would be hard-pressed to make an application that's useful and yet could hinder people's evil plans for it. So they leave that to the user and the criminal justice system - as it should be.

      Same thing with P2P networks. They just didn't realize how very many people are willing to bend or break the law given the chance. What, they thought everyone's basically GOOD at heart? SUCKER! P2P networks are handy. They have legitimate uses. The most valuable one to me is that heretofore unknown artists can make their work available and with just a little word of mouth, garner a lot of attention and notice they wouldn't previously have had.

      And I think that, more than anything, is the crux of it. The establishment has made hoards of money and holds a lot of power based on the fact that previously it was difficult to even make a minor success of yourself. It was like the old system of banks and checking accounts. You couldn't open an account unless someone vouched for you. Similarly, before computers and the internet took over, you couldn't be a success unless someone already rich and powerful vouched for you. (Or you were extraordinarilly lucky. This wouldn't preclude talent, but any talented artist that was successful under the old system will first admit they were lucky to get there.) Frankly, it's mostly the same now, but it's changing. Bands are putting songs they can't get onto the radio on their websites. Videos MTV won't let you see are available online. I don't have to listen to KROQ's corporate-sanctioned IDEA of alternative rock - I can listen to KEXP Seattle right through my computer. Rather than wait several weeks for the "official" release, people globally can get the media they want today. I no longer get suckered into paying $16-18 for a whole CD of crap when all I wanted was one song that frankly, I'd be sick of in three weeks flat anyway. Wifey and Hubby get 10-20,000 subscribers a month and they have a nice house and take fabulous trips. Mark one for everyone.

      Early in my Internet days I realized the great thing about it was, that with a little know how, a small investment, and a few ideas, anyone could make a few bucks. Some with better ideas would make a whole lot more. Sure enough a lot of people, it turns out, were actually quite willing to take their clothes off and start inserting all manner of objects in front of a camera - if they got paid for it. Did anyone realize how many whores there were out there before it became so easy to set up a subscription site? The free market used to be such a sacred cow with the conservatives. Suddenly they've had the rose-tinted glasses removed and realized the cow's a three-input bovine and they freak out and start legislating the use of inputs.

      OK, I ramble, I get off topic. Score me a -1. But the point is, they see things getting out of control. They see their precious status-quo shaken. And rather than adapt and take this opportunity to finally and truthfully get to know their audience for the slightly-slimey and occasionally downright dirty hos they are, they freak out and start taking liberties away. They only way they can see to staunch the flow of blood is to put a tourniquet on technological advances.

      We've got to stop this crap or else we're doomed to live with Brittany Spears and her ilk forever.

    6. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, a 50 pound mackrel that happens to be frozen solid.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    7. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Suddenly they've had the rose-tinted glasses removed and realized the cow's a three-input bovine and they freak out and start legislating the use of inputs.

      Beautiful, just beautiful.

    8. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by rabel · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or are the rest of you always taken back by just how cheaply these guys are bought for? I mean, $37,000 can be a lot of money for a single person, but for a multi-billion dollar corporation?

      Seems like if I were an Evil Beaurocratic Overlord like Orrin Hatch, I'd demand six or seven figures at least... but that's just me.

    9. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by stripe · · Score: 5, Informative

      Sponsers/supporters of the Bill

      Orrin G. Hatch
      Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont
      Bill Frist
      Tom Daschle
      Lindsey Graham
      Barbara Boxer

      If Ms Boxer is up for relection, I am voting for anyone that has a chance to replace her now.

    10. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      If the RIAA pushes too far it could become the largest cultural revolution seen in a century.

      I find it extremely funny that if such a revolution ever took place, the history books will record under "Causes:", not "Taxation without Representation", but instead, "Took away their VCR's". :D

    11. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Exactly. This will be just like lowering the speed limit to 55mph. Overnight virtually every driver in the country became a criminal. If this act passes, overnight virtually every VCR owner will become a criminal -- exact same situation. And it only took, what, 20+ years to repeal the 55mph national speed limit. In that 20 years cars didn't change much, but 20 years from today most VCRs will be dead (and will long since be obsolete - analog TV is supposed to die shortly after 2006), and all the (legal) digital equipment will be technically incapable of timeshifting if the broadcaster disallows it, so in 20 years repealing the INDUCE act will be moot.

      Worst case scenario, in 20 years we won't have any personal computers, because this will outlaw them as well (any general purpose computer is a potential circumvention device and therefore must be prohibited - only DRM-shackled PCs will be legal, and I wouldn't call them "general purpose" if they only do what the RIAA/MPAA want them to do).

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    12. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by rctay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You overestimate the average voter. They'll line up and pay the man like the good sheep they are. They don't understand the argument or the technology, and don't want to. Slashdot is the fringe brother.

    13. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by secolactico · · Score: 1

      The sleeping lion which usually let's the government pursue it's own agenda at will, will begin to fight.

      You owe me a monitor and a keyboard!

      The sleeping lion will only wake up if roused by some powerful entity whose interest will be benefitted by doing so. It will certainly not wake up by itself.

      At least that is my humble opinion.

      --
      No sig
    14. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I don't care if they pass this law .. cause how are they going to sue every friggin American .. I mean come on .. f$%^ them .. and when the VCR becomes illegal .. well I'll just call my local pot selling drug dealer and order a VCR from him .. what becomes illegal will never become unattainable. In a way I almost wish the RIAA would come after me for just downloading a song .. cause I would invest some serious cash into fighting and countersuing.. Granted I might not win but I would make sure I am heard as much as possible to make people wake up. Orrin Hatch needs someone to put a bullet in his head .. I was looking at the post from earlier and someone mentioned searching for him on google .. so I did and I couldn't believe the ridiculous stuff that came up .. could any single person be more bought out and corrupt? I know I am rambling on .. but hey the way things are going .. it will be illegal to "think" in a few years cause the government will have everyone's balls in a vice.

      This whole thing reminds me of a law that was passed in Albany NY a few years ago .. where for apartment building owners .. if a crime was committed on you property (or in the street in front of your property "city property") you would get a warning that the city would condemn your property if a third incident occurred .. and you would be subject to a 5000 fine on the second incident. ok so .. like you the landlord are responsible for babysitting all the psycho's in all your buildings ... come on .. of course the law passed cause no one was watching .. but when they tried to enforce it building owners started suing the city .. this is on a small scale of course .. but they woke up a power bigger than the mentally challenged dictators who create the laws and lost!

      So going back to the subject at hand. I hope it does get passed cause they will wake up a sleeping giant. And when they do, the RIAA and whomever else is in our way will get shut down. The US Government is all about big business and money which isn't going to change any time soon. Until they push the wrong buttons and the people rebel! And one other thing I read a post before about the government having too much control in this country. The government does not have the power to fight the American population + all the ex-military personnel in the US + take over the world!

    15. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by SIGALRM · · Score: 2, Funny
      Yeah, a 50 pound mackrel that happens to be frozen solid
      Yep... just might work. I don't see the fishing industry anywhere on this list.
      --
      Sigs cause cancer.
    16. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Tonight at Saltair, on the anti-P2P tour, Orrin Hatcn and Metallica!

      ... backup vocals by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

    17. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by shaitand · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Media piracy helps SBC, because they sell high speed internet access."

      Not really, piraters actually utilize their high speed access. SBC just wants you to browse the web, not download. They want users who DON'T utilize their connection to the fullest, that way they can support more users on the same t1.

    18. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His music actually made me curious about something. Orrin Hatch is a religious person (assumed based on his musical repertoire). Let's assume, for the purposes of this argument, that we were all made by God, as is consistent with most monotheistic religions. Then suppose I were to then use my brain, lungs, and vocal cords to violate copyright law, such as by publicly performing a copyrighted work to which I don't have rights. Since God produced the materials with which I violated copyright law, and since a reasonable person can see that He intended me to use them for such purposes, is He liable under the Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act of 2004.

    19. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Depending on how vaguely INDUCE is termed & interpreted, (I have no idea about this.) SBC's current business practices could be considered illegal under the INDUCE act, and they may be required to change or face consequences. Dunno.
      I know that's a lovely pipe dream we would love to have--$BUSINESS/$POLITICIAN would be guilty under this act, and then that'll show 'em! The reality part is that we don't get the opportunity to do equal enforcement of crap laws like this. Even though Senator Hatch's VCR at home would become illegal, the feds are not going to take anyone seriously if they report him for having it. Overly broad laws like this are what enables a corporate state. Technically everyone is guilty, but the laws are only enforced against those without the political power.
      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
    20. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1
      Oddly enough, by the same logic he's using in this legislation prescription drugs should be illegal because they can be abused as well.

      No. Go actually read the bill. It's only 1/4 of a page, so it shouldn't be to hard. Why are so many people here unable to do this?

      A drug company would in fact get in serious trouble under current law if they were intentionally promoting the misuse of their drugs, so not only does you analogy fail to make the point you intend, it provides a good argument that the INDUCE Act is in fact not the big scary boogeyman that most people here are making it out to be.

    21. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess when you're fishing for karma it makes sense to stick with what works, eh?

    22. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by meldroc · · Score: 2

      What's sickening is that it doesn't matter who you vote for this election - the MPAA & RIAA have bribed^H^H^H^H^H^Hcontributed to the campaign funds of both sides. Democrat, Republican, they'll both vote for this monstrosity. They've stopped listening to the little guys.

      The only hope is to challenge the constitutionality of this bill and hope the Supreme Court strikes it down.

      --

      Meldroc, Waster of Electrons
    23. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont?

      There must be some rationale for voting for this. I don't, however, see what it could be.

      That Boxer would vote for it doesn't really surprise me...but I'd like to hear her defense of it.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    24. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by leelapolis · · Score: 1
    25. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by tsg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The national 55mph speed limit was enacted to save gasoline during the oil crunch of the 70's. Once that was over, the national speed limit was only a technicality since there are no national traffic police: local cops enforced the "unofficial" local speed limit.

      Unlike this. The INDUCE Act gives the DOJ jurisdiction over prosecuting these "crimes". All it will take is a couple of otherwise innocent people being prosecuted for owning a VCR and it will be a bloody revolution.

      At the very least, the MP/RIAA are going to discover that the harder they make it for people to watch their shows and listen to their music the less people are going to do it and they will bleed themselves dry.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    26. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      There is no way you can say that this problem is unique to liberals. I hear conservatives saying the same old "win by losing" tripe as well.

      There are just too many people who don't care for us to "win by losing."

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    27. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by martissimo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      that list is scary, if the Senate Majority Leader and the Minority Leader are both for it this crap is a done deal....

    28. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you mispelled "swordfish" as "mackrel", and "beat upside the head" as "impaled through the anus"

      Otherwise, I agree wholly with your assessment!

    29. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Tonight at Saltair, on the anti-P2P tour, Orrin Hatcn and Metallica!
      It's craptacular! Be there or be not square!
    30. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by evronm · · Score: 2, Insightful
      What's next? Are you going to make Adobe Photoshop illegal?

      What about guns? As long as those are legal, it's clear that any of these laws outlawing software that could "potentially be misused are clearly hypocritical.

      - "P2P apps can be used to illegally copy music"

      - "Guns can be used to hijack airplanes and fly them into buildings"

      See what I mean?

    31. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by antiMStroll · · Score: 1
      "Once that was over, the national speed limit was only a technicality since there are no national traffic police: local cops enforced the "unofficial" local speed limit.

      Not quite correct, states were indeed free to raise their speed limits, but at the cost of forfeiting federal road funds. The federal gov 'reversed blackmailed' the states, "do as we want or don't get the money".

    32. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Zynthalay · · Score: 3, Funny

      They can have my PC when they pry it from my greasy, mass market snack food covered hands! - The NCA

    33. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Metasquares · · Score: 1

      He seems to have composed very little, if any, music. It looks like he just came up with lyrics for most (probably all) of the albums on that site. Not to demean lyric writers (some songs are really augmented by great lyrics), but that just doesn't measure up to actual composition in my eyes.

    34. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by killjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's just nonsense. The only things that will become illegal will be products (and services) made by people who can't afford to bribe politicians. The rest of the industry will get exemptions for their products.

      The VCR will not be illegal, the TV will not be illegal. What will be illegal are anything made with open source and not made by a large company.

      BTW the public won't give a shit. They are frogs being slowly boiled and they don't even know. All you have to is to raise the terror level up a notch and watch them cower.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    35. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by dcgaber · · Score: 1

      She is, but in California the only republican who could beat her is Ahnold, and he is busy with a different job right now.

    36. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're a Californian get on the horn and let her know how you feel.

    37. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are plenty of good arguments against religion, but yours is not one of them.

    38. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by SoSueMe · · Score: 1
      Not to demean lyric writers (some songs are really augmented by great lyrics), but that just doesn't measure up to actual composition in my eyes..


      Ha, Ha, Ho, Ho, Ho,... That's rich. No, really...
      You must listen to Rap (they forgot the "C", BTW).
      If there are no lyrics, it is an "instrumental" piece. All "songs" have lyrics.

      Yes, Flamebait, but doesn't that deserve it?
    39. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Shao+Ke · · Score: 1

      Here are her contact numbers:
      http://boxer.senate.gov/contact/

    40. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by ibbey · · Score: 1

      Not quite correct, states were indeed free to raise their speed limits, but at the cost of forfeiting federal road funds. The federal gov 'reversed blackmailed' the states, "do as we want or don't get the money".

      Actually, if you reread the parent post, he never said that states raised the speed limit. On the contrary, he said "the national speed limit was only a technicality since there are no national traffic police: local cops enforced the "unofficial" local speed limit". In other words, the law still existed, but most muniicipaliities chose to ignore it.

    41. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Did he say that guns should be illegal? The whole "don't carry guns" thing is really a private matter for which airlines can just blacklist you for flying with a gun, if they wish. And those where you can carry a gun, there might be a few more dead hijackers instead of a lot of hostages. But, who knows..

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    42. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by ibbey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know, I would like to see this pass, I would even like to see the Betamax decision overturned. Why you might ask? Because of the wakeup call it will create.

      I'm sure that lot's of pepople said the same thing about the DMCA, but here we are six years later, and the DMCA is still going strong, despite such stupid things as the DMCA being used to outlaw third party batteries & inkjet cartridges.

      The American people are way to complacent to object to simple things like losing their rights. All the RIAA has to do is somehow associate piracy with Terrorism, and Americans will be happy to give up their rights.

    43. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Igmuth · · Score: 1

      I suppose they might black list you.. not sure what good it would do considering you would be in jail, but hey, if it makes the airlines happy...

    44. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Slight correction. The CLAIMED reason for the 55mph speed limit was gas milage, something that allowed an ignorant congress to appear to do something about the "gas shortages". (I'm not old enough to remember them, but as I understand they didn't really exist, except as some manipulators caused them)

      Most cars get better gas milage at 65 mpg than 55. The best milage varies from car to car. The more wind resistance the slower that speed is, the heavier the car the higher the speed. The bigger the engine the higher the speed. Somehow gearing and engine design factors into it too, but there is no general statement to make. Even many big trucks get better milage at 65 than 55.

      I'm not making the above up. I keep track of each tank, and 55 vs 65 amounts to several mpg difference, even when I compare towing the boat at 65 to unloaded at 55. However I can only speak specificly for the two autos I own.

    45. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by darin3200 · · Score: 1

      You know, I would like to see this pass, I would even like to see the Betamax decision overturned. Why you might ask? Because of the wakeup call it will create.

      Yeh, like the wakeup call we got in the 2000 election with Florida. I mean it was bad, but look at the results, now we have high-quality electronic voting machines so now if we get screwed over we won't have to spends weeks counting chads, we'll know the second your votes goes to /dev/null. Or how about that other thing, The Patriot Act. I swear, my town has been in constant riot/protest. Its just amazing how concerned the citizens are freedoms.

    46. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by metachor · · Score: 1

      Maybe even get rid of the Democratics and Republicans, two parties that claim to be different but are both the same cultural poison. Come on, give Nader a chance, he has some great ideas. :)

      Actually, I don't think Nader is all that different.

    47. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not a bad idea, but ultimately the only way to make an honest whore out of him is to retire him to a federal bordello.

      Watch to see if that rictus of a smile the Bush men and RIAA reps always seem to wearing changes at all.

    48. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Why would you be in jail? Like I said, possessing a gun on a flight is a *private* matter. The airline is a private company. You're a private entity. Your possessing or not possessing a gun on a flight is up to a contract between you and said airline. The government should neither require that no one may carry a gun on a flight nor should they be doing the security work of private airlines (hell, they shouldn't be loaning airlines gobs of money just because they're failing). If you happen to violate some ground law over the airspace of some country (say, shooting people), then you can go to jail. But most countries have a concept of self-defense as a legal defense for shooting someone.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    49. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by d474 · · Score: 1

      Ha! One of the albums Orin Hatch has, is titled "Put Your Arms Around the World". Perhaps a subliminable message to W?

      --
      Authority questions you. Return the favor.
    50. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      As an american, I have only one thing to say:

      "Baaaaaaa"

      (is that how you spell a sheep's call?)

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    51. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's a federal matter. Bring a gun on a plane and you will go to jail. Try it for yourself if you have any doubts. By the way, they are federalizing many of the security workers in airports. And I'm talking about baggage screeners, not just the national guardsmen.

    52. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by avgjoe62 · · Score: 1
      ...something that allowed an ignorant congress to appear to do something about the "gas shortages". (I'm not old enough to remember them, but as I understand they didn't really exist, except as some manipulators caused them)

      I am old enough to remember them. I was tweleve during the Arab Oil Embargo and worked at a gas station during the shortage of 1978. Both were very real shortages.

      The first was a direct result of an emabrgo, and there was actually no gas to be had. The second was a result of panic buying, much like the Toilet Paper Shortage. We were selling through 8000 gallons a day (the most a tanker could deliver) in 78. Once rationing was imposed, we went to selling that in three days. There wasn't a shortage. We could get all the gas we wanted up to a tanker a day. It was just panic buying that caused us to sell out so quickly and thus fed the appearance of a shortage, which fed more panic buying, which added to the appearance and so on.

      There was a mini-shortage in the early eighties caused by a trucker's strike, but that lasted less than a week. Since people knew the reason, it didn't lead to panic buying.

      --

      How come Slashdot never gets Slashdotted?

    53. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by evronm · · Score: 1

      You're missing my point: As long as guns, which can be used to actually kill people, are legal, it's hard to argue about the potential abuses of copy restriction circumvention devices with a straight face. The politicians do manage it, though...

    54. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > In that 20 years cars didn't change much

      Bull-fucking-shit! As a youth, I owned a '68 buick, top speed on the speedometer? 120mph. Top speed of the car? I haven't a clue, as it was trivial to put the need at the 120 mark and still be accelerating. Years later I owned a '78 Mustang. Top speed on the speedometer? 95mph. Top speed of the car? 75. Downhill. With a tail wind. Also realize the former was a family sedan and the later was (what passed for) a sports car. Quite a bit changed.

    55. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by ibbey · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, that's not his only incentive to block p2p. He's also an "Exceptional Singer, Songwriter and Composer". And, though you can listen to a few of his songs on his web site, it's hard to believe that he's not one of the top two or three most pirated artists on the net. I mean, according to one Sony exec, "On any given day in Nashville we receive 200 good songs. What we are interested in is great songs. We think two of the songs are great songs and that they'll be around for 100 years or more". And of course, no one in the record industry would ever lie to further their own agenda.

    56. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention how horribly bad a choice it is to use a gun on an airplane, self defence or other wise. Wanna guess what happens if you punch a .45 sized hole in an airliner's side/window at 30,000ft? hint, it's not good. So unless you can be sure you'd never ever miss once, (yeah, right) you'd be far better off with a tazer, or a baseball bat.

    57. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "All it will take is a couple of otherwise innocent people being prosecuted for owning a VCR and it will be a bloody revolution."

      Bullshit. 14 year old girls were sued by the RIAA and nobody raised a peep.

      The public is perfectly happy to be spoonfed important news like laci peterson while completely ignoring the threats to their freedom.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    58. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Valid point. Bad analogy.

      http://www.snopes.com/critters/wild/frogboil.htm

      -n

    59. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Xrikcus · · Score: 1

      That could be the case on domestic flights, but it certainly isn't on international flights. You'd certainly be arrested on landing in most of europe if you managed to get a gun on a plane.

    60. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Explosive decompression is pretty clearly a myth (Mythbusters did most of a 60 minute show on it clearly showing that the pressure difference between 30,000ft and 0ft isn't enough to cause massive holes in the airplane). The only real threat is depressurizing of the cabin for which a relatively rapid decent and emergency landing could resolve the conflict with few to no fatalties associated with oxygen depravation. Planes have even been known to land when bombs have blown huge holes in the side. That's not to say that an unlikely set of circumstances couldn't make a lone gunman capable of taking down a plane before someone else with a gun is able to stop them, but even killing pilot and copilot is no real guarantee that the plane can't be landed by someone instructing over radio/phone/whatever.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    61. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I did miss your point. I think I mostly missed it precisely *because* politicians keep trying to ban guns because they "might" hurt people. I'm sorry that I mistook your comment.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    62. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 1

      Same thing with P2P networks. They just didn't realize how very many people are willing to bend or break the law given the chance. What, they thought everyone's basically GOOD at heart? SUCKER! P2P networks are handy. They have legitimate uses. The most valuable one to me is that heretofore unknown artists can make their work available and with just a little word of mouth, garner a lot of attention and notice they wouldn't previously have had.

      You seem to be among those who refuse to acknowledge that the proportion of infringing use in Photoshop is negligible compared to what it is in P2P networks such as Kazaa.

      A simple criterion: Photoshop would still be a commercially viable product even if infringing use was eliminated. So would VCRs (nowhere in this statement is it even suggested that VCRs should be made illegal). This is not the case with Kazaa and similar products: if you remove infringing use, they simply vanish. Examples: the old Napster (who went bankrupt as soon as they filtered out copyright material). Audiogalaxy also comes to mind. BitTorrent, on the other hand, would be safe from this point of view.

      The people who sell Kazaa rely on infringing use to make a profit. By refusing to acknowledge this obvious fact, you make it easy for the RIAA to picture all its opponent as bad-faith kids only interested in getting everything for free (which, incidentally, is not so inaccurate a portrayal for a significant part of the /. mob).

      But the point is, they see things getting out of control. They see their precious status-quo shaken.

      Please, next time you feel the urge to invoke some conspiracy theories, could simply read what other people actually say ?

      And karma be damned.

      Thomas Miconi

    63. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 1
      If the RIAA pushes too far

      I remember in school hearing about Malthusian theory: that populations of organisms tend to grow to the point of starvation, then die off greatly, and slowly start the process all over again. I may over simplify, but that's the gist.

      My theory is that governments (no, the RIAA is not the government, they just rent it) tend towards ever-increasing authoritarian control, until the population, no matter how long-suffering and patient, finally stand up on their hind legs, say "Enough!", those in the ivory towers get dragged into the street and shot, and you end up with a new government.

      Then we start the long process all over again. "Meet the new boss: same as the old boss."

      --

      They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
    64. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Most cars get better gas milage at 65 mpg than 55."

      Well, duh.

    65. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "it doesn't matter who you vote for ... contributed to the campaign funds of both sides."

      There're more than two sides. Vote Libertarian (or some other so-called "third" party) if you don't like what the Republicrats are doing.

    66. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by tsg · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. 14 year old girls were sued by the RIAA and nobody raised a peep.

      Because most people believed the FUD that they were "stealing music".

      The public is perfectly happy to be spoonfed important news like laci peterson while completely ignoring the threats to their freedom.

      I completely agree. Most could care less about freedom of speech or their 4th ammendment rights because they aren't the ones being suppressed or searched. It's happening to "other people", not them. But try taking away their VCR. This is something that affects them personally. They will notice and they will not like it one bit.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    67. Re:Powerful incentives (and interests) by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      Preferably one travelling at around the speed of sound.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  2. VOTE LIBERTARIAN by WarMonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    VOTE LIBERTARIAN

    --
    -- I could tell right away that she was impressed with my HUGE Slashdot Karma.
    1. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by ch-chuck · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree in theory, but in practice a vote libertarian is a vote for Bush. Just ask anybody who voted for Nader in 2000.

      --
      try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    2. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by maximilln · · Score: 3, Informative

      I agree in theory, but in practice a vote libertarian is a vote for Bush

      And a vote for Kerry won't change anything either. It's a dog and pony (elephant and donkey) show. The only common theme is spending more of _YOUR_ money to add to _THEIR_ profit.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    3. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by BlaKnail · · Score: 1
      However, since Badnarik is on the far right of the political spectrum instead of the far left, wouldn't a vote for him take away a vote that should have been for Bush otherwise?

      Anyway, saying a vote for *fringe candidate* is a vote for *bad politician* is very simplistic and not always true.

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

      Funny, I thought it was a vote for Nader.

      People erroneously assume that Nader supporters actually want the Democratic candidate to win, and are just (apparently) really confused. What I see is that the Democratic party so poorly represents Nader's followers that they can't even woo them away in the face of certain failure.

      What the Democrats are saying when they want Nader out of the race is, "We wish no one would represent you freaks so that we would be the least of all evils on the ballot." I find it kind of hard to sympathize with that sentiment.

      Here is my outlook: the republicans claim that if they get in office, they will destroy my government, take most of my money, and destroy my freedoms. The democrats claim that if they get in, they will destroy my government, take most of my money, and destroy my freedoms (though by different methods! Yippee!).

      Best of all, I get told that if I don't vote or vote for a third-party candidate, that I am throwing my vote away and *thus can't complain!* Sorry, but I'm going to vote for the party that won't destroy myself or my country.

      It's like if one candidate said he would shoot you in the right knee, another said in the left knee, and a third said he wouldn't shoot you at all. Even if the third had no chance of winning, I can't see the advantage of voting for anyone else. They'll both blow your freakin' kneecaps off!

    5. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And a vote for Kerry won't change anything either. It's a dog and pony (elephant and donkey) show. The only common theme is spending more of _YOUR_ money to add to _THEIR_ profit.

      Yeah because Kerry is going to invade a country that never attacked us while repealing 30 years of progress on environmental laws and giving massive tax cuts to the rich.

      Sure the Democrats have their problems (Patriot Act anyone? DCMA?) and they are almost as cozy with big business as the Republicans are but to say they are as bad as the Republicans is truly crazy. Do you really think we'd be where we are (Iraqi quagmire with the entire free World hating our guts) if Gore had gotten elected (or should I say if Bush hadn't gotten appointed)?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    6. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by irokitt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not a libertarian, but I think you should vote for what you believe in. Voting for a candidate because they're more likely to win is kind of like voting for what everyone else believes in.

      --
      If my answers frighten you, stop asking scary questions.
    7. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, any fair (i.e. equal percentage) tax cut is going to give like 80% of it's money to the rich. That's because they pay 80% of taxes, because they have so much more money than you and because it's taxed at rates approaching 40%.

      Why should they pay more tax in the first place? They aren't benefitting from roads or the Army or the IRS (heh) any more than you. Any tax that doesn't involve sending every adult a yearly bill for the *same amount* is communism, plain and simple.

    8. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know if I'd say Badnarik is on the 'far right'. Being as he, for example is probably in favor of legalizing drugs, which is a position definitely frowned upon by the far right and generally only held by the far left.

      Whether you agree with it or not, the Nolan test does illustrate that 'far left' and 'far right' are way too simplistic to reflect the real world.

      Unfortunately I think a lot of people, politicians included try to bend things around to try to make things fit the artificial left/right division. In many cases I think the two major political parties line up on the opposite sides of issues just for the sake of doing so, regardless of whether the position they are taking really makes sense in the overall framework of their traditional ideology.

      As for whether Libertarians take more votes from Reps or Dems, I am not completely sure. I do know that most of the Libs I know (people who actually belong to the party) are either into new age religions like wicca or militant athiests, which is not something you can usually say about Republicans.

    9. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends if you are voting for the libertarians who believe in strong property rights (stretching the definition of property to include copyrights), or the libertarians who believe in minimal government and free markets.

      I've heard libertarians on both sides of this issue. Of course the error is in treating copyrights as property: once your song or photograph is in somebody else's house, there's a conflict between *their* property rights and yours.

    10. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, so you (they) can bitch about it on slashdot and fark for the next 4 years? "Don't blame me...*I* voted Libertarian!!" Yes, that's very productive. The country is going even MORE to hell, but at least you voted your conscious. Don't you feel so much better?

    11. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Maybe you need to look up what commuism is.

      Redistribution of wealth on a small scale is not communism.

      Complete elimination of personal wealth is.

      And a lot of these people should not be making so much money. I hate it when people are like look how much more money I made such and such fund/company worth. It's only right I get 10s of millions of dollors.

      Any dumbass can make a fund grow in up times, andif said fund/company were to lose value or under perform I doubt sai person would be willing to fork over 10s of millions of their own dollors.

      Taxing money over large quantities is a way to encourage people to look after their employees (and is not done enough)

      It's a lot harder to fuck your employees out of 1,000,000 dollars of bennifits for 300,000 dollars then it is for 600,000 dollars.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    12. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      That's how America's electoral system works. Since it's designed to support only 2 parties, voting isn't about choosing who you think the best leader is. It's all about voting for the person who stands the best chance of beating the person you least want in office. Until the day you see a ballot telling you to put in order (ex: 1 thru 5) the people you want governing, this is how the system must be played.

      I would like to thank our legally appointed President for showing me that youthful idealism has no place in politics and opening my eyes to the stark reality of the way things really work.

    13. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      1) People in Utah are not going to vote Libertarian. They're going to keep voting for Hatch until he dies of old age, which will probably be at 120. People like him hang around like a genital warts, while the people who should hang around usaully die in their 20's.

      2) You can vote libertarian at the local level and for the major parties at the federal level. We had several third party candidates win seats at the local level here in Colorado in the last election.

      3) Yes, I DID just compare Orrin Hatch to gential warts.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    14. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by sparty · · Score: 1
      They aren't benefitting from roads or the Army or the IRS (heh) any more than you

      Er, yes, they are. I don't have substantial interests in any companies selling millions of dollars of ordinance and equipment to the army, nor do I have substantial interests in any companies making millions of dollars based on interestate road transit. I also don't have overseas corporate interests that are protected by US Armed Forces or where executives are prepared to run to the Embassy and hide behind the Marines if the local populace gets ticked off enough. I certainly do rely on a great many publicly-funded programs (including roads, federally-guaranteed student loans, et al), but my use of those publicly-funded resources--and my benefit from the process of implementing them--is vastly different from those with hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars invested in trade based upon them.

    15. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Redistribution of wealth on a small scale is not communism.

      Complete elimination of personal wealth is.


      When the budget for the federal government makes up more than 50% of the total GDP, can the system be implied communism yet?

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    16. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Blackbrain · · Score: 1

      That's what I said in 2000 and voted Gore against my conscience. Bush stole the election that time and he probably will again. Even if Kerry wins, he will not be able to correct the misadventures of the last administration.

      This year, a vote for the Libertarians is a vote against the "two party" system and in the end that may be the most important point.

      --
      Where would we be if Wheel had hid her round rock in a cave instead of showing everyone how it rolls?
    17. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. If your property rights are ever violated by the government without recourse, then personal property ceases to exist. You now have a property privelege. The governments condescends to let you keep half of your cash.

      2. You apparently have no problem stealing money from people who bother you, are too lucky, or just too damn successful and thus piss you off. I dub thee a "Republicrat". Now go and vote thy evil.

    18. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I agree in theory, but in practice a vote libertarian is a vote for Bush. Just ask anybody who voted for Nader in 2000.

      The good news is that the courts ruled that vote swapping sites were legal. I hope people remember them and renew their sites for this years election.

      For those who forgot or didn't know, here is an example: I live in a region that will most likely vote Bush (midwest). That means if I were to vote for a 3rd party, it would be a "wasted" vote. A swap site allows me to trade my vote with someone else who lives in an area where Bush will most likely lose. I vote Democrat for them, and they vote my 3rd party for me. If this happens on a large scale the national vote can suddenly swing with little prediction.

      The Democrats who whould have been a close 2nd in my area get more votes than they otherwise would have, hopefully making this a Democratic state; and the other state where the Dems were going to win anyway get a boost in 3rd party votes. Maybe if we can get the 3rd party votes high enough (I think it's 5% overall) they will get benifits like Perot did the first time he ran (but not the second time).

    19. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you mistake my point. If they benefit more in the end, it's because they do more or different things. My point is that they are offered no more protections, incentives, etc. than are you. You can sell to the Army. You can enjoy protection (personal and corporate) overseas.

      The government, to use a Bibical phrase, "sends rain upon the just and the unjust," or this case the rich and the poor. You have the same rights and priveleges. Any inequality exists because of differences that are not of the government's making.

    20. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pardon those of us who are trying to turn the country around. We spend less time than others trying to slow down its progress toward hell. You fiddle with the engines, we'll fiddle with the steering. Maybe something will work.

    21. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1
      Taxing money over large quantities is a way to encourage people to look after their employees (and is not done enough)

      I'll bite. How does "Taxing money over large quantities" encourage people to look after their employees?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    22. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by bigpat · · Score: 1

      " I agree in theory, but in practice a vote libertarian is a vote for Bush. Just ask anybody who voted for Nader in 2000"

      I voted for Nader and I'm very happy that Al Gore was never president. I'll be voting for Michael Badnarik this time around, precisely because I don't want to waste my vote on either of the Publicrats.

      Oh and to those who are wondering why in hell a libertarian would vote for a socialist like nader... he was just more honest and trustworthy than anyone else at the time. I won't be giving him another vote though, it is too important now to fight the authoritarians with everything we've got.

      To those that are in swing states, I'll concede it may be marginally better to vote for the lesser of two evils, but for the rest of us should vote for our future.

    23. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by ron_ivi · · Score: 1
      " I agree in theory, but in practice a vote libertarian is a vote for Bush. "

      No more than a vote for Kerry is a vote for Bush. Unless the election is decided by your one vote, the message your vote sends is purely and entirely in the percentages.

      By voting for a Libertariean, it's telling the Democrats to start picking electable candidates; and it's telling the Republicans that they need to watch their former-supporters who were advocates of small-government before the Republicans turned into bigger spenders then the worst Democrats.

    24. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by mcwop · · Score: 1
      Correct me if I am wrong, but didn't the last president attack a country that did not attack us? President Clinton bombed or attacked Baghdad, Afghanistan, the Sudan, Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, and sent troops to Haiti, Nigeria, and Columbia, and Kosovo.

      Senator Kerry voted for S.CON.RES.21 (Title: A concurrent resolution authorizing the President of the United States to conduct military air operations and missile strikes against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro).

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

    25. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by bannerman · · Score: 1

      No, I sure don't think we'd be here. I also don't think that Saddam would be in a cell; he'd be finding new ingenious methods of genocide, more effective techniques for his torture chambers, and better ways to hand off money to terrorists who aren't as restrained and can actually strike out at the United States on our own turf.

      --
      I keep forgetting my place. Jesus is for losers. Why do I still play to the crowd?
    26. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Just ask anybody who voted for Nader in 2000.
      Spoken like someone who has already forgotten what happened in 2000. Tens of thousands of Nader followers decided to get clever and vote for a candidate they disagreed with because they disliked Bush more. The result: Nader had a poorer showing than he might have had, and Bush still won.

      Besides which, it's patently false that a libertarian vote is a "vote for Bush." There are quite a few people that would probably vote republican if they couldn't vote libertarian.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    27. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Look at the trend of executive pay after the elimination of the top tax bracket. Obviously people are keeping more for themselves now that they get to keep a whole lot more of it for themself.

      Or are executives just that much better then they used to be so it is in the companies interest to pay them more?

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    28. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah because Kerry is going to invade a country that never attacked us

      Germany never attacked us- should we have waited to go to war with them? Oh, and Iraq did attack us almost every day between 1991 and 2002.

      giving massive tax cuts to the rich.

      Everybody that pays taxes got a tax cut. The only reason the rich got a "massive" tax cut is because they pay a massive amount of taxes.

      Iraqi quagmire

      The liberation of Iraq has been one of the most stunningly successful military compaigns ever. I was going to ask what possible motivations you could have to call it a quagmire, but I think we both know the answer to that...

      with the entire free World hating our guts

      So, you like to exaggerate, eh?

      or should I say if Bush hadn't gotten appointed

      No, you shouldn't say that.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    29. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Aidtopia · · Score: 1
      And a vote for Kerry won't change anything either.

      The biggest issue here in my mind is who you would rather have appointing Supreme Court Justices at this point. I believe that'll have a much bigger long-term impact than anything else in the next presidential term.

    30. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      Socialism is not Communism just like Anarchy is not Chaos. When the Fed makes up 100% of the GDP then you can call it Communism.

    31. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

      You haven't noticed, then that both Kerry and his trusty side-kick have been gung-ho for the war this entire time both in word and Senate voting record?

      Go ahead, look it up. Kerry is on record saying he will NOT stop this war if elected.

      Bob-

      --
      The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
    32. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      And a lot of these people should not be making so much money.

      Just curious- who decides how much money is too much? If its not the employer/board of directors, then who makes that call?

      Any dumbass can make a fund grow in up times

      Ha ha ha ha!

      Taxing money over large quantities is a way to encourage people to look after their employees (and is not done enough)

      What?

      It's a lot harder to fuck your employees out of 1,000,000 dollars of bennifits for 300,000 dollars then it is for 600,000 dollars.

      Seriously, what?

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    33. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Germany declaired war on the US not the other way around. It was part of their alliance with Japan. They did it when Japan declaired war on the US.

    34. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by SirWhoopass · · Score: 1

      Excellent post. I was going to bring up the Germany anaolgy, but decided against it. After all, Germany did declare war on us first.

      This is something the Pearl Harbor revisionists forget. They bring up the point that Roosevelt wanted to end US isolationism and engage Germany. That much is true, but there was no guarantee that Germany was going to declare war simply because we went to war with Japan. They did have the Tripartite Pact, but even that didn't require Germany to intervene (because Japan attacked the US).

      It is sad that people still claim the election was "rigged" or that Bush wasn't elected simply because they didn't understand how the electoral college works in the first place. I'd happily entertain the idea of modifying our electoral process, but not in the middle of an election.

    35. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When the budget for the federal government makes up more than 50% of the total GDP, can the system be implied communism yet?

      No when private land ownership is abolished then it is communism

    36. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      I think most of those were U.N. interventions. The killing and genocide in these countries made Sadam look tame in comparison. Iraq is the FIRST time the U.S. has invaded a country by itself (2nd and 3rd world allies don't count).

      Since Iraq was the first time in history we invaded a country, it will make a bold mark in our history making it scrutinized for a very long time. In 25 or 50, even 100, years when we look back, what explanation are we going to give our children and grandchildren? Look at how we criticized things like the Bay of Pigs, Sacco & Vanzetti and the Scopes "monkey" trials. The last thing I want my generation being labeled as is a bunch of people who let their fear strike them down as ignorant enough to follow a person whose personal agenda is more powerful than the national agenda.

    37. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Do you really think we'd be where we are (Iraqi quagmire with the entire free World hating our guts) "

      You do realize that doesn't even hold a candle to either the Patriot Act or the DMCA, let alone both?

      Thrashing the freedoms of people right here is slightly more important than how well we relate people out there.

      First we need to fix the things we're fscking up right here. Then we can start worrying about what we're fscking up out there.

    38. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by nharmon · · Score: 1

      I'd happily entertain the idea of modifying our electoral process, but not in the middle of an election.

      This is what most people don't understand about the court ruling. It didn't declare a winner, it simply said you can't change the rules in the middle of counting.

    39. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Tsiangkun · · Score: 1

      In this election, rather than make a principled stand and vote for who I believe in, I'm voting against Bush. In the two party ,american system, that means I have to vote for Kerry.

      I wish there was a negative vote. Something that would have the effect of, "I am unable to find any candidates worthy of my endorsement at this time. Rather than waive my right to participate in this election, or to cast my vote towards the election of a candidate I find non-suitable, I am casting a negative vote towards the Candidate/Candidate ticket because I find them the most unsuitable of all the candidates seeking office.

    40. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Yeah because Kerry is going to invade a country that never attacked us
      Germany never attacked us- should we have waited to go to war with them? Oh, and Iraq did attack us almost every day between 1991 and 2002.
      So you are comparing the actions of Nazi Germany to Saddam? I don't recall Saddam taking over the entire Middle East like Hitler took over all of Europe (save England and Spain). And KNOW you can be ignorant enough to compare the Holocaust to Saddam's purges. I mean that would just be stupid. Also, can you please reference exactly where and when he attacked us almost daily.
      giving massive tax cuts to the rich.
      Everybody that pays taxes got a tax cut. The only reason the rich got a "massive" tax cut is because they pay a massive amount of taxes.
      So it's OK for 1% of the population to control over 90% of its wealth? That's not democracy, that's unregulated business gone crazy. Tell me, what can an individual do with $10 billion that he can't do with $1 billion. Money is power. Just because someone is rich shouldn't make their existence more meaningful than mine, but to politicians the person with more money has a louder voice.
      Iraqi quagmire
      The liberation of Iraq has been one of the most stunningly successful military compaigns ever. I was going to ask what possible motivations you could have to call it a quagmire, but I think we both know the answer to that...
      And when we installed "democracy" in South America to stop Communism we called it a success too. Now look how peaceful and uncorrupted their governments are. Lest wait a few years before we declare unconditional success. If Iraq collapses in a few years... well, FUBAR. Enter more terrorists generated by harsh conditions which will be blamed on us.
      with the entire free World hating our guts
      So, you like to exaggerate, eh?
      "Entire" and "hating" may be exaggerations. It should be "the alienation of some of our historically strongest and staunchest allies." To be fair, you have exaggerated quite a bit too.
      or should I say if Bush hadn't gotten appointed
      No, you shouldn't say that.
      That's very true. Even though he was appointed by the Supreme Court, Gore should be blamed for giving up his challenges.
    41. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by gregoryb · · Score: 1

      At some point, people who agree with the Libertarian position are going to have to vote that way. It very well may cause the Democratic or Republican candidate that you _would have_ voted for to lose, but if Libertarians would keep it up for a few elections, the party would gain steam and the ideas would gain popularity... and then the Libertarian point of view would be able to contend with the two main parties.

      Unless you like the bloated government controlling your life, taking most of your money, and screwing you in the end. Don't worry, they'll protect you... Great Father Government will provide for you and solve all your problems. ha. right.

      Badnarik 2004!!

    42. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      Good. Because pulling out with the job half done is much worse. Besides, we live in a time when "patriot" has be redefined as agreeing with the governemnt. He had to side with war or risk the Bush PR machine labeling him as a coward, traitor, unAmerican.

    43. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do I care wether Saddam is in a cell or not. The only "genocide" Saddam tried was against Iran and against the kurds. Speaking of the kurds... You know that they are terrorists, right ? Of course if you think that killing people in Turkey is a good thing, then maybe you think kurdish people are "good" terrorists. So maybe that's why you're upset with Saddam trying to kill them. About Saddam's torture chamber, I don't give a shit. Yeah I know, I'm not a nice "girly" guy. As for handing off money to terrorists... Well, now everyone know this was bullshit ! Reagan had more love for the USSR than Saddam for Al Qaeda. Saddam was not a nice guy but he was useful to the US ! When will you stop listening to the moron in charge and try to think for yourself ?

      The worst part is when Al Qaeda strike the US again, you'll probably be the first one to say that Bush is the guy that can protect you. The only thing Bush can do is give an endless supply of terrorists to Al Qaeda. Way to go, George !

    44. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Yes, but a vote for Kerry is a vote for Kerry. Either way we're screwed.

      On a more serious note, I'm always slightly amazed that people seem so eager and enthusiastic at voting for the lesser of two evils. Do they wake up on inauguration day thinking to themselves "Gee, things are only 92% as bad as they would have been if Dubya were still president!" ?

    45. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by workindev · · Score: 1

      I don't recall Saddam taking over the entire Middle East like Hitler took over all of Europe (save England and Spain).

      Yeah. Saddam never invaded a non-hostile border state like **cough** Kuwait **cough**.

      And KNOW you can be ignorant enough to compare the Holocaust to Saddam's purges. I mean that would just be stupid.

      And why would it not compare? Are the Kurds, Shiias, and Arabs that Saddam killed somehow less important than the Jews that Hitler killed?

      So it's OK for 1% of the population to control over 90% of its wealth? That's not democracy, that's unregulated business gone crazy.

      I think you have a basic misunderstanding of what a democracy is. Democracy has nothing to do with the wealth of the constituancy. Democracy simply means a Government controlled either directly by the people or by representitives elected by the people. And yes, if the 1% of the population fairly earned 90% of the wealth, you bet its OK. It would not be OK to tell that 1% that they are not entitled to the wealth that they earned.

      Tell me, what can an individual do with $10 billion that he can't do with $1 billion. Money is power. Just because someone is rich shouldn't make their existence more meaningful than mine, but to politicians the person with more money has a louder voice.

      Well, if you judge ones existence by how much money they have, then I guess it may be more meaningful. But to the rest of us who are not shallow money-grubbers, wealth really doesn't have much to do with how meaningful your existence is.

      And when we installed "democracy" in South America to stop Communism we called it a success too. Now look how peaceful and uncorrupted their governments are. Lest wait a few years before we declare unconditional success. If Iraq collapses in a few years... well, FUBAR. Enter more terrorists generated by harsh conditions which will be blamed on us.

      Ah, so any failure in our foreign policy over the past 50 years should prevent us from defending ourselves today?

      the alienation of some of our historically strongest and staunchest allies

      While you may be concerned about hurting our "allies" feelings, I'm more concerned about going after a culture and ideology that is intent on killing as many Americans as possible, as well as any nation that provides support or strength to this ideology.

      Even though he was appointed by the Supreme Court, Gore should be blamed for giving up his challenges

      You convienently left out that if the USSC had not stepped in, Gore would have still lost.

    46. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      So you are comparing the actions of Nazi Germany to Saddam?

      Well, I wasn't, but now that you mention it, that isn't a very bad comparison.

      I don't recall Saddam taking over the entire Middle East like Hitler took over all of Europe (save England and Spain).

      He didn't, but not for a lack of trying. Or are you forgetting his invasion of Iran, Kuwait, and his buildup of troops on the Saudi border before we kicked his ass?

      And KNOW you can be ignorant enough to compare the Holocaust to Saddam's purges.

      Why? Do you think the brown-skinned people Saddam killed are less important than the Jews?

      Also, can you please reference exactly where and when he attacked us almost daily.

      He fired on our patrols of the No-Fly-Zone regularly. I'm not going to wipe your butt for you and find a link- try google.

      So it's OK for 1% of the population to control over 90% of its wealth?

      Sure- why not? Is the old tiresome class warfare argument the best that you got?

      Lest wait a few years before we declare unconditional success.

      Ok- lets also wait a few years before we declare it a quagmire too, then.

      It should be "the alienation of some of our historically strongest and staunchest allies."

      If I had to chose between making France happy and preventing terrorists from killing me, guess what I am going to chose?

      Even though he was appointed by the Supreme Court

      He was "appointed" by the electoral college because he had more electoral votes. Its really not that complicated.

      Gore should be blamed for giving up his challenges.

      You mean the challenges that would not have changed the outcome?

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    47. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Yes, because Kerry cherry-picking the biggest democrat "loyalist no matter what" appointees for one or two controversial issues like "free unnotified drive-through abortions for 13 yr old bisexuals" is exactly how I pick a president.

    48. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Oh, and Iraq did attack us almost every day between 1991 and 2002."

      Yes. I remember all those iraqi airplanes flying overhead dropping bombs on my town. Who can foget the awful sight of iraqi tanks rolling down wall street firing at churches and apartment complexes. What a horror that was. Finally there is the image of iraqi soldiers walking from house to house dragging people away from their houses to go lock them up in distant prisons while the women and children were left sobbing in horror.

