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Harvard Prof Says Computers Need to Forget

Jessamine writes "A Harvard professor argues that too much information is being retained by computers, and the machines need to learn how to forget things as humans always have. "If whatever we do can be held against us years later, if all our impulsive comments are preserved, they can easily be combined into a composite picture of ourselves," he writes in the paper. "Afraid how our words and actions may be perceived years later and taken out of context, the lack of forgetting may prompt us to speak less freely and openly." Will such massive databases make us all act like politicians? Is data retention creating a "panopticon"? These are questions that the good doctor raises."

341 comments

  1. And in the spirit of things by ilovegeorgebush · · Score: 1

    "These are questions that the good doctor raises."
    And in the spirit of modern society, the good doctor is (sadly) ignored.

    Sign of the times my friend, sign of the times.
    1. Re:And in the spirit of things by Chiaro+Meratilo · · Score: 4, Funny

      I thought the good doctor was Doctor Who...

    2. Re:And in the spirit of things by Yvanhoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Retention of data is, for good or bad, something that happens and will continue to happen. That's what Information Technology is about. This phenomenon is not new. Politician have known this for ages, and a journalist can easily dig into the past to find some crusty anecdotes about a politician's twenties. The fact is that nobody cares. Everyone has made stupid thing during their youth, done stupid things in private, and everyone knows that this doesn't matter much.

      Here in France we have had photos of Chirac selling a communist newspaper while he was young or our ex-prime minister dancing shirtless at a private party. It didn't matter much.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    3. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's classify the warning and finger raising research of sociological professors into two types: Imminent very bad things, and potential/future very bad things.

      If they were imminent, then they would already have been incorporated in society. Sociological problems are typically not imminent and catastrophic, unlike e.g. an astronomer detecting an asteroid on collision course with Earth, and there are in any case at least some people having considered them directly.

      If they are potential/unmeasurable/not directly affecting life and health/with an eye to the future, then they should also be worthy of discussion - but the problem in that case is that there are so many things to discuss. If you are making scenarios of things that could make modern society go down the shitter, how many potential reasons could you come up with? I bet quite a large number, at least I could. And this isn't even catastrophic, it's just that people 'might speak a bit more cautiously', and even with the flaw that if everything is preserved then the context is naturally preserved as well. On a "non-directly-life-threatening problems the world is or may be potentially facing"-list, this would rank at about 3047th place.

      While I sympathise with the 'the world should discuss this'-view, I cannot very strongly condemn the world to purgatory for failing to.

    4. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      No, it's Beverly Crusher.

    5. Re:And in the spirit of things by alisson · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The problem is that many people do care. Even more unfortunately, Americans seem to have a hard time distinguishing between what to ignore (Swift boat veterans paid to speak against John Kerry,) and what may be a real reflection of character (George Bush skipping out on his Air Force duty.)

    6. Re:And in the spirit of things by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      Here in France we have had photos of Chirac selling a communist newspaper while he was young ... It didn't matter much.

      Er, yeah, but that's mainly because the French aren't exactly repulsed by communism.

    7. Re:And in the spirit of things by jasenj1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I wish that the USA was this forgiving. We have a culture/media here that will latch on to any "indiscretion" and run with it for all we can - until the next juicy tidbit pops up. Especially if the subject is in any way evasive or defensive about it - that's like blood in the water for the sharks.

      - Jasen.

    8. Re:And in the spirit of things by symbolic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Politician have known this for ages, and a journalist can easily dig into the past to find some crusty anecdotes about a politician's twenties.

      A journalist can easily dig into the past today with today's technology, but in the past it did require a bit more effort. That's the difference we're facing. It's not only easier, but our lives have become a lot more persistent- current technology has allowed our past to become an increasingly pervasive aspect of our present.

    9. Re:And in the spirit of things by Gospodin · · Score: 4, Funny

      And in the spirit of modern society, the good doctor is (sadly) ignored.

      Sure, he may be ignored now. But in 30 years maybe we'll dig up his article again and do something about it....

      --
      ...following the principles of Heisenburger's Uncertain Cat...
    10. Re:And in the spirit of things by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1, Informative

      Well, at the time, it was just considered anti-republican and being a friend of USSR. Don't confuse socialism (which is our moderate left wing movement) with communism (which is what you call also communism).

      I must also remind that Chirac is a right-wing politician, staunch opponent to left-wing candidates. But I think that the saying of Churchill is considered true by many people : "If you're not a liberal when you're 25, you have no heart. If you're not a conservative by the time you're 35, you have no brain."

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    11. Re:And in the spirit of things by bberens · · Score: 1

      He just needs to put his thoughts on government owned machines. Those things are apparently quite good at forgetting.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    12. Re:And in the spirit of things by Lazerf4rt · · Score: 1

      Because in 30 years it will be so much easier for a small group of people to control and legislate the entire Internet than it is now?

    13. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, he may be ignored now. But in 30 years maybe we'll dig up his article again and do something about it.... 30 years? What's more likely is that in 30 minutes it will be dug up again and posted on Slashdot.
    14. Re:And in the spirit of things by caffeine_high · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points, this needs to be marked funny not interesting!

      --
      The smarter home exchange, http://switchhomes.net
    15. Re:And in the spirit of things by Intron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What Churchill considered a conservative is very different from the current US neocon.

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
    16. Re:And in the spirit of things by isaac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wish that the USA was this forgiving. We have a culture/media here that will latch on to any "indiscretion" and run with it for all we can - until the next juicy tidbit pops up. Especially if the subject is in any way evasive or defensive about it - that's like blood in the water for the sharks.


      An optimist would say that Rudy Giuliani's national popularity represents a swing away from this mode. A pessimist would say he's getting a free pass because he's a Republican.

      -Isaac

      --
      I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
    17. Re:And in the spirit of things by superbus1929 · · Score: 1

      Welcome to America. Here, we're getting ready to attack Milt Romney - a conservative Mormon - because his wife made a donation to Planned Parenthood when she was 24, which I think was in the 70s.

      --
      Let's stop dilly-dallying and just change "-1: Overrated" to "-1: Disagree" or "-1: Doesn't Subscribe to Groupthink".
    18. Re:And in the spirit of things by homey+of+my+owney · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It seems to me your observation has less to do with information, and more to do with believing your side is eternally right. When both sides drop that silly and divisive premise, THEN we can discuss unforgotten information used in the political arena.

    19. Re:And in the spirit of things by Gospodin · · Score: 1

      I was shooting for +1, Ironic, but since that's not available, I'll take +1, Funny!

      --
      ...following the principles of Heisenburger's Uncertain Cat...
    20. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought that... Also, the panopticon is from Dr. Who as well,

    21. Re:And in the spirit of things by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      I think Giuliani gets away with a lot because he is neither defensive or evasive about it. He doesn't try to cover stuff up, then, when he can't possibly get away lying about it anymore, admit to a limited subset of the offense and apologize in the voice of an angel.

      People are much more willing to forgive offense when the offender is forthright and acts like a human who made a mistake instead an offended angel followed by a naughty child.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    22. Re:And in the spirit of things by homey+of+my+owney · · Score: 1

      But that's not the whole story.

      In years past there were lots of things they didn't need to dig for at all. And they didn't report on things like they were going to shake the very foundation of our homes and lives.

      It's not like JFK was discreet. He operated in a different sphere - when the press wasn't there for ratings. It was there to report to the citizens what was news worthy. There were no teasers like How will coming changes likely kill you by next Tuesday? Tune in Monday at 11 for details!

      The media today imho, has become nothing more than the mindless reality shows that fill the rest of the time on the airways.

    23. Re:And in the spirit of things by NeoPaladin394 · · Score: 1

      Very true, but I only see things like this snowballing as we go further down this path.

      Right now, it's only photographs of college parties and old newspaper articles from high school papers. What will happen when people in their 20's today are in their 50's and running for office? Myspace photos in the way back machine? Private IM conversations about how you think so and so is hot? Those pr0n sites you visited in college? What about that racy cell phone text message you sent a compadre? What about that person you friended who ended up being a serial killer decades later?

      If nothing else, political mud slinging will get much, much more comical.

    24. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      This has a somewhat unpleasant taste.

      Let's consider two situations, situation A and situation B:

      In situation A, you worked with someone thirty years ago in a high-pressure environment. Your perception was that the person, Ronald Railey, did really bad things in this situation. Thirty years have passed however, you do not quite like being exposed in front of a hundred million people and having your personal life changed dramatically, and so this is not something you go around proclaiming loudly. Someone who are negatively disposed to Ronald Railey however hears that he may have done something bad, and they come around to talk to you. You tell them of the situation, but that you would prefer not to proclaim it. They offer you money if you will agree to an interview, which you accept. You provide the interview, and present things as you remember them.

      In situation B, you worked with someone thirty years ago in a high-pressure environment. You had no particular perception about the person, Ronald Railey. Thirty years have passed now. Someone who are negatively disposed to Ronald Railey however hears that he may have done something bad, and they come around to talk to you. They offer you money to speak badly about him. You fabricate some negative stories of how Ronald Railey acted in the interview.

      From the way you use your words, it seems to come across ("paid to speak negatively about") - that you are implying, without directly claiming that situation B is the case, and that therefore this says nothing about Ronald Railey's character. If this is the correct interpretation, how can you know that situation B is the case and not situation A?

      You could of course say that "the act of the person speaking about a topic benefitting financially from their statement throws an extreme doubt on the validity of it, so much that, especially years after the event and given a contrary voice, nothing meaningful can be concluded and it should not even be considered a possibility", but then you would have to all of 1) your categorical imperative should apply to all of these cases, not just ones where Democrats are in the fire lane, 2) bear in mind that in these days pretty much everyone who has something to say that people are interested in will benefit from it in terms of either money or travel and dining.

      Here's a second question for you:

      Let's say a politican in a position of authority is on his way to a not particularly important meeting, and he is pressed for time, but not late. He has not had any bad experiences recently, or anything that could be expected to impact his mental state. He knows there are no reporters around, but that there are people around, although he has no reason to believe they know it is him in the car.

      When backing out of the parking lot, he reverses into a parked car, and makes a big dent in it. He gets out of the car, pulls a piece of paper out of his pocket, puts it on the other car's windscreen, and drives off. It later turns out that the piece of paper was blank. When asked about this later and accused of pretending to leave his details he apologises briefly, but gives no other comment other than that he was generally stressed on the day.

      What does this contribute about this person's character, and by extension, his fitness to work for the good of a large group of people?

      Perhaps, before you postulate the categorical imperative for this class of actions, you would prefer to first know the name and political affiliation of the person who would be classified by it?

    25. Re:And in the spirit of things by Bob-taro · · Score: 1

      Even more unfortunately, Americans seem to have a hard time distinguishing between what to ignore (Swift boat veterans paid to speak against John Kerry,) and what may be a real reflection of character (George Bush skipping out on his Air Force duty.)
      Exactly! No matter how many times Democrats tell Americans what to think, an appalling number of them still form their own opinions.
      --
      Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
    26. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to America. Here, we're getting ready to attack Milt Romney - a conservative Mormon - because his wife made a donation to Planned Parenthood when she was 24, which I think was in the 70s.

      It was 1994. I strongly doubt she was 24 at the time. Shame on you for trying to muddy the waters even further.

    27. Re:And in the spirit of things by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      Panopticon is actually a bit older.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    28. Re:And in the spirit of things by hachete · · Score: 1

      Even more unfortunately, Americans seem to have a hard time distinguishing between what to ignore (Swift boat veterans paid to speak against John Kerry,) and what may be a real reflection of character (George Bush skipping out on his Air Force duty.)

      Exactly! No matter how many times Democrats tell Americans what to think, an appalling number of them still form their own opinions. And, every time, these opinions seem to coincide with what the Republicans want. Strange that.
      --
      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
    29. Re:And in the spirit of things by smitty97 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I thought the good doctor was Doctor Who... Who?
      --
      mod me funny
    30. Re:And in the spirit of things by reub2000 · · Score: 1

      Hopefully, people will realize just how childish this mudslinging is when it becauses so common to find a something bad in someones past.

    31. Re:And in the spirit of things by Atzanteol · · Score: 0, Troll

      Score: 3??? Can't anybody spot a troll these days?!?!

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    32. Re:And in the spirit of things by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      I'm 48 and as the song goes "have done all the dumb things", but that alone isn't going to stop me screwing up in the future. The ability to learn from ones mistakes is what "character" is all about. However you are correct, many "adults" (of all political colours) are obsesed with ideological trivia and the "crusaders" who accompany them (eg: the creator of the "sex offenders list" who put the hard word on page boys).

      IMHO: When all's said and done world politics resembles a never ending series of gangland reunion parties.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    33. Re:And in the spirit of things by lilomar · · Score: 1

      And maybe they aren't as repulsed by communism because they never went through the "Red Scare" where the word communism was subconsciously linked with evil in the general public's psyche.

      Here's a quick test to see if you too have been a victim:
      Quick, list three bad things about communism. Go.

      If you answered um, ah, I guess because {{insert random dictator here}} was a communist?
      Then go check out why you are repulsed by communism before ridiculing others for their "lax" views.

      --
      The creator of this post (Jacob Smith) hereby releases it, and all of his other posts, into the public domain.
    34. Re:And in the spirit of things by HBI · · Score: 0, Troll

      "Because he's a republican" - please, don't make me laugh.

      Clinton was raping half of the South with law enforcement assistance during the 1980s and early 90s, and about the only coverage it got was on talk radio, even when the lawsuits were flying. They had to impeach the bastard to even get the media to notice.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    35. Re:And in the spirit of things by veganboyjosh · · Score: 1

      (Score:1, Troll)Score: 3??? Can't anybody spot a troll these days?!?!
      apparently.

    36. Re:And in the spirit of things by Bob-taro · · Score: 1

      And, every time, these opinions seem to coincide with what the Republicans want. Strange that.
      What's so strange about agreeing with Republicans?
      --
      Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
    37. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if something already has been done, the computers will have forgotten the article 8-).

    38. Re:And in the spirit of things by mangst · · Score: 1

      Here in France we have had photos of Chirac selling a communist newspaper while he was young or our ex-prime minister dancing shirtless at a private party. It didn't matter much. Well, that's France. Here in the US, thanks to the "in-depth reporting" of our 24 hour news networks, we're lead to believe that what a presidential candidate did forty years ago during his freshman year at college is as important as, if not more important than, what he did five years ago during his actual political career.
    39. Re:And in the spirit of things by RobBebop · · Score: 1

      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.

      Progress doesn't depend on the foolish. It depends on the unreasonable men and women who refuse to take things at face value and mindless act a certain way "that's the way they've alway been done".

      The correct version of your quotation is attributed to George Bernard Shaw. http://knowprose.com/node/12260 It is famous enough, that misquoting it makes *you* look like a fool.

      --
      Support the 30 Hour Work Week!!!
    40. Re:And in the spirit of things by moeinvt · · Score: 1


      1. It has never been implemented with any great success

      2. There is little incentive for the individual to perform at his or her best because the marginal contribution of a single person has almost zero effect on the collective

      3. It encourages irresponsible behavior by shifting the cost of personal decisions onto the society

    41. Re:And in the spirit of things by SABME · · Score: 1

      > Quick, list three bad things about communism. Go.

      1. central planning model results in inefficient distribution of resources
      2. government structure too easily lends itself to dictatorship
      3. great need for all people to buy in to the philosophy of the state, leading to secret police and brutal treatment of citizens

      There are more, but you only asked for three.

    42. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but they had the 'Red Scare' because the US government had been deeply infiltrated by communists, whose highest allegience was to the Soviet Union, and not to their own country. Many of the other important Western governments, e.g. the UK government, were also targeted, and in many cases successfully infiltrated.

      As an aside, I'm not repulsed by communism, but if it's used in the sense of Marxism, I do think it's completely barmy pseudo-science. Many of the intentions were good, and the state of scientific knowledge was much lower in the mid-19th century than it is today, so I'm not particularly faulting Marx, but I can't help being amazed that so many people believed it right up until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Progress in the social sciences moved on, as in other fields, but a whole group of people were stuck in a mid-19th-century time warp, and many did great damage to their countries because of it.

    43. Re:And in the spirit of things by koreaman · · Score: 1

      N'est-ce pas vrai qu'à un moment vous avez accordé presque 30% de vos voix aux Communistes lors d'une élection présidentielle?

      Le communisme ne choque guère les Français.

    44. Re:And in the spirit of things by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      It's kinda like agreeing with any large polymorphic group of people. It's like agreeing with Germans because they're Germans or disagreeing with the French because they are French, or even going to war in the middle east because some of our enemies are from the middle east. It's like calling all Democrats unpatriotic, because they are Democrats and somewhere some Democrat disagreed with the war. I'm a Democrat, but that doesn't mean I agree with all of them.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    45. Re:And in the spirit of things by monoqlith · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's what he's saying at all. You are completely misrepresenting the facts. Furthermore, it's difficult to see why you invoke the notion of categorical imperative, as this is primarily an epistemic question, not an ethical one(though it may have ethical implications). In other words, it primarily concerns the conditions under which we believe or disbelieve a claim, and the conditions under which factual reality(to which we are accountable) may be misrepresented. The only real issue which Kant would bring to the table here is whether lying is wrong but there is no real debate here, is there?

      First, if we cannot agree on what the Swift Boat veterans actually did, we can't actually discuss the issue meaningfully.

      Neither of your two situations represent what actually occurred. The group used the testimony of people who were directly contradicting the official testimony that they had already made during the Vietnam War. Some had even *recommended* Kerry for the awards he received, and all of the Swift Boat veterans had not even been in a position to witness or judge his heroic actions at the time they occured. Some even admitted that their grievances concerned not what John Kerry did during the war but instead what John Kerry said after the war. These are people who signed a letter attacking John Kerry simply because they disagreed with John Kerry's public criticisms about war operations.

      So, who are we to say which testimony was true with regards to those who directly contradicted themselves? The fact that the prior testimony was made ostensibly without financial and political inducement while the latter testimony was made with it seems to cast doubt over the latter. Thus, at the very least, we should not be affected at all by the claims of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth(that is, their claims should not cause us to think less of John Kerry or to think more of John Kerry).

    46. Re:And in the spirit of things by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      The difference between the famous/powerful and the rest of us is that we do not have any personal capitol to shake off something stupid we said in a forum 15 years ago that Google links to us today. This lacking commodity makes it very easy for people to black list someone because of something that happened in their youth.

