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Broadcast Flag Sneaking in the Back Door

ZeissIcon writes "Public Knowledge.org is reporting that the oft-defeated broadcast flag DRM scheme is being sneaked into Senator Steven's Telecommunications bill. Aside from the fact that it has no business being in that bill, and making no exceptions for fair use, this particular version calls for an Audio Broadcast Flag that would affect digital and satellite radio as well. The bill goes to committee on Thursday, so there is still time for public comment."

45 of 364 comments (clear)

  1. How to tell when there is a problem... by dubmun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    with our legal system: When random crap like this DRM can get implanted in the middle or a totally unrelated bill.

    Has anyone contemplated legislation to stop this from happening?

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    (end of post)
    1. Re:How to tell when there is a problem... by nbannerman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One of the obvious differences between the US system and the system here in the UK is that bills are typically introduced on a single issue. Amendments are discussed and then voted upon, but it is rare to see seemingly unrelated points being tacked on to bills.

      As for legislation being introduced, the ruling party has no interest in introducing measures to curb it's own power, so I can't see how you'd get such a thing to pass.

    2. Re:How to tell when there is a problem... by FudRucker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      because that is the nature of governments to usurp more power at the expense of its citizens either by force or deception...

      --
      Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
  2. You know... by One+Childish+N00b · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know, it would be nice, just once, for those we entrust with ensuring the country is run for the good of it's people actually worked for the people who vote for them, rather than constantly trying to sneak pieces of legislation into any bill they can in a bid to force it through because it is clearly so unpalatable to everyone else that every time anyone spots it in the wild they beat it to death and chuck it to the kerb?

    What must happen before the people we elect realise that when a piece of legislation is slapped down as often as this one has been, that the people don't want it, and that if the people don't want it, it shouldn't be a "tough shit, we'll just try again when you look the other way" thing? (and before you answer, I already know the answer - campaign 'donations' matching those the media companies chuck at them - when did democracy turning into 'the rule of those who can buy the elected rulers the biggest, most expensive lunch'?

    --
    Dealing with lawyers would be a lot less tedious if they all looked like Casey Novak.
    1. Re:You know... by johneee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It always seems so strange to me that politicians would do that.

      I mean, (and I don't mean for this to become a "rah rah Canada" post) it doesn't seem to happen here, and I have to wonder what we're doing differently to make this kind of thing not happen. And why nobody in the US has ever done anything about a practice that really does smack of the worst kind of dirty and underhanded politiking.

      I think getting rid of this piggybacking practice would really do wonders to start to change people's opinion of the political process. But perhaps that's just my simple-minded naivety.

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      - ------- There are ten kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary, and those who... Huh?
    2. Re:You know... by Chabil+Ha' · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "You know, it would be nice, just once, for those we entrust with ensuring the country is run for the good of it's people actually worked for the people who vote for them..."

      You are coming from a false presumption--that the majority of their constituents do not want the broadcast flag. Many people don't even know who their elected officials are--much less what a broadcast flag is and what it means to them.

      I think sometimes here on /. we assume that the stories we read have the same relevent meaning to the rest of the populace. Sure, it's news for nerds. Stuff that matters...to nerds. It's like RSS discused in the Neilsen interview today. Ask the jow blow user what RSS is and they probably don't know. Ask 'em what a news feed is and they probably still don't know, but it's more meaningful than some obscure acronym meaning Really Simple Syndication.

      </Stepping off of soap box>
      --
      We're all hypocrites. We all have hidden parts, it's the contrast between them that make us more a hypocrite than others
    3. Re:You know... by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pshaw. Just because they don't know about the issue doesn't mean they wouldn't care if they did know. I have explained this issue to non technical people, and everyone I have talked to about it (okay, less than a dozen non-nerds) is against it once they understand it. People don't like being screwed out of things they have become accustomed to. Just because your date used rohypnol and you didn't realize you were being screwed doesn't mean it wasn't rape.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    4. Re:You know... by Wildclaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A big part of it is the result of the "Elite" mindset where the common citizen is seen as stupid and needs someone smarter and more intelligent to decide for him. The most common argument used to support this theory is "The tragedy of the commons"

      Instead you get the opposite, "The tragedy of the wealthy", where all those not rich gets hurt by the decisions of the few rich in power.

    5. Re:You know... by wish+bot · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Some of us - you know - need or expect some uninterrupted sleep after 11pm or before 7am without some random jock sawing up bits of steel outside our windows.

