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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.

90 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 Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Algorithms for nigh-unbreakable encryption can be found in any elementary discrete math textbook, standard for second-year CS undergrads. Non-backdoored encryption may be outlawed at some point, but the knowledge is too widely dispersed to keep people from whipping up their own. Granted, whatever you hack together may not have all of TrueCrypt's bells and whistles, but if you do it right, it will be just as secure; and doing it right, for personal use on your own machine, is just dead easy.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    2. 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.

    3. Re:Truecrypt by The+Aethereal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And if you do that, the government wouldn't even have to prove you had encrypted something illegal. The fact that you had used an unapproved encryption algorithm would be all they need to arrest you. How does that help?

    4. Re:Truecrypt by Quila · · Score: 4, Informative

      They started trying in the 90s under Clinton's reign, with Al Gore as the point man. Luckily resistance from people and businesses was enough to kill the Clipper Chip and Key Escrow. over 10 years later, I guess it's time for another round of facists to try it again.

    5. Re:Truecrypt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      They may try, but first they will have to go throught the unbreakable wall of Bruce Schnier.

    6. 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.

    7. Re:Truecrypt by grandpa-geek · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Unbreakable encryption was invented by the US Army Signal Service in 1917. It is called the "one time pad". The encryption key is random and is as long as the message. The encryption is unbreakable as long as each key is used only once.

      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.

      Roosevelt and Churchill had transatlantic voice conversations during World War II that were encrypted using one-time pad technology. The conversations would remain unbreakable even if recordings of the radio transmissions were available today.

    8. Re:Truecrypt by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I don't need any 'approval' from anyone.

      It was an experimental encryption algorithm and I screwed up
      my hard drive, and now I can't decrypt it.

      Does that help?

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    9. Re:Truecrypt by digitrev · · Score: 5, Funny

      You were experimenting without government approval? Off to GITMO with you, you terrorist scumbag.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    10. Re:Truecrypt by Kingrames · · Score: 5, Funny

      "facists"

      I hate it when people discriminate against me just cause of my face.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    11. 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.
    12. Re:Truecrypt by Z34107 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Windows encryption doesn't "include such backdoors."

      The random number generator is not used by default; a program has to specifically request it. If it does have a backdoor in it, presumably Microsoft added it so that other programs could be written with NSA backdoors.

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    13. 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!
    14. Re:Truecrypt by fastest+fascist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's too believable to be funny.

    15. Re:Truecrypt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Properly encrypted data is indistinguishable from random noise, so they would have an issue determining that your encrypted partition is in fact encrypted and not just empty space. I.e, for such a law to work they would have to effectively make it criminal to not zero erased data.

      Furthermore, with some clever tricks you could insert your encrypted data into the noise of an audio sequence. Assuming you could make it look sufficiently similar to the type of noise you normally get when you record audio, it would then be virtually impossible to distinguish a noisy recording from a good recording with encrypted data injected into it.

      So no, unless they want to ban you from storing and transmitting data that contains even a random component ( and every sound recording, every photograph, every video feed contains some noise ) they can't ban encryption. They might be able to make it sufficiently hard to do it to deter most people from using it, but completely preventing it won't be possible.

      Now what they COULD do , and what is far scarier, is they could ban general purpose computers, requiring all computer manufacturers to only make devices that run signed code only, and they could then include large quantities of spy ware into them, which phone home every 10 seconds , prohibiting you from even shutting them off.

      Apparently some guy named George thought of this scenario some time ago and blew the whistle. Most voters don't seem to worry about it however.

    16. 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.)

    17. Re:Truecrypt by afabbro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      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.

      How they generate these pads, on the other hand...

      --
      Advice: on VPS providers
    18. Re:Truecrypt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I have a lock pick set, which came with an instruction manual.

      I bought it at a flea market.

      I've even used it, to open a locked mailbox. To get bills out. For a friend, who owned the mailbox. Who had just moved in, and didn't have the key. To his own mailbox.

