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Flash Mobs a Threat to Security?

RawCode writes "News about a recent report released by the RCMP suggests that flash mobs could pose a future threat to security. 'Some are aimed at celebrities. Tech-savvy teenaged girls in Britain can quickly spread the word on the whereabouts of Prince William, surrounding him with hundreds of screaming fans. Some are political, organizing protests. Text-messaging was instrumental to organizing public demonstrations in the Phillippines that forced President Joseph Estrada from office'."

135 of 582 comments (clear)

  1. Two thoughts by Control+Group · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First, this seems to be the failings of security through obscurity writ large, and not much to be done about it. Unless you can start closing off whole areas of cities so celebrities can walk through them, I don't see how you can address this sort of problem.

    The other thing that occurs to me, unfortunately, is that this will lead us even more down the path of trying to prevent crimes rather than punish them. It sounds like a good idea - I mean, isn't it better to stop the Bad Thing from even happening? The problem with it, of course, is that the only way to prevent crime is to actually curtail the abilities of people to do things that could be criminal. Fundamentally, it's a tradeoff of liberty for security.

    I'm not exactly a wild-haired anarchist, and I do believe that some tradeoffs of that nature are necessary given the amount of damage ten dedicated people can inflict (to paraphrase a quote that went something like "the progress of history can be measured by how many people a group of ten dedicated men can kill"...but I don't remember who said it. Help with attribution would be appreciated), but we (by which I mean the so-called first world) keep moving in only one direction: more security, less liberty. It's a cultural decision which is based on events like plane hijackings, car bombs and assasinations, but results in policies like the DMCA and the CBDTPA.

    The article certainly comes across as a justification for engaging in yet more crime prevention. At some point, I can only hope that we turn around and realize that we can't prevent Bad Things from happening, so we're better off allowing liberty and punishing criminals than eliminating liberty and making criminals out of everyone.

    --

    Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    1. Re:Two thoughts by Epistax · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree entirely. I think the idea of people mobbing celebrities is a social problem of ours, not a technological one. Cure the problem, not the (albeit) catalyst.

      I personally can't comprehend how people become so attached to celebrities that they collect things about or belonging to them. Or in the case of a musician (er most likely bad singer) go to an event with the person and scream so much they don't even hear the music-- what are they really there for? I'm calling the entertainment industry sick and perverted, and blaming the audience.

    2. Re:Two thoughts by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Great, but first we need to fix our judicial system so that we can actually punish criminals.
      No. Fix the judicial system so we can actually punish ** THE ** criminals.
    3. Re:Two thoughts by composer777 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You're leaving out the obvious third option of getting rid of the factors that motivate people to throw away their whole life in order to get $50 when they knock over a gas station. The obvious 3rd solution, which appears superior to having a locked down police state, or "allowing bad things to happen", would be to create enough of a safety net that only in the most strange of circumstance would someone even dream of going to jail for twenty years to knock over a gas station, sell drugs, etc.

      The next question we need to ask is, whose security do large scale protests threaten? It would certainly seem to be a small minority that are threatened by these protests, not the average Joe. I know that I don't think twice when I see protestors. I see it as a sign of democracy, true democracy, in action.

    4. Re:Two thoughts by laura20 · · Score: 3

      Yawn. You don't have to go to exotic fantasies of Mars for that. You can go back 40 years in America.

      "There were a bunch of people from Mississippi standing around in a candy store, and this noob from Chicago showed up - and he whistles at a white woman! No tolerance for that sort of behavior in Mississippi, so immediately someone complains, a mob is convened, witnesses attest to having seen the guy whistle, and he is found guilty and summarily executed! Sure, swift punishment - and no appeals!"

      Not so cool when it's a 14 year old black kid being tortured and beaten to death, is it, chump? Lynch mobs aren't new, sexy, or modern.

    5. Re:Two thoughts by Schemat1c · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A vapid statement. Shall we also end world hunger while we are at it?

      We have all the technology and means available to us right now to end world hunger, and to create a fair justice system. The problem isn't the means but the attitudes and beliefs of the people in power. And even more importantly the apathy of the population in general to actually change the system.

      --

      "Nobody knows the age of the human race, but everybody agrees that it is old enough to know better." - Unknown
    6. Re:Two thoughts by destiney · · Score: 2, Interesting


      go to an event with the person and scream so much they don't even hear the music
      I'm kind of off-topic here, but I hear ya.. I seem to always have a seat near some drunk guy who just won't shut up. Last time this happened to me it was at Ozzfest. Some die-hard Judas Priest fan was screaming the whole time. He screamed "Ju - das - Prieeeeeeest" for like 8 hours before they ever hit the stage. Then when they did hit the stage he was totally silent. How annoying.

    7. Re:Two thoughts by 808140 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, see, that's the problem. It isn't just punishment. It's rehabilitation. Our prisons are designed to contain, not to rehabilitate. As a result, they operate in a defacto state of lawlessness and abuse -- see the Stanford Prison Experiment -- and result in the institutionalization of inmates.

      People are put in prison to rot. If you go to prison for 5 years on something minor like possession of LSD, and spend those 5 years having to brutally subdue inmates trying to rape you while the guards look on, get used to carrying home made weapons for your own protection, etc, how can you reasonably be expected to function in society? When you went in, there was nothing violent about you. In the joint, you learned violence as a way to survive. Are you just supposed to forget all that?

      Remember the social crisis in the 70s with all the vets that couldn't get over the Nam? Normal, honest boys sent off to kill the bad guys. But then it turned out to not be just the bad guys, but women and children, too. They come back traumatised and violent.

      A drug addict needs treatment for his addiction, not incarceration. A murderer or a rapist needs psychological help, and needs to be constantly observed functioning in society, not outside of it.

      People want to be tough on crime, so they say "We have to punish these people." But unless you want to keep them in prison forever, you need to have an exit strategy. You need to figure out how to punish them, but not make them more violent and hateful than they were to begin with. Half a decade of anal rape and prison killings will fuck up any man.

      Some countries (Denmark, I think) treat prison (in most cases) like a job you do. On the weekends, you can go home. Why is this such a bad idea? If people lose track of society, they won't be able to get back into it.

      Everyone makes mistakes, and people change. We respect alcoholics recognizing that they have a disease and trying to get over it, but we don't think the same of rapists, who arguably are even more psychologically damaged. So we ignore the problem, we don't bother fixing it; instead we put the rapist into a prison where he gets to decide if he wants to be bitch or wolf. Yeah, that's going to decrease the likelyhood of a repeat offense when he eventually gets out.

  2. Sure it is a threat. by diginux · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If the "flash mob" is a bunch of terrorists, or others seeking havoc. This makes no sense at all. Having a LUG meeting could be a security threat with the right type of people :)

    1. Re:Sure it is a threat. by SlashdotLemming · · Score: 5, Funny

      Having a LUG meeting could be a security threat with the right type of people :)

      I'm thinking more of a biohazard.

    2. Re:Sure it is a threat. by yog · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Imagine a group of ten people walking casually into a store, in onesies and twosies, and then suddenly and instantaneously knocking over three shelves, shooting out two security cams, surrounding the cashier and four customers and emptying their cash registers and wallets as the case may be, all without speaking and done so fast that the store clerks don't even have time to register that this is a robbery.

      This kind of stuff is scary. A friend described a group of people doing some sort of flash mob stuff in a park in San Francisco recently. Presumably they were just doing it for fun, or because they don't have a life, but suppose they were rehearsing to overwhelm the flight attendants on a plane or the bank tellers in a bank through nearly instantaneous mob action.

      On the other hand, security personnel could easily implement the same techniques, and perhaps even do it better using sophisticated in-ear comm devices and a "mob meister" orchestrating the whole thing from a server room somewhere. For example, plainclothes police could suddenly pounce on an entire street gang, thus avoiding giving them a chance to flee the scene. There are lots of possibilities.

      Hmm. This is disturbing. I'm going to stay away from crowds from now on ;-)

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
  3. Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seems they are simply using technology to better do what they want to do. Isn't this what it is for?

    1. Re:Technology by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You would think so but now that the technology is created those in power are changing what we should be able to do with it.

  4. Protecting those in power from the evil truth. by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course it is a threat... It's a threat because people are able to quickly organize and protest. That is a major threat to public officials that want to ignore the fact that there is dissention.

    Afterall isn't that why we are "protecting" our President from those horrible demonstrators? They might actually show him that there is a percentage of the population that doesn't agree with him?

    1. Re:Protecting those in power from the evil truth. by R2.0 · · Score: 3, Informative

      You are aware that Canada doesn't have a president?

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    2. Re:Protecting those in power from the evil truth. by WPIDalamar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The president knows... it's the followers of him that we must shelter.

    3. Re:Protecting those in power from the evil truth. by TykeClone · · Score: 3, Interesting
      If an assassin wanted cover to take a close shot at [insert someone important's name here], all they have to do is to organize a flash mob.