      Thank god bush fought the iraqi army back.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    49. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by killjoe · · Score: 1

      VOting for a liberterian is just wasting your vote. What's the point? They will never win anyway.

      No candidate who is both for legalization of drugs and abortion will never win the presidency.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    50. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > but in practice a vote libertarian is

      north americans are such egocentrics. wake up, your individual vote doesn't count at all. vote for the BEST candidate (or don't at all) and go back to your life. mission accomplished. SIMPLE.

      there IS no two party-system on USA. last time I checked, north americans have a full blown range of options when they go vote for president or whatever.

      and yes, this IS a flamebait.

    51. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      Lets say the tax rate is 90%. Lets say a CEO can make 1 million dollars by fucking over employees/investors/the environment/society/other. There's a lot less incentive to do so when he'll only profit 100K for it than currently when he'd get 600K+. The risk reward ratio really isn't worth it at that point (assuming jail time and fines for being caught are decently enforced).

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    52. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      I think most of those were U.N. interventions.

      No, actually. The Sudan and Afghanistan were all on our own. And the Kosovo action was under NATO, not the UN. In fact, the UN has really only got off of its butt twice: Korea, and Iraq.

      The killing and genocide in these countries made Sadam look tame in comparison.

      Tell that to the families of the estimated 500,000 to 2 million people he killed. But that is beside the point, anyway. We didn't invade Iraq because Saddam was committing genocide- we invaded to eliminate one of the most serious terrorist threats in the world. Liberating 25 million people was just a nice perk.

      (2nd and 3rd world allies don't count)

      Why not? Because that doesn't fit with your distorted world view?

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    53. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Maybe what you say is true. The problem is, most people with any sense learned long ago, that they don't want both candidates (even no matter who they happen to be) *equally*. When you positively dislike both of them to such an incredible degree, that you can't be comforted even a little bit by the other ("hey, at least it's not..."), then what?

      I have a metaphor that explains this fairly well. One day, before you wake up, someone breaks in and kidnaps you. Chloroform, handcuffs, chains... there is no escaping. The kidnapper doesn't want ransom, he has no political demands, he's just a nutcase. He drags you up to his cabin in the mountains, and each day, he wakes you up, and asks you to vote on how he will torture you. Electrocuting your gonads, or being sodomized with a gnarled tree branch encrusted with rusty nails.

      He's very charming. He tells you that while he may not torture you in the way that you voted for, there is a good chance that he actually will. He tells you that a mature responsible person would want a say in how they are tortured. And of course, if you stop voting, things may get even worse down the road... what happens 6 months from now, when he decides to amputate various extremeties? If only you had been voting, you could have expressed your dislike of that sort of thing, maybe it wouldn't have happened.

      Which would you vote for, gonad electrocution, or gnarled tree branch sodomy? I can't say for sure which you would, but you strike me as the kind of person that would sit there arguing about the pros and cons of each.

      Well, a sane person understands that this guy will torture you no matter what, and that its all just a big brainfuck. The sane person sits there, refusing to *encourage* the psychopath. Says nothing. Just like you should do. Don't vote for either Kerry or Bush. Oh, and one other thing. The sane person also gives some serious concentration to how he just might break free and kill the nutjob.

    54. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by maximilln · · Score: 1

      VOting for a liberterian is just wasting your vote.

      A vote for anyone is a wasted vote. Only when voting hits about 1% will people realize how stupid it is to give a politician any power which involves money.

      There are 100 people in the world.
      There are 2 brilliant people.
      There are 20 greedy people.
      There are 20 gullible people.
      There are 10 people who are opposed.
      There are 48 people trying to pay the bills.

      5 greedy people beat up 2 brilliant people to keep them quiet.
      5 greedy people convince 20 gullible people.
      20 gullible people make lots of noise.
      48 people want 20 gullible people to keep quiet so that they can concentrate on staying ahead of the bills. They quell the 10 who are opposed to quiet the 20 gullible people.
      20 gullible people, 5 greedy people, 10 people who want to pay taxes and keep food on the table, and 2 who are opposed go to the polls and vote.

      5 greedy people sit back and enjoy the show.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    55. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only "genocide" Saddam tried was against Iran and against the kurds.

      Um, does that make it ok or something?

      Speaking of the kurds... You know that they are terrorists, right ?

      That is absurd. There are Kurdish terrorists, just like there are American or French or Spanish terrorists, but the Kurds are not all terrorists.

      As for handing off money to terrorists... Well, now everyone know this was bullshit ! Reagan had more love for the USSR than Saddam for Al Qaeda. Saddam was not a nice guy but he was useful to the US !

      Saddam has funded terrorist groups for 20 years. And yes, he has worked together with Al Qaeda (read the 9/11 commission report).

    56. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by DragonMagic · · Score: 4, Informative

      Germany never attacked us, but Japan did.

      And Germany was allied with Japan, and vice versa, which just made Germany an equal enemy.

      Don't forget, Japan and Germany had a pact together through World War II. This is why we went to war with Germany.

      --

      Human nature is the same everywhere; the modes only are different. -- Earl of Chesterfield
    57. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by dgatwood · · Score: 1
      We didn't invade Iraq because Saddam was committing genocide- we invaded to eliminate one of the most serious terrorist threats in the world. Liberating 25 million people was just a nice perk.

      Yup. In the November election, the most serious terrorist threat in the world will be eliminated thanks to the Iraq "war"....

      :-)

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    58. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1

      I'm sure the Australians are pissed off at you for calling their country a "2nd or 3rd world ally."

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    59. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1

      The pathetic thing is, no matter who wins the next US Presidential Election, the result will be called into question because of the electronic voting fiaSCO.

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    60. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and the Iraqis raped my sister, on her way to school! Oh... wait, I don't have a sister, it was some other little girl, in Okinawa, and it was US soldiers not Iraqis. Sorry, I got confused for a sec there...

      --
      Freedom: "I won't!"
    61. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by doc+modulo · · Score: 1

      The problem with voting for a 3rd party candidate for president in the US is that it all boils down to 1 person. Most of you people here would like to vote libertarian but if they did that, then the chances of the republican candidate would increase and your libertarian vote would not go to your 2nd choise, the democrat.

      The solution to this would be a 2 round voting system so you could redirect your vote to a democrat if your libertarian didn't make it to the 2nd round.

      Since there isn't a 2-round voting system in the US (I think). You should vote democrat for the time being.

      However, correct me if I'm wrong, in the SENATE, your vote won't boil down to 1 person. There are hundreds of people. If you vote for a libertarian senator, your vote will have a higher chance of voting someone libertarian into government.
      With the president, it's "All or nothing"
      With the senate, it's "4 or just 2 senators"

      Then the senators can work from within the system to give your country a 3! party government or maybe restrict the power of the president and redirect it to the ministers or parliament.

      But the "evil" political geeks in the 2 big parties will probably have thought up a system against that as well.

      --
      - -- Truth addict for life.
    62. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by DissidentHere · · Score: 1

      Huh? OK, Germany never attacked the US, but if I recal Junior high history correctly, we did commit to helping protect our allies. More importantly, there was real, proven _evidence_ of what Germany was doing (although, if I recall, we really didn't get involved until the Lusithinia event). And how did Iraq attack us between '91 and '02? Sure there were some SAMs fired, but we were sort of, kind of flying over thier airspace uninvited. >Everybody that pays taxes got a tax cut. The only reason the >rich got a "massive" tax cut is because they pay a massive >amount of taxes. Um, on a percentage basis, the rich actually did better. I wish I could source this correctly, but I'm really tired. Absolute dollars are meaningless, as you point out, but the wealthy did pretty well on a percentage basis. You know why? Because the people who make the laws are _very_ wealthy. >The liberation of Iraq has been one of the most stunningly >successful military compaigns ever. I was going to ask what >possible motivations you could have to call it a quagmire, but I >think we both know the answer to that... How is it successful? Other than that president shrub told you so. Kids still die there every day, and there is no end in sight. If it were the 'most successful' we would not need to be there right now. Please stop buying in to what the media preaches. The media has no incentive to tell you the truth, but have every incentive to propagate the propaganda.

      --
      "None of us are as dumb as all of us." - meeting mantra
    63. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Yeah. Saddam never invaded a non-hostile border state like **cough** Kuwait **cough**.

      Kuwait is not the same as ALL of Europe. Not by mass, population or any other measure. Plenty of dictators have invaded non-hostile countries and the US didn't much care.

      And why would it not compare? Are the Kurds, Shiias, and Arabs that Saddam killed somehow less important than the Jews that Hitler killed?

      Easy answer, Hitler killed more people and took extra lengths to dehumanize them for years before the final solution. After the first war, Iraq's minority groups enjoyed many freedoms and were largely self-governing. We did not step in to stop Stalin's purges, or Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge, or any of the other human rights violations that involved more people than Saddam's killings. Saving the Iraqi people was not a sales point until the WMD threat was revealed to be bullshit.

      I think you have a basic misunderstanding of what a democracy is.

      I know exactly what democracy is. It was born in ancient Greece where all native males had an equal voice in their governing. America is not a true democracy. As I said earlier, money is power. So either makes a few constitutional amendments to remove money from politics, or tax the hell out of the (usually greedy) ultra-rich who otherwise really don't give a shit about people born into and dying in poverty. I think one of our historical documents had the phrase "To provide for the well being". The truth is that most of the 1% don't earn their money, they are born into it. It's easy to not give a damn about others, everyone is born conservative. It takes heart and education care about fellow man. If the 1% are too greedy to realize the can live opulently and do good with the majority of their money then it should be governments role to step in and say you are a bad citizen.

      Well, if you judge ones existence by how much money they have, then I guess it may be more meaningful. But to the rest of us who are not shallow money-grubbers, wealth really doesn't have much to do with how meaningful your existence is.

      Again you completely ignored the point about the wealthy using their power (aka money) to make their say in government more meaningful than mine. We are supposed to be living in a country where everyone is equal, but in truth we are not.

      Ah, so any failure in our foreign policy over the past 50 years should prevent us from defending ourselves today?

      It should teach us that if we make such a big move (like invading a country for the first time in our history) to think it out first and base it on facts, not fear or intelligence warped to fit a predetermined agenda. And what are you talking defending? Defending us from Saddam? That's laughable. He was no more a threat to us than Castro. Have you read the 9/11 report saying that Iran, not Iraq, had a role in the attacks? Why are we not invading Iran right now? Iraq = no role... Iran = a role. Was the President bullshitting us to attack Iraq for ulterior motives? Because using his same Pre-invasion logic, we should be headed to Iran right now.

      While you may be concerned about hurting our "allies" feelings, I'm more concerned about going after a culture and ideology that is intent on killing as many Americans as possible, as well as any nation that provides support or strength to this ideology.

      So now we went to war over ideology? I thought it was because Saddam as attacking us every day with unseen forces or had WMD's that could reach us. I don't want to tell the families of fallen soldiers that we went to war over people talking shit about America. The truth is America was sold on the war based on a credible threat. As time progressed and that threat never materialized the story switched to liberating the Iraqi's. That a noble objective, but that's not how it was sold to us. Basically

    64. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah because Kerry is going to invade a country that never attacked us while repealing 30 years of progress on environmental laws and giving massive tax cuts to the rich.

      What kind of stupid fuck are you? Did it ever occur to you that rich people pay way more taxes than you ever will? Probably not, because you're a poor white trash motherfucker, who needs more money to buy hookers.

      The envornmental laws were never progress - they got out of control. It's the environmentalists that send the mining intustry out of the country, and as such, associated jobs. In a tech-rich country, where do you think that shit comes from, a garden? No way fucknut, it comes from minerals.

    65. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1
      Tell that to the families of the estimated 500,000 to 2 million people he killed. But that is beside the point, anyway. We didn't invade Iraq because Saddam was committing genocide- we invaded to eliminate one of the most serious terrorist threats in the world. Liberating 25 million people was just a nice perk.
      So it's between 0.5 and 2 million. That's a gigantic margin of error. I wonder who generated it and how they came to that conclusion. I mean that could beat out the Holocaust. I bet Bush could use that number to help us forget the fact his State of the Union and Powell's UN address were total bullshit. The bad intelligence can be blamed on the President and his staff picking and choosing what they wanted the public to hear wile leaving out much more credible sources saying that the intelligence told to the public was flawed. Now if you poke around the official Bush website you will find a video. It starts off with Kerry, Moore and others criticizing the president. Then it switches over to audio of Hitler giving a speech and still pictures of Bush with his quotes at the bottom. According the official reelection video which was sanctioned by Bush, he says "God told me to strike at Al-Qaeda and I did. Then he told me to strike at Saddam, and I did." So we go from weapons of mass destruction, to liberating the people, to God told me to do it. Congratulations George W. You are the first person God has talked to since Joan of Arc. Somebody should remind him he was not elected to be our religious leader. I don't care if God tells him to jump off a cliff. He should represent us and not religion. Leave that crap to the Pope.

      (2nd and 3rd world allies don't count)
      Why not? Because that doesn't fit with your distorted world view?
      No, because we did all of the work and took all of the risks. Didn't the Pillipinos disappear after their first soldier was kidnapped? Allies in this war were a complete formality so we didn't have to say we were going alone.
    66. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck the Australians. We saved their ass in WWII. They should side with us if we go to war with them.

    67. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Offtopic my ass. Do these mods even look at the parent posts before they hand this crap down?

    68. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Phleg · · Score: 1

      Also, can you please reference exactly where and when he attacked us almost daily.

      Saddam's forces shot at our planes nearly every day, while we patrolled the UN-mandated No Fly Zone.

      --
      No comment.
    69. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Chris+Burke · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Germany never attacked us- should we have waited to go to war with them? Oh, and Iraq did attack us almost every day between 1991 and 2002.


      I assume you're referring to them firing on our airplanes in the no-fly zone (if not, please correct me, but I'm aware of no other attack by Iraq on us since the end of GWI). Certainly that's true, but I think the point is that he wasn't a threat to U.S. soil, particularly in comparison to the ones who actually did attack us, al Qaeda.

      Everybody that pays taxes got a tax cut. The only reason the rich got a "massive" tax cut is because they pay a massive amount of taxes.

      Mmm, well, that's true, but what matters is percentages. The tax cuts favor the rich in that they get more of the tax cuts than their proportion of the total taxed income. That, as you say, their share of the income is already so massive just makes the situation insulting.

      The liberation of Iraq has been one of the most stunningly successful military compaigns ever. I was going to ask what possible motivations you could have to call it a quagmire, but I think we both know the answer to that...

      Are you on drugs, or have you simply been in a news blackout since "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED"? Even then, you'd have to be completely ignorant of how Rumsfeld's attempt to launch a Blitzkrieg failed when our supplies lines became too spread out and they were attacked from the sides, slowing the rush to Bagdad to a multi-week crawl. Then there was what was supposed to be the crux of the war, the Battle of Baghdad -- which never happened. Two Republican Guard divisions simply disappeared, or so Bush and everyone cheering for him figured. Any idiot except those we elected could have figured out what really happened -- they went home, put on their civie clothes, and started wiring up roadside bombs. Entire cities are out of our control, our troops are embattled with local militias. Targeted killings and roadside bombs are so common few will leave the "green zone" in Baghdad without a military escort. al Qaeda, our real enemies didn't have a foothold there before the war but are now there in force. Recently, the administration has been asking for more troops, floating the idea of the draft. Some of our allies have bailed on us. This is your idea of the most stunningly successful military campaign ever? How is this not a quagmire?

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    70. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      Saddam in no way posed a threat to you. He did not support terrorists. It a lie, he was a threat only to his people. The first Gulf War and following weapons inspections ensured that he couldn't even mount a real attack against a friut stand.

      He was a dictator. Dictators don't stay in power by sharing their technology and power. If he gave terrorists access to weapons he would no longer be in control of them. Bin Laden is on record calling Saddam a "Socialist Infidel". The Muslim extrimists everyone says Saddam was helping actually wanted to see him dead more than any American.

      He can shoot at our patrol planes all he wants because he knew if actually shot one down it'd be his ass. Iran was, and is, more of a terrorists best friend than Iraq ever was. Answer me this one question: Why did we invade Iraq and not Iran given that fact?

      I don't know what this deal is with France being the only country asking for evidence instead of biasd inteligence and political cliche. Let's try almost every member of the UN and NATO to start. Haven't they been the brunt of many more (read: in numbers of) attacks than we were? They have been a target longer than the US and are thousands of miles closer to Iraq than we are. If the threat of Saddam were real wouldn't they want to jump in the ring with us? Bravo to the rest of the world for thinking and asking real questions instead of being led around by their fears.

      Now before you selectivly ignore certain arguments and say that Saddam was worse than Hitler and say that I must love Jews and hate Muslims, lets ask a World War 2 vet what he thinks. My neighbor who lost both legs in the Arden Forrest (a true partiot) seems to think "Fuck that frat boy Bush. I gave half my body to save humanity from a monster. These boys in Iraq are patriots too. Not because they they are fighting someone as evil as Hitler, but because they do their job even though they know the reason for war is a lie."

    71. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      he did not support terrorists? so what do you call paying $25,000 to the families of Suicide Bombers? or are they not terrorists because they are just killing Jews?

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    72. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If I had to chose between making France happy and preventing terrorists from killing me, guess what I am going to chose?
      So you must be the type of person who goes to a bar, gets drunk, and tries to fight the first person you see whom you think is staring at you even though all your friends try to talk some sense into you, but you alienate them anyway and kick the 90 pound weaklings ass.
    73. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. We did not declare war on Germany after Pearl Harbor. Only Japan. Germany declared war on us shortly after.

    74. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by imnojezus · · Score: 2, Informative

      Oh, and there's that little thing where Germany DECLARED WAR on us two days after Pearl Harbor. Oh yeah and that other thing where they took over most of Europe and showed no interest at stopping there. Saddam was annoying...but there's not much proof of him being a threat to anyone but his own people. Some argue that that alone is good enough reason to go to war, and maybe so. But under the circumstances we were under at the time, we were hardly in the position to dive in and save Iraqis from themselves.

    75. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by workindev · · Score: 1
      Kuwait is not the same as ALL of Europe. Not by mass, population or any other measure.

      Sorry, I didn't realize there was a death toll limit where suddenly a tyrants oppression warrants our involvement.

      Plenty of dictators have invaded non-hostile countries and the US didn't much care.

      Yeah? Name one.

      Easy answer, Hitler killed more people and took extra lengths to dehumanize them for years before the final solution.

      Ah. So we should wait until after somebody kills a few million people before we do anything about it?

      After the first war, Iraq's minority groups enjoyed many freedoms and were largely self-governing.

      You mean, when Saddam wasn't sending his armies up to crush the rebellions and slaughter innocent civilians?

      We did not step in to stop Stalin's purges, or Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge, or any of the other human rights violations that involved more people than Saddam's killings.

      We were not in a position to stop Stalin or Pol Pot when they were slaughtering millions.

      Saving the Iraqi people was not a sales point until the WMD threat was revealed to be bullshit.

      First of all, it still isn't a sales point. The whole point of the Iraq war is and has always been to eliminate the threat that Saddam Hussein and his WMD posed to our national security. Second, nobody has revealed that the WMD threat was non-existent. Quite the contrary. The Iraqi Survey Group found that the WMD threat was still very much real. From the report:

      We have discovered dozens of WMD-related program activities and significant amounts of equipment that Iraq concealed from the United Nations during the inspections that began in late 2002. The discovery of these deliberate concealment efforts have come about both through the admissions of Iraqi scientists and officials concerning information they deliberately withheld and through physical evidence of equipment and activities that ISG has discovered that should have been declared to the UN. Let me just give you a few examples of these concealment efforts, some of which I will elaborate on later

      Among the things found by ISG:

      Several dozen chemical warheads containing Sarin, Mustard, and other blister agents

      A clandestine network of laboratories and safehouses within the Iraqi Intelligence Service that contained equipment subject to UN monitoring and suitable for continuing CBW research.

      A prison laboratory complex, possibly used in human testing of BW agents, that Iraqi officials working to prepare for UN inspections were explicitly ordered not to declare to the UN.

      Reference strains of biological organisms concealed in a scientist's home, one of which can be used to produce biological weapons.

      New research on BW-applicable agents, Brucella and Congo Crimean Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF), and continuing work on ricin and aflatoxin were not declared to the UN.

      Documents and equipment, hidden in scientists' homes, that would have been useful in resuming uranium enrichment by centrifuge and electromagnetic isotope separation (EMIS).

      A line of UAVs not fully declared at an undeclared production facility and an admission that they had tested one of their declared UAVs out to a range of 500 km, 350 km beyond the permissible limit.

      Continuing covert capability to manufacture fuel propellant useful only for prohibited SCUD variant missiles, a capability that was maintained at least until the end of 2001 and that cooperating Iraqi scientists have said they were told to conceal from the UN.

      Plans and advanced design work for new long-range missiles with ranges up to at least 1000 km - well beyond the 150 km range limit imposed by the UN. Missiles of a 1000 km range would have allowed Iraq to threaten targets through out the Middle East, including Ankara, Cairo, and Abu Dhabi

    76. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by jadavis · · Score: 1

      And England and Spain...

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    77. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by workindev · · Score: 1

      Saddam in no way posed a threat to you. He did not support terrorists. It a lie, he was a threat only to his people.

      You are smoking crack. Iraq has been on the Council on Foreign Relations State Sponsors of terrorism for 2 decades. The US state department Indicted Iraq with these words "Al Qaeda reached an understanding with the Government of Iraq that al Qaeda would not work against that government and that on particular projects, specifically including weapons development, al Qaeda would work cooperatively with the Government of Iraq". Iraq openly sponsored Ansar al-Islam (led by Bin Laden trained Abu Musab al-Zarqawi), Hamas, PKK, Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, and the Abu Nidal Organization. Hussein even offered Bin Laden asylum when he was kicked out of Afghanistan by the Taliban in 1999. There are many more examples (1, 2) if you ever bothered to do some research.

      Bin Laden is on record calling Saddam a "Socialist Infidel".

      He is also on record encouraging the entire muslim world to unit with Iraq to fight against western powers.

      I don't know what this deal is with France being the only country asking for evidence instead of biasd inteligence and political cliche.

      France doesn't exactly have a great track record when it comes to defending their own national security.

      If the threat of Saddam were real wouldn't they want to jump in the ring with us?

      Not when the gravy train called the UN "Oil for Food" program was funneling billions in cash and oil their way. Would you want to attack when your hand was still in the cookie jar?

    78. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "And Germany was allied with Japan, and vice versa, which just made Germany an equal enemy."

      Yeah, that explains why the US declared war on Japan on December 8 and then had to issue separate declarations of war against Germany and Italy on December 11. Check it out. And what do we see in the war declaration against Germany? "Whereas the Government of Germany has formally declared war against the Government and the people of the United States of America..."

      It's not very clear that Roosevelt could have convinced Congress in particular and the US in general to get this declaration had Hitler been a little less insane. There was precedent on Hitler not following up on his treaties (such as with the Soviet Union), the many American voters who had German ancestry, bad memories of the first war, etc. There's also the ever-present isolationist streak in the US ("So what if he's butchering people? So long as he's not butchering Americans it's none of our concern.") Roosevelt was out on a limb with Lend-Lease as it was.

      There's also the example of the Soviet Union. The "Great Patriotic War" with Germany started in June of 1941, and yet they didn't declare war on Japan until 1945, several days after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

      <FLAMEBAIT>
      Without Hitler chiming in on December 11, 1941, Roosevelt trying to pursue war with Germany would likely have been about as popular then as Bush trying to pursue war with Iraq today. "They weren't involved in the attack. It's distracting us from our true enemies."
      </FLAMEBAIT>

    79. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Saddam in no way posed a threat to you. He did not support terrorists. It a lie, he was a threat only to his people.

      This is one of the most ignorant things I have read in a while. The Bush administration's claims that Saddam supported terrorists was not new or unique- it has been official US foreign policy (as well as the policy of most industrialized nations) for the past 20 years.

      Saddam was a unique threat because, unlike all of the other bad dictators out there, he:
      - was known to have possessed chemical and biological weapons, and he had actually used chemical weapons
      - had known connections with several terrorist organizations
      - had recently tried to illegally expand his borders- twice
      - had launched unprovoked missile attacks against other sovereign neighbors
      - was under international orders to disarm, with the authorization to use military force to get him to comply, and he had been defying those orders every step of the way
      - was sitting on some of the riches natural resources in the world that could finance just about any WMD program that he wanted

      All of this combines to a very serious terrorist threat. It was a threat that had been growing since 1991. There was even evidence that he was in fact plotting a direct attack on the US in the months before the invasion.

      The first Gulf War and following weapons inspections ensured that he couldn't even mount a real attack against a friut stand.

      Again, no industrialized nation agrees with this.

      He was a dictator. Dictators don't stay in power by sharing their technology and power. If he gave terrorists access to weapons he would no longer be in control of them.

      It baffles me how you can make these claims when the overwhelming evidence of his terrorist support is publicly available. Try googling for Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, the PKK, the Abu Nidal organization, Hamas, Ansar al Islam, and Palestinian suicide bombers, to name a few.

      He can shoot at our patrol planes all he wants because he knew if actually shot one down it'd be his ass.

      What? Are you trying to suggest that he was shooting at us but missing on purpose? Why would he do that? To provoke us to bomb him again?

      Iran was, and is, more of a terrorists best friend than Iraq ever was.

      Yes, Iran supports terrorists. Not more than Iraq did, but they are a problem.

      Answer me this one question: Why did we invade Iraq and not Iran given that fact?

      Because Iraq posed a greater threat. And its not like we have been ignoring Iran.

      I don't know what this deal is with France being the only country asking for evidence instead of biasd inteligence and political cliche. Let's try almost every member of the UN and NATO to start. Haven't they been the brunt of many more (read: in numbers of) attacks than we were? They have been a target longer than the US and are thousands of miles closer to Iraq than we are. If the threat of Saddam were real wouldn't they want to jump in the ring with us? Bravo to the rest of the world for thinking and asking real questions instead of being led around by their fears.

      Ok- even France never claimed that Saddam was in compliance with the disarmament. They only differed on how to get Iraq into compliance.

      My neighbor who lost both legs in the Arden Forrest (a true partiot) seems to think

      What, exactly, does that prove?

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    80. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Windcatcher · · Score: 1

      I have to admit I'm seriously considering it. I'm registered Republican and I'm in Pennsylvania which is a battleground state this year. If voting Libertarian doesn't send a message to my party to stop this nonsense then nothing will. I swear, Hatch is making me embarassed to be a Republican. I'll slit my throat before I vote for a damned Socialist like Kerry, but dammit, *something* has to be done.

    81. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Huh? OK, Germany never attacked the US, but if I recal Junior high history correctly, we did commit to helping protect our allies. More importantly, there was real, proven _evidence_ of what Germany was doing

      There is real, proven evidence of what Saddam was doing. And these arguments are eerily similar to the arguments back in 1941, that getting involved with Germany was just going to distract us from the true enemy: Japan.

      And how did Iraq attack us between '91 and '02? Sure there were some SAMs fired, but we were sort of, kind of flying over thier airspace uninvited.

      As a condition of the cease fire, Iraq agreed to comply with all future UN resolutions. We were enforcing the no-fly-zones that were mandated by UNSEC resolution 688, and we were therefore not there uninvited. Saddam "invited" us by agreeing to the cease-fire.

      Um, on a percentage basis, the rich actually did better.

      Incorrect. The group that had biggest % decrease in tax liability was people making between $10k and $20k/year (their tax liability was reduced by over 50% by the Bush tax cuts). People making over $500k/year had the smallest % decrease at just over 4% (Source).

      How is it successful? Other than that president shrub told you so. Kids still die there every day, and there is no end in sight. If it were the 'most successful' we would not need to be there right now.

      ??? Look at what we have accomplished! In a little over a year, we eliminated one of the largest state sponsors of terrorism, liberated 25 million people from brutal oppression, transferred governing authority to a new sovereign and democratic government that has great public support, and we did all this with an almost record low amount of casualties (only the first Gulf War had fewer casualties, but it doesn't match the scale of this operation).

      Please stop buying in to what the media preaches.

      The media has been preaching doom and gloom failure since before the invasion even started!

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    82. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Don't be a jackass.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    83. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by NuclearDog · · Score: 0

      It's not always about voting for what you think is right, but sometimes voting against what you think is wrong.

      Up here in Canada I know many people who did not want the conservitives in no matter what (they are kind of like Bush down there), and wanted one of the smaller parties (Green, NDP) to win, but rather than be split and have the conservatives win, many voted Liberal simply because that's what most people would vote for, and they would take anyone over the conservatives.

      Doing what's right it not always doing what's right.

      ND

      --
      This statement is forty-five characters long.
    84. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      I assume you're referring to them firing on our airplanes in the no-fly zone (if not, please correct me, but I'm aware of no other attack by Iraq on us since the end of GWI). Certainly that's true, but I think the point is that he wasn't a threat to U.S. soil, particularly in comparison to the ones who actually did attack us, al Qaeda.

      Yes, that is what I was referring to. But don't forget that he also tried to assasinate a former US president, attack the US run Radio Free Europe in Prague, and according to Russia, he was plotting a direct attack on our homeland.

      But the biggest threat from Iraq was not a direct attack- it was their known connections to terrorist groups.

      The threat from Al Qaeda is also significant- probably moreso than Iraq. Thats why we are fighting them also.

      Mmm, well, that's true, but what matters is percentages.

      And the percentages are:

      AGI of 1-10,000 18.5% 8.1%
      AGI of 10,000 to 20,000 16.5% 74.2%
      AGI of 20,000 to 30,000 13.5% 44.9%
      AGI of 30,000 to 50,000 18.5% 15.1%
      AGI of 50,000 to 10,000 22.2% 10.1%
      AGI of 100,000 to 500,000 9.4% 6.5%
      AGI of > 500,000 0.5% 4.4%

      The group affected the most were people making between $10k and $20k, while people making over $500k saw the smallest decrease. (note- this article is about the tax increase that different groups would see if the Bush tax cuts were repealed. In my mind this should be the same as the amount their taxes were reduced by the tax cut. If you disagree with that logic, let me know).

      Are you on drugs, or have you simply been in a news blackout since "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED"?

      By any measure, the military victory in Iraq was a resounding success. In comparison to other modern wars, it is amazing what we have accomplished in such a short amount of time with so few casualties. It has not been perfect, and we have made some mistakes (like disbanding the Iraqi army), but give credit where credit is due.

      As a side note, here is an article by Amir Taheri, who knows a hell of a lot more about what is going on there than you or I do. The article is about 2 months old, but its a pretty even assesment of the situation.

      slowing the rush to Bagdad to a multi-week crawl.

      I got a kick out of this- multi-week, eh? Have you lost all perspective?

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    85. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      So it's between 0.5 and 2 million. That's a gigantic margin of error.

      Yeah- it can be rather difficult to count the bodies in a mass grave...

      The bad intelligence can be blamed on the President and his staff picking and choosing what they wanted the public to hear wile leaving out much more credible sources saying that the intelligence told to the public was flawed.

      What are you talking about? The Bush administration did not make any new claims about Iraq or their WMDs or their terrorist connections, and all of those claims have been verified since the invasion.

      Now if you poke around the official Bush website you will find a video. It starts off with Kerry, Moore and others criticizing the president.

      Wait, wait wait. If this is the video I am thinking about, it is showing an excerpt from a moveon.org video that attempted to equate Bush with Hitler. The quote that moveon.org found is dubious at best. It is a (*deep breath*)translation of a transcription of Mahmoud Abas talking about what his interpreter had translated to him what Bush had said 2 weeks before (*exhale*). But I guess if you are looking for an excuse to justify your irrational hatred of Bush, this is as good of a reason as any.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    86. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since Iraq was the first time in history we invaded a country

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine-American_W ar

    87. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by nmos · · Score: 1

      Again you completely ignored the point about the wealthy using their power (aka money) to make their say in government more meaningful than mine. We are supposed to be living in a country where everyone is equal, but in truth we are not.

      And your solution is to make government even larger and more powerful? The only way you are going to get anything close to an equal say in your government is to do more of the governing yourself or at least locally.

    88. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Frobnicator · · Score: 1
      So it's between 0.5 and 2 million. That's a gigantic margin of error. I wonder who generated it and how they came to that conclusion.
      Well, it isn't exactly like they went out and counted all the people who died when Saddam's administration gassed the countryside. They didn't exactly count the people who were put into mass graves for political crimes. They didn't exactly take keep a count of the number of agrarian and subsistance farmers who couldn't adapt and ended up dying reched deaths as poor vagabonds when their lands were made baren.

      So even the best estimate will have a huge margin of error. If it didn't you can tell they're either lying, or omniscient. In the latter case, of course, the number wouldn't be an estimate.

      --
      //TODO: Think of witty sig statement
    89. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by DissidentHere · · Score: 1

      Many of these points are a matter of opinion, but you make very good arguements. I'm not sure that your source on taxes proves your point. The source seems to show that the lower middle class bore the heaviest increase in taxes. It is also important to note that income tax is not the whole picture. The very wealthy do not make thier money on income, but on investment. When you include capital gains, the very wealthy tend to have a pretty small tax burden (also note the many loopholes). If you have enough money there are many ways to get around taxes. The schedule does not represent how much anyone actually pays in taxes.

      I can grant your point on UN resolutions in Iraq, but really, did they have a choice? And were 'no fly zones' really needed? I agree that Saddam is a bad guy, and I'm glad he is in custody, but were we the ones who should have done it?

      There is real, proven evidence of what Saddam was doing. And these arguments are eerily similar to the arguments back in 1941, that getting involved with Germany was just going to distract us from the true enemy: Japan.

      huh? President Shrub all but admitted that Iraq did not have WMDs, but we were right to what we did anyway. And please explain how it relates to WWII? The US had an isolationist policy and it wasn't until the Lusitania was attacked that we got involved on a military basis. And isn't N. Korea the 'true enemy'? They admit to, almost brag about, working on WMD, but they don't have oil, and they didn't 'try to kill my dad' so we can go with a diplomatic approach. Just seems inconsistent.

      --
      "None of us are as dumb as all of us." - meeting mantra
    90. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Seriously, what?

      You must have sigs turned off, otherwise you would have read his sig line:
      I make no sense
      It explains his entire post.
    91. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government, to use a Bibical phrase, "sends rain upon the just and the unjust," or this case the rich and the poor.

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHA! How many politicians have you bought lately? Who do you think benefits more from the DMCA, etc., and the upcoming Hatch INDUCE act?

    92. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Iraq is the FIRST time the U.S. has invaded a country by itself

      Bullshit. Among the countries that the US has invaded by itself: Canada, Mexico, Cuba, Panama, Grenada, the Phillipines, Afghanistan. (Granted, some of these were a while ago (e.g., Canada was before the US was the US and Canada was Canada).) Also, during the War of Northern Aggression (also known as the US Civil War), the US invaded the Confederate States of America. These are just off the top of my head. There were probably others.

    93. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't care if God tells him [Bush] to jump off a cliff.

      It would solve a lot of problems ...

    94. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Germany declaired war
      Japan declaired war

      "declared".

    95. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 1

      Well this is all mildly amusing.

      You've stated this:

      Germany never attacked us- should we have waited to go to war with them? Oh, and Iraq did attack us almost every day between 1991 and 2002.

      Bringing up Germany (i.e. WWII) to try to help justify the war in Iraq... Now that's funny. Yes, Germany never attacked the US, but it did attack the US' closest allies, and indeed had completely occupied some allied countries before the US got involved. Yes, during WWII the US did support the war effort of its allies in Europe through supplies, but it ignored the cries of its allies for military assistance (in the form of troops) for years.

      The US had justification for joining in WWII long before they did. In times of war you are supposed to support your allies, after all.

      The situation with Iraq was clearly not the same.

      But don't forget that he also tried to assasinate a former US president, attack the US run Radio Free Europe in Prague, and according to Russia, he was plotting a direct attack on our homeland.

      The reverse is also true. The CIA tried to assasinate Saddam on several occasions. The US mounted radio propaganda campaigns in Iraq. As for "plotting a direct attack", frankly it's not very credible - it's much the same as "attempting to acquire uranium" and "links to al Quaeda". Besides which, if I was the leader of a country that had been blockaded and attacked by a foreign power for over a decade I'd be mightily pissed off with them too and wanting to attack them. Saddam didn't have the capability of mounting an attack though, so where's the credible threat here?

      Then we have the tax cut thing...

      The US has been running deficit budgets for many years now, and the deficits are increasing. The economy is basically supported by the dollar - it is the world's currency, however the Euro is starting to gain some ground. Some Opec countries start to recognise the comparative weakness of the dollar compared to the Euro and start pricing oil in Euros, and then what happens next? The US mounts a war to secure the largest oil fields in the Middle East, ensuring they will be priced in dollars...

      The division between rich and poor in the USA is getting bigger every year - it's becoming harder to join the ranks of the rich, and more and more people are living in poverty. We see headlines of new jobs being created, whereas the rate of job losses gets ignored and unemployment is actually rising.

      Bringing things slightly back OT we have corrupt senators such as Hatch pushing laws that further persecute the poor. The rich don't give a damn about these laws since they aren't affected - indeed these laws often help ensure that the rich stay rich.

      The right and just thing to do would be to reduce the lowest levels of taxation, paying for this with a small increase in the higest levels of taxation. The rich won't leave the country if you charge them an extra 5% on everything above $100,000 they earn since they'd have a very hard time earning that much in foreign countries.

      Yes, I am suggesting an increase in taxes. It is in the rich's interest to have poor people who will work for relatively little, but in order for them to be productive workers they've got to be fit and healthy. Raising the taxes at the high-end could pay for a national health service and daycare for pre-school children, removing a major burden from poor people and helping ensure a happier, more productive, workforce.

      As for the victory in Iraq being a resounding success, that may be what CNN tells you, but the whole American media has been in "patriot" mode since 11/9/01. Anyone that speaks out against Bush on the subject of war or terror is branded as un-American. There's been very little questioning as to the wisdom of the actions of the Bush administration by the mainstream media, when there is plenty to question. In reporting on Iraq you hear whining about how many American soldiers are killed, ignoring the many thousand

    96. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Democracy simply means a Government controlled either directly by the people or by representitives elected by the people."

      No, democracy simply means a Government controlled directly by the people, period.

      A republic is a Government controlled by representitives, usually elected by the people.

      We (domestic(ated) US citizens) live in a republic, not a democracy.

    97. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's like if one candidate said he would shoot you in the right knee, another said in the left knee, and a third said he wouldn't shoot you at all. Even if the third had no chance of winning, I can't see the advantage of voting for anyone else. They'll both blow your freakin' kneecaps off!

      Too bad you posted as an AC. That is one of the best ways of putting it that I've ever seen.

    98. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      electronic voting fiaSCO

      "fiasco".

      Oh, wait, I get it, you were making a crack about SCO. Ha ha, very funny, seeing as how SCO has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with electronic voting machines. You're thinking about Diebold.

    99. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      They pulled the video because it was just too insane and caused a lot of trouble.

      http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie =UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=bush+hitler+moore+kerry+vide o

    100. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      Plenty of dictators have invaded non-hostile countries and the US didn't much care.
      Yeah? Name one.

      Stalin and Eastern European countries that they did not hold at the end of WWII. China and Tibet. Japan before they attacked us. Argentina and the Falklands.

      Ah. So we should wait until after somebody kills a few million people before we do anything about it?

      Or until a Black Hawk gets shot down and the American public cries out against us preventing genocide and warlords. We can't create a double standard on who deserves our protection just beacuse of mineral rights over their land.

      You mean, when Saddam wasn't sending his armies up to crush the rebellions and slaughter innocent civilians?

      Again, see double standard. If they had no oil it'd be another country we would either have not gotten invloved with, or pulled out of when enough people die to make front page.

      We were not in a position to stop Stalin or Pol Pot when they were slaughtering millions.

      Says who? Stalin maybe, but Pol Pot was the leader of a third world jungle nation who killed between 1/3 and 1/2 of his population. Maybe you don't value their lives like you value white peoples.

      First of all, it still isn't a sales point. The whole point of the Iraq war is and has always been to eliminate the threat that Saddam Hussein and his WMD posed to our national security. Second, nobody has revealed that the WMD threat was non-existent.

      I've read you evidence and I see no weapons, only the basics to start a small scale program years down the road. The chemical and biological weapons we found had a shelf life of a few months up to a year. By the time we found them they were already well beyond their shelf life and most were hold overs from their war with Iran or the first Gulf War. We know know he wouldn't have given weapons to Islamic extremists because he would no longer be in control of them. Dictators thrive on control. He had no methods to reach the U.S. with any weapons even if he had the resources to make a functional weapon. He also knew that we would trace them back to him if he ever did use them against us or an ally. As I said earlier, he was a threat only to his people, and we have let innocent civillians die in the hands of warlords and dictators before. Why is Iraq so special that the US values their lives over, say, Somalians? Didn't we pull out and let the warlords continue to kill and starve their population? See double standard again.

      Well, there never has been a civilization or government where everybody was equal. The only difference is that under our government, every body has a shot at fulfilling their dream.

      So God forbid we keep trying to make all people truly equal. Under our government everybody has a chance at their dreams provided they are born into the right family and environment. I bet we could find a couple million (at least) who are born poor, lack a proper public education (not their fault we don't value inner city schools like the suburban ones), have no chance at college, and work the same minimum wage job that their parents did, and repeat the cycle with their own families. From the sounds of things I can assume you have never spent even a minute in public housing. It's funny how something like that can change you view on that 'stale old class struggle' argument. We can't even provide for many of our own citizens. I thought one of governments roles was to take care of it's own people. With the money we spent on Iraq, we could have done a lot of good within our own borders.

      Well, the fact that was used to base this invasion was that Saddam Hussein had and was actively seeking WMD programs that posed a threat to our security. This certainly hasn't been proven false, and the only "predetermined agenda" has been to make our

    101. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, let Spain out of this. Just a little man with a funny moustache thought suporting Bush was a good thing for him. The majority of the spanish people tought this was bad for them.

    102. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by jadavis · · Score: 1

      Let's assume your comment is correct. Why do we listen to any countries on the U.N.? Heck, LIBYA is on the human rights committee.

      So these people who say we should be "multilateral" are really saying that we should follow the advice of a bunch of dictators who don't let their people speak. "Multilateral" sounds a lot better until you start listing the actual countries out, huh?

      I suppose we should follow those dictators, because if we ignored them we'd be imposing democracy on other people.

      That's why the U.N. is a joke. It's a joke when they don't enforce their resolutions. It's a joke when Libya is on the human rights committee. It's a joke when we pretend that a dictator speaks for his people.

      If Spain wants to join the cause, then encourage terrorism by giving the terrorists results ("Hey, let's make some more demands in Spain, they seem to buckle quickly"), that's their problem. They're a sovereign nation, after all. At least until the next group of tyrants occupies their country and the U.S. needs to bail 'em out again.

      Regardless, the U.K. is hardly anything less than 1st world, and they are a strong U.S. ally.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    103. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure that your source on taxes proves your point. The source seems to show that the lower middle class bore the heaviest increase in taxes.

      Actually, that is not what it says. It says that if the Bush tax cuts were repealed, the lower middle class would see the heaviest increase in taxes (that is, the Bush tax cuts cut the lower middle class's taxes the most).

      very wealthy do not make thier money on income, but on investment.

      Maybe so, but they still pay the majority of income taxes that are collected in this country.

      I can grant your point on UN resolutions in Iraq, but really, did they have a choice?

      Well, as in any cease-fire, the losing side always has the choice to either keep fighting, or comply with the demands of the victor. That is the consequence of getting your ass kicked in a war.

      And were 'no fly zones' really needed?

      The no fly zones have been credited with saving millions of Iraqi lives and allowing a Kurdish democracy to thrive in the north.

      I agree that Saddam is a bad guy, and I'm glad he is in custody, but were we the ones who should have done it?

      Well, you might recall that President Bush spent 14 months prior to the invasion gathering support for the war. But Saddam represented a threat that needed to be addressed, whether or not France, Russia, and Germany wanted to help.

      huh? President Shrub all but admitted that Iraq did not have WMDs

      He has done no such thing.

      The US had an isolationist policy and it wasn't until the Lusitania was attacked that we got involved on a military basis.

      Um, I think you are confused. The Lusitania was sunk in 1915 at the start of WWI, not WWII. Or am I missing your point?

      And isn't N. Korea the 'true enemy'? They admit to, almost brag about, working on WMD, but they don't have oil, and they didn't 'try to kill my dad' so we can go with a diplomatic approach. Just seems inconsistent.

      The DPRK is definitely a threat- that is why the President has singled them out along with Iran and Iraq. But, unlike Iraq, they were not in violation of 17 UN resolutions passed under chapter 7 of the charter that spanned 12 years. There is still a lot of diplomacy that is being tried before we reach that point. Oil does play a role here, but probably not the role that you are thinking of- Iraq had some of the richest natural resources that could finance almost any weapons program that Saddam wanted. North Korea is dirt poor, and their desperation is mainly what drives their actions.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    104. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The very wealthy do not make thier money on income, but on investment.

      Hey tardface - explain to me how investment income is not income. Thanks, butt breath - didn't think so. Next time stick to what you know, which clearly isn't much.

    105. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Bringing up Germany (i.e. WWII) to try to help justify the war in Iraq... Now that's funny.

      That has nothing to do with our justification for the war in Iraq. It was brought up to show that the claim that Iraq has never attacked does not justify us ignoring a major threat to our national security. It does not justify the attack- it only debunks a weak excuse against attacking.

      The US had justification for joining in WWII long before they did.

      True. And we had justification for confronting Iraq long before we did.

      In times of war you are supposed to support your allies, after all.

      Thank you! Please voice this opinion to the governments on France, Germany, and Russia.

      The reverse is also true. The CIA tried to assasinate Saddam on several occasions.

      I really didn't think I would have to bring this up, but the USA = good = trying to save lives, but Saddam = bad = trying to kill innocent people. Your moral equivalency argument is crap.

      As for "plotting a direct attack", frankly it's not very credible

      Russian intelligence still stands by this claim.

      it's much the same as "attempting to acquire uranium"

      You can change "attempting" to "succeeded". Or did you forget about the 1.77 tons of undeclared and banned uranium that we have secured in Iraq?

      "links to al Quaeda"

      Yes- Saddam had links to Al Qaeda. He also had links to many, many other terrorist groups. This is not new information.

      Besides which, if I was the leader of a country that had been blockaded and attacked by a foreign power for over a decade I'd be mightily pissed off with them too and wanting to attack them.

      So? Should we ignore these attacks then, just because Saddam feels angry? Look- Saddam forfeited his right to take action when he illegally tried to expand his borders and launched an unprovoked missile attack against his neighbors. We kicked his ass, and he agreed to the cease fire. End of story. He could have complied with the UN at any time to lift the sanctions, and if he didn't fire AAA on our patrols, we wouldn't have retaliated.

      The US mounts a war to secure the largest oil fields in the Middle East, ensuring they will be priced in dollars...

      I think the reception in your tin foil hat is getting a little fuzzy.

      The division between rich and poor in the USA is getting bigger every year - it's becoming harder to join the ranks of the rich, and more and more people are living in poverty.

      Dude- the standard of living has been increasing across the board here for decades now.

      We see headlines of new jobs being created, whereas the rate of job losses gets ignored and unemployment is actually rising.

      Dude, what are you talking about? Unemployment has been dropping pretty steadily for the past year, and wages have increased during that same period.

      Bringing things slightly back OT we have corrupt senators such as Hatch pushing laws that further persecute the poor.

      Just curious, but how do you draw the conclusion that this act would only persecute the poor? Because they wouldn't be able to steal music anymore? If anything, this bill would punish the people that are getting rich off of copyright infringement.

      The right and just thing to do would be to reduce the lowest levels of taxation, paying for this with a small increase in the higest levels of taxation.