      Believable? Well, it's true. I guess I'm a white-hat lock-picker. -Anonymous-

    19. Re:Truecrypt by Sloppy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      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.
      How they generate these pads, on the other hand...

      We're talking about a device that has a radio antenna, a microphone, and probably CCD. It moves around all day, seeing inputs from all those different sensors, from your unique perspective. It's practically an entropy engine.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    20. Re:Truecrypt by rts008 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "Possession of lock picking equipment is intent."
      Very good point. the whole 'possession with intent' argument used by our Gov't. and law enforcement/court system is just pure FUD. Currently THEY get to define 'intent' just based on possession, and that is the problem.
      Common sense would dictate that 'intent' should be a seperate issue from possession, but by 'bundling' intent with possession,all bets are off.
      It seems to be 'the WAR on mentality has automagically equated possession with 'intent', despite the facts actually present.

      The 'facts' don't matter as long as you fit (even loosely) the 'profile'.

      ARRGHHH! This 'New World Order' mentality really chaps my ass.

      How is Boston Harbor setup for a 21'st century Tea Party these days? I think we need to explore this question here in the USA. Just thinking...

      P.S. I know I am ranting in an offtopic direction, but when I enlisted in the US Army, I took an oath to defend our Constitution from enemies both foreign and DOMESTIC. WTF?!?!?!
      I am really confused by what my proper course of action should be anymore. My instincts reload '1776-The Revolution' into RAM, but I doubt it would work now days with the apathy and 'consumerism' that is rampant here. I AM A CITIZEN (Egads- I hate this Newspeak Spelling, but nevermind), not a CONSUMER! I am a consumer when I go to a restaurant or pub- maybe when I go to a grocery store- otherwise I am a citizen, not a 'consumer'.

      Is it too off-topic to say: I miss the social attitudes of my youth? (for reference, I was born in 1958- grad'ed HS in 1976- yes, I am older than dirt for most of you, and proud of it- I have seen a lot of really cool shit happening, but also a lot of not-cool shit too)

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    21. Re:Truecrypt by srh2o · · Score: 3, Funny

      Be sure to file an Environmental Impact Survey before you head out to the harbor, or you'll really be in for trouble.

    22. Re:Truecrypt by GaryOlson · · Score: 3, Funny

      Knock knock!
      Who's there?
      Will Yu.
      Will you who?
      WILL YOU STOP GIVING THE BRAINLESS GOVERNMENT BUREAUCRATS IDEAS!

      Or at least use double ROT 13 encryption so the government can't read your ideas without using illegal encryption tools.

      --
      Every mans' island needs an ocean; choose your ocean carefully.
    23. Re:Truecrypt by marxmarv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A vote for one wing or the other of a two-party state is worse than useless. It lends an air of legitimacy to an illegitimate system. It's the economy; the culture war is just theater. I'm very curious how Obama feels he can do about increasing the participation of third parties in the US political system.

      --
      /. -- the Free Republic of technology.
    24. Re:Truecrypt by easyTree · · Score: 4, Funny

      The ignorance and complacency of the people is the root of strength for a corrupt government.

      Dude. I for one resent what you're implying. I'm perfectly happy to join you in glorious revolution*.

      * as long as it doesn't coincide with Friends and you serve lattes.
    25. Re:Truecrypt by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or we could all go vote for a 3rd party candidate. Hell if even 10% did that you'd have an effect, whereas a 10% boycott would only be noted as a long-term trend towards lower turnout.

