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A Look at Technology Legislation for 2006

segphault writes "Ars Technica provides some insight into technology legislation scheduled for congressional review in 2006. From the article: 'Congress plans to cover some important tech issues in 2006 [...] like digital communication, intellectual property law, and computer security. [...] Patent reform is also on the menu. Industry groups have requested that the government allow them to participate in the patent review process, and some legislators have discussed imposing stricter constraints upon patent related injunctions..'"

77 comments

  1. GNAA Announces Corporate Downsizing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait
    GNAA Announces Corporate Downsizing and Administrative Reformation

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    "We are also making internal changes to the corporate information technology intranet," said supers, CTO for GNAA Worldwide Operations. "Many of our information moving processes were running on the Lunix platform, and this was generating large costs due to system slowness and instability. After a careful usability study, we have found that we will be saving millions of dollars [USD] per year by switching to the Microsoft Windows 2003 Server System".

    timecop ended the conference by announcing, "We'll always be there for the gay niggers of the world. With this restructuring of the organization, we are enabled to offer twice the service for a fraction of the cost. It's a new gay universe ahead."

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  2. OUTGOING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

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  3. It's nice to know... by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's nice to know that congressmen are considering legislation to prevent ISPs from restricting third-party services and patent reform. It will be interesting to see what happens after the lobbyists get their hands on whatever bills get introduced.

    --
    Good, inexpensive web hosting
  4. Scary thought for nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's quite frightening the amount of control that the US government is gaining over computer technology. To me, technology, specifically the internet, is great because it offers freedom, a way to do as I like without the limitations of government and politics. Perhaps someday in the near future, that freedom will no longer exist...

    1. Re:Scary thought for nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "specifically the internet, is great because it offers freedom"

      This is exactly why they are cracking down on it, it scares the pants off people in power, government or otherwise.

  5. Mmm, yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...Coz we all know that Politicians are only trying to do what's best for the people, such as you and me.

    1. Re:Mmm, yeah... by scgops · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Lovely.

      Which is more likely, members of Congress understanding technological issues well enough to make rational, informed decisions and enact well-written legislation, or those same politicians going with whatever is pitched by the best funded set of lobbyists?

      Call me crazy, but I can't picture a whole lot of Congressmen being technically literate enough to fully understand the issues described in the article. That's going to drastically limit their ability to predict the ramifications of the potential solutions.

    2. Re:Mmm, yeah... by ToasterofDOOM · · Score: 1

      That's probably most likely. I've met one congressman from Georgia and know through my Grandfather Jeff Sessions of Alabama. Neither of them seem to be technologically literate at all. They want to do the right thing, but they approach technology as they would any other field, whereas in reality it is radically different. We seriously need some non-technophobe politicians.

      --
      I am Spartacus
  6. The patent reform proposed doesn't sound too good. by jZnat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    According to TFA, it seems that this will basically be providing patent enforcement at a much quicker level. Of course, this could also lead to the realisation that patents are bullshit and enforcing anticompetitive monopolies based on patents is, dare I say, socialistic and not at all capitalistic.

    --
    'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
  7. Let's hope that the consumer comes out on top by stastuffis · · Score: 1

    With the heavy reliance upon such important technologies these days, many people (business elite, politicians, etc.) will have the opportunity to either help or hinder the consumers. However, the impact doesn't stop at the option of a few products here and there, but it directly hints towards our rights regarding privacy, ownership, and other things.

    Technology should be used to better the lives of the many instead of fill the pockets of the few.

    1. Re:Let's hope that the consumer comes out on top by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      yes, and lets also hope for world peace.

    2. Re:Let's hope that the consumer comes out on top by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technology should be used to better the lives of the many instead of fill the pockets of the few.

      So should government, but look what they do instead.

      Then again, that's a pretty worthy goal for each and every one of *us*, too, but look at what most of us spend all our time doing...filling our own pockets.

      Inevidable effect of encouraging the "greed is good" mentality...?

  8. Could be an improvement if done right by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Industry groups have requested that the government allow them to participate in the patent review process" While I suspect that this is letting the fox guard the henhouse, there is away to make it work:
    When applying for a patent the applicant would split it into 2 parts. The first states what he can do, but not how. The second says how he can do it. The first part is made public a year before the second. If during that year, someone else can show how it is done, than the patent is denied on the basis of failing the nonobvious test. ( It need not be a year, maybe a month or two would work better ) If nobody can come up with something in that year, then the patent review process begins.

    1. Re:Could be an improvement if done right by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      :o\

      I think your idea fails the non-obvious test.

      If it is truly an important patent, I don't see why another company wouldn't try any and every underhanded technique they have at their disposal to try and discover the method & invalidate the patent.