      All of that chaos would make it difficult for the secret service to protect [that person] from the nut looking to do damage.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    4. Re:Protecting those in power from the evil truth. by zCyl · · Score: 2, Funny

      The president knows... it's the followers of him that we must shelter.

      "The majority of people who come out to wave do so in a friendly fashion, although there is of course the occasional unfriendly wave."
      -- George W. Bush

    5. Re:Protecting those in power from the evil truth. by pnuema · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The chaos won't contribute at all to making the secret service's job difficult. Ask any physical security specialist: It is almost impossible to stop an individual acting alone who is willing to sacrifice his life to accomplish his objective. It is the same as security through obscurity - it just plain doesn't work.

      The secret to physical security is the same as computer security - make the payoff not worth the cost. In other words, stop making people so pissed they are willing to die to kill you.

  5. Of course they are a threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Any attempt by citizens to communicate and organize outside of sanctioned government channels will be seen as a threat to security. Welcome to the future.

    1. Re:Of course they are a threat by cL0h · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Isn't it amazing how accurate George Orwell was when he wrote the book "1984" fifty six years ago. He didn't however foresee the precursive events or threats which would lead to totalitarian government control of civil liberties.
      Perhaps the catalysts don't matter since the world seems to be increasingly bent on raising walls rather then lowering them.
      So much for the global village!

      --
      cL0h
    2. Re:Of course they are a threat by freedom_india · · Score: 2, Insightful
      With Dubya as president for the next term, we can be sure George Orwell will turn in his grave. Already Carter is saying the basic conditions for a fair election in Florida is absent...Diebold's chief is a Dubya supporter...Diebold voting machines have glaring faults...is it any surprise that Democracy is of corporations, by corporate appointees and for corporates. We, as common peasants are "guided" to vote for a "chosen" candidate.

      Long live Democracy!

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  6. as always, our leaders look out for the elite by Cryofan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    before they look out for us.

    If it is lives they want to save, how about all the millions of working class people who die obesity, cancer, heart disease, etc? Instead we pay to make sure some elite figurehead won't have his hair rumpled by teenaged girls.

    Typical of the human critter....

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:as always, our leaders look out for the elite by CodeWanker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't think it's about celebrities. I think that's the only example they've got so far. A lot of it depends on what kind of awful threat the worriers in the government think we face.

      Are we going to have large numbers of suicide bombers waiting around for a target of opportunity? Suppose there were four. The first one signaled the second "I'm going off at 1st and main... Now." So the second bomber arrives. The next one to arrive goes off in the middle of the densest crowd of spectators, signalling that he's gone off.

      But, wait! you wouldn't need flash mobs for that; you just need the bad guys loitering every two or three blocks and waiting to have a crowd to blow up in.

      Hmmm... If you spot a high-value target, like a Prime Minister, wouldn't you just whack him if so equipped? Or call for backup if not? But not a flash mob...

      So these folks really ARE just looking for things to outlaw? Hmmm...

      --


      "Wow. Now THAT'S a lot of angry Indians." - Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer
    2. Re:as always, our leaders look out for the elite by CmdrGravy · · Score: 4, Funny

      Outlawing cities is a bit extreme however I agree something needs to be done.

      Maybe it would be better to cordon off the areas of the cities where the main terrorist targets are living or working: the business district, famous celebrities, politicians, influential business leaders etc and make sure they are well defended and secure.

      The main terrorist suspects could live outside this cordoned off area and maybe be given passes to get into to work as cleaners, shop assistants etc if they conform to sufficiently secure personality profiles.

      Terrorism is clearly the biggest and most dangerous threat the world has ever known and it's only by protecting those in power who do there best to protect us all that we can defeat it, that and lot's of bombs - laser guided bombs.

  7. Well as for America... by apachetoolbox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right to Peaceably Assemble

    The right to peacefully gather and parade or demonstrate to make one's views known or to support or oppose a public policy is based upon the twin guarantees of the freedom of speech and the right to peaceably assemble.

    Practicing your right to assemble is NOT a security risk.

    1. Re:Well as for America... by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The Kent State massacre occurred at Kent State University, Ohio, and involved the shooting of students by the National Guard on May 4, 1970. Students were protesting against American involvement in the Vietnam War; the demonstrations had arisen in response to the invasion of Cambodia that President Richard Nixon launched on May 1. The Ohio state governor had ordered the Guard onto campus in response to the burning of the ROTC building by arsonists the previous day. The militia were wearing gas masks in the hot sun (obscuring their vision and causing heat exhaustion) and had little training in riot control. Provoked by several hours of clashes with protesters throwing rocks and taunting them, the Guardsmen fired a single volley of rifle fire at the gathered crowd.

      No very large group protesting has ever been 100% peaceful. and No response from the government has ever been to protect those citizen's rights.

      If you believe that the Constitution or the Bill of Rights applies to everyone equally in the United States, you either just got here, or have lived under a rock for the past 200 years.

      It's the one ideal waved in everyone's faces that is the biggest hyprocacy on this planet.

      As a US citizen, that fact makes me sick.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:Well as for America... by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Practicing your right to assemble is NOT a security risk.

      Incorrect. It's not illegal, but it may very well may be a security risk.

      Put yourself in the shoes of a police officer or security agent -- if 200 people show up in your area out of the blue, you're going to be suspicious, and you're going to watch them closely. Maybe there's one bad egg in that crowd. Maybe they're all bad. Maybe there's no bad eggs, but while you're focused on watching them somebody else takes advantage of your guard being down and gets away with something.

    3. Re:Well as for America... by operagost · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The Constitution is a piece of paper. The ideas it is based upon, however, do apply to every person. It is up to everyone to make reality reflect this truth. Pessimism just leads to continued division and hatred. There will always be racists, bigots, chauvinists, murderers, and Slashdot trolls - because there will always be evil. This doesn't mean that we should give up on these ideas or say that the U.S. isn't a democracy because a select few try to destroy it. That's absurd defeatism.

      "The government" didn't fire on those students - the guardsmen did. And it wasn't all students who attacked the guardsmen without provocation - it was just the Kent State students.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    4. Re:Well as for America... by philbert26 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Practicing your right to assemble is NOT a security risk.

      The fact that your right is constitutionally protected doesn't mean it's not a security risk. It just means that the right is so important that the government is (supposedly) not allowed to deal with the risk by prohibiting peaceful assembly.

      Everything you do in a free society is a security risk. I don't have a government camera in my apartment, so as far as the government knows I could be making bombs in there. That's a security risk. But some risks are worth taking! We have to find a balance between security risks from terrorists and risks from oppressive government. Risk-free life is not possible. We shouldn't allow ourselves to be convinced that if something carries risk then it should automatically be banned.

    5. Re:Well as for America... by internic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree with you that the right to assembly is essential. Unfortunately, those rights have often been ignored in the past and are currently being violated with little objection from society at large.

      Certainly you've seen some coverage of IMF/WTO protests in the last few years: protesters getting beaten by batons, hundreds or thousands of people getting arrested. Now, some of those people are arrested for vandalism or because they attack police officers without cause, and certainly they should be arrested. So it leads one to wonder if they're all being arrested for good cause.

      If you check out, for example, the Washington Post's coverage of the tactics used against protestors at the Republican National Convention you'll see that a great many people are arrested for no reason other than exercising their first amendment rights. Then, of course, there is the issue of the "Free Speech Zones".

      Now certainly, it's reasonable to say that people can't block traffic or similar without a prior warning or a permit, but increasingly these "time, place, and manner" restrictions are used to prevent people from protesting at all, and people are arrested even when they comply with the law. Clearly, we still have a lot of free speech in this country, but these are disturbing trends. So, all I'm saying is that while certainly the right to assemble should be respected, it is already trampled on regularly.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
  8. Ehm.. by boesOne · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you reason this way then everything is a threat to security. How insecure is prince William anyway if he's surrounded by teenage girls ? Are we afraid of teenage-terror-girls ?

    1. Re:Ehm.. by jpetts · · Score: 4, Funny

      Are we afraid of teenage-terror-girls ?

      Hell, yes! We're /.ers...

      --
      Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
  9. Someone think of the celebrities! by Sanity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So what - ban text messaging to protect poor Britney Spears next time someone spots her getting married in a Vegas drive-thru chapel? I think it might be easier, and definitely preferable, to ban celebrities.

    1. Re:Someone think of the celebrities! by fatmonkeyboy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You know, they actually did that back in the "old days" in Athens. It wasn't at all uncommon for very popular people to be exiled.

      I've forgotten what the justification was, but I suspect the idea was to avoid demagogues.

  10. Flash Mobs? by FortKnox · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wow, this isn't NEARLY as interesting as the "Flash" Mobs I was thinking of...

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
  11. Tinfoil Hat Government. by grub · · Score: 4, Interesting


    When the British police confiscate cell phones as they are apparently "empowered to do so" are they allowed to go though the phones call list and stored numbers or would that require a warrant? The ol' "guilt by association" thing...