      Ok- how much should the "rich" have to pay in taxes? 50%? 80% (which was the tax rate of the highest tax bracket when Reagan took office, btw)? The rich already shoulder most of the tax burden in this country. How much more should they pay?

      As for the victory in Iraq being a resounding success, that may be what CNN tells you,

      HA! That is definitely NOT what CNN has been trying to tell me. They (along with most US media sources) have been painting a pretty gloomy picture since before we even invaded!

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    106. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Who pulled it? The Bush campaign? It was never a TV ad, and I just checked, and it is still available for download on their website (at the bottom).

      The only insanity here was in the unbridled vitriol of MoveOn.org, Al Gore, Michael Moore, and the like. It was not insane of the Bush campaign to point this out.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    107. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by workindev · · Score: 1

      http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=democracy :

      1) Government by the people, exercised either directly or through elected representatives.

    108. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      What's really crazy is that the President doesn't think he shouldn't be held to a higher standard. I'm not saying he can't participate in a little mud slinging, but that video was a bit too low. The worst part is how he justified the war with Iraq by saying God told him to do it. That's the scary thing about the video. Moore is a private citizen and MoveOn is a private orginization, they are able to enjoy their freedom of speech, but canidates and sitting Presidents should think about what they say before going public.

    109. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      It is sad that people still claim the election was "rigged" or that Bush wasn't elected simply because they didn't understand how the electoral college works in the first place. I'd happily entertain the idea of modifying our electoral process, but not in the middle of an election.

      I understand perfectly well how the electoral college works. I also understand that Bush only won Florida (and henceforth the election) because thousands of people (most of them Democrats) were wrongfully purged from the rolls while a non-intuitive ballot sent 2,000 likely Gore votes to Pat Bucanhan. Say all you want about idiots who can't properly read a ballot (there's no way in hell that I make that mistake) -- it's still a travesty. Don't you find it not a little ironic that all of this happened in the state run by Dubya's brother? Kind of strange how none of the other 49 states had these problems in heavily-Democratic countries.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    110. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      But, unlike Iraq, they were not in violation of 17 UN resolutions passed under chapter 7 of the charter that spanned 12 years. There is still a lot of diplomacy that is being tried before we reach that point.

      Yeah I remember all those times that Saddam brutually captured an American vessel in international waters while kidnapping civilians from neighboring countries, building missiles that can reach the US and telling the World that he was enriching uranium. Gosh Iraq is clearly the threat here. It makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside every time we pull troops out of Korea and send them to Iraq because Iraq is clearly the greater threat.

      IDid it ever occur to you that North Korea is ten times the threat to the United States that Saddam ever was and oh-by-the-way perhaps if we had sent the 100,000+ troops in Iraq into Afghanistan instead perhaps we would have caught the guy who slaughtered 3,000 American civilians on 9/11? But why would we want to focus on resource-poor Afghanistan when we can invade an oil-rich country that was a negligible threat to our interests (let alone our people at home)?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    111. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      The liberation of Iraq has been one of the most stunningly successful military compaigns ever.

      Yeah it ranks right up there with the German conquest of Belgium or Denmark in terms of the corresponding orders of battle and levels of military technology. And how can you call it one of the most stunningly successful military campaigns ever when it isn't over yet? Hell I suppose if you look at the Germans in 1942 (before Stalingrad) they had staged the most "stunningly successful military campaigns in history" but they still lost the war.

      I would suspect that Iraq is going to be viewed by history as a pointless exercise that achieved nothing other then wasting American blood and prestige while alienating virtually every ally that we have (and don't give me that coalition of the willing bullshit -- even in the UK something like 60% of the public is opposed to the war) while wasting resources that could have been sent to do something useful -- like perhaps putting some boots on the ground in Afghanistan and killing that motherfucker named Osama Bin Ladin. Care to remember him? He's the one who killed 3,000 people on September 11.

      But why would we invade and conquer the country that attacked us when we can do it on the cheap and install the local warlords (who btw haven't captured or killed Mr. Bin Ladin yet) so we can go and conquer the resource-rich country that didn't kill 3,000 American civilians.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    112. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1
      Your theory assumes that a CEO must perform criminal acts in order to get paid a large amount. History doesn't seem to support that. Sure, there are CEO's who do criminal things (Darl MacBride comes to mind), but they're rare enough as to make the news.

      You assume that someone who is willing to risk prison for a few bucks (when you make as much in base salary as most CEO's, even a million dollars is no big deal) will refuse to risk prison if you just tax him more. As likely as not, people so inclined will just make sure the extra revenue is untaxable....

      It also assumes that the alternative to making lots of money is to help his employees. Likely as not, any extra will go to the stockholders. Unless the stockholders vote to spend profits on improving the lot of the employees, rather than getting a dividend.

      Frankly, if the stockholders (you know, the people who OWN the company) wanted to improve the lot of their employees, they could do so by voting in a Board of Directors with that mandate.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    113. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by sparty · · Score: 1

      If rain falls everywhere, he who has the most buckets (or the best-placed buckets) is going to catch the most rain. They are offered more protections, incentives, etc in the form that (to continue the analogy based on your choice of phrase) selling rainwater to the Army requires that one provide 10 buckets for testing and a guarantee that one can continue to provide at least 300 buckets a year for the remainder of the contract (numbers are completely made up, of course). If most people are sharing a rainbucket with their neighbors and catch barely enough rain for their own needs, only the rich (who can buy and place extra buckets) can even compete for the army contract.

    114. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're talking about how our government should work in principle, not about the effects of unjust laws. Sure bad laws have been passed than, in effect, are ripping people off. That doesn't make it right for me to rip off other people in return.

    115. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well now you are just raging against reality. You want equality in the sense that you demand to be made by the government to be capable of provisioning the entire Army? Or else it's unfair to have an Army? I didn't say you could compete in practice. You can compete in principle. If you don't care about that, then you deserve whatever government you can wrangle at the moment.

    116. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      I don't really see the video as mud slinging. It is just showing how ridiculously low some Democrats have stooped in their mud slinging. If that constitutes mud slinging, then so be it.

      The worst part is how he justified the war with Iraq by saying God told him to do it.

      I feel like a broken record, but he did not say that. The White House has denied that he said it, and the only source of the quote is a translation of the Arabic minutes of a meeting that Abbas attended where Abbas was talking about a meeting he had with President Bush several weeks prior to that. Any conversation that Abbas and Bush did have was through an interpreter, since Abbas does not speak English and Bush does not speak Arabic. The source is so full of holes that nobody in their right mind would rely on it (and this apparently does not include MoveOn.org).

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    117. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Izago909 · · Score: 1
      The worst part is how he justified the war with Iraq by saying God told him to do it.
      I feel like a broken record, but he did not say that.
      Then why did Bush OK a video that uses that as one of his direct quotes and make it the main video link of his offical website for almost 2 weeks? The video in no way was presented as rebutal to that comment. Anyone who didn't know the origins of the quote could easily think that he said it and was advertising it on his website. Either it was the most poorly produced political video I can ever remember, or he actually said it.
    118. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by workindev · · Score: 1

      how can you call it one of the most stunningly successful military campaigns ever when it isn't over yet?

      You simply can't ignore the fact that we defeated and ran over the regions largest military force in a matter of weeks, and our enemy now has to resort to kidnapping random non-military foreigners to try and extort governments to withdraw their troops.

      I would suspect that Iraq is going to be viewed by history as a pointless exercise that achieved nothing other then wasting American blood and prestige

      There are 25,000,000 Iraqis that no longer live in fear of the government who disagree with you.

    119. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by workindev · · Score: 1

      I think you are forgetting a huge difference between Iraq and DPRK. Iraq and Saddam have used WMD in the past, while Kim Jong II has done nothing but wave his weapons around until somebody threw some humanitarian aid his way. It is clear from the past that North Koreas nuclear program was designed to gain diplomatic leaverage rather than physically intimidate anybody.

      By the way, from your post, I can assume that if we launched an invasion against North Korea tomorrow, that you would be the first person to throw your support behing President Bush. Correct? Or are you just trying to find something to complain about this Administration?

    120. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Holy crap. I've been trying to give you the benefit of the doubt, but you are making it difficult. No- the video does not present a rebuttal to that comment. It also doesn't say anything about MoveOn.org comparing Bush with Hitler, or Gephardt saying that Bush is a miserable failure, or Mike Moore saying that the Iraq war was for fictitious reasons, or Dean saying that he wanted his country back, or ANYTHING else in the video. The entire point of the video was to show just how illogical the Democratic party has become because of their hatred of Bush. You don't need to rebut a raving lunatic, after all.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    121. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Gosh Iraq is clearly the threat here.

      Are you operating under the assumption that there can only be one threat to us at any given time? The fact that North Korea does pose a threat to us (which nobody has denied, btw) does not mean that Iraq wasn't a threat.

      It is no secret why the DPRK is acting this way- they are seeking international aid. They admit as much. But there is a dialog in place, and we have the support of China, South Korea, Japan, and Russia in this. Progress is being made, with the third round of talks just now finishing up. A 4th round of talks is scheduled for September.

      But I will take note of your position, and in case diplomacy does fail in North Korea, I am glad that you will be such a strong supporter of military action against them.

      IDid it ever occur to you that North Korea is ten times the threat to the United States that Saddam ever was

      There is a HUGE difference between Saddam, who developed WMD in secret and has numerous links to terrorist organizations, and North Korea, who flaunts their nuclear program in a blatant attempt for international recognition and aid.

      perhaps if we had sent the 100,000+ troops in Iraq into Afghanistan instead perhaps we would have caught the guy who slaughtered 3,000 American civilians on 9/11?

      The war on terrorism is not to get revenge for 9/11. In the 15 staff statement from the 911 commission, they detail the Al Qaeda organization today, and they conclude that it has been "fundamentally changed" in the war on terrorism by killing most of the leaders and eliminating most of their funding. Bin Laden is no longer in control. Sure, it would feel good to capture him, but it would be mostly a symbolic victory that has little impact on the war on terrorism.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    122. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      And how can you call it one of the most stunningly successful military campaigns ever when it isn't over yet?

      Well, to get technical, the military campaign is over now. We are there now as an invited peacekeeping and security force. In a little over a year since the invasion, we have organized a transitional government that has strong international support as well as support from the Iraqi people, and we transferred governing authority to that government. That is a remarkable achievement. And we did this while eliminating one of the biggest state sponsors of terrorism in the world, liberating 25 million people from a brutal dictator, and rebuilding schools, highways, and economic infrastructure all over the country. Where is the failure here?

      But why would we invade and conquer the country that attacked us when we can do it on the cheap and install the local warlords (who btw haven't captured or killed Mr. Bin Ladin yet) so we can go and conquer the resource-rich country that didn't kill 3,000 American civilians.

      Uh, we did invade Afghanistan, and we did conquer, and Afghanistan is getting ready for their first national election since the fall of the Taliban. Sure we haven't caught Bin Laden yet, but do you seriously think we have given up looking for him? Capturing Bin Laden is little more than a symbolic victory at this point.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    123. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      re you on drugs, or have you simply been in a news blackout since "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED"?

      We can assume he or she is a viewer of Fox News, so, yes, they've been in a news blackout.

    124. Re:VOTE LIBERTARIAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You simply can't ignore the fact that we defeated and ran over the regions largest military force in a matter of weeks

      Just because it was the region's largest military force doesn't make it an impressive feat. It's like saying the New England Patriots played their best game of the year against the best football team in Puerto Rico.

      Calling this conflict "stunningly successful" is ignoring the fact that the situation has deteriorated into a state in which the strategies of modern warfare as we know them no longer apply. And that's what's scary.

  3. Flip, flop by Ryu2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Funny, I remember Orrin Hatch was actually a SUPPORTER of the original P2P Napster, to the extent that he actually put some of his own amateur works on there.

    See, for instance here

    Why the change of heart? I guess sticking to one's original convictions is too much to ask.

    --
    There's 10 types of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
    1. Re:Flip, flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I hate it when I see people bashed simply because they changed their minds on something. Sometimes a change of mind is a good thing. People can become more educated on a topic, or look at it in a new light and understand why a different position might be good. This is especially true in technical areas where folks often don't understand all the details and implications.



      Now I'll go along with you that it's the wrong way to change in this case, but I think that has more to do with money changing hands than new insite into the problem/ramifications.

    2. Re:Flip, flop by strictnein · · Score: 0

      Same thing was Kerry. He voted for Napster before voting against it. He owns an MP3 player, but doesn't have any MP3s. Or maybe he owns some MP3s but he stuffed them down his pants?

    3. Re:Flip, flop by Himring · · Score: 1

      Why the change of heart?

      $

      --
      "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
    4. Re:Flip, flop by the_mad_poster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And John Kerry has..... what... exactly... to do with this?

      "Flip flopping" is just a label that arrogant people who can't think for themselves pin on people who admit a mistake and change their position. Apparently, in modern America, it's more important to stubbornly plod along a known destructive path than to turn around and try to get off of it. Whether this applies to Hatch or not, I couldn't say, because, frankly, I don't think he has any convictions. He's just another one of the many politicians that moves in whichever direction the wind blows since that's most convenient for his political career.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    5. Re:Flip, flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate it when I see people bashed simply because they changed their minds on something.

      Bashing? Huh? Grandparent posed a legitimate and interesting question: Why the change of heart? I want to know as well. Sure politicians may change their opinion after considering new facts rsp. pondering the issue for a longer time. But if you change your opinion, you typically have reasons, don't you? It would be interesting to know the reasons Sen. Hatch had for changing his stance on the issue.

    6. Re:Flip, flop by Wordsmith · · Score: 1

      so you're saying HAtch is flip-flopping?

    7. Re:Flip, flop by admiralh · · Score: 2, Funny

      Personally, I can't stand flip-floppers. I mean, look at Stephen Hawking. He flip-flopped on this whole idea of information coming out of black holes! Obviously he's someone without strength of character who simply cannot be trusted to make a decision and stick to it.

      I'll never believe another thing Hawking says ever again.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    8. Re:Flip, flop by Grym · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ""Flip flopping" is just a label that arrogant people who can't think for themselves pin on people who admit a mistake and change their position.

      Admitting a mistake is acceptable. In fact, I can respect that, but flip-flopping is something entirely different because most just try to slip the change in to their platform unnoticed. Watch, you won't see Orin Hatch (or John Kerry, for that matter) apologize or retract any previous statements even if they are "seemingly" contradictory.

      Flip-flopping, for politicians is usually a sign that they follow the polls, and have no concern for the actual public good. Right or wrong, here's the mentality: "If 52% of Americans want me to say this, then that's what I'll say, and if next week, the polls show something different, then I'll say it too, because the public is too stupid to remember I'm contradicting myself. If worse comes to worse, I can always ride the wave of mediocracy and soft-money into reelection."

      THAT'S why the American public hates flip-flopping. We like our politics simple. (Sometimes a little too simple. President Bush's "You're either with us or against us." comes to mind.) It's not that we prefer to have a stubbon, principled politician. It's that we DON'T want a self-serving weasel in office.

      -Grym

    9. Re:Flip, flop by Xerxes · · Score: 1

      Granted, I agree with the implication that he probably changed his mind due to the influence of lobbying $.

      But I disagree that "sticking to one's original convictions" is necessarily a bad thing. IF Hatch carefully analysed both sides of the argument, and decided his first take was wrong, and therefore changed his mind after careful reflection on the merits, that's entirely appropriate, and in fact the kind of behavior we should encourage in our government officials.

      As I said, I suspect that he more likely changed his mind due to the pernicious influence of lobbying money. But I think the implication that changing one's mind is necessary a bad thing also represents sloppy thinking.

    10. Re:Flip, flop by killjoe · · Score: 1

      I don't know anybody who has flip flopped more and on important issues then mr bush. Remember the apology to china, weapons of mass destruction, compassionate conservatism, amnesty to mexican illegals, non interventionist policies, steel tarrifs etc. It goes on and on.

      If we don't want a self serving weasel in the white house why do we have bush?

      --
      evil is as evil does
    11. Re:Flip, flop by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 0

      Like hell he flip-flopped. Hawking is a true man, in the same sense of the word as Davy Crockett ("Killed a bear when he was only 3"). This man has willpower and gonads, my friends. Who else but Hawking, a man that is almost completely paralyzed, would bet on such a purely intellectual thing as theoretical physics? But not just that... the wager he placed.

      He said "If I am wrong about black holes, I will crawl over burning hot coals to reach a 5 gallon bucket of broken glass that I will *eat* while drinking lemon juice." I mean, goddamn.

    12. Re:Flip, flop by gammoth · · Score: 1
      It's that we DON'T want a self-serving weasel in office.

      I know what you mean. Just take the one in office right now: the poster boy for the no-self-serving-weasels-in-office movement.

    13. Re:Flip, flop by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      I think there might be something deeper with flip flopping. Yes, it is ok in theory to admit you made a mistake, but since when has anyone in power done that??? If you admit a mistake, you admit your judgement could be flawed. This is detrimental.

      Could you imagine what would happen if our politicians were honest. In Kerry actually said what he believes in or if Bush would stand up and be willing to say he regrets having given the American people false information on WMD programs in Iraq or an Al Quaeda connection?? This is why we haven't heard too much out of our president about the 9/11 panel, it says he made a decision that was characteristally wrong!! If all politicians weren't horribly arrogant, then we would actually see open revisions and real stances, but if they did this, americans would lose faith. Its so easy to sucker people in. I can make people think I'm a computer genius by doing simple things at high speed but I can't even use a command line in any efficient way.

      If politians didn't flip flop, they would simply be voted out because they would seem "weak" and by god we would hate that. I mean, what a novel idea to be able to say you were wrong, but few people can do it. Before you accuse our politians of how terrible they are, they do what they need to do to be reelected. We are the only people that can change that. Hey, corporations might fund them, but last I checked, someone named RIAA doesn't go vote come november but we all can and that is the only way to change things. If you hate the way things are, go against the incumbents.

    14. Re:Flip, flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Need term limits for members of congress...

      But that was proposed and rejected back in the 1780's....

    15. Re:Flip, flop by Eskarel · · Score: 1
      Wow, someone who actually believes voting can fix this problem.

      We live in a society which essentially allows you to choose between a Democrat and a Republican candidate, a two party system. We could have a multiple party system, but given the fact that we have neither a parlimentary structure(coalition governance) nor any sort of run off voting(you can win with a minority) a third party candidate has about as much chance og winning as a snowman has in hell.

      Now in order to get to be one of those two people you have to gain the support of the party of you choosing, and then you have to run, this takes money, an astronomical amount of money.

      There is a big problem with this because you have to get that money somewhere, which means you either have to be extremely rich yourself and/or you need the support of very rich people/companies. These are the people who have the power, the people who get to choose who we get to vote for.

      I'm not going to say these people are fundamentally evil or even that they're out to get us, because that isn't true, but they have interests, and those interests don't necessarily align with yours or mine.

      Even in the unlikely event that you have a candidate who is rich enough to fund his(yes I know I should use his or her, but face it we won't have a woman president any time soon) own electoral campaign, he still has to bow to these interests because they fund the party whose support he needs to run.

    16. Re:Flip, flop by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Money. Gobs and gobs of money.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    17. Re:Flip, flop by Grym · · Score: 1

      You're exactly right, Eskarel. There is no doubt in my mind that our two-party system is the main reason for much of the corruption and downright plutocracy that is American politics. But it's not the only reason.

      For instance, as one AC posted in this thread, congressional the lack of term-limits is another big reason. Did you know that the national congressional reelection rate is about 95%? This basically means that, unless you screw up really badly or die (and even then, you still might win) you're virtually assured your seat for, on average, 38 years for a representative or 76 years for a senator. So, what does this mean? We don't have idealistic Thomas Jeffersons or principled George Washingtons anymore. Instead, we have professional politicians whose ultimate goal is to maintain their well-paying, highly-comped jobs.

      Term-limits aside, the root of all of our problems is, in my opinion, public apathy. Politicians can get away with selling-out to corporations simply because all they have to do bet on their flashy ad-campaigns because the average Americans don't know or care about the truth. But really, who cam blame them? They're off watching the next mega-blockbuster movie or surfing the internet or grandstanding about Linux on slashdot. Despite the fact that the rich are getting richer in America, the fact is that this difference is only relative deprivation. That is to say that most US citizens live quite comfortably. And until this changes, don't expect our political system to change either.

      -Grym

    18. Re:Flip, flop by swankypimp · · Score: 1

      The problem with Kerry is that he's always stuck to his convictions: he hated the Vietnam war, then went to Vietnam, then lectured on how his experience there transformed him and made him a pacifist. This upcoming election is about trust: I'm not thrilled with the Bush team, but I trust their foreign policy significantly more than John Kerry and the anti-war-on-terror wing of the Democratic party. Christopher Hitchens' essays shows it is possible to be left-of-center and still believe that Islamic Fundamentalism is a threat to our way of life instead of some "issue" to score political points with. Maybe if the party was pro-war but offered the same domestic agenda I'd lean that way in November.

      --

      --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
    19. Re:Flip, flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, people change their minds. I guess it's unthinkable that an elected official should try to represent the wishes of the people -- even if that's a moving target...

    20. Re:Flip, flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Flip-flopping, for politicians is usually a sign that they follow the polls, and have no concern for the actual public good. Right or wrong, here's the mentality: "If 52% of Americans want me to say this, then that's what I'll say, and if next week, the polls show something different, then I'll say it too."

      Isn't that what we want? Politicians who listen to what Americans are saying and make decisions based on what the American people want - isn't that what democracy's about?

    21. Re:Flip, flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a shame that there isn't a '-1, failed to detect and/or understand sarcasm' mod, otherwise you'd no doubt have been awarded it already. Good job! (In managing to completely miss the intent of the parent post.)

  4. This is GREAT NEWS by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I find that I spend far too much time watching television, and listening to music. With the pain in the ass regulations that are going up, I can finally dump my satellite dish, DVD player, television, and TiVo. Without all that crap, I can finally get some programming done.

    And just in case they come for my computer, I'm stockpiling schematics, a 68000 microprocessor, 16 megs of memory, and a hard drive. If my PC won't let me run untrusted software, then I'll fucking build my own.

    Screw the content Nazis. I don't fucking need them, but they need my money.

    --
    Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    1. Re:This is GREAT NEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, I personally agree with you.

      Let them do this. I have already eliminated television from my life. This just gives me an incentive to eliminate more of their useless crap from my life as well, and will pretty much kill them in the eyes of the younger generation.

      I don't mind paying money for *good* music and *good* movies. I will continue to do so. Erecting ridiculous content restrictions will just kill my desire for the "fluff" that they produce.

    2. Re:This is GREAT NEWS by c0dedude · · Score: 1

      Ha. They'll shut down radio shack. And you'll need a transistor and solder liscense. And unprotected hard drives will be punishable by monkies.

      --
      Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    3. Re:This is GREAT NEWS by log0n · · Score: 1

      I canceled my cable subscription back in Jan-February. TV is a waste of time, so many better things I am doing without it now (hobbies, excercising, working harder/smarter/better, relationships).

      Ditch TV.

    4. Re:This is GREAT NEWS by cft_128 · · Score: 1
      I find that I spend far too much time watching television, and listening to music. With the pain in the ass regulations that are going up, I can finally dump my satellite dish, DVD player, television, and TiVo. Without all that crap, I can finally get some programming done.

      Don't worry, you'll still have Slashdot to distract you from your work.

      --

      Underloved Movies and Pub Quiz: donotquestionme.org

    5. Re:This is GREAT NEWS by LordMyren · · Score: 1

      Motorola spunoff Freescale to do their processors. The new Coldfire/68k looks pretty bad-arse, and reasonably power efficient too. Now with MMU!

      I just wish someone were actually doing the work to port linux onto it.

  5. This is getting out of control by minorthreatbmxxx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As much as I agree with the RIAA that piracy is wrong and should be stopped, things are getting ridiculous. Corporations shouldn't have this much power in government. This is supposed to be a government by the people, for the people, but is now controlled by the corporations...

    --
    Free iPod!eBay o
    1. Re:This is getting out of control by RWerp · · Score: 1

      Come to Europe, then. In Poland we dumped out entire government for, among other things, coveting to the interests of one financialist (well, they had to screw up the health care system, too).

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
    2. Re:This is getting out of control by antiMStroll · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This kind of legislation is horrifying. Jackasses like Hatch are basically selling RIAA an exclusive, protected license to make money by drastically curtailing the freedom to move information (but not, apparently, the freedom to move money into his pocket.) The brazen attitude is what really sends chills down my spine, bought Senators aren't even making an effort at an appearance of balance, he's advocating for the rubber stamping of legislation written by special interest corporations making huge segments of the general population criminals. There's a special place in hell for his kind and I wish him god's speed in his journey.

    3. Re:This is getting out of control by svallarian · · Score: 2, Informative

      Fine.
      Do the following.

      1. Get of your ass and write your senator / Congressmen

      2. Vote the bums out.

      Simple.

      Steven V>

      --
      I patented screwing your mom. But it got revoked for "prior art."
    4. Re:This is getting out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Piracy (meaning copyright infringment) is not wrong and should not be stopped, as it flys in the face of the "natural order" of the Internet.

      When something can be copied and distributed an infinite number of times at zero cost without degration, then the value is zero. (according to basic supply and demand laws of capitalism)

      This has completly changed the game, and outdated copyright laws drastically.

      You no longer have the gaurentee to profit off of the creation of your music. But if you are popular enough, you can make plenty of money through concert ticket sales and merchandising.

      I mean, hell, distributing your content is (near) FREE now, thats a big cost-load off of the creator's shoulders.

      dont believe me?

      www.homestarrunner.com is incredibly sucessful, and free.

    5. Re:This is getting out of control by rabel · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's called fascism

      Read up on it!

    6. Re:This is getting out of control by JivanMukti · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well said. This is why I've become a proponent of laissez-faire economics. Something I learned recently is that the U.S.A. at the end of the 19th century had a free-market policy. J.P. Morgan and his contemporaries had setup cartels several times in an attempt to monopolize rail and other industries. The cartels always fell apart because of competition. So they lobbied the gov't for regulations that would stifle new competition but ultimately help those companies already established. All under the guise of being "pro-worker" and "anti-monopoly". It worked.

      Sounds familiar. The *IAA cartels have/are doing the same thing. We need separation of markets and state.

    7. Re:This is getting out of control by CommieOverlord · · Score: 1

      This is supposed to be a government by the people, for the people, but is now controlled by the corporations.

      Technically corporations are people too.

    8. Re:This is getting out of control by SQLz · · Score: 1

      It has been like this for a long time now, at least 100 years maybe more but,it gets worse and worse every year.

      Every so often the supreme court saves us but lately is seems they have been assimilated as well.

    9. Re:This is getting out of control by Mazaev2 · · Score: 1

      Hey now... Corporations are people too you know!

    10. Re:This is getting out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You know what would kill the influence of corporations? If all their employees, or even half or a third of them, said "I disagree with your politics, so I quit." That'd get the message across.

      All this messy conflict we're seeing, especially on Slashdot, results entirely from voter inconsistency. They vote one way on the ballot, the other on who signs their paychecks. This is democracy, like it or not. And ugly and messy as it is... You have to allow people the freedom to do stupid shit. Refusing to, telling them they can only vote one way but not the other, that's fascism.

      A lot of the posts here are really just sour grapes. People who want to get their paychecks from Offensive IT Company A while voting against Offensive IT Company A's political demands. You can't have it both ways. You've got to make a stand. Yeah, it's risky; yeah, you may end up on the street as a result. But that's what it means to be principled. And maybe if you can't stand that thought... then maybe you're voting wrong on the ballot sheet.

    11. Re:This is getting out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What rock have you been living under for the last 30 years. Your government has been the pinnacle of corruption, corporate influence peddling, and special interest lobby groups gone mad for at least 30 years. Probably more. Don't kid yourself, your government doesnt give so much as half a shit what you think about an issue, or where you think your country should go. If you think otherwise, just try to get one of your "elected" reps to vote on any position that goes against any of his/her top 4 campaign contributors positions/interests. Better yet, try to get one to vote against one of those "lets give Israel another 5 Billion dollars" votes. Never happen. Ever wonder why? Because they are owned. They had their offices bought for them, and they serve those who put them in office. The only problem with the system, is that you think that YOU put them in office. You had no part in it. After all these years of screaming about your second amendment rights to bear arms to defend yourselves from "government run amok", it may be time to dust off the old smoke pole.

    12. Re:This is getting out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called a plutocracy

    13. Re:This is getting out of control by servognome · · Score: 2, Informative

      At the end of the 19th century people were also endured far worse working conditions. You think your cubicle is bad? Read "The Jungle" by Upton Sinclair, it tells what unregulated companies can do.
      Goverment regulation does have its place, but it's the responsibility of the people to keep goverment in check. You have to write your congressperson to give them your input, if they don't listen vote them out.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    14. Re:This is getting out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I modded this up. Let me tell you why I think it is informative and not a troll. I think it's important.

      I'm likely to vote Republican in the next election, but I agree that the amount of corporatism in American politics is out of control. It's got some really strong supporters in both parties, but there are some Republicans who really push it.

      It worries me and it should worry you when it's overt corporatism like this.

      That being said, I don't think that trying to create an atmosphere that is business friendly to spur economic growth is inherently bad. I see a major difference between tax breaks and incentives and clear cut cronyism like this. I hope that other folks who vote republican can see through the rah-rah partisanship that both parties suffer from these days and see that this is as much over-regulation as affirmative action or the equal rights ammendment. Using the government to stifle personal use, creative innovation, and competition is not less federal government and does not ultimately encourage economic growth. It is inherently NOT conservative.

      I'd work hard if I lived in Utah to defeat Hatch in the primary next time around. I'd start now.

    15. Re:This is getting out of control by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Fascism is also called the corporate state. It's the belief that anything that's good for business is good for the government. (Note that I didn't say the citizens. They are given scant consideration.)

      It is a blatant historical error to lump the Fascists with the Nazis. They were never as viscious. They started out with "good" intentions. (You know, the kind they pave the road with.)

      This is close to one opposite of free-market capitalism. A fascist government will (nearly) always favor a larger company over a smaller one.

      I don't really think that describe the US. Not quite. The US is more of a Plutocracy. This is very similar to fascism, but with less ideological underpinnings..or at least fewer of them that it will admit to in public. In many ways it isn't quite as bad, but in others it's worse.

      This is all, really, beside the point. The labels may or may not be descriptive, but they aren't ideological motivators. What is moving the US govt. is power politics. Nothing else. Nothing more admirable in any way. Might is not only one factor in determining right, it's the only factor that is (acknowledged to be) in effect. It may be true that they is an "old boys network" and "college chums", etc., but those are, presumably, sacrificed in an instant if it seems to be in one's (long term?) interest. People who "aren't like us" are suppressed because they might be difficult competition...and besides, if we can do it, we have the right.

      This is not in any way admirable, but it does seem to be the current mode of operation. Those who follow this course don't seem to realize, or perhaps don't care, that in previous civilizations that adopted this mode assassinations became the dominant method of changing leaders. And that the average life of a Roman Emperor during the decadent period (i.e., while this form of government was in force) was less than four years. I doubt if anyone remembers most of them.

      OK. I may have overstated slightly about the length of tenure of an Emperor. But I'm not sure that I did. We never hear about most of them. They didn't last long enough to leave any memory. Possibly we've adapted sufficiently that no modern Praetorian guard would be able to choose the successor to the current emperor.

      But I don't feel optomistic.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    16. Re:This is getting out of control by kcbrown · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Fine. Do the following.

      1. Get of your ass and write your senator / Congressmen

      2. Vote the bums out.

      Simple.

      And completely ineffective.

      Vote them out to be replaced by whom? The only people who have any chance of being elected are those who get media exposure. The media is owned by a small number of very large corporations -- the very same corporations that are behind this bill to begin with. If you want to have the slightest chance of being elected, you have to do what the corporations want. Fail, and you'll either be ignored or you'll get a lot of bad press (like Dean did -- do you really think the "screaming madman" impression the media gives of him was even close to being an accurate and fair picture of him?). Either way, you won't be elected, because people won't elect someone they don't know about or who they think is a loser, and they get all that information primarily from the media.

      No, sorry, this is a rigged game, and there's no way out.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    17. Re:This is getting out of control by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 1
      Okay, see, I don't agree with the RIAA that piracy is wrong and should be stopped.

      First of all, "piracy" is exactly the wrong word. It's a piece of linguistic tyrrany imposed upon us by an industry that has everything to lose if the government no longer recognizes its "property" as such. Linguistic tyrrany works like this: an eighteen-year-old-boy hooks up with a seventeen-year-old girl. Well, we could call it making love, but she's a minor, so we'll call her a child, and since she's a child she can't consent to anything, see, so what do you cal nonconsensual sex? That's right. This isn't making love. It's child rape. So let's abandon the term "piracy" right now, because it's being used to cloud the discussion.

      Second, the whole concept of copyright has been perverted beyond anything its originators would recognize. Copyright was meant to balance the rights of the commons (i.e. everybody) with incentives to the creators of written works. The idea was that you would give the author (and not, I want to emphasize, some holding company) exclusive control over the printing of his work, for a limited amount of time. So if I write a book, I and only I get to say when and how it gets published, for a period of forteen years. After that, it belongs to the commons, and absolutely everybody gets to enjoy it however they choose to do so. More to the point, other people get to revise, expand, improve, and build on these works.

      And it was for books, and books only. Not plays, not sheet music, nothing but printed words.

      I sincerely believe that no corporation is entitled to own the whole of a work it did not hire someone to produce. I furthermore believe that copyright is not, and was never intended to be, a mechanism to supress the free flow of information, nor to award permanent ownership of a creative work to anyone, but rather to provide a monetary incentive to producers of such work in exchange for a time-limited monopoly over same.

      If you sincerely think that the RIAA has a legitimate claim to what it says it has a right to, bear in mind that if you sing "Happy Birthday"---a song written over a century ago---over the radio, Time-Warner says they have a legitimate claim to some royalties. Hells bells, people, right now fucking Hendrix should be passing into the public domain, let alone "Happy Birthday".

      --
      This is not my sandwich.
  6. Question by strike2867 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Does someone have a list of Senators currenty in favor of the act. They need to be urgently sto^H^H^H replaced.

    --

    Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    1. Re:Question by krazo · · Score: 2, Interesting
      There should be a web page where for any legislator you could find out:
      • Which bills they proposed
      • Which bills they voted for and against
      • Which committees they are on
      • Other information like that which I can't think of right now

      It could be cross-referenced by bill too. So, you could see who voted for and against which bills. You could see things like partisanship, who was most likely to vote against his party, etc., etc. Maybe it could be linked to campaign finance records too so we could see whose pocket everyone is in. I know the information is all public domain, but I don't know of any simple way to access it.

      Does anyone know of a site that does anything like this? I think it would go a long way towards making actions of congress more transparent and maybe forcing a little more accountability on legislators (by having their voting records very easily accessible and understandable for the public.)
    2. Re:Question by Armethius · · Score: 3, Informative

      Cosponsors of the bill include: Bill Frist (majority leader) Tom Daschle (minority leader) Hatch (chairman of the judiciary committee) Leahy (ranking member of the judiciary committee

    3. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      I can tell you that I most certainly will NOT be reelecting Debbie Stabenow this comming election, who is co-sponsoring INDUCE. Take a look at the list of INDUCE's Co-sponsors to see if there's anyone you're going to help vote out this fall in YOUR state.

    4. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      They need to be urgently stoned? That seems a bit drastic... how 'bout we only do that to the senators that are also adulterers? What? That's ALL of them? Well, ok, go ahead and stone them. Urgently.

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

      I'd even go so far as saying "they need to be urgently sho^H^H^H replaced"...

    6. Re:Question by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      http://thomas.loc.gov/

      Thomas was one of Newt's ideas, back when he was still a conservative.

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

      Unfortunately, it makes more sense to ask if any senators are not supporting it? Nearly all them are.

    8. Re:Question by krazo · · Score: 1

      Right.

      But that's basically oriented toward bills and congressional actions and is WAY too detailed for the layman.

      What I'm suggesting is something which is focused on the legislator. So, I can click on my state and my senator and see that (for instance. I have no idea.) Chuck Schumer voted "Yes" on the Iraq War, "No" on the Patriot Act and spoke in opposition of INDUCE.

      If I care about foreign policy, I could see a list of his votes on issues relating directly to American foreign policy.

      I know this is probably a huge undertaking, but it would seem to me to be hugely useful in election times. Rather than relying on campaign speeches, we could look at our representative's voting record and choose to re-elect him or her based on his or her actions.

    9. Re:Question by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Bills are not limited to any one subject. ANYTHING can be included in ANY bill, even if they are not related and have nothing to do with the name (how do you think so much pork gets passed with out people knowing before hand?)

      And it doesn't matter what they SAY on the floor, what matters is what is written in the Congressional Record, and what is written there isn't always what they say on the floor infront of the CSPAN cameras. You see when they say 'reserve the right to revise and extend' what that means is that they can come back, at a later date, an edit or even totally REPLACE what they said on the floor and BAM! history has been rewritten and the official record is not totally opposite of what they said on the floor.

    10. Re:Question by sindarin2001 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if they were stoned, the drugs would make them a little more layed back and perhaps give them some much needed insight into the stupidity of this bill. All kidding aside, I really hope this bill dies in a great big fiery death.

    11. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      http://action.eff.org/action/index.asp?step=2&item =2918

      Form letter, but the EFF will fax or email it for free to your reps. And if you want you can always copy and past and edit and print it off yourself.

    12. Re:Question by david_reese · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Form letter, but the EFF will fax or email it for free to your reps.

      Someone mod this guy way up!.. with the anthrax scare, written letters are ignored by your legislators, and emails can easily be /dev/null'd. Faxes are they way to get a response, and the EFF rules for giving a free way to do that!

    13. Re:Question by bezuwork's+friend · · Score: 2, Informative
      Just my 2 cents. I was in a class last semester with a few staffers. I made it a point to ask the best way to indicate preferences to representatives or senators. They all said that it doesn't matter - snail mail, email, fax, calling - they just tally it up.

      It seems that a detailed letter is not even required. Clearly state your address, so that they know you are someone who can re-elect them, keep each correspondence to one issue, state your preference that your representative/senator support or not support it. Maybe one sentence of your reasons to ensure that and the terms support/not support aren't misread and maybe one that states you intend to follow the voting as you are very interested in the issue.

      Unless you have an amazing insight or take on the issue that you can't resist writing about, I would think any other thing you write would be ignored.

    14. Re:Question by NuclearDog · · Score: 0

      You get the rifles, I'll pick the spots?

      Excuse me a moment, some car marked FBI just pulled up...

      ND

      --
      This statement is forty-five characters long.
  7. Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by yeremein · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Consider this...
    More than 40 trade associations and advocacy groups voiced similar sentiments in a letter to senators July 6. The Induce Act "would chill innovation and drive investment in technology" overseas, said the letter, signed by CNET Networks, eBay, Google, Intel, MCI, TiVo, Verizon Communications, Sun Microsystems and Yahoo.

    This measure is supported by the RIAA but opposed by the tech industry at large. Why does Congress let the tail wag the dog when it comes to copyright legislation? Does Intel just not give enough money to politicians?

    1. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by Kenja · · Score: 3, Insightful
      "Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice?"

      Because they're out there talking to law makers while we sit around at home eating pizzia and watching TV?

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    2. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by mcpkaaos · · Score: 1

      In a word, yes.

      --
      It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
    3. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay smart guy

      How, exactly, do you propose we get on the floor of congress and make our point know?

      Seriously.

      I dont see _you_ hiring a lobbyist.

    4. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > This measure is supported by the RIAA but opposed by the tech industry at large. Why does Congress let the tail wag the dog when it comes to copyright legislation? Does Intel just not give enough money to politicians?

      "Because snorting a line of cocaine between a pair of flesh lumps is a lot more fun when they're Titney's Spears, rather than Andy's Grove."

    5. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by MattGWU · · Score: 1

      But we're not sitting at home and watching TV and eating Pizza. We're somewhere else, taping the shows so we can watch them later. That's the 'problem'!

      Other than that, I'm in total agreeance.

      --
      "These people look deep within my soul and assign me a number based on the order in which I joined" --Homer re:
    6. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by Kenja · · Score: 1
      "Okay smart guy. How, exactly, do you propose we get on the floor of congress and make our point know?"

      At gun point?

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    7. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by bullitB · · Score: 1

      There's another interpretation here.

      Cue in image of logo of Verizon.
      Fade in market capitalization: $97.85 Billion

      Cut to image of logo of Intel.
      Fade in market capitalization: $146.63 Billion

      Cut to image of SUN.
      Fade in market capitalization: $12.27 Billion

      Cut to Yahoo! logo.
      Fade in market capitalization: $37.96 Billion

      Announcer (in stern voice):
      These huge, multinational corporations want to stop the average American from being able to prosecute them for illegally encouraging theft of their copyrighted content. A non-partisan artists' interests group* recently was denied the ability to sue companies which encourage this piracy. Don't you think it's time to say "NO" to these huge companies? Call your senator and say "Yes, I support the INDUCE Act."

      Coming soon to your TV.

      * the RIAA

    8. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by shadowmatter · · Score: 1

      But we're not sitting at home and watching TV and eating Pizza.

      Damn straight. Now, thanks to P2P, I watch porn movies on my PC.

      - sm

    9. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by Zebbers · · Score: 1

      replace talking with paying

    10. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by dema · · Score: 1

      Because they're out there talking to law makers while we sit around at home eating pizzia and watching TV?

      Correction: Because they're out there paying law makers while we work our assess off just to make enough money to pay rent?

    11. Re:Why does the RIAA have such a strong voice? by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's just Congress' way of telling Intel, et al they need to donate more. It'd be interesting if MS sued the Republican/Democrat parties for racketeering (MS lobbying went from ziltch to a tidy sum, then the case collapsed nicely). Maybe Intel, et al can sue for racketeering for the same reason. Or maybe they can sue the RIAA, et al as they're the actual puppet masters.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
  8. I hope is passes by DigiShaman · · Score: 2, Funny

    Because it will take bills like this to reach rock-bottom before the public wakes up. Only then can we get rid of the bill and the RIAA.

    FUCK IT, PASS THE FUCKING BILL. Jesus....*sigh*

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
    1. Re:I hope is passes by maximilln · · Score: 1

      PASS THE <censored> BILL

      I'm really getting to the same apathetic feeling for nearly everything in society.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    2. Re:I hope is passes by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      More than that- make it stronger. The copyright office person suggested reversing betamax- I hope they do. Because breaking everyone's VCRs and TiVos is about what it would take to wake the american public up in this regaurd.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    3. Re:I hope is passes by cowboy_ein · · Score: 0

      I'm really getting to the same apathetic feeling for nearly everything in society.

      In fact.. if I'd be more apathetic if I weren't so lethargic!

    4. Re:I hope is passes by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I hope that we hit 1984 and Brave New World status. Because it'll make everything much, much better. Really.

  9. Not only a repost, a non-issue. by c0dedude · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hatch introduces these radical bills all the time. This one is Pre-committee [loc.gov]. Nothing to see here folks, move along. Eventually the computer industry will step in and say this is crazy.

    Here's the way a bill is normally passed. This one is about at step 2 1/2.
    1. A senator and a member of the house get togather and write a bill.
    2. They drop it in their respective drop boxes, and GPO prints it up.
    3. The rules committee send it to committees for review.
    4. Subcommitees tell their committees whether they want a hearing on it.
    5. Hearings are held, and each bill is modified.
    6. Assuming the bill doesn't die in Committee, and most of them do, it goes to the rules committee for the Senate and the House. A lot of them die this way, too.
    7. The rules committee schedules a vote. If they don't, time passes, Congress adjourns, bill dies.
    8. Both the House and Senate vote. If one doesn't support the bill, bill dies. These are timed votes, and if you can't get a majority within about 15 minutes (usually) that's it.
    9. Assuming all of the above has occured, you get a conference committee of Representitives and Senators who will hammer out a comprimise between the House and Senate versions. If they can't agree, it dies.
    10. Then the President can sign or veto. If he vetos, or refuses to act in 10 days (Pocket Veto), the bill dies UNLESS 2/3 of the House and Senate vote to override it. This rarely (in less than 1/10th of vetoes) occurs. If they don't, the bill dies.

    All of this has to occur in about 5 1/2 months. I don't think this one will get the fasttrack, and I certainly don't think the House will ever pass it.

    --
    Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    1. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by bloggins02 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just out of curiosity, at which of those 10 stages are we permitted to start worrying?

    2. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by c0dedude · · Score: 1

      I, personally, start worrying at 6, or if the bill goes into fasttrack, by which it skips the committee process.

      --
      Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    3. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      Couldn't you just set that to the tune of "I'm only a bill, yes I'm only a bill, just sitting here on Capitol Hill..."?

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    4. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're forgetting that after step 9 (conference committee) that both houses have to vote on and pass the compromise bill. And as another poster said, the pocket veto only occurs if Congress adjourns, otherwise the bill becomes law if the President doesn't act within 10 days.

    5. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, at which of those 10 stages are we permitted to start worrying?

      About
      step 11 it passes, or
      step 12 date of enforcement of bill will begin, or
      step 13 enforcement begins actually enforcing the bill,
      then you are allowed to worry about it.

    6. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by Armethius · · Score: 0

      You've posted this twice now and it's absolutely incorrect.

      The Senate Judiciary committee had a hearing on it yesterday and Hatch expressed his intent to push this through in whatever form.

      For more information on this bill visit

      Tech Law Advisor's Perpetual Blog on the INDUCE Act

    7. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and like I replied to you before, the fact that the DMCA was passed at all is proof enough that we are on the slippery slope and should definitely NOT IGNORE these "radical" bills.

    8. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 1

      So when should we start worrying? When it's at stage nine? You're not being realistic. We need to nip this thing in the bud, not ignore it until it becomes an ever bigger problem.

    9. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's somewhere after legistlation-renaming but before scheduling.. at this point the pipeline might still get flushed by a mispredicted veto but such instances are rare.
      This is soon going to be obsolete though as the number of stages will be doubled when the rapid execution act gets passed. (a similar technique has been used quite successfully in the land of freedom a while ago)

    10. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by iabervon · · Score: 1

      Assuming your congressmen aren't on any relevant committees, you don't get any say in the process until step 8; between steps 7 and 8 is when you want to make your position known.

      On the other hand, I'm disturbed that someone from the Library of Congress thinks this wouldn't be a huge disaster. You can worry about the Executive Branch at any time.

    11. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by Sebby · · Score: 1
      The one I've patented - can you guess which?

      --

      AC comments get piped to /dev/null
    12. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by colanut · · Score: 1
      Eventually the computer industry will step in and say this is crazy.

      That will only last for so long. In a few years a tech company can get in on the bill writing action and write themselves a big fat monopoly in conjunction with *AA of their choice. The temptation to lock out the competition will be to great. I'm surprised it hasn't happened yet. Maybe, because the tech industry still has some creativity left, but as it matures, I wouldn't count on it.

    13. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by shaitand · · Score: 1

      I think when that happens we need to push from someone from the Library of congress to be fired. Immediately.

    14. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by stubob · · Score: 1
      Did you retype this same text or did you cut and paste it?
      We have every right (at the moment) to be pissed that these bills get introduced. They show that our representatives are not representing us or our interests. Introducing a bill like this should be reason enough to vote the author out of office. What possible benefit does Hatch see this providing to his true constituents, a.k.a the people of Utah?

      Nothing to see here folks, move along.
      I bet you said the same thing about the DMCA.
      --
      Planning to be moderated ± 1: Bad Pun.
    15. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by lspd · · Score: 1

      1. A senator and a member of the house get togather and write a bill.

      You really believe that? I was under the impression that they didn't bother to read most of the bills being voted on, much less write them.

      Maybee I'm wrong in this case though. It's only 2 pages.

    16. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Somewhere around -289.

    17. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      ...yes I'm only a bill, and I'm sitting here on capitol hill. Well it's a long long journey..."

