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Lessig Predicts Cyber 9/11 Event, Restrictive Laws

A number of readers are sending in links to a video from the Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference last month, in which Lawrence Lessig recounts a conversation over dinner with Richard Clarke, the former government counter-terrorism czar. Remembering that the Patriot Act was dropped on Congress just 20 days after 9/11 — the Department of Justice had had it sitting in a drawer for years — Lessig asked Clarke if DoJ had a similar proposed law, an "i-Patriot Act," to drop in the event of a "cyber-9/11." Clarke responded, "Of course they do. And Vint Cerf won't like it." Lessig's anecdote begins at about 4:30 in the video.

479 comments

  1. Just wait ... by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They do that, all bets are off. They'll be encrypted VPNs, private nets and all sorts of things that they'll NEVER be able to control. The tighter your grip becomes, the more Nets will slip through your fingers!

    1. Re:Just wait ... by bky1701 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Until they just indiscriminately block all packets they can't identify. ISP are already itching to do that.

      P2P and freedom of speech in one blow, what could be better?

    2. Re:Just wait ... by chris_mahan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They'll just instruct the ISPs to comply (meaning block any undecryptable traffic) or face mean men with guns.

      Would that get us closer to Civil War? You bet.

      Would that actually get us to Civil War? No, not as long as myspace, google, and facebook still work.

      Port 443 would be blocked for all except online banks and those who comply with the government in other ways (think lots of logs and/or live monitoring of post-ssl traffic).

      Any ISP personnel facing potential felony charges will think first of their families (as they should) and comply, at the expense of Joe Hacker.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    3. Re:Just wait ... by clang_jangle · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You're probably right. Like old saying goes, locks only keep out the honest people. And the more tyrannical our government becomes, the higher the percentage of criminalized population. Criminalized people can't afford to be honest.

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    4. Re:Just wait ... by mvh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which will hopefully, in turn, force us to create a better network. And perhaps we can start again and this time try to avoid Eternal September.

    5. Re:Just wait ... by zappepcs · · Score: 0

      All bets should *already* be off AFAIK

      The trouble with trusting the government is that it has never worked out well at all. There is already some movement afoot to use encryption, vpn's, tor, and others etc. What needs to happen is for users to very quickly start shutting down open communications now. Let the guvmint types try to figure out how to then do an i9/11 event.

      The level of conspiracy talk that is running around the world right now is IMO enough to start impeachment proceedings. There is no smoke without fire as they say, and you can't put out the fire without getting in the middle of the smoke. The point of the pyramid has to be in the middle of the structure, so we might as well start there. Mixing metaphors, once we're pissing on the fire, you can catch the rats as the jump ship.

      Sort of a pre-emptive strike in the war on corruption. Now that's a war I can get behind.

    6. Re:Just wait ... by chris_mahan · · Score: 4, Funny

      me too!

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    7. Re:Just wait ... by bky1701 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Good luck with that. As long as the masses can still get to their myspace, facebook and ebay, the majority of people won't care enough to make funding something of that scale possible. Perhaps isolated networks will pop up, build on things like wifi or in dense cities - but the internet as we know it will be dead.

    8. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's still an arms race scenario, there are already plenty of known methods of hiding data in known types of traffic, such as data hidden in images.

    9. Re:Just wait ... by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      Then we'll just have to disguise our packets as something else.

    10. Re:Just wait ... by MSZ · · Score: 1

      encrypted VPNs
      Terrorists tunnelling their venomous propaganda onto the American soil! Off to Egyptian dungeon you go!

      private nets
      Secret terrorist organizations! Off to Gitmo you go!

      all sorts of things that they'll NEVER be able to control
      Traitors! Shoot to kill! Off to the mass grave you go!

      --
      The moon is not fully subjugated. I demand a second assault wave preceded by a massive nuclear bombardment.
    11. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no "they" or ISP in a private net.