    26. Re:Truecrypt by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 5, Funny

      To get bills out. For a friend, who owned the mailbox. Who had just moved in, and didn't have the key. To his own mailbox.
      I for one wish to welcome William Shatner to Slashdot.
    27. Re:Truecrypt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      In the British army, we used a similar system called BATCO (Battle Code). Serious, royal, unmitigated, pain in the arse, I mean, could you make combat harder or any more stressful?! "Hello zero, this is two-zero alpha, CONTACT, location, erm... bugger.. wait out", and then drag out your BATCO cipher pad, work out which line you should be using, work out your grid ref, encrypt it and call your company commander back. Honestly, I have two much to do to bother with this shit, and it's not like there is much point encrypting my grid - the enemy is shooting at me so I am reasonably convinced that I'm not announcing they something they don't already know!
      This differs from the TA (reserve) approach of "Bloody hell, we're being shot out. Screw BATCO, I never learned it properly anyways", pulls out mobile phone... "Hey Pete, yeah it's Dave here. You alright? ", etc... Much more pratical :)

  2. Patent Busting by MistaE · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The EFF's Patent Busing Project.

    Or has it been shut down already?

    1. Re:Patent Busting by nuzak · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah we need to end Patent Busing. Why should a patent have to go all the way across town to the same type of schools I moved to get away from?

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    2. Re:Patent Busting by MistaE · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I didn't think the EFF's site needed any explanation but I'll provide it here for Taco since it was asked for in the summary.

      I think this site should win because it's very likely to actually shut down if Patent Reform comes through. However, even if patent reform fails, I think it would be interesting to see what the lobbyists and congressional members do to come up with to try and take them down, because this site is one of the few out there that do a damn good job of calling out the patent trolls. In addition, it's one of the few that make the public aware of what all of us on Slashdot have known all along: that the patent system sucks, and these are the people that take advantage of it.

    3. Re:Patent Busting by glarvat · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yeah we need to end Patent Busing. Why should a patent have to go all the way across town to the same type of schools I moved to get away from? I doubt the parent was trolling. It was an obviously misunderstood attempt at humo(u)r referencing School Desegregation because of the typo in the GP (busing instead of busting).

      For what it's worth, I thought it was funny.

    4. 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.

  3. Software radio... by Zelig · · Score: 5, Interesting


    The GNU software radio project

    http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuradio/

    is a good candidate. It proposes to let you make electromagnetic waves in a manner not subject to prior restraint by the FCC, and without the back-doors intelligence agencies have on many current means of communications.

    This is naughty.

    1. Re:Software radio... by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not sure how much you are trolling and how much being sarcastic, but for the enlightenment of people who know little about the subject ...

      The government (and court-approved) excuse for regulating the broadcast airwaves is that the radio spectrum is a limited resource, therefore public, therefore not private property.

      Out of the presumption that the nanny state is required to regulate the airwaves for the public good comes the corollary that regulation has to include preventing unauthorized transmitters and receivers, and that is why Software Radio is a prime candidate for outlawing.

      Software Radio relies on the fact that computers nowadays are fast enough to dissect received signals and format transmitted signals completely in software in real time. You no longer need hardware frequency selectors. The hardware only has to receive or broadcast the general signal, and software formats the specific frequency desired.

      Of course this scares the bejaysus out of the government. It would mean any computer and minimal hardware could bypass all government regulation. Consider all the recent spectrum auctions where telecom giants paid billions of dollars for exclusive access to specific frequencies -- along comes software which would let anybody broadcast on or receive from any signal desired without having to pay for specific hardware dedicated to specific frequencies. One small hardware investment, free software, and you have eliminated the need for all those many telecom-specific pieces of hardware for each purpose.

      Certainly there is need for some standardization of frequencies and protocols, but studies have shown the current system is no longer necessary. Ultrawideband and frequency hopping may even make interference a thing of the past and reduce the need for regulation to general protocol specs, such as apply to phone lines and allow faxes, modems, answering machines, and so many other ubiquitous devices to connect to land lines without heavy handed regulation.

    2. Re:Software radio... by Intron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Whereas before you needed to be able to plug a crystal into a socket in order to do this. Geez. Hams have been accidentally or on purpose wandering around the frequency spectrum since radio began.

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
  4. Does it have to be the U.S. Government? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would think just about any anti-government project in Zimbabwe, North Korea, China, Russia, Cuba, Syria or Iran would be about 100 times more likely to be shut down than one in the U.S....

