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Pay To Have Your Phone Tapped

An anonymous reader writes "The Globe and Mail is running an interesting story over who should carry the cost of wiretapping (registration may be required): 'Canada's police chiefs propose a surcharge of about 25 cents on monthly telephone and Internet bills to cover the cost of tapping into the communications of terrorists and other criminals.'"

387 comments

  1. Har by Perianwyr+Stormcrow · · Score: 2, Insightful

    at least the money comes up front... Not as if you aren't paying already.

    --

    What we call folk wisdom is often no more than a kind of expedient stupidity.-Edward Abbey

    1. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Of course you pay to have the government do things. Who do you think such programs should be paid for?

      Ideally, I'd like to see the fee charged only to those people who actually do get their phones tapped, though.

    2. Re:Har by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So you have to pay if the police tap your phone and then decide that you didn't do anything? That doesn't make any sense.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just add it to the bill of who they are wiretapping?

      Surely its that simple?

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

      And then the suspects could see that their being investigated too. Doesn't seem like it'd work for either side.

    5. Re:Har by John+Courtland · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I find it extremely stupid that law enforcement can pluck money from here and there. It makes it really difficult to determine all their income sources, and almost seems like laundering in a way. They should ONLY get money from direct taxation (property taxes, and maybe sales taxes if applicable), and that should be publically auditable.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    6. Re:Har by 0racle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This would be direct taxation, a 25 cent wiretapping tax. They will probably find a better name for it, Patriotic duty or something but it is still a direct tax.

      Patriotism sucks.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    7. Re:Har by jrockway · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Thank you Pringles can + 802.11g + VoIP + IPSec.

      Wiretap? Have fun.
      Tax? Try me.

      --
      My other car is first.
    8. Re:Har by John+Courtland · · Score: 1

      Hmm, you're right. I suppose I meant specifically a single point of income that can be traced.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    9. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Patriotism sucks.

      Patriotism is just fine, nationalism and cults of personality are what suck. Politicians pandering to the moronic masses with hateful bullshit like DoMA and pandering to big media with spiteful foolishness such as the DMCA are what suck. America will remain powerful for a bit, but the rot is deep, people are stupid, and a jackass is president.

    10. Re:Har by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      No, ideally it'd be the "terrorists and criminals" who pay for it.

      Introducing a 7% "criminal" tax and a 10% "terrorist" tax ...

    11. Re:Har by Geek+of+Tech · · Score: 2, Insightful
      >>Hmm, you're right. I suppose I meant specifically a single point of income that can be traced.

      Yeah, but they're probably afraid that if they make it that easy to find where the money comes from, we might want them to make it as easy to find out where it goes.

      --
      Stop the Slashdot effect! Don't read the articles!
    12. Re:Har by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      I'm figuring that either a) your signal hits the traditional infrastructure at some point or b) you have a very small circle of contacts. As your signal got to slashdot, I'm going to assume the answer is a.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    13. Re:Har by Geek+of+Tech · · Score: 1
      The only problem lies in the possibility for criminals and terrorists to discover if they're being bugged by figuring their bill. If you find a difference of about 25 cents then move on quickly.

      --
      Stop the Slashdot effect! Don't read the articles!
    14. Re:Har by SnapShot · · Score: 1

      It's probably safer to just assume that everyone is a criminal or terrorist. There could be some process to remove the tax for those that have proven themselves innocent (perhaps by a secret tribunal or something...)

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    15. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is different. This is essentially a flat tax. So it is more up front, but in the long run it's screwing us more.

    16. Re:Har by ChairmanMeow · · Score: 2

      and a jackass is president.

      Do you seriously think that John Kerry would be any less of a jackass? Don't get me wrong, I don't like George Bush, but John Kerry would likely be just as much of a jackass.

      --
    17. Re:Har by John+Courtland · · Score: 1

      I think it would be rather funny and perhaps a good indictment of our current political situation if everyone just voted for themselves. I know I'm doing it.

      "Do your part for America! Vote for you, Nov 2nd!"

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    18. Re:Har by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      While my comment was somewhat tongue-in-cheek, I was somewhat serious in the same way that the US seems to require illicit income to be reported on tax forms - if you're a criminal (with some wacked-out definition of criminal), please send the government an extra 7% tax. If you're a terrorist, that is a member of any organisation that the US has defined as such, please make that 10%. This is to help pay for the gov'ts wire tapping.

      That they are or are not tapping you at the moment does not change your civic obligation as a criminal/terrorist!

    19. Re:Har by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      Just like the rest of the taxes that are applied to your phonebill are easy to trace. Looking my last cell phone bill, taxes make up about 9% of that total. God only knows what is taxed on the land line and DSL.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    20. Re:Har by mcheu · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, if you can't reach the Globe and mail article, the Toronto Star article doesn't require registration yet:

      http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pag ename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1 092567664712&call_pageid=968332188492&col=96870589 9037
    21. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then you're reading the Toronto Star...

      Yuck.

    22. Re:Har by bobcote · · Score: 1

      The problem with any tax - in any country - is that the money often gets diverted to other purposes. Massachusetts instituted an additional tax on gasoline a some years back. The idea was that the money would pay for road and bridge maintenance. (Road contractors were the biggest supporters).

      Needless to say, the money went to other places. Soon they will want to add a gasoline tax to pay for what was already supposed to be covered.

    23. Re:Har by Nos. · · Score: 1

      Well, I hope your only using VOIP to known hosts since most commercial solutions that are being used sold with telephone numbers allow tapping. In the states the FCC is making sure they can tap. In Canada, some (most?) of the providers are using Nortel equipment which allows tapping.
      You can't use IPSec if the other end isn't.

    24. Re:Har by aastanna · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nope, this is a proposal by Canadian police chiefs. We don't have patriotism here....we have "at least we're not americans".

    25. Re:Har by 0racle · · Score: 0, Troll

      Oh please. 'Canadians are the most polite people on the planet,' for one, which is total BS, or that smugness when a visitor makes a mistake and all of a sudden, 'Canadians know more about the world then anyone else,' again, BS. You [royal you] make fun of the Southern States, its like that all across the Great White North, 30 million complete retards, almost right down to every man, woman and child.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    26. Re:Har by jrockway · · Score: 1

      Well when I call my gf it isn't encrypted, but when I call my fellow terrorists (jk jk) I make sure that we're both using strong crypto. Not everything needs to be private.

      --
      My other car is first.
    27. Re:Har by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      thats why we (here in germany) have at least two names for that. Taxes go into a big pool which gets diverted to everything, and charges are only to be used for what they are charged.

      --
      bickerdyke
    28. Re:Har by Peter_JS_Blue · · Score: 1
      It might go something like this
      1. Doing something illegal
      2. Police tap your phone and give you the bill
      3. You think "Ahh the Police are onto me"
      4. Stop doing something illegal
      5. Police find nothing and move on
      6. You continue doing something illegal
      --
      Art Makers Just an excuse to show photos of naked women !!
    29. Re:Har by thisgooroo · · Score: 1
      Ideally, I'd like to see the fee charged only to those people who actually do get their phones tapped, though.

      these wiretaps are done because the cops suspect you. do you want them to pay even if the suspicion turns out to be unjustified?

      the problem with the proposal is that they want the victims to pay. even if we believe their specious arguments, this would be for the security of the country, thus should be aid from the general revenue (taxes) rather than the victims of the snooping.

    30. Re:Har by ChoGGi · · Score: 1

      ouch thats harsh
      nice to know you think every canadian is the same

    31. Re:Har by Bazer · · Score: 1

      Patriotism sucks.

      Espiecially when those at the steering wheel have anything but patriotism in mind.

    32. Re:Har by MadCow42 · · Score: 1

      Basically, it's another tax... instead of using the existing tax money to pay for these services, they're grabbing at a new revenue stream, and keeping the old tax revenue stream too.

      Sure, it's more direct this way, but we're already paying for this.

      MadCow.

      --
      I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
    33. Re:Har by badasscat · · Score: 1

      Basically, it's another tax... instead of using the existing tax money to pay for these services, they're grabbing at a new revenue stream, and keeping the old tax revenue stream too.

      Sure, it's more direct this way, but we're already paying for this.

      At the risk of burning through huge amounts of karma (depending on who the current mods are), no, we are not.

      People who say this cost should come out of our taxes need to quit bitching about how high taxes are and then whining about extra stuff like this when their taxes get cut. The fact is we are running a huge deficit in this country, we have a mind-boggling public debt and we're getting deeper and deeper into it every day. Stuff like this, if it's undertaken (VoIP wiretapping, I mean) needs to be paid for, and you can't just say "well, use the money I already paid for regular phone service" any more than you can say the military should fund itself with the lottery tickets you bought last week. The fact is this money all goes to different places and it doesn't even cover what it's supposed to be paying for anyway, let alone any new programs.

      The alternative is you just don't do anything new and you cut things that already exist and aren't being paid for, which is a solution a lot of people support, but the fact is there's a limit to that. What exactly are you going to cut? Cutting law enforcement (as Bush has been doing) seems a bit stupid in this day and age. Cutting the military seems foolhardy right now, as over-extended as we already are. The other biggest government expenditures are social security and interest on the national debt (which, as mentioned, is growing quickly). There's very little actual discretionary spending in the budget, and most of that has been cut to the bone already.

      So you can't really cut anymore, and stuff's gotta be paid for. Right now, we're not paying for it, and people still complain that we're paying too much?

      If you want all your "tax" payments in one place, then fine - but don't then bitch about those payments being too high when we're already not even paying our bills.

    34. Re:Har by MadCow42 · · Score: 1

      And to counter your argument:

      We can't just keep adding programs indefinately... at some point you'll be taking 100% of my paycheck as tax, and there won't be anything left to give.

      Our society is evolving, and so we need to address new issues and new needs. However, the flipside is that some of the old programs probably don't make much sense any more. Law enforcement shouldn't be cut, but you have to cut somewhere or make existing programs more efficient through modernization. Otherwise, the beaurocracy just keeps growing (and we know just how efficient governments are...).

      Ok, I'm being dramatic. But it's a valid point: Add a program, kill a program... it MUST be done unless you want to eventually end up with communism (i.e. no personal property, everything is provided by the state).

      MadCow.

      --
      I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
    35. Re:Har by unoengborg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, it does.

      If you use strong crypto only for some connections, this is would reveal your communication patterns. This may show who your fellow terrorists are. That way homeland security could place a bug in their office. Or just send all of you Guantanamo just to be on the safe side.

      --
      God is REAL! Unless explicitly declared INTEGER
    36. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "and a jackass is president" is a statement for all time. We sometimes have intelligent presidents (even Bush is more a boorish fratboy than an actual moron), but you don't get to the point of being electable without being beholden to a lot of power groups. So the president is by definition a jackass, they will do things that are bad for the country, but good for the people who allow them power.

      So yeah, Kerry as pres would be just as much a jackass as Bush. If elected he will allow and support much of the same bullshit that Bush has - the only real difference is he will not be quite as beholden to the cultural conservatives but his real constituency will be the super rich and giant corporations.

    37. Re:Har by rs79 · · Score: 1

      30 million complete retards, almost right down to every man, woman and child.

      Nah, my daughter is pretty smart. She can set the VCR clock, eh.

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
    38. Re:Har by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of an early Computer Fraud from the 1970's. Here, a programmer modified an application to take a few cents from each transaction and "divert" it to his account. This was illegal then and he was caught in a Federal rap when he tried moving the money over a state line. I wonder if the same legislation could actually trap the Wiretap Police in 2004? This is a SCAM pure and simple to raise money.

      --
      I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
    39. Re:Har by operagost · · Score: 1

      I hear that guy went to a federal pound-me-in-the-ass prison.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    40. Re:Har by mwood · · Score: 1

      Yes indeedy. As if a government had any other way of raising money than to take it from citizens. It's only a question of *when* you pay, not *whether*.

      But I do wonder whether the cost could be covered out of fines exacted from people actually found guilty.

    41. Re:Har by surprise_audit · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Yep - encrypt everything, and set up a random traffic generator that encrypts some white noise and injects it into the stream, so that some of your traffic is garbage. Should keep homeland security busy.

      Or they just pick up you and all your contacts anyway, on suspicion of terrorst activity, because that's all they seem to need. Certainly that was all that was necessary when my son and his friend were stopped twice, for having a video camera in hand while waiting to board a cruise ship. They were accused of videoing the port facilities, even with the lens cap on and the camera turned off. Offers of playing back the tape on the spot were ignored, the security thugs being more interested in patting them down and threatening them with jail.

    42. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that Canadian piss in your cornflakes this morning?

    43. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, great argument and all, I'm sure, but the article is about Canadian police; the US national debt level has little effect on the RCMP budget.

    44. Re:Har by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      Claiming patriotism in Canada won't get you very far. Just tell us the government or big business is shafting us again, and we'll complacently go along with it.

      Just think of us as honest Americans. We're still grabbing our ankles, but the guy shafting us doesn't mind telling us what's happening...

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    45. Re:Har by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ideally, I'd like to see the fee charged only to those people who actually do get their phones tapped, though."

      I can see that working.

      Answerphone: BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP

      Operator: Excuse Me, Mr Brown - we have the FBI wanting to tap your phone, but we cant authorise it until you can make the payment. If you can get back to me as soon as possible. [click]

    46. Re:Har by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Why is it so hard for you to think I might have had the unfortunate fate of being born in Canada? In order to claim there is no patriotism in Canada, you have to live under a rock, or be a the stupidest person on the planet.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    47. Re:Har by mikechant · · Score: 1

      But only when it's midnight...

    48. Re:Har by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      I didn't say we don't have patriotism, just that it doesn't generate blind trust in Canadians. The other half of the shot was at our complete complacency, where we reward those who should be held responsible for misdeeds in politics and business.

      As an example, look to our new prime minister. We have no less than 2 financial scandals in the year or two before the last election, a strong indicator that our then-financial minister is either corrupt or incompetent. Yet there he is, leading the country, and blaming everything on his predecessor.

      So again, they don't have to use the patriotism card to push this through in Canada. Just tell us some bald-faced lie, and we'll all grumble about it while we pay our bills.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    49. Re:Har by davidsyes · · Score: 1

      Alfred E. Newman for President

      --
      Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
    50. Re:Har by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      It doesn't seem to require -- it does require. It's one of those oddities where illicit income is still income, and thus taxable. You can be hit with tax evasion charges on illicit income, which you're still required to pay even when the ill-gotten fruits of your labor have been seized by the government.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  2. So.... by kclittle · · Score: 0, Redundant
    I have to pay to have my privacy invaded!? Sigh!...

    --
    Generally, bash is superior to python in those environments where python is not installed.
    1. Re:So.... by empaler · · Score: 1

      Look at the two hundred other posts that have similar content. Duh.

    2. Re:So.... by saunder3 · · Score: 1

      Note that we are discussing the second post to the article.

  3. You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On your phone bill or through your taxes elsewhere.

    1. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We already pay through our taxes. Why are they trying to double charge us?

    2. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Pretzalzz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The difference of course is that normal taxes are progressive, the richer you are, the more you pay. Whereas with this both rich and poor will be paying the same surcharge so the poor will be hit harder as a percentage of their income.

    3. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Kenard · · Score: 1

      How about the person getting tap pays? They're the one the police are investigating.

      --
      (appended to the end of comments you post)
    4. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The difference of course is that normal taxes are progressive, the richer you are, the more you pay.

      You misunderstand the regular meaning of "progressive tax". A so-called "progressive tax" charges the wealthy a higher percentage, so they pay a higher rate. Most income taxes are like this. Most rich people pay much more income tax than the poor. Many poor people pay no income tax.

      Flat taxes charge everyone the same rate - sales taxes and property taxes are usually like this. The wealthy still pay more than the poor, since they usually buy more and own more valuable property.

      Poll or head taxes charge a constant amount per person. Everyone pays the same fee to get a passport.

    5. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm sure the poor - that is, those who can just afford basic phone service, not the truly impoverished - can't afford paying a single quarter every month.

      The progressive argument works for significant amounts of money, or small percentages of a large amount (e.g., sales tax).

    6. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The progressive argument works for significant amounts of money, or small percentages of a large amount (e.g., sales tax).

      Sales tax isnt progressive.

    7. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by mdamaged · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Example:

      If I flick you in the ear once, it's a bit of a bother, but no big deal, what if i sat there and kept flicking your ear every second, for hours, it'd really bother you then wouldn't it. It adds up, 25 cents here 25 cents there....

      --
      Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
    8. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      On your phone bill or through your taxes elsewhere.

      In which case, perhaps better on the phone bill. At least it's there and line-itemed, reminding people that the government is in fact tapping phone lines, etc. Otherwise it will just get hidden in the general fund.

      On the other hand, as someone else pointed out, this is regressive. Maybe funding through income taxes would be better. It's a toss-up to me.
    9. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1

      Ever hear the phrase nickeled-and-dimed to death? Well a quarter is more than a nickel and a dime.

    10. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by jrockway · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's 25 today, it's $25 tomorrow. Fortunately, you can just use VoIP and strong crypto and avoid problems.

      The world is changing. The government can't control your electronic communications. They still have the power to tell you "do not walk on grass", but YOU have the power to do whatever you want online.

      Use Freenet. Use GPG. Use OpenBSD. YOU are in control, not them. Don't pay their taxes. If they want you to use something easily traceable, they should pay YOU!

      Take a look here:
      http://ciphersaber.gurus.com/

      You will always have encryption if you learn the contents of this page. Nobody can ever take it away. Think about that power.

      --
      My other car is first.
    11. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by danharan · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You're going to pay somewhere...
      On your phone bill or through your taxes elsewhere.
      Lots of people already answered this one with knee-jerk reactions, but here goes an attempt at reason...

      We are already paying for police investigations through our taxes. We do have to pay somewhere- but do we have to pay to sustain numerous bureaucracies? If people don't mind, maybe we should tax dental care to promote dental hygiene, and condoms for sex education? Or, in the same vein, taxing internet access to fund internet surveillance?

      To create another special tax just creates more inefficiency in an already complex system, not to mention that consumption taxes are the most regressive of all. We have a tax system that needs fixing, not more regressive, byzantine jerry-rigging.

      The police/RCMP/CSIS are already conducting surveillance, and paying for it with their respective budgets. Is this a thinly veiled way of increasing their wiretapping budget and legitimating this practice, and the need for corporate communication? What does this entail for new communications technology -- will all companies be required to create easy backdoors for snooping?