    47. Re:And in the spirit of things by Kelbear · · Score: 1

      While I'm sure some are clear on the definitions, I'm sure many are not. I am probably going to fall within the former. And so, I think it would be constructive to take a moment to clarify where one idea ends and another begins.

      By my understanding, capitalism and communism are conceptual extremes of economic order? Capitalism has individuals determining their economic status by their own individual efforts, and communism has a group determining their economic status by a group effort. And in-between there's socialism? What's the distinction between socialism and communism?

      Fascism, Marxism, Democracy, Republic, etc. these are all seperate political concepts right? Naturally economic and political policies will bleed over into one another since the two are going to interact in the system, but are still separable into distinct concepts right?

      There are more concepts out there, but these are the most relevant ones in today's world AFAIK.

      So in getting to the original question of what's wrong with communism, I would say it's a lack of competition due to uncertain rewards for productivity, and lack of danger in failure. Other than that, I don't see anything wrong with it. Why can't there be a democratic communist system rather than an authoritarian dictatorship(Are those two words redundant when used together?)

      Laissez faire capitalism doesn't sound very attractive either, and most if not all countries do have some sort of market regulation because pure capitalism can be pretty cannibalistic.

      With diminishing returns at both extremes, it seems to me that an ideal solution would sit at equilibrium somewhere in-between.

    48. Re:And in the spirit of things by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      Tribal societies seem to have great success with it.

    49. Re:And in the spirit of things by lilomar · · Score: 1

      Thank you for spelling out in more detail what I meant to try to say in my post. Sometimes my methods of making a point come across as rather incisive.

      For all those who replied with three things: That's great, I wasn't trying to make the point that communism is a good idea, I was trying to point out that many people automatically have a recoil to the word communism, even though they have no idea what it really is.

      For the record, I'm a democratic socialist, not a communist. Communism won't be feasible until we become a true information society, aka, anything not just software, music, and movies, can be copied with little or no cost.

      --
      The creator of this post (Jacob Smith) hereby releases it, and all of his other posts, into the public domain.
    50. Re:And in the spirit of things by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1
      And here I thought referencing Blake's 7 "Moloch" was more apropo:

      Vila: Where are we going?
      Tarrant: To destroy a computer.
      Vila: Why?
      Tarrant: It knows too much about me.
      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    51. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If by troll you mean the 4 cocks that we are about to plunge into your mouth and ass. Yeah be spottin' them. Here we gots you this blonde wig to make you be like dat paris hilton. I here she likes getting dat ass hit raw dog. We will be coming for you tonight.

      Signed,
      The Trollish Niggers

    52. Re:And in the spirit of things by Canordis · · Score: 1

      Because 30 years from now our personal computers which contain our chat logs and browsing histories will not merely still exist, but also be accessible, still have that data, and be open for public scrutiny!

      Oh wait, no. My chat logs do go back a long ways, but my browsing history is wiped every week; I don't expect them to exist beyond this box in any form except as a CD archived somewhere I have access to. And 30 years from now, having stupid pictures of yourself on MySpace will be the norm for people running for office - So it'll be socially acceptable; I expect even that some candidates will use them in publicity, if they are non-embarrassing enough; JFK had pictures of him doing all sorts of "regular guy" stuff. Publishing selected parts of one's earlier web identity will serve the same purpose in the future; a generation of people who grew up with MySpace will have more identification and affinity with a politician with a similar background.

      --
      I have never made but one prayer to God, a very short one: "O Lord, make my enemies ridiculous." And God granted it.
    53. Re:And in the spirit of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I thought the good doctor was Doctor Who...

      No, Dr. Hoffman....

  2. Hmm by sharp-bang · · Score: 4, Funny

    I am really tempted to comment on this, but I'm worried that it will be archived and used against me later.

    --
    #!
    1. Re:Hmm by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      I am really tempted to comment on this, but I'm worried that it will be archived and used against me later.

      Boy, does that Politburo know how to turn a phrase. I know I'm inspired.


      Don't worry, comrade. Communists like you are safe.

    2. Re:Hmm by sharp-bang · · Score: 1

      Da, tovarish, and don't worry, they'll never convict you. ;-)

      --
      #!
    3. Re:Hmm by FooBarWidget · · Score: 1

      "sharp-bang worried that his comment will be archived and used against him later"... noted. This will be used against you later.

    4. Re:Hmm by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Ick! I hope nobody ever murders Steve Ballmer. (Did I just say that?!)

    5. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me too. Just imagine how many worthy comments on Slashdot would be lost if I were... deleted. <shudder>

    6. Re:Hmm by BakaHoushi · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. To make up for the computers, I vow to forget even more. Starting with that vow. ...Wait, what were we talking about?

    7. Re:Hmm by hazygin · · Score: 1

      see no evil...? why are people so afraid to live under judgement, every one makes mistakes no one is perfect. best we can do is support each other, not; hay! lets just pretend that never happened ok?

    8. Re:Hmm by spikedvodka · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of 2 jokes.
      1) 2 soviets are talking
      a: "Good morning Tovarish, I hear that congratulations are in order"
      b: "You do, why?"
      a: "Well, your brother in Leningrad just won a car"
      b: "Oh, yes, except it wasn't my Brother, it was my uncle... It wasn't in Leningrad, it was Stalingrad, it wasn't a car, it was a bike, and he didn't win it, it was stolen. But Generally speaking, that's right"

      or better yet 2)
      a) Tovarish, I am so upset, a swiss soldier just came and stole my Russian watch!
      b) I am confused, don't you mean a russian soldier just came and stole your swiss watch?
      a) be that as it may, but you said it, not me!

      --
      I will not give in to the terrorists. I will not become fearful.
  3. Responsibility by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perhaps people should think a little more before they open their mouths, or in this case, apply their fingers to their keyboards. A computer record of your silliness is not much different than a person remembering some stupid thing you said many years before ... but at least it's more accurate.

    1. Re:Responsibility by new_breed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, except that a computer can show a lot of persons far more accurately what that stupid thing was, instead of that *one* person *maybe* remembering it.

    2. Re:Responsibility by Kandenshi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I assume there are a bunch of slashdotters who've spent time on IRC? There are plenty of people spouting stuff online that they (hopefully) wouldn't say in real life. The only time that computer logging is going to be inhibitory is when your statements can easily be linked back to your actual real life identity by either people you know or The Secret Police Of Scariness.

      If everything we did online could easily be traced back to us by our neighbours then yeah, I'd expect we'd be visiting fewer naughty websites, and posting fewer inflammatory remarks. As long as the ability to post as yourself OR as "anonymous" exists then I think we're safe. Our online personas will be squeeky clean(or close enough to it anyway), while in 20 years "Anonymous" is exactly the sort of person you'd expect if you're familiar with 4chan... *cough*

    3. Re:Responsibility by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Perhaps people should think a little more before they open their mouths, or in this case, apply their fingers to their keyboards.

      Or just use a nickname. Or multiple nicknames.

      If it really is a problem, with or without nicknames, perhaps sites could have an expiration date on all comments posted, like the X-No-Archive: Yes thing in Usenet.

    4. Re:Responsibility by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      Perhaps people should be more tollorant, accept people make mistakes and change their minds from time to time.

      Though looking at the divorce figures it seems the opposite is happening.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    5. Re:Responsibility by Vicarius · · Score: 1

      Perhaps people should think a little more before they open their mouths... While I do agree with you, I think you are missing the point here.

      People can learn, which means they can change their opinions and affiliations based on new knowledge and experiences. IMHO, their prior ignorant opinions should not be held against them as if they were current.
    6. Re:Responsibility by jrumney · · Score: 1

      It's easy to say so now, but in 1992, someone posting to Usenet had no expectation that their comments would be archived forever and be easily searchable by anyone with an internet connection and 10 seconds to spare.

    7. Re:Responsibility by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Funny

      You're absolutely correct. ... I wonder if I can change my earlier comment ...

    8. Re:Responsibility by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      perhaps sites could have an expiration date on all comments posted, like the X-No-Archive: Yes thing in Usenet.

      And if you really think that the X-No-Archive header is honored by more than a very small fraction of sites, I have some dot-com stock from a few years back that you may be interested in...

      Furthermore, no solution can be legislated due to the "world wide" nature of the net.

      It's kind of like that mythical "right to privacy" we all would like to have.

    9. Re:Responsibility by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While some will argue that you shouldn't have to be anonymous in a free society, I would answer with they should be thinking about their future if they decide to post something then. But with that aside, I would say spot on.

      You are right, there are plenty of ways to get a message out without having it directly pointed back at you. And seriously, if someone is worried about what might bite them latter in life, then I guess they need to take a more serious look at what they say and what they expect to be doing later in life. When someone is worried about what they believe in, it tells a lot about how strong their beliefs are and how crazy and sometimes wrong those beliefs are wring.

      And truthfully, there are only a few people who will have it come back and byte them. Case in point, look at the distinguished senator from West Virginia. Robert C Byrd was a blatant racist and even went as far as rising to the top of his local Ku Klux Klan chapter and eventually became The Grand Pooh-Bah of recruiting for the Klan in his state area. But it doesn't stop there, as a member of the house of representatives, he attempted to stop the civil rights act of 1964 and again with the voting rights act. Yet today, all that is behind him and he is a prominent and respected leader of the democratic party without issue of his past except when some republicans bring it up about double standards.

      I would guess that you don't even need to be anonymous if your position is right enough and you continue to be around those with like minds. And even if you change your mind, it doesn't matter that much if you continue to hang around the right crowd.

    10. Re:Responsibility by value_added · · Score: 1

      And if you really think that the X-No-Archive header is honored by more than a very small fraction of sites ...

      True, to the extent it's been honoured at all in recent history, but "sites"? There are no sites, or forums, or boards, or whatever else when you're talking about usenet; weird-assed gateways excluded, there's just the groups, the posts, and the servers that propagate them.

    11. Re:Responsibility by Dogtanian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's easy to say so now, but in 1992, someone posting to Usenet had no expectation that their comments would be archived forever and be easily searchable by anyone with an internet connection and 10 seconds to spare. This is quite true; there's a lot of adolescent drivel out there with my real name on it which I posted circa '93-95 (and some even later) that I didn't realise would be archived. Usenet then *was* seen to be ephemeral.

      In the future, given the merging of information databases (including weblogs containing cookies and/or IPs) and data-mining software's improved ability to automatically spot patterns and "join-the-dots" connecting superficially unconnected identities, it wouldn't surprise me if it was trivially possible to find out who someone posting behind an anonymous account (today) was at some stage in the future.

      Personally, I don't assume that *anything* I post on the Internet nowadays will remain unconnected with me forever.

      As for the panopticon concept, if it gets really bad, it may be that human behaviour and attitudes will be forced into changing. Society may end up "accepting" that people say and do things in different contexts, and that no-one is perfect under the surface and politely disregarding such things in much the same way that city-dwellers pretend that the other people on a busy train aren't there.
      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    12. Re:Responsibility by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      And if you really think that the X-No-Archive header is honored by more than a very small fraction of sites, I have some dot-com stock from a few years back that you may be interested in... That raises the question of the legality of such retention, given the use of a standard mechanism to indicate that the user *doesn't* want the data retained.

      And in fact, this raises a more general issue regarding Usenet; when posting to it, what are reasonable expectations? What would the same expectations have been 10-15 years ago?

      That is, when I posted stuff to Usenet in the mid-90s, it was still seen as ephemeral (see here), and yet now we find out it had been permanently archived. Does someone have a right to do that with my message? Or does someone have a right to take my message and redisplay it with adverts on it? Or even to reuse it in a different context?

      I gave no explicit permission when I posted, and whilst a court would probably rule that I implicitly gave permission for redistribution via the standard Usenet mechanisms of the time and for people to see and respond in a standard manner, does this grant the right to uses or issues a typical user would not have foreseen seen at the time?
      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    13. Re:Responsibility by icepick72 · · Score: 1

      When the story is left to two people competing and trying to remember it casts doubt on both. When a computer remembers for one party it seems pretty solid except that the context might not be understood anymore. Archived data coming back to haunt you is less likely when pseudonyms are allowed (i.e. pretty much all of Slashdot) in which case you cannot directly (easily) link back to a real person. It's more of a problem in social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook where most often real names and identification are used. Of course protection features in those might help to curb the spread too.

    14. Re:Responsibility by arminw · · Score: 1

      ......Perhaps people should think a little more before they open their mouths........

      That is good advice, spoken by Jesus Christ about 2000 years ago.

        "But I say to you that every idle word, whatever men may speak, they shall give account of it in the day of judgment. For by your words you shall be justified, and by your words you shall be condemned." (Matthew 12:36-37)

      If what He said is true, then God has a data collection and retention service far more detailed and accurate than a mere computer.

      --
      All theory is gray
    15. Re:Responsibility by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      People can learn, which means they can change their opinions and affiliations based on new knowledge and experiences
      Flip-flopper!
    16. Re:Responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, welcome our new forgetting computer ove.......huh? Where was I? What am I doing here? I'm confused...

    17. Re:Responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the sites that archive them.

    18. Re:Responsibility by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      While the term 'site' is often used as an abbreviation of 'web site,' it is also used to indicate a physical location. It used to be a lot more common, but it is still sometimes used to refer to an organisation with a distinct physical presence that hosts a certain service. A usenet site is a place that hosts a server that is part of usenet. The grandparent's comment made sense in this context, since the 'site' (including the administrators present on that site) determines the policy for the server, including whether certain headers are respected.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    19. Re:Responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If what He said is true...

      Don't worry; it's not.

    20. Re:Responsibility by mikael · · Score: 1

      This is quite true; there's a lot of adolescent drivel out there with my real name on it which I posted circa '93-95 (and some even later) that I didn't realise would be archived. Usenet then *was* seen to be ephemeral.

      That brings back memories: The Green Golfball Joke, Kibology, The Death Dot, and much, much more.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    21. Re:Responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Perhaps people should think a little more before they open their mouths, or in this case, apply their fingers to their keyboards. A computer record of your silliness is not much different than a person remembering some stupid thing you said many years before ... but at least it's more accurate."

      Say what? I remember lots of stupid things I've said or done, and I'm certainly not going to post them on the Internet, as one individual already did. How much less do I want a searchable computer record that some twit with a subpoena could use against me? I'm not a privacy nut, but the idea of every e-mail I ever send, including the "funny" ones, makes me uncomfortable.

    22. Re:Responsibility by Threni · · Score: 1

      > There are no sites, or forums, or boards, or whatever else when you're talking about usenet; weird-assed gateways excluded, there's
      > just the groups, the posts, and the servers that propagate them.

      And the websites which reproduce Usenet posts, such as this:

      http://mailgate.dada.net/rec/rec.music.classical/i ndex.html

    23. Re:Responsibility by ImaLamer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is quite true; there's a lot of adolescent drivel out there with my real name on it which I posted circa '93-95 (and some even later) that I didn't realise would be archived. Usenet then *was* seen to be ephemeral.

      Even worse is when you were the only in the neighborhood with a real ISP. All my friends had AOL or Prodigy so they came to me to ask the USENET about drugs and other things... under my name.

      I fear my next interviewer will know how to Google.

    24. Re:Responsibility by Zspdude · · Score: 1

      A computer record of your silliness is not much different than a person remembering some stupid thing you said many years before ... but at least it's more accurate. A computer record of your silliness is vastly different than a person remembering some stupid thing.

      - Unless your silliness was of exemplary humour or of an extremely scarring nature, a person will forget it. You can pull up USENET posts from over 25 years ago on google archives. If the good doctor is right (and this is his point) 25 years from now you will still be able to.

      - The number of people who have access to a person's record of your silliness is limited to whomever they tell. In the context of the internet, it is limited by the number of people who want to search for it. I suspect that this number is a lot higher than you might think.

      In addition, search, data-mining, profiling, market research tools, and spam techniques are all getting better. It's difficult to say what joe-fraudster, joe-spammer, or joe-homelandsecurity will be able to achieve five, ten, or twenty-five years from now.

      Perhaps twenty-five years from now posting on slashdot will be considered a terrorist activity. Perhaps previous posters will be hauled off to jail in the middle of the night. Or just treated as second class citizens. The point is, who can say? I've tried to identify *current* parties who are interested in a composite of your data - but I have no idea of who the *future* interested parties may be. They may be still more sinister.

      Saying "think a little more" is not the answer because people are not used to thinking in the way that this requires. It requires thinking about possible future abuses rather than just present ones. To a certain extent, people cannot think in the way that this requires. Regardless of whether or not people *should*, people *won't*, people *can't*, and this is why there is a problem.
      --
      What's in a Sig?
  4. Quite Right by AndreAtlan · · Score: 1

    God knows I've posted stuff on here I wish I hadn't

    --
    We as voters have given up essential liberty. We hoped to purchase a little temporary safety. We in fact deserve neither
    1. Re:Quite Right by sharp-bang · · Score: 1

      Lucky for us that Slashdot does, 25 comments later, forget. Except for subscribers, dammit.

      --
      #!
    2. Re:Quite Right by NickFitz · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, there is another who remembers...

      --
      Using HTML in email is like putting sound effects on your phone calls. Just say <strong>no</strong>.
    3. Re:Quite Right by maxume · · Score: 1
      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:Quite Right by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      And another. Man! One of Slashdot's first stories ... announcing Linux kernel 2.1.79 ... those were the days!

    5. Re:Quite Right by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      God knows I've posted stuff on here I wish I hadn't No, he forgot too.
    6. Re:Quite Right by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1
      Very nice is this above the comment submission box:

      If you don't have anything worthwhile to say, don't say it. If people continue to abuse this feature, I will have to remove it.
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    7. Re:Quite Right by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      I see your Linux kernel 2.1.79 and raise you a Linux Kernel 2.1.77

    8. Re:Quite Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your comments are your copyright, surely? Why not simply request that Slashdot remove your copyrighted material? :)

    9. Re:Quite Right by endianx · · Score: 1

      But Google never forgets.

  5. Dare I say it? by daniorerio · · Score: 1

    I wanted to comment on this, but I'm not gonna...