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  12. please report to the nearest Free Speech Zone by Cryofan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    you are living in the past. Have you not heard of Free Speech Zones?

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:please report to the nearest Free Speech Zone by miu · · Score: 4, Insightful
      As far as I can tell the Republicans are a lot more creepy and sinister when they do this sort of thing.

      The fringies hated Clinton for Ruby Ridge and Waco, but much of what Bush has enacted scares the hell out of normal people that think about it. The fact that there is a large section of the Republican party that seems downright excited by the prospect of the apocalypse and authoritarian religious government is another thing that tends to make moderate Americans a little nervous.

      Yeah I'm not exactly excited about the Dems myself, power seekers are often parasites who love control as far as I am concerned, but the Republicans make me a lot more nervous than the Democrats at this point.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
  13. Ugh by nuclear305 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not trying to troll here...but these days everything is a security threat. I'm sure a cat wondering the lawn of the whitehouse is a security threat just because *gasp* somebody may have injected it to carry some kind of biological agent.

    As for flash mobs, what exactly can you do about them? The minute you start trying to use force to prevent flash mobs from forming (read: before they turn violent...IF they even do) you're going to have everyone yelling about how oppressed they are.

    These so-called "security threats" come with the right to be able to leave your house whenever you want...

    1. Re:Ugh by RPI+Geek · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm sure a cat wondering the lawn of the whitehouse is a security threat just because *gasp* somebody may have injected it to carry some kind of biological agent.

      My first thought to that was "well I suppose if you use a catapult. . ."

      Sorry, bad joke :)

      --

      - "Nobody came out that night, not one was ever seen. But Old Man Stauf is waiting there, crazy sick and mean!"
  14. Mobs of flashing girls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Tech-savvy girls flashing for Prince William -
    now THAT's a power to be reckoned with! :)

  15. Security, Security by Tyndmyr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I believe that people are far too paranoid about security...Every possible advance in communications could help "dangerous" people as well as serve useful purposes. And apparently Britian treats protesters different if they have a cell phone...

    --
    Support more choices in goverment-Vote 3rd party.
  16. RCMP = Royal Canadian Mounted Police by TheLoneDanger · · Score: 2, Informative

    For those who don't know (and the article doesn't seem to explain), RCMP stands for Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Y'know the mounties, with the red uniforms. I believe they are roughly equivalent to the FBI, though I am sure someone else can explain exactly what their duties are.

    --

    "But I trust in the people's capacity for reflection, rage and rebellion." -Oscar Olivera
    1. Re:RCMP = Royal Canadian Mounted Police by Wybaar · · Score: 2, Informative
      --
      Y|
    2. Re:RCMP = Royal Canadian Mounted Police by sunwukong · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yup,

      RCMP == FBI
      CSIS == CIA
      CSE == NSA

      Roughly speaking of course -- the exact details are framed in their separate charters and, of course, the constitution differs between our two countries.

    3. Re:RCMP = Royal Canadian Mounted Police by WormholeFiend · · Score: 4, Informative

      The RCMP enforces federal laws and statutes.

      In provinces where there is no provincial police, it also enforces provincial laws and statutes, usually as a police force under contract with the provincial government.

      Some cities and towns also contract the RCMP for municipal police services as well.

      From their website: We provide a total federal policing service to all Canadians and policing services under contract to the three territories, eight provinces (except Ontario and Quebec), approximately 198 municipalities and, under 172 individual agreements, to 192 First Nations communities.

      Also for those who don't know, "First Nations" refers to Native Americans.

    4. Re:RCMP = Royal Canadian Mounted Police by Egonis · · Score: 2, Informative

      CSIS (Canadian Secret Intelligence Service)
      - Similar, if not equal to the CIA

      RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police
      - Federal Police
      - Similar, if not equal to FBI Duties

      OPP (Ontario Provincial Police) Example
      - Provincial Police
      - Similar, if not equal to State Police

      Municipal Police
      - Obvious

    5. Re:RCMP = Royal Canadian Mounted Police by kurokaze · · Score: 2, Informative

      No they are not part of the Canadian Forces reserve. They do not fall under the QR&Os, CFAOs, DAODs or Code of Service Discipline.

      They also cannot be summoned to war by order-in-council.

      That website has it wrong.

    6. Re:RCMP = Royal Canadian Mounted Police by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OK, let's get things started on the right foot here: The mounties originally started off as the NWMP - the NorthWest Mounted Police - and their job was to provide policing services to the Northwest, which had absolutely none at that point in time.

      Your link to the globeandmail site is utter bull - it's nothing but utter conjecture and opinion on the part of the author, desperately trying to pin the FLQ crisis on the RCMP themselves.

      Also, if your father has a record after 30 years, surely he is clear aware there are myriad ways to get these notes removed your record? Also, I find it hard to believe that you are barred from 'ever' holding a security clearance - there are multiple levels of security clearance in Canada, with large numbers of Public Service employees holding the lowest rank.

      Your firsthand view of a (1) investigation gone wrong by the RCMP by no means turns the entire force into a 'bunch of clueless morons'. I'd think labelling you as a 'clueless moron' by extrapolating from a single event would be a better course of action.

      And finally, you give absolutely NO reason for why the FBI is a 'model' police force, compared to the RCMP. FFS, if you're going to try and knock the RCMP, do a better job of it next time.

  17. Flash mobs? by Sanity · · Score: 5, Funny
    2002 just called, they want their fad for unemployed bloggers back.

    (Yeah yeah, and tell them they can have their joke back too)

  18. That's hardly surprising... by i_r_sensitive · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For those who haven't read it, try "The Permanent Floating Riot Club" by Larry Niven. I can't remember which anthologies it is in, but a worthwhile read. At the end you won't be surprised by this phenom, except maybe that it isn't worse...

    --
    "Talk minus action equals nothing" - Joey Shithead, D.O.A.
    "Talk minus action equals /." -
  19. Well, duh by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...so what they're saying is that spontaneous, large, disorganized groups of people in a small space can pose a threat to security.

    Dene Moore, you get a cookie. I can't wait to read your next exposé, "Bullets Fired From New, Hi-Tech Guns May Be Deadly"...

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  20. Most are not political, just silly. by suso · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Like this one:

    Everyone who reads this should go to this guy's blog and post a comment about how you are looking for someone named Betty.

  21. Brush up your Niven.... by abb3w · · Score: 4, Informative
    "Flash Crowd", 1973; collected in "The Flight of the Horse".
    "The Last Days of the Permanent Floating Riot Club", 1974; collected in "A Hole in Space".

    Unfortunately, the solution is going to have to be different. The stories make a starting point for thinking about the problem.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  22. The same threat as cellular phones. by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 4, Informative
    If I A few years back at the Philadelphia RNC a person from 2600 was arrested for using a cellular phone to commit a crime. He was accused of using the phone to arrange a riot.

    Of course, the entire case was eventually dismissed.

  23. You'd think . . . . by theparanoidcynic · · Score: 2, Funny

    That tech-savy girls would be smart enough to set their sights on a better target than prince William . . . .

    --
    Only in a Slashdot fantasy can a Slackware install turn into several hours of sex . . . . .
  24. Flash Mobs = Democracy by grunt107 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As usual, the government is attempting to subvert a technology that is pure democratic freedom of speech. Wish to gather and protest a government official/stance? Gather a flash mob quickly and protest. Nothing terroristic about that - or every method of communication on topics not approved by the government will be outlawed under the 'terror' banner.
    The only manner this could fall under the 'terrorism' moniker is for the flash mob to be directed to do something illegal. Kinda like 'Gather at xxxx street and bring bombs and guns to eliminate yyyy official/people'.
    As pointed out before and proven here, labeling something as a potential terrorist threat is the new way freedom is subverted - and this must stop.

  25. So what is the TSA then? by baudilus · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's the largest flash mob in the US. Why do you think they call them "Thousands Standing Around"?

  26. Flash Coffee and Ice Cream by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 5, Funny
    Back when I was a UC Santa Cruz student, people used to organize food runs on the message board on the open access student timesharing computer, a PDP-11 called "ucscb", that ran BSD. You know, with adm-3a terminals and all.

    Yes, I'm that old. This was around 1986 or so.

    Anyway, one night there was a food run declared for midnight at the Lyons restaurant in Capitola. One hundred and ten students descended all at once on the otherwise empty restaurant, and all ordered coffee, some ice cream, and at the end asked for separate checks, each of which ranged from maybe one to five dollars.

    There were only a couple employees on staff when we arrived. It took a long time to get served because they had to call off-duty employees on the phone, waking them out of bed to come work for the hour or two we were there.

    As we prepared to depart, the restaurant manager sternly said "Don't ever do that again".

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
    1. Re:Flash Coffee and Ice Cream by Tyndmyr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Used this once at college...one person drove a truck with a keg of beer up the admin steps, and everyone, notified via cell-phones(warned via internet), drank it dry and ran before the cops made it there...