      Finally, the very assumption that we'll have to pay is offensive. If we had to pay, it should be done through taxes. But do we need to, and how much should we spend on this priority? I'd like that decision to be made where it ought to be- in the budget debate in our elected parliament. Such a decision ought to be made knowing full well what stupid things our intel services have seen fit to investigate over the years, and whether we ought to trust them to actually recognize a threat without undue harm to civil liberties and privacy. E.g. see Whose national security?

      --
      Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
    12. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by gcaseye6677 · · Score: 1

      True, but the rich do end up buying more stuff, and more expensive stuff, so they do pay more total sales tax than lower income people. In most areas, I believe items such as food and certain other essentials are not taxed.

    13. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if we assumed that the rich spent the same proportion of their income as the poor that would make for a proportionate or flat rate tax, not a progressive tax.

      In general those with high incomes spend a lower proportion of their income than the poor do, making sales taxes in practice regressive taxes.

    14. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hardly.....its the middle class that pays the taxes

    15. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah it was listed right there under "phone tapping." If you don't use a phone you shouldn't have to pay for it. That's what's going on here. And to answer the question "who should pay?" well, of course! it should be the employees who working hard to keep you safe!

    16. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Abjifyicious · · Score: 1
      If they want you to use something easily traceable, they should pay YOU!

      Hmmmm...it used to just be the soviet russians, but it looks like it's the canadians now too, eh?

    17. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by whoopass · · Score: 1

      The problem is that if there is dedicated funding for this, the cops will wire tap more often.

      At least today, they have to compete with other expenses such as cars, maintenance, bullet proof vests for funding. This is a great way to make sure there is scrutiny internally to ensure the power to wire tap is not being abused.

    18. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      In soviet canada, a boot oots you, eh?

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    19. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by zonker · · Score: 0

      oh no, more terrorist "chatter"... there go my rates!

    20. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by cmallinson · · Score: 1
      Ever hear the phrase nickeled-and-dimed to death? Well a quarter is more than a nickel and a dime.

      ...and being quartered to death sucks worse.

    21. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by thisgooroo · · Score: 1

      looks like you didn't read the article: so far it's the phone companies and the ISPs who have paid (for installing the equipment that enables the wiretapping) and they want their money back, so they bill for wiretaps. the cops don't want to pay, so suggest that the cost be borne by the telephone and ISP customers

    22. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Please explain to me how these definitions are different from what the grandparent meant?

    23. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, how do you plan to be using this Freenet and Voip thing without a phone line, which will then be taxed? I assume you will say cable, or sattelite, or some sort of hippy commune neighbourhood wireless co-op, but what about the 50% of the population where those are not acceptable, or available, options?

    24. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by jrockway · · Score: 1

      I have some "commune" wireless ISP.

      But that's too bad for that 50%. Why don't they start an ISP then? They're too lazy? I'm not sympathetic. If you want to go against the government, it's not supposed to be EASY!

      --
      My other car is first.
    25. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Precisely. You argue that it isn't, and that it should be.

      25c would be absurd to make progressive.

    26. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      It's 25 today, it's $25 tomorrow.

      Put a cap at the greater of $1 per service (land phone, cable, Internet, cell phone, etc.) and $1 per government area (city executive, state legislative, etc.) before surcharges must be implemented as taxes out of income tax.

    27. Re:You're going to pay somewhere by DM9290 · · Score: 1

      However, as laws are designed to serve the rich, the poor are consequently more likely to be criminals, and if charged more likely to be represented by bad lawyers, and therefore less likely to be able to have wiretap evidence excluded from trial, when the police abuse their wiretapping powers.

      This is just plain old fashion fiscal prudence.
      And completely fair.

      If you dont want to pay the government to monitor your communications, then you have the right to remain silent.

      And remember... the terrorists wouldn't be so generous.

      --
      No one has a right to their *own* opinion. They have a right to the TRUTH.
  4. And? by Trailwalker · · Score: 4, Funny

    Will he next ask for a tax for doughnuts?

    1. Re:And? by ejaw5 · · Score: 1

      Well, don't forget some folks tried to have a Coffee tax over in Seattle a while back.

      --

      $cat /dev/random > Sig
    2. Re:And? by p0rnking · · Score: 1

      I know this was posted as a joke, but doughnuts are usually given to the Cops for free when they're on duty

  5. Taxes by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    You pay for it either way.. At least in this case its not 'hidden'...

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Taxes by neillewis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nickel and diming is still a hidden cost, unless its itemised on every bill.

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

      The secret is it is $0.25 *per call*. You can check if you are taped looking at your telephone bil.

    3. Re:Taxes by idlerich · · Score: 0

      This is Canada. There is no such thing as the right to bear arms.

  6. Hey cool! I hate money anyway. by theluckyleper · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've also been looking for someone to kick me in the nuts, for $10/hr. Any takers?

    --
    Visit the Game Programming Wiki!
  7. misc phone charges by commo1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The phone company (Bell) will eventually win, jacking up prices at this suggestion for the supposed costs involved in the physicaly act of wiretapping. The government can't win, as it has a) the Bell Canada lobby against it and b) the canadian public totally against it. Eventually, these fees will be hidden in the cost of the phone service, per line, with no explanation, except that the fees will be diverted to a waretapping fund.

    1. Re:misc phone charges by 3l1za · · Score: 2, Informative

      Seriously, dude; admit you didn't RTFA.

      Because if you had, you would know that the phone company doesn't want to "jack up prices" to cover the costs. Or the "supposed" costs as you say (you doubt that there are real costs involved?).

      But the country's largest phone company believes that telecommunications firms and law-enforcement agencies, not subscribers, should split the costs.

      "We think there should be more of a partnership between the agencies and us, rather than getting the public to pay for it," said Bell Canada spokeswoman Jacqueline Michelis.

      That your post got modded informative just proves that not only did YOU not RTFA, every person who gave you a point didn't either. Pathetic.

      It's for obvious reasons that the phone company doesn't want to have their subscribers cover the costs. I guess this wouldn't be obvious if you have a anti-capitalism chip the size of Ottawa on your shoulder though...

      In my opinion, this is precisely what taxes are for (as opposed to, for example, funding methadone clinics for ne'er do wells).

    2. Re:misc phone charges by rokzy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      what are the costs of wiretapping?

      wages? - already paid for
      training? - already paid for
      phone lines? - already paid for
      equipment? - already paid for

      what the fuck needs paying for that the police don't already do/have?

      is "police uniform tax" going to turn up on all my clothes next?

      "police car" tax on cars?

      "police car petrol" tax on petrol?

      wiretapping has been going on for decades without needing a special tax. now the police have more powers than ever so it should be even cheaper. this is bullshit.

    3. Re:misc phone charges by kubrick · · Score: 1

      The methadone clinics are an attempt to keep your home insurance bills down (less break-ins). As to how well that works, well, who knows...

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    4. Re:misc phone charges by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      equipment? - already paid for

      Didn't you know? Their equipment has a coin slot, and after five minutes, it beeps and says "Please insert 25 cents for the next 3 minutes."

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    5. Re:misc phone charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Already paid for? Maybe. But at the expense of other police activities. Believe it or not, the police are not out to get your money to oppress you.

      But I bet it makes you feel big and insightful when you cry out against imagined oppression.

    6. Re:misc phone charges by rokzy · · Score: 1

      since when should some police acts get special funding?

      should we have a "paedophile investigation tax" on the internet and photos?

      a "murder/assault tax" on knives?

      get a freaking clue. the police are there to do that kind of thing. need more money? justify it to government - don't start taxing people directly. if this goes further it'll end up like banks:

      police: I think you might be driving illegally so I'm going to charge you $10 to have a look at your tax disk and license.

    7. Re:misc phone charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disagree with the method of taxation if you want, I don't care. But I was adressing the attitude that the police are out to steal people's money and use it to oppress them. They are underfunded, that's just a fact.

      Idiot.

  8. Not a chance by Sneftel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Police say they cannot - and should not - be forced to pay the often hefty costs involved in carrying out court-approved wiretaps and message searches, warning that investigations will suffer if they are expected to pick up the tab.
    BS. Law enforcement is publically funded. If it's not funded enough, fine; we the voters will think about giving you more money. But making an end run around the process just because law enforcement in the new millenium is sooo expensive, thereby giving them a cash flow that actually encouragesthem to wiretap frivolously, is not an appropriate solution.

    --
    The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    1. Re:Not a chance by vigilology · · Score: 1
      Police say they cannot - and should not - be forced to pay the often hefty costs involved in carrying out court-approved wiretaps and message searches, warning that investigations will suffer if they are expected to pick up the tab.

      Is this not policework anyway? Is it not like saying they shouldn't be forced to pay for the pencils and notepads they use?

    2. Re:Not a chance by swillden · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If it's not funded enough, fine; we the voters will think about giving you more money.

      The common response to this is that it's way too expensive to take this route, because building all of the wiretapping infrastructure will cost hundreds of millions of dollars. We'd have to double the law enforcement budgets if they had to pay to build this infrastructure themselves.

      However, that just raises the question of whether or not wiretapping infrastructure is a good way to spend our law enforcement dollars. All privacy, etc., issues aside, wouldn't we be better off taking the same amount of money and using it to hire more/better cops?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    3. Re:Not a chance by zazylawy · · Score: 1

      What gets to me is, why doesn't someone tell the police department "Technologies like wiretapping didn't spring up overnight, so why didn't you budget yourselves accordingly over the last few decades"?

      I don't think they should have the right to demand we pay and extra charge just because they didn't plan ahead!

    4. Re:Not a chance by Sneftel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One way or another, if it's paid for, we're going to end up paying for it. If we raise income taxes, we pay for it there; if we make the phone company do free wiretaps, we pay increased rates. The key, however, is that if police are forced to request funding through normal channels, they're less able to obscure the true extent of their funding. That, after all, is the aim of all those nickel-and-dime taxes: to spread the perceived burden.

      --
      The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    5. Re:Not a chance by ckedge · · Score: 1

      Now *THAT* is an insightful comment.

      It also begs the question, could they not accomplish it technically in a more cost efficient manner? There is always another way to skin the cat.

      At least if the police or the telephone companies have to foot the bill we a) get to see the cost all in one place instead of 25 cents at a time where it doesn't look as big, and b) there is a huge incentive for them to do it cost effectively.

    6. Re:Not a chance by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      I think that bill should be passed on just to those people that are being tapped, not the whole population. So, when your phone bill suddenly shoots up to $1000, you know the police are after you. Then, if they find nothing they can get you for, they should cover the costs themselves - after all, it would be cheaper than a defending a lawsuit for wrongful arrest...

  9. Who should pay? by usefool · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I guess the answer is pretty obvious - no matter who initially paid for this, customers will be the ones shouldering the cost.

    This has already happened to the airline industry, guess who is paying for the security tax7?

    --
    Uselessful technology (Air-Charged
    1. Re:Who should pay? by nurb432 · · Score: 0

      Considering the police are publicly funded, how do you propose they get the extra fees? From the government that mandated the taps be 'easy'?

      Well that's our money too....

      Either way we lose.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  10. nothing new by gandalphthegreen · · Score: 1, Redundant

    You're going to pay for this anyway. Maybe not upfront; in fact, maybe it's part of the government's budget. But guess who provides that?

    1. Re:nothing new by Monkey-Man2000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, the difference is if I don't have a phone I wouldn't have to pay. Fortunately, I wouldn't be tapped either. Sounds like a win-win situation!

      --
      This post was generated by a Cadre of Uber Monkeys for Monkey-Man2000 (603495).
    2. Re:nothing new by Moofie · · Score: 1

      So what have they been doing all this time to fund their investigations? Having bake sales?

      The only reason to increase the budget for wiretaps is to increase the number of wiretaps. You can't make me believe that it's more expensive to tap phones on modern systems than it used to be when you had to physically move wires around. I think we as citizens are entitled to take a very critical view of that notion.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  11. What is this? by WildBeast · · Score: 0

    I don't care, I never asked for it. Why should I pay for it?

    1. Re:What is this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why I support opt-in taxes. Liberals want to pay for health care, environment, etc? Great, you do that. Me, I'll just check this box here for defense, and maybe that one for education.

    2. Re:What is this? by gl4ss · · Score: 4, Insightful

      **That's why I support opt-in taxes. Liberals want to pay for health care, environment, etc? Great, you do that. Me, I'll just check this box here for defense, and maybe that one for education.**

      oh that would be great if people would plan ahead and there would be a cheap way to exclude those not paying from getting the benefits(don't want to pay for keeping the roads in good shape? well, lose your ability to receive any goods transferred on those roads.. the point being that a system like that would ultimately suck because people are short sighted and can't see the connections between things that make their daily life possible).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:What is this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, my full system sets aside 50% of your taxes for the legislature to decide, and 50% for you to specify. You can of course opt to let them decide your 50% or part of it. Regardless, they'd get a clear indication of what the taxpayers value and be forced to carry it out their will.

    4. Re:What is this? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      *Actually, my full system sets aside 50% of your taxes for the legislature to decide, and 50% for you to specify. You can of course opt to let them decide your 50% or part of it. Regardless, they'd get a clear indication of what the taxpayers value and be forced to carry it out their will.*

      well something to that extend can already be done if you wish just by switching into a lesser giving lesser taking country, and paying the 50% you save in taxes directly for private health care, security, education and so on(there's at least a dozen country-pairs where such differences in taxing and society funded systems exist now, like moving from a scandinavian high-tax country to some place in africa where you would end up paying privately for paving the road in your neighbourhood and educating your kids, and still get off cheaper).

      of course finding a job & locating to another country isn't that easy but anyways..

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:What is this? by akintayo · · Score: 1

      It is not that easy to judge the impact of government spending. And in the end most people will be in the position where there are benefiting without paying the underlying tax.

      For example, an EMS unit comes to help you. There is the cost of developing and maintaining the road, the cost of the pension insurance program (for the autoworkers), the cost of educating the EMS personel, the cost of maintaining the EMS system, the cost of developing that system (partial), the cost of developing any medicines (partial) and the cost of any basic research related to those medicines, among others.

      --
      Woe be on to them, all who rise against poor people, shall perish in a the end. Buju Banton
    6. Re:What is this? by zCyl · · Score: 1

      oh that would be great if people would plan ahead and there would be a cheap way to exclude those not paying from getting the benefits(don't want to pay for keeping the roads in good shape? well, lose your ability to receive any goods transferred on those roads.. the point being that a system like that would ultimately suck because people are short sighted and can't see the connections between things that make their daily life possible).

      If no one payed for social security disability, or food stamps, or head start programs, then we'd have a whole lot more crime as people grow up unable to find simple things like food and jobs. How do you even begin to measure that?

      At some point we need to stop looking at ourselves as just individuals, and begin looking at ourselves as a society which rises and falls in unison.

    7. Re:What is this? by maximilln · · Score: 1

      If no one payed for social security disability, or food stamps, or head start programs, then we'd have a whole lot more crime as people grow up unable to find simple things like food and jobs. How do you even begin to measure that?

      Those programs are inefficient pyrmaid schemes which take more money from the taxpayers than they give back to the needy. By eliminating them we'd actually be doing society and the economy a favor by putting the money back in the hands of the locales that need it most. No longer would Washington DC amass huge coffers from which it can dispense aid to its preferred locales, but each locale would address its own issues on a case by case basis.

      If you don't agree then I will be more than happy to take your money and put it into a trust, which I control, to dispense for your aid as I see fit. Doesn't that make perfect sense? Don't you trust me? Why should you trust someone who, for the greatest probability, you didn't even vote for?

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    8. Re:What is this? by PaulBu · · Score: 1

      At some point we need to stop looking at ourselves as just individuals, and begin looking at ourselves as a society which rises and falls in unison.

      As someone who actually grew up in the SOVIET RUSSIA, I would rather opt-out of this plan, really. The thinking that "society" has "rights", while "individual" only has "responsibilities" is a very dangerous (and *logically* totally unsupported!) proposition.

      Paul B.

    9. Re:What is this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That's why I support opt-in taxes. Liberals want to pay for health care, environment, etc? Great, you do that. Me, I'll just check this box here for defense, and maybe that one for education.

      Fine, as long as you're prepared to live in a toxic waste dump and pay your own medical bills.

    10. Re:What is this? by AgentGibbled · · Score: 1
      By eliminating them we'd actually be doing society and the economy a favor by putting the money back in the hands of the locales that need it most.
      The key problem being that poorer locales have a smaller tax base (lower income == lower tax revenue) so the "locales that need it most" won't have the resources to support their welfare programs. Trustworthiness of government aside, there needs to be some fair mechanism to transfer social aid money from areas that have it to areas that don't. Otherwise the poor locales just keep getting poorer.
    11. Re:What is this? by beakburke · · Score: 1

      Welfare programs don't create wealth though, they can only transfer and destroy it. (Welfare employee's don't produce anything of value, they are a cost, and overhead expense of our good will.) Thus every dollar of welfare spending will lowers the average standard of living in this country (you have to take from one to give anything to another). Pooring money into poor communities doesn't make them better off, it masks the underlying problems. It's a bandaid, not a cure. However, the AVAILABILITY of money to private and public sector to invest in these communities is a necessary but not sufficient condition to improving them. The problem is, how do you know if the is acting as a bandaid or a tonic?

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    12. Re:What is this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can't do this too much or too little... keeping the poor just weathly enough to not become disgruntled is a good thing. But at the same time, as an incentive to be a productive member of the society is getting off welfare and do something about being poor.

    13. Re:What is this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      keeping the poor weathly enough to not become disgruntled is a good way to get the working person to quit thier job and milk the gov. free money. why the hell work when you'll just be given money to survive?

      (darwinism works, social programs don't)

    14. Re:What is this? by iainl · · Score: 1

      "oh that would be great if people would plan ahead and there would be a cheap way to exclude those not paying from getting the benefits"

      I'm a bit fuzzy on this one. Personally, as a pacifist, I may well not want to pay my contribution towards defence expenditure. Are the Government going to turn a blind eye when my house gets invaded by a foreign power, but not my next-door neighbour, who did pay?

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    15. Re:What is this? by jasonjacks0n · · Score: 1

      In the simple form presented, the idea fails, sure. But some variation on it might be workable..