    1. Re:Dare I say it? by kenjishikida · · Score: 1

      "Harvard Prof Says Computers Need to Forget"

      "slashdot reader says we need to forget computers" ;-)

      --
      [] Leonardo Kenji Shikida
  6. One Slashdot article a day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's all I need ... but then I'll want more :-)

  7. Forget? by mattpointblank · · Score: 1

    Interesting, but we need to consider the human memory. Do we really 'forget' things? Or do we simply lose the 'links' to the memory, akin to deleting a file but not emptying it from the Recycling Bin. 'Psychics' like Derren Brown are able to get people to unlock memories they forgot they had - it doesn't mean we've forgotten the details themselves, just how to access them. We're not so different from computers after all.

    1. Re:Forget? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nope. Studies have been done on these 'suppressed memories'. The general consensus is that these memories are manufactured after the fact. What is scary is that when suppressed memories were all the rage about a decade ago, people were getting convicted based on this evidence. I wonder how many innocent people are still in jail based on pop-science.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    2. Re:Forget? by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 2, Funny

      Do we really 'forget' things? Wives don't - ever!
      --
      init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    3. Re:Forget? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Derren is mostly a fraud. Magicians today are quite happy to admit that they are not demonstrating supernatural powers, but using sleight of hand, camera or lighting tricks, misunderstood laws of physics, plants in the audience, editing to filter out the victims who out-smarted him, or whatever.

      Derren is certainly better than those who claim to be truly magic, but bases his performance on a different lie - that his tricks are based on fooling the mind, which, he would have you believe, is unable to critically evaluate and incredibly easy to influence.

      He is as intellectually dishonest as Uri Geller, whose claim to fame is not that he gives a performance that's hard to explain, but that he denies the most trivial explanations even when they are correct.

      His extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, so anyone wishing to refute this post before doing a 30 second Google for the myriad of pages to illustrate his trickery ought to re-evaluate their (whence his) use of the scientific method.

    4. Re:Forget? by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      While the biology of neurons is not entirely understood we can at least say these things:

      1) Cells die all over the brain all the time.
      2) All cells are stateful - i.e., they all "remember" something.
      3) Most of the cells are "rewriteable." It's possible that parts of all of them are.

      Given this, I'm gonna have to go out on a limb and say that you actually do forget things. Occasionally, you have a cell die that can trigger other memories, but you also flat-out lose the memories (remember, you lose cells from all parts of your brain).

      However, it's not as black-and-white as that because the brain stores memories in analog. Think of it kind of like a jpeg image - as you lose cells, a memory gets fuzzier the same way that a low-quality jpeg is fuzzier than a high quality one. (At least, this is how we think it works because this is how our models that do the same thing work).

      So what happens when a low quality memory is brought to the surface? It's "rendered" imperfectly. So you get these "unlocked" memories that can't really be trusted because cells that made them up have died or been changed so much as to be the same.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    5. Re:Forget? by virgil_disgr4ce · · Score: 1

      The interesting thing about this is that memories are not "stored" in individual cells, but rather in large (potentially vast) patterns of cells. So as cells or links die, the memory degrades (quasi-holographically, it might be argued).

    6. Re:Forget? by Pope · · Score: 1

      Yes, we forget things all the time. Do you really remember what you did on that first Friday of June when you were 4? I doubt it. It's not important enough to be stored in a long term association unless something dramatic enough happened to make it stick.

      People can be coaxed into remember memories that are not readily accessible through associations. However, most of the so-called "lost memories" that people have never happened in the first place.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    7. Re:Forget? by fellip_nectar · · Score: 1

      Yes, we...

      ...sorry, what was the question again?

      --
      Worst. Signature. Ever.
    8. Re:Forget? by llamaxing · · Score: 1

      I know elephants don't forget, but you don't need to go around making fun of my wife like that. How rude!

  8. data protection, from government and private by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You don't fix that a book can be taken the wrong way by burning the book.

    Have Data Protection laws (as in the EU) which seem to revolve around the theme that data allowing one to identify a particular person is copyrighted to that person. Meanwhile, ensure that the Constitution is read in spirit to protect against the government even appropriating, let alone operating on, data without good reason.

  9. Solved by fatduck · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Won't we eventually forget where we saved this stuff? Seriously, though, maybe a better solution is for people to stop getting offended about everything. Maybe if we weren't so obsessed with whether someone had ever posted something on the internet indicating they deviate slightly from societal norms and using that information to decide whether someone is qualified for a job or service this wouldn't be an issue.

    --
    Making you think you're crazy is a billion dollar industry.
    1. Re:Solved by sharp-bang · · Score: 1

      Won't we eventually forget where we saved this stuff?

      Or the formats won't be readable owing to "technological progress".

      A few years ago the local high school put out their yearbook on CD-ROM. *Only* on CD-ROM. Twenty years from now, how many CD-ROM players will there be?

      Why, this very comment is formatted in HTML tags that may or may not be browser-supported twenty years from now.

      --
      #!
    2. Re:Solved by heraclitus23 · · Score: 1

      Even if people are too easily offended, I fail to see how this is even a problem at all. Do we really think that there is no degredation in data? Or that the formats in which digital information is stored won't change thus making inaccessable? Is it really plausible, say, that a document written in Word will be readable in fifty years time, let alone two centuries from now? I made the mistake of writing my dissertation in Word (in 1995) and can't even access it now. The problem seems rather the opposite, how to preserve our data. But even plain text and open standards, while the best we can do at present, is no guarantee. Sometimes I think we were better off with parchment.

    3. Re:Solved by hazem · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree. This technological memory will be painful at first as only a few are hit hard by the judgment society imposes against them for their recorded actions.

      When a majority of peoples lives are recorded and available for review, the bar for what is truly scandalous will be set much higher. Soon it will be: "Pictures of me in a pirate hat drinking a beer at a party? Who doesn't have a picture like that on the internet? You should see the one of my with the kangaroo and that giant bucket of peanut butter..."

      That's not to say that massive amounts of surveillance and data retention are good. But I think that society's expectations of people will adjust when we're all forced to remember that we all have times when we were silly, immature, or not the person we are today.

    4. Re:Solved by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      Twenty years from now, how many CD-ROM players will there be? Still a fairly large number, I should imagine. Some may wear out, the majority may be thrown out, but there will still be a large amount in workable order, simply because so many were sold in the first place; and someone can always transfer it to another media type.
      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    5. Re:Solved by doti · · Score: 1

      Exactly.
      This is a new condition of the environment we live in (even if this modification was made by ourselves).
      We must -- and will, as always -- adapt to it.

      --
      factor 966971: 966971
    6. Re:Solved by LionKimbro · · Score: 1

      That's horrible.

      30% of the fun: old pictures of friends.

      70%: rereading what your friends (& crushes) wrote in your book.

    7. Re:Solved by houghi · · Score: 1

      People like to know what other people do or did. That is why we will look at some people living in a house, on an island or whatever other lame shows there are.

      Probably you say that you don't do that, but plenty of other people will. Thise will be the people who will dig into what you once said.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  10. First.... by Umuri · · Score: 1

    Toast?... no, that's not right.
    Coast?... not right either.
    Most?... still doesn't sound right.

    Gee I'm sure glad that humans can forget things, it would be so inconvenient if we remembered everything.

    Joking aside, I use my computer precisely because it doesn't forget things and I do. While it may suck for humans to have history held accountable to them, what incentive do people have to NOT have a record of your actions?

    Without an incentive, things don't usually change.

    --
    You never realize how much manually made unmanaged "linked" lists suck, till you have src.link.link.link.link...
    1. Re:First.... by locoluis · · Score: 1

      I, for one, wouldn't quite like it if my computer started forgetting things as I do.

      Specifically, my TODO list, my projects folder, the notes I wrote last year...

      I can't keep track of it all alone. If my computer started forgettings things, I would have to make hard copies of everything. And that would really suck for me.

      Of course, I never had anything to hide. I understand that some people are really paranoid about 'THEM' (The government, the military, the terrorists, the rosicrucians, the Dutch, the spaghetti monsters, etc.) being out to get them, and so they would prefer stuff about them to be kept private. To each their own.

  11. No kidding by wiredog · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I just pulled my credit report, which I do 3 or 4 times a year. My address at my old air defense outfit at Ft Polk (D 1/55 ADA) is still listed there.

    I got out of the army in 1988.

    1. Re:No kidding by FredThompson · · Score: 4, Funny

      Give us a couple of your credit card numbers, you phone number and current address.

      We can clear that credit report up for you. ...

      Damn, this will come back to haunt me...

    2. Re:No kidding by HazMathew · · Score: 1

      Credit information is surprisingly easy to change due to the Fair Credit Act. Just call TransUnion, EquiFax and Experian. As long as its not your current address you can tell them that the address is wrong and you would like it deleted. They'll tell you that they need to do an "investigation". They only have 30 days to investigate the dispute. They hardly have time to investigate where John Doe lived in 1988 so the address will get removed. Hello cleaned up credit report!

    3. Re:No kidding by wiredog · · Score: 1

      Actually I don't really care that it's on there. I just find it interesting that the information has been retained for 20 years.

  12. Attitudes will change. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that as computers retain more of our past than we've ever been able to retain ourselves people will come to the realization that nothing we have said or done in the past provides a completely accurate picture of the indivual we are today.

    When people who have made this personal realization come into positions of power 5 to 10 years from now, there will be no reason to regret a recorded slip of the tongue.

    Maybe I'm being optimistic, but I see this technology bringing individuals more in touch with what it is to be human, and I fail to see how this outcome could be bad for society as a whole.

  13. computers need to forget by Miguel+de+Icaza · · Score: 0, Insightful

    That's the dumbest fucking idea I've heard since I've been working for Microsoft

    --
    Before adopting WHATWG, read the moonlight.NET EULA [http://www.microsoft.com/interop/msnovellcollab/moonlight.mspx]
    1. Re:computers need to forget by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, Bill Gates knew this all the time. He even gave a rule of thumb to decide when there's too much data stored about you, so it is time to delete some of it: 640K ought to be enough for anybody.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  14. Fine by me... by tttonyyy · · Score: 1

    ...but needs some context.

    Quite happy for my old e-mails and old student website to be "forgotten" (makes me cringe looking on the Wayback Machine, hope my kids never find it).

    Not so happy for my old digital photos to be forgotten. After all, I took those because I wanted to preserve information for the future - the purpose of most photos.

    Definitely needs to be context-aware.

    --
    biopowered.co.uk - catalytically cracking triglycerides for home automotive use since 2008. Just say no to big oil!
  15. Context by onion2k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the worry is that things can be taken out of context then we have only two options: remember everything so context can be retained, or remember nothing. If computers 'forget' (can't we just say 'delete'?) some things and retain others then we'll have problems contextualising content.

    Personally, I'd rather computers stored everything. Human history is only as rich as it is because scholars hundreds, even thousands, of years ago wrote things down. The periods of our past where writing was unusual are only known about through what amounts to educated speculation. How sad would it be that in the next thousand years there's no record of what we did and said because we're fearful of what some mysterious power might do with the archive?

    The tin-foiled paranoids should be more worried about what a rogue power would do without any history to look back on. It works both ways: "Where were you on May 10th 1977? You don't remember? You have no record? YOU HAVE NO ALIBI! You must be guilty!".

    1. Re:Context by Moggyboy · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but the beauty of the internet allows us to not only record history from one point of view, but multiple points of view; different international perceptions, etc. For the first time in history, humans can learn about history without just reading the doctored perceptions of the victor.

      --
      Work smarter, not harder.
    2. Re:Context by Tribbin · · Score: 1

      So the best thing for future history is;

      Tell people that computers forget and then just store everything anyway.

      This way people will speak freely and there will be more information stored that otherwise would not have been because of fear.

      --
      If you mod this up, your slashdot background will turn into a beautiful sunset!
    3. Re:Context by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The tin-foiled paranoids should be more worried about what a rogue power would do without any history to look back on. It works both ways: "Where were you on May 10th 1977? You don't remember? You have no record? YOU HAVE NO ALIBI! You must be guilty!".

      Somehow, I suspect rogue states (à la US?) can find a way to lose any record of history when it suits. And more than likely find it again as necessary. At least if it was difficult to retain the information they'd only be able to act upon its absence - or go to the trouble to create their own evidence.

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

      The tin-foiled paranoids should be more worried about what a rogue power would do without any history to look back on. It works both ways: "Where were you on May 10th 1977? You don't remember? You have no record? YOU HAVE NO ALIBI! You must be guilty!".

      That's what a statute of limitations is for. If too much time has gone by, the crime is "forgotten" in the legal sense, thus making such data storage unnecessary.

      The real problem is that all the data we'd actually want forgotten has value. Otherwise we wouldn't care if it were retained. As a result, there will always be a market and the data will remain with us for years to come.

  16. I see your point by brewstate · · Score: 0

    Any politician will tell you that "forgetful computers" *is* nice. If you are having a secret fling with an intern (sexual orientation need not apply), or if you are planning to do something let's say immoral or illegal it is very necessary for the computer to forgive and forget. If you say when you are 22 that Communism rocks or I wish I were like Stalin and this is remembered and taken out of context as you run for office this could be a huge chink in your plan.

  17. computers don't forget by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Computers with SANs and geographically dispersed backup systems, that is.

    And even if they did, there are many organizations of all kinds crawling the web and some of those won't forget.

    I think what will happen is that people will develop thicker skin. Past embarrassing comments, photos, background facts, etc. will be relentlessly flung in their faces, but there will be greater tolerance for past weakness and mistakes. Call this the Bill/Monica effect.

    Until then, I'm watching my backside by posting as AC.

  18. Public databases need to forget by GauteL · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Right now, you can find 10 year old newsgroup postings from myself when searching Google. That is in my opinion too much data retention. I don't think they are particularly embarrassing now, but there was a time when my 10 year old newsgroup postings would have been posted when I was 14-15 or so.

    They embarrasseed me, and I don't think I should be expected to be cautious about this issue when in my teens. People forget most of your silly mistakes from such a while ago but databases do not, unless you instruct them to.

    1. Re:Public databases need to forget by Vertana · · Score: 1, Insightful

      When a program crashes and "forgets" all the information you had put into it, you get angry no? Think before you type sir. The entire concept of a computer was to NOT forget. They started out as calculating machines, if machines could "forget" then it would defeat the entire concept driving the technological advances made towards computers.

      --
      "The best way to accelerate a Macintosh is at 9.8m/sec^2" -Marcus Dolengo
    2. Re:Public databases need to forget by Chrisje · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My brother in law (I'm 17 years younger than he is) always points out to any new girlfriend (or friend, for that matter) I bring home that he's "known him since he was still shitting his pants as a wee laddie".

      This embarrassed me. And I don't think I should be expected to be cautious about this issue when in my pre-toddler years.

      People don't forget squat, I'm afraid to say. At least computers/google have to be explicitly prompted to go find particular information. My brother in law freely disseminates it on any occasion he damn well pleases.

      Lastly, I simply don't agree with the good doctor's assessment. If you come from a culture like the US where everything and everyone is covering their ass against some or other liability already, computer storage could possibly exacerbate those tendencies, but they hardly can be blamed for being the root cause.

      If on the other hand you come from a culture where pretty much anything can be said in any type of discussion (Holland and Israel are funnily enough quite alike in that regard), computer storage won't do anything to strip that away. If you find something you said as a kid around here the tendency is to shrug it off or do a "ha-ha, nevermind".

      Therefore I would argue that the reaction to the possibility of others seeing what you once said says more about the culture you come from than anything else. What strikes me as funny is that the Doctor is Austrian, and therefore should have a different perspective on things than most people you'd expect at Harvard. Although I saw his photo. In there, it doesn't look as though he has much of a perspective on anything. His whole thesis sounds like an exercise in misunderstanding causality, and poppycock knee-jerk reactions to something someone might have seen sometime somewhere.

      I do however believe, from a technical perspective, in the wisdom of classifying data by desired retention times. This is because it's a simple cost-of-ownership question. You can't retain all your irrelevant data all the time on prime data storage solutions. It's just economically unsound and practically undesirable.

    3. Re:Public databases need to forget by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      10 years? It goes a lot farther than that. I found a bunch of posts that I wrote back in 1987. Comp.sys.amiga lives!!!

    4. Re:Public databases need to forget by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "People don't forget squat, I'm afraid to say."

      Of course they do. Don't be silly. Do you remember every single thing from your life? People certainly remember embarrassing things about you, but they don't remember EVERY embarrassing thing about you. Most things are forgotten and only the "gems" are kept. You shitting your pants was probably a gem :-)

      In a society where EVERYTHING is remembered, people would have to be way more cautious about their life. That is in many ways sad and a lot less fun.

    5. Re:Public databases need to forget by g0at · · Score: 1

      Right now, you can find 10 year old newsgroup postings from myself when searching Google.

      No. You can find such postings from yourself. I, on the other hand, can find postings from you.

      b

    6. Re:Public databases need to forget by metamatic · · Score: 1

      Funny, I hunted down all my 10 year old Usenet postings, copied the substantial ones (that made sense on their own) into my web site's archive, and made the whole thing searchable.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  19. Foucaultian Panopticon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone know what the hell a "Benthamist" panopticon is? Always thought the idea had been expounded on by Foucault. Or is "Benthamist" qualifying panopticon?

    1. Re:Foucaultian Panopticon? by apathy+maybe · · Score: 1

      You have heard of Jeremy Bentham yes? (One of the first real utilitarians, who helped to raise John Stuart Mill, a classical liberal.) He wrote of the Panopticon, a prison where at any time the guards could see what any of the prisoners were doing. Of course, the prisoners could never see what the guards were doing (or know when they were under surveillance). Things are much easier now with the advent of CCTV. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panopticon

      Foucault, he wrote a lot on the idea. But the original was from Bentham. George Orwell's 1984 also describes a "panopticion" society, whether he got his idea from Yevgeny Zamyatin's We (a novel about a society where all the buildings are built of glass) is debatable.

      Today, the idea of the panopticon (literally, seeing or observing all) has moved beyond prisons into the wider society. Take Britain for example, with its millions of cameras. Yet shit loads of these are actually fake. The UK is now, to a certain extent, a "panopticon" society. At one movement, you might be being watched. But you don't know when, or really even by whom.

      In the context of the article, computers are "all seeing", that is, they can see everything you have written. In this case, it only covers part of your actions, and not all of them.