      It's because of inconsiderate yobs like you that these laws are passed in the first place. If you had an ounce of respect for anyone other than yourself, and maybe discussed or negotiated with your neighbours for the few days you felt possessed like a madman to be working on 'projects' in your yard before 7-fucking-am, then the world would be a better place with LESS restrictions.

      --
      lemonade was a popular drink and it still is
  3. Public Comment? by Unlikely_Hero · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sorry if this is a stupid question, but I've never been able to find how to "publically comment" on these bills.
    Not to mention, I have a strong feeling that the congresscritters probably don't even read the comments. How can we forcibly say to congress that we don't want this passed? (before anybody says writing them, etc, you really think they read the letters?)

    --
    Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.
    1. Re:Public Comment? by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How can we forcibly say to congress that we don't want this passed?

      Nothing says "hay guys, listen up!" like a vest that goes BOOM.

      (you did specify "forcibly", which is a funny word to use. Since force is also the reason laws are obeyed.)

    2. Re:Public Comment? by Fallingcow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      At this point, it looks like they're going to be tenacious enough with this thing that it'll pass eventually.

      Get someone to write it in to enough unrelated bills, and it'll pass.

      We'll never get enough interest in the issue to counter a determined, monied, well-connected foe like this one.

      Honestly, 50%+ of the electorate is too dumb to understand this (or has so little understanding of the supporting concepts behind it that it'd take WAY too long to bring them up to speed), and another 48-49% just don't care, or at least they don't care enough to make it an issue in an election.

    3. Re:Public Comment? by bergeron76 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Writing _does_ work. Political Leaders know that for every letter they receive, there are 20,000 (or some other number more appropriate for their district) other people that feel the same way. It's just the person that wrote the letter felt strongly enough about it to write the letter.

      Emailing them may work also, but I don't think it has the same significance as a letter in hand.

      --
      Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
    4. Re:Public Comment? by toleraen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, as the above poster said, doing whatever you can to draw attention to yourself and get your point across. Gotta make sure it's done in a positive way though...somehow your message probably won't look so good as you're ranting it on the way to gitmo.

      Seriously, if a senator (err, their assistant) starts reading a ton of mail saying "hey, this sucks, this is why, vote that sucker down" (word it better), they're going to take notice. While they are not likely reading their own messages, I would be willing to bet that their assistants would bring up issues that are getting a lot of notice. If this issue isn't terribly time-sensitive, send a snail mail to their office. If it is (like this one), send an email. Get your friends to send an email. Have your friends get their friends to send soem mail. That's how you get noticed. If you sit and do nothing, no one's going to notice. Gotta give those interns something to do. Just google your senator, you shouldn't have any trouble finding their contact infos.

      Of course, if your senator kicked as much ass as mine does, all you'd have to do is send them a thank you note.

  4. Thanks! And keep the alerts coming! by erroneus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We all need to know about this stuff each and every time. And for anyone who is in this particular senator's constituency, I urge you to send a strongly worded letter (complete with a copy of voter registration if you have it) that he is INDEED being watched and that it will be made clear and obvious to all where his money is coming from and what laws it is being used to pay for.

    I believe all of congress and the senate need a wake-up call when it comes to these practices. They should all be put on notice that there are people who are watching, and the numbers are growing.

  5. Politicians must hate the internet by Serveert · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nowadays when you try to sneak something like this in the rascally public can learn about it in a matter of minutes. :(

    --
    2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
  6. Nothing short of a revolution by roman_mir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nothing short of a revolution can change the status quo.

    The revolution must be then used to dump the current laws and remove those, who are currently in power, and update the constitution to include the new realities and possibilities and to prevent as much as possible of this degradation of human rights and of this invasion into individual freedoms.

    Of-course it is the most important job of the corrupt government to prevent such a shakeup by all possible means including dumbing down the population, removal of all individual rights and even responsibilities (those who understand their responsibilities also insist on their rights,) introduction of laws that take away all freedoms that really matter and nurturing the environment of conspicuous consumption, which is enough to satisfy the current bodily needs and to substitute any mental needs/activities.

    As it is right now television is great for mass control and the Internet is terrible at it. What the US government doesn't understand is that by creating tight regulations around usage of the TV programs, they are just pushing people to use more of what the Internet offers. If I was the government, who wanted to keep tight control over population, I would promote more cheap and accessible TV for everyone and would discourage usage of the Internet.

    Maybe the equation will balance itself out, or maybe those in power will try to control the Internet in the same manner as the TV (this will be much harder.)