      For instance, I (as US citizen) would *love* to be able to say on my taxes that I would prefer to, say, preserve Arts Endowment and Welfare funding, but cut back on Defense spending. (I don't feel that the current process -- voting for one of a few corporate-sponsored and increasingly homogenous candidates -- offers me much influence or voice.) I would still pay the same amount in taxes, presumably -- but have some more influence on where my tax dollars were being spent.

      To answer your example: suppose I don't use the roads much anyway, preferring to walk or bike? I need the roads to work for shipping of goods, yeah, but I don't care as much about them as a long-distance commuter would. Conversely, you may prefer not to fund public trains as highly as I would. Overall, we (assuming you're American) could better choose how our tax dollars are spent.

      Another thought: if roads (for example) were underfunded, they would deteriorate over time, presumably prompting more people to check the "road work" box on their taxes. Sort of a free-market micro-economy for tax expenditures.

      At any rate, here in the US anyway, some parts of the tax system are basically broken. No harm in at least trying a little creative thinking to see if we can come up with something theoretically better. =)

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    16. Re:What is this? by zCyl · · Score: 1

      The thinking that "society" has "rights", while "individual" only has "responsibilities" is a very dangerous (and *logically* totally unsupported!) proposition.

      Actually, I would say individuals have rights, and as members of society we also have responsibilities.

  12. A no-registration version by theluckyleper · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's a version of the article with no registration required.

    --
    Visit the Game Programming Wiki!
    1. Re:A no-registration version by GNU(slash)Nickname · · Score: 1

      WTF? The posted link didn't require any registration.

    2. Re:A no-registration version by theluckyleper · · Score: 1

      It did (and still does) for me! Maybe it detects that I'm in Canada, from my IP address. Since the Globe and Mail is a Canadian paper, they probably don't mind letting non-Canadians read the articles without registration, but they probably want the demographic info on Canadians.

      --
      Visit the Game Programming Wiki!
    3. Re:A no-registration version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read it and I am in Canada. Maybe they just don't like you...

    4. Re:A no-registration version by GNU(slash)Nickname · · Score: 1

      I'm in Canada as well. I do have a cookie for the site though, so I guess I'm registered. My bad.

    5. Re:A no-registration version by Trickster+Coyote · · Score: 1

      I think the Globe and Mail have their system set up so that casual visitors aren't required to register, but frequent visitors are. (Easy enough to track with cookies.)

      This policy makes more sense than all the other news sites make you register just to read one article even though you'll probably never read their site again. Fortunate for those, there is bugmenot.com.

      --
      Ideology is for ideots.
    6. Re:A no-registration version by theluckyleper · · Score: 1

      Yep, you guys are right. I just deleted the cookie and I was able to view the page without registering. I used to read the Globe fairly frequently, until the registration hassle... now I just read it on Canada.com instead.

      But you're right, this policy does make a hell of a lot more sense than most registration policies. Since I am a frequent reader, I'm already hooked, and more likely to spend the time to register.

      --
      Visit the Game Programming Wiki!
    7. Re:A no-registration version by Rob+Simpson · · Score: 1

      I just have my browser either delete all new cookies on exit (Opera - works better because I can keep the cookies I want) or limit cookies to the current session (Firefox).

  13. Except by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The richer are more likely to have multiple phones.

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

      Bah! So someone making $200,000 pays twice as much as someone making $20,000. BFD.

    2. Re:Except by Jason1729 · · Score: 1

      Well then why not tax everyone down to $2,000 regardless of income. Then the government can use all that money to pay for everyone to have identical apartments, cars, eat the same food everyday, the same clothes, etc. The $2,000 could cover entertainment.

  14. Bent over a barrel AND being charged barrel rent by Dorsai65 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Lovely. Tap folks and charge them for it in the process. Ya gotta love law enforcement.

    --
    --- Asking inconvenient questions for over 30 years...
  15. Taxpayers pay anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Doesn't matter if it's a direct tax on your phone use, or an increase in your income tax (well, it does matter in terms of fairness - do the rich/poor/heavy-phone-users pay more or less of the total antiterrorism bill? - but ultimately, it is the mass of taxpayers that will bear the burden)

    1. Re:Taxpayers pay anyway by techno-vampire · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There may well be a difference. The suggested fee is a flat rate, charged automatically with no relation to the actual costs. Even if the costs are a small precentage of the money charged, the charges go on. If it comes out of income tax, all that goes to wiretap payments is the amount actually needed.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    2. Re:Taxpayers pay anyway by 3l1za · · Score: 1

      Who else should pay?

      Whose needs are being served?

      The public's of course. It's a national security expenditure and as such falls exactly under "what taxes are for."

      And, yes, there may be some abuses; there may be some wire tapping that ends up being frivolous or a dead end or -- in the extreme corner case -- harmful. But in the general case, I believe it's useful and that a real service is being provided.

      I'm thrilled to spend money on terrorist cell members' communication. Can't buy enough of the stuff.

    3. Re:Taxpayers pay anyway by AtomicBomb · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the way they said it makes me think about one of those communist "joke" that the prisoner's family needed to pay for bullet fee....

    4. Re:Taxpayers pay anyway by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      If it comes out of income tax, all that goes to wiretap payments is the amount actually needed.

      If it comes out of your phone bill, all that goes to wiretap payments (what are they paying for, anyway?) is the amount actually needed. The rest will be spent just like all the rest of the budget: raises, parties, unusually high-charge contracts awarded to people who just happen to have the same last name.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    5. Re:Taxpayers pay anyway by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      Yes, but if it comes out of income tax, they'll only be given as much as they need, rather than a big lump to do with as they wish.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
  16. Errrr by Perianwyr+Stormcrow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who do you think pays for wiretapping, already? Magical fairies?

    --

    What we call folk wisdom is often no more than a kind of expedient stupidity.-Edward Abbey

    1. Re:Errrr by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Everyone pays now. If only those being tapped paid, then you would be paying for coming under suspicion. Unless everyone is being wiretapped, this makes no sense. If everyone is being wiretapped, no one has privacy, which is wrong. If everyone paid this tax, then everyone would be paying for it, just like now. In other words, there is no benefit to society if wiretapping is paid for by a tax.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Errrr by mdamaged · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't be silly everyone knows it's the Bluetooth fairy!

      --
      Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
    3. Re:Errrr by mikael · · Score: 4, Funny

      For a moment, I thought the Canadian police were only going to have the tax charged on the telephone lines that they were wiretapping:

      Monthly Phone bill for XXX-XXX-XXXX

      Basic service: $10.00
      Digital Dialing: $5.00
      Emergency Services Provision Tax: $1.00
      Police Wiretap on this telephone line: $0.25
      Optional services $3.50

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    4. Re:Errrr by Qzukk · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How much do you think it costs to wiretap in the first place? Do you think they have wiretapping machines with a coin slot and "please insert 25 cents to hear the next two minutes"? No, they have a person (who is probably salaried and would be paid the same amount to NOT wiretap) sitting in a room (which they MIGHT have to rent from the phone company, though in these Digital Days, they probably just route the packets by some closet in the police station) recording the conversation on tape (which probably costs $5 a minute, knowing how governments like to buy from the closest-related bidder).

      So, for the roughly 30million people in Canada, this raises CDN$7.5million/month. If my estimate of $5/minute of tape is close, then thats 1.5million minutes of listening in on your phonesex calls.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    5. Re:Errrr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That includes infants, as well as a lot of other people who don't have their own phone lines (dorms, families, etc.).

    6. Re:Errrr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the phone happens to be in Vancouver's West End: yes.

    7. Re:Errrr by xenobyte · · Score: 1

      Who do you think pays for wiretapping, already? Magical fairies?

      Something like that.

      But it's the convicted that really should pay for all the resources going into their prosecution; if not in money then in blood, sweat and lots of tears...

      In several countries felons already gets to pay for their stay at the prisons, which keeps that part of the system costless for the taxpayers. Now they should also be forced to pay for the investigative work and the legal process and we're in business!

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
    8. Re:Errrr by jewps · · Score: 1

      In Canada, all of those services added up is called the network access fee, ~$7 canuck bucks :\

  17. Re:Hey cool! I hate money anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whatever gets you off, pal.

  18. at least they're being honest about it by js7a · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Here in the U.S., the FBI's revised-after-passage specifications for Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) compliance is estimated to cost carriers $3 to 5 billion.

    And with a burden shared equivalently by all carriers in this age of record corporate profits, who is going to pay for that? You will, but there will be no line-item on your bill letting you know. Just an across-the-board price hike.

  19. This reminds me of China by doc+modulo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Where your family will get billed for the bullet after you get executed.

    On the other hand, who am I to talk, as the Netherlands is the country with the most wiretaps in the world annually, or at least the most open about the amount they wiretap.

    --
    - -- Truth addict for life.
  20. I'll take it, by empaler · · Score: 1

    and if you pay a 2$ daily surcharge, I'll even wear boots

  21. The really cool thing about this charge by e9th · · Score: 1

    will be the 35 cent "administrative fee" that providers will charge for collecting it.

  22. In Canada, we pay for everything by gringo_john · · Score: 4, Informative
    On my monthly Telus phone bill (in Vancouver BC), there is a $0.14 CAD charge for 9-1-1 emergency service.

    On top of this, there is also a $2.95 Telus long distance administration charge. This charge I'm told is for using Telus's long distance service, regardless if I make any long distance calls. I hear that if I switch long distance carriers, this administration charge increases.

    They could easily add a $0.25 "security enhancement" charge to my phone bill.

    1. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by zippity8 · · Score: 1

      I saw this before.

      If I remember correctly, I asked them about this once. Turns out that they told me that their "911" service was actually an independent, quasi 911 service. It wasn't the real police 911 that land lines are connected to, so they charged this fee for running the service which will reroute your calls to 911 if the need arises.

      Not sure if its still done that way.

    2. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the Lower Mainland, there are several Cities that use their own police force, and several that use the RCMP and E-Comm for 911 service. Port Moody at least does *not* use E-Comm, and they have their own dispach & police for 911 calls. Coquitlam and Burnaby (bordering Port Moody on either side) both use RCMP and E-Comm for their 911 calls.

      So really because of the way it is set up, it wouldn't surprise me if Telus still works the way you describe.

    3. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Moonwick · · Score: 1

      Stop bitching and start using a VoIP provider. This is why capitalism doesn't work; people like yourself just whine about the status quo, instead of looking for a better option.

      --
      Only on slashdot can a posting be rated "Score -1, Insightful".
    4. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by base3 · · Score: 1

      Until there's a power outage and/or the guy actually needs to call 911. Then having ditched the POTS line for VoIP just became a costly proposition indeed. The road I'm considering is maintaining the cheapest possible measured service on POTS to keep E911 access (and a working phone during power and broadband outages), and using VoIP as a main line.

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
    5. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was getting my phone service in Northern California, I asked to have no long-distance service (i.e. I can only call local and toll-free numbers). They said there was an extra charge for that. I nearly fell out of my chair...

    6. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hunting down criminals benefit everyone, not just people who have phones. Why are people who use phones the only ones that pay? I think that this 25 cent tax is another form of submarine taxation where the government tries to sneak in a tax where people aren't looking. Couldn't they have added this cost with their 911 (or whatever Canadian equivalent) charge already on the phone bill, as one combined policing cost? Couldn't they continue funding wiretapping the way it was already being funded, instead of charging people more money? Since the population of Canada is about a third of a hundred million, 25 cents per month turns out to be 100 million dollars annually. Never knew wiretapping needed so much increase in spending.

    7. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Waverleo · · Score: 1
      While the 911 charge is mandated by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commmission, the so-called administrative charge (or 'system access fee') is BS and a scam.

      An April 19th article in the Toronto Star ("Cell providers profit from mock tax - Telcos passing off cellphone charges as a tax") highlighted this problem, but nothing seems to have been done about it.

      Personally, I don't really mind the 911 fee, since there are adminstrative costs for providing such a service which are directly proportional to the number of phones in use, but that other fee makes me livid.

    8. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by gringo_john · · Score: 1
      I agree that the cell phone "System access fee" is BS. I saw that article in April.

      I'm sure the service providers try to advertise low monthly rates while beefing up their profits with extra convienence/administration fees & charges.

    9. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      Just use a GSM phone. They are can dial 911 without a SIM-card (and even if the phone has been reported stolen and blocked).

    10. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by green1 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunatly there's nothing you can do about the 9-1-1 fee, however you don't need to pay the 2.95 long distance admin fee, call them up and say that you aren't interested in their long distance plan, they will remove the fee from your phone bill. the catch is that if you don't pay the $2.95/month you end up paying about 2-3 times as much per minute on any long distance calls you do make, but if you don't call long distance much that still saves you a fair amount of money.

      Although I can understand the line item for 9-1-1 service (and would never choose to have a phone without 9-1-1 access), I do object to them itemizing non-optional services, when I read through my phone bill (or any bill for that matter) I expect that each item listed is something I have chosen or that I can opt out of, if I can't opt out of it, what's the point of itemizing it?

      What makes this new proposal so insulting is that not only can't you opt out of it, they are asking you to pay for something you obviously don't want. I WANT 911 service, I WANT the phone line, I WANT the long distance call they billed me for, and I WANT the internet access on the bill... I DO NOT WANT them wire-tapping me, and to specifically charge me for the "privledge" is extremely insulting.

      I hope TELUS, MBTel, Aliant, etc (I'd list SaskTel as well, but they're still government owned I beleive so they probably don't care) join with Bell in fighting this proposal, let the Police associations know that this is not the way to expand their budgets. (what's actually interesting to note in the article that I read (no, I didn't read THIS article, but another one on the same proposal) is that Bell was actually offering to pay part of the costs of wire-tapping themselves without this fee, they say it should be payed for for jointly by the telcos and the police force. As an employee of the competition (not sure that I should admit that part...), let me say Bell just gained a few points in my books...)

    11. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The $2.95/month LD admin charge is a scam. It is there to offset the cost of the discount long-distance plan that you are signed up with. They hate giving you LD for $.10/minute any time of the day, so they tack on this admin fee to line their pockets a bit more.

      Call Telus, and tell them to cancel whatever LD plan you are signed up for. You then will have to pay the "posted" rate when you make a LD call, but you won't get nailed for the $2.95 admin charge. The key here is that you don't want ANY LD plan. They will try to get you to sign up for one, but don't do it!

      Make sure you never use that phone for LD, because peak-hour rates just within the province can cost as much as $1/minute! (Get a pre-paid LD card, and use the 1-800 number on it. Much cheaper in the long run, and no LD admin charge.)

    12. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cancel your POTS line, and then hook up a bright red phone to the wall jack. This is your "dial 911" phone. Even a line that has been "disconnected" can still dial 911. Seriously. If there is a line running from your house to the CO, it has to be able to dial 911 even if you are not paying for phone service on it.

      Then get VoIP for all of your other calls. Just remember to use the bright red phone for emergencies (and emergencies only!)

    13. Re:In Canada, we pay for everything by base3 · · Score: 1

      I haven't actually tried this (of course), but I do remember that what you describe was true in Florida for some time. I'm not sure if it's true where I live now, though. I will check into it--thanks for the tip!

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
  23. Here's Your Receipt by Myriad · · Score: 3, Funny
    OFFICIAL: (tearing out sheet from pink book) That's your receipt for your phone tap. (taking blue book from her)

    MRS. BUTTLE: Thank you. And this is my receipt for your receipt.

    (sigh)
    Blockwars: free, multiplayer, Tetris like game

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    1. Re:Here's Your Receipt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have seen this film while in Hong Kong. There was an additional scene at the end that was cut from the North American release.

      Someone was arrested, the person was sent to be processed. The person also have to pay for the interrogation charges.

      Note: Likely it was the girl that was arrested after unwarping herself as the xmas gift.

    2. Re:Here's Your Receipt by Barbarian · · Score: 1

      What movie?

    3. Re:Here's Your Receipt by Zardoz44 · · Score: 1
  24. Hey, uh, I've got a surprise by Moonwick · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Guess who's already paying for that phone tapping? Here's a hint: it sure ain't the criminals, for the most part.

    Duh.

    --
    Only on slashdot can a posting be rated "Score -1, Insightful".
    1. Re:Hey, uh, I've got a surprise by Marko+DeBeeste · · Score: 1

      No, just the suspects and possible subversives. All of us.

      --
      Faith: n. -- That human impulse that drives them to steal appliances when the power goes out
    2. Re:Hey, uh, I've got a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we are already paying for the phone tapping then what is this surcharge for?

    3. Re:Hey, uh, I've got a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've heard of "regulatory surcharges?" This is a way for phone companies to squeeze an extra charge out of subscribers while not letting them out of contracts by itemizing every cost of doing business outside the base charge.

  25. Don't fight it son. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Confess quickly! If you hold out too long you could jeopardize your credit rating. - Guard from Brazil

  26. Why am I still waiting ? by TheUncleBob · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one still waiting for a decent secure voip solution. Say with client certificates instead of caller ID to verify who's calling.

    And don't say pgpfone, I want a mainstream easy to use voip phone/software that even my gran could use.

    1. Re:Why am I still waiting ? by ilikejam · · Score: 1

      Why would you want to encrypt a message to your gran?
      If she's involved in something that you *really* don't want anyone to hear, surely she's smart enough to use an encryption system that you have previously set up for her. No?

      --
      C-x C-s C-x k
    2. Re:Why am I still waiting ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Encryption is not for people "involved in something". Encryption is a way to leverage computational complexity for the preservation of privacy rights.

      If only people that had something to hide used encryption, encryption would quickly become illegal, being a red-flag for wrong-doing. If everyone used encryption, however, this would not be an issue.

      It is especially important to encrypt boring conversations about your dog fifi, much more so than your subversive anti-government ranting. Because if most encrypted information has no value, then no one is going to bother attempting to decrypt it.

      While a free society admittedly allows criminals to operate more effectively -- for example, the fact that a wholesale adoption of encryption technology to protect our own privacy rights from an encroaching government would also protect the privacy "rights" of subversive terrorists bent on the destruction of our way of life -- we as people must decide which is more important to us. How much is a bit of perceived security worth to you?

      Some people claim that the reason that we haven't had a major terrorist attack since 9/11 is proof that Bush & co are doing the right thing, and that the Patriot Act, for example, works.

      I don't believe this, but let's play devil's advocate for a moment and pretend that this is actually true; that the Patriot Act does in fact protect you from terrorists.