      --
      I wank in the shower.
  20. Bit rot will help by volsung · · Score: 4, Funny

    At the moment, data is easy to create, but it is also easy to destroy, especially by accident. The constant churn in storage technologies and file formats ensures that anything which entropy does not destroy might become effectively unreadable in 10-20 years anyway. As it stands now, our digital short term memory lasts maybe decades without well considered, active maintenance.

    Think about all digital photos that will certainly be gone in 50 years. (Not that this will be entirely a bad thing. The future probably doesn't want photos of people drinking beer while wearing pirate hats.)

    1. Re:Bit rot will help by laejoh · · Score: 1

      The future probably doesn't want photos of people drinking beer while wearing pirate hats.)

      And so global warming will continue... 'till people realise it ain't such a bad thing, arrrr!

    2. Re:Bit rot will help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try destroying something posted to usenet. It's not so easy, and that stuff will show up in ten years when your job interviewer googles your name.
      I don't particularly mind, because I post responsibly and while lots of others don't, that just means they're out of the competition for lots of jobs I might want. :)

    3. Re:Bit rot will help by camperdave · · Score: 1

      The constant churn in storage technologies and file formats ensures that anything ... might become effectively unreadable in 10-20 years anyway.

      I am not so sure of that. As time goes by, our storage capacity grows. When people got their 4G drives, they simply copied their entire old 504M drive onto it. When they got their 20G, the 4G got copied onto it. 200-300G drives are popular now, with Terabyte sized drives just around the corner. RAID technology is going to take care of the hardware failure issues. Nostalga and open source seem to be taking care of the file format readability issues (there are emulators for pretty much every old machine out there.). So, the data doesn't become unreadable, or left behind. It just gets buried in the mass of flotsam that we collect.

      BTW, any recommendations for a good duplicate files consolidator for linux?

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    4. Re:Bit rot will help by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't count on that being possible in the forseeable future with DRM. Sure, there will always be ways around, but will people circumvent a DRM mechanism to "save" files that don't need anymore, that would be possibly just copied out of lazyness and the notion that it doesn't cost much space (compared to what you got now)?

      Not to mention the large amount of people who don't know how to bypass it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Bit rot will help by durin · · Score: 1

      The future probably doesn't want photos of people drinking beer while wearing pirate hats.

      Actually, they might want exactly that.

      --
      Why, yes! I AM new here.
  21. Interesting Dilemma by Bob(TM) · · Score: 1

    ... but hardly unique to computers. Newspaper, books, pictures, movies - they are all recording media that (presumably) never forgets. It's just a computer does a better job of finding where it put things.

    Actually, it strikes me that the problem is not "forgetting" as much as it is remembering too well. We all remember the "good ole days"; the crux of the problem is the human mind looks back on events through the fog of experience. Events become shadows of their former appearances.

    It would probably be easier to collectively "lighten up" about stuff ...

    Wishful thinking.

    --

    The little guy just ain't getting it, is he?
  22. I disagree by CmdrGravy · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's not often I take time out from my high pressure and high profile work ( which I am currently excelling at, smashing all targets once again for the 12th consecutive year ) to comment on /. but I will make an exception in this case.

    A lot of people have, quite rightly, highly praised my work for charity and the modest advances I have been able to bring to many areas of scientific endeavour and whilst I am obviously too modest to trumpet these achievments myself it would be nice if future employers or business partners were able to locate them on the web.

    Employers especially can often be faced with seemingly excellent prospective employees only to find later on the full details of their sordid obsessions have been documented fully on the web for years. For myself, an excellent choice for almost any position you would want to fill, I welcome scrutiny on the web since I am confident this will simply highlight my excellent skills at driving projects forward and delivering truly innovative and groundbreaking solutions ( at a low low price ) not to mention my near legendary interpersonal and team building skills and a level of honesty which has in some quarters become a byword for "Solid Gold Standard".

    Certainly it has been said that there is no finer employee than myself to truly add value to any business and that as a business partner I cannot be beaten.

    It's just tragic that the network appears to be moving ahead of the scientists at this point and appears to be in the throes of some sort of dementia with regards to information about me. I think it's mistaken me for someone else :-(

    1. Re:I disagree by adityamalik · · Score: 1

      :D

      I think you messed up there, mate..

      It should have gone - My friend Cmdr Gravy - doesn't often take time out blah blah... CmdrGravy, an excellent choice blah... Blah no finer employee than him blah.. hehehehe you get my drift

    2. Re:I disagree by Indiana+Joe · · Score: 1

      Didn't you mean to post this as, "Anonymous Coward"?

      --
      I can't decide if this post is interesting, funny, insightful, or flamebait.
    3. Re:I disagree by metamatic · · Score: 1

      This means that if someone once made racist, paedophiliac, hateful, misogynic, androgynic, stupid, schizofrenic etc. remarks, this should not in any way be held against them when they later in life want to become a politician, teacher, babysitter, policeman etc. We will simply have to assume that people can change and restrict ourselves to looking at their most recent behaviour and opinions.

      ...or not. While people can become better educated, there's no good cure for pedophilia or schizophrenia. They are conditions which can be managed, but not cured.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  23. Computers don't need to forget. by Pyrion · · Score: 1

    People just need to learn to stop taking things out of context.

    --
    "There is much pleasure to be gained from useless knowledge." - Bertrand Russell.
    1. Re:Computers don't need to forget. by michaelmoran · · Score: 1

      Agreed, The problem is not, nor ever has been, that computers do not "forget." The problem is people wanting to take anything out of context. Consider if everything was preserved perfectly, one would be able to see a comment posted 30 years ago, but would also be able to see the comments before and after, thus preserving the context. In addition, the age of the poster would be known and the growth of that person would also be shown. The problem is the constant human desire(in addition to the desire for profits) to have things sensationalized which causes the soundbite.

      I have often thought that all quotes shown on tv should be followed by the previous minute and the minute following the quote. It might not make for "exciting" tv, nor will it always capture the context, but it would at least do away with the 20 second soundbite.

      However, all is not lost. With more and more people going online(and starting to use the computer earlier and more often) it is going to leave a lot of people with quite a record. And with that, it will become nothing. Some people may feign outrage about what someone else had said in youth, however, it probably won't mean much considering so many people will have an equally long( and probably embarrassing) record.

      So, just keep posting drunk and hope others do likewise!!!

      -Mike

  24. Insightful by adityamalik · · Score: 1

    While previous comments about how computers are 'meant' to remember, and sometimes how we 'want' them to remember things are valid - The prof.'s observations strike me as very insightful.. I think he's got a valid point - because today 'data' is not a cold hard silicon number inside the machine anymore.. Data is coming closer and closer to our everyday life, getting enmeshed into our societal networks, becoming richer and closer to omnipresence. I feel that the human brain's habit of 'forgetting' in this context - is akin to forgiving (sins, crimes, sharp comments, mistakes, hurts), overcoming, healing (trauma, abuse, extreme emotions, stress), refreshing (what makes every meal a joy, every orgasm a pleasure or every waft of cool air on hot skin so nice), evolving (views, outlooks, understanding, positions). As information in a machine comes closer and closer to becoming our sensory inputs, records of our society and lives, of our behavior and views, our crimes and grievances, what have you - isn't it important that there be ways to forgive, overcome, heal, refresh and evolve without the same information coming back into our lives again and again and again...? Dunno if i've been able to convey what I feel.. a distinct chill when I think of not being able to (or allowed to) forget..

  25. The right to vanish by apathy+maybe · · Score: 1

    If I leave, everything I've said will still be there and attributable to me long after my views might have changed
    http://www.usemod.com/cgi-bin/mb.pl?RightToVanish

    I use a different user name on every online forum (except for this one and www.revleft.com). This is a precautionary measure to make it harder to link all my online personas. Of course, it is possible, if you have sufficient computing power and/or access to the machines (and their logs) that I have used. However, for a simple search it is not easy. I have also attempted (well I do now anyway) to create usernames that are not easily found by a simple search (except that "apathy maybe" now comes up for both RevLeft and Slashdot, where as previously it didn't...). Another precaution I take, is to edit forum posts to remove personal information (or else simply not post that information).

    Along with the right to vanish, I think that every website should, once the relevant information such as browser stats and geographical stats (if relevant) should delete all their logs.
    Privacy is something that has to be fought for by the individual, and by those who control websites and online communities.

    --
    I wank in the shower.
  26. Society will adjust? by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 1

    I believe that data retention will lead to less strict attitudes about what people have said in the past. Common sense dictates that a person's values and beliefs change over time. What someone once said need not necessarily be held against them later.

    What happens, happens. The fact that something is recorded does not change that.

    That being said, I do think twice about what I post online.

    PS. I live in Finland, Europe... So I'm a bit biased by not living in a police state ;)

    --
    .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
  27. Bad Idea by eebra82 · · Score: 1

    I must admit that the idea is interesting, but also very scary. I agree with the professor that computers can store perhaps a bit too much about yourself. On the other hand, you don't want to do much in front of the computer that might end up lost.

    Part of the reason that we use computers is because it is a solid way of archiving data. Ultimately, you are responsive for your opinions, views, comments and letters. Should you create and hold sensitive material, then you probably know how important it is to keep it safe anyway.

  28. Wrong problem by DragonHawk · · Score: 1

    From the summary: "If whatever we do can be held ... they can easily be combined into a composite picture of ourselves."

    Oh my $DEITY. We wouldn't want people to actually be able to know something more than what anyone lets on at the moment. /SARCASM

    Here's a thought: Maybe it's not a bad thing to be able to be able to look at a person's history. If someone cannot consistently keep a cool head in public, that's valid information. If they once espoused a certain opinion, and have since changed their mind, that's valid, too. If they deny they stated something, rather than simply saying they've changed their mind, that's valid, too. People can change, opinions can change, one statement does not make a person what they are.

    The real issue is that people are too quick to judge based on incomplete information. Computers make that flawed process easier, just like they make so many other things easier.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  29. My mantra (QotSA quote) by ChrTssu · · Score: 1

    Whatever you do, don't tell anyone. Words to live by.

    --
    I am not an animal! I am something worse!
  30. I'm with the prof on this one ... by LoudMusic · · Score: 5, Funny

    http://apple.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=22940&ci d=2467504

    So how about it, Slashdot, lets start deleting old database entries. ;)

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    1. Re:I'm with the prof on this one ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha thats great!!!!!!! You are such a prognosticator...how come some think tank hasn't snapped you up yet ;)

    2. Re:I'm with the prof on this one ... by Zebedeu · · Score: 1

      Try suggesting this to CmdrTaco, I am sure he will side with you on this one :-)

    3. Re:I'm with the prof on this one ... by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

      Haha thats great!!!!!!! You are such a prognosticator...how come some think tank hasn't snapped you up yet ;) Well, in my defense, when I made that post in 2001 it was accurate and by 2005, four years later, when Apple corrected all the things that I complained about the iPod sales went through the fucking roof.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ipod_sales.svg

      USB, proper Windows iTunes client, and the price was cut in half. Not to mention the hardware was about 1000x better.
      --
      No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    4. Re:I'm with the prof on this one ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know I joke...I joke...I remember the firewire only connector back then also and thought they were a bunch of crazy mofos! I bought my wife a 30GB one last year for her birthday and she swears its the best thing she has ever owned (watching tv makes the subway trip bearable).

    5. Re:I'm with the prof on this one ... by jcnnghm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is exactly why computers shouldn't "forget". Your comment, and the majority of that post, provides invaluable cultural insight into the thoughts of a community on a device, which, years later, would become an everyday item.

      --
      You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. - Winston Churchill
    6. Re:I'm with the prof on this one ... by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      Yes but when people finally go back to hating ipods (its only natural you just have to own one), you will have hated them before it was cool.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    7. Re:I'm with the prof on this one ... by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

      Yes but when people finally go back to hating ipods (its only natural you just have to own one), you will have hated them before it was cool. You misunderstand. I don't, didn't?, hate the iPod. I just proclaimed that it wouldn't sell. It's a wonderful device - just that in 2001 the number of people wanting such a device couldn't make immediate use of the Apple iPod. For them it required additional purchases.
      --
      No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
  31. From a medical perspective by PIPBoy3000 · · Score: 1

    I help manage a lot of medical information. Clearly, some of the stuff that people can be treated for is downright embarrassing. The catch is, if we start purging data that might fall into some vague "I don't want my mom to know" category, we won't be able to treat the person to the best of our ability now. One's health is often the sum of one's medical history. A tiny problem that showed up ten years ago might be related to the serious problem today.

    The whole point of medical systems is to supplement forgetful humans and improve communication when dozens of caregivers are involved with a patient's health. I can't imagine ever wanting to go back to the days of paper charts.

  32. Slashdot has this down pat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why, in a few hours or days, Slashdot editors will repost this very story. Almost as if they've totally forgotten about it.

  33. Is he married? by seanellis · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Afraid how our words and actions may be perceived years later and taken out of context, the lack of forgetting may prompt us to speak less freely and openly"

    I'm not worried about computers doing this - the same thing applies to my wife. <rimshot/>

    (Note to prospective employer in 2041: The above is a joke. Please give me a job.)

    1. Re:Is he married? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny, but my wife's and my roles on this have changed. For the first 10 years of our marriage, she was constantly quoting back things I had said that I didn't remember. Then after a bit of a crisis (ok, Major crisis), it's the exact opposite - when I remind her of things she's said, and committments she's made, all I get is a dumb look.

      What's really interesting is that, given the nature of her problems, she should have been MORE forgetful before, and have a sharper memory now. Apparently, brain chemistry is not subject to my logic.

      Posted AC for obvious reasons.

    2. Re:Is he married? by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      All joking aside, you make a good point. I welcome a time when people actually think before engaging their mouths (or keyboard, as the case may be).

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  34. presidential debate, 2048 by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Funny

    "while my good friend senator brown has presented himself to you as a family friendly candidate, i am only trying to help the american public understand him better if he were to be elected come december rather than myself, by bringing to light some grave AIM chat scripts from june 2006..."

    "When i was 14 years old"

    "now senator, you need to own up to what you say and do, take some personal responsibility, isn't that what you keep pressing as a message on your constituents?"

    "moderator, i think that now would be a good time..."

    "ehem, william brown: 'OMFG, look at this lolcat'"

    "moderator"

    "unidentified individual only known as counterstrike-masterstrafer03: 'wtf, "i are serious cat", omfg, lol'"

    "moderator!"

    "william brown: 'you like pussy cats?'"

    "moderator!"

    "counterstrike-masterstrafer03: 'i like the cock fights, if you know what i mean, lol'"

    "moderator i must insist at the totally inappropriate..."

    "william brown: 'a/s/l?'"

    "alright, if my opponent insists on this kind of personal negativity i am only compelled to bring to the attention of the american public a log of eMule downloads for a certain ip address of 165.45.23.100 in april of 2002, does that ip sound familiar mr. gordon?"

    "how dare you"

    "ehem, 'bangbus 25: lisa and raoul'"

    "moderator"

    "'spanking nannies 3, the return of mistress oblivion'"

    "moderator!"

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:presidential debate, 2048 by ohearn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Personally I welcome something like this. Maybe it will get the American public to finally realize that talking about sex is not this big bad thing that we should shun people for.

    2. Re:presidential debate, 2048 by R2.0 · · Score: 1

      Best.Debate.Ratings.Ever!

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    3. Re:presidential debate, 2048 by wyztix · · Score: 1

      How dare you show American purists they're the exception, not the rule!
      My vote goes for Gordon for his good taste in movie: 'spanking nannies 3, the return of mistress oblivion' is a novel.

    4. Re:presidential debate, 2048 by sunami · · Score: 1

      I think an appropriate return question would be, "What does the Bank of America of Concord, California have to do with anything?"

  35. History by Baavgai · · Score: 1

    You could make a similar argument against history. Let's forget that nasty Nazi thing, it's really not our best effort, after all. Slavery? Never happens. Inquisition? The church would never do that. The list, unfortunately, goes on.

    There is some value in leaving the past behind. However, even if prior actions are forgiven, or seen as mitigated by context, they needn't be forgotten. Everyone's done things they'd rather deny, would maybe pretend never happened. But such negative actions define us as much, or even more, than positive actions. The results of such actions maybe even caused change and growth. It's part of being human.

  36. That was just a bad post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this rant even related to the original poster? I fail to see a connection.

    And no, it is sometimes a good thing that your computer forgets it's previous state. The magic button that makes this happen is a "reset" button, and it is there with good reason. But this subject is offtopic since the article is about data retention and publication (read the title of YOUR reply, "Re: Public databases need to forget") rather than the state of a computer (crashing is a state, not a very good one though) which is hopefully a private issue.

    Is "Read your own fucking title" (RYOFT as opposed to RTFA) a new /. low?

  37. Forgetting the flames? by bigdavex · · Score: 1

    Afraid how our words and actions may be perceived years later and taken out of context, the lack of forgetting may prompt us to speak less freely and openly."

    I wonder if this guy has ever read a flame war. Who thinks there's a danger of people not speaking freely enough?
    --
    -Dave
  38. break through by fuliginous · · Score: 1

    On the other hand it could bring a break through where seeing everyone does it the idea that people change their mind when presented with enough information or different circumstances might allow more honesty from politicians. They can say "this is what I knew then and this is what I know now wouldn't I be stupid to still think that?"

    I suppose safety in numbers.

  39. panopticon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're just DYING to use that word weren't you?

  40. Some systems already do this by egyptiankarim · · Score: 1

    I've contributed to a bunch of forums in the past where settings were available to have the system "eat" posts that remained inactive for X amount of time.

    --
    Eek!
  41. The problem is retrieval, not storage by Idaho · · Score: 1

    Similar to how the brain works (AFAIK, I'm not a biologist, etc.), the issue is whether you can find data, not whether it's stored.

    Things that you have forgotten may still be stored somewhere, but the connections needed to retrieve the actual "data" are lost, so you cannot get to the actual information.

    Something similar happens with computers, I may have an e-mail/IM archive over the past 10 years or so, but if I don't know what (combination of) keywords to look for, I won't be able to find anything. It's simply too much information.

    --
    Every expression is true, for a given value of 'true'
  42. My computer does by Bromskloss · · Score: 1

    My computer forgets me all the time. I pass by in the morning and say "hello, friend" and it would respond "who are you?", I'd say "it's me, you must remember me!" but oh no, it wouldn't believe me and refuse to let me in without a fight.