    12. Re:Just wait ... by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 5, Funny

      Splenda?

      --
      I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    13. Re:Just wait ... by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Port 443 would be blocked for all except online banks and those who comply with the government in other ways (think lots of logs and/or live monitoring of post-ssl traffic).

      Port 443 is *already* effectively blocked for anyone who isn't centrally approved. Have you seen the error message you get in IE or Firefox when you try to visit a site with a self-signed certificate?

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    14. Re:Just wait ... by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

      Maybe the government would "reprocess" images so that any steganography would be scrambled? They wouldn't actually read the messages, but they could neutralize the vector.

      Would it be massively expensive? You bet. That's never stopped the government, though.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    15. Re:Just wait ... by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and maybe the getting a cert would involve a Department of Homeland Security approval process.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    16. Re:Just wait ... by kestasjk · · Score: 1

      Anything to prevent a "cyber-9/11". It'd be like 9/11 except instead of planes there'd be data expressed in electrical waves, and instead of massive loss of life there'd be a period of down-time.

      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
    17. Re:Just wait ... by Nursie · · Score: 1

      No, no it isn't, you just have to click through or make sure to pre-distribute your keys.

      That's not blocking, it's good sense to stock Joe six-pack getting scammed. SSL without authentication could extremely easily be monitored by your favourite (government co-operating) ISP.

    18. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm amazed at the number of people who can afford £10/month for internet access, but can't afford £7.60/year for an ssl certificate.

    19. Re:Just wait ... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Which will hopefully, in turn, force us to create a better network.

      Just like that? "Build a better network"? And how are you going to wire that "last mile" for everyone?

      Really, Net Neutrality aside, there's no way to protect ourselves from another authoritarian administration using ISPs to take away our internet. EXCEPT if we don't elect them.

      You want to tell me that John McCain, with his hawkish militaristic background, will even blink at listening to the NSA guys when they tell him they have to shut down the internet, or more likely, turn it into network television?

      No, if you want to avoid the kind of post-9/11 hysteria that has destroyed our economy and the airline industry, raised the price of oil 300 percent and destroyed our civil rights by giving the government unchecked surveillance and arrest powers, the best bet is to JUST NOT ELECT ANOTHER AUTHORITARIAN REPUBLICAN ASSHOLE. This isn't all that sophisticated. Even if you're one of those Fox News wingnuts who just hates the idea of a black man being president, and believes ol' Rushbo when he tells you that liberals are the antichrist, just ask yourself if you want to lose your internet and all the free porn. You don't want that, do you? And for everyone else, now is not the time to worry about poor Miz Hilary getting disrespected. Just suck it up and vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it. At least then we stand a fighting chance of not losing the rest of what once made this country great.

      I'm sorry, all of you slashdot readers who don't live in the US. We've got a lot of knuckleheads who still need it spelled out for them, thanks to our corporate media and Republican party that likes to manipulate the weakest minds with ugly racism and sexism. I swear that most of us really didn't want George Bush, but when you've got the company that makes the computer voting machines AND the Supreme Court working against you, there's not a lot you can do. Don't hold it against us, because we're under attack from an authoritarian corporate class that has long given up on the principles upon which America was founded.

      For those of us that DO live in the US, remember, nothing short of a landslide victory for Obama is going to keep the tin-pot dictators of the GOP out of the White House this time. Don't fuck around, folks. We have to win or this time, there really won't be anyplace to run.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    20. Re:Just wait ... by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 5, Funny

      It would have been more witty to say "and instead of massive loss of life there'd be a massive loss of file"

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    21. Re:Just wait ... by lordofwhee · · Score: 1

      They'd have to change every single pixel in such a way as to make the change transparent to anyone that wasn't looking for it, and then it'd just be a simple matter of breaking the algorithm, implementing a data integrity check and data recovery code of some sort.