      --
      Support more choices in goverment-Vote 3rd party.
    2. Re:Flash Coffee and Ice Cream by coyote_oww · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The problem is that the manager is getting paid to fill hours, and keep the place running, not to serve people. It's a metric problem - you get the behavior you encourage. If you pay hourly pay, with no bonuses for sales or performance, then customers are just a hassle. If the manager had some kind of bonus riding on how many people were served, or $$ of good/service sold, his attitude would adjust itself. Maybe.

      Sudden surges of people when you're not manned up to deal with it is still a problem.

  27. perhaps the reverse could be made true ... by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Could the Internet, phones, etc. be used equally well to detect, prepare for, disrupt and otherwise mess with Flash-mobbers?

    Of course that would require a sufficiently large and motivated group of people with lots of time on their hands who are interested in preventing mayhem ... ;)

  28. How to Get Away with Murder: by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 2, Insightful
    ... call your victim a terrorist.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
  29. Seems to me by Treeluvinhippy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The technology is simply being used for what was originaly envisioned. Worldwide cheap and efficient communication that can change the world.

    And since it's changing the world it isn't surprising to me that there are those who would like to see this form of communication restricted.

    --
    >
  30. Signal to noise.... by zippity8 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As always, it can be easily solved.

    Just put this article in the paper, and wait for other teenage boys to get the idea of throwing a few posts on the web about how the "prince" (or whatever target you want) will be at a certain location.

    Then just sit back and wait as all the girls run around frantically, desperately trying to find someone that isn't there.

    More noise == problem solved.

  31. This is even a greater threat to national security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...than masses of students stuffing themselves into volkswagons and phone booths.

  32. The quote is..... by Jsprat23 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
    Margaret Mead

    1. Re:The quote is..... by Tackhead · · Score: 2, Interesting
      > "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
      > Margaret Mead

      "Originally overheard in a Munich beer hall, 1923, and again at the Wansee Conference, 1942." - A Cynic

    2. Re:The quote is..... by Pope · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The massive firebombing of Japan killed far more people than the 2 A-bombs combined. I'd say the USAF was doing a pretty good job of enraging the Japanese with civilian casualties up until the Bombs were dropped. See "The Fog Of War" for more background and detailed info, Macnamara himself argues that he and LeMay would have been tried as war criminals had the US lost.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    3. Re:The quote is..... by hazem · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What were the WTC attacks genuine retaliation for? "Offences" against the Muslim people which Bin Laden never cared about until he needed justification for terrorist attacks

      Actually, Bin Laden has been clear about this. He has 3 main grievances. (this is unlike the old Ayatollahs of Iran who considered the west "the great satan"). OBL is upset about:

      1) Sanctions on Iraq, which he claims killed millions and caused starvation and malnourshment.
      2) Near-unequivocal support of Israel and what he sees as oppression of the Palestinian people.
      3) Placement of US troops and bases in Saudi Arabia and the US's support for what he says is a corrupt un-Islamic dictatorship.

      Osama's a nasty SOB and deserves a shit-storm in hell, but let's not ignore that he has rational reasons for what he did. They were at least rational from his point of view, and his power grew because there were a lot of people who agreed with his issues.

      Not liking him, or the fact that he committed heinous crimes, does not invalidate his initial complaints.

    4. Re:The quote is..... by hazem · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not saying anything of the kind. I AM saying that it's unwise to simply cast Osama a raving madman who just hates the US because of our freedom.

      Too many people fly into hyperbole and make Osama out as a madman who hates the US because of our freedom. That's simply shortsighted and childish. Unfortunately, too many Americans are happy to believe jingoistic rants.

      "They don't love their children like we do."
      "They hate us because we have freedom."
      "They're incapable of living in a democracy."
      "They'll never have peace because they love violence."

      It's also blindly naive to go around thinking that our actions and our policies do not have any effect on other people in the world.

      Osama's a great orator and he makes arguments that ring true with a lot of people in the region. Arabs are tired of the outside powers pushing their way in the region.

      They hate the the way the US suports Israel, no matter how badly they treat the Palestinians.

      They hated Saddam and they hated the sanctions. And while Saddam had the power to turn that around, they tend to blame the US for keeping the sanctions in place. Of course, before the invasion, Saddam was wiling to talk. Bush said that it didn't matter what Saddam said or did, we were going to invade. That doesn't win friends and influence people.

      They don't like hearing Rumsfeld hinting that Syria and Iran will be next. Doesn't he realize that plays exactly into what Osama predicted the US would try to do?

      They do not believe the lie that we went there to save the peopel of Iraq from Saddam. The fact that our first priority was to protect the oil fields rather protect power and water demonstrates that quite effectively.

      Our actions in the middle east do have repercutions, and even here at home. The running failure in Iraq has served Osama tremoundously. It proved him right, and will probably provide lots more people and money to commit acts of terrorism.

      Osama may be an opportunist and uses current events to push his cause. But is that any different than any other power monger? Look at how 9/11 was used in this country to push massive surveillance systems and the curtailment of liberties.

      I dare say that Osama is not the only one that can be accused of hating our freedom.

      Until we (Americans) can figure that we need to learn to see the world through they eyes of the people we impact, we're destined for more attacks at home, and more invasions abroad.

      We live in a big neighborhood called the world. And right now, we're that neighbor that nobody likes. We park in front of the neighbor's house, dump our garbage in the lot behind us, and play our music loud until the wee hours of the morning. We're the mayor, so the police don't bother us when they call, and then we get indignant when our neighbors complain to us.

    5. Re:The quote is..... by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Are you claiming US policies and actions in the Middle East are not "offenses" against the Muslim people?

      While one might quibble over whether "cultural invasion" is an "offense", the supporting of the Israel oppression and genocide of the Palestinians is clearly an offense, as well as the supporting of the Arab monarchies in exchange for oil.

      Not to mention colonialism and religious warfare going back centuries.

      bin Laden's error was in killing US citizens who were clueless about any of this. Had he limited his attacks to the White House, Pentagon, and especially the CIA, I doubt anybody would have been as upset since it would have been obvious why he attacked those targets.

      Still, from his viewpoint, it IS a war against the West - not because "they hate our freedom" (although many of them probably do) but because they hate our policies. This has been explicitly stated by bin Laden and numerous other Arab critics for years now.

      And it is no surprise that bin Laden regards Westerners in any capacity as the enemy - since most fools in the West regard any Muslim as the enemy.

      As for the Japanese, they could have been defeated in COMBAT BY COMBATANTS. Civilians did not need to be killed for this purpose. Any other statement is justification for war crimes. Period.

      Of course, as a Transhuman, I couldn't care less about how many humans get killed by whatever means - as long as they aren't of value to the Transhuman purpose. But pointless killing is incorrect by any measure. And in that respect, both 9/11 and the nuking of Japan - and the continued slaughter of Iraqi civilians by US troops - as well as the random killing of Iraqis by Iraqis - are incorrect.

      Go here for a video of the US continuing to murder civilians in Iraq in the name of "peace, democracy and the 'war on terrorism'.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    6. Re:The quote is..... by hazem · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sure, there are lots of problems in the Mideast, and the governments there play a key role in those problems. But like most Americans, you're still only looking at it from your own point of view.

      Bend your mind a bit and imagine that you're an Saudi citizen that is just barely getting by. You know the royal family is oppressive and corrupt. And it's very buddy-buddy with the US Government. And you know that you can't complain because the mutaween will at least beat you if not kill you.

      You hear people like Osama who tell you that your government is corrupt and that the US is behind them. It rings true enough. He tells you that the US wants to keep the corrupt and oppressive government in your country because it guarantees them cheap oil. He says that the US wants to dominate the region and points to examples such as the Iraqi sanctions and the US bases in your own country. And he says that all that money coming from the Americans who buy the cheap oil is being squandered by that family, rather than being spent on social welfare and economic development.

      Now from your point of view as a Saudi, you probably don't like the US very much. You'd even feel justified in hating them because you see how they play a role in your misery. Osama says he's fighting the good fight, trying to kick the US hard enough to get them out of the Middle East, and you might even feel justified in sending some money to his cause, or even sending your son to fight in it.

      I know it can be hard to make the break and see things through others eyes. So, lets come back to the US. We've been attacked by a bunch of Muslims who seem to hate us. They bombed embassies abroad, attacked a ship, and then toppled the twin towers. "They hate us because we are free", we are told. And we're afraid and angry of what they did to us and by God, we're not going to let it happen again. Our leaders tell us we need to invade Afghanistan to get those terrorists. Then they tell us we need to invade Iraq because there are terrorists there too. And it makes sense. All these attacks have been carried out by Muslims from these Muslim countries. Maybe we're a bit skeptical, but the leaders tell us we're fighing the good fight and that God is on our side. We're convinced enough to spen our money on it, put the ribbons in our windows, and send our sons for the cause.

      As an American, I feel that with our wealth and power, we should be an example and help those who are less fortunate. But, I don't think we can bomb and invade other countries into better economies, higher literacy rates, and improved human rights. Sadly, our government is not interested in these things. All it cares about is our energy security and it will work to keep the regimes in place that ensure that cheap flow of oil.