    The Internet can lead to organization of opposition and may even be able to provide the means to conduct something of a revolution for the future generations.

    1. Re:Nothing short of a revolution by evilviper · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Nothing short of a revolution can change the status quo.

      Yes, a revolution is the perfectly rational thing to do, in the face of being unable to copy media with your home-made tivo. That was why they wrote The Declaration of Independence in the first place, wasn't it?

      I mean, sure, a few million people will have to die in the revolutionary war, and it will throw the country (and yes, the world) into a depression unlike any that has been seen before, but that's a small price to pay for my satellite radio copies.

      The alternative... starving the media companies by NOT BUYING ANYTHING FROM THEM AGAIN, is too horrible to even contemplate. You can't expect me to watch PBS. I'm not an animal!

      And don't even discuss the idea of voting against those senators (like Feinstein, CA) who have been the most corrupt politicians for years. I mean... VOTING?! Good God man! Don't you dare suggest it.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    2. Re:Nothing short of a revolution by Arcane_Rhino · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...the US Constitution allows too much interpretation...

      I disagree. Accepting that it was written in the vernacular of its time, I think it is very clear. It clearly delineates Federal responsibilities, outlines the specific personal (popular) liberties that shall not be abridged by the States or the Federal Government, and leaves the rest to the States, specifically, local populations.

      The trouble is that it has been ignored and changed (mostly ignored) in the last 150 years (particularly the last 50) to enable an domineering Federal Government.

      I am not sure writing a new constitution so it can be ignored as well will be of any use.

    3. Re:Nothing short of a revolution by roman_mir · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, a revolution is the perfectly rational thing to do, in the face of being unable to copy media with your home-made tivo. That was why they wrote The Declaration of Independence in the first place, wasn't it? - let me be perfectly clear on this: I don't care about media controling mechanisms, I actually believe DRM can be a good tool for certain tasks. I am not really talking about the broadband flag here either, I am talking about degradation of human rights and freedoms that we have been observing for the past decades.

    4. Re:Nothing short of a revolution by Cadallin · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Exactly what about "A giant WAR machine driven by corporate interests. Cannon fodder recruited from the poorest classes, easily satisfied by a few handouts and a promise of pensions. Social structure that is falling appart: growing taxes, inflation, growing oil prices, more and more expensive healthcare. The widenning of the gap between the rich and the poor.

      What happens next in an environment, in which those in power don't believe they have any obligations to the nation, but only have obligations to the highest bidder - corporations? The country's economy will start to fail, the millitary will be used for corporation profit regardless of the concern for the country, because corporations are international and have no loyalty to any nation at the same time. The country will become one giant prison with a very powerful war machine."

      HAS NOT been true for the last 30 years or so? That's exactly how it is RIGHT NOW. Of course the USA has always had these tendencies. It's important to note how many the wars in our history are driven by either: corporate business interests, or impending bank failure; and that's going all the way back to 1800.

  7. Re:You know what? by Volante3192 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, the public outnumbers congressmen around 525,000 to 1.

    Time for some civil disobedience. The jails can't hold all of us if we break this crap. Courts would be tied up for eons, putting precious patent cases on the back burner even if they DID start waving jail time. Citizens that actually have clout would get burned eventually.

    I'm getting very comfortable with the idea of letting Congress passing whatever crap the corporate culture pushes under their noses because eventually a substantial portion of the public will get pissed off and force them to change.

    To paraphrase Gandhi, "535 Congressmen and assorted CEOs cannot control 280 million Americans if those Americans refuse to cooperate."

  8. US Senate is anything but for the people. by Shivetya · · Score: 2, Insightful

    These people are professional politicians. They are beholded to special interest groups. They only acknowledge the people who voted for them every 6 years. When the 17th Amendment effectively removed the appointment of Senators by State Legislatures if started a downward spiral. Now they were not beholden to the State they served and soon they became even less enamored with following the direction their state took. Now they care little what the people in each of their respective states thinks. Its all about amassing personal power and reelection. They serve those who line their pockets.

    This isn't to say they are all bad. There are some true Democrats and Republicans in the Senate. They are just outnumbered by those who serve neither people or party. They are quite willing to sell our rights to the highest bidder. They will make sure to excuse themselves from any law they feel like for they no longer see themselves as the people. They are above us and the laws they pass show this belief.