      Is it worth it?

      My answer is no. This is basically the logic that drives me to encrypt my e-mail whenever possible, regardless of the content. Because I don't think that law enforcement should be able to snoop or spy on me, no matter how good their intentions, and if that means they can't snoop or spy on terrorists using the same technology, well, too bad. It's a risk I'm willing to take.

      I believe that a very free and basically secure society is of much more value than a basically free and very secure one. There's almost no crime in North Korea; think about that.

  27. Free? by N8F8 · · Score: 1

    Utilities use public land, resources and in other ways burden the taxpayer. Maybe the government shouldn't have to pay.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
  28. Free iKicks... by DarkMan · · Score: 1

    Hey, if you want that sort of service, may I suggest signingup with Free iKicks

    Get enough people to signup, and it's free!

  29. Chinese bullets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I hear that in China, when they execute someone by firing squad, they make their family pay for the bullets in order to further humiliate the family.

    1. Re:Chinese bullets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I heard that your mom is a filthy slut and charges people for the numerous STDs she passes on when whoring herself out.

      Just something I heard.

    2. Re:Chinese bullets by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > I hear that in China, when they execute someone by firing squad, they make their family pay for the bullets in order to further humiliate the family.

      And that's what's so wonderful about Western-style socialism, as opposed to Chinese socialism! In Western socialist nations, everyone shares the cost!

      From the article:

      Supt. Grue said it's "a bit of a mystery" to him why the industry is decidedly less than enthusiastic about the idea. "All companies would have that fee on the bill, so it's not like you're giving one company a competitive advantage over another company."

      > TAP FIBER

      The fiber is dark. You are likely to be listened to by a grue.

  30. Brazil by Beardydog · · Score: 3, Funny

    "I understand this concern on behalf of the taxpayers. People want value for money. That's why we always insist on the principal of Information Retrieval charges. It's absolutely right and fair that those found guilty should pay for their periods of detention and the Information Retrieval procedures used in their interrogations."

    1. Re:Brazil by Agn0stic3000 · · Score: 1

      bravo on the sig; i almost spit out my beer after reading it.

      --
      What, me worry?
  31. Re:Bent over a barrel AND being charged barrel ren by TedCheshireAcad · · Score: 1

    Law Enforcement funded by taxpayers - never saw that one coming, eh?

  32. Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by IAmMaxHarris · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It is wrong to punish people for being successful.

    America is still a country where absolutely anyone with a functioning mind can become wealthy if they are honest with themselves, and work hard enough. Due dilligence is important, but if this is absent, it's just another case of laziness.

    1. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by gilroy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Blockquoth the poster:

      It is wrong to punish people for being successful.

      It's wrong for "successful" people to pretend that they are that way only on their own merits and efforts. Everyone benefits from a stable society. Those with more, benefit more -- and probably disproportionately. Since they have more to lose, a stable society is more valuable to them. Therefore they should pay more.

      Oh, wait. No one seems to be a believer in "capitalism" when confronted with the idea of taxes as payment for social goods. Suddenly then we don't believe in paying for what we get.
    2. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by mdamaged · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Agreed, but the side-effect of this is becoming a plutocracy, which the USA now is (and has been for quite some time).

      For you political neophytes:
      PLUTOCRACY: A government where power is in the hands of the wealthy classes;
      The rich dictate policy and law

      --
      Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
    3. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but what's a neophyte?

    4. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by donutello · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Since they have more to lose, a stable society is more valuable to them. Therefore they should pay more.

      I think that's the most idiotic argument for a "progressive" tax system that I've ever heard.

      By your logic, the poor should be paying more for medicare and social security since obviously, they have the most to lose if those go down.

      Taxes are not a way to "keep society stable". Taxes are a way for citizens to pay for what the government does for the common good. It's debatable what any persons "fair share" in this is but pretending that it is somehow proportional to what they have to lose is preposterous.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    5. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by donutello · · Score: 3, Funny

      Agreed, but the side-effect of this is becoming a plutocracy, which the USA now is (and has been for quite some time).

      Nonsense. Political power and the government is NOT in the hands of "the wealthy classes". Political power is squarely in the hands of ALL the people. Some people might be too stupid to exercise their political power but to pretend that it is in the hands of the wealthy in a democracy is a travesty of the truth.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    6. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by mdamaged · · Score: 1

      LOL, thanks for the laugh, it's the funniest thing I have read in ages, thanks.

      --
      Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
    7. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. Political power and the government is NOT in the hands of "the wealthy classes". Political power is squarely in the hands of ALL the people

      Pass the crack pipe, please.

      What rock do you live under? And how did you get to be so susceptible to lip service? You know, the kind where people tell you what you want to hear just so you'll go back to working, paying taxes, and not asking any difficult questions?

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    8. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by SnapShot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In purely economic terms, the wealthy elements of society have the most to lose from social disruption. In every government program (especially defense, transportation, and any form of research) those that gain the most from government expenditures are those with the most invested in the system. Those benefits either come directly (defense contract pay pretty damn well) or indirectly (I don't need to hire a security firm to protect my apartment and my nice computers because we all pay a little for a police department).

      GPP is correct. A progressive tax is fairer because those that can pay more most defintely gain more from the system. You are right; "taxes are not a way to 'keep society stable'", but what you are missing is that the services those taxes provide ARE what help keep society stable.

      I'd be willing to posture that even those "pure" welfare payments (in the old sense of the word as opposed to corporate subsidies which definitely benefit the wealthy overwhelmingly) like medicaid help keep society stable becuase they are a symbol of a level of compassion towards the weakest members of society.

      BTW, neither of your two examples are technically taxes. We pay social security to pay for the previous generation's retirement. Presumably, our kids will pay for social security to pay for our retirement. I'm less certain about medicare but I think it works similarly.

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    9. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by SnapShot · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Your powerful message shook the cynicism from my eyes. (cue patriotic music...)

      No longer will I assume that lobbiests funnel money to our representatives to buy influence. I now realize that they simply want to be friendly.

      No longer shall I think negative thoughts when Dick C. invites energy companies into private meetings to write energy bills. They were probably just playing Risk or Dungeons & Dragons.

      No longer will I assume that George was skipping National Guard duty in Texas rather than slogging through the jungles of Vietnam because of his family connections. It was probably just the luck of the draw.

      I will recognize that the DMCA was for the benefit of all citizens of our great country and not a cynical manuever to extend Mickey Mouse's value. I feel better knowing that my copyrights are now protected for decades after I die.

      I will rejoice that the grassroots efforts of the voters of California managed to unseat a lawfully elected govenor without the influence of outside money. Jeb next, anyone?

      From now on the great words of the commie freak Arlo will echo in my ears: "This Land is YOUR Land; This Land if MY Land!" Assuming, of course, that this is considered "fair use" under the current law.

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    10. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people might be too stupid to exercise their political power

      Wow, really! And here I thought that because I live in an overwhelmingly party line state, there was no point in my voting thanks to the mechanism of the electoral college invalidating any vote that goes against the state majority.

    11. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      BTW, neither of your two examples are technically taxes. We pay social security to pay for the previous generation's retirement. Presumably, our kids will pay for social security to pay for our retirement. I'm less certain about medicare but I think it works similarly.

      We pay for the previous generation - the next generation is likely smarter than we are and will kick us out on our collective asses.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    12. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ungrateful little shits. After all we did for them...

    13. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      Yeah - like refused to take care of Social Security while it was still just 15.3% of your pay. Like refusing to raise the retirement age a couple of years or distribute cigarettes at school.

      In all honesty, the time will come when the retirement age will be raised, the distributions will be lessened, and the FICA taxes will go up. We probably won't be smart enough to say "fuck off", but I'm sure that our children will.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    14. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by the-build-chicken · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you may want to look further than simple cash before refusing the senior generation social security. I don't know what it's like in the U.S., but in australia a large amount of the previous generations sacrificed their standard of living so that my standard of living could be better. My parents didn't go to Uni and worked very hard so that it would be my right to be able to be educated. I'm guessing it's the same for a lot of others. Our generation is rich in all senses because of the previous generations sacrifice. It might make us all better people to remember that.

    15. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by beakburke · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the crack pipe needs to be passed... you've been sucking on it way too long! CEO's get to vote the same number of times as the rest of us. Yeah they lobby and run commercials on all different sides of issues and candidates, but in the end, it's the rest of us who win or lose elections, because we all get only one vote.

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    16. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I agree with the spirit of your post. In the United States, however, this generation (that is, the children of the baby boomers, those just entering the workforce in their early twenties) will be the first to be worse off financially on average than the previous.

      That is to say, throughout the course of US history, there has been a net increase in standard of living with every generation, except for ours. I'm speaking in averages here, as obviously extreme punctuations like the great depression caused rather low standards of living for particular generations -- but only temporarily.

    17. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by jhunsake · · Score: 1

      No longer will I assume that George was skipping National Guard duty in Texas rather than slogging through the jungles of Vietnam because of his family connections. It was probably just the luck of the draw.

      Actually, he was a fighter pilot. They weren't sent "slogging through the jungles of Vietnam" regardless of who their family was.

    18. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by mpe · · Score: 1

      Actually, he was a fighter pilot. They weren't sent "slogging through the jungles of Vietnam" regardless of who their family was.

      Unless they got shot down...

    19. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by mpe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      CEO's get to vote the same number of times as the rest of us. Yeah they lobby and run commercials on all different sides of issues and candidates, but in the end, it's the rest of us who win or lose elections, because we all get only one vote.

      Voting is not the be all and end all of democracy. Lobbying can matter far more than voting. Especially somewhere like the US where the 2 major political parties agree on many issues.

    20. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by jhunsake · · Score: 1

      Unless they got shot down...

      He was a jet fighter pilot. We didn't have too many jet fighter planes in Vietnam. He wouldn't have been there regardless. Get over it.

    21. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by digitaltraveller · · Score: 1

      you may want to look further than simple cash before refusing the senior generation social security. I don't know what it's like in the U.S., but in australia a large amount of the previous generations sacrificed their standard of living so that my standard of living could be better. My parents didn't go to Uni and worked very hard so that it would be my right to be able to be educated. I'm guessing it's the same for a lot of others. Our generation is rich in all senses because of the previous generations sacrifice. It might make us all better people to remember that.

      I hope you are really old. In Australia, most baby boomers received free university education from the Gough Whitlam government. Nowadays students pay through the ass. You know all that government debt? Guess who generated it. Those generations that _lol_ 'sacrificed'. Face it, the baby boomers can take credit for being the most selfish generation ever.

      The situation is much worse in the U.S. though. Fiscal discipline related to the U.S. national deficit is all but nonexistant. Imagine being born and immediately having a $25,000 debt- If you were American you wouldn't have to imagine. That's the reality. That's roughly what the deficit would be worth if each U.S. citizen took an equal share today. That figure will be much worse in the future.

      Sounds like a good argument for increased immigration to me.

    22. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by donutello · · Score: 1

      No longer shall I think negative thoughts when Dick C. invites energy companies into private meetings to write energy bills. They were probably just playing Risk or Dungeons & Dragons.

      Dick C. and George W. Bush were elected by the people.

      No longer will I assume that George was skipping National Guard duty in Texas rather than slogging through the jungles of Vietnam because of his family connections. It was probably just the luck of the draw.

      George was elected by the people.

      I will recognize that the DMCA was for the benefit of all citizens of our great country and not a cynical manuever to extend Mickey Mouse's value. I feel better knowing that my copyrights are now protected for decades after I die.

      The Senators and Congressmen who voted for the DMCA were elected by the people.

      I will rejoice that the grassroots efforts of the voters of California managed to unseat a lawfully elected govenor without the influence of outside money. Jeb next, anyone?

      Gray Davis was recalled in a vote cast by the people.

      CEOs and "rich" people get exactly the same number of votes as everyone else. All power is granted exclusively through the democratic process. I know you want to try and blame the boogeyman for everything that is wrong in the world so you can feel better about yourself but in this case the buck stops with the people. None of the above would have happened without the authority expressly granted by the people.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    23. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah, right, because democracy ends at the voting booth. Lobbying is arguably far more powerful and influential than a vote. A single multi-thousand dollar campaign contribution is sadly worth way more than your single protest vote, because it can be used to influence and sway more than your vote. Your reasonable single-handed attempts to 'change things' (mostly ranting adn raving to your friends) will hardly have an impact. No, spending half your waking hours canvassing and trying to convince other people is not considered reasonable. Especially not when compared to the few seconds it takes to cut a $5000 cheque to your favourite politician's party, who surely would never take a closer look at what the attached note had to say; that would be dishonest, and way way below the politician.

    24. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The situation is much worse in the U.S. though. Fiscal discipline related to the U.S. national deficit is all but nonexistant. Imagine being born and immediately having a $25,000 debt- If you were American you wouldn't have to imagine. That's the reality. That's roughly what the deficit would be worth if each U.S. citizen took an equal share today. That figure will be much worse in the future.

      Sounds like a good argument for increased immigration to me.


      No, it sounds like a good argument for having sound fiscal policy. Simply bringing in more people is not a viable long-term solution for anything.

    25. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by BK425 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This sort of argument is what drives people to Libertarianism. Nobody here is typing about wether or not we should help mom or dad. We're typing about a TAX. (actually we used to be typing about a tax to split out the cost of wiretaps but obviously that's fallen far by the wayside). And that's where the whole "government is here to take care of you" thing really falls on it's face. You (personally) don't get off the hook of taking care of your parents because you pay for SS (or whatever your country calls it)... but that is definetly the way quite a lot of people act. Viewed from a slightly more "radical" (or realistic) perspective: why are you forcing your neighbor to pay for your parents care? Answers to this question usually devolve quickly into talk about "social contract" and similar nonexistent vagueisms that concentrate on the warm fuzzy "lets take care of one another" while blotting out the implementing reality of tax guys with guns and flash bang grenades.
      At any rate that's a lot of typing to say that I certainly do agree that we owe our parents our lives. I'm just not sure that I owe mine your income.
      Token on topic point- taxes that make expenses easier to account are good imo. If this means we break them out into to many things for people to think about... maybe people will get to thinking about -that-. Just IMHO.

    26. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dick C. and George W. Bush were elected by the people.

      This statement shows a fundamental misunderstanding of how the American electoral system works. "The people" do not elect the President; the Electoral College does. That's why Dubya is sitting in the Oval Office despite losing the popular vote.

    27. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      No.

      The RICH have the most to lose if medicare and social security go down. Because if they did, the riots in the streets would have people hunting and killing the rich.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    28. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by the-build-chicken · · Score: 1

      Gough Whitlam was in government from 72 to 75...I was born in 74, so I don't know whether that makes me old or not (or whether it just makes you young ;) ). The baby boomer generation is defined from 1946 to 1964. University fees were abolished Jan 1, 1974. So, just for clarity, my parents didn't have the option of free university, and I'm guessing, unless you're less than 12 years old, neither did yours.

      In regards to having to pay for university currently, my comment above is exactly used as a reason why we shouldn't have to pay for university. The government would argue that education is a service to be payed for. Others (including the baby boomer generation) would argue that it's our right...it's our right borne from the sacrifices of the previous generation (i.e. my parents sacrificed to make this country better so I would have the right to health care, the right to an education etc...the argument goes, that to make people now pay for that, it to ignore the percieved social contract of the previous generation).

      In regards to debt, I take it you're talking about our $AU2.2 billion trade deficit? The trade deficit is the dollar difference between monthly exports to other countries and imports. Now, to blame that on the previous generation when it's measured on a monthly basis is a little short sighted...even to call it 'debt' would be incorrect. There are a massive number of factors that go into play in working out the economic status of a country, and it's quite normal for a country of our size, who has many trading partners as we do, to have a trade deficit. It is interesting however to note that under a keating government, we had a trade surplus...so the transition from surplus to debt has occured in the last 9 years of liberal power...so don't blame the baby boomers for john howards mistakes.

      In regards to the baby boomers being the most selfish generation ever...well, I could spend the morning researching standards of living and average weekly earnings figures from 46-64, however I think a quick generalization will do the job.

      How many 17 year olds have cars today...how many 17 year olds had cars in 1946? How many 23 year olds have travelled overseas? How many 23 years olds in the baby boomers generation had travelled over seas (vietnam doesn't count)? How many 30 year olds in australia currently own their own home (or are paying it off)? How many 30 year olds in 46-64 owned their own homes?

      I think you get my point. Cut them some slack, the vast majority of the previous generation sacrificed greatly for us. Don't blame them for the acts of one very right winged government. It was howard that killed the right to education, not the baby boomers...they fought hard in many rallies to give you that right, and one man took it away. Ask any baby boomer whether they want the right to free education brought back and I think you'd find they would whole heartedly support the idea.

      And one final point on "this sounds like a case for increasing immigration". Ever heard of "Populate or perish"? It was the slogan of the australian government after the second world war. We increased immigration and brought in over 2 million european immigrants in the space of just a few years. We also increased family offspring output by pushing it as every australians duty to have a big family with the slogan "Australians, populate or perish". It was a very big thing, and while, in the short term it was wonderful for australia, and made us the power we are today. Now we have a large amount of older people (baby boomers) that need to be supported (because of exactly what you recommend). So, on one hand you're suggesting exactly what put us in the situation (I don't believe it's a problem, so I won't call it that), but you're unwilling to lend a hand to support the previous generation who exists as a result of your suggestion?!?! That doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me.

      <end-2-cents/> :)

    29. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by mdamaged · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > George was elected by the people.

      Wrong, he would have lost if not had been for the chad thing in Florida which was related to none other than Jeb Bush, did you not hear about the thousands of 'lost' DEMOCRAT votes sitting in Oliphants office near a boiler? Jeb Bush put her there. Anyone claiming all that as coincedence is delusional at best. Then when the minority speakers tried to point this fact out and get the votes counted, congress refused to listen to 2 dozen or so people because they did not have a congressmans signature, when asked, each one told the same story, as they tried to get in contact with every congressman, they were snubbed and told they were unavailable, NONE of them would sign the requests.

      --
      Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
    30. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by donutello · · Score: 1

      No, the "Rich" would hire private militia to maintain their security.

      It's a stupid argument. Taxes are not a way of appeasing thugs so they won't hurt you. Let it go.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    31. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by DM9290 · · Score: 1

      It is wrong to punish people for being successful.