      As an American, I'm ashamed of the fact that my government often choses to support tyranical dictators and monarchies for the expedient short-term return in cheap resources and the illusion of security. It is exactly these short-sighted policies that breed a hatred and distrust of my government.

      The encouraging thing is that many Americans don't directly support these policies. In many cases we're simply not aware of what is done in our names. The sad part, though, is that too many Americans are content with being ignorant and resist the idea that our government does bad things to other people and countries. We're raised to believe we're the good guys, fighting for the good cause, and doing good works in the world.

      The ingorance of the fact that this is often not the case is why so many Americans are surprised that people hate us. Not aware of what's done in our name, it's easy to then believe it when we're told, "they hate us because of our freedom." Clearly their governments (the very ones we support) don't support freedom, so it must be true.

  33. Coordinated behavior = power by invid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Historically, the reason large groups of people could be controlled by small groups is that the small groups were able to coordinate their behavior better. This usually took years of training within a culture of discipline (like the Roman army). Now, with technology, it is easier to coordinate the behaviors of large groups of people. Your seeing more of this sort of thing with grass roots campain activity over the internet. However, this will lead to unexpected side effects which I certainly can't predict, and I imagine has the entrenched powers-that-be worried, because if you're in power you want the general population to be predictable.

    --
    The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
  34. Re:Yes, they really could be dangerous by Doverite · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, a high powered rifle at a distance is dangerous too and they let the ban on assault rifles run out contrary to campaign promises. Shouldn't we ban those, or how about pretzels for that matter. This whole topic is absurd. Freedom requires risks, and resposibilities, you can't be completely safe and completely free at the same time.

    --
    You can legislate morally you can't legislate morality
  35. Re:Flash Mobs and Terrorists by Baby+Duck · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You write as if the bearded-one mind-controlled everyone in the crowd, stripping them of all self-will. As much as you'd like for it to be true, it's not. So the "judge, jury, executioner" cliche doesn't fit at all.

    A bunch of people chose to do this. One guy might have ignited it, but please stop acting like he's a corruptor that will consume your soul and force you to do his bidding.

    Flash mobs have the potential to ensnare young participants in things they would normally not even dream of.

    GOOD! It sure beats youthful apathy, doesn't it?

    --

    "Love heals scars love left." -- Henry Rollins

  36. Hmm... by Greyfox · · Score: 2, Funny

    If only there were people whose job it was to prevent mayhem... We can dream, can't we?

    --

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

  37. All you need is a sorority girl phone tree by csoto · · Score: 3, Funny

    Like in this movie.

    Arianna H. talks about it, too.

    --
    There exists no way of exchanging information without making judgments. --Bene Gesserit Axiom
  38. How are flash mobs more dangerous than say... by Demon-Xanth · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...British Soccer fans? They show up at a predetermined time, riot, and then disperse to thier home country. And they've been known to cause injuries and death!

    A soccer ball is the symbol of real terror!

    --
    If you think education is expensive, you should try ignorance -- Derek Bok, president of Harvard
  39. opposing the president? blasphemy! by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    Text-messaging was instrumental to organizing public demonstrations in the Phillippines that forced President Joseph Estrada from office

    Well, of course they're a security threat! We don't want groups of unimportant people forcing politicians from office, now do we?

  40. Only if you are a fascist by xtheunknown · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Flash mobs only pose a security risk if you are a fascist. I think with the advent of the cell phone and text messaging, the possibility of a coup d'etat in the developed world is slim to none. Before any would be junta could consolidate power there would be protests in the street, largely due to cell phones and text messaging. I think this a good thing. It safeguards our freedoms and if a few celebrities have to put up with mobs of teenage girls, then so be it.

    --

    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
  41. amphetamines of the people by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Flash mobs, and the decentralized media systems to organize them, are a threat to the security of the corporate state. It attacks the popularity of the official media, like ABCNNBCBS, which hide their incompetence and complicity behind popularity. The masters of the status quo can't abide the people freely speaking, assembling, and believing whatever they want, when the corporate edifice depends on the consent manufacturing industry producing through the proper channels.

    "Flash mobs" are under attack first, because they've got "mobs" in their name, and most Americans have no other idea of what they are, never having the chance to participate. Once they're on the "terrorist" side of the "with us or against us" equation, look for blogs to get lumped in. I'd expect that by the end of 2005, several of the most reliable websites without FCC-controlled components will have been spiked with "true lies". Like the simulated Bush draft-dodging memos that killed CBS as a messenger of their subsequent Iraqmire documentary. The mediacracy prefers potatoes to surfers.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:amphetamines of the people by coyote_oww · · Score: 2, Insightful
      That is such a bogus complaint. CBS shot itself in the foot - there was no conspiracy. No one forced CBS to ignore the contrary evidence, they did that on their own.

      The political world is rough, there are millions of rumors about every politician, both good and bad. There are known to be any number of people who hate Bush (or Kerry, or [insert_name_here]) and will fabricate any kind of story about said politician. Check Snopes - false rumors are a daily thing. What investigative journalism is supposed to do is investigate the validity of this stuff. CBS was in such a tizzy to produce a story that they forgot to actually do the investigation.

      They were sloppy, and they're paying for it. This is Good.

  42. The unfathomable mind of law-enforcement... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 5, Funny
    (From TFA:)
    More often, flash mobs have no discernible purpose at all. Last August about 40 people gathered at the Place des Arts in Montreal to toss rubber ducks in a fountain and quack.
    Ahh, the mysteries of what goes on in the little brains of law-enforcement officers...
  43. Flash mobs work for freedom also by Simonetta · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Flash mobs can work for basic freedoms when the political system is too corrupt or stagnant to respond to changes in the modern world.

    Say you and your friends are tired of being arrested for possession of marijuana. You feel that if you're not disturbing the peace, it isn't anyone's business. And you feel that the people who do the arresting and prosecuting are just in it for the bribes and kickbacks from lawyers to the police and the judges, or they are making tons of money by investing in corporate prison systems.

    So whenever you see or you be in 420 arrests happening, you send a flash bulletin. Many people who agree that this situation must change show up.
    They surround the arrest perimeter. They don't leave when ordered. They just aren't reasonable.
    A single arrest turns into a hundred arrests (for 'terrorism').
    This happens over and over. It's not a one-time thing. Eventually, the authorities begin to get the message through their cement heads that the time has come for the situation to change.
    It changes. No more 420 arrests; regardless of the 'law'.
    This is not exactly how democracy is supposed to work, but it is the only way that does in corporate dictatorship (like where the people who make big bucks selling prescriptions to Marinol reinvest the money in corporate prisons, which are filled with (black) people serving time for being unable to come up with the money to bribe the judge, ahh... excuse me, for 'using drugs').

    1. Re:Flash mobs work for freedom also by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 5, Informative

      Civil disobedience is a very good idea in principle, and with the right enemy it can work wonders. But the WTO arrests, the RNC arrests, the willingness to shut down airplanes and whole airports because someone finds a piece of paper with "BOB" written on it, the mass detention of muslims in LA a few years back, the indisputed fact that the US has _by far_ the highest incarceration rate in the world, it's all indicative of guys in charge not really giving a shit about public perception and being more concerned with CYA and maintaining their own jobs.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    2. Re:Flash mobs work for freedom also by secolactico · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Eventually, the authorities begin to get the message through their cement heads that the time has come for the situation to change.
      It changes. No more 420 arrests; regardless of the 'law'.


      Boy, that cracks me up! Given the current events, what will happen is that The Powers That Be will try to control the situation thru some bonehead restriction of technology.

      Are people using cell phone text messages to spread the word? Then expect said service to be restricted under some "security act".

      --
      No sig
    3. Re:Flash mobs work for freedom also by dougmc · · Score: 2, Interesting
      a few years back, the indisputed fact that the US has _by far_ the highest incarceration rate in the world
      Actually, the US is only slightly higher than Russia with 690 prisoners per 100k people vs. 675 per 100k. (My source , though it is 3 years old. I don't know of any more recent figures.)

      You're right, we do have the highest incarceration rate in the world, but it's not by far the highest rate.

    4. Re:Flash mobs work for freedom also by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Civil disobedience is the ONLY hope of change in America. Sure, they've put a whole lot of people in jail. Quite a few of them unjustly. But the vast majority of us still walk free. Even the vast majority of people who went to the protests you name.

      Maybe the jackboots don't care about public perception, but the public certainly does. If the opposition keeps bringing cameras to document peaceful protestors illegally attacked by police--and perhaps if protestors start policing themselves and establish clear guidelines to be followed to distinguish themselves from agent provacateurs--the maybe you'll be able to show the public who is more trustworthy.

      On the other hand, if the opposition abandons civil disobediance and tries to answer violence with violence, then the public will see that they are merely choosing between two sets of thugs. If the only alternative to facism and corporate dominance is violence and rage, then how can you expect people to care about anything more than whether the trains run on time?

