Slashdot Mirror


Nominations Open For "Most Likely to be Shut Down By Government"

The corporate overlords at SourceForge asked me to name a Slashdot category for their upcoming Community Choice Awards and to let you guys select the winner. I have named my category "Most Likely to be Shut Down by a Government Agency." We're going to run this like we do an Ask Slashdot call for questions — post your nominations into the comments here. Use moderation to send up good ideas. In the upcoming days we'll post another story where you can vote on the actual winner. Nominations need to include the project name, a link to some sort of official website, and a paragraph of why you think they deserve to win. The project that wins will gain fame, notoriety, and maybe a cease and desist order that they could print out and frame if they had that kind of time.

20 of 629 comments (clear)

  1. Truecrypt by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Truecrypt

    It's basically only a matter of time before the fear-mongers and political demagogues in the U.S. and elsewhere outlaw any form of encryption that doesn't include a backdoor for the NSA and other "trusted" government agencies. There has already been evidence of commercial encrytption (such as Windows encryption) including such backdoors. And when the commercial companies all cave, how long do you think it will be before the government comes after the open source projects too?

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:Truecrypt by bsDaemon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Couldn't/wouldn't they just move the project outside of the country to avoid issues? OpenBSD doesn't have to abide by crpyto export rules because they are in Canada, for instance.

      Of course, I suppose the argument could be used for pretty much every project that is likely to be mentioned.

    2. Re:Truecrypt by evanbd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While all the knowledge is out there, and you *can* do it yourself, getting every single detail right is not even close to easy. Are you sure you didn't leave some piece of the key swapped out to disk? Are you certain your random number generator was of sufficient quality and well seeded? Modern cryptosystems fail thanks to details, and the only way to get every detail right is many eyes and lots of work. Amateur efforts can certainly do it, but it's not easy for either them or the pros. Just remember, "I used RSA" isn't good enough. Witness the Netscape SSL problem, and the recent Debian SSH problems for examples of where the support infrastructure around the cryptosystem failed.

    3. Re:Truecrypt by Sloppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The drawback of a one-time pad system is the logistics of transporting the keys and having only two copies, that are destroyed after they are used.

      One thing I enjoy harping on, is that there are many situations where OTP is actually quite practical; the transport and storage just aren't a big deal. For example: people you see in person every day. You put your phone next to your wife's phone at night, and they exchange pads over a wire or low-powered IR link or something. Your conversations the next day are OTPed.

      As a general-purpose fix-everything solution OTP doesn't work, but sometimes it can, without really being very burdensome.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    4. Re:Truecrypt by thtrgremlin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is already true for physical locks. Possession of lock picking equipment is intent. You can not posses the tools without a license that you can not receive without certification that you can't get without going to an approved and certified school. It is unlawful to study outside of approved classrooms. This is why lock picks make so much money, and for anyone into OSS here, why is is also so easy for criminals to pick any lock or work around any theft deterrent device.

      --
      Want Big Business out of government? Take away the incentive and start by getting government out of big business!
    5. Re:Truecrypt by fastest+fascist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's too believable to be funny.

    6. Re:Truecrypt by HadouKen24 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      IANAL, but mere possession of lock picking equipment is perfectly legal in most states even without a license. It only counts as intent if there is some reason to think that you intend to use them to break in somewhere. There is a small hobbyist community that picks (their own) locks for fun--perfectly legally. It does vary from state by state, though; lockpick possession is considered prima facie evidence for intent in some even where simple possession might be legal under a strictly literal reading of the statute in question.

      Walking around with them in your pocket isn't smart, though. Having them in your own home is frequently just fine, but taking them anywhere very frequently does constitute intent, if you're not a certified locksmith on a job.

      So... that's not quite how it is with lockpicks. It depends on what State you're in. (Unless you're in Canada, of course. Canada requires certification even for mere ownership.)

  2. ThePirateBay by nuzak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're the next allofmp3 -- they're getting named by name in international treaty talks.

    --
    Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
  3. Slashdot by AlephNot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would like to nominate Slashdot as being most likely to be shut down. After all, free thought is anathema to government control.