      Tax is not punishment for being successful.
      Tax is not punishment for being successful.
      Tax is not punishment for being successful.

      I can certainly sympathize with the suffering and misery of other successful people. We, successful people, have a very hard time getting by in this world. Just look at the infant mortality rate of successful infants, and the life expectancy rate or quality of living ratings of successful people.
      Of the quality of healthcare successful children get. Or the amount of time successful parents can spend with successful children.
      Abysmal. all around.

      What an easy time of it, the poor have. Taking all the shitty jobs, we succcessful people would never stoop so low to perform. Cleaning our toilets, picking up our trash, picking our cotton, guarding our office buildings, and going to shitty public schools, where the students are so lazy they use 30 year old textbooks.

      The poor should be greatful for the charity of us successful people. If it wasn't for us, then perhaps THEY would be successful.

      Why can't the poor just accept the fact that pure unadulterated capitalism is the best substitute for actual morality.

      America is still a country where absolutely anyone with a functioning mind can become wealthy if they are honest with themselves, and work hard enough.

      America is also still a country where absolutely anyone with the right background, education, political connections and friends can become super-wealthy if they accept and defend the power structure in this system and work to support and defend the status quo and insure the wealthy stay wealthy and the poor shut the fuck up and get back to work, or quit and watch their kids starve. And having rich parents also helps.

      Or you can win a lottery.

      Because let us be honest with ourselves now. In America being honest with your fellow man, and admitting THE SYSTEM IS NOT FAIR certainly doesn't pay a good dividend on the dollar.

      Due dilligence is important, but if this is absent, it's just another case of laziness.

      Or inferior lifestyle choices.

      --
      No one has a right to their *own* opinion. They have a right to the TRUTH.
    32. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      If the Rich would hire private militia, than that cost proves that they benefit MORE than the poor people do. They are saving that money. Taxes are not just a single thing, they do lots of functions.

      We are NOT stating they are a way to appease thugs. We are stating that one of the ways the rich benefit from taxes is that it allows poor people to live without committing crimes. If you give a man a choice of starve to death or kill a rich man, they will kill the rich man. This does not make them a thug.

      Finally, you ended with my favorite indicator of stupidity: "Let it go". Let it go means you do not care if I am right or wrong, you just want me to shut up about it. Yes it is more polite than "shut up", but it is still never used by people that know what they are talking about.

      Or rather it WOULD have been polite if you had just stated "It's a stupid argument, let it go."

      But instead you gave your own argument, THEN told me to let it go, indicating that you yourself just wanted the last word.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    33. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by donutello · · Score: 1

      Taxes do so much more than "keep the poor from starving". You're not even close to making a relevant point there.

      Just to clarify what I meant earlier. I said what you were arguing was stupid. You should let your ego out of the way and just admit you were wrong and let it go rather than come up with ridiculous arguments just because you don't want to admit you are wrong.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    34. Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones by beakburke · · Score: 1

      That depends, how many votes are actually changed by some guy writing a $5000 check?

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  33. User pays system by syousef · · Score: 5, Funny

    Only charge those who are being wiretapped. That way they can see the charge in their bill, know they're being tapped, and stop using that phone line to conduct their illegal activies. This ultimately reduces the cost of wire tapping to zero. ;-)

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    1. Re:User pays system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, in Canada, the police do HAVE to tell you that you are being tapped. I do not know if the law has changed post 9/11, but I knew a guy who showed me his letter. It basicaly said "We are informing you that your phone conversations have been monitored for the past 90 days". This was about 15 years ago, so it may have changed, but they certainly did have to inform you in the past.

    2. Re:User pays system by syousef · · Score: 1

      "for the past 90 days" implies that they only tell you after the fact. Not really a problem for the Police telling a criminal after they've got the evidence. Warning them before hand is a different story, as they could continue their illegal activities through an unmonitored channel.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  34. Waste-not-want-not by t_allardyce · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well if were getting charged for it, we might as well use it eh?: "Plot, bomb, president, plane, nuclear, chemical, hi-jack, kill, big-mac.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    1. Re:Waste-not-want-not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if were getting charged for it, we might as well use it eh?: "Plot, bomb, president, plane, nuclear, chemical, hi-jack, kill, big-mac .

      big mac... isn't that a WMD in the evil socialist republic of Canuckistan?

      satellites uplinking.. NSA contacted.. Bush called on the red phone.. nuclear strike inbound...

  35. We need accountability before taxation by 2think · · Score: 1

    As a US & Canadian citizen, I am tired of hearing government asking for more tax revenue due to things such as "increased security costs". What we need is a transparent process that details the costs of the government doing business and then we will know whether or not we should be giving up our hard-earned dollars. For example, in this case of money for wiretaps, the government and Bell Canada need to reveal why this is such a costly endeavour. If regular citizens are expected to bear increased responsibility due to new "security issues", then someone please tell me why Bell Canada and other corporations should not also do their part?

    1. Re:We need accountability before taxation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ponce

    2. Re:We need accountability before taxation by ArbitraryConstant · · Score: 1

      "As a US & Canadian citizen"

      I didn't think the US recognized dual citizenship...

      --
      I rarely criticize things I don't care about.
  36. 101 Reasons Not to Live in Canada by thejackhmr · · Score: 0, Funny

    .
    .
    .
    89. Freezing
    90. Gas 3 dollars a liter
    91. No football
    92. Government spies on you and steals your money
    93. Terrorists come and go as they please
    94. Suffocating taxes on everything
    95. The French
    .
    .
    .

    1. Re:101 Reasons Not to Live in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You left out one:

      88. The French

  37. The cost may keep the number of taps down. by techno-vampire · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As several others have pointed out, all wiretapping, email snooping and other communications intercepting are inherently invasions of privacy, but are sometimes needed. If the police agency asking for it has to pay the costs out of their regular operating budget, then they have to ask themselves if the benefits are worth the cost. Having a fund like this means it's effectively free for them, making "fishing expeditions" more attractive, and invites abuse. Yes, I know they still have to persuade a judge to sign the warrant, but I'd still rather have the police reluctant to use them without good reason.

    --
    Good, inexpensive web hosting
    1. Re:The cost may keep the number of taps down. by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Well ultimately the police component of municipal budgets is the one element that gets rubber stamped virtually every year, despite the endless increases (in my region I believe the year over year increase this year was 7%...we certainly aren't growing that quickly, and crime is actually signficantly down the past couple of years). What mayor wants to be for rapists or muggers (as clearly that's what such a refusal would stand for).

      I think the eventual result is that 50% of the population will be police officers, and we'll each have our own assigned cop. Actually given that there's 3 shifts, at least 75% of the population will have to be men and women in blue (probably more accounting for holidays and weekends).

  38. Big deal - no real news. by rainer_d · · Score: 4, Funny

    In Europe, it's common knowledge that the telcos pay the costs of the wiretapping infrastructure (upfront, I don't believe they're swallowing it).
    This is very nice for the authorities, as they could have a system built to their spec but not pay a single cent for it.

    What is interesting is that some time ago, a large German telco made a mistake and billed several customers for the wiretapping (their detailed phonebill showed lots of connections to a number where the calls were presumably forwarded to).
    Obviously, the authorities were not amused at all.

    It has not happened again since ;-)

    Rainer

    --
    Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin
  39. Isn't it obvious? by FisherRider · · Score: 3, Funny

    Sheesh, people! It should be so clear - if a person is causing a problem, you send them the bill. Just charge the suspect. Make sure to get the money before you do it. You could tell them it was for... I don't know, a nation-wide iPod purchasing campaign.

  40. Police Corruption to Blame by mfh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sorry it's called a police budget. I'm a Canadian and I'm sick of the cops trying to weasel more and more money out of us taxpayers. They squander their budgets on police brutality and corruption cases, so it's not my fault they have fallen a tad short these days. And I'm not paying for it. This kind of cash grab always happens when the Liberals are in. It's worse when the Tories get in... they just hand the cops more money without asking. The Liberals always want to ask us for more money.

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
    1. Re:Police Corruption to Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that was a terribly narrow minded view of "liberals". Believe it or not, they aren't after your money. I'm not sure what you are referring to but it's not a liberal.

    2. Re:Police Corruption to Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about the more than one billion on the worthless gun registry? That's a Liberal initiative... the cops didn't even want it, they're saying "give us more officers, not a billion dollar computer registry!"

      I know it's the cool thing to do to bash anyone in authority, but the cops are underfunded in many parts of Canada. Crime is going up. I live in the home invasion capital of Canada - home invasion, as in through the front door, often in broad daylight while people are inside. There aren't enough cops to deal with it. On the entire east side of my city of 200,000 there are frequently only two squad cars out, because we don't have enough officers. Phone 911? Hope they get there in time!

    3. Re:Police Corruption to Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF is that shit? I'm glad in the US I can blow their bitch ass to kingdom come if someone is stupid enough to try and break into my house.

    4. Re:Police Corruption to Blame by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I live in the home invasion capital of Canada

      Where exactly do you live? I want to make sure to cross that city off my list.

    5. Re:Police Corruption to Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically you can do that here, but... they are completely nuts about reasonable force. It's not enough that he's just broken through your door and is wielding a knife. He has to be in the process of attacking you.

    6. Re:Police Corruption to Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Regina, SK is pretty much the same, but with a few less home invasions and a few more car thefts.

      It could be a much nicer place if the sask gov't would just put these assholes in jail. The young offenders act keeps these guys on the streets.

    7. Re:Police Corruption to Blame by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Is there some law against just shooting these guys when they come in? Yeah, it'd suck carrying a handgun around with you in the house, but if the home invasion problem is really that bad I'd probably do it.

  41. Fire Grue as the spokesmen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Get a load of this:

    "We're thinking, amongst ourselves, 25 cents. Whether that would cover off all the costs, we don't know. We haven't done the analysis on it," Supt. Grue said.

    What a maroon.

    1. Re:Fire Grue as the spokesmen by soulsteal · · Score: 1

      It is dark. You're likely to be overheard by a Grue.

  42. ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    People are looking at Voice over IP as a solution to all this idiocy, but really, not because of its technological advantages at all. They're looking at it because telephone communication is too mainstream and has been saddled with all these extra charges, surveillance, telemarketing, et cetera, none of which is optional to pay for. If VOIP was mainstream, it would have exactly the same crap tacked onto it.

    I don't see why i should have to buy anything but what I want to buy... which is commmunication with family, friends, government, and businesses. Telcom's should not be forced to offer 'services' like this at all, they should only be motivated to offer services that benefit and attract customers.

    If the country thinks they should be using wire taps that is totally separate, and the budget certainly does exist.

  43. that's exactly what I thought by RelliK · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wonder how they'll deal with refunds... :-)

    --
    ___
    If you think big enough, you'll never have to do it.
  44. It's Slashdot Cliché Time! by oberondarksoul · · Score: 0

    1. Charge users to have their lines tapped.
    2. ????
    3. Profit!

    --
    And tomorrow the stock exchange will be the human race
  45. At least they're telling you up front by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

    Either:

    An individual line item for $0.25 on your bill --- "Security Surcharge - $0.25"
    or
    "Due to increased operating costs, we're changing the base rate for standard phone service from $18.45 to $18.70"
    or
    "Police budget will increase this year by $600,000 dollars. Most of this increase will be used to create two new officer position, specifically targeted at electronic crime prevention. The rest will be used for their network infrastructure."

  46. Colon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's next, a surcharge so they can look up my rectum?

    Apologies to the goat guy.

  47. Better idea by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Why not charge someone for the tapping fees upon conviction? That way you have to be *convicted* to pay. It might cut down on unneccessary wiretaps too....

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  48. Don't pay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I don't pay, does that mean they won't tap my phone?

  49. I wish I hadn't read the summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like my own interpretation of the headline better, whoever's getting their phone tapped gets to pay for the cost:

    Bell Canada: Hello this Bell Canada, what's so important that you have to call and interrupt my break?!
    Mr. Bush: Yeah hi, I just received my phone bill and there's a $2000 extra charge on it, what is this?
    Bell Canada: *Sigh* whatsyourphonenumberareacodefirst?
    Bush: 666
    Bell Canada: *Sigh* wait...
    Bell Canada: Yes, the RCMP has identified you as a potential terrorist and has asked us to tap your phone.
    Bush: OK, so?
    Bell Canada: So moron^Widiot^Wsir, we're charging you $2000 to cover our phone-tapping costs.

  50. Doublespeak by 3l1za · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I actually think this whole thing is doublespeak.

    The company -- Bell Canada -- is doing a nice job of saying that it's concerned for the customer. Doesn't want to increase costs covered by the customer, ...

    But what they mean is that (a) they don't want the customer to see this charge as part of their Bell Canada (TM) phone bill; AND (b) they don't want to cover the costs for processing that charge...

    But mostly Bell Canada doesn't want to be seen as the SOURCE of this cost. Which is completely understandable AND completely fair. This is not a charge related to upgrading their network or switches or ... it's a charge that is wholly the result of national security concerns. As such, it belongs (a) being regulated by external oversight (not just giving Grue a blank check for some amount that results from charging each customer what seems to be not an overly burdensome amount); and (b) coming from the public in the form of a tax.

    Grue doesn't want to have to justify the costs to the public and so that's why he wants to just pass it onto them under the auspices of the phone company, always an easy villian (behemoth, ...).

    As every /.'er has said, the public will cover the costs, it's just a question of who has to stick them with the bill. So this story is about all of these people playing musical chairs to avoid getting stuck with delivering the check. Not even covering it. And it's a totally appropriate expenditure in my mind.

    At least the phone company says it's willing to split the costs: half coming from LE, half from the phoneco itself; whereas LE just wants to charge everyone a quarter b/c, as Grue says, that seems about right (next breath he says that he hadn't done the analysis on those numbers yet--whatever).

  51. Wasn't this in the movie Brazil... by rben · · Score: 1

    Oh, no, there you just paid for your own police interrogation.

    --

    -All that is gold does not glitter - Tolkien
    www.ra

  52. Ideal vs. Reality by maximilln · · Score: 1

    Ideally I'm a libertarian (with a small l). I want government to be small. I do not want government to have these blanket rights to do these things because, ultimately, the misuses and abuses will scale up to be more expensive than any real uses. People can cry and scream about catching criminals all they want but, at the end of the day, how many times has any criminal been caught on the basis of a phone tap? In all of my years criminals are still caught by good old-fashioned investigation. Phone taps rarely reveal anything that enforcement officials didn't already know.

    Now back to reality...

    Big government is here. Big government does not care two whits what you, I, or anyone on /. thinks. Big government cares only about one thing: self-propagation. Topics such as wiretapping are simply flavor-of-the-day. They provide debate. They get people's blood running hot. They provide emotion and energy which mobilizes silly legal feuds which, ultimately, cost the working taxpayer more and more money with every year.

    But big government is not all bad. Without big government the big corporations and big banks would have us all as tenant slaves on their property, renting out slums from their agencies. Our only defense against big industry is big government. It's a never-ending vicious cycle. It is a cycle that cannot be broken in today's era of world government. Big government will not capitulate and neither will big industry. Our only choice is to carve out what little happiness we can from life.

    Do not fret about your freedoms. Do not lament your rights. At the end of the day only one thing is certain: You will pay and someone else will profit. Live with it.

    Besides, if you don't like it, you can always leave.

    --
    +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    1. Re:Ideal vs. Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last call for suicide!

      All aboard the one way trip to Hell!

  53. Brazil by beswicks · · Score: 1

    I saw this and couldn't help being reminded of "Imformation Retreval" from the film Brazil http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088846/. Where they charge the victims of government oppression the cost of actually oppressing them.

    Although the idea of charging criminals the "real" cost to prosecute them is interesting...

  54. And? WHO is wealthy? by PaulBu · · Score: 1

    An old argumnent that 80% of the wealth is controlled by 10% of the people is wrong because those are not THE SAME people every year/month/day!

    Do you really believe that the people who controlled substantial chunks of $$ in 1997 are the same as in 2004?

    When you start talking about "classes" the distinction is less noticeable, after all you can define a "wealthy class" as ones who control more than X% of the economy, and then your statement will become true BY DEFINITION, but it says absolutely nothing about the actual people involved.

    Paul B.

    P.S. There was that thread on /. some time ago, along the lines of "If you are making more than 80K/year you are actually wealthy by Kerrie's campaign definition", I would not be surprized.

    1. Re:And? WHO is wealthy? by SnapShot · · Score: 1

      I agree. The story of Warren Buffett starting out with nothing but a shovel and a can of beans in 1997 and becoming the mutli-billionaire he is today is an inspiration to us all. And look how far the Rothchildes, the Rockefellers, and the Mellon-Scaifes have fallen. All of their money, connections, family estates, investments, and education couldn't hold their place among the wealthy.

      I'm a good example of this sort of class mobility. I get paid on the 15th of the month, but I don't pay rent until the 30th. That means that there are at least 2 weeks where I probably rise from 30% to the 32% (or even higher) in the ranking of the wealthy!

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    2. Re:And? WHO is wealthy? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Do you really believe that the people who controlled substantial chunks of $$ in 1997 are the same as in 2004?

      Bill Gates, The Rockefellers, the Kennedys, the Bushs, and so on. Yep, same guys, right on down the line.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    3. Re:And? WHO is wealthy? by mdamaged · · Score: 1, Insightful

      May I add I.G. Farben to that list.

      --
      Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
    4. Re:And? WHO is wealthy? by PaulBu · · Score: 1

      and education

      Yeah, that might be important... But do you honestly think that if Warren Buffet (or whoever) has 1,000,000 more than you AT THIS POINT IN TIME means that his kids are getting the same *1e6* X better education right now?

      Paul B.

    5. Re:And? WHO is wealthy? by SnapShot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      His kids might barely be able to phonetically sound out the words to "Curious George" and they are still going to be worth $N,000,000,000 more than you or me where N is some integer value greater than one. At this point in time or any point in time in the foreseeable future.

      I notice that in your response you also convienently skipped over: connections, real estate, and all the other benefits starting out rich provide. It is a popular mythology of this country that we all start out equal, and I still firmly believe that we as individuals have more opportunities in this country than just about any other country on this planet. But, to claim that wealth gives you no advantages in the race to gather more wealth is naive to the point of willful ignorance.