      Remember, the American military is, far and away, the most powerful military in the world. The fact that you protestors are still alive is proof--our government is STILL afraid of civil disobedience. Throw away civil disobedience and you've lost the war.

      When you see the police in their riot armor and gas masks, with their tazers and guns, behind their shields--it should be obvious to you who is afraid of who. When they come to arrest you, stay calm. Concentrate on the pity you feel for your aggressors--who only beat you in order to mask their own fear and powerlessness in the face of your truth.

      In the 90s we all sang the praises of intellectual capital. In the 00s, perhaps we will realize that the real mental capital--the only true scarcity in our world--is honesty, honor, and self-restraint. If you can prove to the world that you have those things, the world will follow you. The fact that our government is not known for honesty right now should make things easier for those practicing civil disobediance.

    5. Re:Flash mobs work for freedom also by EinarH · · Score: 3, Insightful
      According to this study it's now; US 702 per 100k and Russia 628 per 100k.

      Not by far now, but maybe by far in 2010.

      --

      Melius mori in libertate quam vivere in servitute.

  44. OT: 'bearded terminal hacker' by sczimme · · Score: 2


    Did you just stumble across this phrase or something???

    In this thread you said and any true bearded terminal hacker would tell you as such. You then used the same phrase twice in the parent post:

    All it takes is one bearded terminal hacker gone bad
    Can we allow bearded terminal hackers to become judge, jury, and executioner


    I don't often notice this sort of thing, but having just left the 'Solaris vs Linux Continues' thread the additional instances of the phrase stood out.

    I do not think it means what you think it means.

    --
    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
  45. So, just jam them! by jbarr · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just give the celebs powerful, wearable "jammers" that obliterate all cell phone activity within a two-block radius! ;-)

    --
    My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
  46. Just British!?! by Lieutenant_Dan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What about the Dutch gangs (who used cell phones to arrange fights between fans of Feyenoord and Ajax), Italian ultras (Lazio fans have some clever communication network), Turkish fans, and most of the other countries.

    Heck, Canada had its flash mob when the hockey team won the world cup last week. They turned over cabs and made a nuisance of themselves in downtown Toronto.

    --
    Wearing pants should always be optional.
  47. The Fountainhead by SeanDuggan · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "The basic trouble with the modern world is the intellectual fallacy that freedom and compulsion are opposites. .... Let me give you a simple illustration. Traffic lights restrain your freedom to cross a street whenever you wish. But this restraint gives you the freedom from being run over by a truck. If you were assigned to a job and prohibited from leaving it, it would restrain the freedom of your career. But it would give you the freedom from the fear of unemployment. Whenever a new compulsion is imposed upon us, we automatically gain a new freedom. The two are inseparable. Only by accepting total compulsion can we achieve total freedom."
    'Ellsworth Touhey', the villain of Ayn RAND's The Fountainhead.
    London : Cassell, 1947.
    ^_^ I knew that one day, staying awake in English class would come in handy. We debated this one fairly extensively in class when it came up. It's got some points, at in terms of sometimes having to give up a bit of freedom for a bit of safety. But honestly, I don't think it works on a grander sense. While constraints may give you freedom from danger, they also constrict your path to that single safe one, which you have to trust not to end in a greater danger at that.
    --
    This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
    1. Re:The Fountainhead by Paulrothrock · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I don't think Ms. Rand had a very good command of the english language. You don't "gain a new freedom," you simply gain safety at the expense of freedom.

      Traffic Light Example: If you aren't an idiot, and can manage to time it right, you can get across the street without a light. I do it all the time. However, the light frees a bit of your brain from thinking about crossing the street, but you lose autonomy.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  48. About ten minutes ago by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 2, Funny
    Just got done sending the announcement and I'm out to make some money.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
  49. Assumptions by JohnnyNoSPAM · · Score: 2

    People have been protesting for years. Protesting peacefully is a right in America. When people feel passionately about a cause, they are going to persue actively that cause - technology or no technology. Improved communications means that the organization can conducted more efficiently. The article does not say this, but I hope that people do not have the assumption that improved technology equates to more crime. Crime comes from human nature, not technology. Crime has been with us as long as humanity itself.

    As to how to deal with it... there really isn't a lot anyone can do about it as the article suggests. I suppose that the best we can do is deal with crime as it arises and punish accordingly.

  50. Take the RCMP reports with a grain of salt by temojen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is the same police force who investigated the Raging Grannies as a subversive group.

  51. When I first read the headline... by Techguy666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...My first thought was that terrorists were contemplating using flash mobs to create an instant victim base...

    Sure, you have security crawling all around a popular building - big deal. The terrorist, posing as a fan of say, Britney Spears, creates a flash mob two blocks away from the secured building claiming that she was spotted there - and shows up at that spot with a bomb. Voila, several hundred victims appearing of their own free will, close enough to the security site to create absolute chaos.

    It didn't even occur to me that the Man considered flash mobs to be a threat in themselves... After all, there are certain Amendment rights to make this train of thought silly. I thought that the government was concerned about the public - not their right to assemble!

    1. Re:When I first read the headline... by dwaggie · · Score: 2, Funny

      Several hundred Britney fans gone in one go?

      That's not terrorism, that's cultural improvement!

      He's only a terrorist if you don't agree with him, after all.

  52. You are mistaken, "mob" can be "lookouts" by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 2, Informative

    You are completely mistaken. Did you even read the summary? The summary, let alone TFA, explained how the "mob" can unintentionally locate high valued targets. That the person calling the mob to a location could inadvetantly be acting as a lookout. That the mob converging on the location could inadvertantly be acting as camoflauge for a terrorist. Things are far more complicated than your post suggests.

  53. innate, perhaps by MenTaLguY · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It seems to be a primate thing.

    In one set of experiments, monkeys were willing to sacrifice very large quantities of their favorite beverage in order to simply look at pictures of higher-ranking monkeys in their social group for a period of time.

    Sort of puts a new spin on those celeb mags in the supermarket checkout lines, doesn't it?

    --

    DNA just wants to be free...
    1. Re:innate, perhaps by jafiwam · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wow, I'd love to have a link for that, might explain some of the folks infatuation with modern political figures too. Please post it if you have it.

    2. Re:innate, perhaps by Zeriel · · Score: 2, Informative

      I wanna see a cite for this. It'd be interesting to read the methodology.

      --
      "America has done some terrible things. But I know that Americans don't cheer when innocents die." -Dave Barry
    3. Re:innate, perhaps by MenTaLguY · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm afraid this is the best I can do for now.

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
  54. Learn how civil disobedience works by mengel · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This is exactly the kind of thing that gives civil disobedience a bad name. The people who successfully used civil disobedience (Ghandi, Martin Luther King, etc.) figured out where the benefit to the people in power was in the current system, and organized specific protests designed to remove those benefits.

    So Ghandi figured out that the British were making a fortune on the salt tax, and had made making sea salt illegal to make more tax money, so he organized lots of people to break that law and make sea salt. The point was not to flout the law, but rather to stop the money.

    Now do the similar analysis: According to your statement, the people profiting from the current drug laws are "...making tons of money by investing in corporate prison systems". You are proposing to get a factor of 10 or 100 more people arressted and jailed for each drug bust. So tell me, does that make those coprporate prison investors more money or less money?

    You have to actually learn from history to make a difference.

    --
    - "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men" -- Blue Oyster Cult, 'Godzilla'
    1. Re:Learn how civil disobedience works by mcmonkey · · Score: 5, Insightful
      It's about the money, but it's also about practicality. The sea salt protests clogged the jails and courts with petty criminals that would get out of court and commit the same crime just to get arrested again.

      Certainly the war on drugs has its profiteers and mercenaries, but jails take years to build. It's easy to make money on a sustained growth in the prisoner population; it's hard to make money on a sudden growth in what is essentially petty crime.

      There is also the ability to force an unjust government to face uncomfortable political realities. Who wants to first on the boat back to mother England with the news the practitioners of violent uncivil disobedience aren't being prosecuted because judges have 100s of cases of 'possession of salt with intent to season'?

      Likewise, how many politicians will run on the 'I let a serial rapist go free to make room for johnny pot-smoker' platform? Not many. You can clog up the courts with petty criminals and force politicians to choose between pot smokers and violent criminals. Witness the current debate in Chicago. I don't see legalization around the corner, but I do see more localities coming to the realization pot smokers are not public enemy # 1 and just cost too damn much to prosecute.

      To many, the benefit of the war on drugs is money. But for those who have allowed this war to escalate, and have the power to stop it, the benefit is political clout. Force the hand of the police with what is essentially a DoS attack on the court system, and the politicians will have some 'splaining to do.

    2. Re:Learn how civil disobedience works by mengel · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Except that approach clearly doesn't work -- all the prisons are already filled over capacity with people arrested on drug offenses -- it hasn't changed the laws, they've just used it as an excuse to build more prisons -> more money to you know who.