      Before I get accused of being a tinfoil hat paranoid, don't forget that the U.S. has been accused by a variety of countries that they've passed along NSA intercepts containing sensitive business information to help U.S. companies win international contracts. I wouldn't put much of anything past the largest companies.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:Could be an improvement if done right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where did you get this NSA BS? WHat proof do you have, and CNN (& most liberal newspapers) doesn't count because they don't bother to research crazy left-wing story.

  9. Let me be the first to say... by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Congress is (inevitably) stuffed with men and women who do not have the time to be fully informed about the subjects they are voting on.

    This is why lobbyists get paid so much money.

    Your avg Congress Critter gets a lot of their information from lobbyists, industry groups and various other organizations with an agenda.

    Worse, sometimes the legislation put forward by Congress people is essentially a cut-n-paste job from 'model legislation' that the lobbyists like to give out.

    Occassionaly, your representatives get called on their blatant plagarizing, but more often than not, it goes unnoticed because the 'model' legislation was never made public in the first place.

    Nowadays, with MS Word documents and PDF being posted to your Congress person's website, we get the occassional meta-bomb revealing that the document was written up by some lobbyist.

    /not anti-congress, just pointing out the negatives that come with lobbying

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Let me be the first to say... by CokeBear · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So what would it take for the EFF to write some legislation and get it passed? (With the support of the Slashdot community.)
      If it was well written and important legislation, I'd pledge $50. Who's with me?

      --
      Reality has a liberal bias
    2. Re:Let me be the first to say... by Vampyre_Macavity · · Score: 1

      I'd pledge $25 (not because I'm stingy, but because that's all I can afford right now).

    3. Re:Let me be the first to say... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      Of course, this is why politicians have staff. I don't expect my Senator or Representative to understand all the technical issues involved in, say proprietary software vs. F/OSS, or DRM vs. fair use; I do, however, expect him to have someone on his staff who does, and who can help filter out the lobbyists' bullshit from legitimate input. The problem, it seems to me, is the "revolving door" in which staff members and lobbyists are very often the same people, going from one position to another and -- inevitably -- carrying money and biases with them.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    4. Re:Let me be the first to say... by triffidsting · · Score: 1

      If the EFF actively lobbies congress, I thought they would put their tax exempt status in jeopardy. Anyone know for sure?

      --
      Non, je ne veux pas coucher avec toi ce soir.
    5. Re:Let me be the first to say... by CokeBear · · Score: 1

      So is it time to create a new organization, with similar interests, with the expressed intent of lobbying congress?

      --
      Reality has a liberal bias
  10. Tech legislation by User+956 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Although the situation in Iraq is sure to monopolize a big chunk of their time, they also want to spend time on issues like digital communication, intellectual property law, and computer security.

    What's frightening is that the majority of congressmonkeys in office are either completely oblivious, or they consider orwellian DRM to be a "solution". I mean, honestly, can you expect a solid understanding of technology issues from a generation that doesn't even use direct deposit?

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    1. Re:Tech legislation by kabocox · · Score: 1

      I wonder if it's not that their generation doesn't use direct deposit, but that they understand all the little things that could be taken out of your account or deposit without your knowledge until they see a statement some time in a month or 2. They like those little paper things because that somehow makes their checking and savings accounts more secure than someone that uses direct deposit.

      Um, that doesn't make any sense. I use direct deposit for my income. None of my bills are paid that way. If it was just me, I'd most likely do it, but my wife likes checks. She needs to write down the amount of the bills in her check books so she'd know how much money we have at any given range.

    2. Re:Tech legislation by Scarblac · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Sorry to go even further off topic, but this is one of those 'difference between the US and Europe' moments again.

      People seriously get wages paid in checks? I had no idea the word "paycheck" was literal.

      In Europe, there used to be "Eurocheques" for use in foreign countries, but they ceased to exist in 2002 (after all, ATMs work everywhere, can just pay cash in other countries). Bills are paid electronically, or, I guess, by sending a paper transfer order to your bank. Every two months I get a paper record of what went in and out on my accounts, I store them, but I don't think I'll use them ever again.

      Just interesting to see how different these Western countries can be. :-)

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    3. Re:Tech legislation by kimvette · · Score: 3, Funny

      {
      or, I guess, by sending a paper transfer order to your bank.
      }

      Right. A check.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  11. Interested in ? by UberWhack · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Our elected representatives are legitimately concerned that youngsters today aren't as interested in science as in days past,

    It seems to me that many "youngsters" aren't interested in education in general.

    I do not see, however, what this has to do with technology related legislation...


    uW

    1. Re:Interested in ? by jZnat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe if Congress stopped outlawing new technology all the time, people might actually want to try IT or CS more often. Right now there's patent minefields, outsourcing to incompetents in India, alleged DMCA-violations up the ass, and increasingly annoying companines like SCO trying to pick on the little guys just to name a few. It becomes more and more illegal to actually work in IT or CS, and they wonder why nobody wants to do it anymore...