    --
    "Feel a glory in so rolling / on the human heart a stone" --E. A. Poe, "The Bells"
  4. wikileaks by asynchronous13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    wikileaks - since it already was (sort of) shut down by government.

  5. Tor, Freenet, and I2P by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Tor, Freenet, and I2P are probably on the top of the list. There is no way that government wants difficult to trace communication to be availble to the general public.

  6. FreeNet by bsDaemon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I suspect that FreeNet is something that many, many governments would like to shut down. In the west, pretty much all they have to do is say "klddy pr0n" and it's gone. In China and other such countries, they don't really have to say anything at all.

  7. I Save RX by Slightly+Askew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This website, supported by the states, offers its citizens affordable medications from Canada and Europe. I predict the federal government will shut it down, citing "safety issues" with foreign drugs.

    --
    Public use of any portable music system is a virtually guaranteed indicator of sociopathic tendencies. -- Zoso
    1. Re:I Save RX by josath · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, yeah, we hear this argument every time. But did you know most drug companies spend more on ADVERTISING then on actual research and development of new drugs?

      --
      sig? uhh, umm, ok
  8. GOA by ezwip · · Score: 5, Insightful

    www.gao.gov

    --
    "I guess I'm gonna fade into Bolivian."
  9. Obama by bidule · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, it worked for jfk...

    --
    ID: the nose did not occur naturally, how would we wear glasses otherwise? (apologies to Voltaire)
  10. What an extremely useful little competition ... by Angostura · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... this is, for the powers that be.

  11. The Memory Hole and its 'Fellow Travellers' by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 5, Insightful
    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  12. Re:Patent Busting by jonbryce · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do the mega corps want patent trolls around? I doubt it.

    They want patents to stop small companies competing with them. If a small company sues them for patent infringement, they find lots of other patents in their portfolio that the small company is infringing, and come to some cross licencing deal. They can't do that with patent trolls because they don't have a business.

  13. Re:most likely to be yawned at is more like it by Alsee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Huh? Unless I'm missing something Taco made no mention of left vs right, nor did he say anything reasonably interpretable as involving partisan politics whatsoever. In fact at the moment most pf the posts here seem to be about TrueCrypt, and the one-any-only post I can find from anyone that can even be remotely interpreted with a partisan implication is that the anti-crypto attempts "started trying in the 90s under Clinton's reign, with Al Gore as the point man... over 10 years later, I guess it's time for another round of facists to try it again". If anything, that would tie this sort of attack to the left, and the "another round of facists" is entirely ambiguous or entirely non-denominational as the rapidly approaching "next round of facists" is a tight presidential race between Dems and Pubs.

    Maybe it's just an anomaly, but I've been seeing a bit of a repeating pattern lately. Borderline paranoid delusional people with a persecution complex about partisan political bias. They themselves are wildly biased, and it takes the form of baseless accusations of opposite bias, even against entirely non-political non-partisan statements complete strangers. They literally just imagine things and hang them on other people like Christmas tree ornaments, and by themselves imagining biased things about the other person it somehow "proves" that other person biased.

    It was pretty interesting when someone went on a "bias" rant against me with all sorts of stuff that came out of their own imagination, especially when they managed to effectively toss in an accusation that I was sexist. A really neat trick considering that no one had even menentioned gender prior to that point. Chuckle.

    One of the critical aspects to creating and protecting extreme bias is psychological filtering, uncritically embracing anything that serves that bias, and finding ways to automatically disregard anything that might challenge that position. For example if you decide someone is wildly biased and everything they say is completely unreliable, and they say 23+38=61, you don't have to waste any thought seeing if it's true or not. The source is "biased", therefore one can automatically send the untrustworthy information to the trash heap without wasting any mental effort evaluating it at all.

    Baseless accusations of bias are themselves bias, are themselves a powerful psychological mechanism of creating and perpetuating that person's own bias.

    I have some speculations on why I think this might currently be a particularly common issue, but such speculation would be particularly fertile ground for bias and accusations of bias. Heh.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.