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    6. Re:And? WHO is wealthy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When we speak about the people who control the vast majority of wealth, we don't mean your average millionaire down the street, or the paper rich. We mean people like Gates, Ballmer, Buffet, Waltons, Kennedys, Mars, Cox, and the countless others worth more billions that you will make thousands in any single year, or whose wealth increases more every minute they SLEEP than you make in a day. Their ranks don't really change all that much year to year.

  55. Car Theft Scam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is as bad as our local state charging a $1 per car per year for the 'automobile theft fund'.

    Criminals hurt more than just their direct victims.

  56. And if i don't have an analog phone line... by POTSandPANS · · Score: 1

    ...Then i don't haveto pay for other people's wiretaps? or will this somehow be added to cellular/VoIP providers as well?

  57. Wanna tap a phone? Tap the lead detective's salary by Corydon76 · · Score: 0
    I haven't found what I think is the optimal solution to this problem of wiretapping. If a police officer or detective wants to have a phone tapped, and a judge agrees, then the money for hooking up the tap should come directly out of the police officer's salary. If he or she really believes the wiretap will get them that conviction, they'll gladly shoulder the monetary burden. On the other hand, this will prevent abuses of the wiretap system, as an officer of the law who does not believe the wiretap will be useful won't ask for the wiretap.

    And if it's too expensive, well, hey, the officer can surely find another way to get that conviction, right? Wiretap becomes a tool of last resort, which really protects the public from abuse of the system.

  58. So, who has been paying for phone taps all along? by Hamster+Lover · · Score: 1

    It's not like wiretapping is new; has Bell/Telus/Alliant or the RCMP/local police agencies been picking up the cost for the last 30, 40 or 50 years?

    What the article does not say is that the costs at issue really concern access to Internet email and services from an attempt to modernize wiretapping regulations (the Liberal governement originally proposed these changes two years ago). There must already exist an infrastructure for tapping wireline and wireless phone calls since police have been doing this for years. Nothing new here, but Internet companies are balking at the cost of tapping their own networks.

  59. they are taxing the wrong people the wrong way by russsell · · Score: 1

    this is crazy for two reasons
    1. adding a charge to the phone bill is a tax on people who have phones/internet connections. wiretapping protects everyone, so everyone should pay, not just those with phones/internet connections

    2. the overhead of collecting small amounts from various businesses is inefficient compared with the normal tax system. behind the scenes, companies are having to modify software, accountants are having to do reconciliations, etc. the customer is paying for that too!

  60. User pays by Trickster+Coyote · · Score: 2, Funny

    I think it is grossly unfair to make everybody pay for wiretapping when the majority of people will themselves never be wiretapped. Kind of like paying the private copying levy on blank CDs when all you are doing is backing up your data.

    To be fair, they should only add the levy to the phone bills of people who are being wiretapped.

    --
    Ideology is for ideots.
    1. Re:User pays by CdnZero · · Score: 2, Funny

      "the majority of people will themselves never be wiretapped"

      Have you not heard of... Carnivore? Calmly places tinfoil hat on head and sits in the corner slowly rocking mumbling "I like my life, big brother is good, I like my life, big brother is good..."

    2. Re:User pays by Kwil · · Score: 1

      You must also think it's grossly unfair to have everybody paying for.. oh.. MRI's, emergency funding for natural disasters, the fire department, or even post-secondary education since the majority of people never use any of these things as well, hm?

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    3. Re:User pays by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 1

      "To be fair, they should only add the levy to the phone bills of people who are being wiretapped."

      The interesting question is, will policemen's phone-lines include the wire-tap cost? Howabout the phone lines supplied to government offices, or to a police station? Presumably there's no need to exclude these people from being wiretapped?

    4. Re:User pays by smcavoy · · Score: 1

      Hmm... I don't think Carnivore would work here in Canada.
      Privacy seems to be more valued here, and somewhat better protected then is currently in the US (oddly enough).

  61. Re:Wanna tap a phone? Tap the lead detective's sal by 3l1za · · Score: 1

    That only makes sense as even a way-out-in-left-field idea IF the law officer is somehow financially compensated for getting a conviction (or participating in a conviction since police officers don't try folks).

    Because otherwise all you have is the police officer paying out for the wiretap and never getting paid IN. Cops' jobs are hard enough and not well compensated enough as it is; now you want them to sacrifice in order to be able to carry out their jobs? It'd be like your IT dept telling you that YOU have to pay for your new 256 MB RAM card == you need it to do bidness.

    Which would perhaps set up some screwy incentives (evidence planting to increase likelihood of gaining a conviction? strange partnerings b/n prosecutors & police officers?)

  62. Haha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is Canada really that poor?

  63. OT and in reference to your sig by PitaBred · · Score: 1

    "There are lies, damned lies and statistics"
    Did the author of that page (or you) ever consider the president BEFORE the one who posted all those gains? 4 years makes a difference, but not a huge one. We're still seeing backlash from things Clinton and even the first Bush did. Get a clue.

    1. Re:OT and in reference to your sig by js7a · · Score: 1
      Did the author of that page (or you) ever consider the president BEFORE the one who posted all those gains?
      Yes:
      doing all the same calculations for the years 1982 through 2002, and giving each president's policies a year to take effect, changes only one result: The Democrats pull ahead of the Republicans on per capita personal income.

      Sure you can complain about selective statistcs, but when the three measurements of job growth, stock market performance, and GDP growth taken during times that the two parties control the House, Senate, and White House all point to the same result, then what is there left to complain about?

      I think Vinzant has the most salient explanation:

      Democrats are more likely to spread the wealth around through public spending on education or transportation, which may stimulate the economy more broadly. The foundation of recent GOP economic policy--tax cuts--may offer narrower benefits than Republicans claim. High defense spending, another GOP hallmark, may only boost one sector while hurting the whole economy in the form of bigger federal deficits and higher interest rates.
  64. It's not just the phone by idlerich · · Score: 0
    According to the article, the proposal is to add $0.25 to phone and internet bills, for tapping phones and reading e-mails.

    This should not be on my bill because it's not a service provided to me that I asked for. It's different from 911, which is indeed a personal service to me if I have an emergency.

    I don't see why this is any different from any other investigative technique that the police has to pay for. What's next, a hospital surcharge for DNA testing by police? There's a process if the police wants to justify a budget increase, and it passes through Parliament. This is an attempt to foist it on to the consumer instead, scaring us with "The terrorists are coming! The terrorists are coming!".

    Try to get it through Parliament (good luck; we've just voted in a minority government), and if it passes, collect it through taxes, where everybody pays, and the rich pay more.

  65. Secure VoIP by 0x0d0a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If VOIP was mainstream, it would have exactly the same crap tacked onto it.

    Really?

    Allow me to post something that I wrote last time Slashdot ran a "tapping VoIP" article:

    Whoever thinks that they are going to wiretap all VoIP networks at the FBI is living in dreamland. Let's take a brief look at a quick VoIP system that I'm going to design. I'll even publish the source code, right here on Slashdot. It will take me a few seconds to write:

    #!/bin/bash
    # smallvoip.sh
    # VoIP software capable of bypassing FBI wiretap regulations.
    # Warning: use or posession of this software may be a federal crime in the United States of America. Download this software at your own risk.
    # Copyright 2004, 0x0d0a, released under the GPL
    # Usage: smallvoip remote-username remote-ip-address
    # You must have a shell account on the remote machine.
    # Run on each of the two machines involved in the call.
    # Duplex audio support required.
    # TODO: pass through lame or oggenc for better bandwidth usage. This will make the second line slightly longer.
    # LIMITATIONS: only one user per host at once
    # I recommend setting up public-key ssh authentication with this software.

    nc -l -p 7001 >/dev/dsp &

    ssh -R 7000:`hostname`:7001 $1@$2 "cat /dev/dsp|nc localhost 7000"


    Hmm. My high-security, encrypted Internet phone doing VoIP.

    Now, I have to ask the people in charge of Homeland Security: do you really, truly, honestly think that you have *any* hope of keeping anyone from writing such a two-line program? Any *IX user with a bit of experience could write this piece of software and distribute it to the world. In addition, the fact that it contains voice data is essentially undetectable to the outside world, so there is no practical way to "catch" someone using such a system.

    It is true that this is a very simple program, but it can also be very easily extended into a full-blown encrypted voice communication program, without the minor limitations here that make this annoying for day-to-day use. In addition, there are a vast number of extant Internet systems for communicating that cannot be wiretapped by the FBI -- PGP/GPG contains no back doors to allow wiretapping of email communications. Frost (on the Freenet platform) can disguise the very fact that an association exists between two users. These systems are rarely used, but they are also not hard to deploy, and if the FBI insists on forcing conventional voice communication to be breakable, there is little incentive not to use systems such as the one that I have demonstrated here.

    1. Re:Secure VoIP by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Now, I have to ask the people in charge of Homeland Security: do you really, truly, honestly think that you have *any* hope of keeping anyone from writing such a two-line program?

      Prosecutor: "Your Honor, the prosecution enters into evidence this encrypted VoIP stream, which originated from the defendant's computer, at the date and time of foo."

      Judge: "So entered."

      Prosecutor: "Mr. Defendant, what is your encryption key?"

      You: "Um....."

      Judge: "I'll remind you that not disclosing it instantly lands you in jail. And don't give me that 'I forgot' crap; being Bubba's bitch does wonders for the memory, you know."

      You: "Err...."

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    2. Re:Secure VoIP by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Judge: "I'll remind you that not disclosing it instantly lands you in jail. And don't give me that 'I forgot' crap; being Bubba's bitch does wonders for the memory, you know."

      The United States is not Britain, where refusing to disclose a password or key is grounds for immediate prison. Yet.

    3. Re:Secure VoIP by Elpacoloco · · Score: 1

      What prevents a person from pleading the fifth?

    4. Re:Secure VoIP by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      What prevents a person from pleading the fifth?

      The same thing that restricts the second. New laws that ignore the Constitution.

    5. Re:Secure VoIP by ambrosine10 · · Score: 1

      lame or oggenc?

      I think that's for music. Maybe you meant speex or some other such voice codec.

    6. Re:Secure VoIP by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Clearly the open-source model works. Already we have improvement suggestions. ;-)

    7. Re:Secure VoIP by varjag · · Score: 1

      Notice though that by employing such a high-latency protocol as TCP/IP you render your VoIP implementation unusable from the start.

      --
      Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
    8. Re:Secure VoIP by meringuoid · · Score: 1

      Um... that only applies in .us. In .uk the right to silence has been severely cut back.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    9. Re:Secure VoIP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whoops, forgot the -u switch to netcat, I suppose.

    10. Re:Secure VoIP by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      As you say; yet.

      Especially if Bush 'wins' another term.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    11. Re:Secure VoIP by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1
      Notice though that by employing such a high-latency protocol as TCP/IP you render your VoIP implementation unusable from the start.
      Notice though that by employing such a high-latency protocol as TCP/IP, companies such as Vonage are making money on their successful VoIP implementation.
      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
    12. Re:Secure VoIP by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      I can run this just fine over my local network. A number of even things like interactive network games use TCP. It's true that UDP and a fancy scheduling engine might improve performance, but it's hardly unusable with just TCP, at least over links that aren't overloaded.

    13. Re:Secure VoIP by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      Me: Your honor, the starting key is XXXXXX. However, the key mutates with each packet, in a manner related to the packet contents. If a packet is missing, you won't be able to decrypt past that point. You do have all the packets, right?? Including those that were not sent over my regular network connection??

      Persec^H^H^H^H^Hrosecutor: Crap!

    14. Re:Secure VoIP by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      Prosecutor: You are aware, of course, that as per the PATRIOTUSA-3 act of 2006, in the Sixth Year Of The Enlightened Reign of Glorious Leader Bush, that such encryption carries the death penalty? Report for termination, Friend Citizen!

      You: Dammit! I should have moved to Canada!

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    15. Re:Secure VoIP by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Before that happens they'll have found a way to revoke my Green Card and deport me back to Europe...

    16. Re:Secure VoIP by varjag · · Score: 1

      Notice though that by employing such a high-latency protocol as TCP/IP, companies such as Vonage are making money on their successful VoIP implementation.

      As far as I understand Vonage uses H323 family of protocols, which are UDP-based for most part.

      --
      Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
    17. Re:Secure VoIP by varjag · · Score: 1

      whoops, forgot the -u switch to netcat, I suppose.

      Yeah.. and call me when you done wrapping UDP traffic into an SSH tunnel :)

      (Speaking seriously, it can be done by e.g. wrapping UDP in Vtun with built-in encryption turned off, and then tunneling it via SSH. But that's a bit more hoops though).

      --
      Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
    18. Re:Secure VoIP by varjag · · Score: 1

      In my experience, VoIP quality varies even with UDP, so I'd expect that TCP/IP, with its slow start and retransmission of dropped packets would give some bumpy ride.

      This all is a minor nitpick though - I totally agree with your point that secure VoIP is possible and accessible to those who have need for it.

      --
      Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
  66. too liberal for this gringo by willCode4Beer.com · · Score: 1

    "From our perspective, it's a very slippery slope to start paying for the execution of search warrants or any kind of a court order," said Grue.

    A slippery slope to pay for the execution of a search warrant that they ask for?
    I can't believe that Canadians tolerate that kind of crap.
    I the police feel that they don't get enough money for their investigations, then they should ask to have their appropriations increased. Isn't the point of a police budget to pay for investigations? Maybe its just for salaries in Canada.
    I thought things were getting bad here in the States. But, even we would not tolerate that kind of statement.

    So, what happens if the *tax* generates more money than is needed? Is their a plan to give it back? (lol) What if its not enough? (spend a lot more money to convince folks to raise it).

    --
    ----- If communism is a system where the government owns business, what do you call a system where business owns govern
  67. presumed guilty by Naito · · Score: 1

    I think this is evidence the American influence is starting to get to us Canadians. now OUR police is assuming everyone is guilty and keeping tabs on everyone because it's POSSIBLE we're criminals. If this goes through, the whole notion of "innocent until proven guilty" will be turned on it's head here too. *sigh*

    1. Re:presumed guilty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They aren't wiretapping everyone, idiot. Only people they have warrents for.

      I swear, slashbots get dumber every day.

  68. That actually happend.. by henni16 · · Score: 2, Informative

    That happened in Germany two years ago :-)

    Some customers of the mobile phone provider "O2" got bills with a lot of "outgoing voicemail" connections to one certain telephone number.
    That number was used by the authorities to record the customers calls - so warning the suspects that they were under observation.
    According to some spokesperson of "O2" the reason was an erroneous software update.

    Two year old (german)article at heise.de and a follow up.

  69. Is wiretapping even effective? by the-banker · · Score: 1

    I would love to see some research on how many criminal case juries were significantly influenced by the existence and contents of information gained form wiretaps.

    It seems to me that most criminal cases do not rely on wiretaps, only certain high-profile and complex crimes (just speculation - I have no evidence). If this is the case then might there be a better way of funding it?

    Taxes levied like this have little accountability on how they are spent. Taxes levied by a legislative body, on the other hand, have annual budgets and audits. I guess I would like to see how much wiretaps are needed first.

    If I were to guess, we would see that in the last 2 years wiretaps have gone up dramatically while convictions from wiretaps have declined as a percentage. In other words, more spying, less results.

    1. Re:Is wiretapping even effective? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeing as how you've admitted you pulled all of your estimates out of your ass, I think we're fairly justified in saying you're opinions are worth shit.

  70. Make the politicians pay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The solution to all problems of excess government is to make political parties pay the costs arising from any laws that their politicians enact.

  71. Re:Wanna tap a phone? Tap the lead detective's sal by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Good idea :) At one time soldiers had to pay for their own equipment and weapons, which if nothing else ensured that they took care of what they were issued!

    Tho taken to its logical extreme, one can envision an inverse scenario -- if the cops have to pay for everything they do that costs money, maybe they'll just sit back and draw their salaries -- after all, investigative costs come out of their pockets. ;)

    In reality, tho, you're right -- there should be some sort of penalty attached to requests for any sort of warrant (wiretap or other), so the cop has to think twice about asking for it, and ideally the judge should also have to think twice about issuing it.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  72. Induces more abuse, I'd say. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why abuse of wire tapping, by law enforcement is such a big issue.

    I think if they request a wire tap and it turns out to be for nothing, for what ever reason, whomever requested it should have to pay for it. Then perhaps they'd perform a little more due dilegence, before fivirously requesting a wiretap, which they don't have to pay for currently.

  73. The Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    He's talking about the Liberal party, not "liberals". Big huge difference dude.

  74. Obligatory Brazil reference by vishakh · · Score: 1

    This sounds a lot like the Ministry of Information Retrieval from the movie Brazil. The more things change, the more they remain the same. :)

    --

    Posting messages for the betterment of humanity..

  75. Re:Wanna tap a phone? Tap the lead detective's sal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I haven't found what I think is the optimal solution to this problem of wiretapping. If a police officer or detective wants to have a phone tapped, and a judge agrees, then the money for hooking up the tap should come directly out of the police officer's salary.

    Yeah, but in reality the police officer gets his money from the Mafia or Bill Gates (I repeat myself) or George W. Bush (I'm redundant as hell today). So the additional expenses won't hurt him.

  76. Re:Wanna tap a phone? Tap the lead detective's sal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That only makes sense as even a way-out-in-left-field idea IF the law officer is somehow financially compensated for getting a conviction

    Oh yes, lets pay the judges for convictions by the pound. Soylent Green is criminals!

  77. I've ALREADY paid for this! by mcheu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's the way it is now. The cops are getting billed by the phone company for the wire taps and records searches and are supposed to pay for it out of their operating budgets. The money for wire taps, informants, etc are supposed to be budgetted out of the public funds that they receive for their annual budgets. Where things are getting complicated and where the controversy lies is that some police forces are refusing to pay the bills when they arrive and instead using the money for other things (unspecified).

    They're effectively breaking the law, but the phone company can't do anything about it. It's not like they can just cut the police off for not paying the phone bill.

    From my point of view, I've already paid for this stuff in my taxes and they've got parts of their budget already allocated for it. I do not wish to pay for this twice.

    1. Re:I've ALREADY paid for this! by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2
      They're effectively breaking the law, but the phone company can't do anything about it. It's not like they can just cut the police off for not paying the phone bill.

      Actually, they probably could. The fact that they are content to just roll over rather than stand up for themselves is a bit sad, when you think about it.

      It would be interesting if a phone company were to slug the police with a massive bill, payable in advance, on request for a wiretap. After all, nobody else receives any service until they've paid for it.