      If all you're doing is tying up police, they'll just hire more police, and advocate privatizing the police force so they can make money off of that, too. What you have to do is figure out who is making all the money from the current situation, and how people acting in concert can stop that money from flowing.

      So you have to ask yourself, who is making all the money from whatever you care about being illegal? Two groups:

      • those who sell it at astronomicly marked up prices
      • those who profit from lots of people being in jail.
      with, I suspect, the former group making the most money & therefore having the strongest interest.
      --
      - "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men" -- Blue Oyster Cult, 'Godzilla'
    3. Re:Learn how civil disobedience works by Psyrg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Although it sounds like a good idea to use ones self to clog the courts, have you considered what being a convicted criminal may mean?

      As far as I understand the US political system, would you be willing to give up your right to vote ever again just to put a point accross? What about being able to travel overseas?

  55. Govt use of SMS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What hasn't been discussed is the fact that police organizations also use SMS messaging as a way to deal with security issues (i.e., flash mobs can be used to "increase" security). I've seen police officers (not in the US though) text each to coordinate their movements against rowdy ruffians that were turning violent.

    With cell phones being so cheap, yet effective, it seems that flash mobbing may be a way around outdated equipment or non-functioning equipment.

  56. Re: Assualt Rifle Ban by Migraineman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The assualt rifle ban was one of those "feel good" pieces of legislation. High-power rifles were never the focus. Lawmakers were aiming to restrict rapid-fire short-barrel weapons that were predominantly used in urban combat evnironments. The final compromises made and the grandfather clauses created a "pre-ban" marketplace that very effectively bypassed the legislation. In summary, it was a complete waste of time.

    Banning "dangerous things" is always a bad idea. I have a hammer. It can be used as a weapon. Should it be banned? The distinction between "tool" and "weapon" has nothing to do with the item.

    Unfortunately, this position requires that we allow crimes to happen, and forces the police to be reactionary instead of preemptive. It's the only way to allow me, Joe LawAbidingCitizen, to have my freedom.

  57. Fair article, probaly a fair report too by SlashDread · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I mean, c'mon, burn every "Freedom==security threat" wanker at my account, but the article is fair. Even a Mountie (Well prolly not a mountie, but some IT manager for the Police) was quoted saying "Every twist in technology has benefits and not-so-beneficial things that occur".

    The original Mountie report was quoted to say flash mobs are a "phenomenon to be reckoned with" and they are bloody well right. They are the police. Flash mobs ARE a force. Leddem reckon with it. Thats them jobs.

    I mean, Its not like "The Man" recommended to do away with cell phones entirely or anything, that would be preposterous even in the US of A.
    And this is Canada speaking.

    "/Dread"

  58. Please mod INSIGHTFUL not FUNNY by jridley · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anybody who modded that funny apparently doesn't know what's going on.

  59. Project Mayhem by suso · · Score: 2, Funny

    We can dream, can't we?

    The first rule of project mayhem is you do not ask questions.

  60. Emulate the Swiss in crime prevention by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Preventing crime is a necessary function of society, not just punishing criminals but fortunately there's a Right Way to do it without imposing draconian restrictions on individual liberty.

    The Swiss are issued guns as part of their mandatory military service, and required to keep them in the home and be proficient with them. You don't hear much about violent crime being committed in Switzerland.

    Arming citizens, giving them the duty and more importantly the *ability* to protect themselves, is a great way to prevent crime. Unfortunately, the USA is so stricken with cultural victimitis that even though guns are still allowed, actually using them in self-defense is likely to result in civil or criminal prosecution because the would-be assailant is a victim of The Man, racial profiling, whatever. It is strange that this is one of the few cases Europeans provide a social model that Americans would do well to emulate.

    How far would a terrorist, or even a normal murderer or rapist, get in a well-armed society? Especially the kind of society where the people can text-message each other quickly and easily? The end of the Wild West started with the proliferation of the telegraph, so that distant towns could communicate with each other and warn each other about dangerous outlaws.

    --
    N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
    1. Re:Emulate the Swiss in crime prevention by TykeClone · · Score: 2, Funny

      You'd have a "flash posse" then.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  61. US flash mobs by Southpaw018 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The article forgot to mention the heavy, heavy use of SMS to organize flash mobs in protest to both the DNC and RNC. This is not an "a-American" phenomenon.

    --
    ACs are modded -6. I don't read you, I don't mod you, I don't see you. Don't like it? Don't be a coward.
  62. In a secret bunker somewhere by Waab · · Score: 2, Funny

    General Jack D. Ripper is already proclaiming: "Mr. President, we cannot allow a flash mob gap!!!"

  63. GOP "more creepy" than Dems' prison-like FSZs? by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At the DNC, protesters were herded into fenced enclosures with concertina wire. At the RNC there were far more lenient restrictions as to where and how people may protest.

    There is a cultural assumption on the political scene that the Democrats are all compassionate progressives (so their actions are ipso facto less evil), and the Republicans are all hateful religious zealots (so their actions are ipso facto more evil). It seems the Republicans are far more creepy to you simply because they are Republicans, and any restrictions that exist just proves their jackboot nature. I guess the DNC's prison-like FSZ's are simply just necessary steps to ensure that the protesters (many of them likely Republicans or GOP-sympathetic libertarians) don't spread their vile hateful poison while Kerry "Reports for Duty".

    --
    N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
  64. Its banned here.. by xot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Its banned in India due to security threats.The police think it can lead to major disruptions.The last flash mob that I heard about was pretty successful with people there for a few minutes.
    All this ws co ordinated through SMS(text messaging). But the main organiser was called up by the cops the next day and asked not to hold any more of such mobs or there would be arrests.I don't think any one wants to face the prospect of an arrest just for holding flash mobs.

    --
    Lord of the Binges.
  65. what the?.... by nmec · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't know what the flashmobs in the US are like but the ones here (London) are fun, non-political gatherings.

    Everyone talks as though they're dangerous out-of-control, pretencious politcal statements thought up by flunked out students.

    So far I have been to all but one of the flashmobs here in London and at every single one there has been zero-police presence, but it isn't as though they can't get the information out fast enough or arrange the man-power. Not this minute did I receive an email outlining the next mob in London (a week from now)

    Every time there has been a mob it's on the evening news, and not once has the idea of 'terrorist attacks' surfaced, it is always a light-hearted affair (note this is all post 9/11 as well)

    I think this just goes to show the highly-overzealous and inanity of current thought towards anyone normal having something remotely near un-regulated fun. Not to mention the seemingly constant specture of 'terrorism' and other assorted panic buzz-words 'biological' 'chemical' 'islam' 'mushroom cloud'...you get the idea.

    I'll be going to the mob next week regardless of what all the politcal advisors and sercurity experts say.

  66. New Media is always suspect by mhollis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    People of a certain age remember when "Television would rot the minds of the youth of America" and "Rock and Roll was 'dangerous jungle music' that would cause uncontrollable urges in today's youth." These were horrified reactions to new media on the part of the more conservative elements of society.

    At the same time, the "conservative" elements of US society applauded when the fax machine in Soviet Russia became a tool for the masses to communicate without government censorship. Yeltsin came to power largely due to mass faxes in Russia (predomanently in Moscow) told the real story of the government coup attempt on Gorbachev. Gorby lost face because he "allowed" it to happen by remaining Communist and a well-informed (via fax) Yeltsen became an instant hero because he stood up to the Red Army generals who wanted Gorby's ouster.

    Obviously, the conservative elements in Soviet Russia didn't think so highly of the fax machine.

    I note one Russian news service is called "Interfax" and, for a while, was a very independant and trusted news agency.

    What bothers me is that laws have been passed to allow the confiscation of cellular phones and other new media devices to prevent the use of these new media for the purpose of organization "against" something or "for" something else. These laws will be selectively enforced to "edit" what kinds of flash mobs will be permitted by governments who wish to use those laws as that kind of tool.

    I would predict that this kind of "editing" will amount to unequal enforcement. For example, were Conservative Christians in the US to "Flashmob" a clinic that offers family planning, there would be few arrests under a Bush government. But a monthly "flashmob," also known as Critical Mass was broken up by police in New York in late September because the riders supposedly went where police decided they should not go (even though they were obeying all traffic laws).

    Critical Mass has become a "reason to arrest" for the NYPD only since their August 28th event just before the Republican National Convention.

    This amounts to unequal enforcement and standing before US law enforcement, as no prior Critical Mass gathering had ever resulted in arrests.

    Critical Mass holds the meets in order to promote non-polluting transportation and encourage the construction and maintenence of safe bike lanes. That doesn't sound like terrorism to me

    --
    Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
  67. Flash Democracy a Security Threat by freality · · Score: 2, Insightful


    "Congress shall make no law... abridging the right of the people peaceably to assemble..."

    Because it used to, and people couldn't gather and protest the abuse of power. Don't believe the hype.