    --
    Swedish plasma phys. PhD student; MSc EE; knows maths, programming, electronics; finance interest; seeks opportunities
  43. Unrealistic by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm all for personal responsibility, but this isn't as simple as standing by what you once said.

    For one thing, no-one is perfect. If I took offence every time one of my friends said or did something a little childish or hurtful to another of my friends, I would have few friends left, yet I know that all of my friends are basically nice, decent people, who on balance I am glad I met. Magnify this up to the whole world stage, and suddenly the whole world is an a**hole.

    Secondly, people's views change for many reasons, not all of them bad, and society as a whole is not good at recognising this. Just look at what happens to politicians today who change their position on an issue. "U-turn! U-turn!" As I've pointed out before, even in politics it is silly to think that our elected representatives have the time to fully study each issue on which they vote in the same detail as an expert, or to retain a staff of suitably smart and qualified people who can at least advise them well. Wouldn't you rather be represented by someone who would change their mind if they realised their previous position was short-sighted or ill-informed, rather than one forced by the system to stick to their guns even if they knew they had made a mistake?

    I've commented on this subject before on Slashdot, in the context of social networking sites. I think humanity needs to learn that in a highly-connected world, you have to be careful what you say, you have to be wary of reading too much into what others say, and most important of all, you have to cut people a little slack sometimes. Right now, IMHO, our laws don't place nearly enough value on privacy, and I think this is a painful lesson that we are going to learn as an entire generation who grew up with the likes of Facebook, Myspace and LiveJournal run into problems for the next few decades.

    Bottom line: kids will be kids, adults will behave like kids sometimes, even the most mature and responsible adult makes mistakes, and all of this is only human. I, for one, would prefer not to live in a world where everyone's dirty laundry was aired in public, with full search features.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:Unrealistic by fotbr · · Score: 1

      I'd love to have politicans who realized their mistake and tried to correct it. The problem is no one will ADMIT that they were wrong, and instead just change their position with no explanation.

    2. Re:Unrealistic by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The "uturns" and "flipflpos" people are talking about isn't were a politician says he believes X now and then later in life believes Y.

      What it is and I rightfully agree with the criticism and it being a problem is were a politician is claims belief X in front of one crowd and belief Y in front of another or changes his position for no other reasons then they think it will get votes. I can give a sorts of reasons why I changed my position if you vote for me or at least don't vote against me. This doesn't mean I won't still believe the way I did before, I just won't publicaly show it and most if any work on the subject will be hidden to make it difficult to detect any variance. I can even claim the support was for a rider to a bill that needed passed and not for going against me newly stated position. This is why you have politicians who opposed war in the past, voted us into the wars we are in today, and now appose the wars again. One could say that they only supported the wars because the public did, if they had stuck by their guns, Iraq might not have ever happened. And yes, that had all the same information about the wars that the president did. They cannot say they were mislead any more then the president was.

      Now, OTHOH, if I see a politician who has changed his position for whatever reason and there isn't some great polling debate showing it as a way to get reelected, I would tend to agree with their sincerity. All most of us are asking for is consistency and honesty in their campaigns. Not someone who changes their mind based of the direction of the political wind at the time. Any number of large organization can create a media storm and change the opinions of the vast majority of people and in effect control the political process and climate when the uturners and flipflopers are in a position of power. It is like RIAA convincing congress that the people support their rubber stamped laws and then having congress enact them.

    3. Re:Unrealistic by frdmfghtr · · Score: 1

      I've commented on this subject before on Slashdot, in the context of social networking sites. I think humanity needs to learn that in a highly-connected world, you have to be careful what you say, you have to be wary of reading too much into what others say, and most important of all, you have to cut people a little slack sometimes. Right now, IMHO, our laws don't place nearly enough value on privacy, and I think this is a painful lesson that we are going to learn as an entire generation who grew up with the likes of Facebook, Myspace and LiveJournal run into problems for the next few decades.

      I'm not sure I see where the connection is between privacy laws and social websites. Social websites contain material that is voluntarily posted by members, not material that is forced to be posted against one's will. Otherwise, I agree with everything else in this particular segment. We all need to be a little more thick-skinned and, at the same time, a little more sensitive to what might offend others. The "more sensitivity" to try to stop offending somebody, and "thick-skinned" to overlook the occasional transgression.
      --
      Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
    4. Re:Unrealistic by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm not sure I see where the connection is between privacy laws and social websites. Social websites contain material that is voluntarily posted by members, not material that is forced to be posted against one's will.

      I'm not sure that's always true.

      For example, I was talked into signing up for Facebook a while ago, when various friends starting using it to host their photo albums and logging in was required to see them. Over the next few weeks, I was bombarded with notifications: a friend has indicated that they know me, and how; another friend has identified me in 17 photographs; I have been labelled as holding this position in that organisation and went to some other place for a while.

      Within a very short space of time, I decided that Facebook's entire modus operandi is based on getting friends to spy on each other. Despite the fact that I gave them nothing but the bare minimum data required to get an account (name, place of study, e-mail address), they now know what I look like, many of my hobbies, many people who know me and who we know in common, where I live, much of my academic history, and more. And I gave them none of this; it was all freely volunteered by my friends, probably without a second thought.

      I deactivated my account on Facebook. In fact, after that incident, I decided that my paranoia really wasn't a side-effect of the high concentration of tin foil in my kitchen, and was justified. I deactivated all my accounts on social networking sites where I could easily be identified.

      The only web site that remains is actually Slashdot, where I post using this alias but someone who really wanted to could probably data mine my 6,000 or so posts and get a fair idea of who I am. I also post to Usenet, using my real name, but mostly on technical forums and always with an awareness that what I'm writing may be archived without my consent. Even there, I no longer use my surname or give obvious personal information like a verifiable e-mail address these days.

      I think it is sad that things have come to this. I did find the social networking sites useful for keeping up with friends when we couldn't meet in real life for a while. However, knowing that (for example) Facebook still allows everyone to record information about me even though my account is now deactivated (and I therefore can't untag photos and so on), I do not regret my decision to reduce my on-line footprint dramatically.

      I would prefer to be able to force these web sites to remove all personally identifiable information about me since we no longer have a relationship. This is where privacy laws here in the UK are hopeless, IMNSHO. As it stands today, I suspect that their terms of use protect them because I did consent to having an account, even though others supplied almost all of the personal information about me without my consent.

      But even without such long-term safeguards, I'm glad I got clear before too much potentially damaging information about me was out there for all to see. I've been on the wrong side of a case of mistaken identity, and it is not fun.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    5. Re:Unrealistic by chrisb33 · · Score: 1

      even the most mature and responsible adult makes mistakes, and all of this is only human. I, for one, would prefer not to live in a world where everyone's dirty laundry was aired in public, with full search features. This reminds me of Judge James Rosenbaum's article In Defense of the Delete Key [PDF Warning]. Some notable quotes:

      Sometimes people just have bad ideas, or might just pass an idle - if imperfect - thought. This does not mean the person is vile. Mere evidence that a person who has done "A," but once expressed "B," does not prove that the person is lying or deceitful. The fallacy in the "truth" of the recovered e-mail or computer file is that it might just have been a bad idea, properly rejected, and consigned to an imperfectly labeled wastebasket. The problem is that on the computer's hard drive, it looks like more.

      Into this classic legal environment comes the computer. It never forgets, and never forgives. An idle thought "jotted" onto a calendar, a tasteless joke passed to a once-trusted friend, a suggestive invitation directed at an uninterested recipient, if done electronically, will last forever. Years later, it can subject its author to liability.
    6. Re:Unrealistic by frdmfghtr · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the clarification--I suppose I would have seen the connection had I actually used a social networking site. I didn't think that sort of thing could happen. Now I'm more sure that staying away from those sites is a good move.

      --
      Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
  44. Common Good by rodney+dill · · Score: 1

    ...but its all used for the common good. (meaning: never used against me)

    --

    Use your head, can't you, use your head,
    You're on earth, there's no cure for that
    - S. Beckett
  45. I disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    People need to learn to protect their private data.

    People need to make sure potentially self-harmful things they say on the net can never be connected to their real persona.

    People used to protect and hide their diaries, now they just put it in the net for everyone to read.

    This is SILLY, computers will not forget and won't have to forget.

    It's the PEOPLE who have to REMEMBER that.

  46. Bugs in automatic forgetting algorithms: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quotes from a [hopefully] distant future:

    "I'm sorry, but you can't have the source code for this program: my computer has forgotten it."

    "The computer in the accounts department forgot to pay me this month."

    "The computer forgot my password, so wouldn't let me in."

    "Well, I can't find any records of this person having ever committed a crime, so we better release them from prison..."

    "We did have evidence you were at the crime scene, but it has now passed its expiry date."

    "I'm sorry. When you originally contacted us five years ago, we didn't think this job would take this long. As a result,
      we've now lost all our data about it."

    "You're allergic to that painkiller? There's no mention of that in your medical record!"

    There would be more, but a computer 'forgot' the rest of this message.

  47. Yes, we do forget... and memories alter themselves by demon+driver · · Score: 2, Interesting

    but we need to consider the human memory. Do we really 'forget' things? Yes, we do - and more than that, even as long as we do remember, memory is not really fixed. As far as I understand (and if I remember correctly!) what I read about it a couple of months ago, memories in fact change slightly each time we recall them, by recalling them.

    Which makes especially old memories a lot less reliable than we used to think. Which also is the basis for the phenomenon of people recreating their memories to what they want to remember. When someone strongly believes in a factually wrong memory of a certain event, even if he had been there and seen it as it happened, it may well be because at some point in time, after remembering and slightly changing the memory in a desired direction often enough, he might simply have no other memory left of the event.
  48. the whole picture by fishdan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If a man is not a socialist by the time he is 20, he has no heart.
    If he is not a conservative by the time he is 40, he has no brain.
    - falsely attributed to Winston Churchill

    What the good doctor is missing is that you are the whole picture. Everything that happened in your life, good and bad has lead you to where you are today. To deny/forget the bad would make you less of a human. I am still that 11 year old kid who played D&D and cried when that jerk of a DM killed my 35th level mage that I cheated to make. I'm still the guy who in high school managed to seduce the hottest girl in school. I'm still the guy who took 4 grams of mushrooms on a road trip from Austin to New Orleans to make the time pass (though I wasn't driving). I'm still the guy who was on the Longhorns SouthWest Conference championship Lacrosse team. I'm still the guy who failed out of college 3 years later. I'm still the Sp.ED teacher who worked for 7 years teaching autistics before realizing I could live up to my family obligations on a Sp.Ed teachers salary. I'm still the guy who defaulted on some significant debts in my 20s. I'm still the jerk who told that girl I loved her only so I could sleep with her...

    I'm still the good husband and mighty developer I am today. But all because of all that stuff in the past.

    I completely understand what was IMPLIED by the article, but I that that is an issue of privacy, not of computing. And to imply that people should forget about their past (or others) doesn't seem like a good idea. I am about as anti-religion as you can get, but I recognize the powerful words "...and forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us."

    Forgive, but don't forget. Remember where you came from, and what you overcame.
    --
    Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm
    1. Re:the whole picture by delire · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thankyou, your file has been updated.

    2. Re:the whole picture by hoggoth · · Score: 3, Funny

      > played D&D and cried
      > seduce the hottest girl in school

      Non-sequitor! Error! Paradox encountered! Cannot reconcile! Daisy... daisy... give me your answer true...

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    3. Re:the whole picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds to me like a Digital Picture of Dorian Gray.

    4. Re:the whole picture by kavalec · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed.
      And adding to that... the path of a person's life - not just a snapshot of his past - is relevant.
      We don't need computers to forget, we need them to help us see that moving picture.

    5. Re:the whole picture by psymastr · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm still the guy who in high school managed to seduce the hottest girl in school. I'm still the guy who took 4 grams of mushrooms on a road trip from Austin to New Orleans to make the time pass (though I wasn't driving). And from now on you're the guy that bragged about it on slashdot. That's the saddest of them all.

      --
      Improve at backgammon rapidly through addictive quickfire position quizzes: www.bgtrain.com
    6. Re:the whole picture by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Forgive, but don't forget. Remember where you came from, and what you overcame.

      An excellent post, with just one small flaw: all too soon, the viewers that are mining this information to decide whether to give you a mortgage, offer you a job, or revoke your medical insurance are going to be emotionless software running on cold, calculating machines. They do not forget, and they do not understand forgiveness.

      They probably do, however, believe that because of those girls you slept with, you are statistically at increased risk of picking up an STD, and therefore your medical insurance bill will always be higher.

      Oh, and that because you cheat at games, your personality is not compatible with taking that high-paying senior job at the bank. (What do you mean you were only 11? Nothing in here says to consider any indicator of age! But you do get extra demerits for defaulting on that debt, regardless of whether you were paying someone's emergency medical bills instead.)

      So at the very least, for your approach to work, there would have to be a legal safeguard on any decision ever made by a data-mining program about anything, so that anyone affected by it (knowingly or otherwise) could require a real human to look at the real circumstances in full context and review the decision. Interestingly, this is theoretically the case in my country for automated credit-checking by financial organisations already, because of the many mistakes that were made earlier on. Of course, this relies on the fact that you know you have been harmed by such a decision, which might be obvious if you know that you've just applied for a loan, but which in general won't be.

      So in terms of a personal philosophy, I can respect your post, very much. But as a practical philosophy in a world ruled by computers and big business, I think it is a very, very dangerous thing. People can forgive (and perhaps we should learn to do it more often) but machines do not.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    7. Re:the whole picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am still that 11 year old kid who played D&D and cried when that jerk of a DM killed my 35th level mage that I cheated to make.

      Please... If you are referring to the D&D box sets, the class was still called "Magic User", as in "Bargle the Chaotic Magic User". It did not become "Mage" until 2nd edition AD&D.

    8. Re:the whole picture by Aranel+Alasse · · Score: 1

      People can forgive (and perhaps we should learn to do it more often) but machines do not. Computers also can't differentiate between the truth and a lie, either. (And people post a lot of both, on the internet.) That very fact makes it sound really ridiculous (in my opinion) for any business to depend upon data-mined and computer-analyzed internet posts to make any business decisions for them.
    9. Re:the whole picture by nine-times · · Score: 1

      You will still be all of those same things, and you will remember all of those things, if there ceases to be an electronic trail. That's what the issue is about-- should there be a detailed electronic information trail of your life, maintained forever, whether you like it or not?

      E-mail, chat transcripts, purchase histories-- do you really want all that information sitting around, indefinitely, waiting to be made public? Even though you've admitted to crying when you were 11, there are probably some events of your life that you wouldn't so readily admit to. There are things that, even if they're still a part of you, they aren't a part you'd like to have dragged out into the light of day for ridicule, where both strangers and loved-ones will know exactly what you did.

      If you don't have anything like that in your life, consider yourself fortunate. Many of us do, and there's no purpose in saving a record of these events unless you want to tear people down, hurt feelings, and damage lives.

    10. Re:the whole picture by cultrhetor · · Score: 1

      Reading through these comments, I was beginning to wonder whether anyone babbling about the panopticon had ever read Foucault, whose treatment of the Benthamist concept is at the heart of the faculty research working paper discussed by the article. Even if you haven't, your take is very close to a significant idea debated in the work (which also deals with issues of disciplines within "knowledge" and other fun topics).

      --
      "Tu fui, ego eris" - Virgil
    11. Re:the whole picture by Derosian · · Score: 1

      Well I know I feel better about myself, after reading about who you are.

    12. Re:the whole picture by awesomo2001 · · Score: 1

      Very interesting post and I agree with you that we should not forget our past. But there is a difference between us and our family and closest friends knowning of our past actions and the general public having access to all this information. There are people in the general public that will not hesitate to use this information to harm you and/or your family. People are already getting burned because of some photos that they published on MySpace or a video of themselves on YouTube.

    13. Re:the whole picture by rhakka · · Score: 1

      Yes, but what happens when the viewers too have already been through this data mining process, and have gotten to their positions in spite of it?

      They will also know what it's like to have this record. They will understand a "statute of limitations". And you know what? Maybe, if you cheat on a game when you're 11 and someone else is exactly like you but they never ever consider cheating on games... just maybe they ARE a better candidate than you, even if you are competant and trustworthy. You learned not to get caught. They just hate breaking the rules. This position does not want people who want to break rules, even if they learned not to. You see?

      I think there could be a transitional period where the decisionmakers have not had to be vetted via their own, open historical record, and the people vetted by it are.. but once we are through that period, and not even all the way through it... heck, we here on /. have mostly ten or 15 year internet records already, if we're old enough, regardless of our ages beyond that... then I think understanding as a whole will be increased and some of these fears will mean less.

      But I do have to admit it's a bit scary here on the edge.

    14. Re:the whole picture by ashtophoenix · · Score: 1

      I agree with you and your spirit and would like to say that I hope in 30 yrs, instead of changing the system now to delete data which may be taken out of context later, we as humans would have changed to not take such data out of context...to understand that past, present and the potential future, all is US but thats not all we are.

      --
      Life is about being a Phoenix!
    15. Re:the whole picture by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      It is ridiculous to make critical decisions based on that kind of information. Unfortunately, what is critical to you or me is just acceptable losses to a bank, prospective employer, etc. As long as the decision is right enough of the time that the cost savings from using the automated system outweigh the losses caused by its mistakes, it is commercially viable to run them, and they will choose to do so unless legislation is put in place to protect the unfortunate people whose card gets marked incorrectly by the system.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    16. Re:the whole picture by krbvroc1 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the uplift, Mr. Humble pie.

      I see your humbleness translates to your resume too.

      From your resume

      'Implemented best practices in a software department that had been run previously by gifted amateurs.'

      and

      'I'm a guy who you need to have in for an interview, really for both of our sakes. I need to know more about you than the ad I saw somewhere or the recommendation I got from a friend - and you need to meet the real Dan. I'm a great addition to any office, but that's the sort of thing I think you need to meet me to truly appreciate.'

      I forgive you, but I won't forget! ;)

    17. Re:the whole picture by vp_development · · Score: 1
    18. Re:the whole picture by PurifyYourMind · · Score: 1

      I don't buy it. There are plenty of experiences I've had that are purely negative, that I'd rather forget. Things that make me more bitter, cynical, pessimistic than I need to be.

    19. Re:the whole picture by uofitorn · · Score: 1

      um. No kidding. No one disputes that you're the sum of your life experiences. TFA argues that people will restrain themselves leaving them less likely to express themselves -- stifling their creativity -- for fear that something they do may be taken out of context at a later date.