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    18. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by focitrixilous+P · · Score: 1
      No need to worry, everything is fine

      And no, I'm not being paid by the RIAA to say this.

      Not much, anyways.

      --
      SAILING MISHAP
    19. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by thdexter · · Score: 1

      Point 8: Republicans like to hold votes open until they can get a majority of votes (something they used to yell at Democrats for doing, back in the day when they were the majority body in the House.)

      Point 10: GWB hasn't used a veto yet in his presidency.

      --
      I'm on a road shaped like a figure eight; I'm going nowhere but I'm guaranteed to be late.
    20. Re:Not only a repost, a non-issue. by pjay_dml · · Score: 1

      You are just plain wrong: http://www.corante.com/importance/archives/Stateme nt_of_Marybeth_Peters_on_S_2560-1.pdf Here's just one statement that had been made at the hearing! Guess we are at level 6 then!

  10. Tivo TV, or no TV by AIX-Hood · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I and 500 of my closest friends have Tivo style television watching entrenched in our way of doing things that if it were taken away, we'd probably just stop watching it altogether.

    1. Re:Tivo TV, or no TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that the Tour de France is almost over, I really have no need for DirectTV/Cable. And we need to save money. Why not pull the plug? I often feel trapped when I feel like I 'have to watch show X,y,Z' each week.

    2. Re:Tivo TV, or no TV by Billobob · · Score: 1

      500? That sure is alot of close friends

      --
      If you have to ask, you'll never know.
    3. Re:Tivo TV, or no TV by alphakappa · · Score: 1

      You have 500 close friends? What the heck are you doing on Slashdot?

      --
      "When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail." - Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
  11. I wrote to my Senator by neonfrog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    (here is the letter I sent, misspellings intact)

    Dear Senator Leahy:

    I would like to express my concerns over the fomerly entitled INDUCE act.

    I have read your statement, but cannot reconcile an important point.

    If a technology company wishes to make a tool, and induce folk to use it, expressly for sharing copies of works where the copyright has been freely released (my own writings, for example, that I may wish to share with the world for no profit) then that company might not feel it can create such a tool because of the possibility of it being interpreted as an inducement to infringe upon copyright.

    I interpret our founding fathers' ideas behind copyright law this way: the more works that are created and shared, the better the world will be. If you create then you alone should be able to profit from your creation, if you so desire, but only for a certain amount of time after which further profit can only be had by creating new works. Copyright serves two purposes: to inspire you to create again and again and, ultimatley, to pass your previous creations into public property where they can be freely copied, thus insuring their preservation for the betterment of all mankind. They carefully crafted those laws with the goals of incenting artists to continue to create works and ultimately preserving those works' societal value forever.

    I feel that the internet has provided a distribution vector never conceived before that meets those goals perfectly. Rather than being incented by profit, a corporate goal, many new and important works are being created and freely distributed simply for the betterment of mankind (as well as possible widespread fame or recognition), a societal goal. I submit to you the incredibly valuable Wikipedia.org.

    In the past, when copying was limited by technology, an artist had no vector for distributing their works that wasn't corporate -- world-wide distribution simply was not available to the common man due to the tremendous economic hurdles of replication and transportation. Nowadays I, a simple native Vermonter, have an opportunity to share works with my world peers, far-flung and next door, and enjoy their works shared straight to me, without the burden of a cumbersome distribution model. I am hugely incented to create more and share it with humanity. This tremendous incentive never existed before.

    Presenting legislation that could be used to stifle technology or activities that induce sharing of freely created works, simply because such could be used to copy works that authors choose to control, would directly contradict the spirit under which copyright law was originally established. Perhaps your response would be that this is not the intent of the law, but I believe that media corporations would try to bend this tool to further their own profits regardless of the impact on freely available works created for society's benefit. There's a reason why libraries are well-represented in the letter you recently received from the EFF!

    Thank you for your time and attention, and for your continued work in the Senate.

    Sincerely,

    --

    I'm thinking about it, therefore I might be.

    1. Re:I wrote to my Senator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      P.S. Go fsck yourself!

    2. Re:I wrote to my Senator by Hyperspac · · Score: 1

      So did I. Maybe more of us should, it all most as easy as reading /.

    3. Re:I wrote to my Senator by Bartacus · · Score: 1

      Hmm. My Senator is on the road. I wonder if he has the time to be concerned about his citizens back home?

      --
      -- he's not heavy, he's my sysadmin!
    4. Re:I wrote to my Senator by SQLz · · Score: 1

      I know a few people who work on capital hill. Your assuming writing a letter to your Senator actually does something. Even if his office was flooded with letters, he wouldn't even know, and if he did know and on an off chance bothered to read one, he wouldn't give a flying dick fuck. Why? Because non of those hippies are going to get him reelected. Basically, an aid reads your letters, selects the appropriate canned response, and sends it off.

      Congratulations, in about 30 days you'll be the proud owner of a form letter that doesn't even respond to a single one of your points.

    5. Re:I wrote to my Senator by Hyperspac · · Score: 1

      Your assuming writing a letter to your Senator actually does something. Even if his office was flooded with letters, he wouldn't even know, and if he did know and on an off chance bothered to read one...

      So your saying the solution is what? Do nothing and expect something to change? I'm fully aware that my senator is not the one who will read what I send them, but someone does, and as they are reading a Senator mail odds are they have more infulance then I do. If I can infulence their thinking with what I write maybe it will get passed up the line. (Think of aids as manditor moderator if you want.)

    6. Re:I wrote to my Senator by jeffkjo1 · · Score: 1

      I also helm from North Carolina. In the past, when I have recieved responses from John Edwards, they are always canned, form letter responses. Edwards's staff also seems to take their time sending them.

      In all of the emails I've sent to Libby Dole, I have never gotten a response, although once, I got a physical letter (in response to my email), that said that I would soon recieve an actual response to my inquiry (wtf?)

      My congressman, David Price, is fantastic about responding to things. I doubt he writes all the letters himself, but I've always gotten detailed responses to all letters I've written, even when they were about mundane obscure amendments to bills. I'm very impressed with Price, overall.

    7. Re:I wrote to my Senator by prator · · Score: 1

      Maybe the Senator doesn't read it, but, hopefully, that aide puts a mark in the "Hates New Bill" column. They have to somewhat stay in line with their constituency's views (assuming that the hippies vote).

      -prator

    8. Re:I wrote to my Senator by Danse · · Score: 1

      His aids likely scan your email so that they can figure out which form letter to send to you and put another check under the For or Against column for that bill. Not that it matters much when only a handfull of people care enough one way or the other to write to him about that particular bill. This one won't even make the evening news, so virtually nobody will know about it, so he won't receive more than a handfull of letters about it. I've written to my congresscritters several times in the past, and I invariably get a response that doesn't even remotely address my concerns. Once I got a response that seemed to think that I agreed with him, even though I was vehemently against the bill. Writing letters doesn't do a damn thing unless you can generate an absolute flood of letters. For a bill such as this one, that's not likely to happen.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    9. Re:I wrote to my Senator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Here's mine. I sent it to my sens Clinton (a co-sponsor!!) and Schumer and to most of the rest of the Sen. Jud. Committee. http://judiciary.senate.gov/

      July 23, 2004
      Dear Senator Schumer,

      Please make every effort to prevent S. 2560, the Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act of 2004, from becoming a law.

      This legislation is ill-conceived and would ultimately do a disservice to our nation's people, industry, and culture.

      1. S. 2560 will stifle innovation. The wording of this bill is vague and would discourage inventors and companies from introducing new products. We have seen a technological revolution and for it to continue, the flow of information must be unfettered, free from the arbitrary restrictions of a few well-connected companies.

      2. S. 2560 will weaken the U.S tech industry against foreign rivals. U.S. companies must be able to develop new technologies to compete in the global marketplace. Companies in Japan, Taiwan, the EU, China, and India will not be so restricted.

      3. S. 2560 will create a restriction on manufacturers that is absurd in comparison to other industries. Manufacturers would be culpable for the criminal acts of its customers. Are sports car makers held responsible for drivers who speed? Should a manufacturer of spray paint be punished if someone uses their product for vandalism or drug abuse? Products with legitimate, legal uses cannot be considered to be "inducing" a crime.

      4. S. 2560 is a law that is made to be broken and is simply a preparation to a payoff to politically influential industries. The popularity of mp3 players and other open media demonstrates that there is a demand for these products that will be supplied by someone. This law would merely set the stage for a settlement between hardware producers and "copyright" holders similar to the unfair taxation levied on blank CDs. Law abiding consumers would be assumed to be criminals and fined. This arrangement is contrary to American values and should not be permitted to spread.

      5. S 2560 is another example of corporate money influencing politics. The introduction of this bill is simple pandering to big money donors. It is this sort of manipulation that breeds widespread cynicism in our political process and is especially egregious in an election year.

      In conclusion, S. 2560 is an unnecessary, short sighted and counterproductive bill rooted in corporate influence that should not be passed. I am very interested in your thoughts on this subject and would appreciate a reply.

      Sincerely,
      me

  12. Honestly, I hope this passes by TheHonestTruth · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Maybe once America (the majority that is) can no longer record/TiVo COPS or Jerry Springer reruns without personally asking a Fox customer service rep each time they want to do so, they'll wake the hell up to all the bullshit big media companies are pulling in DC. I hope this passes and people realize that they've been asleep at the democratic wheel and vote every Senator (D) for Disney, (R) for RIAA out of office.

    Or better yet, we'll realize that we watch too much TV anyway and start reading some damn books again.

    -truth

    --

    I had a steady B+ in my AI class until I failed the Turing test...

    1. Re:Honestly, I hope this passes by cowboy_ein · · Score: 0

      heh reminds me of the Family Guy episode where Peter tries to tape Monday Night Football and as soon as he hits record ABC S.W.A.T. members show up and say:

      ABC: Do you have the express written consent of both ABC and the NFL?

      Peter: Just ABC..

      ABC goes on to destroy his VCR, filling it with bullets....

      ...WELL I THOUGHT IT WAS FUNNY

    2. Re:Honestly, I hope this passes by maximilln · · Score: 3, Insightful

      without personally asking a Fox customer service rep each time they want to do so, they'll wake the hell up to all the bullshit big media companies are pulling in DC. I hope this passes and people realize that they've been asleep at the democratic wheel

      People already have this experience in that most commercial ISPs include, in their AUP, clauses which make it grounds for termination to use in-house routers and switches. Everyone does it but, technically speaking, you're not supposed to.

      It seems that in today's world the issue isn't about being a criminal or not. Everyone is, by default, a criminal at any given time. The issue is which people are more likely to be targeted as victims of a law enforcement system gone haywire.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    3. Re:Honestly, I hope this passes by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      You know what the sad part is?

      They'll take all these copyrights and apply them to ebooks, too, so that everyone has to have a yearly subscription to read them.

      Check out "The Right to Read" by Richard Stallman...
      http://rds.yahoo.com/S=2766679/K=the+ right+to+read /v=2/SID=w/l=WS1/R=1/H=0/SHE=0/*-http://www.gnu.or g/philosophy/right-to-read.html

      and also this Slashdot article:
      http://slashdot.org/yro/00/08/28/1158221 .shtml

      Ick.

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    4. Re:Honestly, I hope this passes by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1
      People already have this experience in that most commercial ISPs include, in their AUP, clauses which make it grounds for termination to use in-house routers and switches.

      By most commercial ISPs, you mean most cable ISPs.

    5. Re:Honestly, I hope this passes by NuclearDog · · Score: 0

      "It seems that in today's world the issue isn't about being a criminal or not. Everyone is, by default, a criminal at any given time."

      That, sir, is exactly why the current system is broken.

      --
      This statement is forty-five characters long.
  13. scrapping the Betamax decision by Threni · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > she proposed scrapping the Betamax decision, which makes it legal to timeshift
    > TV shows with a VCR. Analysis here."

    Perhaps you can write to your politicos, suggesting that a law which would have made every single VCR owner a criminal isn't really a very good idea.

  14. DMCA Deja Vu by KrisHolland · · Score: 1

    Time to speak up now before it becomes law, don't you wish you could go back in time and speak up before the DMCA was passed?

    Also elections are being held soon, vote anyone out who supports this bill.

    1. Re:DMCA Deja Vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only problem with that is some of our senators aren't up for re-election this time. One of mine, Debbie Stabenow (D, Mi), has expressed her support for this, and sadly isn't up for re-election until 2006.

  15. INDUCE Act apparently means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Idiots Now Demanding Useless Computer Entertainment Act

    1. Re:INDUCE Act apparently means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no...

      It really stands for:

      Idiots Now Demanding Unfair Copyright Extensions.

    2. Re:INDUCE Act apparently means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiots Now Demanding Unfair Copyright Extensions.

      I actually like that better, and I'm the first anonymous coward :) Good job.

  16. Induce, eh? by iamdrscience · · Score: 1

    After reading a description of the bill, vomitting did not need to be induced, it came naturally to me.

  17. I no longer care by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My government officials are hell bent on making me a criminal then so be it.

    Every direction I turn I see something that I do in my daily life that uses technology to make things more fun or convienient are put up as "evil" and neede to be made illegal. I give up, I'll be happy to live in the underground as a criminal. These ultra rich senators and represenatives have no clue as to what the real world is and do not give a rat's ass about one single citizen.

    unless a mobilization of the american public to scream loud and clear to these out-of-touch fools in the government our desires nothing will change and everyting will get worse.

    I strongly suggest that every technically adept person learn how to do things secretly and quietly. Making sure their technology is hidden from the police because what you do today will become illegal and more than likely have a harsher punishment than cold-blooded murder.

    I laugh when people sell things like this to conceal what they are carrying. But it looks like it will be required in the future to listen to music or carry anything technological that is not "approved".

    certianly makes you disgusted. men like Senator Hatch in congress are like people stopping to piss on the constitution... they are an embarassment and abomination to what america was.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:I no longer care by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Every direction I turn I see something that I do in my daily life that uses technology to make things more fun or convienient are put up as "evil" and neede to be made illegal.

      Such as?

      P2P isn't any more convenient than the half-dozen music stores that already exist. It's a halfway convenient source for movies and television--but the former you have extant mail-order services, and for the latter you can just build a box and record the darn shows yourself.

      Name me ONE thing you do that has been made "illegal" that isn't a dangerous act or an infringement upon someone else's rights.

      Congress isn't calling P2P "evil." They're calling it "wrong." Or, if you rather, "against the law of the land."

      There are P2P schemes that don't "induce" copyright infringement, by making the distributor postiively identified or embeding identification in the file.

      The Constitution was a document based on personal liberty and responsibility. How does enforcing the law of the land infringe on either of those?

    2. Re:I no longer care by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      100% agree.

      I work on a university campus, oddly, in Hatch's state, and I got a call from a guy in the Humanities dept., who does a lot of foreign language media production, and he wanted to know if it was possible to convert DVD video into QuickTime. The DVD in question was produced in-house.

      I told him that there are tool available, but that me telling him where he could get them, and how to use them would be illegal. He wanted to know what I was talking about, so I let him know about the DMCA.

      Guess what... He didn't care. He didn't care about the law - he was willing to break it - and he didn't care that the guy who was behind it was his senator. Meanwhile, I've sent three letters in the last two years to Hatch about this stuff.

      We are reaching HUGE levels of apathy here. I don't think it matters how loudly we yell. Joe Sixpack just doesn't care.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    3. Re:I no longer care by Wooo · · Score: 1

      What about when I want to watch DVDs on my linux box? Currently I do this using mplayer but since mplayer uses DeCSS to decrypt the DVD I am in violation of the DMCA...

      --

      When life gives you lemons, you squeeze the lemon juice into your enemies eyes and steal his apples.
    4. Re:I no longer care by maximilln · · Score: 1

      We are reaching HUGE levels of apathy here. I don't think it matters how loudly we yell. Joe Sixpack just doesn't care

      There are 100 people in society.
      2 people are brilliant.
      20 people are greedy.
      10 people are opposed.
      20 people are gullible.
      48 people don't care.

      5 of the greedy people beat up the 2 brilliant people to keep them quiet.
      5 of the greedy people convince the 20 who are gullible.
      20 gullible people clamor and whine enough that the 48 people who don't care muffle the 10 people who are opposed just to get the 20 to shut up.

      The only people voting are the 20 gullible people.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    5. Re:I no longer care by Starji · · Score: 1

      Name me ONE thing you do that has been made "illegal" that isn't a dangerous act or an infringement upon someone else's rights.

      Watching a fscking DVD with mplayer or xine (made illegal thanks to DMCA).

    6. Re:I no longer care by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1

      P2P isn't any more convenient than the half-dozen music stores that already exist. It's a halfway convenient source for movies and television--but the former you have extant mail-order services, and for the latter you can just build a box and record the darn shows yourself.

      Yeah, and the postal system isn't any more convenient than a telephone or an e-mail.

      Let's outlaw paper, envelopes, pencils & ink pens. Because, you never know, those damn citizens MIGHT be copying song lyrics and guitar tablature and sending them through the mail in absolute secrecy thereby escaping detection. But, we could tap all the telephones and monitor all the e-mail to catch those thieving pirates!

    7. Re:I no longer care by Tony · · Score: 1

      The Constitution was a document based on personal liberty and responsibility. How does enforcing the law of the land infringe on either of those?


      Uhm... when the laws favor corporate autocracy over personal liberty?

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    8. Re:I no longer care by runderwo · · Score: 1
      P2P isn't any more convenient than the half-dozen music stores that already exist. It's a halfway convenient source for movies and television--but the former you have extant mail-order services, and for the latter you can just build a box and record the darn shows yourself.
      It's very convenient for sharing documents, legal media, free software, etc. Should such a medium be outlawed because pirates like to use it too? Shall we also outlaw FTP, or TCP/IP?

    9. Re:I no longer care by rworne · · Score: 1

      What's funny is that this in-house DVD was most likely created and recorded without region encoding or CSS - it's far more cost-effective to produce these things on "consumer" DVD recorders and DVD recordable media which cannot utilize CSS. In that case, there would be no DMCA violation because there's no CSS to circumvent. Since the video was produced by the department asking you for the copying information, there's no infringement issue either.

      If they wanted to ask about extracting a few minutes of video from a Region-2 DVD to include in an in-house production on Japanese culture, then you have a valid point.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    10. Re:I no longer care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      One can be prevented from buying third party ink cartridges.


      Besides, why do we need this legislation if the act of copying is already illegal in some cases?

      Blame the infringer, not the tool. But when judgement day comes, the punishment should fit the crime ($150,000 per incident is rediculous).

    11. Re:I no longer care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one seems to realize that the common mans apathy is what is going to be the *AA's demise. They are going to pump more and more money into stopping the sharing and more and more people are going to be copying, whatever method of distribution that is the easiest for the consumers to get their consumables is what is going to win. Whether it is illeagle or not.

    12. Re:I no longer care by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      True, but because the tools they would use for this purpose have the ability to DeCSS, it is illegal for me to "link" to them.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    13. Re:I no longer care by gcaseye6677 · · Score: 1

      What people don't care about is the fact that it is illegal to copy stuff. Make it impossible to copy stuff, and people will start caring. Will anyone buy a DVD recorder if the only thing it can record is MPAA sanctioned material? I highly doubt it. Most people don't know or care about the technical and legal details concerning recording equipment, but they do care when that new DVD recorder that they paid a lot of money for is basically useless. And when the public is truly outraged about something, that will have more power over congressmen than campaign contributions (see National do-not-call list).

    14. Re:I no longer care by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      I also have, on very good authority, that the DMCA only covers encryption for copy protection. Region coding is neither encryption, nor for copy protection. So, working around it does not violate the DMCA.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    15. Re:I no longer care by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      Very true.

      When I was an undergrad, a new administration decided to shut down an important campus road to non-faculty drivers. The students raised a ruckus, but, when I came back to do a PhD, none of the current students knew the road had ever been opened to students.

      The same thing happened when they doubled parking fees.

      If the **AA can slowly choke rights, or the implimentations of these restrictions, and bundle them with "improvements" or "new feature" like digital or HD broadcasts, there will be those of us who scream about it, but, in the end, our voices will be silenced (one way or another) and no one will care.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    16. Re:I no longer care by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      What about when I want to watch DVDs on my linux box?

      Buy a licensed DVD decoder, or write one yourself. The DMCA doesn't outlaw someone writing their own--it outlaws telling someone else to do it or selling one that does it.

    17. Re:I no longer care by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Watching a fscking DVD with mplayer or xine (made illegal thanks to DMCA).

      "infringement upon someone else's rights."

    18. Re:I no longer care by Starji · · Score: 1

      how is watching a DVD I own an infringement on other people's rights?

    19. Re:I no longer care by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1

      My government officials are hell bent on making me a criminal then so be it.

      Heh heh. I renounced living within the bounds of the law YEARS ago. How can a rational mind do otherwise? Consider:

      In Oklahoma, it is illegal for a woman to style her own hair without being licensed by the state.

      In Massachusetts it is illegal to go to bed without first having a full bath.

      I was going to mention the sodomy laws (some of which I have broken), only to discover (just now) that they have (finally) been declared unconstitutional. Well, maybe common sense hasn't been completely abandoned after all. Nevertheless, for many a year, those worthless laws were undoubtedly broken by millions.

      The point of my post is this: Ridiculous laws like these only serve to erode respect for the law in general. Once you break an unfair law and justify the act because of its unfairness, it is a little easier to break another, and another, and another.

    20. Re:I no longer care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does that not conflict with free speech?

    21. Re:I no longer care by aralin · · Score: 1
      Well, I think you are onto something, but not quite. The problem with law is that the government really doesn't want to make me feel that whatever I do, I will break the law and the only thing that matters is if they find out or not.

      The simple fact is that law enforcement, jails and stuff do not work as correction for problem, they only work as deterent. They are designed to make you not want to break the law because the consequences. But if the law is impossible not to break, then their function as deterent is nill, since no matter what you do, its not possible for you to live in a way as not to break the law.

      Now if a large enough segment of population (lets say 1%) decides that they are not detered anymore, they might also decide to only judge the chance they get caught in their actions and not the fact that what you are doing in unlawfull.

      Corporations are already in this state and we can all see its not pretty. They do whatever they want and just count the cost of lawsuits and settlements into the business costs. Just imagine the same lawlessness and anarchy when people decide the same thing. Ultimately, there is just not enough law enforcement agents to handle it and the whole system breaks down.

      --
      If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
    22. Re:I no longer care by Danse · · Score: 1

      Buy a licensed DVD decoder, or write one yourself. The DMCA doesn't outlaw someone writing their own--it outlaws telling someone else to do it or selling one that does it.

      Brilliant. So in order to use a DVD that we legitimately bought with our Linux system we must all become skilled programmers and write our own software, or pay whomever the industry decides to grant a license to, which may be nobody as the case was with Linux for the longest time, which also enables monopolistic pricing since there may be only one licensed vendor offering a solution. You're a fucking genius.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    23. Re:I no longer care by sindarin2001 · · Score: 1

      And how is being unable to play a legally, store-bought, "license" (as the MPAA likes to refer to that as, "infringement upon someone else's rights." Or how about INFRINGING UPON MY RIGHT to backup said movie to a different medium so that I don't scratch the hell out of the original? Here's a novel idea, how about the gov't tries to protect the rights of its citizens first and THEN protects the rights of its corporations. Of course most citizens can't pay as much to the politicians as many coporations.

    24. Re:I no longer care by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Huh?

      The problem with law is that the government really doesn't want to make me feel that whatever I do, I will break the law and the only thing that matters is if they find out or not.

      Okay. Say you're right.

      But if the law is impossible not to break, then their function as deterent is nill, since no matter what you do, its not possible for you to live in a way as not to break the law.

      People have lived to learn in the grey area of balancing actions with consequences. As people become more wealthy they are able to budget more money for the consequences. We will never reach this theoretical point of enlightenment as a society. The deterrent still functions.

      Ultimately, there is just not enough law enforcement agents to handle it and the whole system breaks down.

      Here, corporations prove that they are well aware that they are always guilty of something. They have reached the point of enlightenment where they budget enough money to have a staff of attorneys deal with the consequences of "finding out".

      In a system of corporate government graft this is a perfect regimen. Everything is illegal, all the time, and the wealthy corporations can afford to pay for the legal defense. The average citizen is kept on the edge of their seat because there's no way they can afford the legal defense.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    25. Re:I no longer care by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

      I don't know about that guy but I have smoked marijuana and Bernie S was in deep legal trouble for the possession of a small rock that could have possibly been used to commit telecommunications fraud, if it were put into a circuit and used on said telecommunications system.

      2600 printed a cover awhile back of an american law prohibiting the distribution of blueprints or instructions of certain things during wartime. Oh here it is.

      Doesn't Congress *make* the laws of the land, and therefor can say that anything is against the laws of the land in virtue of their ability to create new laws for whatever they say to fall under?
      I'm Canadian, and may not have a full understanding of the american legal system, but there appear to have been quite a few laws in the past 20 years or so that have made regular, harmless, day-to-day things illegal, sometimes possibly for the effect that they will serve as a catchall for people committing crimes not yet on the books.

      "If you keep treating these kids like terrorists and criminals, sooner or later they are going to start acting like them"-Emmanuel Goldstein.

      --
      GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    26. Re:I no longer care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the real solution is to realize that the "matrixicator of the towers XIV episode 2 starring you-know-who and that other girl" movie sucks.

    27. Re:I no longer care by rworne · · Score: 1

      That's likely true. But commercial DVDs usually contain both.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    28. Re:I no longer care by rworne · · Score: 1

      The tools might, but the DVD burner and media likely cannot. If the DVD itself does not have CSS, then they are in the clear.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    29. Re:I no longer care by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      I'm Canadian, and may not have a full understanding of the american legal system, but there appear to have been quite a few laws in the past 20 years or so that have made regular, harmless, day-to-day things illegal, sometimes possibly for the effect that they will serve as a catchall for people committing crimes not yet on the books.

      Kindly name one.

      Your first example, Pot, is a substance deemed to be ruinous enough to a person's health so as to have no redeeming value. It's not entirely an untrue statement, although not as clear cut as, say, heroin.

      Your second example, Bernie S., was charged with having various things "knowingly and with intent to defraud", intending "to obtain unauthorized use of telecommunication services through the use of public telephones."

      If he can convince the judge and/or the jury that he had no intent to defraud the telephone system, he's fine. If not--he's breaking a law designed to protect the rights of everyone. (Or would you rather have the alternate method of stoping phone phreaking--constant monitoring and oversight of all telecommunications?)

      Your third example, an uncited law, is a bold-faced extension of the President's war-power. A rather overzealous one that won't stand up to constituional muster, but one that's worded broadly enough to catch terrorists plotting to blow something up. As far as meeting my requirement, it's a damn good one--because, like the PATRIOT act or the DMCA, it takes a descent idea and goes way too far.

      The fact is that it's impossible to convict someone of a law that isn't on the books. And most of the "bad law" that IS on the books is either a heck of a lot older than twenty years, or is perfectly reasonable law that is worded horribly.

    30. Re:I no longer care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What people don't care about is the fact that it is illegal to copy stuff.

      ok let's try this again...

      IT IS NOT!

      it is illegal to distribute copies of a work without the permission of the author or copyright holder.

      If I want to pay to hav 90,000.000 copies of Bill clintons book made for my personal use then i am completely legal to do so.

      please learn about the laws.

  18. Time to send a message . . . by harley_frog · · Score: 5, Informative

    To your Senators.

    --
    It's all fun and games until someone loses the key to the handcuffs.
    1. Re:Time to send a message . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that was really easy. Click the link, fill in your info and hit send.

      Do it!

    2. Re:Time to send a message . . . by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      If you write Hatch, be sure to quote a little Mormon scripture:

      ---
      D&C 121:39
      We have learned by sad experience that it is the nature and disposition of almost all men, as soon as they get a little authority, as they suppose, they will immediately begin to exercise unrighteous dominion.
      ---

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    3. Re:Time to send a message . . . by eakerin · · Score: 1

      I've done this a few times before, but never found it as much fun as this time.

      I live in Michigan, and one of our Senators is Co-sponsoring the bill. I wonder what the reply letter will say...

  19. The "reasonable person" standard. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Quoting the Act itself:

    In this subsection, the term `intentionally induces' means intentionally aids, abets, induces, or procures, and intent may be shown by acts from which a reasonable person would find intent to induce infringement based upon all relevant information about such acts then reasonably available to the actor, including whether the activity relies on infringement for its commercial viability.

    (Italics mine)

    The problem here is that "reasonable people" are rarely reasonable.

    1. Re:The "reasonable person" standard. by kfg · · Score: 1

      The problem here is that "reasonable people" are rarely reasonable.

      Particularly those people bearing the job title "prosecutor."

      KFG

    2. Re:The "reasonable person" standard. by bloggins02 · · Score: 1

      The other problem (and imho the main problem with this bill) is that the term reasonable person is extremely subjective. I believe this part of the bill is what will stifle innovation.

      When you have subjective content in a bill, it makes it that much easier for people to "sue first, think later." The reasoning is that one might convince a judge that a reasonable person would find intent to induce infringement for a particular device or technology.

      Now imagine you are a small company (or a cautious large company), maybe you will look at this act and decide not to release that cool toy or piece of software that you otherwise would because you are almost certain that someone, somewhere will sue you for inducing copyright infringement.

      As I read these testimonials, proponents of the bill seem to be saying "oh don't worry, innovation will continue because courts can look at the cases individually." Well, I know this is news to the hot air baloons in Washington, but it's expensive and time-consuming to be dragged to court. No one wants it to happen, even if they are sure they will win.

      So what will most smaller and more cautious companies likely do when forced between innovation and legal fees? What do you think?

  20. This is a DUPE from ONLY yesterday. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a DUPE from ONLY yesterday.

  21. Write to your senators... No, Seriously. by c0dedude · · Score: 1

    Senators record the number of calls and letters they get on an issue. In most offices, a call carries the same weight as a letter. If enough people call their senator's office, the Senators will shape policy to what their constituents want.

    --
    Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
  22. I guess we're all thinking: NOT AGAIN! by Zeroth_darkos · · Score: 1

    Another law taking away my freedom :(

  23. Music and Video boycott? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about if this thing passes we get organized and boycott the purchase of music and video?

    I'm sure many of us have already been doing this for the last year or two, but I'm talking about going outside your local Music/Video store and protesting, and harassing customers that buy DVDs and CDs.

  24. The sky is falling by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 0

    Jesus christ, people. Go read the act itself. It is only about 8 sentences or so. It wouldn't outlaw iPods or MP3 players or VCRs or PVRs. All it seems to do is make it so that if you sell something with the intent that it be used for copyright infringement, you can't use the fact that it is also possible to use it in a non-infringing way as a defense. Take iPods. Apple sells them so you can listen to iTMS music, and music that you rip from CDs you buy, and audiobooks you buy from Audible.com. So, Apple is perfectly safe.

    1. Re:The sky is falling by ihaddsl · · Score: 1

      Yes but it wouldn't be slashdot without a serious overreaction and misreading of a proposed bill now would it

    2. Re:The sky is falling by 511pf · · Score: 1

      Who says what Apple's intent was in making the iPod? The fact is that it CAN be used as an infringing device and this law would make its non-infringing uses irrelevant, ergo - the iPod is illegal.

    3. Re:The sky is falling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ergo

      You like that word, don't you? You think you are swift, and that it lends your tripe credibility. But your argument is, of course, garbage.

    4. Re:The sky is falling by maximilln · · Score: 2, Insightful

      if you sell something with the intent

      So this is blatant evidence of political graft with wealthy individuals? Apple obviously intends for its media players to only be used for legal purposes. Mike Entrepeneur, who doesn't contribute strongly to political campaigns, obviously intends for his media players to be used to distribute pirated works.

      Proprietary software vendors who produce media playback software obviously intend for their software to only be used to play properly licensed material. Open source media players are obviously intended to play primarily pirated material.

      A proprietary software vendor who writes a network filesystem obviously intends for only properly licensed material to be exchanged. Open source distributed network filesystems are obviously intended to violate copyright rules.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    5. Re:The sky is falling by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1
      The fact is that it CAN be used as an infringing device and this law would make its non-infringing uses irrelevant, ergo - the iPod is illegal

      No it wouldn't. Go read the bill.

    6. Re:The sky is falling by argent · · Score: 1

      And no prosecutor, corporate attorney, judge, or jury would ever decide that some bloke had really intended to induce piracy when he was just developing a new gadget or program that made it easier to copy stuff. I mean, when VCRs came out was it really obvious that they weren't intended to promote copyright violations? Before the Betamax decision, it wasn't clear that what they were intended to be used for was legal, and if this law had existed then VCRs *would* have been assumed to infringe. Couldn't happen today? not to VCRs, probably, because they're well established. It'd sure as hell kill the next VCR or iPod.

      Apple's safe because iPods are already out there, and because they're a big company with a bunch of lawyers on staff, a good relationship with the music industry, and a decent (if not Microsoftian) cash reserve. Not because MP3 players are obviously not infringing.

    7. Re:The sky is falling by JJ22 · · Score: 1

      Apple is perfectly safe, as long as they don't try a "Rip. Mix. Burn." advertising campaign again. Apply this to the auto industry, you wouldn't be able to show cars doing over 65 to sell them. Due in part to the brevity of the bill, it seems to be overbroad...

    8. Re:The sky is falling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love it. A poster makes a response saying "Get over it slashdotters, this isn't as big a deal as you think".

      Then comes the flames, and of course, the overrated mod.

      Slashdot has too many young, immature, paranoid people who have no clue how the real world works. When someone tries to explain what's really going on, he's flamed and modded into oblivion.

    9. Re:The sky is falling by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And no prosecutor, corporate attorney, judge, or jury would ever decide that some bloke had really intended to induce piracy when he was just developing a new gadget or program that made it easier to copy stuff. I mean, when VCRs came out was it really obvious that they weren't intended to promote copyright violations?

      We have a legal system that has, for over 200 years, been determining just this kind of thing. I see no reason to believe that it will suddenly completely break down if asked to determine intent in this situation.

    10. Re:The sky is falling by argent · · Score: 1

      The US legal system has repeatedly and routinely been abused in exactly the way I'm suggesting, not only producing deep personal tragedies for people caught in the wheels, but derailing or delaying the introduction of new technologies and new features of existing technology. I don't see how anyone could look at how things like the DMCA and RICO have been abused and conclude that INDUCE would be anything less than a blank check for barratrous attorneys to go out on fishing expeditions.

  25. Amtrak analogy? by nucal · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Aside from the government connection - I fail to see how the Induce act is anything similar. The US Government actually runs Amtrak as a quasi-independent business (much the way the US Postal Service is run). The Induce act is meant to put a set of regulations in place, not run record companies.

    What I find interesting is that the current administration is perfectly happy to regulate the behavior of regular citizens, while allowing unregulated and irresponsible corporate behavior ...

    1. Re:Amtrak analogy? by maximilln · · Score: 1

      The US Government actually runs Amtrak as a quasi-independent business (much the way the US Postal Service is run). The Induce act is meant to put a set of regulations in place, not run record companies.

      That's where you miss the connection. The government doesn't run Amtrak. The people with controlling money interests of Amtrak run the portions of the government which have any influence on any aspect of Amtrak's business.

      On the entertainment media and software side: The government doesn't legislate rules for media and software. The people with controlling money interests in the media entertainment and software industries run the portions of the government which have any influence on any aspect of entertainment media and software.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    2. Re:Amtrak analogy? by ihaddsl · · Score: 1

      The newsletter writer obviously has a grudge against Amtrak.

    3. Re:Amtrak analogy? by ihaddsl · · Score: 1

      Name one corporate lobbyist that works to promote Amtrak Oh wait what's that? There are none Amtrak is not supported by influence by business, in fact it's barely supported at all. The only reason it's still alive is that there are some that understand that alternative transportation solutions are a good thing and keep it funded just enough to allow it to limp along and yes Amtrak is an important part of the nations transportation system NorthEast of the US, and to a lesser extent in California/Chicago

    4. Re:Amtrak analogy? by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Name one corporate lobbyist that works to promote Amtrak

      I'll be looking forward to the next issue of "jhaddsel's definitive list of every lobbyist in the USA and a complete map of all politically related social networks".

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  26. Proportional Representation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try to get proportional representation up so everyone has a voice.

    1. Re:Proportional Representation by antarctican · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Try to get proportional representation up so everyone has a voice.

      How the hell do you do PR on a presidential election? Each candidate gets a percentage of the Whitehouse?

      For the presidential election two changes would improve the system. First, get rid of the electoral college, make it pure nation wide numbers. And second, single transferable vote, instant runoff voting, whichever name you might call it - that would take away the "a vote for Nader is a vote for Bush" argument. You could vote for Nader, but at the same time vote for Kerry. And maybe once people catch on a bit more, Nader might even win! Yay for America! :)

    2. Re:Proportional Representation by wfeick · · Score: 1

      Instant runoff voting would be a huge step forward. I'd love to see that.

      The other thing I'd like to see, is the ability to vote for different people to represent me on different subjects since, for example, I tend to side with Republicans on gun control issues but with Democrats on abortion and foreign policy. Imagine being able to vote for person A to represent you on education, person B on the military, person C on foreign affairs, person D on budgets, ...

      To be clear, I'm talking about a theoretical goal here, Since I know of no way to make it actually work in the real world. There are obvious problems with this, such as the fact that whoever controls the money controls everything.

    3. Re:Proportional Representation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Sorry, but I think that is a horrible idea. The founding fathers did too, and some of them were pretty smart guys. The electorial college isn't great, but there is a reason it was chosen over pure nation wide numbers. In those cases, the politicians would only bother to campaign in (and later cater to) major population centers. The big cities. Farmers and anyone else who lived in rural areas would be pretty much screwed. Policians wouldn't bother to campaign in rural areas, wouldn't bother learning about rural problems, and would pass laws the city folks liked, no matter how bad they screwed things up for rural dwellers.

    4. Re:Proportional Representation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      For the presidential election two changes would improve the system. First, get rid of the electoral college, make it pure nation wide numbers.

      -----------

      And just how long do you suppose the rest of the country would take having every decision being made by New York, LA and other large population centers? Take away the electoral college and you take away the only thing keeping your over-populated metropolises fed. You try telling a Texan that all decisions henceforth will be made by Californians and New Yorkers, and you'll get a bullet in the head. Seriously, the electoral college is the ONLY thing that has prevented civil war in this country as long as it has.

    5. Re:Proportional Representation by antarctican · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The other thing I'd like to see, is the ability to vote for different people to represent me on different subjects since, for example, I tend to side with Republicans on gun control issues but with Democrats on abortion and foreign policy. Imagine being able to vote for person A to represent you on education, person B on the military, person C on foreign affairs, person D on budgets, ...

      That is exactly what my party here in BC is pushing for, not having to take the "package deal" when it comes to policies. In addition to this, stoping the "bait and switch" we see with election platforms so often.

      Give the people a direct voice on the issues. Our current system was designed from the days when you didn't know what was happening in the town on the other side of the mountain, let alone the other side of the country. When towns became the size where you couldn't gather everyone in the town square to vote on an issue. So we had to send a representative to a central location to speak for us.

      Technology is changing this, we (at least up here) have a highly educated population, computers are cheap, networking is cheap. We can create a system where to get to pick the policies you want, a la carte as we've heard about in the cable debate down south. If I want fiscal conservatism, why should I have to vote for the party that also would create socially conservative laws that limit freedoms?

      A better way is possible. Actually, check out Liquid Democracy, it's a system that has really gotten my attention as a possible alternative.

      (and I know all the paranoid slashdotters are going to rag on me about how computers can be compromised, electronic voting can't be trusted, yadda yadda.... it can if done correctly, we trust bank machine networks...)

    6. Re:Proportional Representation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Sorry, but I think that is a horrible idea. The founding fathers did too, and some of them were pretty smart guys."

      Actually, the EC was slapped together as a compromise between the more populous states and less populous states. The more populous states wanted "one (white, male, landowning) person, one vote", while the less populous states wanted "one state, one vote". The EC was the only way to get all 13 colonies to sign onto the constitution. They didn't do it because they thought that direct elections were a horrible idea. Well, at least, the founding fathers from more populous states didn't think that it was a horrible idea.

    7. Re:Proportional Representation by MQBS · · Score: 1

      Abolish one single presidency and instate a council of several leaders. We could call it a 'cabinet'. Give each of the cabinet members a say over one particular part of policy, say one for the economy, one for foreign relations, one for internal politics, one for offense and one for defense, just as some examples. End the use of political parties by moving from a running for election which is very costly ($186 million so far and counting) compared to standing for election, the system I believe is used is a lot of parlimenatry governments.

      In standing for election, the campaigning time is reduced from the US time of four years for the president, six for a senator, and two for a representative (for those outside the US, that's their entire term) to only one or two months before the election. Instead of 'running' for election, going from place to place, the candiates 'stand' by publishing their position papers in newspapers. There is a rebuttal published from other parties. The candidate then responds to the rebuttals. No more fearmongering, years of campaigning, and vauge promises. Everything that the candidate stands for is in black and white. Everything that all candidates say is picked apart by the others. Those who don't care to read about what's going on in their government or the positions of various candidates don't have the chance to be persuaded by flashy PR campaigns and probably just don't vote. Overnight, you eliminate the uninformed voter. Suddenly small candidates can run without hundreds of millions of dollars in donations. Ultimately, although not immediately, parties can become unnecessary. Money looses it's importance in politics. The system works because it utilizes, instead of ignores, people's appetite for power. If they want to remain in power, they have only one duty to do faithfully (serve only the people for only the one task that they have been elected to do), instead of many different roles, as the presiednt does now, compounded by many different influences.

      It has some obvious gaps, such as figuring out how to narrow down the number of candidates for each particular cabinet post without relying on parties, although a gradual phase out over time might be able to accomplish that, if there was a strict, unalterable timeline.

      Maybe I should write a pamphlet or something?

      --
      The dream reveals the reality which conception lags behind. That is the horror of life- the terror of art. -Franz Kafka
    8. Re:Proportional Representation by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but in a few ways I agree with the electoral college, the fact is, this is a leveler for the interests of smaller states, since most of the country's population is in 5 states... If it were strictly population based, it would limit the interests of states like Wyoming, or Ohio.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
  27. mods!! mod that post up, please by Travoltus · · Score: 1

    (D) for Disney and (R) for RIAA has gotta be worth at least 2 extras right there :)

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  28. wonder how he'd feel .... by scud80 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    about holding weapons manufacturers liable for deaths using their products. he should have his brain scanned for malware.

    1. Re:wonder how he'd feel .... by DaHat · · Score: 1

      You mean like suing the tobacco companies? What about making gun being found liable for some crimes? Shame they've already happened!

    2. Re:wonder how he'd feel .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with holding weapons manufacturers liable for deaths inflicted by their products is it would be like holding auto manufacturers liable for deaths inflicted by their products. Auto makers shouldn't be held responsible for deaths caused by accidents, or for those caused by someone who drinks and drives, or even for those caused by someone who intentionally runs someone down. Auto makers should be held responsible if due to a design flaw or manufacturing defect their products suddenly explode and kill the occupants or something like that of course. By the same token gun makers should be held liable if their products, due to a design flaw or manufacturing defect suddenly explode and kill the shooter, but they should not be held liable for someone using their product to kill someone whether it be accidental, under the influence of drugs/alcohol or intentionally. Even though the purpose of a firearm is (arguably at least one purpose) to kill, as long as it is legal to produce a product that can kill, there should be no liability for that usage in and of itself. The fact that automobiles are not designed intentionally to be used to kill doesn't change the fact that they are incredibly effective killing machines and more people die as a result of automobiles than firearms by a huge margin. Or for a comparison to another product that is designed to be (at least one purpose) to kill would be knives. I don't believe that knife makers should be held liable for illegal use of their products. They should only be liable if a user, through a design flaw or manufacturing defect kills or injures themselves.

      By the same token, I don't think manufacturers of TiVo or iPod like devices or CD/DVD writers should be liable if people use their products for copyright infringement. These types of products are usable for plenty of legal purposes, and the user is responsible for any illegal use, regardless of how easy it may be to do so. Unless the manufacturer is advertising 'use our DVD writer to copy movies and sell them to your friends' or something like that, I can't see how they are 'inducing' anyone.

  29. How soon before we can get pictures ... by burgburgburg · · Score: 1
    of MaryBeth Peters without the human-like shell she uses in her mission of deception, revealing her boundlessly evil true form?

    I recognize that it might scar the young and faint of heart, but staring into the heart of darkness is necessary sometimes.

    Or does that seem a bit over the top? I can never tell.

  30. Human Memory Soon to Be Banned by lofi-rev · · Score: 3, Funny

    Recollection becomes an "unauthorized derivative work", talking becomes "piracy." Forget Fahrenheit 9/11, the real danger is Fahrenheit 451.

    1. Re:Human Memory Soon to Be Banned by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      Mods, why is the parent funny? It's sadly true. Even if memory isn't banned, copying or quoting to make an article will be illegal.

      --
      Not a sentence!
  31. The "reasonable person" standard. by anonymous+cowherd+(m · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Quoting the Act itself:

    In this subsection, the term `intentionally induces' means intentionally aids, abets, induces, or procures, and intent may be shown by acts from which a reasonable person would find intent to induce infringement based upon all relevant information about such acts then reasonably available to the actor, including whether the activity relies on infringement for its commercial viability.

    (Italics mine)

    The problem here is that "reasonable people" are rarely reasonable.

    Doh, didn't mean to post this as AC.

    --
    http://neokosmos.blogsome.com
  32. PLEASE DONE PASS THE BILL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I and 500 of my closest friends have Tivo style television watching entrenched in our way of doing things that if it were taken away, we'd probably just stop watching it altogether.NOOO! 499 more trolls! Just what we don't need!

  33. Google Search: Orrin Hatch insane by mikeophile · · Score: 4, Funny

    Results 1 - 10 of about 2,850 for Orrin Hatch insane. (0.13 seconds)

    1. Re:Google Search: Orrin Hatch insane by OO7david · · Score: 1

      And on the otherside:

      Results 1 - 10 of about 662 for Orrin Hatch sane. (0.07 seconds)

  34. Re:Dont bother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Senators dont read the letters they get. An intern glances at them, jots down your stance on the issue.

    Then an letter is automatically generated, a signature machine fakes the senator's sig, and a token letter is mailed off to you.

    Writing your senator is useless.

  35. Badnarik is not right-wing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Badnarik is libertarian, not right-wing. Right-wingers believe in a strong government. Libertarians, in contrast, argue for much smaller and weaker government.

  36. Re:TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only as much as our founding fathers were. I find it intereting that so many would see us heading down the path that we are going rather than trying to stop the insanity that is both the democrats and the republicans. The dems seem to want grab my right to own a gun, and handle a business the way that I see fit, while the Republicans are more than happy to grab all the other rights from me while allowing big business (not small business) to trample me.

  37. The Eldred decision and fair use... by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

    Most people (correctly) criticized the US Supreme Court's Eldred decision because it essentially held that "limited time" could mean forever.

    Beyond that mistake, the Court went further and stated throughout the opinion the fair use rights citizens have are the societal benefits mandated by the Constitution. In other words, the Court strengthened its support for fair use rights.

    However, if the public domain is taken away. And if fair use rights are legislated away, then exactly where is the Constitutionally mandate benefits for citizens?! Does anyone even care about the Constitution other than for internet porn and gun rights?!

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    1. Re:The Eldred decision and fair use... by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Since when did anyone care about gun rights? Even the ACLU ignore #2.

  38. Don't you just feel powerless? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Don't you just feel powerless when lawmakers push shit like this through? You write letters and get some form letter thank-you back from some congressman flunky. Democracy in action.