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    2. Re:Interested in ? by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 3, Insightful

      i was about to say some of that. it's like asking why "youngster" arent interested in building a bicycle when you cannot use gears, interchangable parts, any type of welding device, and adding handlebars is illegal. it's also close to someone pointing a gun at you and saying, "feel free to do anything you want on this computer... just dont make me unhappy" which is quite a nebulous assertion. hmm... patent minefields... sounds like we need some of those rats.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    3. Re:Interested in ? by Decessus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've always wondered if part of the reason kids are not interested in education is due to the image that people who like school seem to receive.

      If you actually like school, then you get branded a nerd and you then become somewhat of an outcast. Perhaps so many kids just want to be liked that they adopt the attitude that school and education isn't for them.

      It seems that schools encourage sports activities more than they do educational ones. My school had pep rallies, dances, and all sorts of other activities that focused on sporting events.

      One solution to increasing children's education is to have more events that give credit to kids who take their education seriously. The schools should try and do something that changes the image of people who like to go to school and do well.

    4. Re:Interested in ? by rob1980 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I do not see, however, what this has to do with technology related legislation...

      Technology = application of science. Lose interest in science, and technology could suffer as a result.

    5. Re:Interested in ? by Seekerr_alt-tab · · Score: 1

      Having been a nerd meself, I'd disagree with this. Most nerds act in the traditional nerdy antisocial way because they think it's expected of them. As soon as you realise that there's no need to hold up the nerd act, you cease to be a nerd. On the downside, you lose all your nerdy friends, and struggle to find anyone who can discuss quantum theory ;D It's not up to the schools. It's up to the nerds, to do well, and to ignore the stereotypes. But I still don't see what this has to do with legislation? So there might (might, I doubt it meself) be a technology dropoff...wat's this going to do about that, again? (nope, I didn't RTFA. this is SLASHDOT, after all!)

  12. It's not all bad by Debiant · · Score: 3, Informative

    Jus think Skype. If big operators and telecoms have to say what can be done without any rescrictions, soon there will be no Voip, except what they want to offer.

    After all the operators are the bridges which connect customers to other bridges that form the internet.
    Do we want to allow some troll to block our way and tell how and which way we can walk in the bridge?

    I don't, but if nothing is done, that's where it will end. Because even operators have to make a buck, and that's the easiest way. And they have a point that when they say they've put money to infastructure that others use, unfortunately.

    --
    Nobody knows the trouble I've seen, nobody knows has the trouble seen me, even I sometimes wonder why I write these line
  13. GZAA --- Is that you?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Gay Zionist Association of America:

    Is that you?! I heard you control over 92% of American TV, Movies, Radio, Music, Newspapers!

  14. Lets hope by nighty5 · · Score: 2

    that govenments start to wake up and actually furful their actual role and start to care about their citizens and stop caring less about greedy companies.

    Its good to be informed about the going's on in technology, but the more I read slashdot, the more cynical I become.

    I'm hoping the trend will change shortly.

    1. Re:Lets hope by Corfe · · Score: 1
      and stop caring less about greedy companies

      Yeah, I agree, and... wait a minute, whose side are you on?
    2. Re:Lets hope by nighty5 · · Score: 1

      whoops, thats a typo.

      should be start caring less about greedy companies.

      Good pick-up :)

    3. Re:Lets hope by Debiant · · Score: 2, Funny

      I doubt it.

      Becoming more cynical is in a direct relation to snabby, wise-ass replies you read that cynical Slashdot readers give to prove how seasoned and intelligent they are.

      Like this one.

      --
      Nobody knows the trouble I've seen, nobody knows has the trouble seen me, even I sometimes wonder why I write these line
  15. Patents not the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So in a way, the overall idea of a patent system isn't the problem but rather the process by which the physical patent system of today is being modified?

    --
    Thats Logic.

    1. Re:Patents not the problem? by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I guess.

      Mostly it's that the original idea of patents has been corrupted.

      I don't imagine that the original patent clerks envisioned companies whose sole business was patent litigation.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
  16. There are two ways to go by WindBourne · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The first would be to disallow any blocking of others. IOW, it is status quo when it comes to packets going over a network. This would allow services to really build, but it could curtail future build-outs.

    The second is the libertarian way. That is, we could allow anything, but we could also prohibit exclusive monopolies. Right now, govs. do a give away by allowing exclusive monopolies to various large companies. In my area, comcast has the coax rights. Qwest has the twisted pair rights. Comcast is now trying to stop Qwest from carrying iptv, by getting local legislation to block it, even though comcast has the right to offer phone and internet. By prohibiting any gov. from entering into a exclusive monopolies (or just allow very short-term ones), we would encourage huge build-outs, with the possibility of curtailments of services.