      No matter what the government would throw at us, we'd break it, do our best to keep the break hidden for as long as possible, and break the next thing that came up, until eventually there'd be enough organization among hackers to simply shut all these filters down.

    22. Re:Just wait ... by flappinbooger · · Score: 4, Funny

      These are not the packets you are looking for.... (wave hand)

      --
      Flappinbooger isn't my real name
    23. Re:Just wait ... by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Until they just indiscriminately block all packets they can't identify. ISP are already itching to do that.

      Let's bring on Open Mesh-net then. Other than my own I see two wifi connections available on my list, however it only lists three with a fourth choice of Other...

      Falcon

    24. Re:Just wait ... by gerf · · Score: 1

      Then we'll just have to disguise packets as images or something goofy.

      I can just just imagine some OSS p2p project hiding encoding amongst (the appropriate in this case) hello.jpg being sent back and forth between distributed clients.

      Can't you see it now? Goatse saves the world!

    25. Re:Just wait ... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Would that get us closer to Civil War? You bet

      Actually, no it won't. How are we gonna organize to fight back if our phones are bugged and our email is rinsed through the NSA/ATT?

      Naw, Chris, this little coup has been in the works a long time. As the article said, that execrable "Patriot Act" was on the table long before 9/11, which only made it convenient for the little pissant tyrant in the White House (may he burn in Hell).

      We've got to head this BS off before it can happen. Fortunately, we have an opportunity to do that in November, this year. I was at the UofC when Barack Obama was a Constitutional scholar there. There are only a handful of people in this country who know the Constitution better than he does (read his articles from the Law Review). And from what I hear, he's a lover of freedom and a true believer in the Constitution and Bill of Rights. If we put him in the White House, we stand a fighting chance to turn this thing around.

      Plus, having a young black president will make the jackoff racists' heads explode, which will make for some great entertainment for the next 4/8 years.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    26. Re:Just wait ... by Darkness404 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Or perhaps a quote I remembered from somewhere

      in a free government, that which is common is legal

      On that basis (and many others) the US, UK, Canada and all other "free" nations seem to be heading down the road to tyranny.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    27. Re:Just wait ... by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

      Who says the images would remain exactly the same? The government could easily apply a destructive filter to the image that would degrade the image somewhat, effectively neutralizing steganography, but leaving the image still good enough for common browsing.

      Maybe they'll come up with an image processing server that all ISPs must install on premises. This would not be hard. They could do the same with video. Heck I would not be surprised if current monitoring equipment didn't have that capability already, waiting for the activate command.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    28. Re:Just wait ... by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 4, Funny

      Re:Just wait ... (Score:1, Insightful)
      by mvh (9295) on Tuesday August 05, @07:07PM (#24488549) Homepage

      Which will hopefully, in turn, force us to create a better network. And perhaps we can start again and this time try to avoid Eternal September.
      Reply to This Parent
      Re:Just wait ... (Score:2, Funny)
      by chris_mahan (256577) on Tuesday August 05, @07:09PM (#24488593) Homepage

      me too!
      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

      Me too!!!!

    29. Re:Just wait ... by jmorris42 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      > There are only a handful of people in this country who know the
      > Constitution better than he does...

      The man is an illiterate fool. He can't even parse simple English phrases like "Congress shall make no law..." or "...shall not be infringed."

      Seriously. Either he is a total illiterate and is thus excused for being a gun banner and free speech infringer (but also unfit for elective office) or he does know and doesn't care, thus is evil. Not that McCain (of McCain/Fielgold) is much of an improvement on the 1st Amendment. Grr.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    30. Re:Just wait ... by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

      Which is why you must keep your copper dry. (And modems).

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    31. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The only solution to that will be steganography -- sending packets that are valid HTTP, say, but have subchannels encoded into them. The ISPs can't block those, since their scanners will say its 'allowed' traffic. Usable bandwidth will suck, but there's a tat for every tit, so to speak.