  39. filesharing == speeding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Hatch has blown way out of proportion the size of the filesharing "problem". I think it is useful to push the analogy that filesharing is like speeding. Just because 60 million americans speed doesn't mean it's a huge problem that needs some heavy-handed legislation to fix. It makes sense to ignore minor speeding and to put the drunk driver who's going 100mph in jail. Similarly, there's no evidence that casual filesharing hurts anyone, so there's no real need to do anything about it. The effort should be put into fighting people who manufacture and sell copyrighted materials for profit. For some reason (*cough* lobbyists, contributors), Hatch sees every filesharer as some maniac drunk driver.

  40. Does this mean no more VHS? by lofi-rev · · Score: 1

    Do we get to ditch VHS and get consumer betamax back?

    1. Re:Does this mean no more VHS? by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      No, it means that VHS users get thrown in Conjugal Visit prison, and the Betamax users (what do you do with Betamax other than pirate anyway?) go to Federal Pound Me In The Ass prison.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
  41. Re:TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, it's a *CUTE* little troll! :)

    Hey, that's because even a high-schooler can see the logic of libertarianism. High-schoolers also tend to be more idealistic and more live-and-let-live.

    It's when they grow up that they realize they can't get what they want out of life, so they try to make the government give it to them.

  42. PR is not necessary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Proportional representation does not change things as to who has a "voice" or not. Without it, the fringe kooks get weeded out at the ballot box. With it, the fringe kooks end up in the legislature, but they still get weeded out when it comes time to vote.

    1. Re:PR is not necessary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but the voting is more likely to be along multiple-party, rather than two-party, lines. For example, Libertarians are more likely to vote with Republicans on issues like gun control, but with Democrats on issues like medical marijuana use. This more accurately reflects (or should more accurately reflect) the will of the people.

  43. Re:and whos fault is it? by mikeophile · · Score: 1

    Blah. You are fucking up our rights because you are cheap idiotic theives.

    Hey, I'm not cheap.

  44. Pocket Veto by salahx · · Score: 1

    Then the President can sign or veto. If he vetos, or refuses to act in 10 days (Pocket Veto)....

    Not quite - it a "Pocket Veto" only if, during those 10 days, Congress adjurns. If Congress is still in session after those 10 days, then the law is passed as though he signed it!

  45. Re:I hope is passes(sic) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I know you're joking, but the problem with this is that by the time things have hit rock bottom it may be too late to do anything about it. By the time the "public wakes up," which I don't think they ever will, the RIAA will be the law and people won't be able to fight it.

    As the saying goes, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance. Resisting now saves a lot of ugly work later.

  46. Same here by raygundan · · Score: 1

    I absolutely cannot go back to watching TV on someone else's terms. I've been using a VCR to timeshift for years, and tivo since 2000. If the tivo becomes illegal or has its functionality reduced to a pointless level, I will simply abandon TV. My TV set will become a video-game and DVD display monitor, and I will suddenly have a much higher monthly budget for spending on something besides TV.

    1. Re:Same here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they take away my wife's ability to time-shift her soap opera (Y&R) by TiVo, she may actually be pissed enough to vote for the first time ever... She's never been swayed by any of my arguments as to why she should care about politics before, but that might finally get through to her.

    2. Re:Same here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. I just realized that for the money I spend on the cable subscription, I can go skiing more!

  47. The public think "P2P" == "piracy" by Zeroth_darkos · · Score: 1

    Well how about this: I develop a P2P system and advertise it as a general purpose P2P system, and people use it for spreading copyrighted material. Is the fact, that it is a P2P system, enough evidence that I released the software with the intent that it be used for copyright infringement?
    If this is the case then the law is a _major_ threat to the OSS community.
    I fear the media and public often think "P2P" == "piracy" and this will bias the interpretation of the law.

    1. Re:The public think "P2P" == "piracy" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot, to mention: MP3==Stolen Music; also seems to be popular oppinion.

  48. Flip Flopping is a disease... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    but not the one you think.



    It's funny that a the worst thing a politician can do is "flip flop", i.e. change his or her position on an issue.


    What if, perhaps, said politician realizes that they were wrong before, that the situation is not as simple as they previously thought, that circumstances have changed? In this case, do we not *want* a politician to "flip-flop" and adopt the (corrected) position? Or are we all simpletons?


    I know this is off topic, and I'm not trying to imply that Hatch is justified to be supporting this bill, but the obsession with "flip-flopping" is a pet peeve of mine. Go ahead and mod me down.

    1. Re:Flip Flopping is a disease... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Because most politicians only "flip flop" after being presented with large amounts of money.

  49. with sony by DeusExMalex · · Score: 1

    and with sony claiming that even showing something on the screen is copywrite infringement, we'd better get rid of those pesky computers. also those movable-type printing presses had better go too - after all, their express purpose is to reproduce copywrited material. sticks and mud? gotta solidify the mud & burn down the forests so there aren't any more sticks...

  50. Iraq attacks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yeah because Kerry is going to invade a country that never attacked us"

    Real history. Over a period of several years, and until the retaliation in 2003, Iraq engage in approximately 2000 attacks against US and UK peacekeepers who were patrolling the "no-fly" zones in accordance with the cease-fire. 2000 does not equal "never".

    "...giving massive tax cuts to the rich."

    Very misleading. The rich are a tiny minority of those who received tax cuts under the Bush plan.

    "if Gore had gotten elected (or should I say if Bush hadn't gotten appointed)?"

    You mean appointed by the voters? Bush won the same way his predecessors did: he won votes in enough states to win the electoral college.

    1. Re:Iraq attacks by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1


      Very misleading. The rich are a tiny minority of those who received tax cuts under the Bush plan.

      The rich are a tiny minority to begin with. By giving a $1 tax credit to every person with less than $1M/year income, and a $100,000 tax credit to every person with more than $1M/year income, you do exactly what you just described.

      I'd say that your statement is more misleading than that in the parent of your post.

  51. Don't vote Libertarian by 0x0d0a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And a vote for Kerry won't change anything either.

    Wrong.

    First, Kerry's and Bush's ideals *do* differ. Both Republican and Democrat parties are fairly right-wing when it comes to global comparisons, but claiming that they are identical is ridiculous.

    Second, voters are very unlikely to go from Republican to Libertarian. In general, Libertarians compete with votes mostly with Democrats, and will absolutely not beat the Democrats in the immediate future -- there are not enough Libertarians out there. The best way for Libertarians to get a vote is for Democrats to have a large, secure majority over the Republicans -- at that point, Democrat voters that are dissatisfied with Democrat policies will feel safe voting Libertarian, and Libertarians will begin siphoning off votes, and working their way up to becoming a major third party.

    Third, there is a particularly disagreeable type of person noisily advocating Libertarian voting at this point -- Republicans who do not believe that they can get any centrist voters, and are trying to convince people sitting on the line between Libertarian and Democrat to vote Libertarian, as Libertarian is not a threat to them. The Republican party is already in hot water in two different states for funding and backing Nader to try to weaken the Democrat vote. I am not saying that you are such a person, but there is no way for us to know that this is the case.

    I understand that you want to vote based on pure ideals, however, the voting system is not a mechanism to make philosophical claims. It is a system to place the next set of officials in office. If your vote does nothing, you have simply thrown your vote away. That is not because people are operating badly; it is because the voting system in the United States is not structured in such a way that is conducive to many parties. The real fix would be to move to preferential voting (personally, I'd like to see the electoral college go away at the same point in time) or another voting system that doesn't discriminate as harshly against slightly smaller parties. The problem is that the people in office have little incentive to change the voting system to something that favors the little guy. Again, I think that the best fix for this, if you really believe in Libertarian principles, is to ensure that the Democrat majority is large enough, siphon off enough votes to win smaller elections and begin pressure, using these elected officials, for voting reform. That really needs to be pushed through for a third party to be in place. Once that happens, the Libertarian party has a decent ground to stand on. Yes, that's a lot of work, and it's a way off, but to do otherwise, to imagine that the Libertarian vote is going to beat Bush, is just wishful thinking.

    1. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by sinnfeiner1916 · · Score: 0

      libertarians compeate for votes with dems only 'cause you both both like drugs.

      --
      The More Laws, the less Justice --Marcus Tullius Cicero
    2. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think most libertarians are closer to dems than reps? I'd like to see any basis you have for thinking that. Idealistically, reps are closer to libertarianism in philosophy. Reps at least still wave the flag of smaller government and less taxes, even if they have no such thing in mind.

    3. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by maximilln · · Score: 1

      First, Kerry's and Bush's ideals *do* differ. Both Republican and Democrat parties are fairly right-wing when it comes to global comparisons, but claiming that they are identical is ridiculous

      Please, write speeches for their campaigns. Do not preach to me. The definitive trait is that, if either one of them gets elected, I will pay more to and get less from my government.

      Second, voters are very unlikely to go from Republican to Libertarian

      Voters are unlikely to go to Libertarian at all since the Libertarians and their adversaries have both contributed equally to the common perception that Libertarians are over-the-top. The common voter has no concept of a minimalist government because, by and large, Americans are spoiled, immature, irresponsible fools who are addicted to the concept of having a powerful government that they can someday use to legislate their neighbors dog off of their lawn without ever having to talk to their neighbor.

      Third, there is a particularly disagreeable type of person noisily advocating Libertarian voting at this point

      Let's not forget the self-righteous Democrats who happily spend your money to help their alcoholic cousin or the greedy Republican who happily spends your money to lock-in taxpayer contracts for his brother's company. Not saying you're such a person...

      If your vote does nothing, you have simply thrown your vote away

      No matter who you vote for, the overall % of the GDP which goes into the government budget will increase. Your vote does nothing. It has been wasted.

      Again, I think that the best fix for this, if you really believe in Libertarian principles, is to ensure that the Democrat majority is large enough

      You're going to tell _ME_ how to properly address my own best interests? I'm going to spend the rest of my day laughing. You can please go back to writing campaign speeches.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    4. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by cpeterso · · Score: 1, Insightful


      My pragmatic Libertarian voting philosophy is:

      1. If you live in a swing state, vote for Kerry. A Democratic white house will be deadlocked by the Republican congress. Political deadlock is the least-worst real-world option for liberty-minded folks. Studies of state and federal budgets have shown that a Democratic president/governor with a Republican senate spend the least and a Republican president/governor with a Republican senate spend the MOST!

      2. If you do not live in a swing state, vote for the Libertarian Party candidate. In the 2004 Presidential election, in particular, even the mainstream media have identified the Libertarian Party as a possible Republican spoiler (ala Nader). Elections are won and lost by a tiny 1% sliver of "centrist" swing voters, not a party's "base". Just like Democrats take African Americans' votes for granted, the GOP takes Libertarian votes for granted. We should let the Democrats and the GOP recognize that Libertarian swing votes are up for grabs... for the right price. :)

    5. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "If your vote does nothing, you have simply thrown your vote away."

      My vote is thrown away only if I don't cast one, or if I vote for something I disagree with. Voting for the "safe bet" is cowardice.

    6. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny. The last time I met a republican there was a spliff going around.. though I think he's even more leaned towards beer as a favourite drug.

    7. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by runderwo · · Score: 1
      Yeah, that's why Kerry has vowed to be "Tough on drugs".

    8. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Silvers · · Score: 1

      Why is this rated highly? The Democrats are doing horrible things to *keep Nader off the ballot*.

      You can defend this all you want with your logic but Democrats are being exceptionally sleezy here.

      Look at this for example:

      http://www.votenader.org/why_ralph/index.php?cid =1 06

    9. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by sinnfeiner1916 · · Score: 0

      and why he voted for the $87,000,000,000 before he voted against it?

      --
      The More Laws, the less Justice --Marcus Tullius Cicero
    10. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I understand that you want to vote based on pure ideals, however, the voting system is not a mechanism to make philosophical claims. It is a system to place the next set of officials in office. If your vote does nothing, you have simply thrown your vote away.

      Not true at all, Bush will win handily in this state - but my Libertarian vote will show dissatisfaction with many of his policies in a very direct way.

      There is no way I'm voting for Kerry who:

      1. Has vowed to stay the course in Iraq - why switch?
      2. Has vowed to create a new Intelligence Czar
      3. Has vowed to double government spending on domestic surveillance
      4. Is a dyed in the wool big spender who'll only grow the government
      5. Will continue the current ill-conceived 'war on drugs' just as both major parties have for almost 30 years now

      Kerry is not a good alternative to Bush - and regardless of the level of current terrorist threat a Kerry victory will greatly increase the odds of another terrorist strike here in America, IMO.

    11. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by medelliadegray · · Score: 1

      Bush: tastes like chicken!
      Kerry: the other white meat!

      --
      Troll, Troll, go away and flame again some other day
    12. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Second, voters are very unlikely to go from Republican to Libertarian. In general, Libertarians compete with votes mostly with Democrats


      Wrong.

      I want my liberties both ways. My values are generally conservative, so if it came to a choice, I'd take the liberties that Republicans offer over the liberties that Democrats offer. But I'd rather have both, and I want my vote to demonstrate that, so I'm voting Libertarian. And I'm not alone.

    13. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      1. Has vowed to stay the course in Iraq - why switch?
      2. Has vowed to create a new Intelligence Czar
      3. Has vowed to double government spending on domestic surveillance


      2 is a minor bureaucratic reshuffling, and has little direct impact on citizens. 1 and 3 are unfortunate points that were pretty much guaranteed by anyone hoping to win the election. The media turned 9/11 into a crucial election point, and Demms and Reps have both accused each other of failure to address the problem, and lack of resolve to address the problem in the future. It is unlikely that *anyone* is going to be called out on "going too far to stop another 9/11", but "not doing enough" is a nasty accusation. Point is, it'd be nice if someone could win without (1) and (3), but it's just not going to happen. There were almost no legislators that stood up to the war in Iraq -- even that unpopular and risky move was seen as too dangerous to a political career.

      4. Is a dyed in the wool big spender who'll only grow the government

      Yup. Also guaranteed of the winner of this election. Lots of old boomers and echo-of-the-baby-boomers who very much do not want government subsidization of their lifes (largely by younger, working people) to end.

      5. Will continue the current ill-conceived 'war on drugs' just as both major parties have for almost 30 years now

      Probably, though the Demms are somewhat softer than Republicans. This is also something hard to overcome -- seventy years of antidrug propaganda has had a serious impact on the American psyche. World War II propaganda still affects viewpoints -- talk to some older people sometime, it's frightening -- and that ran for a much shorter period of time. There's a reason for the hard line politicos are taking -- decades of their predecessors worked very hard to associate the terms "recreational drug" and "bad".

      Don't get me wrong. I generally agree with your points. My point is that we live in a democracy; there's no point in pretending we don't (for the moment, hold arguments about representative republics or whatnot, as it doesn't affect my point). You need to not only ask for what you want, but what others will accept (otherwise, hell, you could just ask to be dictator and all of your desires would go through nicely).

    14. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's why Kerry has vowed to be "Tough on drugs".

      Find me a politican who has vowed to be "soft" on drugs. That's just career suicide. "Tough on drugs" is just another piece of political cliche that must be spouted before someone can offically enter office.

    15. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      If your vote does nothing, you have simply thrown your vote away.

      Finally, a practical idea. What we all need to do, and by we, I mean registered voters, is listen to the opinion polls on CNN, to find out who will win the election. Then, we all vote for that candidate, even if we prefer the other... after all, a vote for the losing candidate is a vote thrown away!

    16. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Okay, there was some assumed meaning to "does nothing". I'll clarify. We operate within the framework of our knowledge available.

      Most people are pretty sure that Nader is not going to win the election.

      Few people are sure whether Bush or Kerry is going to win the election.

      Also, opinion polls haven't been an accurate predictor of election results in the past.

    17. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      But as soon as they are accurate, we can just dispense with all this voting non-sense, and appoint them directly, right?

    18. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by cpeterso · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Is a dyed in the wool big spender who'll only grow the government

      but Bush's Republican white house and Republican congress have increased defense and non-defense spending WAY MORE than Clinton did in his eight years. A Republican congress can't say no to a Repubulican president (and vice versa). But do you think a Republican congress would let a Democratic president pay spending increases? NO WAY! Political deadlock is the ONLY viable (short term) solution for liberty-minded voters. :\

    19. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by kindbud · · Score: 1

      First, Kerry's and Bush's ideals *do* differ. Both Republican and Democrat parties are fairly right-wing when it comes to global comparisons, but claiming that they are identical is ridiculous.

      I can't help but notice that not once in your entire post, did you provide an example of where Kerry and Bush differ.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    20. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      The Republican party is already in hot water in two different states for funding and backing Nader to try to weaken the Democrat vote.

      Why shouldn't registered Republicans be able to give money to any political party or candidate that they want? People can spend their money on whatever they damn well please and if it pleases me to give money to a third party candidate so that he can make trouble for the Democrats then who is to say that it is not my right to spend MY money in that way?

    21. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your vote does nothing, you have simply thrown your vote away.

      A Libertarian vote does something. It helps build support for the party. Voting for someone like Kerry or Bush who couldn't possibly and have no intention of representing my interests -- THAT'S a wasted vote!

    22. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      As in, if we have a device that can tell us what we *will* do, we might as well just do it?

      Yeah, I'll go for that. :-)

    23. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      It was nonprofits being run by the Republican party, involved with the campaigning not just people who happen to be Republicans. The problem actually wasn't so much that they were funneling money to Nader, but on some technicalities regarding who is allowed to do so.

      I'm not saying that they shouldn't do that, but it is a point of nastiness -- a chunk of the people out there helping Nader don't like him one bit. Before you get friendly, enthusiastic "advice" from someone about how one should vote for Nader, one ought to consider whether this really is an honest Nader backer or a Republican who is lying.

    24. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Nope. But if you'd like a couple, try a list of Kerry's and Bush's platform issues.

      As a quick summary:

      * Kerry is more pro-affirmative-action.

      * Kerry opposes a gay marriage ban, Bush supports.

      * Kerry wants gays to be allowed to be open in the military, Bush wants them to stay in the closet.

      * Kerry wants to allow adoptions by gays, Bush wants to ban them.

      * Kerry wants to allow attacks on gays to be classifiable as hate crimes, Bush opposes.

      * Bush wants Star Wars, Kerry opposes.

      * Kerry explicitly wants to increase number of personnel in Army, Bush wants to "increase military spending"? Probably just a minor variant in approach.

      * Bush wants to remove the ban on oil industry setting up in the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge, Kerry wants to keep it.

      * Kerry wants to reduce dependence on fossil fuels, Bush (not surprisingly) isn't that interested.

      * Bush wants to ban citizens from suing their HMOs, Kerry wants to allow them.

      * Kerry wants to disallow US citizens from being classifiable as enemy combatants, Bush wants to allow this.

      * Kerry opposes the PATRIOT Act, Bush supports it.

      * Kerry is more in favor of allowing immigration.

      * Bush is much more pro-Iraq-war than Kerry.

      * Bush was, for most of his term, much more opposed to UN involvement in Iraq -- he may be moving towards Kerry's position of promoting UN involvement.

      * Bush favors pre-emptive strikes on countries, Kerry wants UN approval first.

      * Kerry is pro-choice, Bush is pro-life

      * Kerry is anti-death-penalty, Bush is pro-death-penalty

      * Kerry is more in favor of regulating gun manufacturers.

      * Obviously, Kerry is going to appoint more liberal and Bush more conservative Supreme Court Justices.

      * Kerry is opposed to Social Security privatization, Bush is in favor.

      * Kerry wants to tax the wealthy as much as they were before Bush's tax cuts, Bush wants to retain the cuts.

      Basically, Kerry is socially liberal, more in favor of big government spending, takes a more pacifist approach to foreign affairs, and is more in favor of protecting civil rights.

    25. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Sad, since it's not a question of what "we'll do" but a question of what you, me, or the random stranger will want.

    26. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by RenaissanceGeek · · Score: 1
      I positively HATE the statement "Don't throw your vote away!"

      Why? Because it is simply impossible for someone who is actually voting to throw their vote away: voting for a losing candidate does NOT make the voter a loser! The ONLY way for a voter to express their will in the leadership of the government is to vote for the candidate that supports similar ideals. How can actually doing that be called "throwing your vote away?"

      The problem lies in having a voting system that is so obviously biased toward only having two candidates. How so? Because, under the current "single vote to a single candidate" system, it is largely impossible to vote AGAINST both of the two "leaders" in the race: in order to vote anti-Republican, one MUST vote Democratic (and visa versa.) This does two things: it creates an "Us vs. Them" mentality that divides the electorate, thus giving non-voting individuals (corporations) an advantage in influencing public policy, and it steals support from new parties by forcing voters to support one of the two major parties in order to oppose the other.

      To those who say "But any system more complicated than the current one is unworkable for the general public!" I say: think of a group that holds the outcome of contests of little to no consequence in high regard and, in fact, regularily pays money in order to attend said contests. Think of sports-fans. Think of the crowd of screaming fans at the baseball game, with their foam "#1" fingers and their "official merchanise" apparel, doing the wave.

      Now think of how that group chooses the players for the All-Star game. That's right: they choose multiple candidates in order of preference.

      Baseball is trivial. Democracy is vital. If MLB can get voting "right", then why can't we?

      Support a voting system that allows the voter to vote against BOTH of the major parties and FOR the candiate that they actually WANT in office!

      --
      What is the difference between a small revolutionary change and a large evolutionary change?
    27. Re:Don't vote Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not the O.P., but I'll answer that:

      Kerry wants Kerry to be elected.
      Bush wants Bush to be elected (or re-elected, depending on how you feel about the 2000 election).

      That's about it, AFAI can tell.

  52. If we write enough letters, they HAVE to LISTEN by write_with_numbers · · Score: 1

    I am a resident of TN and after reading an earlier /. article and following up with a little research on this piece of legislation I took the time to write both of my state Senators. I am putting this post here and hope it gets modded just high enough to see so that I can get out a single message.

    If you are in America, write your state Senators and protest this bill with an intellegent argument from the tech community.

    We must remember the most important and base principles of a Senator
    1. They often vote on bills they have not read or barely understand.
    2. They have to listen to people in their state because if they don't they loose the next election.
    3. They don't come close to understanding technology like a technician, engineer, programmer, or any of the vast army of geeks out there.
    4. Knowledge is power and big words (technical terms) impress the hell out of someone in a political office, because they can take your letter and read it on the Senate floor to sound like they are informed.

    If we all write in, we will start a debate. If we start a debate, we will win.

    --
    You teach a child to read and he or her will be able to pass a literacy test. - George W. Bush
    1. Re:If we write enough letters, they HAVE to LISTEN by ignatzMouse · · Score: 1

      Amen to that!

      Just one thing: Dont' write to your State Senators, Write to your State's U.S. Senators. In fact, write to other states Senators too. Why not call them up on the phone or send them an email, while you're at it?

      --
      No artist tolerates reality. -- Nietzsche
  53. How does this make the Recording industry AMTRAK? by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1

    AMTRAK is federally owned and funded, pretty much. How does this law make the recording industry federally funded?

    --
    Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
  54. government by the corporation.. by gonar · · Score: 1

    for the corporation.

    just another example of the egregious effect of the concept of "corporate personhood"

    i.e. a corporation has all the same rights to free political speech (read as "give money to politicians") as real people, but with the substantial advantage of not having a dollar limit on their contributions(unlike real people, who are limited to $1000/candidate), and very deep pockets.

    the only fix for this particular form of corruption is to eliminate the concept of "corporate personhood"

    --
    The difference between Theory and Practice is greater in Practice than in Theory.
    1. Re:government by the corporation.. by maximilln · · Score: 1

      the only fix for this particular form of corruption is to eliminate the concept of "corporate personhood"

      But, if we did that, then CEOs could be held liable for hoarding corporate profits when the company goes bankrupt. That's far too much risk. No one would start companies. The entire nation would come to a grinding halt because there would be no companies.

      We need corporations to have personhood. That way all lawsuits and litigation is absorbed by the company (which can't be tracked down if it goes bankrupt) and the CEOs, VPs, and executives can continue to make enormous salaries without any liability for their greed.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  55. IPods anywhere but in USA by Luchio · · Score: 1

    Well now only Canadians and Europeans will be able to buy delicious IPods. hum!

  56. Why not guns? by Quixote · · Score: 1
    Why doesn't Hatch ban guns also? Because he's a paid shill of the NRA, of course!

    Here's a thought: P2P supporters should enlist the support of the NRA, because, at one level, P2P software is just like guns: has a valid purpose, but can be used by criminals. If you can get the NRA behind you, you can rest assured that Hatch and his cronies will be too scared to even think about banning P2P.

  57. Uh, this is /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those are the two most important things in the universe, man!

    1. Re:Uh, this is /. by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      No, that's internet porn and free software. Internet porn and guns are the two most important things for country music fans.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
  58. Bush tax plan clobbers the rich. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Little known, but irrefutable fact: Under the Bush plan, the rich (compared to the non-rich) pay a much higher actual dollar amount, a higher percentage of income, and a higher percentage of the overall tax picture.

    Here is another fact. Many accuse the Bush tax plan of giving money to the rich. The actual total of money given to the rich (or any taxpayer) under the plan? $0. The government does not give a cent. It just alters the amount it TAKES. It does not give.

  59. What will you work on? by gosand · · Score: 1
    Without all that crap, I can finally get some programming done.

    Please work on P2P applications. Thank you.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:What will you work on? by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      How about an entirely new internet instead? Drop by and chat, eh?

    2. Re:What will you work on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow! Tell me more about this non-internet chatting that you speak so fondly of! What do I install something so that I can 'drop by'?

    3. Re:What will you work on? by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      If you have sigs turned off, you won't see my link. If you don't visit my link, you won't see the various addresses I've included, which would let you stop by for a chat at the various places I hang out on the net. If you don't chat, then I couldn't explain how there is all that much to install, to do the non-internet chatting thing. See where I'm going with this?

  60. So Nice, We post it twice by mekkab · · Score: 1

    Sometimes, you need to post a dupe of a story.

    Not because you are a bad editor, but because the importance of the very real possibility that it will stifle our ability to innovate.

    So, enjoy it again for the first time.

    --
    In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
    1. Re:So Nice, We post it twice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I e-mailed "Daddy Pants" before the story went live about that. Doesn't really pay to have a system for notification if you don't check it regularly enough.

    2. Re:So Nice, We post it twice by pgnas · · Score: 1

      Too funny! This one is worth it though; I can get hell bent out of shape another day.

      There is simply nothing more aggravating than an ignorant politician, oh wait...

      Isn't ignorant politician a Yoggi-berraism?

      Forget it, I can't do this again. Speaking of a Yogi-berraism:

      "Anyone who shoots his own nuts off should be castrated"

    3. Re:So Nice, We post it twice by mekkab · · Score: 1

      I e-mailed "Daddy Pants" before the story went live about that.

      Yeah, I used to like wasting my time like that, too.

      Doesn't really pay to have a system for notification if you don't check it regularly enough.

      Doesn't really pay to have a subscription if they don't check it at all.

      --
      In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  61. Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Step 4 can be skipped by a Chairman of a committee - only he can send it to a subcommittee and if he doesn't want it to - then it doesn't go. And Hatch isn't. They held a FULL committee hearing on this yesterday. BTW - Its already on a fast track - when you see the speaker and the minority leader as well as the two big shots on a committee supporting the bill - its practically a done deal. THe house can stop - but only if it has the muscle (and wants to use it). The Prez ain't going against a bipart tech bill that NO ONE in the general citizenery gives an ass about

  62. Down with entertainment! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have been doing something interesting for a long time: eliminating "entertainment" from my life. I have eliminated television, most computer games, and other useless timesinks. Instead, I spend my time reading about real topics of interest, working on projects, and socializing with real people.

    Guess what folks?

    I am still alive. In fact, my quality of life has largely improved since I did this. A little bit (and I do mean a *little bit*) of entertainment is ok. The problem is that our culture is addicted to mass entertainment as an opiate. Put it away. Turn off the TV. Go out with your friends or work on something worthwhile instead. Get yourself off the hollywood crack.

    P2P piracy is just a way to get your crack cheap and prolong your addiction. I deleted my P2P crap as well.

    The great growth of civilization that we've seen in the last several hundred years is a result of a tremendous pooling of human talent and a tremendous outpouring of productive work. The removal of extreme religiosity as an opiate combined with the emergence of a strong "work ethic" drove the enlightenment. Hollywood is a new opiate for the masses and has largely replaced religion as a useless mental distraction and timesink. As such, hollywood is soaking up time that could be spent socializing, experiencing, and doing. In other words, these opiates soak up productive time.

    A myth perpetuated ruthlessly by the entertainment industry is that you need "rest" from your "work." If you feel this way, it probably means that your "work" is something that you do not enjoy doing and herein lies the problem. You should enjoy your work.

    I also believe in something that I call "productive recreation." Productive recreation is when you do things like socialize with friends, travel, study, or engage in hobbies. These things give you knowledge and experience. These are the root of creativity and the growth of the mind and soul. Shrink-wrapped entertainment gives you neither knowledge nor experience. It is a time sink that rots the mind.

    I think it is time for an anti-entertainment movement and a simultaneous revival of two things: a life revolving around direct personal experience and a work ethic. Work hard, play hard, and experience reality. Turn off your TV and get the f*ck off the couch.

    However, I do still have one guilty pleasure. I still read slashdot. :)

  63. Re:How does this make the Recording industry AMTRA by maximilln · · Score: 1

    AMTRAK is federally owned and funded, pretty much. How does this law make the recording industry federally funded?

    Those individuals who profit most from Amtrak related holdings own and fund politicians and regulators who have any effect on Amtrak.

    Those individuals who profit most from media organizations are working on owning and funding politicians and regulators who have any effect on media distribution.

    It's not that difficult.

    --
    +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  64. Out of control by l4m3z0r · · Score: 1
    All this legislation is way out of control. It's insane that we have to put up with this kind of crap. When is some sane individual going to come along and say hey as long as your not using that for profit have a blast. I still have yet to see evidence that shows media trading(movie,tv show,music on p2p) has any adverse effect on the profits of these companys.

    Furthermore, not allowing time shifting is just a crazily stupid idea. Thats tantamount to saying, "look its nice that you like the show but you missed out, you were at work, picking up the kids, doing whatever, and now the penalty for not making time for our show is your not allowed to see it unless you happen to catch a rerun(usually same time but off season, so you are likely to miss that one too) or buy the DVD/VHS several years from now"(if ever, I'm still waiting for the Legend of Brisco County Jr. DVD's - Bruce Campbell rocks). It's odd that they aren't simply happy that they have fans that are loyal enough to make sure they don't miss a single episode.

  65. essential liberties by PMuse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    According to the article, "Nobody wants to undermine the iPod [but] We have to understand that some people use P2P technology in ways that are wrong and illegal." -- Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt)

    Some days, don't you just wish that the second amendment to the U.S. Constitution read, "A well regulated public domain being necessary to the happiness and liberty of a free People, the right of the people to keep and hear music shall not be infringed." How is it that guns are an essential liberty, but iPods are so dangerous that they must be outlawed?

    --
    "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    1. Re:essential liberties by JJ22 · · Score: 1

      i think that kind of falls under "free speech", in that, you can make all the music you want for yourself, but you gots to get permission from the owner to "keep" anything not explictly posted to the public domain.

    2. Re:essential liberties by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Well, why don't you talk to your representatives and pass something like that as the 28th? The Constitution can still be changed.

      Or talk to your representatives in the state legislature. You'll have a better chance of convincing them, and either they can pass a statewide law preventing attacks on these rights, or if 34 state legislatures agree, they can hold a convention to create Constitutional amendments without the interference of Congress.

    3. Re:essential liberties by hackstraw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How is it that guns are an essential liberty, but iPods are so dangerous that they must be outlawed?

      Our freedom of speech and right bear arms is to protect us from tyranical powers of government.

      Maybe its time to exercise our rights.

    4. Re:essential liberties by elinenbe · · Score: 1

      let's try replacing a word or two...

      According to the article, "Nobody wants to undermine the gun [but] We have to understand that some people use firearms technology in ways that are wrong and illegal." -- Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt)

      --
      -eric
    5. Re:essential liberties by steveha · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How is it that guns are an essential liberty, but iPods are so dangerous that they must be outlawed?

      Because guns can be used to keep someone from killing you, and guns can be used (in the last extreme) to fight a government that can no longer be fought "within the system".

      It's hard to exercise your freedoms when you are dead, and guns can help prevent death. They can be abused, just as free speech can be abused (a few restrictions on the free speech rights of Jim Jones might have saved his followers, for example). For that matter, gasoline can be abused (the worst mass murder I can recall was when someone used gasoline to burn down a crowded night club with hundreds of people inside it) but you seldom hear people calling for a ban on gasoline, strict liability for gas stations, etc.

      The First and Second Amendments are, coincidentally enough, the two most important of the Bill of Rights. The right to free speech helps keep the political process healthy, and guns in the hands of citizens are the ultimate check on the power of government.

      iPods are nice, but they hardly represent a crucial freedom.

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    6. Re:essential liberties by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Guns are nice but they are useless in trying to hold the power of the govt in check. If you don't believe me ask the palestenians. Ask them how well those AK47s are working against the tanks, helicopters, missle launching drones etc.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    7. Re:essential liberties by steveha · · Score: 1

      Guns are nice but they are useless in trying to hold the power of the govt in check.

      Hardly "useless". It's true that modern weapons of war (tanks, missiles, etc.) far outstrip mere rifles and handguns, and trained soldiers are likely to win most stand-up fights against untrained ordinary people. Yet if the people are armed, they at least can fight.

      Look at Vietnam: our soldiers took losses from those AK-47s you ridicule. Look at Iraq now: our soldiers are taking losses from a relative handful of attackers.

      Imagine a truly evil government took power in the US. These days political rhetoric can be vicious, and people accuse each other of being evil, but I don't mean trivial evil; let's say someone starts killing off people by the hundreds or thousands, as Stalin did. This would get the average American up in arms. Don't you think that literally millions of people, armed with rifles and pistols, might make a difference? Even if we assume that the Army turns evil and protects the tyrants, rather than the Constitution, could the Army stand in the face of millions of armed people?

      But we don't have to imagine a crisis of national proportions. Guns can be useful even at a very local level. In the 50's, in the deep South, some police stations were the local recruiting stations for the Ku Klux Klan! Imagine you were a black person living in such an area. If Sarah Brady told you that you shouldn't own a gun, you should let the police protect you from the Klan, what would you say to that? Because black folks were armed, there was a lot of white-on-black violence that never happened, because the white KKK thugs were deterred.

      I do wonder whether the Founding Fathers would interpret the Second Amendment to mean that citizens should be able to own tanks, Stinger missles, etc. It's abundantly clear to me that they would approve of citizens owning assault rifles such as the M-16 (as P. J. O'Rourke put it, back when the Bill of Rights was written, every rifle was an "assault rifle").

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    8. Re:essential liberties by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "trained soldiers are likely to win most stand-up fights against untrained ordinary people. Yet if the people are armed, they at least can fight."

      Trained soldiers will not stand-up fight. They will drop thousand pound bombs on the targets. that's what we do in iraq, that's what israel does in palestine.

      "Look at Iraq now: our soldiers are taking losses from a relative handful of attackers."

      Not from rifles or AK47s. We take losses from car bombs and road side bombs neither of which are protected by the second amendmend.

      "Don't you think that literally millions of people, armed with rifles and pistols, might make a difference?"

      No I don't.

      "Even if we assume that the Army turns evil and protects the tyrants, rather than the Constitution, could the Army stand in the face of millions of armed people?"

      Yes it can. I pointed out that Israel is able keep 3.5 million people under occupation despite the fact that they have plenty of firearms and sidearms. A mere 150,000 US troops are able to occupy the entire nation of iraq.

      "I do wonder whether the Founding Fathers would interpret the Second Amendment to mean that citizens should be able to own tanks, Stinger missles, etc."

      If the second amendment does not guarantee your right create a bomb making factory in your basement then it's useless. If it will not let you have shoulder fired missiles then it's useless. When the govt comes after you it will be coming in with drones that lauch missiles and jet fighters that are carrying daisy cutters. They will destroy your entire neighborhood with one strike. They will bomb the shit out of your city killing hundreds of people.

      That's what we do in iraq, that's what israel does in palestine.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    9. Re:essential liberties by steveha · · Score: 1

      Israel is able keep 3.5 million people under occupation despite the fact that they have plenty of firearms and sidearms.

      Israel is far from angelic here, but they haven't done anything so extreme that all the Palestinians feel they have no choice but to rise up in arms. The US isn't perfect, but the average Iraqi has figured out that our soldiers aren't going to eat their babies or anything. In both cases, a majority of the people are not shooting at the occupying soldiers.

      [US soldiers don't take losses] from rifles or AK47s.

      Um, sorry to break it to you, but this is not true. They do take losses from small arms fire. It's true that they take worse from the IEDs, although many IED attacks are followed up with small arms fire.

      When the govt comes after you it will be coming in with drones that lauch missiles and jet fighters that are carrying daisy cutters. They will destroy your entire neighborhood with one strike.

      Even if Joe Stalin II holds power in Washington, D.C., this is not likely to happen on a wide scale. How long would the men flying the bombers stay loyal to him, and keep bombing their own country? If the whole country is up in arms, how will the tyrants get food and such?

      I guess the real threat is that the tyrant will hide a nuke warhead in every city, and personally send the detonation signal when displeased. I still think someone with a gun would find a way to assassinate the tyrant eventually.

      If the second amendment does not guarantee your right create a bomb making factory in your basement then it's useless.

      So, what? Do you propose a new Amendment that will guarantee the right of the people to own and carry Stingers and such? Do you propose to repeal the Second Amendment? Do you in fact propose anything?

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    10. Re:essential liberties by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Israel is far from angelic here, but they haven't done anything so extreme that all the Palestinians feel they have no choice but to rise up in arms."

      What??? What an odd thing to say. They kill a couple of thousand palestenians every year, they bomb cities, they destroy hundreds of houses leaving thousands of people homeless, they curfew hundreds of thousands of residents, they bomb media outlets, they routinely round up palestenians and take them to jail without charges, they torture people, they take away land belonging to people, they take away precious water rights, they delay people from getting medical treatment with checkpoints, it goes on and on. Don't you read? Don't you watch TV?

      The palestenians HAVE risen up, they ARE fighting back, it's just futile because ISrael is better armed and AK47s are pretty useless when helicopters are launching missiles into your city.

      "The US isn't perfect, but the average Iraqi has figured out that our soldiers aren't going to eat their babies or anything."

      Oh great. As long as we don't actually eat their babies all other behavior is excused.

      'In both cases, a majority of the people are not shooting at the occupying soldiers."

      Throughout history the majority has never risen up. The majority has never fought to gain freedom. It's always been a small, active and organized minority that throws off the shackles of bondage. The majority will always be happy to make it through the day with a belly full.

      "How long would the men flying the bombers stay loyal to him, and keep bombing their own country?"

      It's very common in totalitarian governments that the military stays faithful to the ruler. I don't see how it would be any different in the US. For example right now if you told a US soldier to shoot and american and told him that the american was a liberal a vast majority of the soldiers would shoot. It's pretty easy to divide people against each other. Look at Fox news for an example.

      'If the whole country is up in arms, how will the tyrants get food and such?"

      They whole country won't be (see above). A minority will but they will be surpressed in short order and the masses will continue to plow the fields. That's the way it's always been. read a history book or two, this has happened many times before.

      " Do you in fact propose anything?"

      I propose that we either clarify the second amenment or get rid of it. If the purpose of the amendment is to assure freedom from government tyrany then it should say that any all weapons are legal in order to counteract the ability of the govt to surpress the people. In today's world that means I should have the right (at a minimum) to have shoulder fired missiles and access to chemical, biological and conventional bomb making facilities and materials.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    11. Re:essential liberties by steveha · · Score: 1

      What an odd thing to say.

      I don't have the time, or the inclination, to really go over this issue with you. From what I've read, the average Palestinian would rather get a job working for Israelis than kill Israelis.

      I notice in your long list of accusations against Israel, you didn't mention any of what terrorists do to Israel. For example, terrorists have loaded explosives into ambulances, driven them past security checkpoints, and blown them up. In response, Israel stopped giving ambulances a free pass through security checkpoints. What should Israel do here? Both of their choices suck.

      I have serious concerns about Israel's policies, but I am not as certain as you are that the Israeli government is completely villainous, and I stand by my assertion that they would have much more trouble holding the Palestinians if they had treated them even worse.

      Oh great. As long as we don't actually eat their babies all other behavior is excused.

      You have trouble figuring out when to take people literally, I guess.

      Throughout history the majority has never risen up. The majority has never fought to gain freedom. It's always been a small, active and organized minority that throws off the shackles of bondage. The majority will always be happy to make it through the day with a belly full.

      There is something to this.

      It's very common in totalitarian governments that the military stays faithful to the ruler.

      I don't think that applies to the US armed forces, at least not in the near term.

      I propose that we either clarify the second amenment or get rid of it.

      Politics is the art of the possible. You will not find either of those suggestions to be possible. However, I respect that you are willing to follow your opinions through to their logical conclusion.

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    12. Re:essential liberties by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "I don't have the time, or the inclination, to really go over this issue with you. From what I've read, the average Palestinian would rather get a job working for Israelis than kill Israelis."

      Of course they would. That's always been the case with the masses. We don't disagree here.

      BTW when a "civilized" nation invades another one and takes over their land they eventually make the conquered people citizens. US, China, South Africa, etc have done this in their history. If israel was a civilized nation they too would make those palestenians they conquered citizens. It would solve the problem of terrorism once and for all if the average palestenians made more then a buck a day and had access to decent health care and education. It will never happen though because Israel is a theo-democracy still stuck in the dark ages. They can't have a country whose majority is muslim. It's a country for and of the jews.

      "I notice in your long list of accusations against Israel, you didn't mention any of what terrorists do to Israel."

      That's because there is a profound difference between inflicting violence in order to keep a people occupied and inflicting violence to shed the shackles of occupation. I hope you can see that because we ourselves did it once. If you remember your history lessons you might have run across statements such as "give me freedom or give me death" and "don't tread on me". Same thing.

      "What should Israel do here?"

      I have already told you. Do the civilized thing. Draw the borders of israel any way you like, take as much land as you want to (who is going to stop you anyway?), and make those people your citizens with full rights. Give them the right to vote and I bet terrorism disappears overnight.

      "I have serious concerns about Israel's policies, but I am not as certain as you are that the Israeli government is completely villainous, and I stand by my assertion that they would have much more trouble holding the Palestinians if they had treated them even worse."

      Well gee I guess they could torture even more people. Yes that would be worse.

      "You have trouble figuring out when to take people literally, I guess."

      No. It's just that I am sick and tired of listening to this pathetic excuse. "we are not as bad as saddam", "we could be a lot worse", "they have more freedom under our occupation then under saddam's" and on and on. This is the worst kind of moral relativism. Saying that if you give people a little more freedom then saddam then it's enough is bullshit. People deserve full freedom. Full Safety. Full opportutnity. They deserve everything you have, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

      "I don't think that applies to the US armed forces, at least not in the near term."

      You have an overly optimistic opinion of the US military. I was in the military and seeing it from the inside I disagree. Needless to say you are of course entitled to your opinion.

      "Politics is the art of the possible. You will not find either of those suggestions to be possible."

      If that's the case then I submit that the second amendement is a useless vestigial organ of the US constitution.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    13. Re:essential liberties by steveha · · Score: 1

      "What should Israel do here?"

      I have already told you. Do the civilized thing. Draw the borders of israel any way you like, take as much land as you want to (who is going to stop you anyway?), and make those people your citizens with full rights. Give them the right to vote and I bet terrorism disappears overnight.


      I don't think it would work overnight, but I agree that this would be better than what Israel is doing.

      By the way, my question was meant as, "Should Isreal's policy be to block ambulances at security checkpoints, delaying them, or to let them through even though terrorists will load them up with explosives some of the time?" The answer "treat the people right so that, in a generation or so, they are well-integrated into your society and no longer wish to be terrorists" is not a responsive answer. Both of Israel's choices suck, here. I'm glad I don't have to make any decisions like that.

      I am sick and tired of listening to this pathetic excuse. "we are not as bad as saddam"

      Well, this shouldn't be used to excuse atrocities or preventable mistakes, but it's true.

      This is the worst kind of moral relativism. Saying that if you give people a little more freedom then saddam then it's enough is bullshit.

      I presume you did not intend to put those words in my mouth. This is a long way from my observation that the behavior of American troops is so far not inflaming the average Iraqi-in-the-street to grab weapons and start shooting.

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    14. Re:essential liberties by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Both of Israel's choices suck, here. I'm glad I don't have to make any decisions like that."

      I belive that I have the perfect and achievable solution to the palestine/israel problem. It's exactly like two people deciding how to divide a cake. The best solution is for one person to cut the cake and the other person gets to choose which piece he wants. This way both people have an incentive to be fair.

      So in that spirit here is the solution.

      1) israel gets to define it's own borders. They can take as much land as they want. They can take lebanon, iraq, iran, syria, saudi arabia, anything they want.

      2) Everybody inside those borders immediately becomes a full fledged citizen of israel with all the rights and privledges afforded to all the jewish citizens of israel.

      3) isreal immediately eliminates all laws that discriminate on the basis of race and religion. No more morally indefensible jaewish only neighborhoods, no more laws that target muslims and arabs for exile and harrashment.

      Simple right? Israel gets what it wants, it joins the rest of the civilized world in not codifying racims into laws, it brings democracy and prostperity to the middle east.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    15. Re:essential liberties by steveha · · Score: 1

      What will you do about the Arabs who really believe that all Jews must die, and Israel must be wiped from the Earth? If the leader of the Palestinians is viewed as colloborating with the Israelis, he will probably be assassinated by extremists on his own side; this tends to limit how cooperative he might ever be. Do you have a solution for that? For that matter, Sharon might find himself in trouble if the extremists in Israel are unhappy.

      But the above doesn't really matter. I stand in awe that you can use the phrase "the perfect and achievable solution" to describe a plan that includes Israel grabbing land from Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, etc. The whole area would erupt in war.

      I'm sorry, but you aren't living in the real world.

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    16. Re:essential liberties by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "What will you do about the Arabs who really believe that all Jews must die, and Israel must be wiped from the Earth?"

      This is a very small minority of the arabs. They will quickly be shouted down, especially since the vast majority of the people will be happier, more free and more prosperous. This would be no different then the militia movement in our own country. A small minority of radicals working to overthrow the govt. They can be dealt with easy enough especially if the population at large is not interested in sheltering them.

      " For that matter, Sharon might find himself in trouble if the extremists in Israel are unhappy."

      Not if he took just the very minimum amount of land to make their god happy. In other words they simply take whatever land their god promised them and nothing else. Remember under my plan if they only take the west bank and gaza the population of israel would be pretty much 50/50 jewish and muslim. Anymore then that and the jews become a minority!

      I can say with absolute confidence that Israel would never ever grab that much land knowing that all of a sudden the jews would be a tiny little minority in their own country. That's what makes this plan so absolutely perfect. The more land israel takes the more of a minority the jews become in israel. Since israel is the fulfillment of zion this would never be allowed to happen. Israel would take the absolute minimum amount of land so as to make sure the arabs will always be a minority.

      Lets say they took lebanon for example. All the lebanese would be able to vote in israeli elections, everybody in lebanon would be being paid israeli minimum wages, and everybody in lebanon would have full access to all israeli social services. Of course Israel could not afford this, not politically and not financially so they would not take lebanon. It's exactly like the cake analogy. If I cut the cake so that one piece is much larger then the other then you get the bigger slice.

      "Israel grabbing land from Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, etc. The whole area would erupt in war."

      The whole world would not erupt in a war. For all practical purposes Israel is the most powerful country on the planet. If anybody attacks israel they will have the full might and fury of the US military upon them before they know what happened. The US will absolutely use and all measures neccesary to defend israel including unleashing nuclear holocaust if need be. Of course Israel also has around 300 nuclear weapons themselves so they would only ask the US to use them if they wanted somebody else to look like the bad guy.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    17. Re:essential liberties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      don't you just wish that the second amendment to the U.S. Constitution read

      No. Perhaps I'd agree if you said th third or fourth should read that way, but without the second intact it's kinda moot what the others say.