    Personally, I prefer the later, but either should work. What I do know will fail, is if we give exclusive monopolies like we do now, AND we allow the companies to control services. That will prevent build-outs (why would the big players peer with you?), and would kill services that were not developed by a company.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  17. No way by VincenzoRomano · · Score: 2

    I wonder how can all these laws restrict (real) freedom for Internet users.
    I suppose that companies are concerned with P2P file sharing and (maybe) governs are concerned with pedophilia and terrorism.

    On the first field there is little they can really do but limiting the usage of Internet itself as a bidirectional medium. If everyone used a strong encription P2P protocol mapped over, say, TCP port 80 or 25 to do my P2P, then I'd like to see how could they stop me. Only by avoiding incoming traffic to my systems. That's almost the same as old fashioned TV and averyone would skip such a stupid technology.

    On the second field there is little to do without leaking into organisations in order to grab ciphers. A simple message (email, IM, etc.) like "Let's meet at the usual pub for a couple of beers at 10" could mean everything, from a friends party to a terrorist action meeting. Who knows?

    Do they think they have enough resources to fight such a battle, 24 hours a day, 365 day a year all over the world?
    Even by "controlling" the Internet they cannot stop people from creating VPNs (in a general sense) to do whatever they want.
    Unless 1984 is much more in the near future than in near past!

    --
    Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
    For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
    1. Re:No way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On the second field there is little to do without leaking into organisations in order to grab ciphers. A simple message (email, IM, etc.) like "Let's meet at the usual pub for a couple of beers at 10" could mean everything, from a friends party to a terrorist action meeting. Who knows?

      The NSA does, after having (without a warrant) examined your call-placing patterns for the last two years and recognizing that you don't go to the pub with this person regularly at all, or even talk to them. Of course, they also now know about Senator Jones' 20-something intern paramour, and Congressman Smith's crossdressing habit. So don't expect too much complaining out of the politicos about all this.

    2. Re:No way by VincenzoRomano · · Score: 1

      Nice!
      And with some hundreds thousands of targets, if not tens of millions, using wired and wireless phones, internet email and messages and even magazines ads all over the world, it cannot be done in a snap.
      IMHO, without some good hint and leak in they would have a very hard time to "recognize" anything!

      --
      Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
      For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
    3. Re:No way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Echelon Carnivore, next

  18. Nice if programs could work well together. by mysterystevenson · · Score: 1

    Intentional incompatibility between systems and programs causes problems that denies efficiency to all and costs money for everyone that is slowed down. It would be a fortunate change if the "program makers" would really try to provide a service to consumers that improves the digital world instead of conflicting in a useless gambit that has failed in other industries in the past.

    --
    MYSTERY
  19. Spying on the US Security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Spying on the US Security State. Countermeasures for US Citizens
    12/27/2005 10:45

    Is anyone really surprised that the USA now openly advocates torture, spying on its own citizens, or equates dissent with aiding and abetting the "brutal killers" as Bush describes them?

    Whew! Life is imitating art. President Bush stars as Sgt. Bob Barnes, the maniacal soldier in Oliver Stone's Platoon, who proclaims that he "is reality". Vice President Cheney is Dr. Phibes as portrayed by Vincent Price in the movie classic, The Abominable Doctor Phibes. You want torture? Talk to Dr. Phibes. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld brings to life Colonel Walt Kurtz, the rogue US Army soldier from Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now. American society is modeled on Starship Troopers' militarized society at war with the insects from another galaxy. A great scene in Troopers is a segment which shows children stamping out bugs with glee as the narrator says, "Support the war effort. Do your part to kill the bug!" Welcome to the USA.

    Is anyone really surprised that the USA now openly advocates torture, spying on its own citizens, or equates dissent with aiding and abetting the "brutal killers" as Bush describes them? Ummm, should US homegrown serial killers be designated enemy combatants? Who could argue with a clear conscience that the US didn't have 911 coming. Civilians are innocent, the American fundamentalists say. Oh me, oh my, the victimized USA and so much innocence lost on that day. That sentimental dream went out the window long ago with the Allied bombing of Dresden in WWII and the fire-bombing and subsequent use of nuclear weapons against Japan. Add Rwanda and Darfur to that and, right at home, add decades of US government approved racial segregation, plus the US government's response to Katrina and, for that matter, 911. Useless commissions, staged congressional hearings, senseless senses of congress, a presidential press conference. All by formula, of course. What's the point? Nothing changes.

    The USA is no victim or innocent bystander in the world's machinations. Each and every US citizen is responsible for the actions of its leaders--such as they are. If the American people want a militarized state, then so be it. Have some brass and go for it. If they want to torture, then they should have the guts to stick a knife in the throat of a living human being and watch'em gurgle and die. The NO TORTURE amendment of John McCain is a joke. The US government is a government by and for loopholes. It'll go on as long as the USA exists.