      The postal service in centuries past had to go so far as to refuse free postage for newspapers, as people started using them for sending free letters to each other by poking little holes above the letters in articles to encode messages. But I don't think the ISPs can afford to refuse HTTP traffic altogether.

    32. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Keep in mind, our Democratic Congress apparently doesn't mind rubber-stamping this shit. Even your precious Barack Obama voted for telecom immunity.

    33. Re:Just wait ... by drDugan · · Score: 0

      THE POLLS FOR MCCAIN AND OBAMA ARE ALMOST EQUAL
      and if history is a guide, Republicans usually win recent presidential elections, especially if people use Diebold machines.

      OP-ED COLUMNIST
      Where's the Landslide?

      By DAVID BROOKS
      August 5, 2008
      http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/05/opinion/05brooks.html?th&emc=th
      Why isn't Barack Obama doing better? Why, after all that has happened,
      does he have only a slim two- or three-point lead over John McCain,
      according to an average of the recent polls? Why is he basically tied
      with his opponent when his party is so far ahead?

      His age probably has something to do with it. So does his race. But
      the polls and focus groups suggest that people aren't dismissive of
      Obama or hostile to him. Instead, they're wary and uncertain. ...

    34. Re:Just wait ... by fishbowl · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Until the majority of people recognize that oppression has become intolerable enough that they become willing to kill or die in order to end it... it's probably not time.

      The fact that people generally tolerate things is at least an indication that a call to revolution is not going to succeed.

      I know people who have lived under martial law and genuine oppression. I laugh at Americans who seem to actually believe there is a spirit sufficient to outright spark a revolution.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    35. Re:Just wait ... by emjay88 · · Score: 1

      I can't believe it's not unencrypted traffic!

      --
      1178161 is prime...
    36. Re:Just wait ... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Ironically, then, none of the justices on the Supreme Court since... oh, ever, could parse simple English phrases either.

      Either every single Supreme Court justice since ever is illiterate or they're all evil.

      The answer is, no, they're neither. They just realize the reality of the situation, which is that the Bill of Rights is simply wrong in that respect and you need to ignore it and get onto more pressing matters.

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    37. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't just happening in the US. While your king was screwing you lot over, ours here in the UK has been firmly planted between his ass-cheeks.

    38. Re:Just wait ... by jmorris42 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > Either every single Supreme Court justice since ever is illiterate
      > or they're all evil.

      No, four could read "Congress shall make no law..." and understood that McCain Fiengold was clearly infringing. And five managed to parse "shall not be infringed." and rule the DC gun ban out of bounds.

      > They just realize the reality of the situation, which is that the
      > Bill of Rights is simply wrong in that respect and you need to ignore
      > it and get onto more pressing matters.

      And now it is clear, we won't be agreeing on much because you serve the forces of darkness. You can't just "ignore" the Bill of Rights and remain a nation of laws. What you pine for is a dictator who will make all of your decisions for you.

      And we have the answer to how so many educated Supremes can fail to read the Constituition and not get the right answer. They understand perfectly, but being Socialists they simply don't give a damn what it says.

      Note that it IS perfectly acceptable to disagree with the 2nd Amendment, private possession of arms, etc. and still be an American. But you can only do so by first proposing the repeal of the 2nd Amendment. Remember that the Founding Fathers were very wise men, but they were not God Kings handing down the law on graven tablets, thus they realized that their laws might need to be adjusted for differing times, and the procedure for Amendments. Done that way it doesn't turn us into a nation of men instead of laws.

      Of course you will repeal the 2nd Amendment only after I have fought you to my last breath and last dollar.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    39. Re:Just wait ... by urcreepyneighbor · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Even if you're one of those Fox News wingnuts who just hates the idea of a black man being president,

      Would those be the same wingnuts that wanted Condoleezza Rice or Colin Powell to run?

      --
      "The fight for freedom has only just begun." - Geert Wilders
    40. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And how are you going to wire that "last mile" for everyone?