  68. And the alternative by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    would have been a full scale invasion on the Japanese mainland. On the order of 1,000,000 Allied dead, and maybe 10 times that Japanese dead.

    1. Re:And the alternative by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Given the choice between two terrible alternatives to end that war, which would you choose?

      And you must choose one of them. No waffling.

  69. What the hell are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
    But the RCMP has no problems in infliltrating and manipulating terrorist groups it setup. For example, 34 years ago, the RCMP arranged for a corrupt minister to be kidnapped and killed days before he was to be arraigned for being in the mob, thus not only sparing embarrassment to the government, but also giving a nice pretext to declare martial law and help eliminate the prime minister's political ennemies.

    I read the article you pointed to, where does it say that the RCMP setup a terrorist group? Where does it say that the RCMP arranged for someone to kidnap and murder this minister? The closed thing I could see was this:

    On Oct. 5, 1970, members of the FLQ kidnapped British diplomat James Cross. The Mounties had thoroughly infiltrated the organization years earlier, yet the situation was not deemed sufficiently urgent to prevent Premier Robert Bourassa from flying to New York to woo American investors. However, with the kidnapping of Pierre Laporte (and two days before his murder), things took on a feverish quality.

    Which only states that the Mounties had infiltrated, that is, had informats or under cover agents, in the FLQ. That certainly does not mean they had any influence over the decisions the FLQ made. At worse it shows a failure to act.

    Assumine that Laporte is the minister you are referring to, if the RCMP wanted him killed why would they be giving evidence to the local police that caused them to ask for emergency powers? Wouldn't the best play be to just let the terrorists kill the kidnapped victim?

  70. Re:You missed the point, mob is force multiplier by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'll take the risk to high-profile targets over millions being stripped of their freedom any day of the week.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  71. more thoughts... by zogger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What do you do as the "swift law n order" guy when you as a prosecutor or jury turn out to have convicted the wrong guy? We see articles about it all the time now, some poor schmoo in prison for years, turns out the prosecutors surpressed evidence or their main witness recants and admits they were lying, or new DNA evidence clears someone, etc. What then? Are you prepared to take their place in the criminal justice enforcement provisions, and take jail time or execution or castration for making a drastic mistake? Or is saying "whoops, sorry 'bout that" enough? What amount of "sorry" cash will bring someone back from the beyond, or restore your nads? How do you give back the time taken from someone who's spent years in jail?

    The problem with extremely "swift justice" is that in a lot of cases it leaves out the "justice" part and concentrates on the "swift" part. And in our society now it all boils down to cash, the more you got, the more you can get away with, and the least likely you may even be charged. The less you got, the more likely it is you WILL esperience capital S swift and not really get any small j justice.

    You ever been in a courtroom for something serious where the prosecutor and cop get on the stand and lie to the judge about events they claim transpired, with you as who they want to prosecute, and you know they are lying, and that you are 100% innocent? I have, and I tell you, it is about one of the most depressing and dismal and hopless scenes you can imagine, you just get devastated. It's in my top ten list for being such an anti corrupt government agitator, been there, done that, it HAPPENS to people, either individually, or in the case of big crimes like illegal wars, it happens to everyone. Justice? Where is it, not seeing it much, I see a prison/lawyer/government 3 million laws on the books and climbing racket, but not seeing much in the way of "justice". Isee a system where eventually you won't ever be innocent, because they could find something you are guilty of. I bet it's there now for the bulk of the population.

    "Justice" to me is-say, one example-a potential rape victim HASN'T been disarmed in advance by society, and when a rape is attempted, the raper gets popped by the rapee. When joe sixpack has some burglar break into his house, the same, bang, end of story, obvious evidence, burglar on floor in living room. That's "justice". Anything else is a convulted melodrama conducted in a foreign language most people don't speak with the winners usually determined by who has the most cash or the most "power" in the situation. Not in all cases, but in most of them.

    What we have now is the criminal justice "system" which is more of a perpetual jobs racket for some folks then anything else. Do we have crime? Sure! There's still a lot of legit crime, theft, murder, etc, but a LOT of what we have now is artificially produced pseudo crime, introduced by the state and legislators who's only job is to write more laws, never to REMOVE laws that have been proven to be a disaster. A lot of the so-called "crimes" on the books are merely a way for the state to seize command and control and to take property. I would say almost all asset forfeiture laws are scams, most drug laws are a waste of time (alcohol prohibition proved that) and so on. The tax codes are criminal in nature from top to bottom, not a dang thing about them is even close to being lawful, either by design or by implementation.

    In addition, our society *rewards* extremely high level criminals, calls them CEOs and distinguished politicians, it's really in most cases petty ante crime that gets prosecuted. Joe haliburton can "lose" a million here or there and not much happens, joe six pack can "lose" a few thousand on taxes and get his life devastated. The big cases make headlines, but that's only .00001% (whatever, some small number) of the cases out there, the rest are too random in their details to really classify easily, because the system is so broken now. But it's not "justice", it's something else, but not that word, not anymore.

  72. Not the Man we have to worry about by Kphrak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm surprised so many Slashdotters are making such a fuss about law enforcement finding the idea of crowds so unpalatable. Hasn't anyone been in a moshpit before (fun)? Or a riot (not so fun)?

    A large, unpredictable crowd of people showing up, possibly for no good reason, in a possibly dangerous area, is something to be concerned about. Not that I'd advocate banning the technology, but I definitely see where the RCMP are coming from. Mobs are weird beasts at the best of times, and a charismatic figure can get them to do abominable things that they would never even think about doing as individuals.

    As other posters have already mentioned, terrorists could lure bloggers to a predetermined point to maximize casualties in the case of an explosive attack. A quickly-organized protest without any expectation of it by authorities might get the point across to onlookers, but the lack of expectation might also lead to all the problems of a large crowd with none of its solutions -- trash everywhere, smashed windows, snarled traffic....and the possibility of an injurious riot breaking out.

    Now for a moment, switch away from my comment and browse at -1. Imagine the Slashdot crowd all yelling the contents of their individual post at the top of their lungs -- or carrying signs summarizing it, or both -- in the middle of downtown New York. This is (IMHO) a good analogy because New York, like Slashdot, is high-traffic, and usually there are only two or three distinct positions taken on an issue, which can be compared to shouting slogans. Some, not many, of these people have extreme ideas and are willing to commit violence to get this across. Some of them have pointy sticks.

    The reason why this is contained on Slashdot (for the most part) is that everyone's talking at once, but it never cuts off anyone else since you're only reading one at a time. This means that slogans, etc usually aren't required. Even then, an anti-MS post laden with slogans, even faulty info, can be modded up, showing that even this is not perfect.

    You are isolated on Slashdot -- or a blog -- as well. In addition, a certain percentage of Slashdotters (the moderators) are assigned to police the others through (meta-)modding -- this works to a pretty decent extent. The assignment is by fiat and people know who's in charge. A crowd has no such thing.

    Even the crappiest, most reviled blog has far better signal-to-noise ratio than a crowd, and the worst that someone can do is troll...or attempt a DOS. In real life, crowds are really something to be concerned about.

    --

    There's no sig like this sig anywhere near this sig, so this must be the sig.
  73. Re: cite please? by MenTaLguY · · Score: 3, Informative

    No cite, sadly -- I can't find the original (and more in-depth) article I had originally read on the web now -- but the researcher's name was Dr. Michael Platt, and the research in question is referenced in this NewsWeek article (halfway down, look for "berry berry"). I'm not sure if this was before or after he left the Glimcher Lab for Duke.

    His lab page is here, but none of the paper titles ring a bell.

    If you're interested, you should at least be able to reach him at: platt at neuro dot duke dot edu

    --

    DNA just wants to be free...
  74. Re:Threat to Security? by Rich+Klein · · Score: 2, Funny

    Outlawing text-messaging wouldn't eliminate the perceived security threat; they'd have to outlaw all forms of communication. I beleive that communication was used in the planning of virtually every terrorist act to date.

    --
    -Rich
  75. P.C.ness by mcmonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Those aren't "internment camps". They're "free speech zones".

    We have always been at war with Eurasia.

  76. Re: cite please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5304846/site/newsweek/

  77. The truth about Arab attitudes towards Palestinian by lewko · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The reality is that the Arab states as well as Osama bin Laden couldn't really care less about the Palestinians and merely use them as a pawn in their efforts to destroy Israel.

    Witness the 'Black September' shooting of 20 000 Palestinians in Jordan or the fact the Lebanese, Egyptians and Jordanians haven't offered the Palestinians anything since 1948 while Israel is held responsible for their welfare.

    The only reason Osama bin Laden raises the Palestinians is the one and only thing all the Arab Muslim states can agree on is hatred for Israel, the only non-Islamic democracy in the region. So why not use it to rally support for various other causes?

    Don't be fooled... Western actions were never the cause of Militant Islamic fascism, merely an excuse. Being non-Islamic is the reason and nothing we should feel guitly about.

    --
    Do you or your partner snore? - Visit www.snoring.com.au