  66. Every polotician by HogGeek · · Score: 1
    has somebody (corporation) putting money in their pocket, for the corps cause(s)

    even Microsoft donated to Bush, but not Kerry...

    1. Re:Every polotician by Chemical · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should check again. Microsoft did indeed make a campaign donation to Kerry

  67. Re:and whos fault is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree.

    When you act immoraly, you encourage others to do so. The absurdity of this bill is a direct response to the absurdity of the "napster culture." Immorality breeds immorality, and hypocrisy breeds hypocrisy.

  68. Aimster. by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Hmm Mary states that Aimster was created and named after it use of the AOL IM network. I thought this was the common thought but infact not the actual truth.

  69. Very vague... by drakyri · · Score: 1

    Section 501 of title 17, United States Code, is amended...

    ...intent may be shown by acts from which a reasonable person would find intent to induce infringement based upon all relevant information about such acts then reasonably available to the actor, including whether the activity relies on infringement for its commercial viability.


    The above excerpt (my emphasis added) from the INDUCE legislation has two things of note. First, the test of liability is very vague; I'm guessing that a court probably wouldn't find a P2P provider liable solely on the 'all relevant information...' bit unless the P2P featured things like "A Newbie's Guide to Illegal File-Sharing" available with the product.

    The second part is likely to prove more troublesome; on whether a P2P provider can profit and prove that they don't have to relay upon illegal file-sharing to do so.

    I can think of two work-arounds; free/shareware programs that have no commercial purpose, no advertising, and don't make anybody money, or if a P2P partially sells out - works with The Man to help sell/exchange files - but still allows users to trade files on their own.

    Still, I hope that the bill fails.

  70. Fix the bugs after it ships by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's suppose you are a software developer. Most software developers know that it is orders of magnitude cheaper and easier to fix a bug early in the development process rather than later. By your philosophy, would you wait till the product has shipped before you worry about fixing bugs?

    I suppose you would rather we try to fight this bill after most of Congress has decided to support it? It would have been much easier to kill at step 1 than at step 3.75 where it is now (not 2.5, it had a hearing yesterday).

    You let us know when the task is hard enough to be worthy of attack.

  71. There is a major dirty open secret here by ShatteredDream · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Congress first of all doesn't particularly care about drafting laws that actually benefit copyright holders in general, rather they care about protecting the interests of the big donors and their pet causes. The DMCA's anti-circumvention statute actually hurts smaller businesses by cutting out "consumer reports" style reviews of DRM systems. Losing 25% of one's potential sales to piracy hurts a small copyright holder significantly more than a large one. In fact, it could make the difference between having a day job and being able to get better at one's creative endeavor.

    Hatch has been steadily earning the name "RINO" in conservative circles for his "Republican In Name Only" politics. The RP may not be too conservative, but he's a flaming statist if there ever were one in the Senate. It's also alarming to see many self-proclaimed capitalists support this measure, as IPCentral, a capitalist IP blog and Motley Fool seem to think that INDUCE is common sense. Of course, IPCentral didn't have trackback enabled so I had to email a rebuttal to some of their arugments.

    At this point I just don't understand the record labels. Why don't they push hard to get people buying on iTunes so that they can turn digital distribution into an even bigger cashcow? They seem to be convinced of the "justice" of their cause, so much so that they'd rather be dead right than wrong alive.

    I don't even need to boycotte them anymore because Century Media and Projekt make most of my favorite music now. Lacuna Coil, a fast rising goth metal band that stole the show at Ozzfest 2004, is signed to CM, which is not affiliated with the RIAA according to the RIAA Radar. This is the future, people. Labels like Century Media know the writing is on the wall, and that being a member of the RIAA is as socially acceptable in the 21st century as declaring you're down with people who gas Jews and lynch black people for fun.

    1. Re:There is a major dirty open secret here by DarkSarin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's odd--at one point I had some respect for Sen. Hatch.

      That has gone away. I wish all politicians would see this: STAY AWAY FROM MY FREEDOMS! This is the reason that I am more and more disgusted with the two-party system: they are both into increasing the power of the federal gov't. I am not. End of story

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    2. Re:There is a major dirty open secret here by WindBourne · · Score: 1
      Why don't they push hard to get people buying on iTunes so that they can turn digital distribution into an even bigger cashcow?

      One of the mistakes that everybody seems to make is thinking that this war on the internet is about costs of sales. It is not. It is about controlling an industry. As the internet takes off, those artists who have moved over to P2P have actually made a great deal more money. Who has not made more money had been the media companies. They are no longer needed.

      These attacks on IP as well as tools and rights, are simply a means to controlling the future. I suspect that all the ppl who died to found the USA are turning in their graves.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    3. Re:There is a major dirty open secret here by ghost4096 · · Score: 1

      Actually i think mil-industrial complex could be userful in fight against INDUCE... Because if the DVD-Writer manufactures can be held responsible for copyright infrigement inducement than surely firearm manufacturer could be held responsible to violence inducement

  72. It'd be worth him doin' it just to catch him.. NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >You know, I would like to see this pass, I would even like to see the Betamax decision overturned. Why you might ask? Because of the wakeup call it will create.

    No offense, but that kind of attitude is, I think, one of the biggest problems that liberals have. It's usually unconscious, but you've spelled it out specifically: a desire for things not to go your way, pretty much just so you can say "I told you so."

    Resist the desire to be a martyr, it's not becoming. You should never be happy when things don't go your way because you can complain about it.

  73. Amen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i've been thinking about the idea of making "Safe Computers" in garages again - with the power and size of today's fpga's/microprocs and the ease of making your own pcb's etc - why not? i'd market them as kits for Clean PC's...you *know* what is in it and what it is doing or *not* doing at all times.

    This of course give way to all kinds of compatibility problems, but fuck it, at least i have a computer that i can trust that does what *i* want it to. :)

  74. THIS IS COMPLETLY WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Inducement is a legal term and not what you would normally think! This bill could be interpreted under legal rules to mean that ANY technology that CAN infringe (even if it can be used for things that aren't infringing) can be declared illegal. Unless of course you cut a deal ahead of time with Hollywood. The worst part of this bill is it would allow any copyright holder to sue. I am a copyright holder just for writing this email - so I could sue Apple to stop the iPOD from produced. And if you trust Hollywood not to sue - then you deserved to hunted by Jack the Ripper.

  75. Don't they get it? by mike77 · · Score: 1
    Among other things, she proposed scrapping the Betamax decision, which makes it legal to timeshift TV shows with a VCR.


    What I just don't get is, the VCR and similar products, which they want to make illegal, have increased the amount of money and time I spend watching tv, and listening to music. If they go and make these things illegal, and make it a pain in my ass to watch TV or music, or what have you, guess what? All you big-monopolistic, price-raising, customer and artist screwing morons are going to have none of my money. I just won't do it anymore! think about it!

    --

    --Keeping the flame wars alive, one post at a time

  76. An honest politician... by Tackhead · · Score: 1
    > Funny, I remember Orrin Hatch was actually a SUPPORTER of the original P2P Napster, to the extent that he actually put some of his own amateur works on there.
    >
    > See, for instance here
    >
    > Why the change of heart? I guess sticking to one's original convictions is too much to ask.

    And that's the problem with Hatch. He's not an honest politician. And yes, there is such a thing.

    An honest politician is one who, once bought, stays bought.

  77. So, this is the way it's going to be by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

    They'll just try again and again and again until they get their way?

    How much will satisfy them? How much power? How much money? I'm reminded of Cerebus the Aardvark.

    Q: If you could be rich, how much money would you want?

    Cerebus: All of it.

    Q: No, I mean, if you could have as much money as you wanted, how much would you really want?

    Cerebus: All of it.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  78. Rip, Mix, Burn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If that's not an inducement for "piracy", what is?

    But you're right. Apple won't be targeted with this legislation. But the open source programmer who lives in mom's basement and has never made a campaign contribution in his life probably will be. In fact I wouldn't be surprised if *Apple* uses the INDUCE act against a competitor.

  79. For every CD you buy, send equal $$ to EFF by adrenaline_junky · · Score: 1

    Boycotting the RIAA by not buying any CDs might be the "ideal" answer, but its unrealistic for most people.

    So as an alternative, consider donating an amount equal the what you spend on CDs to the EFF. And tell your friends to do this too.

    Personally, I make sure I donate at least TWICE what I spend on CDs to the EFF.

    1. Re:For every CD you buy, send equal $$ to EFF by JaxGator75 · · Score: 1
      I donate 300% of my annual CD and DVD budget to the EFF every day.

      /non-violent criminal

      --
      Come and see the violence inherent in the system!
    2. Re:For every CD you buy, send equal $$ to EFF by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Unrealistic? i've never bought a music CD in my life!

      (Note: If you are a member of the RIAA, this is not an admission to copyright violation)

      But on a different note, i think the EFF does a great job, however democracy in the US means donating money to the senators, so it might be time to come up with a "Slashdot lobby group" im not trolling, seriously half of them are totally corrupt.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  80. Re:Dont bother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Senators dont read the letters they get. An intern glances at them, jots down your stance on the issue. Which is then correlated and examined by analysts.

    A letter is automatically generated, a signature machine fakes the senator's sig, and a token letter is mailed off to you.

    Writing your senator is useless.

  81. Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Proposed Timeline: BetamaX decision is overturned. VCR's, Tivo's, and all manner of electronic gizmo are now rendered illegal. The MPAA, RIAA, and their cohorts will crack down on a select few people to make an example of them. For once, a legal battle fought on the grounds of COMMON SENSE will be won in court, but probaby be overturned by judges and/or congressmen or whoever decide these things (I'm Canadian) who have all recently bought huge new boats and houses with their big anonymous donations. Maybe, just maybe, at this point, Americans will wake up and suddenly realize that their country is being run by a band of brain-dead monkeys who don't give a rip about you, your job, your dreams or your future. Of course, it could also go the other way with the final vestigal organs of independent thought being wiped out forever, or fleeing to neighboring countries. Either way, it'll stop all this arguing.

    --
    I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    1. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by wynndow · · Score: 0, Funny

      Well, independent thought definitely won't flee to Canada. It got booted from the Great White North a long time ago and has no signs of returning any time soon.

    2. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Luigi30 · · Score: 1

      And then they argue that life is a possible circumvention device, so they duly confiscate it from all attending the court.

      --
      503 Sig Unavailable

      The Signature could not be accessed. Please try again later or contact the administrator
    3. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 1

      *applauds your willingness to insult an entire nation*

      --
      I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    4. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by ultranova · · Score: 1
      And then they argue that life is a possible circumvention device, so they duly confiscate it from all attending the court.

      That idea is copyrighted and belongs to whoever owns Judge Dredd. In that comic there was an alternative Earth in which the judges (a kind of mobile police with the authority to pass judgements and carry out (deat) sentences on the spot) decided that since all crimes were done by living creatures, life itself should be made illegal. They then created undead judges to carry out this sentence, and after having finished with their own Earth, tried to continue with Dredd's Earth.

      Your copyright infringinment crime has been noted, citizen. Report yourself immediately to the nearest judge for purification !

      The truly scary thing is that with the entire society being increasingly run by the entertainment industry (which in itself is absurd) I can well imagine the day when the punishment for (suspected - isn't the DMCA designed to allow one to be punished (by terminating internet access, for example) merely on suspicion ?) copyright infringement will be death.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    5. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by wynndow · · Score: 0

      Hey, I grew up there. I love Canada, but when it comes to independent thought, it unfortunately isn't the optimal breeding ground. Maybe that'll change...

    6. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2, Informative

      Americans have been bred and trained to be "asleep" for 8 generations or more. Ever wonder how the unions ever came to be? Lord forbid that they didn't exist, and someone was trying to unionize now... it would be impossible. I wondered, then I realized people 100 years ago were different than you and I. Back then, they had wills. Ours have been erased. Oh well, the unions were co-opted long ago, and are worthless.

      This book (online ebook) deals with the situation from a different angle, and much of what he says pertaining to our own discussion is tangential to our own. Don't read it if you are depressed easily.

    7. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Veramocor · · Score: 0

      "Asleep" like in They Live?

      Are you insinuating that FOX news channel is broadcasting radio waves which make aliens look like humans? Which are slowly giving corporations all the power, and slowly polluting the earth to make it a suitible habitit. And the only way you can get people to see the aliens is to make them where a special pair of sunglasses? But to do so you have to fight them for like 20 minutes. Oh and george bush is an alien.

      If so you are one sick sick individual, seek help.

      --
      Veramocor
    8. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 1
      Ok, I'll grant you that. The problem is that no nation is known for independent thought... it's individuals, or maybe small groups that are known for it.

      No nation is also known for promoting independent thought, but America is famous for trying to quash it. That, and most high school teachers.

      --
      I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    9. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 1

      We need more death sentences. That'll show those people recording "ER" because they have to work late!

      --
      I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    10. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Is this a joke? If so, haha. Might as well laugh, can't do much else. If its a troll, I respect that too, keep up the trolling. If its some asshat attempt to smear my comment as conspiracy, I invite you to read, even just a little. After all, the proper way to make me look like the fool, is to pick apart what I've said piece by piece, showing everyone how it couldn't be so...

    11. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that it is a joke is pretty apparent. If you had ever seen "They Live" you'd probally find it funny too. In fact they based a southpark episode after the movie (cripple fight).

      As to being a troll take a look at the member ID # and the fact that it has a +1 modifier. If it was a troller the person would have been posting at 1, 0 or -1 not a +2.

    12. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by stuktongue · · Score: 1

      I apologize if this is semi-OT, and this might not be the best place to ask, but I value intelligent Slashdot readers's views so I would like to ask your advice. I am considering purchasing a Tivo hard disk recorder (my first) and I am wondering: Is this wise or am I going to find myself the proud owner of a device which might soon be rendered inert by DMCA-related stuff.

      I am largely ignorant of the details, and maybe even the broad strokes, so please be gentle. :-)

    13. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      Get a Tivo. Enjoy it. In the meantime, get parts and software so you can build your own when the guys in the black helicopters shut down the company (and thus, your source for show guide information) for "violating the law*".

      *The law of revised economics, which dictates that it's no longer enough to serve a market need, but you must do so at the pleasure of the ruling monopoly.

    14. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Luigi30 · · Score: 1

      I was half-quoting one of the HHGTTG books.

      "Then the court found that life itself was in contempt of court, and duly confiscated it from all those attending."

      --
      503 Sig Unavailable

      The Signature could not be accessed. Please try again later or contact the administrator
    15. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Simonetta · · Score: 1

      the final vestigal organs of independent thought ... fleeing to neighboring countries.

      This is the most likely result of bad corrupt overbearing cultural laws.

      One thing that gets missed in all the discussion of 'music piracy' is that the music flows in two directions. The global media corporations (all five of them) need constant new input in the form of popular talent to be repackaged and sold globally. They don't create this new music: they record it in state-of-the-art studios, package it and market it, but they don't create it. They have agents that go out to clubs to find it for them. Always the bands themselves can't wait to get signed by a global record company.

      But if with their oppressive laws they run the risk of alienating their primal musical sources. Bands and their fans will make a serious effort to keep new and exciting music hidden from the global music industry. The music industry will remain clueless to the changing trends in popular youth taste until someone or some band comes out of nowhere and claims the allegiance of millions of youth people in a manner that the global media corporations can't easily exploit.
      This happened to a small degree in 1964 when the musical groups in northern England blasted away all the payola driven gunk off the pop charts for almost two years. At that time the idea that pop music could come out of Northwestern England was incomprehensible to record executives. Even after wave after wave of #1 hit singles from Liverpool and Manchester hit the American charts, they still couldn't believe it. Only when it didn't die off in 1965 did they start to cash in on the Beatles and later the Stones.
      The next musical wave to come out of nowhere could hit them even stronger, because the fans will have a legal interest and a technological capability to keep their music away from the global media corporations. If someone figures out how to combine the intensity of Islam with that of American rock music, oh watch out. Fifty years ago the prison preachers just couldn't believe that an illiterate junkie convict who called himself Malcolm X wouldn't pray to a blue-eyed Jesus, and now 1/4 or more of millions of prisoners in the USA are devout Muslims.

    16. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by stuktongue · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your reply. I'm curious as to how long you think Tivo has in your scenario. Years? Months? Also, if one rolls one's own hard disk recording setup, is there some sort of OSS equivalent to the downloadable program guide, or is it strictly manual programming only?

    17. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      I'm curious as to how long you think Tivo has in your scenario. Years? Months?

      Years, hopefully - I own some of their stock :). However, Tivo needs to do HD to stay in the game long term, with the ongoing changeover to HiDef television. The media companies have been busy trying to lock Tivo out of the game, and to try and revoke some of their current capabilities. I think Tivo will continue to be around in some form, but not in the convenient, user-friendly form it is today. I say, 2-3 years worst case scenario.

      is there some sort of OSS equivalent to the downloadable program guide

      Yes. There are OSS "scrapers" that mine data off of TV-Guide type websites (like TV Guide, Titan TV, etc.), put it into a database (usually built on mySQL), and then feed it to your PVR software. You can also buy packaged solutions from companies like Hauppage, if you have a Windows box, which include PVR software, or from companies like El Gato, if you have a Mac OS X machine.

      Disclaimer, I own Tivo stock, but I don't have a Tivo machine - I use ReplayTV instead.

    18. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but I value intelligent Slashdot readers's views

      Troll!

    19. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      make them where a special pair of sunglasses

      "wear".

    20. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by stuktongue · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the excellent answer; I now feel as though I have a better idea about Tivo. Additionally, you have piqued my curiosity on ReplayTV. Can you provide any additional commentary on why you decided to go with ReplayTV and how you like it? Maybe this would be a better way for me to go.

    21. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The main reason I got a ReplayTV is that the 4000 series units had built-in ethernet, which coupled with an OSS program called DVArchive, allows you to archive your shows to your computer, and re-serve them over the network back to your ReplayTV 4k series machine, or other ReplayTV 4k units. The latest version is extremely nice, as it includes a scheduling module which reports recording conflicts.

      If you're a tinkerer, ReplayTV is nice. Tivo's are also tinkerer friendly, but has a superior automatic show selection system (although it can suffer from incorrect guessing - do a google search for "my tivo thinks I'm gay".) Basic line is if you're a total PVR newbie who just wants to have something that works, get a Tivo. If you're someone who wants to archive recordings without having to go through a lot of trouble, get a ReplayTV 4000 or 5000 series recorder. Be warned that ReplayTV has already passed through 2 owners, and has a lot less market share than Tivo does.

    22. Re:Stupidity Breeds Freedom by stuktongue · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your reply, AC. I would definitely fall under the n00b classification relative to PVR. The Tivo unit I'm considering is the Pioneer Elite DVR-57H, which has a built-in DVD recorder that supposedly makes archiving recorded shows pretty simple. That said, I'm not sure how much archiving I really would want to do; I think I'm more of a simple time-shifter.

      Based on all of that, it sounds to me like you'd endorse the Tivo path. Thanks again for your input, whoever you are. :-)

  82. Re:Intent is implied, no specific intent required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The intent is implied, no specific intent is required. The ipod is illegal because it uses the relatively open mp3 format. If it was only for legal uses, then why didn't Apple design the ipod so it could only play DRM restricted formats, and only rip CDs to a DRM based format? The same applies to Intel and Microsoft. If they didn't intend computers to be used for illegal purposes, why didn't they make them locked down so they could only run approved software (like the Xbox)? You probably don't think the DMCA applies to third party printer cartriges and universal remotes, but it does. The intent of a law means nothing (according to the supreme court), only the actual wording.

  83. Senator Pat Geary by Baldrson · · Score: 1

    Why is it that whenever I see a picture of Senator Orin Hatch I think of that scene in The Godfather II where Senator Pat Geary is caught red-handed in a brothel with a hooker who is dead, and only his "friendship with The Family" can save his political career?

  84. Re:TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you have to balance is the dems want to grab your gun rights, and they have had, and probably will in the future if they grab the whitehouse, luck in doing so. On the other hand, reps want to grab your rights to do what you want when it comes to things like sex and religion, but they have been fairly ineffective in doing so. Both of those parties have consistantly been in favor of things like keeping the 'war on drugs' (a.k.a. war on the bill of rights) going. If you are going to pick the lesser of two evils, you have to look at which one is going to screw you over most effectively, and what rights are most important to you. Because make no mistake about it, either the far left or far right will ultimately take away all of everyone's rights, they will just do it in a different order, and use different rhetoric to justify it.

  85. His reply by MacFury · · Score: 1

    Dear Sir. I am afraid there has been a mistake. I did not receive any check or money order along with your letter. Please rectify this situation immediately, so I may take your concerns into consideration.

  86. Hatch Campaign Contributors by redshield3 · · Score: 1

    Here is a list of his major contributors in his 2000 campaign.

  87. And here is his response by neonfrog · · Score: 1

    (here is his original statement http://leahy.senate.gov/press/200406/062304a.html which generated my letter. Below is his response to my letter above.)

    Thank you for sharing with me your very thoughtful comments about the "Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act of 2004." It is good to hear from you.

    For many years, I have been a supporter of new technologies and new ways of delivering digital content to consumers. This issue is particularly important to me, and to rural states like Vermont, because the digital age has the potential to bring more content - books, movies, music, and other forms of entertainment - at lower cost and in ways that are easier to use. However, when these technologies are misused, it prevents the deployment of still better ways of delivering content because copyright holders fear, rather than embrace, the new technology.

    In order for exciting new technologies to flourish, the United States must protect intellectual property. The creative spirit of America has made our country the unquestioned leader in this part of the world economy, but our innovators will only continue to amaze us with new creations if the rights inherent in their works can be protected. In Vermont, we have seen how more traditional forms of piracy hurt our industries. For example, knock-offs of Burton Snowboards' products have been found around the world, robbing that company of revenues it deserves. I helped pass a law in 1996 to combat this form of piracy, and I am working on more legislation that will help Vermont's companies protect their goods.

    The "Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act of 2004" is aimed at stopping another form of piracy that costs innovators billions of dollars. Digital piracy is on the rise, and in the case of software piracy alone, infringers siphoned away nearly $29 billion from copyright holders in 2003. For this reason, I am proud to cosponsor the "Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act of 2004," along with Senators Daschle, Boxer, Clinton, Hatch, Graham of South Carolina, and Frist, because I think we need to do more to stem the tide of piracy - but we need to do it in a way that does not target technology. The bill is straightforward, clarifying a longstanding common law principle in the copyright law. It is a provision that has also been found for years in patent law. Specifically, the legislation treats those who induce copyright infringement as infringers themselves. Our experience with patent law shows us that such provisions work: over the years, the number of patents has steadily grown and patent-related industries continue to thrive.

    I realize that there has been some confusion about this legislation, and that some have viewed its provisions as anti-technology. Although I disagree with this characterization, I want to assure you that I am working to address these concerns. Please know that I will keep your views in mind as I work to generate consensus on this bill, and to pass laws that are good for copyright holders, good for technology, and - most of all - good for consumers.

    Thank you again for contacting me, and please keep in touch.

    Patrick Leahy
    United States Senator

    http://leahy.senate.gov/

    --

    I'm thinking about it, therefore I might be.

    1. Re:And here is his response by dafz1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While they have good intentions(like the Burton snowboard issue), senators don't seem to realize, like the PATRIOT act, the potential for abuse. This act gives the RIAA and the MPAA, and their lawyers, free rein over current and developing technologies. "We don't like (insert technology here), so we will say it induces infringement." Those with the most to gain make the rules. This is EXACTLY why the BetaMax ruling should NEVER be overturned.

      My favorite part is "Our experience with patent law shows us that such provisions work: over the years, the number of patents has steadily grown and patent-related industries continue to thrive." Yep, people like Teleshuttle Technolgies and MercExchange make the economy so much stronger. At least for their lawyers.

    2. Re:And here is his response by Danse · · Score: 1

      Digital piracy is on the rise, and in the case of software piracy alone, infringers siphoned away nearly $29 billion from copyright holders in 2003.

      I love how he just flings out a number like so much monkey feces. He could at least cite a source for it. I would love to know how they came up with that number.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    3. Re:And here is his response by aronc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Please know that I will keep your views in mind as I work to generate consensus on this bill, and to pass laws that are good for copyright holders, good for technology, and - most of all - good for consumers.

      This line to me contains the crux of one of the biggest problems while the whole discussion. Note that you are only a consumer, over and over again. Not a producer, not a citizen, not a fellow american, not a constituent, hell.. not even a customer. Only a simple a consumer. As long as our the members of our government view us all as simply a gaping maw waiting to buy and wolf-down the products of industry we will not be given equal footing with said industry with regards to drafting legislation.

      --

      jello.
      aka aron.
  88. No scraping the betamax. by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    I read her testimony she never states that we should scrape the betamax case. She does compare current trials to it, and states how p2p networks don't fit within the case. And states that had Sony willingly advertised the VCR as a way to copy copywrited works, it may have come out the other way.

  89. Soylent Green, Inc. by OECD · · Score: 1

    This is supposed to be a government of the people, for the people, but is now controlled by the corporations...

    Well, legally a corporation IS a person, so that still holds...

    Seriously, the problem isn't so much about corporations as it is about money. Bill Gates has way more influence than the corporation I work for.

    Of course, influence runs both ways: IIRC, Gates wasn't giving money to the political parties until the anti-trust suit shook loose that money tree.

    --
    One man's -1 Flamebait is another man's +5 Funny.
  90. There must be a point of by failedlogic · · Score: 1

    At what point does this government believe that passing news laws will make America more civil and free?

    Already the DMCA imposes crazy penalties and fines on violators. For a country as privaledged and wealthy as it is, the US has amongst the highest encarceration rates: namely from those sent to jail for minor drug offences (usually possenssion of small amount of marijuana). So if you or your buddy get caught taping the next Superbowl, the Simpsons or Everybody Loves Raymond and you can't pay the fine..... do you go to jail???

    I'm in Canada, so any protests sent to US officials will go ignored. I encourage Americans to tell their officials they protest this. Tell your friends and neighbors. Your copyright laws are being passed on to other countries incl Canada and .... suprise.... Iraq Iraq Copyright

  91. Re:TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Precisely. Hence, I already see a vote for a republicrat as no vote, so I may as well spend my no-vote on whomever I actually want.

  92. shoot in foot by arakis · · Score: 1

    So will they then prosecute the induction of the oldest p2p on the Internet, IP? Really this whole thing gets back to that pesky DARPA and those hippie liberals in the UC system with their LSD and BSD.

    IP is what allow us to connect to nodes quasi-directly and initiate peered transactions at higher levels. Guess they will just have to sue themselves into oblivion after this is passed. If only there was someone to sue over the electron. Could we finally stop this Digital/Intel/Xerox abuse with that pesky Ethernet allowing people all over to connect machines as peers on a network?

    This whole thing stinks; all that is coming is more anti-capitalist market control and corporate welfare. Only supermodel P2P systems will actually feel the cut of this knife in a stupid fracas of greed. Oh well preach -> choir and maybe a little pot - kettle = black too in this post.

    1. Re:shoot in foot by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      You miss the main point of the act - any technology that makes high enough revenue for a select elite of corporations (who-ever paid hatch the most) is exempt. Obviously theres too much money to be made off IP to ban it, so it gets to stay, just as theres too much money to be made off portable digital music players, but only if they have DRM. Also you have to have your levels of exemption - ie who is allowed to have what. Obviously recording studios need to be able to have certain equipment, but the ultimate goal is that anyone without a license won't be allowed to own so much as a tape recorder - you'll have to use your phone to record things so that they can be scanned for material that may be copyrighted. You think im smoking something? this is the sort of crap that goes through their sick minds.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  93. Eh? by lewp · · Score: 0, Troll
    Marybeth Peters, of the US Copyright Office testified recently before the Senate Judiciary committee in support of the INDUCE Act

    Stupid bitch.

    --
    Game... blouses.
  94. Anybody else... by Cyno01 · · Score: 1

    Wanna rent some pirate costumes and camp out in front of Hatch's house? Yaahrr...

    --
    "Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
  95. Re:TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the other hand, reps want to grab your rights to do what you want when it comes to things like sex and religion, but they have been fairly ineffective in doing so.
    Quite the opposite. The republicans are now to blame running large deficits, invading countries, trying to pass the anti-gay stuff (if this economy was good, I suspect that they would get it passed), passing patriot actI/II (the day that sadaam's "capture" was announced, patriot II was passed as a rider on a minor bill in a non-recorded vote in both houses), allowing a traitor to exists in the white house, being so inept that they have managed to blow up 2 shuttles (sorry, but 2 years was long enough to fix things), allowing 3K+ to die, etc.etc.etc.

    Plain and simple, both parties are nightmares and they are both effective at accomplishing things, then trying to blame other.

    As to who is more effective, W. is to blame for many of todays ills. In my state, if it becomes a close election just before, I will vote for kerry, otherwise, I will vote libertarian.

  96. American System too Complicated! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These checks and balances are too complicated, this is easier, and thus better:

    1. The despot demands something be done.
    2. If it doesn't then you die.

    (Just hope he doesnt ask for something impossible to be done... a la getting into the Spruce Moose ;) )

  97. A note - Call you Senators. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I called my Senator, Jeff Session (R)-AL which is in this same committee with hatch. His aid assured me that he was against this legislation.
    I strongly encourage everyone to call their respective Senators and ask for their position. The more the better.

  98. Dont bother? by harley_frog · · Score: 1

    True, an intern is probably reading the letters, faxes, etc. that come in (that's part of their job, after all), but some times Senators and Congress members listen. I wrote my local Congress critters about SCO lobbying Congress against Open Source and got a response from one of my Senators that was not (at least from all appearances) a stock reply. Of course, YMMV. Some times if you yell loud enough and long enough, they'll hear you.

    --
    It's all fun and games until someone loses the key to the handcuffs.
    1. Re:Dont bother? by raydobbs · · Score: 1

      Write by hand, call, try to make appointments to speak to your congress critter in person - make an utter and complete ASS of yourself to get the point across. Basically, if they cannot ever get rid of you - then they will have no choice but to listen to you.

  99. No funny posts? by mantera · · Score: 1

    I usually read slashdot for the funny posts. It's remarkable that all the top-rated ones in this thread regarding the INDUCE act are either rated "interesting" or "insightful". I guess this sums up how seriously people feel about this issue.

  100. this is awesome, so how do you bring it by waspleg · · Score: 1

    to the Senate's attention? will they care? remember htey're all basically corporate sponsored these days anyway, hell they might as well have the Pepsi(TM) Congressional Chamber and Disney themed C-Span from the floor with annoying teeny bopper play by play mtv style

  101. This bill is a step backwards by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 1

    One of my dreams being a central library with all content 20 years ago and before on it.

    People could pick their favorite movies and books, and another person could use their recommendations to see whats worth viewing.

    With a central library, our culture as a whole would be better off. This bill gives more power to the most powerful people.

    That is of course in addition to the fact that its so broad that it makes owning a computer illegal because you could copy things with it.

  102. Logic by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    By the same 'logic', almost everything could be declared illegal due to potential misuse..

    Cars, drugs, food, guns, bricks, table spoons...

    The possibilities are endless and just as ludicrous..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  103. Wakeup calls by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    When you are talking about congress and laws, "wake up calls" are not too effective.

    Its much harder to get an insane law repealed then it ever does to get it passed..

    Its rare that laws ( or taxes ) are ever repealed.. common sence does NOT rule in washington.. So no, dont wish for this to be passed..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Wakeup calls by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      Its rare that laws ( or taxes ) are ever repealed..

      [trolling]Yeah, but when taxes are lowered, the liberals scream TAX CUTS FOR THE RICH, never mind that most of the taxes are paid by the rich anyways.[/trolling]

      Remember the death tax, anyone?

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    2. Re:Wakeup calls by jadavis · · Score: 1

      never mind that most of the taxes are paid by the rich anyways.

      The more important question is so much simpler. Are taxes on the rich to low? To high? Just right? Most people who whine about "tax cuts for the rich" have no idea what taxes on the "rich" actually are, or who is considered "rich". If "tax cuts for the rich" are always bad, then we should just tax "rich" people at 100%. So, sometimes a tax cut is good, sometimes it's bad. It all depends on the numbers, and the associated economic implications (which affect everyone).

      Few people have enough time to bother themselves with numbers, facts, or real economic analysis. It's so much easier to just buy into some rhetoric.

      Of course, there could be legitimate concerns about said tax cut. I'm just critisizing the people that are taken in by the rhetoric without asking the obvious questions.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
  104. OT: Excellent quote regarding interest groups by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "While the rich are as entitled to be heard as anyone else, they
    deserve no greater hearing."

    ALLAN HUTCHINSON, Globe And Mail, Wed 19, 2004

  105. You're right by neonfrog · · Score: 1

    His response is posted above.

    --

    I'm thinking about it, therefore I might be.

  106. Re:TROLL by abigor · · Score: 1

    Actually, this AC is right.

    http://world.std.com/~mhuben/faq.html
    http://www.sethf.com/essays/major/libstupid.php

    Libertarianism is naive and silly. Thankfully, it has no chance of ever going anywhere close to an elected office.

  107. Re:I wrote to my Senator - Now go to Jury Duty by Blackbrain · · Score: 1

    Every time I write my congress critter I get a jury duty notice. I though it was coincidence until the same thing happened to two other people I know. In all cases we never had jury duty before, we write a letter to congress and within a month get servered notice.

    Has this happened to anyone else?

    --
    Where would we be if Wheel had hid her round rock in a cave instead of showing everyone how it rolls?
  108. What if we had a copyright and nobody cared by deathcloset · · Score: 1

    follow me here,

    many, many intelligent people take issue with the current direction of copyright. Many of those same people actually don't even care for the current notion of copyright in the first place.

    These same people (within the US - perhaps elsewhere soon), myself included, will be forced by law to comply if these new laws are passed.

    I feel it is every cogent person's responsibility to disuse and disregard any works which ascribe to these new laws, and instead subscribe and add to the notions and creations of open works - made for the benefit of all, not just the benefit of one.

    If most (if not all) intelligent people were to do this, then most (if not all) works created under the new laws would be rubbish. These works would be of little or no value since the input of smart, creative folk would be directed and contained within open works - seperate and above these restrictive laws.

    In other words, let them keep thier gold - We'll take the silicon.

    Now the final piece, all we need are some smart farmers willing to take free, intellectual works to keep us all fed with open food :)

  109. Vote for what you support by SirWhoopass · · Score: 1

    Tax cuts were given to everyone. In terms of percentage, the poor saw a bigger cut than the rich. A family of four making $50,000 a year had their federal income taxes cut by 50%.

    In terms of absolute dollar amounts, the rich certainly saw a bigger cut. That's because they paid more in the first place.

    The sad fact of Kerry's plan is that he will raise income taxes on the working upper-middle class (above $200,000), while doing nothing about the tax shelters used by the super-rich (both Kerry and Edwards are in the super-rich category).

    Which brings me to your "Republicans versus Democrats" slant. It is unfair, and counter-productive. Is Bush representative of all Republicans? Hardly. There are a lot of conservatives who are quite upset with the administration. Is Kerry representative of all Democrats? Also, not true.

    Politicians needs to be evaluated individually, and on the issues. The notion of "anyone but Bush" is stupid and dangerous. It implies support for anyone at all, regardless of how bad they are, as long as it is not the current President. There are a lot of people out there who are worse than Bush. I'm not stating that Kerry is one of them, but pointing out that one needs to vote for someone who they believe will act in their interests. Not simply for anyone who isn't the person they dislike.

    1. Re:Vote for what you support by gcaseye6677 · · Score: 1

      What a lot of people don't realize is that the "working rich" get really really hosed by taxes. Doctors, lawyers, accountants, don't have too many places to shelter their wealth from insane levels of taxes. The old-money types can set up trusts, foundations, and various other schemes where they officially have no personal wealth but yet enjoy very comfortable lives. This set of rules is the only reason why rich people will support democratic politicians and high taxes, estate taxes, etc. Because they won't be paying them; only people who are working for their money pay high taxes.

  110. Orwell 1984 and the Revolutionary War by Dan667 · · Score: 1

    The problem is that the masses will never wake up. (1984 book) The only reason they did in the Revolutionary War is because there was wide spread oppression and religous intolerance. Everyone was unhappy and knew why. In this technology/civil rights battle was most of the people affected cannot even program their VCR or list their civil rights.

    1. Re:Orwell 1984 and the Revolutionary War by wynndow · · Score: 0

      I agree for the most part but entertainment has become the religion of this country and people are devoted to it more than just about anything. I think they would wake up and holler pretty loud!

    2. Re:Orwell 1984 and the Revolutionary War by thogard · · Score: 1

      Maybe you sould look at the numbers involved in the revolution. It wasn't the US aginst England. It was a few powerful colonialist (that tended to see themselves as Virginians or what ever region they were from) aginst a few powerful people that were loyal to the King. Most of the population was nutral on the matter and felt if they annoyed England, they couldn't get the goods which at that time were mostly imported. A vast majority of just didn't care then like they don't care now.

  111. Apple's RIP MIX BURN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple had an advert Rip Mix Burn, they have ad device that plays MP3 the bulk of which must be created by ripping from copyrighted material.

    RIAA sues everyone for everything, including suing CD duplicators for not checking if the material is copyrighted.

    So what planet are you on?

  112. stupid american trash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bwahahahahahaha
    fuck you up shit stains!

  113. So... by ThisIsFred · · Score: 1

    Is there a way we can get Hatch to be accountable for this? Where is his representation in Utah? Where is the public support abroad? Utah is especially important, because those folks voted him in. How do they feel? My guess is, like most of the population, they are indifferent. While I'm a Republican, and I like reduced government and tax cuts, I'd like to borrow the Democrat characterization "fiscally irresponsible" and make a slight change. Hatch, like many of his fellow congresscritters, is not "irresponsible", he's "fiscally simpleminded." Tax cuts are great, but on the other end we have protectionist legislation being proposed that will not only obstruct the regular, healthy progress of the economy, but also make the government responsible for maintaining the status quo. We've already paid our taxes for decades so the courts could hear the numerous cases surrounding copyright and electronic medium. Now we're going to pay while the government takes over a job from a private industry. Hatch can stuff it.

    --
    Fred

    "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
    -RMS
  114. Why SBC WOULD want this. by slithytove · · Score: 1

    That would seem to make sense. However, I can see a (rather nasty) reason why any large telecom company would be in favor of INDUCE. In order to enforce it, either the end user's equipment or the ISP's will need to be "enhanced" with DRM/ filtering technology. This technology would either have to be massively limiting, going so far as to ban encryption all together (or require key escrow), or would have to be updated as fast as the community could work around it. It would be far more difficult to get every desktop/server in the US equipped with such hardware/software than to require ISPs to implement it. Obviously this would cost SBC some money and you'd think I'd proven your point. The key, though, is that this additional overhead required of ISPs would further subvert the smaller ISPs and encourage the consolidation of companies and stagnation of innovation that we can see in the history and present of the telecom industry.

  115. Leahy is an idiot by PhilipPeake · · Score: 1
    Vermont's Patrick Leahy, the top Democrat on the panel, echoed Hatch's comments. "Nobody wants to undermine the iPod or any other piece of technology out there," he said. "We have to understand that some people use P2P technology in ways that are wrong and illegal."

    First comment - the people he refers to are already doing something illegal. If you prove it, go ahead and prosecute them. There is no need for any further action.

    Next, his dimwitted view of "P2P technology". Its a term he doesn't understand. It has been applied to a particular sub-set of P2P technologies, which have actually been around for many, many years. Ban P2P technology and you ban SMTP - so no more e-mail for a start.

    This whole thing is just a indication of an underlying problem - the view of our ruling criminal overlords that its not sufficient to make some act illegal, you also need to make illegal every innocent article that can potentially be used to commit that act.

    1. Re:Leahy is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe their position is, they know there are people out there doing something illegal, and they know that it is beyond their resources to stop it. They have widespread crime, and are unable to prevent it. They have interested people shouting in their ear that they *must* do something about it, and those are the very people who control the media, which politicians absolutely need. The other ear? They hear everything from anarchistic rants to well-reasoned explanations of why they are overstepping their bounds of authority. Guess which ear they listen to?

      The *only* way to fix this, or any other political problem, is to use the process that exists, and express the will of the people via democracy.

      My position is that we have done exactly this. The government, whether you like it or not, is an expression of the will of the people. I think, by and large, the US government really does represent what the people want, and those who disagree are very much in the minority.

      That understanding scares me more than anything a politician can do.

  116. VCR won't become illegal by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Interesting
    If I were one of the evil overlords working on this, I would handle it by writing in weird exceptions. Grandfather the VCR in. That way, they can outlaw the VCR in principle and prevent future products that do essentially the same thing from becoming mainstream, but not actually outlaw the VCR specifically. That way, you avoid inciting outrage in the sleeping masses.

    It's a general principle you'll see all the time: screw the future, but don't make too many people mad right now.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    1. Re:VCR won't become illegal by jcostantino · · Score: 1
      I for one welcome you! Anyhow... there is no damn way that they could avoid grandfathering in existing equipment, they will just hope that eventually it'll break and be discarded. This would most likely drive up a black market for "pre-ban" devices.

      Similar to gun parts regarding clips over 10 rounds. I'm sure a used Glock clip goes for a bit more than a new one for the same model did before the ban.

      --
      Reviews with a twist! http://www.sardonicbastard.com
    2. Re:VCR won't become illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forget used clips, there are so many NIB pre-ban clips that were produced before the ban became law, that the prices are not an issue. Just picked up a nice still in the wrapper 30 round M1 carbine magazine for under $20.00.

    3. Re:VCR won't become illegal by Vancorps · · Score: 1
      Might revitalize a hardware repair industry. Right now you don't fix that broken computer, you replace parts. I suspect people would want to hold on to their pre-ban equipment as long as possible since new technology wouldn't have the abilities of the old technology.

      I don't think any of this will make it to law though.

  117. I love their attitude about it by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1

    Did you notice this quote from Hatch? "If you help us, we just might get it right," he said. great. That shows a lot of intelligence on his part. He's proposing legislation that he knows is wrong and saying it's other people's responsibility to make suggestions to correct it before it gets passed.

    --
    We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
  118. not just Hatch by SethJohnson · · Score: 1
    Hatch has been steadily earning the name "RINO" in conservative circles for his "Republican In Name Only" politics.

    Orrin isn't the only RINO. One of the basic tenets of the Republican Party is that they favor 'smaller government'. In the past four years, the Republicans have lost the ability to taunt the democrats as the 'tax-and-spend liberals'. We now have a $500 trillion deficit and an entire new department in the government with tens of thousands of new federal employees (Homeland Security). Talk about beaureaucratic redundancy! We've now got the CIA, the FBI, and Homeland Security all working in the same field.

    Another tenet they've left by the wayside is 'less government intrusion' in peoples' lives through fewer regulations. Well, it seems like regulations are bad when they concern big business, but if it has anything to do with the Bible, then the Republicans will spend countless days trying to pass laws (i.e. Ban on Gay Marriage).

    On the plus side, the Republicans seem to be deftly wielding fear and it seems to be working well on controlling the majority of the American Public.
    1. Re:not just Hatch by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      One of the basic tenets of the Republican Party is that they favor 'smaller government'.

      They give lip service to the idea, but they are just as in favor of big government as the democrats are. With the big two parties, whether they favor big, central control or whether they favor local control depends entirely on which approach gives their own party more power. When the localities are more republican than democrat, the republicans will talk about more localized control being a good thing. When the localities are more democrat that republican, the democrats will talk about more localized control being a good thing.

      As proof that the parties have flipped in the past on this issue, the famous president that convinced people that big government is worth having a civil war to preserve, was the first Reublican president. (Although I don't believe that was his actual reason, that was the rhetoric used to make everyone go along with the idea. Just like today when the big two parties talk of big vs small governments, it's a smokescreen for the issues they really are interested in.)

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    2. Re:not just Hatch by RALE007 · · Score: 1
      I hate the shinnanigans in the United States government, but I also despise misinformation.

      ...We now have a $500 trillion deficit...

      The deficit is the largest it's been in history, however it is one thousand times smaller than your claim of 500 trillion to the tune of 500 billion. To put it in another perspective, according to The CIA World Factbook, your dollar figure of the deficit is nearly fifty times the gross domestic product of the United States, and ten times the gross world product. So unless the United States government is buying ten times more than everything annually produced on the entire planet, your figure would be wrong.

      ...and an entire new department in the government with tens of thousands of new federal employees (Homeland Security). Talk about beaureaucratic [sic] redundancy! We've now got the CIA, the FBI, and Homeland Security all working in the same field...

      The FBI, CIA, and The Department of Homeland Security most certainly do work in the same field, however they have differing focus, jobs, and responsibilities. Your argument is analogous to one claiming that the transportation manufacturing field is overly redundant because there are airplane manufacturers AND auto manufacturers. There certainly is large amount of waste because of bureaucratic redundancy, but for gods sake, use specific factual examples instead of thinking that "Look, they're in the same field!" means a damn thing.

      --
      Beware blue cats moving at .99c
    3. Re:not just Hatch by SethJohnson · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the correction on the figures. Pulled straight out of my ass....

      Please explain to me what work Homeland Security does that the FBI couldn't do. This department should NEVER have been created. Gifted leadership would have modified the responsibilities of the existing FBI and CIA organizations in order to handle this need. You want an example of redundancy? How about the simple task of domestic intelligence gathering. The Homeland Security Department will fully employ 170,000. The only department that is larger than that is the Dept. of Defense.

  119. If you don't vote Libertarian, you ASKED FOR THIS by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

    I couldn't agree with you more.

    What's surprising is how many people don't realize that in order for the Senate to "lean" in this direction, it requires DEMOCRATS to be in favor of it too.

    We've both faces of the Boot On Your Neck party smiling with this bill of Control Over Information.

    Bob-

    --
    The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
  120. It's not that vague by bluesbrosfan · · Score: 1

    [T]he test of liability is very vague; I'm guessing that a court probably wouldn't find a P2P provider liable solely on the 'all relevant information...' bit

    I disagree. I don't think a court would have any trouble applying this standard. The concept of charging a judge or jury to answer a question based on what a "reasonable person" would do or understand is very, very old and very, very common in American (and probably UK) law.

    With regards to the "all relevant information" clause, to me that just means that that the judge or jury should attempt to put himself in the shoes of the person or company who is accused. Putting oneself in the shoes of the accused and considering "all relevant information" available to them at the time is another very common legal concept, used, for example, in negligence cases and in self-defense and defense-of-others matters to determine if someone's conduct was reasonable under the circumstances.

    The second part is likely to prove more troublesome; on whether a P2P provider can profit and prove that they don't have to relay upon illegal file-sharing to do so.

    I don't think this is a hard question, either, at least in the current P2P context where copyrighted material is so common. The profit thing doesn't have to be "proven" by anybody. At least in the civil context, it's a matter of which side made the most convincing argument - the preponderance of the evidence standard. I think somebody could probably make a good case that Kazaa would not be commercially viable without copyrighted material being shared.

    I can think of two work-arounds; free/shareware programs that have no commercial purpose, no advertising, and don't make anybody money...

    That would not be a work around, it would just make it a little more difficult to prove. The commercial viability thing is not a requirement, it's simply one way that a plaintiff could prove intent to induce infringement."

    ...or if a P2P partially sells out - works with The Man to help sell/exchange files - but still allows users to trade files on their own.

    Would the Man really be willing to work with a P2P service that allowed users to trade files on their own? No.

  121. the awful truth by flacco · · Score: 1

    1) you are probably smarter than a sizable majority of the population

    2) the targeted music 'consumer' would still crave brittany and justin even if the only way to get it were to have the broken pieces of the crushed-up CD's packed up their asses with a putty-knife.