      With shovels, if we have to. Wireless if shovels are not an option.

    41. Re:Just wait ... by Hatta · · Score: 5, Informative

      What makes you think Obama will be any better? He's already shown us that he thinks national security is more important than the rule of law. But the rule of law is a prerequisite for any kind of security! The fact is, both candidates are part of the authoritarian corporate class.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    42. Re:Just wait ... by einer · · Score: 1

      omg... thanks dude... :)

    43. Re:Just wait ... by joocemann · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Keep in mind, our Democratic Congress apparently doesn't mind rubber-stamping this shit. Even your precious Barack Obama voted for telecom immunity.

      Congress is another series of elections all together.

      Keep in mind, the Executive branch has relatively EQUAL power to the full Legislative branch, and judicial branch.

      That means it is VERY important to care about who is president, and then who he appoints to the supreme court.

      Congress, with all those people involved, are the other third of the effective powers. My point? Pointing at partisan or general flaws/concerns in congress, as a response to flaws/concerns over the presidency, is probably a moot point.

      We can all make a direct effect on the Executive at the same time, collectively. But when focusing on the legislative; a guy living in northern california isn't about to change the election of congressmen in Utah, is he?

    44. Re:Just wait ... by CelticWhisper · · Score: 1

      Okay.

      *ahem*

      And instead of massive loss of life there'd be a massive loss of file.

      You can leave the funny points over on the table there. Thanks.

      --
      Help protect civil rights from abuse by the TSA - visit TSA News Blog.
      http://www.tsanewsblog.com
    45. Re:Just wait ... by TeraCo · · Score: 1

      "Actually, no it won't. How are we gonna organize to fight back if our phones are bugged and our email is rinsed through the NSA/ATT?"

      Holy shit, you're right. There was never any civil disobedience before the existance of phones and email.

      --
      Not Meta-modding due to apathy.
    46. Re:Just wait ... by CelticWhisper · · Score: 1

      Usable bandwidth will suck, but there's a tat for every tit, so to speak.

      Incidentally, I happen to have amassed a significant stockpile of tats. Anyone willing to help me offload some? C'mon, remember Mace Windu. "Bring balance to the Force."

      --
      Help protect civil rights from abuse by the TSA - visit TSA News Blog.
      http://www.tsanewsblog.com
    47. Re:Just wait ... by Dripdry · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not sure it will happen, but can someone mod parent up at least a half point? I'm not sure Obama is much better than our other choices either, and i donated to his campaign!

      Now I understand that "we need to win this one" in a sense. However, I received a call from an Obama fund raiser the other day. I listened calmly to what she had to say and answered her questions (loaded for 'yes' of course). I then proceeded to explain to her that Obama voted for the FISA bill which gives the Telcos retroactive immunity after those companies explicitly broke the law and ignored the 4th Amendment. I told her that Obama has either switched directions on his policies or extended them in a nonsensical way and with what seems like little interest for Americans. I told her that I could not in good conscience vote for Obama, and that I hoped she would research who she supports. She seemed a little crestfallen and stuttered, "Well, oh... I'm really sorry to hear that..." and I said goodbye.

      When the ideas Obama starts talking about seem to make very little economic sense (he's against Nuclear power, for instance, or that he wants to release oil from the strategic reserve, or that he wants to have another economic stimulus program) then there's something wrong. It quickly starts to sound like a Democratic Dubya, with a blue hand up his ass instead of a red one. Alarm klaxons scream inside my head and it becomes very tough for me to believe the man.

      I just don't know what to do. Who am I supposed to vote for? Voting for an independent does little good. Most of them have even less sense than the current candidates. It may sound ludicrous, but sometimes I get the sinking feeling that the game is already over and it could require a lot of blood and sacrifice to win back the freedoms we've already lost.

      Just my two cents, though.