      Would you have done half of the questionable stuff that you did in the past if a BigBrother SpyCam 3000 (tm) was hovering over you? I know I wouldn't have, for better or worse.

      --
      "What kind of music do pirates listen to?" -Paul Maud'dib
      "Yeeeaaarrrrr n' Bee!!" -Stilgar, Leader of Sietch Tabr
    20. Re:the whole picture by vp_development · · Score: 1

      I think what you said ignores what the OP means when he says it's a privacy issue, and not a computing one. Data is not good/evil. It's just data. And I agree that the wrong data can bias a person -- which is why we have laws about what can be introduced as evidence in courts -- somethings should not be considered in certain decision.

      Privacy is a much bigger issue than computing. We cleanse a person's credit account of information over 7 years old -- but we did that LONG before computers existed. Instead of trying to come up with some half-assed way to protect privacy by saying "people should forget stuff" we need to actually say "people have a right to privacy that must be protected."

      The fact that people have to live with what they put on their myspace/facebook/blog 20 years down the line doesn't bother me. What bothers me is that that should be considered relevant for getting a loan/job/insurance etc.

    21. Re:the whole picture by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Privacy is a much bigger issue than computing. [...] Instead of trying to come up with some half-assed way to protect privacy by saying "people should forget stuff" we need to actually say "people have a right to privacy that must be protected."

      Oh, I couldn't agree more. Please see my up-modded comments in thread called "Unrealistic" a bit further down this discussion, and indeed many posts I've previously made to other discussions here.

      However, I think it's fair to say that in the very recent past, the rules have changed. We used to live in a world where infringing on people's privacy was discourteous and unpleasant, but relatively harmless otherwise. With today's technology, we now have the ability to store much greater quantities of data on individuals, and to process data from diverse sources to build an overall picture automatically and in near real-time.

      It's the difference between someone in the street seeing me walk into a shop, because they happened to be in the same public place as me; and computers systematically tracking every store I visit on my entire shopping trip via CCTV and automatic facial recognition, looking up the corresponding credit card transactions to work out what I bought, checking with vehicle licensing to find my car's number plate, checking their ANPR systems to identify where I parked, and then having my vehicle impounded and my bank account sealed immediately, all because an automated system decided that there was a 0.7% chance that the collection of things I'd bought that day could be used in terrorist activities in combination with the things bought by someone else who was also out shopping that afternoon and lives within a half-mile of my home.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    22. Re:the whole picture by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      You raise some interesting general points, though I'm not sure I agree fully with all of them. In any case, I think we're talking at cross-purposes here: when I described the viewers in terms of software running on computers, I mean this quite literally, not as a metaphor for people who are trained not to think. Such viewers would never go through the same sort of filtering process themselves, and don't know anything about statutes of limitations. All they know is how to do what the programmer told them to do, and we all know how well that approach works for building reliable, effective software, don't we?

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    23. Re:the whole picture by rhakka · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, I wasn't thinking literally there. I'm a metaphorical fool I guess ;)

    24. Re:the whole picture by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      So, the hottest girl thing... Was that what made him cry in D&D, or was the crying in a different game?

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    25. Re:the whole picture by yusing · · Score: 1

      Re your quotation:

      I suspect the definition of "conservative" has changed since that quotation. Because I'd rather die a fool's death a thousand times than be a greedy, stingy, hard-hearted misanthrope thinking I was better than almost everyone else.

      --

      "You must try to forget all you have learned. You must begin to dream." -- Sherwood Anderson

  49. Re:Hmm ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I (AC) don't worry about it.

  50. Sheesh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All my anti-american comments I posted after 9/11 were gone a year later or so (maybe to make room on the Slashdot hdd)...

    So what? I still post anti-american comments but censorship will safe me from a backlash somewhere in the future.

    I let stupid censorship work for me.

  51. Love letters and Sherlock Holmes by dpbsmith · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yet another overreaction to social change. It's different, it's scary because... it involves computers. The problem has existed ever since the first Egyptian wrote a love letter on papyrus.

    Nothing new here. People will worry about it a bit every time a new problem breaks, then they'll forget and start committing imprudent things to electronic storage just as they always committed them to paper.

    Why, very first Sherlock Holmes story, A Scandal in Bohemia deals with this very problem:

      "Your Majesty, as I understand, became entangled with this young person, wrote her some compromising letters, and is now desirous of getting those letters back."

    "Precisely so. But how--"

    "Was there a secret marriage?"

    "None."

    "No legal papers or certificates?"

    "None."

    "Then I fail to follow your Majesty. If this young person should produce her letters for blackmailing or other purposes, how is she to prove their authenticity?"

    "There is the writing."

    "Pooh, pooh! Forgery."

    "My private note-paper."

    "Stolen."

    "My own seal."

    "Imitated."

    "My photograph."

    "Bought."

    "We were both in the photograph."

    "Oh, dear! That is very bad! Your Majesty has indeed committed an indiscretion."

    1. Re:Love letters and Sherlock Holmes by Kjella · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "We were both in the photograph."

      "Oh, dear! That is very bad! Your Majesty has indeed committed an indiscretion."


      For better or worse, todays answer would be: "Photoshopped"

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  52. I'd reply, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd reply to article, but my internal computer felt the article was of little significance so I've forgotten what I was going say...

  53. Expiration date on files by ECS_Norway · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How hard would it be to put an expiration date on files? Say one or two years, and the file is deleted. There would also be archive files that would never delete. The original creator would decide on whether the file, or post, was archive or expiration. How many things have you posted online that really need to be here in two years?

    1. Re:Expiration date on files by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      How do you know the difference at the time?

      I've looked up issues online that had answers posted 6 years before. At the time, the person was just responding to someone's request for help. He wasn't writing a FAQ or WIKI. It would likely NOT have been tagged, and would have been a LOT harder to find that answer.

      But it doesn't really matter because computers DO forget, just not like we do. As proof: I want it to remember the source code to that mesh converter I wrote years ago in VB6. I lost the source years ago and at this point, I don't even have a copy of the compiled program.

      It would be relatively trivial to rewrite, but it was a pain to figure out some of the things they did and how, and there's not really a need for it anymore. I just want it. But my computer, and every other computer, doesn't remember the source. Very few remember the compiled program, including my web host who apparently deleted all ZIP files out of spite, or something. (It's a ZIP! Must be illegal!)

      It's my fault that the files are gone, I admit, but my point is only that computers DO forget. And just like human memory, it's not always the things that we WANT them to forget.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    2. Re:Expiration date on files by ECS_Norway · · Score: 1

      I see your point. You are right. I have often dug around in old forums looking for a computer or automotive solution. There is a lot of valuable information to be gleaned in the mass of abandoned posts. But there is so much of it. How many blind alleys have you gone down before finding the information you wanted? At least with expiration there would be more of an incentive to distill the valuable tidbits, condense them into a useable form, and archive for posterity. Why aren't there more comprehensive wikis on car models? I suspect, because there too many half-baked forums with ancient posts waiting to be uncovered.

    3. Re:Expiration date on files by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      I could be wrong, but I think it's because car-lovers aren't geeky enough. They'd rather be out tuning/racing/driving than writing about it. This isn't unique to car enthusiasts, though. Even geeks would rather be doing than writing about it. The difference is that geeks enjoy the technical workings of a wiki where the car-phile would not. It's also a buzzword in the geek world now.

      As for how many blind alleys... Co-workers often say things like 'Let him find it, he can find anything.' I'm really really good at using Google. I usually come up with useful information right away, and when I don't, that info would most likely NOT have been in a Wiki or FAQ anyhow. Destroying those archives with apparently useless information would be a huge hamper to me. (It only appears useless until you realize you need it. The most trivial-seeming information can sometimes make all the difference.)

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
  54. Instead of looking at it negatively... by cnelzie · · Score: 1

    ...why can't this be a good thing where someone can actually see how a person has grown and changed over life or maybe has never grown and changed.

        Opinions, views and personality of a person can alter over time. Having this available could prove to be exceptionally beneficialy in writing someone's biography and or considering them for important positions.

        Would you want someone who once was foolish (as many/most of us were) who later developed into a very mature and well reasoned individual or someone who has never matured and still acts the part of the fool over the course of their life working an important position?

    --
    If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
  55. How and what will be forgotten? by Dancindan84 · · Score: 1

    Just because something -can- be detrimental doesn't mean it always is, or that the opposite is necessarily the solution. Being able to forget that time I went out with a real weirdo is great. Forgetting about my wife's birthday... not so great.

    The same goes for computers. I'm sure that people wish their questionable forum posts from when they were teenagers spouting nonsensical crap could be automatically deleted, but what about useful information such as technical forums discussing hardware issues. Who decides what will be forgotten, and when?

    --
    "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much." - Oscar Wilde
  56. I disagree by jtogel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I disagree with the conclusions of Mayer-Schönberger, though I agree with the main logic of his argument.

    I believe making all public archives "forgetful" would be (A) disastrous to research in history, philology, and linguistics (e.g.) and of course to political accountability, and (B) almost impossible, at least without a technological monoculture (e.g. Microsoft runs all the blogs).

    Instead, we have to adapt our culture to the inevatible presence of modern technology. This means that if someone once made racist, paedophiliac, hateful, misogynic, androgynic, stupid, schizofrenic etc. remarks, this should not in any way be held against them when they later in life want to become a politician, teacher, babysitter, policeman etc. We will simply have to assume that people can change and restrict ourselves to looking at their most recent behaviour and opinions.

    Changing our culture in such a way might sound impossible (and to some people undesirable), but I think it's far more possible (and desirable) than changing our technology in the way Mayer-Schönberger proposes.

    It is also possible that such a cultural change would be a natural consequence of information about everybody becoming available, rather than it making us all into politicians.

  57. Incorrect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Computers DO forget; the internet DOES forget.

    One of my favorte sites back in my Quake playing days was Yello There, a hilarious parody of Blue's News. But it's gone, almost completely forgotten. The Wayback machine doesn't even remember my British online friend Niel and his site. AFAIK the only computerized "memory" of it is one page I downloaded to my own PC. Much of my old Quake site is still archived, but Niel's is gone.

    Likewise, in 1993 shortly after my ex-wife, Evil-X, left me and my teenaged daughters, I posted a series of pieces about my futile efforts to get laid or even a date at K5 known as the "Paxil Diaries." They (and I) were quite popular there at the time, as were most of the stories I submitted. But now If you google for "'paxil diaries' mcgrew" your search returns Your search - "paxil diaries" mcgrew - did not match any documents. Some of the widely plagairized pieces (e.g., "how to stop smoking cigarettes") can still be found, but the Paxil Diaries are gone, except on my hard drive.

    No, the "don't put anything personal on the internet because they'll find you fifty years from now" is a myth. In slashdot stories about the subject I've posted my name and challenged slashdotters to identify me, and not once have I been identified, although some poor Canadian fellow with my name always gets fingered and his address and phone number posted on slashdot. Sorry, Steve. Your mother should have given you a different name! Likely when the Paxil Diaries were popular the poor fellow probably took flak for them, despite the fact that there is no Springfield in Canada.

    In short, and in slashdot terminology, "nothing to see here, move along".

    -mcgrew

  58. Slashdot already has this feature by aussie_a · · Score: 1

    Compare then with now

  59. I'm not entirely sure that's a bad thing. by Canthros · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The good doctor is complaining because people might feel pressure to be more circumspect in the words and actions because their history may, at any time, return to haunt them. Is that really a bad thing, or is he just worried that all those years of being subscribed to Marxist Weekly (or whatever) may undermine his credibility as a professor of government?

    --
    Canthros
    1. Re:I'm not entirely sure that's a bad thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trouble is, what is acceptable at any given time is liable to change, quickly. If universities in the United States were like universities in my country a couple of decades ago, then the professor might have thought his subscription to the Marxist Weekly completely defensible. Now, several decades later, you find it objectionable.

      If you're suggesting that one should shape one's political beliefs(for example) entirely by what is likely to be acceptable in the future, then you're essentially suggesting that everyone should maintain the status quo at as the ideal all times, for fear of society evolving in the opposite direction of their proposed change, making their beliefs seem quaint or offensive. Surely you don't think that would actually be a good thing? (Remember that the "status quo" need not be, in our hypothetical situation, exactly the way the world is now. No matter what your ideology, some situation can probably be imagined that, according to your system of thought, should be changed.)

    2. Re:I'm not entirely sure that's a bad thing. by Canthros · · Score: 1

      Actually, I picked politics as an example because he's a professor of 'government', which sounds like polisci to me. I should probably have picked something more public than a magazine subscription. Let us propose that a prominent religious figure had been a member of a fascist youth organization in a totalitarian country.

      If his reasons for his actions were defensible when he acted, they should still be defensible now, in the historical context in which they exist. If that reveals flaws in one's characters which are not demonstrably corrected, well, that's kind of the point, isn't it? I'm not defending the status quo. I'm defending the idea that there is a better standard of behavior than "do as you will", and that people will treat as consequential those things which have consequences.

      --
      Canthros
  60. silliness? by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1
    Silliness, political views, religous views, sexual orientation, or any number of things. I wrote essays in college about the death penalty, legalization of drugs, etc. I've searched for nekkid pictures online. Any or all of this could be used against me when applying for a job, a house loan, or so on. Should it?

    Do you want to see people denied employment because they wrote an obnoxious athiest essay when they were 16? Should someone be considered a probable druggie if they wrote a Slashdot post advocating drug legalization? Should they be considered a subversive because they wrote a post saying people shouldn't be held without trial, or that torture is wrong? This isn't just about silliness or stupid stuff, though there is of course enough of that to go around.

    1. Re:silliness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just curious, as an attempt to understand American political culture: what sort of opinions on the death penalty would matter to an employer? I can see that arguing for the legalization of drugs would place one definitely outside the "mainstream", but I thought that both proponents and opponents of the death penalty were fairly "mainstream" in the United States?

      (I don't mean to start a debate about the merits of the death penalty, and I can see that having argued either position in an obnoxious way might lose one points with the sort of data mining employer we're expecting in our hypotheticals. However, am I incorrect in assuming that both positions are, in general, socially acceptable?)

    2. Re:silliness? by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1

      Controversial issues in the US often take on an absolutist, black-vs-white character. One side characterizes the other as practically Evil with an capital E. My capital punishment example was only an example pulled off the top of my head, but the political environment has gotten ugly in the last few decades (not that I can attest to what it was like before then). Many people in my country think that if you don't agree with them on a broad array of issues, then you "hate America," "want the terrorists to win," "want to coddle criminals," etc.

  61. Interesting by Joker1980 · · Score: 1

    I am in no way qualified to comment on this matter but what the hell, i always thought it wasent so much that humans forget stuff, more that we surpress.

    --
    Well, Bart, your uncle Arthur used to have a saying: "Shoot 'em all and let God sort 'em out."
  62. I don't think it's going to matter by Jessta · · Score: 1

    I think the long time recording of everything will bring about a better understand of each other.
    I stick by all the posts I've ever made, some may have been incorrect or my opinion may have changed since I wrote them, but I stick by the fact that for that time in my life they were correct for me.

    With everbodys posts stored forever, everybody is going to have lots of posts that could be seen as bad by potental employers, partners etc. but because this will be something that effects everybody it won't be a problem.

    and if a employer didn't hire you because they didn't like that photo of you out drinking with your friends, then you probably don't want to work there anyway.

    --
    ...and that is all I have to say about that.
    http://jessta.id.au
    1. Re:I don't think it's going to matter by Spaceman40 · · Score: 1

      I stick by all the posts I've ever made, some may have been incorrect or my opinion may have changed since I wrote them, but I stick by the fact that for that time in my life they were correct for me.

      Absolutely. If I didn't mean what I said, I wouldn't have said it. Of course, this might fall into the "nothing to hide" argument vs. privacy, and it gets sticky.

      Still, it's amazing what people do or say when they think they're anonymous.

      --
      I [may] disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.
  63. Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We Are Anonymous
    Anonymous Is Legion
    Anonymous Does Not Forgive

  64. Dangers of Security Questions by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    I am disturbed by the increasingly common practice of websites requiring you to create and save Security questions pertaining to various personal details. Were someone to save and collate the answers to such questions over time, they would have knowledge of quite a large knowledgebase of personal backgrounds - as though everyone put up a MySpace profile!

    Yes, I could and I have started to make up fake answer to such questions. But that means having to remember what the fake answers are. So it's no better than an additioinal password. I think we need a better solution to recovering forgotten passwords.

  65. My computer forgot.. by s31523 · · Score: 1

    OK, it didn't forget, but it did crash and I lost everything. I forgot to make backups, so in turn the computer "forgot" all my data. The solution, don't back your old data, eventually it will be forgotten.

  66. Implement at filesystem level by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There must be (and there are, I know) filesystems that tag an object with a time to live, after which they are removed (upon encountering them, I suppose - it's a bit much to ask that they be deleted effectively in real time). Test installations, temporary files, privacy-sensitive records, account validity; it can all be enforced this way. A few filesystem tools that can manipulate this, et voila - instant forgetfulness.

    1. Re:Implement at filesystem level by the_germ · · Score: 1

      This could probably be implemented easily using Reiser 4 metadata.

      Simply write a tool that allows to set TTL for FS objects like folders and files and stores it as metadata. Then create a Reiser 4 plug-in that checks the metadata and deletes files that are outdated.

      Directories should carry a default TTL value for files put into them. For example /etc, /bin, /lib, /sbin would keep all data forever, /var/tmp would be cleaned after one day, your home directory could forget data when it's not accessed for one year etc.

      However, I think I prefer having all my data kept until I delete it personally. ;)

    2. Re:Implement at filesystem level by bytesex · · Score: 1

      You could implement a ttl-to-limbo variant; plus, you could implement all sorts of features with respect to how you discriminate - must a file be untouched for a year, or is one year after its ctime that you move it to limbo ? In reality, since people aren't very good at micromanaging their files, it's probably better if this feature were 'inherited' from the directory that it's in. Also, it's typically something that programs do instead of users; if I tag a tar with a ttl, then I'll want all files coming out of that tar to have the same ttl, and all the files that are created in that same dir using 'configure' and 'make' also. That way I can have an installation of some package and not worry about it's throwing files around: tomorrow they'll be gone. But if I want to keep them, then all I'd have to do is issue some command, and they'll live on my hard-disk forever. I guy can dream, I suppose..