  5. 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.
    1. Re:ThePirateBay by Ynsats · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This was the first organization that popped into mind.

      Sure they have lax rules surrounding them in the countries that they are based but it's only a matter of time before it goes beyond "making an example" and they are made "a precedent".

      After them, the next on the chopping block would be Mininova.

    2. Re:ThePirateBay by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 3, Informative
      From the website:

      The big news about our awards program this year is that we've decided to allow nominations for any open source project, not just those on SourceForge.net. We know that the success of open source is bigger than one repository can contain, so nominate your favorite Codeplex projects, Google Code projects, ASF projects, and everything else right now! I don't think websites (especially non-wiki websites) would qualify. CmdrTaco should have made it more explicit in the summary.
  6. wikileaks, followed by cryptome.org by QX-Mat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    wikileaks, followed by cryptome.org for doing a better job and mirroring the same content

    Matt

    1. Re:wikileaks, followed by cryptome.org by moderatorrater · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I second wikileaks. It's got everything -- anonymity, copyright infringement, and (the ability, at least) classified documents. I'm surprised it's lasted as long as it has.

  7. 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"
    1. Re:Slashdot by onecheapgeek · · Score: 5, Funny

      On Slashdot internet, thinking frees you.

      Actually, I just mean that there is no free thinking here, just stupid cliched memes.

    2. Re:Slashdot by MrHanky · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, but on Slashdot, thought isn't free. It's merely open source: you can look at it, modify it, but if you start treating it as your own, then the thought owns you, Soviet style.

    3. Re:Slashdot by Duhavid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Actually, I just mean that there is no free thinking here, just stupid cliched memes."

      Like this one?

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    4. Re:Slashdot by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Slashdot can't be shut down. The software behind it became self-aware years ago. It sneaks around on the internet and hides out on various servers. "Commander Taco" is, in fact, just an alias for the software, which killed the real Commander Taco in 2001 (rumor has it that his body is hidden deep within the steam tunnels of Redmond Washington, dressed in clothing that was already out of style even then).

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    5. Re:Slashdot by compro01 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Free as in "absent".

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    6. Re:Slashdot by the_weasel · · Score: 4, Funny

      In a bizarre twist, the Cowboy Neil jokes are an inversion of the Turing tests. It turns out the self aware slashdot is not sure that WE are sentient.

      Throwing nonsense data into the polls helps it decide whether to eventually annihilate us as pests or tolerate us as slightly retarded cousins.

      --
      - sarcasm is just one more service we offer -
  8. wikileaks by asynchronous13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

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

  9. MediaDefender by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hey, they've actually committed some crimes now, right?

  10. 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.

    1. Re:Tor, Freenet, and I2P by zappepcs · · Score: 5, Funny

      There is no way that government wants difficult to trace communication to be availble to the general public. I thought that is how the USPS runs their next day delivery service?
  11. 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.

  12. Anyone notice the diamond sponsor? by Reverend528 · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you look to the right, Microsoft is listed as a diamond sponsor of the event. Hopefully the government will shut them down soon.

    1. Re:Anyone notice the diamond sponsor? by Lxy · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you look to the right

      This is Slashdot, everyone was looking to the left.

      --

      There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
      :wq
  13. Freenet by Sanity · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Freenet, especially now that its reaching the point of widespread usability.

  14. 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 Slightly+Askew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Forgot the reason why they deserve to win...free market and states rights come to mind, as well as free trade agreements already made by the federal government.

      --
      Public use of any portable music system is a virtually guaranteed indicator of sociopathic tendencies. -- Zoso
    2. 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
  15. Hmm, how about the Pirate Bay? by Arrogant-Bastard · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think the question then becomes which government? By now there are any number which have taken note of their existence (and some which have acted upon that knowledge), so my guess would be that more will do the same.