    3) the average Have (rich, educated, powerful, politically-connected) looks at the average Have-not (half-witted hand-to-mouth douchebag working at a car wash) more as a herd animal than a human being. ie, raw material to be managed for the maximum aggregate labor output with minimum unrest, carroted and sticked into whipping up a frothy lather of frivolous economic activity from which the Haves skim the cream.

    4) darwin was right.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  122. Congress looking for a budget cut target by alizard · · Score: 1
    Marybeth Peters, of the US Copyright Office testified recently before the Senate Judiciary committee in support of the INDUCE Act, which has been discussed here before. In summary, she thinks its not strong enough. Among other things, she proposed scrapping the Betamax decision, which makes it legal to timeshift TV shows with a VCR. Analysis here."

    I think she should be on the record industry payroll, not ours.

  123. Jury Duty by harley_frog · · Score: 1
    Hey, I rather like getting called for jury duty. After all:
    1. My vote counts as 8.33..% of the total
    2. I get a day (or more) off of work
    3. I get paid for it (since I'm salary, that's extra spending cash)
    Can't get the same deal at the general election. Well, I suppose you could, but . . . ;)
    --
    It's all fun and games until someone loses the key to the handcuffs.
  124. Libertarians take votes away from BOTH by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

    That's false. Both faces of the Boot On Your Neck party hate the Libertarians, which is why they both cooperate to ensure Libertarians are never included in debates, that the mass media simply ignore the Libs as much as possible, etc.

    Have you never read the Libertarian platform? Democrats hate it as much as Republicans to.

    Far more often I read people spewing how Libertarians are just Republicans who want to smoke pot, than how Libertarians are Democrats who have been mugged.

    Bob-

    --
    The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
    1. Re:Libertarians take votes away from BOTH by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Hating both major parties as much as I do, I've never voted for either in my many years as an eligible adult voter. More than useless, I'm always horrified at what either might think up at any given moment.

      That said, let me just say that there is hate enough in me to leave plenty left over for the Libertarians. You would think that between the 2 major parties, they could have a perfect monopoly on utter insanity. You would be wrong.

      Tell me Mr. Libertarian, would the LP have done anything differently with the DOJ antitrust case against Microsoft? What about the FCC restrictions on media ownership, aren't those rather anti-libertarian?

    2. Re:Libertarians take votes away from BOTH by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Tell me Mr. Libertarian, would the LP have done anything differently with the DOJ antitrust case against Microsoft?

      We wouldn't have wasted any more taxpayer money on overpaid lawyers than we absolutely had to. We would have looked at the case, look who was on the political donation roster, and said publicly,"Microsoft has you hamstrung. We're not going to waste your money even trying. If you want to fix it then you'll need to quit buying Microsoft. If your corporate masters insist on Microsoft products you'll need to take it up with your corporate masters. We won't waste your money trying to convince you that we have anything to do with this."

      What about the FCC restrictions on media ownership, aren't those rather anti-libertarian?

      Ownership is a good thing but we would have ensured that the ownership was to individual private citizens so that, if anyone was caught abusing their power, they couldn't hide behind a corporate legal team to cover their butts. You know, like the way the big media corporations have used their collective market position to make it almost impossible for you, as a private citizen, to even think about radio or television ads to keep up with Republicans and Democrats at election time.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    3. Re:Libertarians take votes away from BOTH by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Your first answer sucked, and is wholly unnacceptable. The second one is better than I might have hoped, but only tolerable if my brain is deprived of oxygen for more than 2 minutes.

      Private citizens are better than soulless corporations, and if we could all start off from scratch, it might work. In practice though, with your libertarian revolution, the same billionaires that own media companies indirectly would be forced to admit it, and buy them personally. Big deal, it doesn't fix anything, and even though they have to own up to it, those same billionaires could just buy it all up, with no checks on what they own. And you know what, they just might let the libertarians stay in power, assuming you allowed all that.

    4. Re:Libertarians take votes away from BOTH by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

      Tell me Mr. Libertarian, would the LP have done anything differently with the DOJ antitrust case against Microsoft?

      Without doubt. First of all, Microsoft never forced anyone to use their products. So long as Microsoft doesn't use force or fraud, they have committed no crime.

      So the prosecution may have happened anyway, but for entirely different reasons.

      Microsoft did, indeed, use fraud often and widely to crush others, they stole ideas and code freely. They fabricated evidence that was used in the trial. For all these reasons Microsoft should have been prosecuted, not for simply being purchased by a large number of people.

      Another thing Libertarians would have done differently is in not accepting product instead of cash for the penalty. Imagine that, Microsoft gets to write off $300 of their "punishment" for the cost of a $.50 CD, and then charge the "winner" when the time comes for upgrading.

      What about the FCC restrictions on media ownership, aren't those rather anti-libertarian?

      Far more anti-liberty are the restrictions that say I cannot operate a radio or television station, without licenses and permits which ensure that only large corporations are able to afford to transmit.

      The FCC was established to censor and control media reporting of the abuses of government. Just like the RailRoad Commission, it was designed and built in cooperation with Big Media, who ensured that the resulting rules and regulations (while an occasional minor hindrance) prevented competition.

      The illusion many people have about freedom is that those who espouse it believe it will ensure the perfect world. But Utopia was the creation of a philosophy of total control, not freedom.

      The benefits of freedom don't mean there will be no criminals, no idiots, no one trying to get ahead by screwing their fellows.

      The benefit of freedom is that such people will not have the monopoly on force that government makes available for their own use. No badges to hide behind, no ability to avoid responsibility by claiming they were just following orders.

      They will have to get ahead by making a better product, providing a better service. Just like the peaceful, productive people who make up the large majority of everyone does right now.

      Bob-

      --
      The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
  125. Every vote counts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I understand that you want to vote based on pure ideals, however, the voting system is not a mechanism to make philosophical claims. It is a system to place the next set of officials in office. If your vote does nothing, you have simply thrown your vote away.

    If the vote is actually tallied, then each vote does do something.

    Nader supposedly 'took' a lot of Democrat votes - do you think the Democratic party didn't notice?

    Have you noticed the amount of attention they are giving to their "base" lately?

    2000 was a HUGE wake up call for the party leadership. It was too close and they lost BIG TIME.

    The most common reason for voting Nader was to shake up the two party system, since they were too similar. I'd say that those Nader votes the most powerful votes of that election - far from being "thrown away".

  126. "which file-swapping networks are legal"??? by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1
    Get a load of this section from the article:
    Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Electronics Association, suggested that the Senate wait for the courts to figure out which file-swapping networks are legal.
    How can some be legal and some be not legal? This is kind of the basis of this whole bill. There are some nebulous factors that apparently indicate that one network "induces infringement", while another one doesn't.

    Even beyond that, he suggests that they wait for them to decide which ones are illegal. To do what? Pass a law to make them MORE illegal?

    Even if they get some networks shut down that "induce infringement", the traffic will just move to other networks. And if they then change their conditions so that they shut down the rest of them, it will just move to some other distribution method--anonymous networks, newsgroups, whatever. This is just the world's biggest game of Whack-a-mole that they have no chance of winning.
    --
    We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
  127. Out the porthole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and into the sea. It's time to chuck it out the Hatch with a "Limited Terms" bill. Boxer can go, too.

  128. Not likely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't worry, you'll still have Slashdot to distract you from your work.

    Not for long. The Internet is the greatest mechanism for distributing copyrighted works ever invented. It will soon be shut down so that the RIAA, MPAA, etc. can try to make a buck. You really gotta feel for those poor destitute CEOs that have seen their honest living shot down by pirates. I mean, the record industry used to make a lot of money and ... what's that? They are still making record-breaking profits? Wait a second. They break the law and collude to screw over their customers too? You mean they aren't being completely honest, and are in fact being quite hypocritical? Well, when you put it that way, screw them and screw the congressweasels that they bought. Let's see how much money they make when you can't do a damn thing with the music and movies you buy, and you can't watch your favorite shows cause they come on at a bad time for you. People will lose interest and find other things to do. I really hope the fuckers get what's coming to them.

  129. Ubiquity sells by Proc6 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Digital media is fun right now, CDs and DVDs combined with MP3s and MPEGs, iPods, notebooks and portable DVD players abound and the synergy between the outright paid for content and the "shared" content keeps them both going.

    It has to be the ubiquity and fun, because it sure as hell isn't talent.

    So once they drop the axe on PVRs, VCRs, MP3 players, any type of recording, sharing or portable media devices that don't require retinal scans and call in activation. Once this new "Digital Lifestyle" becomes an expensive burden, they will start to lose money.

    I buy CDs, usually most the songs suck, but theres a few on there. I know I can just rip the CD, toss it in the closet (or garbage), move it around from PC to notebook to MP3 player at will. It probably wasn't worth the $12 for the talent, but oh well its fun and easy. The first CD I physically can't rip/move or that requires me to call some 800 number to activate - seriously - people will start examining the value and quality of the content first and the impulse buys will drop. It becomes a hassle to enjoy the digital lifestyle so people will only put money in the things they're really really serious about, and that will impact sales a lot.

    --

    I'm Rick James with mod points biatch!

    1. Re:Ubiquity sells by steveha · · Score: 1

      ...once they drop the axe on PVRs, VCRs, MP3 players, any type of recording, sharing or portable media devices that don't require retinal scans and call in activation...

      They won't try this. People like all these things, and if the government tries to take them away, the people will vote to replace the government.

      I buy CDs, usually most the songs suck, but theres a few on there.

      I recommend you check out Magnatune. They let you listen to all the songs they sell, and then they let you decide how much you want to pay for an album (in the range of $5 to $18) and if you only like a few songs, just pay the $5. Then you download the music, in your choice of four formats (WAV, FLAC, Ogg Vorbis, MP3).

      I'm not connected with them but I've bought several albums through them and I hope they prosper.

      http://magnatune.com

      steveha

      --
      lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
    2. Re:Ubiquity sells by swankypimp · · Score: 1
      I hardly ever download music. However, six months or so ago David Bowie put out a new album. I love Bowie (in a Platonic way), so I downloaded "Reality." I was impressed by it, and bought the album a few weeks later. This hurts the music industry how?

      Several of the albums I have (none of them mainstream) I downloaded first. Then again, by previewing the music I didn't purchase several crappy records that had one hit single. Maybe that's what the RIAA is afraid of.

      --

      --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
  130. That's nothing compared... by cnelzie · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...to the President's stand on Embryonic Stem Cell Research.

    He's against it, on moral grounds, because life 'begins' at conception and the research will 'destroy' the precious life of those poor defenseless Embryos... (Even though the Embryos in question would likely be destroyed anyway, but could be put to good use, possibly finding cures for terminal illnesses and increase the quality of life for people with nervous system disorders and the like.)

    So, how come he isn't going after the Invitro Fertilization Clinics?

    Those places Destroy THOUSANDS upon THOUSANDS of Embryos every year. Why not outlaw those factories of genocide? (Because it would be political suicide, otherwise infertile people want babies, that's more important then the several dozen of their embryos that are lost/destroyed in the process.)

    Where's the balance to that equation?

    The real answer is that there is no balance to any equation that involves a politician, at least the two political parties that run this nation. It seems that the only rational people that base decisions upon balance are those that aren't in either political party.

    I just wish it wasn't so.

    --
    If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
  131. I like your idea, but it will not work.... by micron · · Score: 1

    Today, we use our Tivo's (and VCR's) to time shift our programming for viewing.

    Cable companies in my area are now offering movies on demand. This is a legal, paid for, and controlled by methods protected by the DMCA service.

    You pay extra for this service.

    This legislation would effectively eliminate the need for that VCR that SO many American's use for illgal means today.

    Cable companies are already timeshifting movies, for your convenience of course, so you don't have to use that pesky VCR that is ever so hard to program.

    Will it be that far off for them to charge me to timeshift programs that are now currently free?

    This feeds into the dream that Hollywood wants. Anytime you want to access content, you have to pay to use it.

    For this reason, I fear that this legislation give the entertainment industry exactly what it wants, and the sheepish population of the US will play right into it.

  132. Socialism by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

    Anything less is just Socialism, rather than Communism.

    --
    The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
  133. You like the electoral college? I don't. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Take away the electoral college and you take away the only thing keeping your over-populated metropolises fed.

    You should be made aware that the electoral college is already population-based. California, for instance, has many, many more votes than North Dakota does.

    The issues that people have with the electoral college focus around the fact that it is only a rough-grained representation of what people want. For example, by Gerrymandering (redrawing voting districs for political advantage), one can isolate all the people that feel strongly about one issue in a single district, and limit their influence to one vote, leaving remaining districts to be narrow victories for the other side.

    The main reasons people support the electoral college at all are logisticial issues that I largely now see as solved. It can reduce the cost of recounts by localizing disputes, and speed up the amount of time until the results from voting are in.

    Other political effects -- it tends to reduct the impact of physical areas that overwhelmingly feel strongly about something. This tends to blunt the political impact of, say, Mormons in Utah, since Utah has as much clout as a bunch of people in New York, which might somewhat favor abortions but not be screaming and raving about it like the Mormons.

    Theoretically, the representative elected in an electoral college does *not* have to follow the vote of the people that he is representing (a rather disturbing thought to many people, including me). It has only happened a handful of times; perhaps ten electors have disregarded the wishes of the people they represented over the history of the United States, but it can happen.

  134. We're all criminals by mindaktiviti · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the 21st century.

  135. Scared of the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a Canadian, I'm finding the US is becoming a country to fear. From my perspective, corporations are hijacking your democracy. Laws are not being made to improve the average joe's life and protect their liberties. Instead, it seems that all laws being created either strip you of your liberties or line the pockets of your corporations. Republicans, Democrats, they are both the same from a Canadian perspective. They both take huge corporate donations, usually from the same company, and look after the interests of their contributors. The rights of the average person are taken care of as long as it doesn't conflict with the agendas of your corporations.

    The DMCA, INDUCE Act, Patriot Act, Patent system, and changes to Copyrights are all indicators of a deterioration of what used to make the US great.

    I realize that this is coming across as a rant, but the US has changed a lot in the last four years and not for the better.
    The US is no longer respected by countries that admire it, instead countries respect the US because they fear it. The US is no longer the Jewel of Democracy, it's more like the Zirconium of Democracy.

  136. System=broken by SteveXE · · Score: 1

    There should be no such thing as campaign contributions of any kind, everyone who runs should get the same things, same tv time, same radio time, same everything. Until we change the way people are elected our goverment will never be for the people, it will always be for the corporations so they can rape the people who pay their salaries.

    1. Re:System=broken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You going to give the Nazi party the same advantages as the Indians who want the US to enforce its treaties? You going to give the Communists the same airtime you give the Republicans?

    2. Re:System=broken by SteveXE · · Score: 1

      This is a free country is it not? If you have a better idea please share, because the way things are going we are all royally fucked.

  137. possible solution by Starji · · Score: 1

    A few other posters have mentioned that they just don't care and the sooner this passes the sooner the fools who passed it will realize what a huge mistake they have made. Personally, I feel the same way.

    One of the main points against this act is how it will stiffle creativity and innovation, especially in the computer industry. If that is the case then perhaps it would be a good idea to move software companies outside of the US so they can work freely. This sort of mass migration might just get Congress' attention and make them rethink their positions. Things probably wont get bad enough to do this, but it would probably speed things up.

  138. is it really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IAAL, a copyright lawyer, in fact. One that has worked on a case or two of this nature (and I'm not telling for which side -- though I'm sure you will have a guess).

    I think the overwhelming fear here is that P2P networks will inherently be declared illegal, but that is not necessarily the case. Kazaa, Grokster, and Morpheus are all businesses for profit which desire a share of the music industry. They go to conferences and beg for a moratorium on prosecution, or for the music industry to license them, or for old laws to be overturned so that they can continue with their business models. These companies would not have have business if not for the presence of copyrighted works. Period. From time to time, I'll do a search for "bible" or "koran" (in various spellings) or "declaration of independence" and maybe, just maybe get one or two hits. On the other hand, I can get Spiderman 2 from 300-400 people. I can get just about any piece of music I desire, most of which I know for a fact are not available with the performer's or songwriter's permission.

    A network which truly does not profit should not have any reason to induce. That is, a reasonable person (despite what another poster claimed, that is a common barometer in American law at least) should be able to look at a network and say, "those guys are selling ads, they want people to use this network, and they're attracting people to use the network by encouraging the sharing of copyrighted materials." Or they can say "this was written by a group of professors for research purposes -- they make no money, and have no motive to encourage stealing."

    I guess I don't see why that's so bad. Sure, there's a slippery slope argument, and indeed every law that is ever passed is on the slippery slope from freedom to a lack thereof. We draw arbitrary points in the law all the time. What's wrong with this one?

  139. This reply is BS by ghack · · Score: 1

    Second, voters are very unlikely to go from Republican to Libertarian.

    This is, simply, not true! The only libertarian high level officials in the U.S. have all been republicans. Two term New Mexico governor Gary Johnson, a Republican, advocated legalization of all drugs, and promoted the non-agression principle. Congressman Ron Paul, M.D., the 1988 Libertarian party presidential candidate, is a "Republican," although he votes only for legislation if it adheres to his libertarian principles. Additionally, Jeff Flake, a very libertarian congressman from Arizona, is a Republican.

    The libertarian party believes that we should eliminate essentially all taxation eliminate all gun laws and eliminate all environmental regulations

    If you believe any libertarian would vote for Kerry, you are sorely mistaken! Understand what a libertarian is before you post, and mod this terrible bullshit parent DOWN.

    Orrin Hatch is NOT a libertarian, nor is Bush, they are both conservatives, but there is, and always will be, a percentage of the republican party that is libertarian/classically liberal.

    Name a SINGLE libertarian democrat in the congress!!!

  140. Look who's sponsoring the bill by jonatha · · Score: 1

    Both Senator Frist (majority leader) and Senator Daschle (minority leader) are cosponsors.

    This one's going to pass...

    --
    The SCO lawsuit makes me wish my company were in Utah. We need a new building.
  141. Slashdot editors need to RTFA! by techstar25 · · Score: 1

    In the Marybeth Peters statement (an eye-opening read that cuts through the paranoia/lies that Slashdot is spoonfeeding you) she says several interesting things. She is not in favor of scrapping the Betamax decision, and makes no mention of it not be strong enough, despite what our editors want you to believe. She says:

    These circumstances also help to show why the concerns about the breadth of the bill are misplaced. As Senator Leahy's floor statement makes clear, those who merely provide copying technology should not be liable under this bill, because they would lack indicators of "intentional inducement" like those found in the peer-to-peer context. For example, the seller of a portable MP3 player does not make it nearly inevitable that the user will commit copyright infringement just by turning the device on. Rather, several additional steps must be taken by the user before any potential infringement takes place. Also, the seller of the portable device is very likely not reliant on building a network like the peer-to-peer service that is trying to sell advertising, and therefore it typically has no need to and does not encourage users to become distributors of copyrighted works.

    She also says:

    In addition, concerns that this bill would affect liability of Internet Service Providers ("ISPs") are unfounded. Normal activity of an ISP like that defined in the Section 512 safe harbors could not reasonably be considered intentional inducement.

    If you know nothing about copyright and want a primer, her statement covers the facts. Obviously, this law still creates a slippery slope, but she gives facts making it riduculously clear that Kazaa and others like it are designed to contribute and profit from copyright infringement. For instance, based on her description of the offending behavior, it's clear that Bittorrent, for instance, would have no problem proving it's legal uses, especially since companies like Mandrake and Linspire are using Bittorrent for distribution now. Frankly, if this does pass (and I wrote my reps via the EFF form to ensure it it doesn't) it might not be as bad as some think.

  142. I agree about US preferences by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    but I think we're blaming the wrong guy.

    Bush is a huge flipper. Sure, he sticks to (bad) decisions like glue, but when there's a vote to pick up by shredding a core Republican principle, he'll do it in a heartbeat.

    He opposed the Dept. of Homeland Security. Big government, anti-freedom. Oh, polls were in favor. Cool. He's down with it now. Especially as something to bludgeon Dems with. (Who were for it, almost unanimously, and who were among the folks who originated the idea.)

    Agricultural subsidies - statist and terrible economics. What - my base in the Red States is addicted to them? Sure!

    Free Trade? Sure, unless tariffs on steel might sway West Virginia.

    UN involvement in Iraq - "don't need 'em" until we do. Both dumb and a flip flop.

    The stem cell position is as agonizingly nuanced and weaselly as anything a Democrat pres or presidential candidate has articulated in the last 30 years.

    Bush has almost no principles. Those he has are wrong.

  143. seriously... by BinaryJono · · Score: 2, Insightful

    we all need to move to utah to make sure orrin hatch never again wins a seat in the us senate...

  144. Just a thought by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1
    I agree with the general attutide around here on matters of copyright, but could it be possible to view this issue as a protection of the minority from the majority?

    I see a lot of people saying that these laws are bad NOT because they are badly written or inefficient, but because "most" people don't like them. This is supposed to be representative government, right?

    But majority opinion only matters up to the boundary where it crosses into the rights of the minority, or even a single person. The minority in this case, of course, is the artist, and the majority is the consumers of the art. The artist has created something that has a high demand and, as a result, an intrinsic value beyond any concept of it being a unique physical object or not. If there was no demand, this problem would not exist. To copy a song isn't theft, but there is a loss of value there. There's a consumer who desired the product. The copy also has value brought into being by the consumer's desire to have a copy.

    Maybe the consmuer would not have wanted it if paying for it was the only option, but now were getting into a speculative area that does not make for good legislation. You can't write "follow this rule, unless you really don't want to" in a law book.

    I'm not advocating this, just tossing it out to munch on. Maybe we need to once and for all clearly delineate what rights, exactly and precisely, the creators of easily reproduced art have. Right now it seems to be a mishmash. One ruling here about VCRs. Another here on portable players. Instead of another layer of laws, we need to shake it all out and get it straight.

    And, no, sorry, but "information wants to be free" is not a rational legal concept. ;-) Too often that means, "I want that information, and I want it for free."

    --
    --- Ban humanity.
  145. Escape Clause. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Hatch Pushes INDUCE Act"

    Ladies and Gentlemen. Something else has just fallen through the Boobie-Hatch.

  146. We're all missing the real reason here by aristus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    RIAA doesn't really want to eliminate the iPod, the VCR, etc. What they want is the power to do so, exactly how the Business Software Alliance has special powers granted by congress to examine all your computers, without a warrant, to certify "compliance", and sue you out of existance while forcing you to pay their legal bills. It's not something they do every day because they don't *have* to. The threat is enough.

    What the *AA want is a piece of the pie, to mandate DRM *and* get a royalty payment off every device and download. We keep telling them "get a new business model!" Well, this is it.

    --
    Sometimes seventeen/Syllables aren't enough to/Express a complete
  147. Not wrong, but illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Laws do not define morality.

    I disagree with the popular notion that a content originator should have complete control over how everyone else uses that content.

    "But it belongs to the originator!" you say?

    Ownership is a legal concept, with legal definitions. Laws have shaped our intuitions about ownership, however, they need not continue to do so.

    How to make money on free music:

    1) Assemble an entertaining music show.
    2) Distribute the songs for free over the internet
    3) Charge for live shows (PROFIT!)
    4) Charge for band-name merchandise (PROFIT!)
    5) Charge for commercial appearances (PROFIT!)

    Such a model both preserves the monetary incentive to produce music (though many musicians do it just because they love to) and allows people to trade content freely.....and all this without attempting to pass weird laws that prevent one from making use of some of the most fundamental features of one's hardware.

    Under such a model, "piracy" is not wrong, and for that matter doesn't have much of a meaning.

  148. let me add something rational here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Orrin Hatch is a fuck stick!

  149. Earn your rights to complain by Tajarix · · Score: 1


    I've contacted the offices of my senators and that of Mr. Hatch. Contact yours now and say you did something! If everyone on Slashdot actually followed through and did this, the opinion of many would be known, and known well.

    Yes, you can sit back and convince yourself that your opinion doesn't matter, or you can try to make a difference.

    http://www.senate.gov/

  150. We Need Real Reform by spirality · · Score: 1

    Recently many in the technology community have been railing against the Inducing Infringements of Copyrights Act of 2004 , or the INDUCE Act. Yesterday the Senate Judiciary Committee held hearings on the bill and after reading the testimony from that hearing I am, as a technologist, not so sure that the bill is a bad idea. The INDUCE Act will amend United States copyright law to treat as an infringer of a copyright any party who 'intentionally induces' the infringement of another party's copyright. The bill seems to have bipartisan support, and is sponsored, amongst others, by Orin Hatch, Tom Daschle, Hillary Clinton, Patrick Leahy, and Bill Frist. Senator Hatch and Senator Leahy are the Chairman and Vice Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

    The INDUCE Act is primarily focused on peer-to-peer networks and especially the use of them to illegally copy movies and especially music. The bill is meant to clarify the meaning of secondary liability in respect to copyright infringement. Secondary liability, in this circumstance, involves assigning liability to an actor who assists or facilitates an act of infringement, and has been recognized by the courts for decades. Previously Napster had been found guilty of secondary liability for allowing illegal downloads of copyrighted music, and was subsequently shut down. However, Grokster, another file sharing utility, was exonerated because, unlike Napster a centralized index of files available for download was not maintained. Still, the court realized that Grokster's revenues were linked to its large user base, which only existed because of the opportunities the network provided for the downloading of pirated music. [1] Certainly Grokster was not running an ethical business as it profitted because of the fact others were willing to break the law.

    Although peer-to-peer networks are often used to infringe copyrights, it is not the only legitimate use of them. Still, in her testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee, Marybeth Peters, the Register of Copyrights and Associate Librarian for Copyright, said that unlike the VCR, there was "no dispute that the use of [peer-to-peer network] services constitutes copyright infringement". Certainly many peer-to-peer networks are used primarily for copyright infringement. However, there is one peer-to-peer network The Free Network Project that is, in fact, being used in countries such as China to facilitate the free interchange of political ideas. Users contribute to the network by giving bandwidth and a portion of their hard drive (called the "data store") for storing files. Unlike other peer-to-peer file sharing networks, Freenet does not let the user control what is stored in the data store. Instead, files are kept or deleted depending on how popular they are, with the least popular being discarded to make way for newer or more popular content. Files in the data store are encrypted to reduce the likelihood of prosecution by persons wishing to censor Freenet content. [2]

    Any legislation, that prohibited such technology outright would irreparably damage the First Amendment in the digital age. The right to assemble virtually over the Internet, via a peer-to-peer network, or any other mechanism, is a trivial extension of the freedom to assemble in a public place. Any person should have the right to speak and to exchange ideas with any other person over the Internet, just as he does with a person in the physical realm. This "digital right to assemble" should neither be eroded by allowing the government to eavesdrop on conversations unless a proper warrant has been issued.

    The INDUCE Act, however, seems aimed primarily at companies that profit from providing technologies that are used to engage in copyright infringement. Now, this is tolerable to an extent, but it seems hard to differentiate the provider of peer-to-peer networking software like Kazaa, from manufacturers of CD burners and other mass storage devices, or a peer-to-peer network like Freenet for that matter. The vagueness of the law seems problemati

  151. This statement is key by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
    Marybeth Peters is quoted as stating:

    Let me be clear, however, that our concern about its future application should not hold up this bill.

    This is the point where all of us have to contact our senators because they are listening to the dullwit expertise of a woman who, frankly, would obviosuly not know what the proer use of a copyright was if it bit her in the face!

    The louder you are, and the more obvious you are about the fact that you are watching them, the more likely you are to be heard.

    Especially if you have a senator who is up for re-election.

    Contact your senator. Phone, e-mail, etc. Scream as load as you can. Tell your family and friends - scare them about the idea that their VCRs and TiVos could be considered illegal - and get them to contact their senators, too. This thing has to die in the Senate - fast.

  152. Re:You like the electoral college? I don't. by HBI · · Score: 1

    One of the nice things about the Electoral College is that it reduces the impact of ballot box stuffing in urban areas. At worst, NYC can only screw up the New York vote. This is what it was intended for - to provide some additional power to the smaller states and prevent the larger ones from controlling everything.

    The system isn't broken - besides it would require a constitutional amendment to change it, and it wouldn't pass because of the reason cited.

    --
    HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  153. RTFA yourself, first by roystgnr · · Score: 3, Interesting
    In the Marybeth Peters statement (an eye-opening read that cuts through the paranoia/lies that Slashdot is spoonfeeding you) she says several interesting things. She is not in favor of scrapping the Betamax decision, and makes no mention of it not be strong enough, despite what our editors want you to believe.

    Scrolling down to page 20 of Marybeth's statement:
    While you have carefully crafted this bill to preserve the 20-year-old decision in the Sony case, it may become necessary to consider whether that decision is overly protective of manufacturers and marketers of infringement tools, especially in today's digital environment. If the Sony precedent continues to be an impediment to obtaining effective relief against those who profit by providing the means to engage in mass infringement, it should be replaced by a more flexible rule that is more meaningful in the technological age, but that still vindicates the Court's goal to balance effective "and not merely symbolic" protection of copyright with the rights of others to engage in substantially unrelated areas of commerce.

    she gives facts making it riduculously clear that Kazaa and others like it are designed to contribute and profit from copyright infringement

    Unfortunately, Marybeth's understanding of peer-to-peer networking is just as superficial as your understanding of her statement. Her "ridiculously clear" facts include:

    Kazaa gets more advertising revenue from having more users. Duh. Her same argument would make Microsoft liable for people who send copyrighted attachments with Hotmail, except that unlike Kazaa, Microsoft has finally figured out that large companies can buy their way out of federal prosecution with enough political contributions.

    Kazaa automatically reshares downloaded files. Again, duh. Bittorrent (which you erroneously think she would support) works the same way. In any case it's irrelevant. If a file could have been legally downloaded once, then it's almost certainly free to upload afterward. In fact, the fact that peers do most of the uploading to relieve central servers of network congestion is practically the definition of how P2P software works!

    The X button minimizes instead of closes Kazaa. This doesn't "hide the program from the screen" as she says, it leaves the program in the taskbar, just like countless other programs from Mozilla to Winamp. Again, this is how P2P is supposed to work: because the software is always running, there is always a wide selection of uploaders available, and so uploads can be fast without swamping a central server.

    Kazaa lets you download more if you upload more. Again, Bittorrent works this way too. And yes, this is how P2P is supposed to work: fast download speeds for everyone are made possible by ensuring that the first people in line to download a file are the ones most likely to help others download it as well.
    1. Re:RTFA yourself, first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "it leaves the program in the taskbar, just like countless other programs from Mozilla to Winamp."

      The only way that mozilla or winamp will do this is if you tell them too. Just uncheck a button when you are installing it and you wont have to worry about it not closing.

      "Kazaa lets you download more if you upload more."

      Unless you have a hack installed or use K-Lite, which accounts for alot of people. And it would be possible just to leave the program running all the time if the damn thing didn't eat up 20% of your cpu.

    2. Re:RTFA yourself, first by shark72 · · Score: 1

      I acknowledge you're not a lawyer, so you may not have understood that the "it should be replaced by a more flexible rule..." business does not mean "throw out the decision and thus make VCRs illegal." She was suggesting that the decision no longer be applied as a rule within the concept of evaluating current cases. No worries... a lot of Slashdotters, including the one who did the write-up, also misunderstood this.

      "Kazaa gets more advertising revenue from having more users. Duh. Her same argument would make Microsoft liable for people who send copyrighted attachments with Hotmail, except that unlike Kazaa, Microsoft has finally figured out that large companies can buy their way out of federal prosecution with enough political contributions."

      This is a straw man (mischaracterizing somebody else's position so that it's easier to tear down). The argument is that Kazaa's business model relies on copyright infringement. This is largely via advertising revenue, and more Kazaa users means more ads, but this does not mean that anybody whose business model relies on ads also relies on copyright infringement, and that's not what she's implying. She's pointing out that Kazaa has a profit motive here, and not that relying on ad revenue is a litmus test for legality.

      The parent may not have been clear in his explanation of why he thinks that BitTorrent may not fall victim to this law while Kazaa would. One test (and I'm paraphrasing from the act here) is whether the system relies on piracy for commercial viability. You can do a thought experiment here and imagine what would happen to both services if, with the wave of a wand, all unauthorized copyrighted material were gone from both services tomorrow. Kazaa's traffic would go to less than 1% of what it is now, and their revenue stream would disappear almost as quickly. As the parent poster pointed out, there's a higher ratio of legimate traffic on BitTorrent. While you are 100% correct that both systems work in fundamentally the same manner, it's actually the difference in their business models which may, according to the parent poster, exclude BitTorrent. It's that same reason that your example of Microsoft's Hotmail would be exempt from the law -- and likewise, if starting tomorrow nobody could use Hotmail to infringe on somebody's copyright, it would probably keep chugging along.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
  154. Hatch would be found guilty under his bill.. by Phil+John · · Score: 1

    ...remember when someone found out his website was using a pirated menu script that hadn't been paid for? Well, apparently it was the web-designer who used it and thus commited copyright infringement, however, Sen Orin Hatch asked (induced) him to make the site, ergo, he could be implicated, now we just have to get him to make the bill retroactive and we could put pay to him once and for all. Or someone could end his suffering and put the fuckhead to sleep like they do to lame animals, either way, I'd chuckle.

    --
    I am NaN
  155. Amtrak? by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    Um, Amtrak is actually *useful* - the recording industry is *not* useful anymore.

    How the heck has *Amtrak* drained liberty from anybody? That's the dumbest analogy I've heard in weeks.
    Let's see here..
    Get on train. Pay $8. Get from my place to Sacramento in about an hour. Enjoy the scenery along the trip.
    Go to record store. Spend $16 on CD. Hate all but 2 songs. Can't return it because the store has a "no return policy." Can't rip it because of crazy DRM.

    Yeah, I think I'd take Amtrak any day.

    1. Re:Amtrak? by Natestradamus · · Score: 0

      I really think that, even if this bill should pass, the Supreme Court will throw it out. God bless the independent judiciary. But, in the worst case scenario, old tech will be our salvation. Can't rip the CD? Convert it to cassette, then you can have your way with it. Hang on to your VCR. Vive le resistance!

      --
      The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. --Edmund Burke
    2. Re:Amtrak? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Convert it to cassette, then you can have your way with it."

      That has got to be a totally new way of perversion that I never even thought of being possible...

  156. You've got it all wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You've got it all wrong....

    The record labels are in the position of whale-oil salesmen at the dawn of the age of electricity.

    The whale-oil industry undertook huge PR campaigns to talk about the evils of electricity... got laws passed to help them. In the end, they died like dinosaurs. The smart ones however, adapted.

    Here's the REAL problem: Adapting to embrace the new technology will in this instance, as the labels know, make the labels obsolete in the long run and they will perish.

    As many have noted, the labels simply have a dying business model, and suggest labels need to embrace on-line music sales and sharing. Some have done so. But what few people have realized is that by adapting to the new technology like the smart whale-oil salesmen, they are signing their own death warrant because the widespread adoption of legitimate, on-line music sales will have artists asking: "Why do I need a label?" And they will be right to answer that question "I don't" because the services (spit) labels give to artists (distribution, pressing, promotion, etc.) will be either 1) unnecessary or 2) practically no cost with on-line sales.

    You don't need a label to get your CD into the store with limited shelf-space.
    You don't need a label to front the budget for pressing.
    And consumers don't need a label to find and develop bands.

    Everyone else still has a job... producers, musicians, recording studios, roadies, groupies, etc.

    It is just the labels that die.

    They are desperate for a plan B that will save them... even if that means raping women and children and cutting heads of innocent old ladies. ANYTHING rather than die.

  157. Wish I could mod you up even further... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  158. Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Among other things, it's legal.

    This might be an excuse to start getting out the youth vote. I suggest the following add be placed by 'interested citizens' in his riding:

    Would you like to be thrown in jail for making an MP3?
    Do you want CD writers to be illegal?
    Would you like your computer destroyed for sharing your own music?
    Would you like VCRs to be illegal?

    If Orrin Hatch has his way, all of these things may come to pass.

    NOW is the time to stop him.

    Get active.

    Get voting

    These ads should start going out as soon as possible.. Similar adds in the constituencies of other senators who are supporting this bill.

    People should start putting notices on their websites about senators and congresscrittors trying to outlaw these things.

    If anything will get out the youth vote, I think that this will.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    1. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      Good Idea, I've just done what I can in 15 minutes. Your inspirational speech now is the top item on my homepage; which should reach people directly affected by (and interested in) this as it covers various hacks for the xbox.
      Cheers,
      -nB

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    2. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by sorrodos · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I early support your calls to get more voting, but I see one issue w/ this concerning Orrin Hatch.

      I live in Utah, and have lived here for 15 years. Until that man himself wants out of the Senate, my guess is that he will continue to be re-elected by the blind masses here in LDS-land that follow the political directives of their church. Its a tragedy that these people are directed against thinking for themselves so much of the time.

      But yes, we need to get more people voting, so we can those who would oppose Hatch's agendas in other states into the Senate, so we don't have to worry about him anymore.

    3. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by silentbozo · · Score: 2, Informative

      You know, there are a lot of Slashdot readers. I'm sure most of us have at least $5 to spare toward killing the INDUCE act, and kicking Orrin Hatch out of office. We should pool our money, take out some Google Adwords ads, targeting keywords such as "Orrin Hatch, VCR, MP3 Player, freedom, etc.", and have them point to a site detailing how Hatch plans on stealing rights from the citizens of the country, in order to give them to corporate interests. This is nothing more than corporate welfare, cloaked in lies.

      Next step is to start taking out newspaper ads, and sending in letters to the editor (we've targeted the geeks and the net-savvy with the Google Adwords and the website, now to take it to the rest of the voting populace.) Drop by your local Good Guys, Best Buy, etc. where the salespeople make their commissions by selling you the latest electronic doodads. Let them know that their livelihoods are being imperiled by Hatch, and that they should tell people to buy their DVD recorders, etc. NOW. Nothing like panic buying to help drive up sales, and increase media awareness of an impending deadline to get coverage.

      Only now, that you've sounded the alarm among the voting public, gotten money involved (ie, commerce is threatened), and managed to get media attention focused on scaremongering INDUCE for what it is, ONLY THEN do you start putting the heat on the senators and elected representatives. That's how the game is played - if we approach them now, they'll just spin it about how INDUCE is needed to prevent piracy, blah, blah, blah. If we establish that INDUCE will rob Americans of their rights, and condemn our industries to second-class status, and throw thousands out of work, all to provide corporate welfare to Orrin Hatch's campaign contributors, well, and that's what the media is telling the general public, that puts the politicians mightly on the defensive, doesn't it?

    4. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by SirCrashALot · · Score: 1

      That's an excellent idea. Do you know of one such site? I'd being willing to donate for/buy such an ad.

    5. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wasting your time.
      Hatch is from SCO-land, Utah, land of the Mor(m)ons, the brainwashed zombie army.
      They vote how they're told to. (and not by you or me).

    6. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
      Until that man himself wants out of the Senate, my guess is that he will continue to be re-elected by the blind masses here in LDS-land that follow the political directives of their church.

      How much was he voted in by, and what's his competition like? What would it take to get somebody in who would be acceptable to the church, but not as anti-citizen as Hatch is?

      Even if it fails, It might still be worth making an attack on this guy. The people of Utah may be blindly following their religious leaders, but they may start to be shaken if their ability to do their own stuff is seen to be at risk.

      OK: According to The Federal Election Comittee, Hatch won in Utah by 66% - 32%. Getting him out would require both pulling out the interested non-voters and getting current Utah voters to change their mind about him.
      This isn't impossible, but it would take a lot of work. Nontheless, it may be worthwhile taking on -- Even if a campaign makes a significant dent in his majority, it could gain the notice of the rest of the senate.

      I think, however, that It'd be best for a national campaign to go after a few of his less entrenched RIIA teammates, with UTah people still trying to make a noticable dent in Hatch's electoral bunker.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    7. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by Daimaou · · Score: 2

      You are incorrect regarding the LDS church. While they do encourage their members to vote, they have never in my lifetime offered any political directives regarding candidates whatsoever. To blame them for is as ugly and dishonest as Hatch himself.

      The problem in Utah is that the people are very conservative so they vote the republican candidate most of the time (SLC being the exception) but they only vote during the final election. If Utah is going to oust Hatch, it needs to be done prior to the final voting stage so he isn't even on the ballot. A republican will always win. We, as Utahns need to make sure there is a different republican to vote for in the final election.

    8. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by sorrodos · · Score: 1

      While the church may have never explicitly endorsed a single candidate, they do endorse political positions. And in doing so, they implicitly endorse candidates who support those positions. Take for instance the issue on same-sex marriages. The church did endorse a position opposing such marriages, and thus, the LDS people will by and large now view a candidate who opposes that as a candidate that they, as members of the church, should not support.

      Here's a site from KSL (a Utah media group, partially owned by the LDS church I believe) that demonstrates the fact that the church does indeed endorse certain political moves. http://tv.ksl.com/index.php?nid=8&sid=105019

      As a tax-exempt religious organization, they are by law supposed to all political messages, and I find it disgusting that they do not and are yet able to keep their tax-exempt status.

      The point of all this though is, Hatch is a candidate who will support the politics the church supports, and thus will be nearly impossible to get voted out in Utah.

    9. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a non Mormon, can I ask you what it took to make you into such a nasty little fascist bastard?

      Oh wait, let me guess; you belong to a different church?

      There I was thinking that America was founded by people fleeing religious persecution! I must have been mistaken.

    10. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by Daimaou · · Score: 1

      Offering a statement such as that is a far cry different than what you suggested; that they tell their members how to vote.

      Many religious, tax-exempt groups offer similar statements. It is the job of religion to offer it's members a moral compass, isn't it? The Pope of the Catholic church issued a similar statement not too long ago too. Does that mean that the Catholic church is also telling its members how to vote? Are you equally disgusted by the Catholic church's statement and their ability to retain their tax-exempt status?

      As for your final statement, I think you are still wrong. If Hatch were a democrat, he wouldn't win. The LDS church has never asked its members to vote for Hatch or anybody else. He simply wins because he is the "conservative" candidate (and I use the term loosely) in a conservative state. It is as simple as that.

      I am a member of the LDS church, but I hate Orrin Hatch as a senator, and I want him out. However, if I can't get him out prior to the final election, and my only choices are him or a democrat, I will vote for Hatch.

      The liberals are for gay rights, abortion, high taxes, and large government. I am very much against all of these things, so if my choice is between Hatch and a democrat, I will vote for Hatch. It has absolutely nothing to do with the LDS church, and I am disgusted that you would suggest so.

    11. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      Slashdotters have been talking about assembling a GEEKPAC for years (ever since the DMCA passed.) Late 2002 somebody actually organized one (geekpac.org), but I haven't seen anything come out of it. In fact, I can't even get to the website.

      Best bet is to get a bunch of like minded individuals together (maybe via a Slashdot Journal), pool your funds, and start hitting them wherever you can. Maybe something as simple as a website with a donation counter to let people buy more ad impressions, an overall description of the plan so people can go out and set up their own sites and execute their own ad campaigns. EFF has a page on the Induce act, but it's rather low-key.

    12. Re:Beat him over the head with a VOTING BOOTH. by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      Ok, here's my sample text for a Google adwords text ad, targeting "Barbara Boxer" and "Orrin Hatch" as keywords, restricting the geographical distribution to California and Utah, as a test case. (I checked out the rates for iPod and VCR as keywords, and was shocked to see it would take $20-$60 a day to land those words - they're expensive!)

      Congress to Ban iPods!
      Keep Your iPods and VCRs Legal
      Tell Your Senator to Stop INDUCE
      stopbadlaws.org

      stopbadlaws.org doesn't exist, but the idea would be for someone to set up the site, put up a paypal link to fund more ads, and maybe include a short essay on why INDUCE is bad, with links to relevant sources (Wired, CNET, EFF), and a link for the viewer to find out who their Senator/Congresscritter is.

  159. if high-tech REALLY wants to stop INDUCE... by alizard · · Score: 1
    A simple statement to each member of Congress from a coaltion of the group of companies who oppose this saying "We would not presume to attempt to influence your vote, but if you vote for this, your most viable opponent will get $1M in new campaign funding from us and we will be making attack ads accusing you personally of trying to drive technology companies out of America will be appearing in every major TV market in your state/district. Have a nice day." would probably stop the bill cold and make any member of Congress think three times about the political career downside to accepting *AA company payoffs.

    $665M (Congress + the Senate) for the top 40 high-tech companies combined is petty cash... but it is far more than the Hollywood content cartel can possibly scrape together out of profits.

    High-tech industry has allowed itself to be pushed around by Hollywood for far too long.

    Isn't there anybody with balls at MS, IBM, Google, et. al. willing to stand up to Hollywood?

    This is like asking "does this herd of elephants have the courage required to stand up to a pair of fucking yap dogs?"

    Given the answer to that, if you want to do innovative technology, better start shopping for a country that has not allowed its political leadership to have been cheaply bought off by the *AA companies.

  160. Re:You like the electoral college? I don't. by AuMatar · · Score: 1

    The fact that it means someone living in Wyoming has a vote that means more than me means it is broken. You're right that fixing it would be next to impossible though.

    --
    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  161. PATRIOT ACT. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While the typical pace may be slow it isn't always slow nor does it need to be. In fact, as the PATRIOT Act showed there is no need for congress to move slow. As was also demonstrated by that ugly horrible failure of American Democracy naby if not most Congresspersons routinely vote for bills that they have not read, or even considered the response to.

    Take a look at the list of sponsors. Hatch has long been a freak when it comes to copyright laws, and Barbara Boxer has long been the RIAA's lap dog. But, Leahy, Clinton, Frist Dascle, and Grahm? None of these people has (so far as I know) long-standing ties to the RIAA or the kind of local Copyright-Based industries that Grahm and Boxer have. In my opinion they are jumping on this bill for the same reasons that they jumped on the PATRIOT bandwagon because it will "protect capitalism" or "protect children" or some other such one-line nonsense that Hatch, Boxer, or some nice person from the RIAA with a bag of money said.

    In my opinion the real danger here is that a Bill of this type like PATRIOT, or the IMF treaties will not get the lengthy analysis and debate that they deserve but will pass through congress because they will look good in a campaign ballot and because none of these people cares about anything else but that.

  162. PEOPLE WAKE UP!!! LETTERS DO NOTHING! by shaitand · · Score: 1

    Somewhere above you'll find someone who posted the letter they sent their congressmen and the cookie cutter response they got back.

    I've sent numerous letters to congressmen and gotten the same responses back. THEY DON"T READ THEM. Some aid reads them. There could be millions flooding in and the congressman won't even know it happened.

    "So what, we should do nothing then? Just sit back and take it?"

    NO. But the easy way out, emailing or mailing a letter to your congressman isn't the answer either. You have to make your voice heard publically. We have to create such a load roar AMONG THE PUBLIC, that it is heard by the ears of our congressman.

    This bribe from the RIAA doesn't mean much if he knows he won't be reelected and therefore won't have the opportunity for bribes in the future.

    Write editorials to the paper, stand in town square with a megaphone for gods sake. Put out flyers at libraries, grocery stores, local businesses, donate to the EFF, band together and raise funds for a cheap tv spot in place of an infomercial tonight.

    Talk to your families and tell them to do the same, And yes, the sad truth is that you have to make the bold far flung attention getter statements out first, and debate details AFTER.

    Start out with statements like they want to outlaw VCRs! And it's always been illegal to copy tapes, now they want to enforce it. They want to outlaw your computer and xerox machines and anything else that could be used to copy information, EVEN INFORMATION YOU OWN!

    Start doing this now, not later. Do it now and this bill will die in commitee, do it later and they'll exempt devices that will piss the public off now and this will affect all innovations in the future.

    Be loud slashdot, we DO have numbers here, we have enough numbers to take down most servers instantly at any time time of day simply by linking in a high modded comment for godsake.

    If we all get the message to even 3 people that is a rumble, if they each get the message to even 2 people it's the start of a wildfire.