    Of Mice and Evil Doers

    Why limit the game to waterboarding or electric shock? Use the Spanish Inquisition era Mouse Trap. Put a bunch of mice into an open metal container and then secure it and them on the abdomen of the evil doer/dissenter. Slowly apply heat to the metal. Mice burrow when they can't run. Use your imagination. The "Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave." What nonsense! Special operators are brave, some journalists and citizens are brave, fire fighters and first responders are brave, but most Americans are from the Land of the Cowardly.

    The overthrown regimes, the assassinations, the support for murderous regimes, silencing dissidents, eliminating politicians and sanctioning the use of torture and murder of civilians the world over is the standard mode of operations. The leaders of the USA work hard to ensure that they are not charged with war crimes or plain old violation of US law - such as it is. And the American people tolerate it. At the pace the USA is pissing off the rest of the world, expect more 911's.

    We have to, in all seriousness, thank Bush and his crew for speaking bluntly about what has been known for so long by so few, but never really exposed. Yes, Americans, your leaders authorize torture, domestic spying, and are adept at creating threats that lead to wars. After all, it's good for business and anyway, how would "you", White Collar Proletariat, know what it takes to keep the gas pumps in operation or wha

  20. Re:The patent reform proposed doesn't sound too go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "...enforcing anticompetitive monopolies based on patents is, dare I say, socialistic and not at all capitalistic."

    Please dare to say it! Say it to everone you meet, shout it from the rooftops!
    I keep saying this, and I want to use this chance to shout it louder again.

    Patents are unique in being simultaneously anti-capitalist and anti-social. They screw business and they screw society equally. They are a very devious form af anti-progressive thought, skillfully sold as the exact opposite.


    "What is to be gained from damping progress?" you may ask. Work that one out for yourselves.

  21. Sometimes even mr. Bush is right by mixenmaxen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "No doubt President Bush's well meaning but misguided No Child Left Behind Act is partly to blame as well. As the son of a science teacher, I regularly hear about how government emphasis on unrealistic academic standards incapacitates effective science education. And as a victim of the public school system myself, I am painfully aware of how it impedes learning"

    Although not a regular supporter of mr. Bush, I am supportive of his "no child left behind" act. If implemented correctly it raises school standards to a higher level, creating an overall more educated workforce, and thus a more educated, flexible, and innovative society in which innovation thrives, and where racial injustice, crime and other human misdeeds are at a minumum. Coming from Denmark, a country that has carried this policy for many years, I think that I am justified in saying that I know what the implications of this policy are. The current good example, of course, being Skype - Started by a Dane and a Swede. Furthermore, there is the upside of not having outrageous public discussions about whether ID should be accepted into classrooms as science, a subject Danes spend many a cold winternight joking about, and of course being scared shitless that the worlds only superpower is at an educational level where the public can be made to believe this nonsense...

    1. Re:Sometimes even mr. Bush is right by Guuge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If implemented correctly it raises school standards to a higher level, creating an overall more educated workforce, and thus a more educated, flexible, and innovative society in which innovation thrives, and where racial injustice, crime and other human misdeeds are at a minumum.

      ...thus creating a nation that will never elect people like Mr. Bush. Come on, did you really expect it to be implemented correctly?

    2. Re:Sometimes even mr. Bush is right by mattwarden · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The US is a much larger and more diverse country. This is why No Child Left Behind is failing. And that is why, prior to Bush, the Republican Party has held that public schools should be controlled locally. Why anyone could think that a federal government could set a standard that was approrpriate for a rural farm area with 99% white Protestants and approrpriate for an urban area with 95% minorities is beyond me. It is a hindrance to progress for those areas where the guidelines don't make as much sense.

    3. Re:Sometimes even mr. Bush is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The "No Child Left Behind Act" can and will never be implemented correctly in this nation. One of its main issues is the fact that it holds the teacher directly responsible for how the children do on "Standardized" tests. If you were a teacher and had the monetary future of your school on your back, not to mention the Principle, fellow teachers and parents what would you do? Teach to the test. Great, so we end up with a nation of students that know how to pass a single test and a bunch of teachers who know they can do better, but have to have the financial future of their school in mind. It needs to go.

    4. Re:Sometimes even mr. Bush is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If implemented correctly it raises school standards to a higher level, creating an overall more educated workforce

      The problem with that is raising the standards does not automatically mean people meet the raised standard. For example, a few years ago California changed the High School graduation standard, statewide, to make passing Algebra I a mandatory requirement. While I have no problem with that being a graduation requirement, setting that standard does nothing to help the people who weren't passing Math A or Math B classes - yet the politicians treat it as though simply setting that higher standard will make everything better.