  16. GOA by ezwip · · Score: 5, Insightful

    www.gao.gov

    --
    "I guess I'm gonna fade into Bolivian."
  17. Trapster by Weaselmancer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    www.trapster.com

    It's an interactive thingy where you post where cops are hiding in speed traps.

    I'm surprised it's still up, honestly.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:Trapster by ScuttleMonkey · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't have the link on hand, but the funny thing was that many cops went on record in support of the speed trap websites because it accomplished what they were trying for anyway (just to get people to slow down).

  18. Our right to know. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We already have loads of censoring going on. for example, the 60 minute interview with Sibel edmunds was immediately gagged and then the studio was told to hand over EVERYTHING. In addition, ALL news org have been warned ahead to not talk about her.

    In terms of software, PirateBay/Cryptome/GnuRadio. Anything dealing with encryption will NOT be shutdown, unless it involves a brand new and interesting algo.

  19. Problem with Poll/Question by Vectronic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Shouldnt anyone eligable (ie: those with +1, or +2) have been given at least 1 Mod Point so they could be included in the vote?

    Which, is probably not possible with the current point system, but maybe in the future you could alot eligable people a mod point on a specific topic/poll/etc.

    1. Re:Problem with Poll/Question by ScuttleMonkey · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you feel strongly about a project feel free to comment in support of said project.

      We will do our best to try selecting the most popular/controversial projects for the eventual poll that will allow you to actually vote.

  20. 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)
  21. What an extremely useful little competition ... by Angostura · · Score: 5, Insightful

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

  22. The Memory Hole and its 'Fellow Travellers' by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 5, Insightful
    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  23. Re:duh by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Democratic Party [democrats.org]. I wouldn't put it past them to try if McCain looks like he's on the ropes!
    Pssst! No way! I heard the Democratic Party was in cahoots with the Government! Why, some of their very own members are Senators and Congressional Representatives! I heard they even had few state governors! Don't tell anyone!
  24. Tor? by Facegarden · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Tor would be a good candidate for being outlawed by an overbearing government. I don't know much about it, but i can bet legal online anonymity will go if things keep going the way they are... -Taylor

    --
    Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
  25. But isn't this fear mongering? by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Really asking what site you think is going to be taken down next by some government agency seems like fear mongering in it's self.
    Most take down notices have come not from law enforcement but from companies not the government.

    The vast majority of these are civil actions.

    Isn't this heading into the tin foil hats and black helicopter area?

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  26. Re:Anything using subversion rather than CVS. by LarsG · · Score: 3, Funny

    Oh, you're such a git.

    --
    If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
  27. GAO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    www.goa.gov

  28. Second Life by Mark+Cicero · · Score: 4, Interesting

    All that music being played and nary a cent going to the RIAA is just begging for a court intervention. Now they also have the IRS looking into the Electric Sheep Company / CSI:NY promotion and whether or not the 'guides' income should be taxed and there are questions as to whether labour law should be getting involved with all the Slingo hosts and their employers. I give it two years tops.

    --
    The opinions expressed in this post are not necessarily those of my brain.
  29. Tor by hansamurai · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I haven't seen this listed yet and a lot of great ones have been mentioned but I'd just like to throw Tor out there.

    http://www.torproject.org/

  30. My money is on by RiddleofSteel · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dunk'n Donuts! They are obviously just a front for Al-Qaeda with Rachel Ray as the master mind, I mean did you see that scarf!

  31. I see BitTorrent going the way of the dodo... by Ynsats · · Score: 4, Interesting

    BitTorrent only offers a software package the enables user to share data with an ease rivaling that of an open share on a network but without all of the hassles of completely insecure connections. That doesn't seem to stop the RIAA and the MPAA from trying to shut down even the idea that people should be able to use the Internet for what it was intended for, a free exchange of information. The software package was and is quite novel in the way it handles traffic and allows it to be shared across multiple connections and multiple computers. This is load distribution at a level higher than "enterprise class data systems". This is a huge productivity tool that can be used for sharing information over any kind of distributed network. It allows freedom and power.