    If america doesn't start getting loud about these issues, if we don't stand up and say that "we won't take this anymore". Then all we have to look forward to is being beaten down, slowly but surely, in small incremental steps until one day we wake up in a cott in our tiny 1 room apartment, with bars on the windows.

    We look around prisoners in our homes, and we think about those barbaric uncivilized 3rd world nations where nobody needs a license to leave their homes during curfew hours, and they don't even doorlocks to ensure this and keep everyone safe.

    Much like today when we think about those barbaric 3rd world countries where you don't need a license to drive a car, or to go fishing. Where you need no license to have a gun and anybody can plop down on public property, lay out a blanket and sell goods.

    If you don't start making your voice heard on this issue, today, your that much less likely to do so tomorrow on the next issue, and the next, and the next. That is how we've gotten to the spot we are in today. It's not too late to stop it from getting worse tomorrow!

  163. Open Letter to Orrin Hatch by Rimbo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Mr. Hatch,

    You have proven yourself to be a man of noble intent. Your support of the DREAM Act alone shows that you care about individuals, and that you care about the future of America. I am certain that your support of INDUCE is also backed by noble intent; it is wrong for people to steal from the works of others.

    On that note, let's examine the business practices of the corporations that have asked you to help them. They frequently state that they are here to protect artists; if that's so, why do artists who work for them revile them? They say that they are here to prevent theft; if so, why do artists accuse them of stealing from artists? They say that P2P applications have no legitimate uses; if that's so, why do struggling independent artists -- those not affiliated with the RIAA's member corporations -- embrace P2P applications as their last, best hope?

    I write to you as an artist, and on behalf of artists, whose livelihood is threatened not by P2P apps, but by INDUCE. The RIAA is not speaking for me; it is my competition. Their true purpose is not to protect me, but to lock me out.

    Remember how hard you worked to secure digital law for the RIAA, so that they could distribute digital content safely? And how afterwards, they never did it -- except for a few third-rate websites? Instead, they used the law to lock out the means we independent artists use to promote our music -- P2P applications like Napster! These file-sharing applications give me a huge audience and distribution mechanism, so that I can find new fans without the need for the RIAA. That is the REAL reason for laws like INDUCE -- it's not about theft; it is about CONTROL.

    What protection is there for legitimate uses of P2P software? What is there in this bill to ensure I can still promote my music without having to sell my soul to the RIAA's member companies using the latest in technology?

    If you would like to discuss this issue more, please give me a call on my cell phone any time at (redacted). I believe that you would not promote a bill that would hurt America and its future. I think that if you understood my point of view, you would understand why I feel this bill, in its current form, may be very dangerous to America's future.

    1. Re:Open Letter to Orrin Hatch by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      Mr. Hatch,

      You have proven yourself to be a man of n
      ... A very nice letter. Well written, simple, doesn't sound fanatical.

      But, did you send it, on honest-to-god paper, with a real signature at the bottom, your home address, phone number, etc (to show you as a constituent) included?

      An "Open Letter" on slashdot has the visibility (to Mr. Hatch) of a black hole on the other side of a nebula.

      In other words, none at all. If you sent this, my hat goes off to you. If not, quit wasting time!

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    2. Re:Open Letter to Orrin Hatch by Oswald · · Score: 1
      An "Open Letter" on slashdot has the visibility (to Mr. Hatch) of a black hole on the other side of a nebula.

      Probably for the best, considering his sig.

    3. Re:Open Letter to Orrin Hatch by Rimbo · · Score: 1

      "But, did you send it, on honest-to-god paper, with a real signature at the bottom, your home address, phone number, etc (to show you as a constituent) included?"

      Through his web page.

  164. Vote in 2004 by ThatWeasel · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Please, don't just talk about this. Please get out and vote in November. Please change this government. The Induce Act is bad. The Patriot Act is bad. Please stop what this government is doing. Get out and vote and teach everyone you know the truth.

    --

    TW
    Television is dead. Long live That Weasel Television

    1. Re:Vote in 2004 by maximilln · · Score: 2, Funny

      Get out and vote and teach everyone you know the truth.

      There are 100 people in society.
      There are 2 brilliant people.
      There are 20 greedy people.
      There are 20 gullible people.
      There are 10 who are opposed.
      There are 48 people trying to keep ahead of the bills.

      5 greedy people beat up 2 brilliant people to keep them quiet.
      5 greedy people convince 20 gullible people.
      20 gullible people make lots of noise.
      48 people trying to pay taxes are distracted.
      48 people placate the 10 who are opposed.
      5 greedy people, 20 gullible people, 10 people struggling to keep food on the table, and 2 people who are opposed go to the polls and vote.

      5 people sit back and enjoy the show.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    2. Re:Vote in 2004 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the 74 people who can't count.

  165. Can you avoid the RIAA? by toddt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I like a fairly diverse set of music (Gillian Welch to Rammstein), but a quick check at RIAARadar.com shows a good chunk of it is RIAA produced.

    Now, I hate the RIAA as much as the rest of you. I like my rights, and it sucks that they're being trampled. The RIAA blows.

    But I also really like music. And I don't buy the argument that all RIAA music is crap. It isn't. The stuff that gets a lot of commercial airplay may very well be, but it's simply not true to say that the RIAA doesn't have good artists.

    And there's my problem. I hate the RIAA, and I like the artists. I'd cheerfully screw the RIAA by burning CDs from friends or finding what I like on the p2p networks, but I feel wrong not paying the artists for music that I spend a lot of time enjoying. Their hard work makes me happy, and they deserve compensation for that.

    I wish there were a way I could mail the artist a check directly, for some fair price. If I could, I'd send a letter saying, "Hey, Gillian. I downloaded your music from Kazaa. It's great. Here's eight bucks. I trust that's more than you'd get from the RIAA, if I bought their packaged version."

    Does any mechanism like this exist?

    1. Re:Can you avoid the RIAA? by base3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Buy your CDs used and send a buck to the artist. You break no copyright laws, save money, and, most imporantly, don't fund the War on Freedom.

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
    2. Re:Can you avoid the RIAA? by Catamaran · · Score: 1
      Do concert ticket proceeds go to the artists? If so, then that is one way to support them.

      Many of those who signed with RIAA were duped and didn't know what they were getting into, so yes, feel sorry for them, but for the greater good of society your money would be better spent supporting EFF, downhillbattle.org, and independent artists.

      --
      Test 1 2 3 4
    3. Re:Can you avoid the RIAA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good idea IN THEORY, but you're forgetting some jackass has to buy RIAA CDs for you to buy yours USED. In other words, your just funding their crap indirectly.

    4. Re:Can you avoid the RIAA? by base3 · · Score: 1
      1. Some jackass already bought them--that's why they're available for sale.

      2. If you were going to buy it new, and buy it used instead, it's still one less sale, despite the used one having been sold new once.

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
    5. Re:Can you avoid the RIAA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second this... its an unfortunate casualty when a good artists has signed a deal with the pigs, but now is the time to walk like we talk. No more buying big label artists. No more buying into the bankroll required for MTV marketing. Much incredible music is produced on the cheap. Sound engineering skills of the home-studio and laptop guys are growing by leaps and bounds.

      Look at your HD, your ipod, find all the RIAA artists and toss them. Don't buy their CDs. End their game.

    6. Re:Can you avoid the RIAA? by toddt · · Score: 1

      E-Baying a used CD is fine.

      The problem is buying used CDs from music stores. Most stores that buy used CDs offer a better store credit rate than cash rate.

      That means that a lot of those used CDs are funding purchases of new RIAA CDs from the same store.

      If you, the consumer, don't buy used CDs, stores have no reason to buy used CDs from other patrons, and there's less store credit to buy new CDs.

      Now, this is all very, very indirect and buying a used CD doesn't help the RIAA nearly as much as buying a new one. But it still helps a little.

      And that's why I like my idea of burning the CD and sending a check directly to the artist. The RIAA gets no piece of that action.

      Todd

    7. Re:Can you avoid the RIAA? by base3 · · Score: 1
      Actually, I use secondspin.com mostly, and very occasional Wherehouse Music (where your caution against funding new CD purchases would apply).

      I still think it's the least evil of the alternatives available while complying with the law. A wrinkle I've thought of is donating albums I'm no longer interested in to the public library--but a donation is no guarantee they'll shelve and lend them.

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
  166. *Raises eyebrows* by pjt33 · · Score: 1
    These ultra rich senators and represenatives have no clue as to what the real world is and do not give a rat's ass about one single citizen.
    What kind of country is American that it lets non-citizens govern it?
  167. You Americans forget something: by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're not the only country in the world. You're not even the only country on your land mass.

    Your friendly neighbour to the north (Canada) allows filesharing technology. The Internet cares not for borders.

    Our stores will sell gear without DRM. (It's cheaper to make stuff without it.)

    You can walk or drive to Canada. If not, our stores will ship gear to you. Pick up a high-flow toilet while you're here - they're great!

    Also, our legal system is loser-pay. That means that if someone sues me in a Canadian court and I win, they pay my legal bills. The RIAA's tactics can't work in Canada.

    --

    ---
    ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    1. Re:You Americans forget something: by t_allardyce · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Our stores will sell gear without DRM. (It's cheaper to make stuff without it.)

      Thats about to change. DRM will be included in most chips (CPUs, MPEG-Decoders & other DSP etc..) and once its in it will pose no extra cost. Finding chips without DRM will be the hard (i.e expensive) thing. Im guessing no American or European companies will risk making them for fear of being fined, some other enterprising foriegn manufactures might make some (or make mod chips) they could potentially make a fortune. Once the big players have got together with the US government and agreed on hardware, life is going to suck and since the US polices the rest of the world (i.e decides what laws we need to have in order to trade with the US) life is going to suck for everyone else too.

      Just read about high-flow toilets ROFL "you have the right to own an assult rifle that can cut through trees and brick walls, but not a toilet that can flush more than 1.6Gs!"

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  168. Goth Metal ain't what it used to be. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whaa you say?
    Britney Spears + Metallica + a hint of Bella Lugosi = Lacuna Coil

    Eeeuuuuuwww! Thanks P2P you just saved me some dough.

  169. Amtrak a drain on liberty? by mrgeometry · · Score: 1

    How the hell is Amtrak a drain on taxpayers's liberty?

    I would also be dubious of the claim that it's bloated and inefficient, but on those counts I must admit I don't really know the basic facts. Still, some serious evidence would be needed to justify such an assertion.

    The bit about drain on wallets.... eh, well....

    zach

    1. Re:Amtrak a drain on liberty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bit about drain on wallets.... eh, well....

      Oh cmon, Amtrak gets under 1% of the transportation budget.

      Airlines get billions in loans and grants and Amtrak is supposed to work with $500 million?

      Imagine if the airlines had to pay for everything involved in running the airports, etc... Your $190 Jet Blue ticket is now $950, thank you for flying.

      I am proud to say that I use Amtrak for all my long distance travel. It's not the cheapest (Greyhound) or the fastest (Airline) or the most personal (Car), but when it's at it's best, it's an amazing way to travel.

  170. Technical point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...original P2P Napster...

    Napster was never P2P, it was client-server. The RIAA sued the company with the servers (Napster) and brought them down, cutting off the head of the proverbial hydra. P2P is the exponentially increasing number of heads that grew in its place. The RIAA's biggest mistake was pushing everyone off of Napster, a network with a centralized point that could be monitored and to some extent controled, and onto a number of networks that cannot be controled or destroyed by targeted attacks.

  171. Lawyers, Guns, and Money.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    From the late, great Warren Zevon, a prophetic verse on what we'll all be doing next year:


    Now I'm hiding in Honduras


    I'm a desperate man


    Send lawyers, guns and money


    The shit has hit the fan

  172. Old Joke Appropriate Here by bheerssen · · Score: 1

    Q: How do you know when a politician is lying?

    A: When you see his lips moving.

    --
    (Score: -1, Stupid)
  173. American chip makers? by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

    Russian components... American components... They're all made in Taiwan! I guess that's one benefit to outsourcing to India and China.

    Remember how the P3s had the unique ID, and it went over really well, and now the P4s all have unique IDs? The market, not the government, will decide what goes into the chips.

    This would be a better post if it's wasn't 5. Bye.

    --

    ---
    ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    1. Re:American chip makers? by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      It doesnt matter if they're made on the moon, if the American companies that design them (Intel etc) decide DRM has to go in then thats what goes in. Other companies will have to fall in line in order for their chips to get through customs and in the end its much cheaper to have DRM on every chip than to make different versions so they will be everywhere. They wont let there be a repeat of the P3 ID PR disaster, they've been weaning average-joe consumers on the idea of DRM for a long time now and the people will just go along with it. Don't forget, this time they will have the law on their side and will be presenting a FUD-filled technology that average-joes wont understand.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    2. Re:American chip makers? by DarkMan · · Score: 1

      VIA.

      With the C3 and motherboard chipsets. Taiwanese company.

      If I recall correctly, S3 is also based in that neck of the woods. (I looked, Japan, and has joint ventures with VIA).

      There are motherboard designers out there too, Abit, for example.

      So, there are a number of companies designing PC level gear that need pay buggar all attention to the USA laws. Sure, they might not be able to sell as many without DRM, but that's an economics issue - provided there are people who want them, they will be made.

  174. Especially Since Within Utah by weston · · Score: 1

    This measure is supported by the RIAA but opposed by the tech industry at large. Why does Congress let the tail wag the dog when it comes to copyright legislation? Does Intel just not give enough money to politicians?

    This especially considering Utah has a thriving hi-tech industry, but is in no way a media powerhouse.

    However, it would take a serious miracle to get Hatch out of his Senate seat in Utah. Not only does the majority of the population votes Republican automatically, but Hatch's campaign is usually run on the idea of how helpful it is to Utah to have a senior, well-connected Senator fighting for our interests in Congress. This is particularly ironic considering Hatch ran 30 years ago on the concept that the incumbent had become a Washington insider.

  175. Your Ain't Got Freedom, Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another thing that will never flee to Canada is the mental contagion that causes blind support of a ruling cabal that mass-hypnotizes, manipulates and abuses its population while marching them down a very dangeorus road in abject stupidity. We voted against our "neo-cons".

  176. The end by Caged · · Score: 1

    To paraphrase the CEO of Sun:
    Freedom of spech is dead, get over it.

  177. No, your reply is BS by Wannabe+Code+Monkey · · Score: 0

    The libertarian party believes that we should [...] eliminate all environmental regulations

    Did you even read the article you referenced? It was about how in certain cases the government has been unable to enforce the laws mostly due to "sovereign immunity" of government agencies (like the military), and previous incorrect policies (killing wolves in parks to increase deer population) which have since been re-evaluated. But nowhere do they claim that all environmental regulations should be eliminated... not even close... In the last paragraph it states:

    The third and final step in the libertarian program to save the environment is the use of restitution both as a deterrent and a restorative. (emphasis mine)

    Hello... restitution n 1: a sum of money paid in compensation for loss or injury.

    How do you think they're going to collect this restitution without laws and regulations? You think libertarians would want a government where the following could happen:

    Government Lawyer: Your Honor, Company X polluted the land around their factory. They need to pay restitution for the harm it caused.
    Company X Lawyer: There are no laws or regulations saying that it's illegal to do this.
    Judge: Is this true? Did Company X not break any laws?
    Government Lawyer: Well no, not really, we don't have *any* laws regarding the environment. But we want to be able to arbitrarily say when law abiding companies should pay us money.
    Judge: I find in favor of the government.

    Yeah... That what libertarians are going after.

    I also found this from the same author's column, "Ask Dr. Ruwart":

    If government focused on making ALL polluters right their wrongs, businesses, individuals, and public officials would make cost-effective behavioral changes. We'd get more environmental protection for less!

    government ... making ... polluters ... right ... their ... wrongs

    Yeah... that sounds nothing like regulation

    Speaking of this specific author, reading her other columns I found that she seems to try to duck the issue quite a bit but in places she can't avoid it, she ends up coming back to the fact that the government would still have to play a role. She uses quite a bit of straw man arguments, and in general makes very strained conclusions (because some companies and government agencies have gotten away with polluting in the past, we should stop trying to police all companies).

    She uses restitution because libertarians only want to the government to protect citizens' private property, so restitution fits in nicely. But what happens when a company pollutes the air... or a river that no one "owns". Or what if a company has since gone out of business, or just doesn't have enough money to pay for what they've done? And what if a company can make more money by polluting than they would have to pay land owners for any damages? What if they just pollute land they own and then abandon it (while still technically owning it)? Or what if you can't really put a dollar price on what the pollution has done. The point is that for future generations and greater good, we really need to stop pollution for the environment's sake, not for any land owners that may happen to be near by.

    I consider myself pretty libertarian when it comes to personal rights and smaller government, but when it comes to the environment I want regulations, the tighter the better. And I could really care less about huge corporations that pollute, regulate them to hell, they certainly shouldn't be given the same right's as individuals.

    About the only point I agreed with is that the government should also be responsible for pollution it causes, but that means strengthening curren

    --
    We always knew Comcast was corrupt, here's the proof: http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1909890&cid=34545432
    1. Re:No, your reply is BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I could really care less

      "couldn't".

      the same right's as individuals

      "rights".

  178. There's a real difference by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    AUPs are agreements between you and a service provider. They agree to provide you a service, in exchange for cash, but as it is their service, they are allowed to set limits on it. Just because I give you space on my webserver does not mean you can do as you please with it, I can restrict your usage.

    However this is all fine because it's all free market. I know that there are telecommunications monopolies in some places, the monopoly is the problem, not the underlying theory. As I was saying, it's a free market so if a company is unacceptable, you go to a different one. Enough leave, they'll learn. This is happening to Qwest in my area. I had DSL with them, and it blew. I now have DSL with Speakeasy and am pretty happy. I'm not the only one, as Qwest is revamping their service and pricing.

    However, violating an AUP is grounds for loosing your service form a given provider, not for going to jail. That's what makes laws different. You go to KAIL for breaking the law, and you have no alternative provider (moving to a foriegn country is inapplicable and usually impossible). I don't much care if Speakeasy outlaws FTP on their network, I'll simply get a different provider. I would very much care if the government outlawed FTP, since getting a different governmnet isn't really something you can easily do.

    Also, ISPs will listen to their users. They won't listen to a user, but they'll listen to them in general. Cox has a clause saying no VPNs which was so broadly written even SSH could count. BAsically, they wanted you to get bussiness class to use that. Well our university extensively uses SSH and Cisco VPNs. So a rep from the university had a chat with them and explained we'd recommend against using Cox, unless they changed the clause. The clause was then changed.

    Same thing can work if the users get together. Get 10,000 people that are pissed and get a list of things that need fixing. They fail to respond, you all terminate your service. They WILL respond (or the shareholders will replace thwm with people who will).

    Same basic theory as a representitive government, except you can hop to an alternate provider while the other ones shapes up. Not so with governments.

  179. You fool, it would make no difference. by Elpacoloco · · Score: 1

    Government has tanks, Nuclear warheads, and thousands of times the people I could summon up.

    If I did rise up and shoot at the government they would simply shoot back with more firepower than I'm legally allowed to own. And then I'd be dead and they'd go right back to business as usual.

  180. You Canadians (or you at least) forget something by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Those of us reading Slashdot are not making the laws. I would venture to say not a single member of either house of congress, or any of the state legslatures reads Slashdot with any regularity, if at all. I also can tell from this and other like posts, that nearly all of Slashdot opposes such a law.

    So get off your high horse, we aren't thinking we are the only nation in the world. We ahve some stupid lawmakers (and don't pretned like Canada doesn't have some too) that are trying to pass a stupid law that we disagree with.

    P.S. I'm a Canadian citizen too.

  181. Down and out in corporate america. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Because they're out there talking to law makers while we sit around at home eating pizzia and watching TV?"

    *sniffle*

    I wish I could afford pizza.

  182. And NO HOME STUDIOS for MUSICIANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, that's right! No more home studios for musicians! They will have to go to RIAA controlled studios.

    Heck, how will they get the devices? Won't they be illegal even for them?

    A Nony Mouse

  183. So Stop It by cgreuter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is really easy to stop. For all we talk about campaign contribution and corporate influence, Hatch is still accountable to the people. If you want to kick him out of office, just get the voters mad at him. All the campaign contributions in the world won't get him re-elected if the voters hate him.

    And none of the voters like this bill. The only reason he's getting away with it is that most people don't know about it at all. (What? The mainstream media isn't reporting on it? Shocking!)

    So get the word out. Write a pamphlet that describes this in a way ordinary (non-geek) folk will find informative (think "VCRs made illegal", not "stifling innovation"), put it online and get people in those areas to print up copies and hand them out door to door.

    Be sure to ask the recipients to write to Hatch et., al about this as well. There's nothing like a flood of angry letters to get a politician to back off.

    1. Re:So Stop It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hatch is still accountable to the people. If you want to kick him out of office, just get the voters mad at him. All the campaign contributions in the world won't get him re-elected if the voters hate him.

      It's a tall order to vote out a ranking Republican senator in Utah.

      Still, I certainly intend to vote against him. Too bad he's not up for re-election until 2006.

  184. Seinfeld reruns forever by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

    The more draconian the laws get in regards to the content industry the more its going to hurt them. How do new TV shows hit critical mass? Usually tape trading and word of mouth. Remember Seinfeld's first couple of seasons? No you don't. No one does because no one watched. The show achieved critical mass later on. This tends to be true of a lot of television and media. You get some kind of loud cult following and if enough people jump aboard the bandwagon suddenly Joe Sixpack is singing its praises too.

    How will they promote their new shows? Who will be sharing tapes with friends? Pushing play on the VCR and saying "Check this shit out?" No one. That means it will be harder to market new television, lots more canceled shows, lots more midseason replacemnts, and lots more reruns. The Simpsons is already on three times a day. Heck, Cheers is still on.

    At this point I do hope they shoot themselves in the foot. Put up all the damn digital protection you want and my incentive to watch will go down. Not because I'm going to knee-jerk about digital rights, but because if my Tivo can't hold it for me, chances are I'm not rushing home at 7CST to watch your show on YOUR schedule.

    Toss in I can't share this show with anyone and you've lost more customers.

    People will just shift to the DVD rental market and movie theaters. The TV will collect dust while people discover better things to do with their time.

    Could happen or the very least these policies could hurt the industry in ways it is not taking seriously.

  185. Is compromise possible? by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1
    There seems to be a whole lot of senators lined up behind this--it's possible that passage of SOME bill is inevitable. Perhaps the tech industry opponents could offer up some compromise that would appease Hatch and friends?

    The main problem with the INDUCE act is that it's too vague--it doesn't specify exactly what I'm allowed to do and not allowed to do. What exactly is going to be criminalized by this? We know they want to get rid of Kazaa. Is Bittorrent also suspect, even though linux distributions and the mozilla project among many others have used it as a legitimate means of relieving bandwidth? Is the freenet projectfreenet now going to have to move underground? Are programs released for free with no profit incentive equally doomed? Are CD burners, MP3 players, and VCRs also doomed? No one is offering evidence of what would and would not be prohibited by this.

    So, if your job was to specify a reasonable version of this law, how would you write it? Let me suggest some of the following:

    Require programs likely able to be used for copying purposes to warn the user when files will be shared and which files will be shared. Advise the user to make sure they are only downloading and sharing legitimate files. A big part of Hatch's complaint is that users are tricked into sharing illegal files then sued for it--if he is being sincere, then the law needs to be targetted to prevent deception and misunderstanding, rather than just a vague notion of "inducing".

    Require that all programs are actually used substantially for non-infringing purposes. Not just theoretically useable for non-infringing purposes--actually used. Bittorrent would be good, since a big chunk of bittorrent bandwidth is actually legitimate distribution. Kazaa probably wouldn't be quite so fortunate.

    Exempt programs that are released with no profit incentive and no centralized control system (even auto-update can be suspect)--the contention is that programs are released in order to make money from stolen content. If that is the problem, then simply forbid questionable software from making any revenue (adware, spyware, shareware, or simple commercial software).

    Some combination of these ideas would make a much more palatable INDUCE act. Software would have to be modified to fully inform the user, some business models profiting from illegal file transfer might be banned, but overall computer would still be able to do everything they can do now. Computers are universal turing machines--you can only forbid them from doing so many things before you've outlawed all computers.

    If they still wouldn't be satified with this bill, might I suggest that they write a somewhat less ambitious law? Since P2P technology seems to be the inspiration for this law, then they should write a law focusing exactly on that--what sorts of P2P networks are acceptable, what sorts are forbidden. If future technologies arise, then write more laws to govern those. Trying to write a bill that governs all technologies will never work--the resulting bill is so vague that everyone on the Internet is going to end up getting sued. Heck, the record companies will probably start suing themselves by accident. Maybe Senator Hatch should be a bit more conservative in his law proposals--this one is far too ambitious.

    1. Re:Is compromise possible? by tsaler · · Score: 1

      There seems to be a whole lot of senators lined up behind this--it's possible that passage of SOME bill is inevitable. Perhaps the tech industry opponents could offer up some compromise that would appease Hatch and friends?

      I think you're correct on this point. It is virtually assured, in my opinion, that there will be some sort of legislation passed with these goals in mind. How specific it is and how far-reaching it is are really the only two variables here. I don't know whether or not there are (and this is just me being honest and speaking from a political background, not a technology background) people who actively oppose legislation like this for reasons other than the typical political rhetoric such as expansion of the federal government, excess federal spending, unnecessary federal regulation, infringment on states' rights, et cetera in order to actually make a difference and affect change. I don't even think they'd be able to get a compromise. This is no fault of these particular people and organizations, they just don't have professional lobbyists for the most part.

      The main problem with the INDUCE act is that it's too vague--it doesn't specify exactly what I'm allowed to do and not allowed to do. What exactly is going to be criminalized by this? We know they want to get rid of Kazaa. Is Bittorrent also suspect, even though linux distributions and the mozilla project among many others have used it as a legitimate means of relieving bandwidth? Is the freenet projectfreenet now going to have to move underground? Are programs released for free with no profit incentive equally doomed? Are CD burners, MP3 players, and VCRs also doomed? No one is offering evidence of what would and would not be prohibited by this.

      Good luck getting the United States Congress to be specific in regards to legislation that affects things that virtually none of them genuinely care about. The fact of the matter is that the folks who represent us in Congress really don't take most of these issues seriously at all until a corporate lobbyist from the RIAA, MPAA, or a similar organization calls his or her office, schedules an appointment, and effectively both bribes and scares our elected officials into opposing certain behaviors which they hardly understand.

      Basically, in order to understand how these folks operate, you have to acknowledge a couple pretty humbling facts:

      * First, they don't care at all about whether or not there are masses of people downloading mozilla, linux distributions, or anything else legitimate over BitTorrent or any other network. The legislation may use specific examples, but the enforcement will take place on a broad scale, and the enforcement clause(s) of the legislation will be written on a broad scale. It will be up to the appropriate law enforcement agencies who to shut down. If you want to start preparing some letters, think about starting a petition to send to the Department of Justice for after this legislation is passed. They're the folks who you're going to have to persuade not to shut down BitTorrent or similar networks which provide genuine and legal services. You can basically kiss KaZaA and the rest of those networks goodbye.

      * Secondly, you can't fault them for not knowing what's going on in a world that they do not participate in. For all intents and purposes, the Internet is an international sub-culture that reaches up from time to time and gets involved in the regular day-to-day affairs of those who are involved in politics. Take the Dean campaign for example. It's not that politicians don't know what the Internet is, because they certainly do. They know that it can be used to raise donations, spread their messages through e-mail, and to post issues and platform information. What they didn't realize, it seems, is the depth of the Internet. I don't think people in politics realized, prior to the Dean campaign, that you could theoretically win an election simply by firing up "grassroots" support over the Interne

    2. Re:Is compromise possible? by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1
      The Internet may be a subculture, but the technology industry is not. They make many billions of dollars more and offer more jobs than all of the content industries combined. That they have failed to make their voice heard to the extent that RIAA has is very disappointing to me. But basically our only hope is if the rich lobbyists who have something to lose from INDUCE start proposing compromises of their own.

      I DO actually hold the legislators in question responsible for this--if they have any honest confusion regarding these matters, I'm sure someone in the EFF would love to explain everything to them. The judges who decided the Grokster case seemed to understand the technologies involved, and their life is even more law-centric than a legislator's. I blame corruption rather than ignorance--if they would bother to build relationships with academia and organisations like the EFF, instead of only talking to people with money, then they wouldn't write such terrible laws.

      You can basically kiss KaZaA and the rest of those networks goodbye.

      No, what I'm worried about is how much harassment U.S. software developers are going to experience. This is a very humbling fact for legislators, so I hope no one is pointing this out until after the laws in question are passed, but the dirty secret is that there is no question that networks that offer KaZaA-like services will continue to exist whether or not this legislation passes--it will just be developed in Europe instead. Most of it is already developed outside America--why do you think the big court case that Hatch is upset enough over to write INDUCE was against the lesser known Grokster instead of the more infamous Sharman Networks that currently runs Kazaa?

      This is where the courts showed themselves way, way smarter than the legislators--P2P means peer-to-peer. One developer can enable billions of people to trade files, with no centralized company or programmer to control them. And there are millions of people out there with the know how to be that one developer--and most of them live beyond the reach of American law. You'll NEVER be able to stop the developers. Even the American ones will be hard to control--now that Bittorent has been released and is available to the masses, Open Source even, how is suing the original American developer going to stop everyone from using it? Some one in Europe will start writing new versions, and everyone will use Bittorent to download new copies of Bittorent. Congress would be much wiser to write new laws targetting illegal uploaders AND downloaders, (currently, the downloaders seem to get off scott-free) and American corporations that manage to make money from stealing .

      It's the same argument as with cryptography--an issue vastly harder to understand than P2P, but which after much civil disobedience and lobbying, geeks have managed to get most of what they want (de facto elimination of crypto export restrictions), and law enforcement realized that they needed to adapt to technological realities (by installing keyloggers and breaking into criminal's computers to bypass cryptography.) See this.

      Just as with cryptography, the only solution is to target bad USERS, not developers. Hatch will realize this once he sees that P2P doesn't decline because Americans are already using European software. Having been humbled in the area of Cryptography by inability to control Phil Zimmermann, Congress would be wise to not be humbled again for exactly the same reason by passing INDUCE.

      I oppose INDUCE not because I want to use P2P networks (which will continue to exist as long as the internet exists), but because I don't want to be forced to emigrate from America to get a job as a software developer.

      I think that Congress is going to paint with a broad brush, as they probably should (again, from my political background as opposed to a technological one), in order to have to avoid going back to the issue agai

  186. Youth vote? What youth vote? by Simonetta · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is a type of law that focuses on people who don't vote, young people. Young people are really the only people who are downloading MP3 and DivX stuff. 55 year olds aren't going to risk jail and bank account confication in order to hear "I can't get no satisfaction" one more time.
    Basically when laws like this are passed, they are written very broad so that anything involving music recordings in digital form can be interpreted by some mean old judge somewhere as illegal. But they are always enforced very politically. Rich white kids will get away with claiming that their brother's girlfriend's old college Napster account makes it OK for them to download anything and everything, while black college students will be thrown in prison for downloading 80 year-old African-American history items from the Library of Congress without written permission from the CEOs of the global media corporations.
    These kind of laws just perpetuate and intensify the level of institutional corruption already present in a country. They seem new and extreme for America, but it's just standard operating procedure in the third world. What's disheartening is the extent that the US Congress is adopting third world legal standards. Before the Reagon era there was always someone in the back rooms of the Capitol who would just say that these bills were Bongo Congo laws and not the way that we do things here. Now the corporations are in a positive feedback corruption loop passing dumb laws right and left.
    In the long run, the effect of really dumb corrupt laws is to transfer innovation both in culture and technology to another part of the world where there isn't so much pressure from the government. The reason Hollywood became the world's film capital is because all the bright people moved there from the NorthEast in order to get away from Edison's crushing patents, back when he claimed to have invented everything and had enough money to hire private goon squads to bust up any movie or sound recording activity that didn't pay him off.
    Sometimes you just gotta lighten up and let people create and copy, regardless of how many patents or copyrights your lawyers say you own. In the end, it's good for business.

    1. Re:Youth vote? What youth vote? by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1

      That's the whole point... Get those non-voting youth whipped up into a frenzy, and make sure that they get themselves registered to vote. A sudden rush of young people signing up to vote would probably be enough to get this bill killed.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    2. Re:Youth vote? What youth vote? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what the fuck does this have to do with rich white kids and poor black kids? you are fucking crazy. and besides, how many poor black kids do you know who are downloading historical content on the internet? the majority of the -poor- black youth are out there stealing stereos and killing their brothers in gangs.

    3. Re:Youth vote? What youth vote? by fingerfucker · · Score: 1

      In essence of your second paragraph, you are basically saying that INDUCE will suppport racism because laws are enforced "politically".

      You truly must be out of your fucking mind. You must be a non-white person because in everyday life, you hear this kind of shit from non-white people. People of non-white skin color in the U.S. try to find relations to racism in EVERYTHING, no matter how fucking ridiculous it sounds. Get over your grandparent's problems and leave that shit in their grave. Move on, kiddo, move on!

  187. Have any of you done something? by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

    You know, I think this will be the only time I post this, but when we have articles like this, the community really gets fired but. But honestly, do any of you do anything. Of every slashdot member that doens't like this spreads the word to other forums and sends messages to their senators, you can get something done. Showing a willingness to do something in force can scare any senator. They get lots of money beyond their pay check from congress as long as they are in office, hit them hard. Do not vote for people that support things that you are vehemently against. When you see them tresspass where they shouldn't, fight back. Yes its hard, and you will probably be shot down, but just keep doing it, over and over. I personally have written 3 responses to my senator about this(yes, I neglected to right to the other one, that will be tonight). If you don't care enough to do something, then quit complaining. Democracy is supposed to be about getting your voice heard and corporations are doing their best to drown you out, I love how so many people just let them do it. Laziness never helped a democracy get anything worthwhile done.

  188. rambling OT rant inspired by this lousy bill by Oswald · · Score: 1
    Remember the old story they used to scare kids with about democracy going down the toilet as soon as the voters figured out they could vote themselves funds from the treasury? Well this INDUCE bullshit suddenly made me realize that we're not going to have time to wait for that shit. What's going to tear the whole thing down first is this: nobody ever un-restricts us.

    First the Republicans (say) run the show for a while, and they decide to make it illegal to use recreational drugs. Then, after a few years, we get sick of the Republicans, and we vote the Democrats into office. And do they make it legal to smoke pot again? NO! They take our guns away. So out with the Democrats, and in with the Elephants again, and do they give me back my guns? Of course not--they're too busy taking away women's right to an abortion.

    I'm sure you see where I'm going with this. The absolute worst time, of course, will be when we all feel like we're living in a very small box, but we hate each other's politics so much that we can't get together to get rid of the politicians that implemented it (that day's not so far off, if you ask me). Finally, we end up with a revolution, and we shoot the politicians, then we shoot each other over whose gonna be the new boss.

    We do this to each other. I take your freedom, and you take mine.

    I need another glass of wine.

  189. more like the new auto industry by dekeji · · Score: 1

    the record industry would become the new AMTRAK. 'Bloated and inefficient as always, but now a drain on taxpayers wallets and liberty as well'.

    AMTRAK isn't at fault for their problems: AMTRAK is a moderately subsidized business trying to compete with a heavily subsidized business: the auto industry.

    The amount of money the US government is draining from our wallets and funneling to the auto industry and the amount of pressure the government creates for us to use cars are staggering.

    And if you think the AMTRAK bureaucracy is big, have you ever even thought about the size and complexity of the bureaucracy needed to build and maintain public roads, from the local level to the federal level? And have you looked at the level of service you actually get from them? Or how they make decisions (like building perfect roads for the main roads politicians travel on in DC and creating special parking spots for politicians, while letting other parts of the city fall apart)?

    If using the car were a truly pay-as-you-go proposition, you'd hardly ever use it. And if AMTRAK had the same level of political support as the auto industry, you'd have service to your doorstep.

  190. Amtrak rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the government is going to promise them funding and deliver about 1/4 of it... well that's Amtrak. Bad analogy.

    Accessible Transportation DOES NOT MAKE MONEY.

    Personally, I hope the federal government stops funding the airlines so people will see what a plane ticket is supposed to cost.

  191. as the old saying goes.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    two wrongs don't make a right /JaredSyn

  192. Someone Please Make Orrin Hatch Go Away! by Locus+Mote · · Score: 1

    Can't we recall him or something? Orrin Hatch is extremely annoying. Corporate America has totally made him their bitch. He has been responsible for a ton of the legislation geared at taking away our rights little by little so that huge corporations can make more and more off of us. Somebody's got to pry this guy of the RIAA/MPAA teat!

  193. I Know Who I'd Sue First by selex · · Score: 1

    I think I'm going to sue God or Nature (which ever one is in control, I'll cover the bases) for inventing the brain. Right now you are reading this message, the message is being copied onto your eyes through lens, being processed (copied again), and then being stored in your brain. If I were to copyright this message then everyone reading this would be in violation of the Induce Act. Then if you went and told someone else about this message you'd be infringing on my copyright, by copying it and then editing it, because I doubt you're going to recite this message verbatim. Your brain makes it possible to steal.

    Once again stupidity taken to the extreme is dangerous, and we are all aware of how stupid the RIAA is.

  194. Constitutionality of INDUCE act by MntlChaos · · Score: 1

    I know about the Eldred vs. Ashcroft case, but couled this law be declared unconstitutional due to the statement that Congress should have the right "To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries".

    This seems to fly flat in the face of that because (A) it restricts the manufacture/trade etc. of items that could be used after the "limited times" expire (technically, such a time does exist, despite Congress' stupidity as of late) and (B) it seems to fly counter to the promotion of the progress of science and the arts

  195. Way off topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I saw a way un-scientific poll on CNN a few months back that had a strong majority of the respondents saying they gave little heed to rainbow warnings....

  196. Change in Strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let DRM proliferate, make the licensing high, and let only bankrolled artists be able to participate.

    Lock it so fricken tight so the only way you'll be able to hear the Rolling Stones is out of a whale's blow-hole.

    Leave the real art to the underground.

    Who gives a fuck about free Britney, - free shit is still shit, enough already.

    (INDUCE won't make it - no worries)

  197. Hell, can you just *READ* ? by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 1

    RTFA (I know you won't, but maybe some people will)

    She doesn't want VCRs to be illegal. She even provides several criteria that allow to distinguish between products that should and should not be allowed (she didn't invent them, they're based on legal decisions):

    1) The product has or doesn't have substantial non-infringing use. VCR: check. Napster, Kazaa et al: Look at the traffic, how much is non-infringing ?

    2) The product does not depend on infringement to be commercially viable. As she says, in the case of a VCR or of a portable MP3 player, clearly the product would still be commercially viable even if only legit use was possible. If you really believe that Kazaa would survive as a commercial entity if infringing material was removed from it, I give up.

    But you don't even need to trust me, because she provides one shrewd example: The "old" Napster. Remember them ? As soon as they filtered out copyrighted material, they went under !

    Kazaa and similar services thrive on massive copyright infringement (BitTorrent doesn't, as it is used by several companies to distribute products legally in a practical way). This is fact for anyone with at least vague remnants of sincerity. There may be several answers to this. Legal licensing ? Throwing copyrights away altogether and deciding that "information wants to be free" and that intellectual work should only be financed on a "for hire" basis (after all, if you want to go back to the dark ages, that's your problem) ? This is an interesting debate - too bad the /. crowd chose the "burn the witch !" option.

    Instead of us whining on slashdot, we need to inform and mobilize the masses.

    Instead of you whining on /., you need to pull your head out of the lower end of your digestive system and at least make an attempt at listening to what people say.

    Thomas Miconi

  198. Please please get active and sort it out! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck, please sort out your country before the WTO or someone comes over and says that we have to 'harmonise' with these insane laws and the EU once again bends over and takes it and our own stupid fuckwit politians make up some worse law over here.... please please !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  199. Solution: Get Rid of Hatch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None of us have the kind of pull necessary to get Hatch to back off on this issue. What we need to do is teach politicians the meaning of fear.

    Politicians fear the gun lobby, they fear the NAACP, but they don't fear geeks. Why? Because these organizations can bring massive influence to bear on ELECTIONS - lets get a lobbying organization going, and bear down on making sure Hatch isn't reelected in his district. Make an example of this guy as loudly as possible, and the rest of these people will back off on this issue.

    Politicians like job security, just like the rest of us. To rule politicians, put the fear of god into them by running a couple of their buddies out of congress. They'll never put a foot wrong again.

  200. Re:You like the electoral college? I don't. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Theoretically, the representative elected in an electoral college does *not* have to follow the vote of the people that he is representing"

    In some states, by law he/she does.

  201. So much for open systems then! by wolverine1999 · · Score: 1

    So much for open systems!

  202. Re: Germany Attacks! by some+guy+I+know · · Score: 1
    Germany never attacked us
    Yes, they did. Remember the Titanic? The Germans tried to make it look like it had struck an iceburg, but they didn't fool President Lincoln! Oh, no, he knew what those Krauts were up to, because of the spy satellites. (How can a blimp strike an iceburg, anyway?) Hitler also attacked the US personally by selling counterfeit copies of Windows XP to the Justice Department, and writing "Mein Kampf", where he stated, "the only good Indianian is a dead Indianian", which is a direct ripoff of Yogi Berra, and an insult to Daytona 500 fans everywhere. There is also evidence (albeit unconfirmed) that his V-2 rocket program, after several revisions, would have evolved into a program to stock American grocery shelves with bad-tasting carrot juice.

    So don't tell me that the Germans never attacked us.

    - Grandpa Simpson
    --
    Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana
  203. Re: USAPATRIOT Act by some+guy+I+know · · Score: 1
    You do realize that doesn't even hold a candle to either the Patriot Act or the DMCA, let alone both?
    It's not the "Patriot" Act; it's the "USAPATRIOT" Act.

    Note: The "USAPATRIOT" Act has nothing to do with patriotism, so I pronounce it "the you sap at riot act" to avoid confusion.
    --
    Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana
  204. Please learn how to make links. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Please learn how to make links.
    Those <a href="http://www.votenader.org/why_ralph/index.php ?cid=106">sleazy</a> Democrats!
    (without any spaces put there by Slashdot) yields: Those sleazy Democrats!
  205. Arrrh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree that piracy is wrong, but since when do hijacking and robbery at sea have anything to do with the RIAA?

  206. Re:Question TO /. EDITORS! by mwa · · Score: 1
    Thanks for the link. I watch the EFF Action Center Alerts by having the slashbox on my front page. Apparently the feed has not been maintained, as there are several alerts that don't show in the feed. I've emailed the EFF webmaster encouraging them to make RSS feed maintenance a priority.

    I encourage anyone else to do likewise. RSS has no value if it's stagnate and the EFF feed has the potential for generating a lot of faxes/emails on important on-line issues.

  207. Canadian slant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read slash-dot daily but never post. This demands a post.

    It totally blows my mind that hatch and all of the other assaults on your freedoms are generating little more then whining and internet posts -- especially in a country that puts so much stock in liberty, the right to better one's self and the idea of individuality. (Especially when compared with a country that is 2/3rds of the way to communist as Canada is and never even went close to putting up with this.)

    Other user's comments about boiling frogs are so dead on. The professional activists among you need to stand up, take notice and mobilize before it's too late.

    You need a million geek march on Washington. You need to to totally drown every representative with a flood of phone calls, snail mail, email and postings that demand that not only this bill gets deep-sixed, but that Hatch and his batch of corporate butt kissers get removed from office and a strong message gets sent to the holders of dead technologies (the record labels and others like them) that they are free either to change their business model or just plain go ahead and die.

    Kazaa, Bittorrent and Mute need to stop fighting for profit (Or power or recognition or whatever). Instead, they need to pool their respective technologies and come up with an open source, searchable, multi seed download technology protected by encryption so high and protocols so varied that it will be impossible to shut down, monitor or control without shutting down the entire internet.

    The very fact that debate is still going on for this many pages tells me that Hatch will probably win. The time for debate is so past. This is time for a civil war driven by an army of everyone who has enough sense to fear a corporate version of G. O.'s 1984.

    It matters not at all if this bill dies in committee. This is a test of, "We the people,"'s resolve -- a test of whether something this outrageous goes by in silence or if the legal hounds of the labels are finally put on notice that they will be attacked on sight by a united people who are refusing to take it any more.

    When is America going to stand up and say that enough is enough?

  208. I've made a decision by agraupe · · Score: 1

    If these evil things come to pass, I'm gonna build a shack in Western Canada, with a hi-speed (satilite?) internet connection, and buy myself a nice collection of guns. Anyone who tells me I shouldn't do whatever I'm doing gets a slug through the forehead (I'll make Orrin feel special: I'll hit him in the nuts with a sledgehammer first).

  209. The enemy of my enemy is my Vote by TPFH · · Score: 1

    I agree in theory, but in practice a vote libertarian is a vote for Bush. Just ask anybody who voted for Nader in 2000.

    No no no no no, a vote for the Libertarian is supposidly taking votes away from the Republicans (because Libertarians are conservative.) thats why when I voted for Nader, even though I'm a conservative, the vote really counted for Bush.

    Now, at least in Florida, a vote for Gore counted for Buchanan I don't understand this but I didn't make up this logic.

    What I don't understand is if a vote for Nader is a vote for Bush, and a vote for Browne (in 2000) is a vote for Gore, than who do you vote for if you actually want your vote to count for Nader?

    If a vote for Nader is a vote for Bush, does that mean a vote for Bush is a vote for Nader?

    No, that' makes no sense.

    I guess you have to vote for the other reform canidate if you actually want to vote for Nader. But no one remembers his name.

    Maybe if we get even more 3rd party canidates there will actually be an enemy of my enemy to vote for so that you can actually vote 3rd party without your vote counting for a Republicrat.

    But I've heard rumours that the Democrats are playing dirty tricks with Nader this year, and if that's true it really pisses me off. Could that backfire?

    --
    This signature used to contain a cute kitty virus with ansii art. Please set the slashdot editors on fire. Thank you
  210. Go Ahead Mod me by eadint · · Score: 1
    Mod Me if you must
    I will probably get modded into oblivion for this but i think it has to be done
    The recent events of orin hatch that i was not able to comment on have just gone too far. there are allot of people on /. who like to whine about this kind of thing but nothing ever gets done. i think its time that /. show its power in the DMCA and DRM, and *AA playing field. the web site www.nomoreorin. org com net are currently available. based on user moderation here is what i plan to do.
    1. Register the domain www.nomoreorin.org and use it for a organizational starting place to campaign against his reelection
    2. Gather all of the evidence and bills that he is against peoples rights and is in the pay of the *aa
    3. Work to form a grass roots party in his hometown to make sure that he is defeated buy a landslide in the next election.
    4. Try to set up rallys and protests in his community with pamphlets that say
      1. Your senator wants to outlaw your VCR, Tivo, DVR
      2. Your senator wants to outlaw your computer
      3. Your senator wants to put viruses and destroy your computer if you do something he doe sent approve of
      4. Your senator helped to put an innocent Russian Civilian in jail without due process over writing an essentially legal program.
      5. Your senator wants to remove your rights to make backup copies of movies and software that you already own
      6. Your senator cares more about the *aa than the people who elected him
      7. Your senator has accepted XXXXX$ from these *aa groups
    5. Next target any and all politicians that have shown support for the DMCA, INDUCE or have received an money from the *AA
    6. If we send a message to the government that clearly states that
      1. If you accept any money from the *AA we will see to it that your political career is destroyed.
      2. Supporting any bill that restricts a users rights to media he owns will result in your not getting elected.
    It is evidently clear that if we do not act now. your right to use a computer or any kind of audio and visual media will be severely restricted.
    Depending on the replies to this post i will reserve and set up the
    www.nomoreorin.org website.
    and will do what i can to help a movement whose time have come .
    if you have any questions email me at
    eric.aint.net (spam proof)