      It won't, it will just mean that more children will fail to meet the standard. Long term, we need to raise the standards, but we need to figure out how to get more children meeting the current standard - or we'll never be able to meet a higher standard.

    5. Re:Sometimes even mr. Bush is right by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Although not a regular supporter of mr. Bush, I am supportive of his "no child left behind" act. If implemented correctly it raises school standards to a higher level, creating an overall more educated workforce, and thus a more educated, flexible, and innovative society in which innovation thrives, and where racial injustice, crime and other human misdeeds are at a minumum.

      The key words are "if implemented correctly". What NCLB does, in practice, is that it holds everyone to certain national standards, and good teachers who would have quickly taught that material anyway are forced to give standardized tests and formal lesson plans and all sorts of other bureaucracy about the subject, which decreases how much they actually teach. NCLB is an equalizer: it's good that it holds poorer-performing schools, teachers, and students to higher standards, but it also holds back the better-performing schools until they can "prove" they're past that point.

      NCLB is great in theory, but so is capital-C Communism. And along with that analogy, democratic socialism works in those crazy European countries with 50% income tax and free healthcare (as opposed to, say, 100% income tax and free food). And so should a limited version of NCLB if it's not required in schools above, say, the 60th percentile (or even 40th should do). You're not doing anyone a favor if you're making the bad schools and the good schools approach the same target. You're not going to have any true innovation if the geniuses have been shuffled into the same "educated workforce" - there's people who serve society better in academia than in the workforce.

      Oh, and remember that "No Child Left Behind" in a literal sense means holding everyone else back to keep up with him.

    6. Re:Sometimes even mr. Bush is right by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      You might have a point, but I don't think it even got that far. The No Child Left Behind Act is failing because it was completely under-funded. Compassionate Conservatism and $1.85 will get you a Grande cup of Starbucks.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  22. The world fights back!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Castro attacks Bush and says any US-led invasion of Cuba will fail
    12/27/2005 11:30

    The Communist leader called US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice "mad"

    The Cuban President Fidel Castro said that any US invasion to his country would fail and called US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice "mad" after Washington announced plans for a "democratic transition" in the Caribbean Island last week. Castro talked before the Nationl Assembly shortly after his government announced that it had turned a corner in its econmical recovery from severe financial crisis, reportin 11.8 percent growth in 2005.

    "I am going to tell you what I think about this famous commission, for the democratic transition in Cuba: they are a group of shit-eaters who do not deserve the world's respect," Castro told the National Assembly. "In this context, it does not matter if it was the mad woman who talks of transition - it is a circus, they are completely depraved, they should be pitied," added the 79-year-old Cuban leader.

    While US imperialism was in its decline, Castro said, his revolution is "uncontainable and unstoppable. "We are in transition: to socialism, to communism," Castro insisted.

    Castro has been recently strenghtened by a number of victories of left wing parties in recent South American elections. The leaders of these parties: Tabare Vazquez, in Uruguay; Lula da Silva, in Brazil; Nestor Kirchner, in Argentina; Hugo Chavez, in Venezuela; and lately Evo Morales, in Bolivia, support his rule in Cuba and are critics of the US policies toward the region.

    Economy rebound

    Addressing the communist nation's lawmakers as President Fidel Castro looked on, Economics Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez said the Caribbean nation had fully recovered from the 1990s, when austerity measures were adopted to survive the economic crisis caused by the Soviet Union's collapse.

    "This could be considered the highest in revolutionary history," Rodriguez said of the growth figure, referring to the 47-year-long administration of Castro, who came to power with the Jan. 1, 1959, triumph of the Cuban revolution.

    The economics minister also projected economic growth of 10 percent for 2006. Rodriguez said the biggest income earners for Cuba this year were tourism, nickel and the exportation of services - especially doctors and other medical workers hired by other countries such as Venezuela to provide free care to poor people.

  23. Re:It's nice to know... [but "bickering" per head] by shanen · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    I think you're greatly overestimating the way they do things these days:
    "I don't want to obey those laws, and you can't make me, you can't make me, you can't make me!"

    "But you promised!"

    Hint: The second part is especially characteristic of your typical Democratic Congresscritter.
    --
    Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
  24. Hehe. by mofomojo · · Score: 1

    It's funny, how 50 years of fighting the communists and their adapting their policy of censorship.

    I think the US is reaching the breaking point where the government is no longer transparent.

    As soon as it reads : "FCC censorship" on your monitor when you visit Rotten.com, that's when you know the communists really have won. Plus, "FCC" kinda sounds like "KGB"... amirite, or what?

    1. Re:Hehe. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      The Chekists already control the White House.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  25. Re:The patent reform proposed doesn't sound too go by pieterh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Rapid patent enforcement would be quite fine if patents in general respected the original social bargain, namely exclusive rights to the inventor in exchange for a temporary monopoly.