    To me Bush's biggest fault isn't the Iraq war, its not standing up to the Senate and using the veto power of the office to protect the people from abuses of power like this bill. They will continue to strip our rights while at the same time taking our money and building legacies for themselves. What is worse is the media will support them and many will have their anger directed at corporations and such while the true theft occurs in our halls of power.

    The only way to reign in the power of the Senate is through your state legislatures. They can effect many changes. However the Congress has show quite a disregard for the 10th Amendment and managed to use the courts to effectively take power from the states who are the people.

    So, do you know your Senators? Your district's representative? Send them teabags, send them letters, send them e-mail. Show up at their "townhalls" and give them an earful. How many had to resort to Google just to find out who represents them???

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  9. Not to worry, you already have to have papers by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 2, Insightful

    under our new Department of Freedom, you're required to carry papers and be subservient to the Party Police, here in America.

    So a Broadcast Flag being implemented through back-door legislation is the least of your worries.

    I'd be more concerned by the fact that your library records are already being given to the Department of Correct Thinking ...

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    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  10. Re:Obviously... by IAmTheDave · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Obviously you must be new here...

    Because I'm not - and I hope no one else is - surprised in the least. I'm actually surprised it's attached to a telecommunications bill at all. I expected that the oft-defeated broadcast flag would be snuck through in a farm bill, or a bill that feeds homeless children (you wouldn't vote against a bill that feeds homeless children!!)

    Washington sucks. Once an idea is shot down, it shouldn't be legal to attach it to another bill. Why did line-item veto's fail again?

    --
    Excuse my speling.
    Making The Bar Project
  11. Re:Mod parent up! by Haeleth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, Party A passes a law to curb this ... and abides by that law.
    Eventually, Party B becomes the majority ... and they pass a law allowing it again.


    I thought you Americans had a neat system specifically designed for making laws to limit government power, whereby a law could be passed which needed more than a mere majority to overturn, making it more resilient to power shifts. It's called the Constitution.

    I guess the problem there is that you need a supermajority to get an amendment made in the first place... :/

  12. Re:Power Sucks by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "maximum corporate legislation possible "

    Sununu is defending his "constituent" (briber^Wcontributor) telco corporations from liability for the broadcast flag. That doesn't make him wrong to oppose the flag, it just makes it less obvious which corporate legislation he insists on. If he insisted on copyright holder laws, he'd get less "support" from telcos. If he really protected consumers, he'd replace the broadcast flag legislation with other legislation that blocks it, rather than leave the vacuum. The vacuum gives Sununu an issue to bargain with the telcos in the future.

    I'm not talking about a "partisan issue". I'm talking about a partisan government. Republicans control the government so exclusively that they exclude Democrats from even debate, or even reading the bills before votes. With that power, Republicans insist on the maximum corporate legislation possible - with possibility defined mostly by conflicts between corporations over "market access", without any regard to the people we elect them to protect.

    Republicans already have taken the telco position against Net Neutrality, despite its obvious rigging the market for telcos. If MoveOn, which depends on Net Neutrality for its existence in face of telco power, didn't oppose it, the Republicans would have found their common interest with telcos even easier to execute. Shutting out MoveOn from such political activism is the result of abandoning Net Neutrality. Republican kneejerk "enemy's enemy is my friend" is the hallmark of what's wrong with their control of the government.

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    make install -not war

  13. That's why they want to kill net neutrality by spun · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm pretty sure that if politicians enact laws allowing backbone providers to decide what data passes over their backbone and how fast, it will take at least ten minutes to load any page critical of said politicians.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  14. Re:Obviously... by DigitalRaptor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nothing should be attached to any bill. Every issue should have to stand on it's own merits.

    And there should be a law that any time a new bill is passed, 2 old bills / laws have to be removed. That way government is ever-shrinking instead of ever-growing.

    Washington sucks big time...

    --
    Lose Weight and Feel Great with Isagenix
  15. Re:Obviously... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Why did line-item veto's fail again?

    Because in a "Feeding Homeless Children Act," the broadcast flag provision wouldn't be the line veto'd.
  16. Re:You know what? by kcbrown · · Score: 5, Insightful
    To paraphrase Gandhi, "535 Congressmen and assorted CEOs cannot control 280 million Americans if those Americans refuse to cooperate."

    They can if they have control over a modern military with a few hundred thousand troops and lots of big guns.

    And don't give me that bullshit about how the military won't be willing to fire on its own civilians. Thousands of years of history have shown otherwise, and there's no reason at all to believe that the U.S. military is so special that it's an exception.