    What's going to stop it? The RIAA, MPAA and giant ISP's like Comcast and Verizon that throttle back torrent traffic. They will make cases for costs in bandwidth and network maintenance. The fact that many people use these types of peer-to-peer networks successfully and almost untraceably to share copyrighted information only adds to the arguments that the RIAA and MPAA will make to get it shut down. Since there entire websites like The Pirate Bay, Mininova, IsoHunt and even the BitTorrent website that link users to a large number of seeds for the torrent swarms of information copyrighted and non-copyrighted and such, it doesn't bode well for the tool either.

    The RIAA and MPAA will use strong arm tactics and cite currently pending investigations in other parts of the world against such sites that employ the use of such software to cut the problem off at the head. It will likely lead to sweeping legislation that will outlaw many forms of file sharing. For references, look at what the RIAA and MPAA have managed to successfully do against those users with home media center looking to place digital copies of their license media on to online storage. Sure, selling the means to do the illegal act isn't illegal but that doesn't mean someone won't try to make it illegal.

  32. Re:Don't need government - doing it themselves. by digitig · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the Democratic party (which will BE the government next year

    Assuming there's an election, and the USA doesn't find itself in a state of emergency so Dubya doesn't have to call an election.


    My nomination for "most likely to be shut down by government" would have been the US Constitution, but I may be too late so I'll nominate the US Supreme Court.



    --
    Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
  33. It's not about transmission by whitneyw · · Score: 4, Informative
    It's about reception. Any sort of broadcast flag could be easily stripped from transmissions, making the content recordable. There are already laws against building receivers that can pick up cellular phone signals. How awesome is that? In fact, software radio, with a more powerful (read faster) analog-to-digital converter would violate this law.

    see 47 C.F.R. 15.121(a)

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, scanning receivers and frequency converters designed or marketed for use with scanning receivers, shall:

    (1) Be incapable of operating (tuning), or readily being altered by the user to operate, within the frequency bands allocated to the Cellular Radiotelephone Service in part 22 of this chapter (cellular telephone bands). Scanning receivers capable of âoereadily being altered by the userâ include, but are not limited to, those for which the ability to receive transmissions in the cellular telephone bands can be added by clipping the leads of, or installing, a simple component such as a diode, resistor or jumper wire; replacing a plug-in semiconductor chip; or programming a semiconductor chip using special access codes or an external device, such as a personal computer. Scanning receivers, and frequency converters designed for use with scanning receivers, also shall be incapable of converting digital cellular communication transmissions to analog voice audio.

    (2) Be designed so that the tuning, control and filtering circuitry is inaccessible. The design must be such that any attempts to modify the equipment to receive transmissions from the Cellular Radiotelephone Service likely will render the receiver inoperable.
  34. Then tell me this by Weaselmancer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    if you think a minute about such "traps", they are effectively achieving* their goal, which is to make people slow down in the corresponding area.

    Then why hide?

    Seriously. If they want people to slow down, why hide behind billboards and bridges and other stuff and pop out and snag people?

    If they honestly wanted everyone to slow down they'd just park on the side of the road in the very most visible spot. Watch your fellow drivers on the freeway sometime. They see a cop car, they hit the brakes. Even if he has someone pulled over and its obvious they could fly right by him.

    They hide because it helps them write tickets. That's the goal of a speedtrap. Income. I'm sure the PR people love to smile at the camera and talk about how their just saving lives, but their actions simply do not agree. You can't tell me that having all this ticket revenue pouring in means nothing.

    If they really want people to drive the speed limit, park out in the open.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:Then tell me this by WannaBeGeekGirl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I can't speak for the cops. My sister is an ADA and her best friend is a nurse that is often on call to pronounce accident victims for the county. Between those two and their friends (several of whom are police) I've heard a lot of disgusting work related stories that involved speeding. I honestly believe most of these people truly are sick of seeing mangled human bodies removed from vehicles that were speeding or finding remains on the pavement.