    It's not really about politics, just that "intellectual rights" have been twisted into "intellectual property" over the last decades, with the implication being that ideas and inventions are now property. In fact they are not, it's the exclusive right that is property.

    Patents and copyrights could work very well (possibly even in software, though only with fundamental reforms) if the concept of "I.P." was replaced, by, e.g. "Intellectual License", and the terms of these licenses made much more clear and transparent.

    E.g. "the USPTO grants inventor X the exclusive commercial rights to invention Y for N years under such and such conditions, including a clear description of the invention, and fair use for all non-commercial use."

    If the patent system was reformed to clarify the license behind the property, it'd be quite fine to enforce patents rapidly and firmly. At the same time, a large part of the enforcement would be against patent holders that abused their licenses.

    Ah, in an ideal world...

  26. One law they forgot by dada21 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It looks like Congress needs to first pass a law mandating that all political candidates do a thorough class on studying the Constitution, pay for dictionaries to explain phrases such as "Congress shall make no law..." and maybe even look over a history of every fascist and socialist regime and why they always fail.

    Not one of these laws falls under any Congressional power as given to them by the Constitution. The Commerce Clause has been distorted and stretched as far as imaginable, considering the intent of the clause was to give the Feds the power to keep the states from restricting trade between each other. Instead, we're seeing it used to help the Feds restrict trade completely, or to enhance trade of their friends/cronies with subsidies or monopoly power.

    Congress has done so much damage, and it will only continue. Don't think a major change in party numbers or voting for a third party will help it -- we've lost the war again tyranny, and we have only one thing to look forward to: the continued rape we call democracy.

    Bring back, at the least, a federalist representative republic where states compete with one another for the best talent, and the feds can do nothing but look on with empty pockets.

    1. Re:One law they forgot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nitpicking a little - but if they used their dictionaries they would discover that socialism is not a synonim for communism

    2. Re:One law they forgot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      first pass a law mandating that all political candidates do a thorough class on studying the Constitution, pay for dictionaries to explain phrases such as "Congress shall make no law..." and maybe even look over a history of every fascist and socialist regime and why they always fail.

      Why stop at political candidates? when all folks and currently elected MUST study the constitution? not SHOULD or MAY, start using MUST! Fuck them. They ARE BREAKING their Oaths! That's DOMESTIC TERRORISM~!

      I'd like to see wording like, MUST BE proficient at TCPIP, electronics, digital logic, and several basic programming languages. (How many? hmm) in order to vote or write laws that govern them.

      Because if you don't fix the E-VOTING inside the LOCAL PRECINTS inside the UNITED STATES problem everything else won't matter.

      you can *NOT* validate electronics or it's signals!
      If you don't get this, we're fucked!

      This good Ol' Boy Network is nothing but MAFIA CARNAGE!
      There is NO more "United States of America."

      it MUST be re-named
      The electronically hacked cracked(man in the middle attacked) and court elected LOCAL PRECINTS OF WHAT WAS OUR BELOVED FUCKING AMERICA
      VGhlIGVsZWN0cm9uaWNhbGx5IGhhY2tlZCBjcmFja2VkKG1hbi BpbiB0aGUgbWlkZGxlIGF0dGFja2VkKSBhbmQgY291cnQgZWxl Y3RlZCBMT0NBTCBQUkVDSU5UUyBPRiBXSEFUIFdBUyBPVVIgQk VMT1ZFRCBGVUNLSU5HIEFNRVJJQ0EK
      (base64)

      ps. interestingly the picture to post this message on slashdot spells the word, "doomed" perhaps we already are. I see a lot of posts that refer to 1984, 1984 is fucking here now!

    3. Re:One law they forgot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not require them to pass a standardized test on the subject of the constitution?

      Then expand that to any general area the legislator intends to make a decision relating to -- I.E., before any legislator would be allowed to participate in a vote on a matter directly related to the internet or telecommunications, they would have to pass a 30-question test to obtain a 'Certified Technology Sector Legislator' credential, another test to obtain a 'Computer Technology Legislator Credential', and a 50-question multiple choice test to obtain a 'Certified Internet Politician' credential.

      The content would have to be developed by a neutral party, not some technology vendor, and provide a solid benchmark against the base level of knowledge someone needs to have in order to claim they understand the implications for individuals, hobbyists/geeks, industry, competition, consumer choice, and value.

  27. Just a suggestion by sgent · · Score: 1
    before spouting off against the various congressmen for not knowing the constitution, learn it yourself.

    Article I, Section 8. The Congress shall have power...To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries;

    Congress may make a mess of things, but they have always had the defined power to pass laws dealing with patents, tradmarks, and copyrights.