      --
      Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
  67. Why? by codeButcher · · Score: 1
    It is human nature to create tools that help us overcome a shortcoming. Not strong enough? Attach a chunk of rock/metal to a handle, an behold! the hammer.

    Computers (and incidentally AI) is just that - a tool. What good is it to make something that is "just like humans" (or indistinguishable from them, to paraphrase Turing)? Rather make something that is better than humans at one particular skill, e.g. remembering facts, or making objective decisions, or operate in dangerous situations.

    --
    Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
  68. But.. dude.. by n1hilist · · Score: 1

    That's what FAT32 was designed for.

    1. Re:But.. dude.. by johnw · · Score: 3, Funny

      ITYM "That's what NTFS was designed for".

      HTH

  69. Well, there you have it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm still the guy who took 4 grams of mushrooms on a road trip from Austin to New Orleans...
     
    ...I'm still the guy who failed out of college 3 years later
     
    ...I'm still the guy who defaulted on some significant debts in my 20s


    Yeah, I think we see enough of your "whole picture" rather clearly.

    1. Re:Well, there you have it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a perfect example of what the OP is missing. People don't look at your life as a whole. They only see tiny pieces, and they only see the suggestive pieces. And those little peeks at an individual's personality inevitably leave a distorted impression. Privacy exists to protect the "whole picture" over the tidbits of gossip.

    2. Re:Well, there you have it. by rhakka · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, but couldn't you make the arguement that sure, for this transitional generation things are a little weird.. we are USED to only having a small picture of the people around us, so most of the people we interact with are 10% substance and 90% assumptions we make about them.

      But what happens, when you live in a world where the public face and history of everyone is available forever?

      could it be, could it just be that it becomes clearer what REALLY IS ok and normal, and what effects those things REALLY HAVE on who people are... if any?

      I mean, heck in ten years we're going to know about the old drinking and drugging habits of the people applying for higher paid and more powerful positions. More to the point.. we're going to know about ALL OF THE CANDIDATES' habits.. in comparison, we may just have to realize that people are human and maybe we'll have to start having realistic, human expectations of them, instead of faulting everyone for every "sin" they may have ever committed, should we find out about it.

    3. Re:Well, there you have it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because the information is out there doesn't mean people will know it or care about it. How much do you know about the leading candidates for the next Presidential election? Probably nowhere near all there is to know. Same for the vast majority of voters. But I'll bet that doesn't stop you from casting a vote based on what little information you *do* have.

    4. Re:Well, there you have it. by rhakka · · Score: 1

      That's definitely true. I personally have not grown up in a world where I am used to simply being able to easily search someone's history. But as time progresses, that will simply get easier and easier, inevitably, and the record will be more and more complete.

      As that happens, I think exposue to truth will have some pretty strong effects on perceptions. Of course I am speculating. But I do think access to knowledge and truth can only cause good in the LONG run.

  70. Do it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get a small notebook and one of those fireproof safes.

    If your house burns down and the outer plastic melds with some charred wood, making an impossible to open mess, well.. your computer probably went with it, so you'll be calling your bank/whatever anyhow.

    If your house doesn't burn down, are you going to be forgetting your passwords that often? Geez.

  71. I dunno... by djones101 · · Score: 1

    The fact that we know our every word is recorded sure hasn't stopped George Bush from providing the late night talk shows with plenty of "Bushisms".

  72. Windows computers already "forget"! by Robber+Baron · · Score: 1

    Windows computers already do! They forget .dll files... they forget .ini files... they forget registry settings...
    They do it all the time too!

    --

    You're using her as bait, Master!

  73. Full of shit by norteo · · Score: 1

    What I conclude from this article is that Harvard needs to renew his professors soon.

    So in order not to take stuff out of context, the best way is to forget the context...

    Humans do not forget. Humans never forget. Do they synthesize? could be...

    This sounds like an attempt of censure. As an advise for those who like to censure stuff, Ill say people may forgive you but people DO NOT FORGET.

  74. Eternal Memory by Joker1980 · · Score: 1

    I dont really think theres anything enherintly wrong with eternal memory, that said though the powers that be have shown that they have no quams using this information to their own advantage (think taken out of context for example). This type of abuse of information would be my concern more than the data existing in the first place. Like nearly everything in this world information is a tool, its how you use it that counts

    --
    Well, Bart, your uncle Arthur used to have a saying: "Shoot 'em all and let God sort 'em out."
  75. In Soviet Amerika by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google owns all YOUr base for ever and ever and ever...

  76. The context will be remembered too... by LighterShadeOfBlack · · Score: 1

    Interesting article, but some of his ideas don't add up for me.

    Firstly, if computers will remember everything we say, why will things be remembered out of context? If anything it will be harder in the future then ever before to take things out of context because everything about that time and that situation will also be remembered. No more situations where only one side of a conversation can be recounted because only one person saved their letters, instead we'll have perfect record of both sides of the discourse in the form of e-mails or blog entries.

    Secondly, even if we don't want computers to remember everything and we come up with computers that "forget" and laws that enforce their use, anyone who wants to remember everything can still choose not to forget. No doubt government agencies would be exempt from any such laws, and of course there are plenty of people and organisations who would be happy to run the very small risk of getting caught to keep an indefinite record. The people you don't want to have that information will still have it, except now there won't be a public record to retain the context of the situation. This increases the likelihood of the "perfect memory" being used in a negative way by removing it from publicly accessible databases.

    It seems far more sensible to stop living in a mudslinging character assassinating world. Something like this will force that to happen. Nobody will consider long term consequences of their speech or online actions when growing up so this would be the great leveller. If everyone can get something on everyone else then it just becomes meaningless and trivial.

    We still need better data protection laws though. Just not for the exact reasons given here. There's a big difference between losing the ability to forget and losing privacy.

    --
    Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
  77. Erasing records by pubjames · · Score: 1

    Will such massive databases make us all act like politicians?

    No, it will be worse. Because politicians will be the only ones that will have the influence to be able to "clean up" their records.

    Consider Bush. We know he was the black sheep of the Bush family. We know he used to drink a lot. It's likely he did drugs. And yet there is little evidence of this at all, and I bet any journalist that tries to dig up that kind of dirt on Bush will hit a brick wall. Perhaps literally.

  78. Polluting the well by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, it's true specific incidents can last seemingly forever on the internet. But when you look at the increase in available data, it's staggering. And that data is spread out around hundreds of servers in different formats. But the more data, the more junk data. Outdated, incorrect entries and, sometimes, forged entries.

    I manage a lot of data and have learned over the years how easy it is to pollute that well. Users are ingenious in their ability to get crap information in a system, no matter how tight you think your validation is. And importing data from an outside source...lol...even more of a nightmare. The ability of the internet to store information long term can also be used to hide information by clouding the waters.

    So, years ago I started polluting my personal online data well. Instead of one or two profiles, I'd have five or six, all different. Different addresses, phone numbers, cities, states even race and gender. Five turned into ten, turned into 15 or 20 and then I lost count. Started doing the same thing to my online resumes. Cloned the resume under a different name, address and phone number. Created new resumes with the name withheld or changed with many subtle variations, swapped out phone numbers, email addresses. Started masking personal information behind my own LLC. Turned into my own personal Wild Weasel. Which one of the clones is really me? Hard to tell.

    Haven't done that to my direct marketing profile and credit report...yet. But the day may come when I want to poison those wells. Don't need instant credit, pay cash for almost everything, including cars. You can play hell with your credit report by getting a camper or a boat and living on one of them for a while. I could park in my nephews back 40 for a couple months. Or live overseas, almost as good. Use PO boxes, change addresses so many times no one can keep up. Have one address for drivers license and vehicle registrations, a different one for online orders, another one for tax purposes. Use the wife's cell phone one week, mine the next. Change phone numbers twice a year. And, ironically, it's computers that give me the ability to keep up with all the different versions of myself.

    No matter how good you are at consolidating data, there's always going to be someone like me with the knowledge to crap it up and make you work at manual consolidation. Got a lot of spare time on your hands to figure that out? :)

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Polluting the well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am intrigued by your technique and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

    2. Re:Polluting the well by DynamicPhil · · Score: 1

      Putting aside the mastery of data retention techniques you must posses (which impresses me) I feel i have to ask the question;

      Why?

      --
      "If it can be thought up, there exists at least one person trying to make it happen for real" - Phil
  79. The net used against you in the U.S.A. by razpones · · Score: 1

    Sadly and in a way very scary, the U.S. is on the lead in using the net against people. As Professor Andrew Feldmar, a well-known Vancouver psychotherapist learned, when it comes to the current U.S. government, and the use of the Patriot Act, a simple border patrol officer, or a normal cop, can google your name and "decide" what kind of person you are. Laws like the Patriot Act, put way too much power in the hands of low level security workers, that with the internet tools can ban, and maybe even incarcerate anyone on their sole judgment. Prof. Feldmar wrote an article published in the spring 2001 issue of the journal Janus Head. The article concerned an acid trip Feldmar had taken in London, Ontario, and another in London, England, almost forty years ago. It also alluded to the fact that he had used hallucinogenics as a "path" to understanding self and that in certain cases, he reflected, it could "be preferable to psychiatry." The guard didn't like what he saw, and pulled him off the line and in to a nightmare that hasn't really finished. He has been baned to enter the U.S. for ever due to "narcotics" use. LSD is not a narcotic substance, Feldmar tried to explain, but an entheogen. The guard wasn't interested in technicalities. He asked for a statement from Feldmar admitting to having used LSD and he fingerprinted Feldmar for an FBI file. I don't think computers should "forget" stuff, in this case for example, the computer would have to forget the professor's work entirely. I think the use of the internet as a weapon against people is just ripe for a government like the current U.S. administration. I wish we could just forget despot laws and politicians, but the net will never forget.

  80. Dale Gribble? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dale, is that you?

  81. GIGO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A computer record of your silliness is not much different than a person remembering some stupid thing you said many years before ... but at least it's more accurate.

    Garbage In, Garbage Out. I'm still dealing with the consequences of a number of Usenet posts forged in my name over a decade ago. I never said those things, but if you search on my real name, they turn up and look like I said them.

    Of course, computers are perfect, and no one would ever try to falsify someone elses identity to make the consequences fall on them, so it's perfectly okay to hold someone responsible for every single thing that the computer says they did.

  82. They do forget! by johnw · · Score: 4, Funny

    If you've never heard the graunching noise which a hard disc drive makes as the computer "forgets" your last week's work then you haven't been working with computers long.

  83. The more data retained the better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The professor says:

    Afraid how our words and actions may be perceived years later and taken out of context, the lack of forgetting may prompt us to speak less freely and openly

        In my opinion this is justification for even more data retention. By allowing one to review and discect all facets of an article, statement or situation can only help to ensure that they will get the most accurate depiction of what truly transpired.
  84. Typical lack of responsibility by Grashnak · · Score: 1

    This just oozes the modern demand that everyone be absolved of all responsibility for their actions.

    Didn't get a job because your prospective employer say pictures of you partying naked in a mound of cocaine with Yasser Arafat on your Facebook page? The obvious solution is to ban employers from looking at Facebook.

    People can look up your old comments on the internet and you're afraid you might look like an asshole? Clearly the internet should have an expiry date after which it forgets your comments.

    Why can't people just engage their brain and think before they post stuff on the internet? Personal responsibility FTW.

    --
    Life needs more saving throws.
  85. Re:The right to vanish?? by ohearn · · Score: 2, Funny

    The right to vanish??

    Didn't you know that only ninjas have the right to vanish, and they are still required to leave behind an annoying smoke cloud that fills your sinuses in the process.

  86. so he's saying... by BenSchuarmer · · Score: 1

    that forgetting the truth will set us free.

  87. A bad idea on so many points... by Bazar · · Score: 1
    From the article...

    ...A law would decree that "those who create software that collects and stores data build into their code not only the ability to forget with time, but make such forgetting the default." From a security point of view, all you would need to do to cause chaos, would be to change the system clock, and the data would start to erase. The number of compromises would be horrible. If there was any way to change the system clock, you could force lawful applications to erase their data.

    From a commercial point of view, the cost of adding functions, and redesigning code that works on the assumption that data is permanent is incalculable, it'd be worse then all the reprogramming that went into y2k.

    what i believe hes getting mixed up, is not forgetfulness, but privacy. Not everything needs to, nor should be recorded for the records. And of that which is, most of it should be kept confidential.
    --
    To avoid criticism; Say nothing, Do nothing, Be nothing.
  88. You have the right to remain silent... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. but any dumb thing you've said or others have said about you in the last decades will be selectively dredged up by a search engine and used as evidence against you by people with a grudge.

    ****

    Viktor Mayer-Schönberger may be complaining about lack of privacy now, but that's because he's a TERRORIST:

    Google [Viktor Mayer-Schönberger bomb]
    First result:
    "Elisabeth Holzleithner und Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, 1997-05-12 ... including 'Calcium Carbide Bomb,' 'Jug Bomb,' 'How To Make a CO2 Bomb,' 'Cherry Bomb,'"

    *****
    See! I told you. So don't listen to anything he's saying, especially about ATnT secret ongoing warrantless NSA wiretap.

  89. Decidedly NOT a good idea! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Because I already know how it will be implemented. I've been living on this planet long enough.

    First of all, no data connected to any "normal" person would ever be removed, because he could be a terrorist and we could still need his info to sniff him out when computers are finally "good enough" to connect the dots. No data of that shall ever be wasted or lost.

    Second, any incriminating data that could lead to a politician's arrest or that would make a three letter agency look bad will immediately be destroyed on grounds of said paper and the fact that you can't hold something against someone after 50 years...

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  90. Sounds like... by Refefer · · Score: 0

    Sounds like someone was caught with the 'ol horse porn on his computer.

  91. Tell It to Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google has made it its mission to store and catalogue massive amounts of data, and I doubt they intend to change their raison d'être any time soon.

  92. To the contrary.... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    ... when we get enough of a collection of human ... whatever... then we can look back on it in honesty and start looking for the reasons/cause rather than hiding the symptoms.

    The lesson of history is to not make the same mistakes.
    Those who don't want to learn the value of history, want to repeat it.

    1) forget history
    2) repeat it.
    3) profit

  93. Any laws that come of this are a smokescreen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact is, that once information is in electronic form it is durable. In fact, if it is illegal to keep the info it will be even more valuable. Why, you ask ...

    If someone wants to investigate you, the quickest and cheapest way to achieve the objective will be to use the treasure trove of information. You will never know whether a job was denied you because you sucked or because of that purchase you made 5 years ago. Further, your employment is at will so you never need to know why you were chosen to depart. Making laws to limit information storage will simply make illegal info more profitable. People will be lulled into a false sense of security making the illegal information even more damaging. People will trust the laws so allow even more info to be gathered on them. For example, if you want to exercise your privacy with creditor information you need to request exclusion in writing and then in a year or two repeat the process. So, how many people actually do that?

    On the other hand, if you recognize the risks you can prevent the information from being gathered in the first place. You can appear to be worthy of sainthood, verifiable in the legal information stores. So, just assume that anything you say can and will be used against you and you will be truly free.

    People would be much better off without privacy laws and full control of what information they have to release to others. Of course, that would be all too simple, give the little guy his rights, and cost THE MAN his power, so will never occur.

  94. Already happening? by GnuDiff · · Score: 1


    From a management point of view, storing "all" your data indeterminately will cause ever-increasing storage (and access!) costs, so "forgetfulness" is already being implemented by neccessity. While storage costs go down, if your storage volume goes up FASTER, you WILL hit some point after which the cost/amount growth will be exponential rather then linear for any given technological level.

    In other words, the cost of storing "everything" depends on how fast your "everything" grows. After it hits a (moving) point, your costs will skyrocket.

  95. The buttons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The buttons are too small for our fat fingers.

    *ducks*

  96. Well Duh. by wolff000 · · Score: 1

    If you say something online in a place you don't have the power to delete it. It could be used against you someday. i don't think computers need to forget but people need to learn to watch what they say and what they put online. it's just common sense and i don't think it's going to make us all act like politicos. As far as Americans having a long memory and holding things against people, Bush is a prime example of how that is not completely true. The guy drove drunk and was arrested for it during a time that most cops would just scold you and tell you to go straight home. All the rumors of his coke habit didn't seem to hurt come election time either. But none of that has to do with online comments, pictures, etc. The guy makes some valid points but I seriously doubt anyone's online behavior besides those that are thinking about or are in politics are going to change.

    --
    WTF?
  97. Common sense? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couldn't we just, I dunno, not attach any identifying information to things we wouldn't want to be associated with? It's easy enough to use a pseudonym on the Web, and IP logs are generally not kept forever (use an anonymous proxy if you're worried about that). Hell, I use several different identities depending on what I'm doing, and I am very careful to never link them to each other.

  98. Why computers? by curlynoodle · · Score: 1

    Why does he target computers? Would not any recording medium be suject to such an arguement, including simple pencil and paper? Anyway, it not a single application or system that perserves information, but rather the high-level process which encompasses hardware maintenance and backups. In my experience, computers very easily "forget", its called a hard drive failure.

  99. Adaptive Control Theory Has Known This For Years by m0nstr42 · · Score: 1

    A standard lesson in any text on adaptive control/filtering is the employment of a "forgetting factor". Roughly speaking, if X is your estimate of how something works and you're constantly updating your estimate, heuristically speaking you do something like

    X(new) = e^{-\lambda t}X(old) + (estimate based on new information)

    That way, as the system slowly changes over time, your estimate is not "stubborn" in thinking that it must always act the same way. Not only is this a good idea, in many cases it is absolutely essential in making something work.

  100. PGP as a remembering solution by evolymsey · · Score: 1

    It will be relevant when we will have a reliable identification online. Each citizen that would like to use the Internet should have a PGP key to identified them. This way we could use the Internet as we use life, without being able to pretend to be anyone else...even it should be harder to do so. That way, information gathered about each of us would be of trust. Of course anonymous or pseudo username surfing is relevant about the picture it gives of us generally, but aren't we wanting the Internet to become part of real life too? In order to become effective and bring some health in this world, Internet should know us, we human. Even know us much more that our country. What identifies us? What's better to identify us? What is better the technology has invented yet? PGP, username, or social security number? Why is it so slow to adopt technology that can serve us in a better way.