    2. Re:I've ALREADY paid for this! by ACPosterChild · · Score: 1

      no, no, no. See, it's like buying a car. First, you buy a car for $15,000 to $45,000. Then, when you're ready to pay for it, they tag on an "advertising fee". Cause, see, ADVERTISING isn't part of their regular business, see? It's an extra, over-the-top thing they do for ya, and see, they just gotta pay for their lights and rent and all, and if they don't charge ya this extra fee for something that you're already paying them to do anyway, then they'll just plum go out of business! waaaah!

      I think I'll open a pizza shop. Pepperoni will be $1 extra. Of course, that will also incur an additional $.50 pepperoni delivery charge, a $.25 pepperoni placement labor fee, a $.25 pepperoni re-stocking fee, and a $.50 aren't-you-glad-you-got-pepperoni fee, so the total is $2.25. Yup, sounds logical to me! heh

  78. Re:Hey cool! I hate money anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > I've also been looking for someone to kick me
    > in the nuts, for $10/hr. Any takers?

    In our Bangalore office you can get three engineers
    to kick you in the nuts for that kind of money!
    Oursource and save!!

  79. "Future Jail Surcharge" by kmahan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems to me that by the police being allowed to have a special "wiretap surcharge" put on the bill that just makes it easier for them to say "let's tap a whole bunch of folks and hope for the best, since it's free." What crap. At least now they have to put a little thought into the consequences (since it seems more and more a judge's signature isn't required). At least if it comes out of their "budget" they have to convince the government to up their budget. Besides, at least here in the US they are already crying "poverty" and confiscating everything worth anything criminals. Maybe a little better management of their money (rather than their tricked out shiney Ford Explorers, Crown Vics, Harleys, and other high end vehicles) would allow them a few more dollars to violate our supposed rights.

    The next thing you know we'll start seeing a "Future Jail Surcharge" explicitly on your taxes -- viewed as an investment in "your possible future incarceration."

    --
    Invalid Checksum. Retrying.
  80. Beware the Bureacracy Factor by Radical+Rad · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If this surcharge is put in place then obviously the price will need to be adjusted occasionally. By exaggerating the need for wiretaps the police chiefs can increase their budgets and their headcount without even raising taxes because the citizen only sees an increase in his phone and internet bills.

    Don't think it could happen? More than once, a friend of mine who compiles crime statistics was pressured by his female boss to massage the numbers for domestic violence cases because that is her pet peeve. She couldn't flat out say to change the numbers but it was clear what she wanted, especially after several years of this. He ended up reclassifying certain types of cases that had never been counted under DV before. Presumably she wanted to show an increased need for funding either for her own satisfaction or as a political favor to the director of that program.

    I guarantee you that if someone can bump up their headcount or budget by doing more wiretaps then more and more wiretaps will get performed regardless of the true need. Peace. Big Brother loves you.

  81. -1, Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't think the US recognized dual citizenship...

    Think again. The US doesn't encourage it, but it certainly allows it.

    1. Re:-1, Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US doesn't encourage it, but it certainly allows it.

      That needs to stop.. pronto.

  82. Fun with the news by softspokenrevolution · · Score: 2, Funny

    Really, one of the problems I can see with this whole; you pay for your own wiretap business is the following transaction.

    It is about 10:45 in the morning in an undisclosed city. The apartment is worn down and the furniture mostly consists of milk crates and things found outside of construction sites, much like your typical bachelor pad. A man stands in the midst of the room, knee deep in his shag carpet with a bill in one hand and a phone in the other pressed tightly up against his ear. He appears to be in his late twenties with about five days growth of beard, he taps his foot impatiently as he stands staring hard at the bill, as if that would make the inscrutable charges vanish. The line picks up...
    Operator: Hello, this is [phone company x], how can we help you?
    Man: Yes, I have a question about an item on my phone bill.
    Operator: I'm sure that you do sir, or else you wouldn't be calling us. Could you tell me what the item is?
    Man: Yeah, it's a twenty-five cent surcharge with the code WT next to it.
    Operator (Pauses for a moment): According to our records, that's supposed to be there.
    Man: (Confused) But what is it, I'm looking at last month's bill and it isn't there.
    Operator (again pauses, some typing can be heard): Yes, the charge was added this month.
    Man (a little upset): Yes, but for what.
    Operator (pausing once again, and letting out a loud sigh): For the wiretap sir.
    Man (really upset): The wiretap?
    Operator: Yes sir, the wiretap that the Feds put on your phone last month to monitor you.
    The man then hangs up the phone, tossing it casually onto the couch. He then goes into the kitchen and grabs a bite to eat.
    Of course that's a bit of an exaggeration, the phone company is never that helpful. All right, so this was mostly a joke, deal.

  83. It'll be funny when those bills start coming out by dusanv · · Score: 1

    Watch when random people start running and/or calling Bell asking why are they being wire-tapped. "It wasn't me, they made me do it I swear! Please don't tap my phone."

  84. Re:Terrorist tax. by mr.scoot · · Score: 1

    Easy. Telephone companies have a long tradition of billing various taxes from all customers to benefit a few. This requires only a small change: Telephone basic rate: 19.50 Long Distance: 5.42 Universal lifeline surcharge: 1.42 911 fund: .73 Universal Terrorism Fee: 2.97 Flat Rate Criminality charge: .42 Camera phone usage: : .00 We saw your pics. .00 You look kind of funny fee: 1.27 CEO Monopoly money: .93

  85. This land is your land by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 2, Informative

    That wasn't Arlo, that was his dad Woody.

  86. Re:Bent over a barrel AND being charged barrel ren by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They aren't tapping everyone... only people they have warrents to tap.

  87. Here's what I wrote my Member of Parliament by ppanon · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Dear Mrs. Fry,

    I recently read the following article online in the Globe & Mail web site and am quite concerned.
    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet /story/RTGAM .20040815.wtaps0815/BNStory/National/

    I believe that funding for wiretapping costs should be provided according to the cost-sharing plan that Bell Canada and others propose. There are a number of reasons why I feel their proposal is attractive:
    • This is not a user-pay service in the same way that gasoline taxes are. All canadians benefit from law enforcement activities so why should only telecommunications service users have to pay? This tax would be regressive.
    • I feel that the government contribution should come from general revenue where it can be balanced against other needs and priorities. I believe that privacy is important enough that funding for activities that could violate it should be tightly controlled by our elected representatives. Maintaining funding for wiretapping in the general policing budget will ensure that closer scrutiny is paid to how the money is being spent.
    • A tax on telecommunications service complicates revenue collection, placing the burden on service providers.
    • I like the idea that telecommunications providers would pay for part of the wiretapping costs. By making the service providers pay part of the costs, decreasing their profit margin, it makes it less likely they will try to inflate actual costs and turn the operation into a revenue stream.

    While I sometimes don't agree with some of your stances, I did vote for you in the last election because I felt that, in spite of the scandals the Liberals have had recently, Liberal policy was better than the alternatives available. I hope you will seriously consider this input from one of your constituents.

    Sincerely yours,

    Paul-Andre Panon
    --
    Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    1. Re:Here's what I wrote my Member of Parliament by zangdesign · · Score: 1

      By making the service providers pay part of the costs, decreasing their profit margin, it makes it less likely they will try to inflate actual costs and turn the operation into a revenue stream.

      Wow. Do your phone companies really operate like that? South of your borders, the telco's would look at that twelve and one-half cents and start tacking on administrative fees, processing fees, handling fees, and by the time they were done it would $2.50 in Federally-Required Fees and the police would still only get twelve and a half-cents.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    2. Re:Here's what I wrote my Member of Parliament by Rob+Simpson · · Score: 1

      Wait a second, Hedy "crosses burning on the lawns of Prince George" Fry? You voted for that loon?

    3. Re:Here's what I wrote my Member of Parliament by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately. That's one of her "stances" I don't agree with. I consider it as political grandstanding, playing to what is probably one of the more leftist constituencies west of the Ottawa river. Couldn't see myself voting either NDP or Conservatives (former Canadian Alliance, though.

      I won't vote for the new Conservatives until they show (by ejecting the MPs from the party that espouse those sentiments) that racist and homophobic sentiments will not be tolerated. Hedy's a rare loon among a party that understands that canadians are, for the most part, fiscally conservative and socially liberal. The Conservatives have a lot more loons (on the right-wing side) than the Liberals do, and it's why we have a Liberal government.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  88. very fishy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    The association of police chiefs, which represents the majority
    of Canadian forces, argues one way to accomplish that is addin
    g a fee to each subscriber's monthly telephone, cellular or Int
    ernet bill.

    "We're thinking, amongst ourselves, 25 cents. Whether that woul
    d cover off all the costs, we don't know. We haven't done the a
    nalysis on it," Grue said.


    The cop says he hasn't done an analysis of the costs.
    Well why don't you DO an analysis first, if you're so
    in the dark, or are you just blinded by the money?

    25 cents a month for EVERYONE.

    Why don't you DO an analysis before you start asking
    for the cash?

    That's a lot of money EVERY month for ONE purpose.

    --Oh we have some more in the wiretap budget this month
    left, let's tap a few more...--

    If it doesn't get spent, who's pocketing it?

    Something fishy with the costs. The costs of looking up
    numbers. ? Thousands to make connect between places??
    Why not USE the internet. Something very fishy about
    these costs.

    "The controversy revolves around the ongoing costs of lookin
    g up phone numbers, hooking up to networks and relaying communi
    cations from one city to another -- individual services that ma
    y cost anywhere from pocket change to thousands of dollars.

    "

    Sounds like the police should arrest the phone companies for fr
    audulently inflating prices.

    How many wiretaps they do a month? A million? Probably more like
    a thousand at a time, tops. Why should that cost millions?

    Very fishy.

    Out of the taxes, like the rest of the taxes, maybe then it will be spent a little more wisely.

    [probably redundant]

  89. Hey I know by Cyno · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is great!

    More reason to build a free encrypted internet based voice network. With surcharges, taxes, roaming fees, etc. It will either provide some much needed competition for the telecoms or at least give people an alternatives.

    Though personally I think it should be designed with async in mind since its much more efficient to communicate asynchronously, IMO. Kinda like instant voice messaging..

    And if it were p2p/distributed it would be more difficult for a central authority to request the ability to tap the connections, demand taxes/fees, etc. But governments will get away with anything they want as long as their citizens let them.

  90. Iraq! by asscroft · · Score: 1

    If Iraq was behing 9-11, which we all know is what they want us to believe, then why not tax iraq for the wiretapping required because of 9-11. We'll simply take it out of their oil sales, like garnished wages. same with every other terror-related cost. what's so hard about this?

    --
    because I have been enjoined by this Holy Office to abandon the false opinion which maintains that the Sun is the centre
  91. Another Way to Capitalize on Public Fear by jubitzu · · Score: 1

    enough said

  92. GRRRRRRR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some people may actually find something like this useful. Just recently my home phone number has been getting odd calls from people that claim to know me and just ask strange questions... such as where do I work, about my family, etc. I would LOVE to have this feature on my phone so the phone company could hear this rediculous savage of a human making these calls.

    -stressed out

  93. Not in the US. by raehl · · Score: 1

    In the United States, the largest tax for 74% of taxpayers is the payroll ax - the combination of Medicare and Social Security taxes that are a flat 15.30 percent - unless you're rich.

    See, the payroll tax is really a worker tax, beause the only people who pay it are workers. If you're unemployed, you obviously don't pay it, but if you're fortunate enough to already HAVE money and live on interest/dividends/capital gains, then you also pay... nada! Not to mention that only the first $87,000 or so of wages are subject to the tax, so if you're filthy, filthy rich you get a very low percentage payroll tax as well.

    1. Re:Not in the US. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so if you're filthy, filthy rich you get a very low percentage payroll tax as well.

      No, they pay no S.S taxes. S.S. taxes only apply to wages, tips and earned income. It doesn't apply to dividends and intrest payments. The very rich don't pay these taxes since their income is not 'earned income'. (Government bonds are free from federal taxes as well.)

  94. Punishment can't be too bad... by raehl · · Score: 1

    It is wrong to punish people for being successful.

    I havn't seen too many successful people deciding to start failing miserably due to their punishment for being successful.

    I don't mind paying much more in taxes than poor people. I *DO* mind that filthy rich people tend to pay a lower percentage of taxes than me.

    1. Re:Punishment can't be too bad... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      You see, that's the problem with trying to tax the filthy rich. They have the money to hire people to 'hide' and 'manage' income in order to avoid taxes. I've read that the really rich have always paid about the same percentage. Why? They're also the most mobile class of people. You try to soak them too much and they move. A flat percentage tax without deductions would actually get more money out of them.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    2. Re:Punishment can't be too bad... by Kombat · · Score: 1


      I havn't seen too many successful people deciding to start failing miserably due to their punishment for being successful.

      Then you're ignorant and uninformed. I suggest you take a browse around this site, and familiarize yourself with the AMT.

      I don't mind paying much more in taxes than poor people. I *DO* mind that filthy rich people tend to pay a lower percentage of taxes than me.

      If you think that rich people pay less taxes than you, on a percentage basis, then once again, you are woefully uninformed. One wonders why you bothered to post at all, when everything you say is provably false.

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
  95. It already happens... by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1
    You pay for the license plates on your car, put there so big brother can keep tabs on you when you drive.

    You pay for that passport you need so that big brother can keep control of your travels.

    You pay a post-9/11 tax for air travel so that Uncle Sam can buy more cameras to watch travellers.

    So how is paying for a wire tap any different?

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:It already happens... by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 1

      I drive my car on public roads, paid for by the taxes other people pay.

      I use public transportation for getting to another country, so my passport is used only on public transport, or, again, on things like the Canada-US bridge, paid for by public funds of both countries. I also am not a citizen of foreign countries, so the passport is a way for my government - in theory, at least - to protect me from foreign crap I'm not used to.

      A camera in an airport is, again, in a public transportation building, paid for by the taxes of other people.

      My phone line is used in my house, by me, personally, is paid for by me, personally, and if somebody else wants to use it, I can tell them to screw off, and they can't do a thing about it.

      That's what's different about it....

      --
      "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
    2. Re:It already happens... by juan2074 · · Score: 1
      The first two are different. License plates and passports are for identification, not to keep tabs on you. (That would actually cost more money to track you. The fees to get license plates and passports only pay the administrative costs for those IDs.)

      The last two are controversial. In those cases, people are paying a fee for something that is actually paid for by taxes. (They are charging us twice, and moving the extra money elsewhere. Where's the oversight?)

      Only the people who use a service should pay for it. Only airport users should pay for airport security. The police should pay to have telephones tapped. (The police are the users of the service that is provided.)

  96. Ah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was reading at 0, and just cam across the AC post at the bottom of the page.

    In any event, *this* is redundant.

  97. Where's the news? by mseeger · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The Globe and Mail is running an interesting story over who should carry the cost of wiretapping

    In the end, the consumer will always pay for being tapped. Some way or another....

    I would prefer to have the costs explicitly listed on the bill. In that case consumers would see what enormous costs the tapping is causing and how little (compared to the costs) results we're getting.

    Canada's police chiefs propose a surcharge of about 25 cents on monthly telephone and Internet bills to cover the cost of tapping into the communications of terrorists and other criminals

    Allow me to laugh. We're not talking about 25 cents. Perhaps this are the costs the police needs to do the actual tapping. Currently providing the capability of tapping makes up 15% of your telco bill. Perhaps it is less for large telcos but for the averade city carrier (in germany) this figure is correct.

    These costs will drive the concentration process in the telco and ISP business. New regulation in germany require ISPs to have email tapping equipment ready for use which must comply certain standards. Those costs 100.000+ $.

    Regards, Martin

  98. Its not about terrorism by malsdavis · · Score: 1
    "cover the cost of tapping into the communications of terrorists"

    I hate how official statements like this, especially ones concerning civil liberties, always refer primarily to the anti-terrorist factors.

    Everyone knows the terrorists don't use phones.
    I bet that anti-terrorism is the reason behind the wiretap in only a tiny, miniscule number of cases and yet it is touted in a way implying it is one of the main reasons and therefor everyone should be happy about it as everyone needs to remeber to be scared of the terrorists.

    They should just admitt that the vast majority of the time the wiretaps will be used to combat fraud and people trying to take sickies from work.

    1. Re:Its not about terrorism by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      Everyone knows the terrorists don't use phones.

      Or at least, they could be using disposable cellphones.

  99. you're out of your mind, cousin! by bathmann · · Score: 1
    Here in France it is now written down in the law books that the State should be paying the "Electronic Communications" operators for any extra costs they suffer due to wiretapping on their networks. The issue is that the text doesn't say how to calculate the costs, what exactly will be covered and how the State will hand the money. Another text is required to precise that.

    4 years ago the State already forced on the operators the holding of connexion logs for a certain amount of time and said "how, we will compensate for that". As far as I know, we're still waiting.

    At least the Canadian government is not fooling anyone here.

  100. Fight back by Graabein · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Here's a subversive little list of links everybody should be familiar with:

    Armed with this information, use OpenBSD to set up firewalls with ALTQ packet prioritizing, PF stateful filtering and IPsec secure VPNs between all endpoints.

    Setup Asterisk PBX' behind the firewalls and network them over the VPNs.

    Now let them try to monitor your calls.

    (No, this doesn't help with calls you terminate with an insecure 3rd party, like a VoIP provider gatewaying your calls out to the PSTN. The "P" in PSTN is for "Public", so you need to treat it as completely insecure and act accordingly.)

    --
    And remember kids: Never trust a computer you can actually lift.
  101. Bush's Tax Cut. by Firethorn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just felt I need to let you know, that while I support balanced budgets, I really hate this:

    Federal Taxes->Federal Grants to State Governments->State Services.

    If it's going to run a state service, it should be run from taxes at a state level. Why? Each step the money goes through wastes some of it. Some states might not need the service. Some might have a different solution.

    As far as 'raiding social security' every administration has 'raided' it. It's actually in the codes, any surplus is placed in savings bonds.

    In any case, the deficit was mostly caused by:
    decreased revenues from the dot.com bubble bust
    decreased revenues and expense from 9/11
    stock market loss from Enron/Worldcom
    continuing costs from the war on terror.