    1. Re:Just a suggestion by dada21 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I know the Constitution. I see two things in the Constitutional quote above that don't exist in the laws we have today covering patents, copyright and trademarks:

      by securing for limited times

      and

      to authors and inventors

      Patents are for authors and inventors. The fact that are sold away to lawyers and patent holding groups is outrageous. Limited times doesn't mean decades or lifetimes.

    2. Re:Just a suggestion by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Current patent law has a patent lasting for 20 years, this is fine, it's Copyright lifetimes that are the problem, with a "life of the author plus 50 years".

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    3. Re:Just a suggestion by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Current patent law has a patent lasting for 20 years, this is fine, it's Copyright lifetimes that are the problem, with a "life of the author plus 50 years".

      Hm... life of the author is not a limited time. I don't know about you, but I plan to live forever.

      Plus 50 years is arguably not a limited time, because it's absurdly long. The U.S. has been around for what, 250 - 260 years?

      This policy will have copyright lasting for almost half the time this country has been existence, and with it likely to further be extended retroactively -- that is not a limited time by any means.

      Congress' ability to retroactively extend the copyright term (but not to retroactively reduce it, for fear of claims or retribution, like withdrawl of campaign funds by powerful rights holders), assures that the policy is not a limited time: it might turn out that the rights eventually expire, but it would be sure luck, by coincidence almost, for the term to not be extended.

      The constitution doesn't say for limited times... unless rights holders get lucky and convince a gullible congress to keep renewing the time period..

      Limited time means limited time, and there must be a concrete, non-expandable, maximum limit for any one piece of work, decided at the time the right is first granted, otherwise.... this sharade of ever-extending copyright will never end.

    4. Re:Just a suggestion by tepples · · Score: 1

      Limited time means limited time, and there must be a concrete, non-expandable, maximum limit for any one piece of work, decided at the time the right is first granted

      Most Supreme Court justices would disagree with you, telling you to go ask Congress.

    5. Re:Just a suggestion by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and their rationale, IIRC, was "Undoing the CTEA and releasing several decades of copyrighted work into the public would be too hard".

      --
      Dyolf Knip
  28. should be renamed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think something like "2006's misadventures of the idiot politicians and their clueless quest to do something about technology they can't understand but think they're qualified to regulate anyway" would be appropriate.

  29. Analog Hole by JackL · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is interesting that Ars Technica didn't include legislation introduced to close the analog hole as some of the most important in 2005. I was worried that in the flurry of activity in congress before the winter recess that it might have passed. I did a little looking but didn't find anything about it so I assume it did not pass... yet.

  30. Re:The patent reform proposed doesn't sound too go by Bios_Hakr · · Score: 1

    >>E.g. "the USPTO grants inventor X the exclusive commercial rights to invention Y for N years under such and such conditions, including a clear description of the invention, and fair use for all non-commercial use."

    So, if you invented the next big thing, you'd be perfectly OK with MS taking it and releasing it for free?

    --
    I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
  31. EFF by chandoni · · Score: 1

    Time to renew your EFF membership! (there are also the tax advantages of joining before the end of the year)

  32. Re:The patent reform proposed doesn't sound too go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "enforcing anticompetitive monopolies based on patents is, dare I say, socialistic and not at all capitalistic"

    moded "insightful" ??? That's crazy. you (I guess it's people from USA who modded this up) are a bunch of washed brains. The IP-pattent craze is supported by right wings parties everywhere in the world. There is nothing "socialistic" (whatever that means) in these moves.

    and I will be marqued troll, but you are the ones who have an agenda spreading this sort of bullshit.

  33. Re:It's nice to know... [but "bickering" per head] by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    No, I think the correct response of an elected representative of either party is "Your check just cleared, go ahead."

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  34. Re:The patent reform proposed doesn't sound too go by pieterh · · Score: 1

    Since I've been doing that with my own works for 20 years, yes, of course.

  35. That idea needs but one change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your idea is a good one, but may I propose a slight change:

    Give it a month, two months, a year, etc. and see how many ways companies interpret the idea and how many different implementations of the idea expressed in the patent arise. If the idea is general (ie. "Hyperlinks", or this latest nuisance of a "Method of storing data remotely" BS), then there will undoubtedly be many implementations or ideas regarding the same general concept yet these implementations will be vastly different products or services.

    Better yet, lets establish a new government profession: IP researchers, most of whom are engineers and have degrees in CS, SE or IT. When a company wants to patent an idea, they perform the same two steps you just described. After the first step is complete, the job of these IP researchers is to transform the general idea submitted into a more concrete idea. If too many ideas arise from the same concept, then the concept is too general and needs to be refined before it is accepted by the patent office. If the researchers can't think of anything or they all come up with the same concrete idea, then the patent is not too general and is accepted.

    Maybe this country can get somewhere with that.

    -MB, SE student from RIT