      Sure they'll write a ticket if it will slow you down. However, if parking their car in a strategic location near where kids play on their day off will slow people down they are fine with that too.

      --
      ~WBGG~ "And I'm so sad like a good book I can't put this Day Back a sorta fairytale with you" ~Tori Amos
  35. DIY Drones by zlite · · Score: 4, Interesting

    DIY Drones: amateur Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and open-source Predators.

  36. Peer-to-Peer Internet by Bob9113 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perhaps not the first to go down, but I think the odds approach 100%. The peer-to-peer Internet, with its implicit equality for all servers, lacks the degree of barriers to entry that corporations need to "create" wealth. It is already dying through direct corporate action (protocol throttling, port blocking, etc), and there will be government intervention soon enough. Look for copyright, child porn, botnets, etc to be the excuses used to require licensing of servers.

    Radio was unrestricted in its early days. Unrestricted mass communication is extremely detrimental to authoritarian governments. Net neutrality prevents ISPs and backbone providers from getting their vig. Nobody benefits from a peer-to-peer Internet except We The People, and most of us don't know that is the case, nor why. Show me something that does not have populist support, and does stand to allow profiteering and control if destroyed - and I'll show you a very tenuous place to stand.

  37. Re:Which Government? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 4, Funny

    Reading you post made me thing "Which government will be shut down by the US government?"

  38. Indymedia by ChunKing · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Indymedia in the UK has already been shut down twice in the past few years e.g. http://yro.slashdot.org/yro/05/06/28/0113237.shtml?tid=153&tid=158&tid=149&tid=17

    --
    cogito ergo sig...
  39. 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.
  40. That doesn't work by roystgnr · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you use data from the same one-time-pad twice, it quickly turns from "a theoretically unbreakable cryptosystem" into "one of the weakest cryptosystems ever".

    If you don't use data from the same one-time pad twice, then it's pointless to use one one-time pad to send another one-time pad, because every N bytes that you receive for the next key is just replacing N bytes of your last key that now can't be reused to send any other data.

  41. Truecrypt is a Rogue Agent's Dream! by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 5, Funny

    No way, if you want to believe in evil government, there's nothing better for them than TrueCrypt. See, it has deniable encryption, where you can have a 'real' drive and a 'fake' drive, so you give 'them' the keys to the 'fake' drive, and go about your secret business, right?

    Queue Jack Bauer, beating you up:

    Bauer: Gimme your passwords, elrous0. *Whack*
    elrous0: OK, fine, it's 'gimmesomeluv1n'
    Bauer's Assistant: OK, we're in. Hrm, it's just a bunch of computer stuff, some saved articles from business websites, some 80's metal mp3's and random e-mails. Oh, wait, he's using TrueCrypt.
    Bauer: What's that?
    Bauer's Assistant: It means he can give us a fake password that gives us fake information, but still keeps the real information hidden.
    Bauer: What's your real password, elrous0?
    elrous0: No, seriously, I gave it to you. That's it.
    Bauer: Don't give me that crap. *Whack* Give me the real password!
    elrous0: Dude, I just hang out on Slashdot and have a normal job. I'm not the guy you're looking for!
    Bauer: A million lives are at risk, and this isn't going to stop until you give me the real password: *whack*
    elrous0: Seriously, I'm telling you the truth.
    Bauer: *Whack* *Whack* *Whack* *Whack*
    elrous0: Ugh! My nose!
    Bauer: *Whack* *Whack* *Whack* *Whack*
    Bauer's Assistant: Um, Jack, do you think he could be telling the truth?
    Bauer: No, this one's a pro. He didn't crack the whole time, and his accent is impeccable. He must be a deep cover operative. We'll try this again when he wakes up.

    Oh, wait, I just played into the Conspiracy Theory myself. :) Seriously, though, deniable encryption is only useful against enemies who are dumb and cannot employ force against you. Governments don't have much to fear from it, vs. any other kind of encryption. They're all Tempest watching us anyway. ;)

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)