    Meanwhile, home ownership is at an all time high, a recovery is continuing, and unemployment is still several points below most of Europe.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  102. Sounds like Brazil... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... where the people being tortured had to pay for 'Information Retrieval'.

  103. Population as a WHOLE by thrill12 · · Score: 1

    ..not just the people that have phones. This is like saying: You have a phone, therefore you should pay to get criminals of the street. Shouldn't the people *without* a phone pay to get criminals of the street too ? In other words: isn't this implying some sort of guilt upon those people who own telephones: you own one, so you *could* be guilty and thus have to pay ??

    --
    Slashdot: stuff for news, nerds that matter, matter for news, stuff that nerd
  104. Of course we pay... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

    it doesn't matter if it's through some add on tax or any other tax... if the government is doing it, WE are paying for it, somehow. At least this is upfront and honest about how your money is being spent.

    I've always thought you should be able to fill out a tax form, maybe along with your W4 (here in the U.S.), where, while you can't say how much the government can have, you can tell them where to spend it (%20 for this, 10% for that...) Then let's see how many politicians get their pork barrel projects funded. I think we'd finally see an end to the subsidization of helium reserves (in case of blimp warfare) and sheep farmers (wool for uniforms... only we don't use wool in uniforms anymore).

    --
    Stupid sexy Flanders.
  105. Well at least... by Penguin2212 · · Score: 1

    Well, at least you'd know if somebody was tapping your phone lines....

  106. $0.25 is for 911 services. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    25 cents is to cover 911 emerge services. The new E911 (for some mobile carriers) will set you back 50 cents a month (But will pass telemtry information within about 50' of where you are).

  107. War on Drugs Example by krgallagher · · Score: 1
    "Canada's police chiefs propose a surcharge of about 25 cents on monthly telephone and Internet bills to cover the cost of tapping into the communications of terrorists and other criminals."

    They should follow the Unied States example from "The War On Drugs." When you arrest a suspect, freeze all their finances. Then when you convict, sell off all those assets and give the money to the law enforcement agency that made the arrest. This way the criminals pay for the enforcement.

    --

    Insert Generic Sig Here:

  108. What did I miss? by krgallagher · · Score: 1
    " Pay To Have Your Phone Tapped "

    Am I the only one who thought that phone companies were going to offer services where by you could have your own phone tapped?

    --Must need more coffee...

    --

    Insert Generic Sig Here:

  109. The stuff on phone bills by Alioth · · Score: 1

    When I lived in Texas, I was surprised how many nickel-and-dime to death charges that GTE (now Verizon) charges. Believe it or not, having DTMF ("Touch Tone") dialling was charged as an extra service! The line item was for about $1 a month to have the privilege of DTMF dialing, which is already part of the switch (and it probably saves the phone company money if you use it over pulse dialing as you tie the circuit up for less time).

    Someone from Manx Telecom told me in relation to why roaming GPRS was free for a while, "If we don't bill you for something, it's just because we haven't yet worked out how to bill you for it".

  110. Not that expensive by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    The cost of actually doing a wiretap is small. I believe they can just configure the switch to call-forward to another number in addition to completing the call. The cops/feds/whoever just need to sit at a computer for a couple minutes to set it up (remotely) and then just wait for the phone to ring and record the calls. $0.25/month would probably cover the cost of tapping your phone once per year. That's a whole lot of tapping - every phone once per year...

  111. random charges by heby · · Score: 1

    I don't know how popular that's going to be, something like that. Twenty-five cents is a really significant amount to add to everybody's phone bill.

    oh yeah? so what does Bell Canada call the Touch-Tone Service (tm) charge of $2.80 i.e. more than 11 times as much that is on every one of their customers' phone bills every month?

    blessed are those who have a quasi-monopoly.

    don't get me wrong, i hate the idea of paying for that but their argument is plain ridiculous given their own completely arbitrary charges (i haven't tried but it would be interesting to see if a pulse (i.e. non touch tone) dial phone would work on a new bell line at all. plus, i sure couldn't opt out of that charge then).

  112. Make it a use tax... by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1

    Why? Just tap their phone and then send them a bill for it. The same way the Chinese execute someone and then send the family a bill for the bullet.

  113. Re:It'll be funny when those bills start coming ou by green1 · · Score: 1

    I work for a large Canadian telco, people ALREADY come screaming to us every time they hear the faintest click on the line POSITIVE that someone is tapping their phone, as a field technician I get sent out to investigate many of these complaints (never mind the fact that if the police WERE tapping your phone you'd never hear a thing anyway)

    There are a LOT of paranoid people out there, and if this does go through the customer support calls will go through the roof to explain this charge. (There will be a LOT of upset customers as well...)

  114. Don't tread on me by avronius · · Score: 1

    Interesting that when confronted with humour about your post that you strike back with an alarming pettyness that is truly insulting.

    Unlike the person that you were flaming, you have mimicked the stereotype that you suggest in your post.

    It's a sad day for trolls...

    1. Re:Don't tread on me by davidsyes · · Score: 1

      It's a sad tray for dolls (had to throw in a Spoonerism...)

      Saturday, a friend of mine took his nephews to see "Alien vs Predator". The trailers or something going on said "WhoEVER wins, we LOSE!"

      One of the nephews, 9 years old, said, "That's like bush and Kerry; whoever wins we LOSE."

      WOW, from a NINE year-old!

      Impressive. But, I think we lose more with the current cadge/cabal occupying the Oval Office. If ET landed here and said, "Take me to your leader.", I'd be mortified, for I'd expect an ET to have more intelligence to ask for THEM. I'd probably counter with, "what LEADER?", or "WHAT leader?", or "WHOSE leader?". I don't have one, there are just figureheads, figurines and foolhardy sacks of organic matter shedding skin and making proclamations over in that place.

      Now, if ET said, "I/We are here to perform lobotomies..." "How many drill bits did you bring, ET? Are they diamond, corundum, tungsten, carbon-carbon, tungsten-carbide...with thorium tips...? And, which countries are on your list?"

      David Syes

      --
      Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
  115. How is it provably false? by raehl · · Score: 1

    I pay 15% payroll tax. Rich people pay 0 or 3%, depending on where they get their income.

    Additionally, I pay in the 30%+ tax brackets on the majority of my income. This extra payroll tax is more than enough to offset the difference in income tax, especially since almost all of my income is from actually working, while the rich can derrive quite a bit of income from things like interest, capital gains, etc, which have no payroll tax, and in the case of capital gains, are taxed at a much lower rate.

    1. Re:How is it provably false? by Kombat · · Score: 1


      I guess I should have been more specific regarding jurisdictions. In my jurisdiction (Canada), there is no "payroll tax", there is only "income tax," and different brackets. Income from 0 to $8000 isn't taxed at all. Income from $8000 to $35,000 is taxed at 16%. Income from $35,000 to $70,000 is taxed at 22%. The highest bracket is 29%, on income of $113,804 and above.

      Capital gains are taxed in the highest bracket, but only 50% of it is taxed.

      Thus, in my jurisdiction (Canada), the rich do indeed pay more taxes, even on a percentage basis, than the poor, or even middle class.

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
  116. Use PGPfone instead by Kernel+Kurtz · · Score: 1

    It was around long before VoIP became popular, and still works great.

    http://www.pgpi.org/products/pgpfone/

  117. You are a fool by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

    "Dick C. and George W. Bush were elected by the people."

    The people who are the 5 Republican Supremes.

    ">No longer will I assume that George was skipping National Guard duty in Texas rather than slogging through the jungles of Vietnam because of his family connections. It was probably just the luck of the draw.

    George was elected by the people."

    Yeah, but his National Guard service was dictated by powerful family connections that allowed him to jump to the head of the line for available positions, despite getting the lowest passing score on the aptitude test. He took a place of safety that belonged to someone else. Someone else went to Vietnam in his place.

    "Gray Davis was recalled in a vote cast by the people."

    The recall was purchased by a Republican. How many do-overs should the right get? If we were to "recall" the Gropinator, and if that failed, do it again, and again, and again until it stuck, would you be just as happy?

    Do you really believe that special interest money has no effect on elections? That lobbying has no effect on politicians? That the electorate tracks the actions of politicians with 100% accuracy? If so, you are a fool. Or else, you should earn a commission on all you save lobbying firms by telling them to stop.

    The law prohibiting us from sleeping under a bridge applies equally to the rich and the poor. Does it have the same impact on both? There are two kinds of votes - the ones in the ballot box and the kind that go with $$$.

    1. Re:You are a fool by donutello · · Score: 1

      You've spent too much time with the crack pipe and now your brain cells are fried.

      The people who are the 5 Republican Supremes.

      The Supremes merely ruled on the rules by which the recount could be conducted. Bush won Florida regardless.

      Yeah, but his National Guard service was dictated by powerful family connections that allowed him to jump to the head of the line for available positions, despite getting the lowest passing score on the aptitude test. He took a place of safety that belonged to someone else. Someone else went to Vietnam in his place.

      Nonsense. Bush served in the Texas Air National Guard flying some fairly dangerous missions. His political connections could have easily got him an administrative job. Instead, he was flying a fairly dangerous supersonic jet. Regardless, that has nothing to do with this being a plutocracy.

      The recall was purchased by a Republican. How many do-overs should the right get? If we were to "recall" the Gropinator, and if that failed, do it again, and again, and again until it stuck, would you be just as happy?

      This has got to be one of the dumbest things I've ever read. How does a Republican "purchase" a vote? The recall was authorized by the California constitution and a majority of the PEOPLE of California voted Gray Davis out. The California constitution allows you to launch as many recall campaigns as you like against Arnold provided you have sufficient support. You collect the required number of signatures and get a majority of Californians to vote for the recall and he will be out. What part of that do you have a problem with?

      Do you really believe that special interest money has no effect on elections? That lobbying has no effect on politicians? That the electorate tracks the actions of politicians with 100% accuracy? If so, you are a fool. Or else, you should earn a commission on all you save lobbying firms by telling them to stop.

      The law prohibiting us from sleeping under a bridge applies equally to the rich and the poor. Does it have the same impact on both? There are two kinds of votes - the ones in the ballot box and the kind that go with $$$.


      Refer to my point of the people being too stupid to exercise the power that they have. That's not the same as them not having the power. There's a fundamental difference between a plutocracy and a democracy but it sounds like you're too stupid to comprehend it.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    2. Re:You are a fool by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

      Here are a few of the "mere" rule interpretations the Supremes ratified: overseas, primarily military ballots will be counted even if late, but ONLY if mailed to Republican-leaning counties - James Baker fought bitterly to deny service men and women the same right to vote late if it appeared they were Democrats; ballot counting standards SIGNED INTO LAW in Texas by G.W. Bush will not be employed because it is inconvenient. You have to face it: only partisan hacks had any respect for the two decisions that decided the election. The first one was decided on the basis that it would "harm G.W. Bush" ! The second recognizes itself as purely political and for the first time in Supreme Court history contains a clause that states, in effect, that this is such terrible law that it is not to be relied on for any kind of precedent.

      "Refer to my point of the people being too stupid to exercise the power that they have. That's not the same as them not having the power. There's a fundamental difference between a plutocracy and a democracy but it sounds like you're too stupid to comprehend it."

      You appear to be too stupid to understand that money has an effect on elections and the people who win those elections. That is power. Why are you denying it? Two reasons suggest themselves: 1) you are a fuckwit and 2) you favor the results.

      Paid signature gatherers are not exactly what the recall provision had in mind. That's the mechanism by which the recall was bought, by a Republican millionaire's private efforts. I grant that it was run according to the letter of the state constitution. It is still fundamentally undemocratic.

      And your defense of G.W.'s Guard service - when he bothered to show up - is deeply, deeply pathetic. It has to be among the dumbest things you've ever read. Dangerous missions? Defending Texas against Oklahoma? You should be embarassed.

    3. Re:You are a fool by donutello · · Score: 1

      I'll repeat that you are an idiot.

      I don't know whare you are getting your "facts" from but they are completely incorrect. Ballot measures signed into law in Texas were not used because Texas law does not apply to Florida. The Florida election was held according to Florida law. I just can't understand how anyone with even an iota of a brain could not know something as simple as that.

      Paid signature gatherers are not exactly what the recall provision had in mind. That's the mechanism by which the recall was bought, by a Republican millionaire's private efforts. I grant that it was run according to the letter of the state constitution. It is still fundamentally undemocratic.

      Paid signature gatherers are a form of free speech. You seem to be focusing on the fact that the people collecting the signatures were paid to do so to gloss over the fact that a majority of people in California voted to oust Gray Davis. It does not matter whether the signature gatherers were paid or not. Are you denying the fact that the majority of people in California voted to oust Gray Davis? The only travesty of democracy would have been if the will of the majority of Californians had been thwarted. Typical liberal idiot. "Democracy is good except when the people don't agree with me."

      And your defense of G.W.'s Guard service - when he bothered to show up - is deeply, deeply pathetic. It has to be among the dumbest things you've ever read. Dangerous missions? Defending Texas against Oklahoma? You should be embarassed.

      You should educate yourself about some facts before you believe all the lies the Democrats tell you. That way you don't expose yourself as an idiot. The Texas Air National Guard was involved in combat missions in Vietnam at the time that Bush enlisted there. It is an interesting contrast to the fact that the Swift Boat crew that Kerry enlisted in was not involved in active combat missions at the time that Kerry enlisted there.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
  118. you are amazingly obtuse by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

    Yes, a Texas Governor tends to sign bills into law that apply to Texas. But only a complete moron would miss the apparent inconsistency of G.W. Bush fighting a voting standard in Florida that he approved in Texas. This was my point and you are a fuckwit to miss it. Is this point spelled out clearly enough? If not, get a cranial enema and read it again.

    I am denying that a majority of people in California voted to oust Gray Davis. A minority of those who voted in that election voted for the Gropinator, and due to the provisions of the recall, he's in.

    And paid signature gathering as a form of free speech? You can't be serious. That's probably the least apt way to discribe it. Are you denying that a wealthy partisan bought an election? He paid, and the election happened. Is there not a disproportionate advantage to be had by those who can cause elections on topics of their choosing? I'll make it easy: there is. To make it easier: would you want an election to determine whether you got to stay alive? Just putting the question on the ballot is a real disadvantage to you, and an advantage for everyone else...

    Revisionist history. Chickenhawks like Bush and Quayle and the other members of the "Millionare Boys Club" flocked to the National Guard because at the time it was considered much safer than taking a chance on the draft. This is indisputable - quit disputing it. And there is no disputing the war record Kerry had. You get right-wing wingnuts who didn't serve with him, and a commander changing his story to suit his politics. It is really weird that Republicans think they can compare the service records - "Kerry didn't get wounded enough! While in contrast, W. may actually have showed up for Guard duty! My mannnnnn!" Amazing.

    1. Re:you are amazingly obtuse by donutello · · Score: 1

      Each state has its own election rules. You can't change them around when it is convenient for you.

      And paid signature gathering as a form of free speech? You can't be serious. That's probably the least apt way to discribe it. Are you denying that a wealthy partisan bought an election? He paid, and the election happened. Is there not a disproportionate advantage to be had by those who can cause elections on topics of their choosing? I'll make it easy: there is. To make it easier: would you want an election to determine whether you got to stay alive? Just putting the question on the ballot is a real disadvantage to you, and an advantage for everyone else...

      Uhh... sure.. whoa! I can see right through my hand with these drugs! We're talking about paying the people who ask you to sign, not about paying the people who sign. There's a colossal difference. The Democratic propoganda machine is hard at work, I see. The recall vote required over 875,000 people to sign the petition of their free will and without coersion or compensation. It's interesting that you choose to focus on the fact that the people holding out the petition forms were paid to do so - I guess there weren't enough unemployed coke-heads who supported the recall.

      Revisionist history. Chickenhawks like Bush and Quayle and the other members of the "Millionare Boys Club" flocked to the National Guard because at the time it was considered much safer than taking a chance on the draft. This is indisputable - quit disputing it. And there is no disputing the war record Kerry had. You get right-wing wingnuts who didn't serve with him, and a commander changing his story to suit his politics. It is really weird that Republicans think they can compare the service records - "Kerry didn't get wounded enough! While in contrast, W. may actually have showed up for Guard duty! My mannnnnn!" Amazing.

      Revisionist history? Interesting that you choose to attack the swift boat veterans who weren't even the subject of this discussion. Your brain is so much mush you can't even figure out what you are talking about. The fact that the post that Kerry volunteered for was not involved in combat at the time is not in dispute. Even John Kerry admits it: http://slate.msn.com/id/2099184/. In his own words: "I called [the draft board] because I was thinking one of the options was, maybe I'll go study abroad, which was a euphemism for screwing around a bit, but it was clear to me that I was going to be at risk. My draft board ... said, 'Look, the likelihood is you are probably going to be drafted.' I said, 'If I'm going to be drafted, I'd like to have responsibility and be an officer.' "

      and

      In a 1986 book, Kerry wrote that the Swift boats "were engaged in coastal patrolling and that's what I thought I was going to be doing. Although I wanted to see for myself what was going on, I didn't really want to get involved in the war."

      It's really shocking that you don't know this.

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      Mmmm.. Donuts
  119. Re:Wanna tap a phone? Tap the lead detective's sal by Corydon76 · · Score: 1
    It'd be like your IT dept telling you that YOU have to pay for your new 256 MB RAM card == you need it to do bidness.

    Many companies already have this, although it doesn't come out of the employee's salary -- it comes out of their project budget. That's essentially the same thing, although perhaps not so direct. A similar proposal in this case might have the police department budget pay for wiretaps. The nice thing here is that the costs of harrassing people by wiretap is twofold: first, they experience a reduction in their overall budget; second, their inappropriate expenditures become public record -- that's a force to be reckoned with when it could cost the police chief (and through hierarchy, the officer) his job.

    evidence planting to increase likelihood of gaining a conviction?

    Nothing new there. No, I'm not suggesting that police officers plant evidence on a regular basis, but it does go on, no matter what measures the law has in place to stop it.

    strange partnerings b/n prosecutors & police officers?

    Strange partnerings? The prosecutors & police officers are already partnered and interdependent. Police investigate crime; prosecutors take the perpetrators to court.

  120. Hmm by Sv-Manowar · · Score: 1

    So thats how mum knew i was homosexual

  121. Moore's law in effect you sed propaganda by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

    Using the word propaganda is as thread invalidation as the word NAZI. Er, wait...

    Fuck it this thread is dead either way.

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