    --
    Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
  17. Bought and paid for by doodlebumm · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Congress will never enact a line-item-veto, nor get rid of these attachments to bills. That is because they cannot guarantee to the corporations that buy them (the congressmen and senators) that they can get something passed. You can't line your pockets if you can't get elected. You can't get elected if you don't have campaign contributions. You can't get campaign funding if you can't guarantee getting a bill passed for some group/corporation. You can't guarantee if you can't deliver crap through the back door. Evil men have taken a well designed system (what the founding fathers created) and perverted it into a sickening mess.

    The only way to get rid of the current corrupted system is to vote out EVERYONE in Congress, and vote in just about anyone who's platform promotes campaign reform, line-item-veto, Congressional term limits, and (my one of my personal favorites) no salary raises for congressmen currently in office (they only go into effect for the next guy to take the office - nobody in government should be in charge of their own salary). Then if they don't follow through, recall or vote them out in the next election.

    1. Re:Bought and paid for by absoluteflatness · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Congress will never enact a line-item-veto

      Congress did enact a line-item veto, during the Clinton administration. The first time he tried to use it to get rid of some frivolous spending item, the state in question (New York I think) brought suit, and the line-item veto was struck down by the Supreme Court as violating the doctrine of separation of powers. In my opinion, that's the correct decision, since it essentially gives the President some amount of direct control over the contents of individual bills.
    2. Re:Bought and paid for by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The only way to get rid of the current corrupted system is to vote out EVERYONE in Congress, and vote in just about anyone who's platform promotes campaign reform


      Hm, you forgot (or at least didn't mention explicitly enough for my taste ;^)) the most important thing: public campaign financing. Seriously -- running for elections is a required part of any politician's job, and any system that requires candidates to campaign but doesn't give them the resources to do so is doomed to corruption. It's like a 3rd world country hiring policemen but then not paying them enough to be able to buy food or equipment -- the honest people will quit because they aren't able to do their jobs, and the dishonest people will find "creative" ways to get the money, and we are back where we started.


      And just to head it off the "why should taxpayers have to pay for lousy elections?" response ... the answer because someone is going to pay for the elections, and the candidates who win the elections are going to be serving the interests of that party. So that party ought to be us, the taxpayers.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    3. Re:Bought and paid for by kassemi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Simple solution - Pay congressmen the federally mandated minimum wage.

      --
      What the hell's a "gewie?"
    4. Re:Bought and paid for by dada21 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Terrible idea. Campaign finance reform only creates cronyism and preferential treatment of a select few (2 party system). How I spend my money is how I express myself, and it should be completely unregulated. There are 3 reasons why we have a 2 party system: 1: the debates are closed, 2: the money that is acceptable in a campaign is heavily regulated to prefer the 2 main parties and 3: it is harder to get a third party candidate on a ballot in terms of ballot signatures.

      Campaign finance has only made it harder to get rid of incumbents, not easier. Don't think that taxpayer funded campaigns would make a difference -- we already live in that world, and it is a failure.

      I don't believe in campaigns anyway... Just vote like I do.

    5. Re:Bought and paid for by quantum+bit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      By the same note, the way riders are currently used in practice essentially gives congress an end run around the Presidential veto, by holding important or popular legislation hostage to distasteful items that are completely unrelated to the main issue a bill addresses.

      Any president who wasn't a spineless pawn of a political party wouldn't let himself be held hostage by that. A smart one would turn it around and hold the pork barrelers hostage.

      The proper response is to have a strict policy of "Any bill with unrelated crap attached gets automatically vetoed. No exceptions.". Given the current way Congress likes to operate, that would mean that everything would be vetoed and the government would come to a screeching halt unless they shaped up.

      A good speech is all it would take to have the public on the side of the ballsy president for standing up to the political machine. If somebody did that they would sure as hell have my vote...

      Unfortunately in a two-party system it would never happen.

  18. Line-item vetoes would make vetoing too easy. by ThinkingInBinary · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Why did line-item veto's fail again?

    Because otherwise legislators would have no way to sneak their otherwise unpassable legislation into other bills and get it passed. It's akin to a filibuster in that it is an annoying thing to do practically, but the ability needs to be there for the rare cases when it's the only way to get something done. (I would argue, though, that filibusters are used for useful things, while sneaking unrelated amendments into bills is rarely used for anything that isn't evil.)

    I agree with a sibling post that says line-item vetoes should be allowed if the line item is unrelated to the bill itself. I would go as far as to say that amendments to a bill should be required to be related. If they're not, they simply don't belong there. End of story.