  101. The Ministry of Love by ynotds · · Score: 1

    A radio serialisation of Orwell's 1984 finished here the other night and I found myself listening again to the last few bleak installments. The premise of that extreme dystopian view is that you willingly forget everything while Big Brother remembers everything, and that sounds like exactly where the professor's half baked idea (400k PDF) would lead us in practice.

    Please keep it all and more, so that idle process in some unimaginably rich future environment which finally gets far enough down the list of reincarnation candidates will have access to the maximum possible amount of data surviving from first time around, enough data that new process it spawns will be happy it is me.

    --
    -- Our systemic servants do not good masters make.
  102. I've got a question: Shut up! by Joe+Snipe · · Score: 1

    My first thought is to say shut up old man; I bet your grandfather felt people shouldn't get their news from the newspaper and telegraph. I am sure that the youngwer generations, having lived in a world where ANYTHING can be recorded for future indemnification, will be more concious as to what they do in public. Then I remembered my teenage years. While it doesn't change my thoughts about this old coot complaining about short skirts and "touch dancing", it changes my reasoning thusly: If EVERYONE has embarrassing/incriminating dirt in their past (which they do), and anyone can bring that up for anyone else to see, it will lose it's power. I realize this is the "if everyone owned a gun" argument, but it applies here better after all, if everyone used their guns we would all die, but if everyone uses their dirt, we just all end up dirty.

    --
    Sometimes, life itself is sarcasm...
  103. Method to say "good bye" to your data by id3as · · Score: 1

    In Gmail, you delete the messages, then use your Gmail as usual. If you remember something important, recover from Trash. This way it's easy to say "goodbye" for most of the unnecessary data.

    The same works for HDDs, CDs, etc. For example, you clean a spare HDD, and make a copy only of the files that you actually opened. After 1 month has passed, distroyed all the other data. Leave only the new HDD.

    Very easy.

  104. The Only Reason History Is Important by EgoWumpus · · Score: 1

    I think the problem is not that we're retaining everything, but that we're retaining only pieces. I'm sure there is blog activity I've partaken in that is no longer connected or attributable to me; there are pictures out there that don't have my name associated with them. This has always been the case - there have always been things people have done that they are no longer associated with. This is, presumably, because we can only remember a small amount, and what we choose to remember tends to be the more important things.

    Which brings us to the second problem; context. If you take a complete record of someone's life, you have no inherent way of knowing which parts are more 'them' than other parts. 'Memory' and 'forgetting' tends to leave behind those parts that are going to most inform the decisions of a person in the future - which is all that you care about. You don't care about someone's history so much as you care about how they would make choices in the present. That's why you want to know their past. A complete record does not help you so much with this; you can see the decisions they've made, but turning that into a predictive model is hard. Meaningless decisions and events may not have changed them much, whereas others will have hit them quite hard.

    I think back to all the boards I've read and I think I can recall most of them - but certainly not all. And certainly not all the comments I made. They were superficial in my life, ultimately. I don't care about them. Neither should anyone else. But there does need to be a culture of awareness over the fact that if you dredge up a comment positively attributable to me, it may still not mean much to me. We're going to have to evolve beyond the, "Well, you said or did [x], therefore aren't who we want you to be."

    --

    [Ego]out

    1. Re:The Only Reason History Is Important by zotz · · Score: 1

      "But there does need to be a culture of awareness over the fact that if you dredge up a comment positively attributable to me, it may still not mean much to me."

      Indeed, there is a big difference between what I feel may be worth talking or thinking about and what I think is true even.

      To put a stupid example up:

      I am thinking the sky is silver. (I made sure to think this before, during, and after writing the previous sentence.)

      I think the sky is blue. (Just not to play unneeded games, normal daytime sky here.)

      all the best,

      drew

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
  105. Two words by direpath · · Score: 1

    Net Handle.

    Hmm...you know come to think of it that could come back around to you as well.

    --
    "It's amazing what velocity can do when human beings are in season" -Matthew Good
  106. What about.... rm? by saibot834 · · Score: 1

    rm -rf /
    What about that?

  107. How do we plan for weird-assed gateways? by tepples · · Score: 1

    There are no sites, or forums, or boards, or whatever else when you're talking about usenet; weird-assed gateways excluded, there's just the groups, the posts, and the servers that propagate them. The attack model is that the attacker would use such a weird-assed gateway that does not honor X-No-Archive.
  108. It already has by Angst+Badger · · Score: 1

    Will such massive databases make us all act like politicians?

    Actually, the presence of archived messages on mailing lists and Usenet from my teens -- some twenty years ago -- ensures that I would never even consider running for office. I'm not sure this is unique to net culture, though. It's not like raking public figures over the coals for their 'youthful indiscretions' is anything new. Politicians have always been worth the effort. What's new is that it's so easy now that it becomes worth the effort for ordinary people. Every time I have a job interview, I am always dreading a visit from the Ghost of Usenet Postings Past.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  109. Bring on the memory hole! (except for, um, us) by turing_m · · Score: 1

    That's what the good professor is really worried about. Someone being able to write an alternate history besides an ordained priest from Harvard university, using a simple search engine (or in the restricted future, some sort of search on a private hard drive), and doing a better job. And also being able to research the Harvard high priest who wrote the official whitewash, so that he can be identified as not just a name assumed to be authoritative and objective but a real live person with a background and an agenda. Fancy that!

    At the moment there is no real memory hole. Which was in large part what enabled the world of 1984 to function. TPTB would declare "Oceania is at war with Eurasia, we've always been at war with Eurasia." And Winston Smith and co would dutifully clip out any conlicting references.

    But now 'tinfoil hat wearing' 'paranoid' 'conspiracy theorists' can say "'Ang on a sec mate! Oceania was at war with Eastasia just 10 years ago, and we were at peace with Eurasia then. Why, 'ave a look 'ere at this 'ere photo, it shows Big Brov shaking hands with Dear Leader Foo Wang! Wot do ya make of that, then?"

    So this professor wants us to all have default erased family photographs, records and the like, expecting us to believe that Big Brother is dutifully doing the same thing, so it can't embarrass us at some future time. Because "forgetting is so central to society's fundamental values".

    Who the hell is he kidding?

    --
    If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
  110. Regret by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

    ""Afraid how our words and actions may be perceived years later and taken out of context, the lack of forgetting may prompt us to speak less freely and openly.""

    He is going to regret saying this one day!

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  111. I think you're missing the point? by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1

    Now that we know all that stuff about you we are more likely to pre-judge you, whereas if we had met you without knowing any of that you'd have a fresh chance to make an impression because what happened in the past doesn't necessarily define who you are today but it's hard for people to leave things that happened in the past where they belong.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
  112. Computers don't have this precedent. by edunbar93 · · Score: 1

    Perhaps, bureaucracies should also forget. Or paper records. Or diaries. Or newspapers. Or historical records.

    No, we should keep all this data intact. It's all very important, no matter how banal it might seem to us right now.

    --
    "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
  113. It's just a tool by daveisfera · · Score: 1

    On the most basic level data storage is just a tool, and like any other tool it's true worth/morale value is determined by how you use it. Do you hear people crying out that we should do away with hammers or create a bunch of laws limiting their use just because you can break someone's bones with it? No, it has a myriad of other important and good uses and we leave it up to individuals to use the tool correctly. If you're afraid of what a hammer might do to you, then just don't use one. The same applies to data storage. If you don't like storing all of that data, then don't store it. Nobody is forcing you to take pictures with a digital camera, have a blog, search on Google, or any of the other things that create the mentioned "digital footprint". It's called agency (the ability to choose for yourself), and I recommend that people start using it instead of demanding a bunch of laws to make all of the decisions for us.

  114. Wrong goal by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

    Computers forget very easily, hit SHIFT+DEL, click YES, there we go. It's forgotten.

    If people needed computers to randomly forget things, they wouldn't religiously create daily, hell, even hourly backups and using multi-million storage rooms with carefully adjusted temperature, humidity and so on, to store those backups in.

    Computers can be trusted to forget only the day they are smarter and do everything better than a human can. Right now they are tools, which must obey their owner, and the owner decides what goes and what stays.

  115. That's the spirit! by Aranel+Alasse · · Score: 1

    That's the spirit! You've just got to unsay what you said before, then, when they look up your past, they'll pay more attention to the more recent comments.
    Er...hopefully. But I suppose actually meaning the "unsaid" comment might help... ;)

  116. The republican national committee servers... by fiendy · · Score: 1

    ..are great at forgetting! 5 million emails, that's amazing!

  117. Maybe people should be more careful... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    about what they write (and say).

    "...may prompt us to speak less freely and openly..."

    And is that a BAD THING?

  118. Free but Careful Speech by Bob-taro · · Score: 1
    I, for one, think society might actually benefit from people choosing their words more carefully.

    I agree there's a downside to this, and people can misuse information, and I don't think all concept of privacy should be abolished, but trying to control the storage of information is probably an unwinnable battle. Educating people on how and when information about them may be stored might be the best we can do. It's an interesting idea, though.

    --
    Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
  119. Re: Responsibility --That's the problem. by Aranel+Alasse · · Score: 1

    Perhaps people should think a little more before they open their mouths, or in this case, apply their fingers to their keyboards. Which is exactly what the summary/article mentioned as being bad:

    "Afraid how our words and actions may be perceived years later and taken out of context, the lack of forgetting may prompt us to speak less freely and openly." I actually do find myself speaking less freely and openly precisely because I know it's all likely to still be on the internet someday long after I'm dead. I see that as a problem.

    Someone mentioned that we could use nicknames, so yeah, I use a nickname. The trick comes when I try to continually separate my nickname-self from my real-self, in order to protect my privacy. It's hard work!

    So, I'm sad that I feel the need to censor what I say on the internet. But what's worse is that I tend to carry that tendency over into real life. I find myself not divulging information about myself to other people, in real-life conversations, because the hesitancy to do so is so ingrained in me now... I've somehow come to a point of thinking that it's not anyone's right or business to know anything about me, unless I'm feeling particularly benevolent. But this is to the detriment of real-life relationships. :(

    Does anyone else experience this issue? Does anyone have useful tips on resolving it?
  120. Teach People? by bigwave111 · · Score: 1

    Doesn't much of this come down to a lack of education? Computers are a part of society that we are incredibly reliant upon and yet we expect users to be either self-taught or trained. Public education fails in computer education (and many other realms). While there will always be the technologically inept who can't program their Tivo or who look at an iPod as a paperweight, these are devices that don't bring about serious consequences for their misuse. As the reliance upon computers has increased, and as the sensitivity of information retained on computer has also increased, the training to go along with handling these responsibilities and technologies has gone almost untouched.

  121. Think first by tchdab1 · · Score: 1

    Maybe the answer is thinking before spewing. There was a time when writing a letter was time-consuming enough, and permanent enough, that thought was required before writing. Similar thought might leave us with a legacy that we're more proud of.

  122. AOL's Secret Plan by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Clearly, the way AOL is going to stay afloat is to sell you 'deletion rights' to the logs of your chats they're archiving on their AIM servers ('for analysis purposes') in a few years.

    You do use an OTR client, right?

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  123. THE DIGITAL ICE AGE by mattnyc99 · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't we be worried that computers won't remember enough? Interesting breakdown of an entire era of human history becoming lost because of changing file formats and irrecoverable data here: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/industr y/4201645.html?series=21

  124. Buckaroo Banzai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, hey, hey. Don't be mean. We don't have to be mean because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

  125. Right! Let's do it now by hackingbear · · Score: 1

    Let's start by erasing this Harvard professor's comments from the computers!

  126. Accurate data is truth. Why forget truth? by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    Accurate data is truth. Inaccurate data can be changed, or at least rebutted. Why forget truth?

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  127. Cardinal Richelieu said it best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Never write a letter and never destroy one"

    "If one would give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest
    man, I would find something in them to have him hanged".

  128. from fear of being bitten in the ass later... by ephedream · · Score: 1

    This is why I don't blog.

  129. Re: Responsibility --That's the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've experienced the same thing. I started using the Internet as a teenager, and was happy to rant about anything that came to my mind, under my own name, without thinking it would be archived and searchable by anyone for the rest of my life. When I came to realise this, I do think I became much more reserved, and not just when posting to the Internet.

    To me, the pervasive archiving and indexing of data sent over the Internet (including emails, websites, usenet, etc.) feels to much like Orwell's 1984, with Google being something like Big Brother. However, it's even worse, because anyone has access to the information being collected. In the real world there's also CCTV, which makes me slightly uncomfortable if I think about it, but at least access to it is restricted.

    Overall, I like Prof. Mayer-Schönberger's idea of a default expiry date, mandated by law. Without it, I think there is too much danger to privacy, especially with search engines like Google crawling through the web, indexing and in some cases archiving anything anyone posts to a site (even an ephemeral one).

  130. don't forget your history by nanosquid · · Score: 1

    Notions of anonymity and being able to "start over" are fairly modern. Historically, a single mistake might follow you for the rest of your life.

    But it's not like we have a choice anyway. USENET posts had expiration dates, yet a decade later, DejaNews still puts them up on-line. We may wish that digital information expires, but it doesn't. We might be able to achieve this through totalitarian control over information, but that's worse than the problem it's trying to fix.

    Besides, you can always change your name.

  131. Why forget truth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because sometimes truth may be inconvenient.

    This isn't necessarily as sinister as it sounds. Is it vital that the public gets to know that some now-"well-adjusted" individual has previously been a drug addict or a prostitute? Doesn't it have value that individuals can choose not to disclose things about themselves, even things that are true?

    1. Re:Why forget truth? by maillemaker · · Score: 1

      I don't know. I think I would prefer to know the truth. That way, if, say, I am deciding whether or not to hire someone, I can bet on the guy without the checkered past instead of the guy with one, rather than betting on whether or not he is now "well-adjusted".

      In any case, it's a moot point. We are rapidly approaching the time where there will be no privacy, if we are not already there. Basically if someone wants to spend enough time and money looking at your past, they will find anything there is to find.

      --
      A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  132. The "good doctor" is a fucking moron, like most by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    "good doctors" (with the exception of Dr. Who, of course, and maybe Dr. Atomic.)

    First, who cares if everything you've done comes back to haunt you? It's called "karma" and people have been dealing with it for thousands of years.

    Second, the only people who want their past to be forgotton are politicians and criminals (and I say that as a former criminal myself who doesn't give a damn whether my past is known.)

    Third, even if YOUR computer forgets, who says somebody else's won't remember, giving you the disadvantage?

    Fourth, who decides what should be forgotten?

    Fifth, if you don't want your past comments on the Net, don't put your current comments there.

    Sixth, has the "good doctor" ever heard of personal responsibility? Probably not, the concept has been "forgotten" in this society.

    Morons.

    It seems no matter what stupid notion somebody comes up with, they can get publicity for it.

    So what am I not famous?

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    1. Re:The "good doctor" is a fucking moron, like most by MechanicalJesus · · Score: 1

      All of this was settled in the game Metal Gear Solid 2 by a sort of "Artificial Intelligence" created by our subculture and information taking on the responsiblity of deciding what to be deleted and what should be passed on.

  133. Obligatory xkcd reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This, of course, makes me think of the xkcd comic

    http://xkcd.com/c137.html

  134. If you don't have the balls... by Talgrath · · Score: 1

    If you don't have the balls to stand behind your words, don't say them. Whether it's on the internet or spoken to a friend, live up to what you've said and done in the past, what you are doing now and what you plan to do in the future; that's what having balls, honor and/or integrity is all about. Personally, I think this guy is dead wrong, computers shouldn't forget things; data being forgotten or lost is often times the cause of modern problems (forgot about Vietnam perhaps? Well no wonder we got into Iraq.).

    1. Re:If you don't have the balls... by Archon-X · · Score: 1

      I think that you miss the point of the article - it's talking about timeframe, not whether you have the minerals to backup your statements. For example - no matter how brilliant you may have thought you were back then, would you stand behind comments you made online when you were 16?

      At the time of posting, sure - but when you're 30? Definitely not.

      The problem is, if you're applying for job X and you're being judge by things that were said decades ago, because some zealot is proud of his googling ability.

      If all your words and actions were stored endlessly, noone would ever get a job, etc.

    2. Re:If you don't have the balls... by pho3nixtar · · Score: 1

      If all your words and actions were stored endlessly, noone would ever get a job, etc. I'm hoping that would include the person interviewing you for the job...
    3. Re:If you don't have the balls... by neminem · · Score: 1

      I have a much better idea: how about we, as a society, simply agree not to judge a 30 year old for comments he might have said 15 years ago, because that would be stupid. Or, at the least, after discovering something awkward that your applicant wrote, instead of assuming he still agrees with it, ask him about it. Ask when he wrote it, and what he would say about it now.

      Just because a technology can be used for all kinds of nasty purposes, doesn't mean we have to use it for them. I, for one, am wholeheartedly in favor of keeping as much information around, for as long as possible...

  135. Someone's been reading Asimov... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a short story called "Lest We Remember," in which a man with absolutely perfect memory that never expires is able to deduce everything about anyone he's ever met, by putting together tiny, often subconscious, clues from each encounter.

    'Course, in this case, it's only what people CHOOSE to put into cyberspace, but I thought it was an interesting parallel.

  136. The Problem Exists, But Wrong Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As many others have said, it will be all but impossible to enforce this type all-encompassing rule on archived data. And that's what you would need for it to be effective -- widespread or maybe even ubiquitous compliance.

    What we really need is to improve our measures for maintaining privacy, and to educate the public in how to use it. I know that, whenever I write something out to the www that I feel might even be vaguely controversial, I take appropriate precautions (high anonymity proxies, account names consisting of random characters, etc.) that make it much less likely that it will be tracked back to me, especially through some automated process.

  137. Counterexamples? by TuringTest · · Score: 1

    1. It has never been implemented with any great success GPL

    2. There is little incentive for the individual to perform at his or her best because the marginal contribution of a single person has almost zero effect on the collective Linux

    3. It encourages irresponsible behavior by shifting the cost of personal decisions onto the society Debian (ok, that one might be considered as irresponsible behavior) 8-P
    --
    Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
  138. Easy: optical media by Derf_X · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I haven't read TFA.

    Bad quality optical media can help computers to forget. They don't choose what they forget, but they do as time passes by. I've read so many article about optical media, I'm surprised no one thought about it.