  19. Re:Obviously... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well what would be better was if the Constitution just specified that all legislation on a bill had to contribute to a single core purpose, and that the purpose couldn't be overly vague (to keep the purpose of every bill from being "Making the United States a Better Place"). That way the Supreme Court would have the ability to just delete anything that got attached to a bill that it wasn't supposed to have been attached to. It wouldn't solve the problem altogether (and might make it worse -- politicians would just take lots of crap on and let the courts figure it out), but it wouldn't hand that much extra power to the Executive.

    I guess at the end of the day it just depends: would you rather give more power to the President or to the Justices? Historically, the latter seems to have made a lot less total boners, but that doesn't mean they will continue to do so.

    I also think that the USSC should have automatic review of all new laws passed, without having to wait for a challenge case, but that's a separate issue.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  20. Broadcast flag. by PrefersVMS · · Score: 3, Insightful

    OK. quit griping. quit flamin'. DO something constructive. How about going over to the EFF site https://secure.eff.org/site/Advocacy?JServSessionI dr003=0qdwvz7h91.app6a&cmd=display&page=UserAction &id=223 Fill in the info, and send it off. If all of us would do this EACH AND EVERY TIME Hollywood tried this, it just might make someone sit up and take notice. Although I did add a few sentences that I'm sure will make my Senators & Representatives sit up and take notice. If they don't stop monkeying around and playing buddy-buddy to these repressive ideas, then perhaps it is time to recall all of the senators and representatives from Washington. Put limitations on terms -- no more than 8 years of service. Not just continous or fragmented, but total years of service. No more big cars. No more living in mansions. No more junkets. No more "special" retirement fund -- they get social security, just like the rest of us. No more special privileges. Perhaps a pay cut back to realistic levels. You get the idea. If they want us to swallow their bull, then they will have to face the consequences. YOU. The voting public have the power AND the inclination to affect change. If you don't take action? Then Hollywood wins. So quit your whining and do something about it.

  21. Re:Obviously... by Crazyscottie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And there should be a law that any time a new bill is passed, 2 old bills / laws have to be removed. I love this idea, but I think it would take a long time to have any noticeable effect. The only change would be the lack of publication of those "silly laws" books (e.g. a law that prohibits tying an alligator to a fire hydrant).

    --
    Just because it can't be explained doesn't mean it isn't true. Science fits into reality... not the other way around.
  22. Futile. by Wolfkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The good guys have to succeed every time. The bad guys only have to succeed once. Eventually, the good guys will fail.

    It's important to internalize that enough to prepare ahead of time for when whatever you want to do ("X"; it doesn't matter what "X" is) becomes illegal.

    --
    Property law should use #'EQ, not #'EQUAL.
  23. Re:give the FCC authority by Jeremi · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This cracks me up because the same people opposing Net Neturality with their "hands off the internet" BS are right here, front and center, saying "hands on every device that can access the internet!"


    Who are these people you are referring to? AFAIK the net-neutrality advocates and the broadcast-flag advocates are entirely different groups.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  24. Re:Obviously... by Lord+Kano · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Washington sucks. Once an idea is shot down, it shouldn't be legal to attach it to another bill. Why did line-item veto's fail again?

    It was an unconstitutional violation of the separation of powers. It gave the president too much power. It made it too easy to craft obfuscated legislation.

    Lets say that a bill provided 100 billion dollars of funding to be distributed as following.

    80 Billion dollars to middle school education.
    19.9 Billion dollars to Medicare supplements.
    and "The remaining balance to weapons development"

    It would seem that weapons development would get 100 Million dollars.

    If a president line item vetos the first item, the "Remaining ballance" becomes 80.1 Billion dollars. Line item veto was a BAD idea and it should have been stricken down.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  25. Danger, Will Robinson, danger! by Lord+of+Hyphens · · Score: 2, Insightful
    If you can get two thirds of the state legislatures to call for a constitutional convention, you can bring in an amendment in that way.

    Ever notice that there's no stipulations as to exactly what can happen at a constitutional convention? At all? It feels like we're just handing our Constitution over to the delegates and saying "do whatever."

    Personally, I think that's one of the reasons why that "second route" to an amendment has never been used... ignoring the fact that you'd need a lot more political firepower to get 3/4rds of the state legistlations to do anything (and IIRC, it is 3/4 of legistlatures).

    --
    "I've spent my whole life figuring out crazy ways to do things. It'll work." -- Montgomery Scott, "Relics"