      --
      -
    48. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      You want to tell me that John McCain, with his hawkish militaristic background, will even blink at listening to the NSA guys when they tell him they have to shut down the internet, or more likely, turn it into network television?

      You want to tell me that the little naif that things putting huge taxes on oil companies would make gasoline cheaper for the working class could even spell NSA, much less understand how it works?

      You're an utter dumbass if you think US military personnel aren't fully aware of its responsibilities under the US Constitution.

      I hate to break the news to you, but the biggest threat to personal liberty are do-gooders who want to give the government all kinds of money and power "for the good of the people". No government on the face of the earth cares about the "good of the people", all they care about is the "good of the government".

      And Barack Obama's no fucking different. At least with McCain you know he's not going to play weathervane to the political winds like Obama does. Shouting "Change!!!" and running to the front of a bunch of lemmings streaming off a cliff isn't leadership.

      PS - How's all that power and money FDR gave to the US government serving us, bright boy?

      PPS - I can't wait for the campaign commercials about Barack Obama featuring Jackson Browne's songs come out - "Running on empty...."

      PPPS - I am SO going to laugh my ass off at basement-dwelling sheltered twits like you when Obama's writings from, say, 1996 to 2004 in The Hyde Park Herald and the Chicago Defender finally come to light and demonstrate that Jeremiah Wright was no anomaly and Obama's winds up getting crushed.

    49. Re:Just wait ... by jeevesbond · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Which will hopefully, in turn, force us to create a better network.

      As long as the masses can still get to their myspace, facebook and ebay, the majority of people won't care enough to make funding something of that scale possible.

      This seems to be overly-cynical. People aren't bad at adopting new things, they just need a motivator:

      • A killer application (no Reiser jokes please!), something that will make people switch. Must be tangible though, abstract concepts like freedom alone won't be enough. Freedom to troll Internet forums and freedom from the government snooping at what porn you're looking at is enough for some people. What's really needed is a big win, something like Wikipedia moving over to our better network, would make a vast number of the Internet follow.
      • Fear. Wait for the government to start locking people up/bringing people in for questioning just based on their Internet browsing habits, then make sure everyone knows about it.
      • Uncertainty. A whispering campaign is the order of the day, make sure people know they're being watched when online. No-one likes to be spied on, particularly by the Kafka-esque bureaucracies our governments have become.
      • Doubt. Another aspect of the whispering campaign, make people think about how good the Internet used to be before the US government fucked it up.
      • Abusing Firefox market share (well, not really). When surfing normally, Firefox could present a small banner at the top of the window: 'Warning: you are browsing unsafely, third parties may be watching this connection (switch safe browsing on)' pressing the 'switch safe browsing on' button could enable encryption, or whatever improvement is used to circumvent this law, on. If the site does not have a 'safe' version, another warning could be displayed, this will provide an incentive for site owners to update their systems to support the improvements.

      Wow, the things Microsoft have taught me. Thanks Bill! Anyway, getting back to the point, the biggest risk to an improved network, is that legislation may be created to stop it being used. Most people are willing to bend the law a little, but not break it.

      Incidentally, who was the bloke speaking after Lessig? He had some very good points about how the Internet on mobiles isn't taking off because of the huge fees carriers are demanding, and the assumption by venture capitalists that the Internet 'just works' by itself. Very insightful comments from him.

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    50. Re:Just wait ... by glittalogik · · Score: 1

      "An Internet worm that disabled networks across the U.S. Monday and Tuesday temporarily thrust the nation into its most severe maelstrom of productivity since 1992."

      Nationwide work startages, it'd be chaos!

    51. Re:Just wait ... by chris_sawtell · · Score: 1

      And from what I hear, he's a lover of freedom and a true believer in the Constitution and Bill of Rights. If we put him in the White House, we stand a fighting chance to turn this thing around.

      Only until the history surrounding the death of JFK repeats itself.

    52. Re:Just wait ... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      What would be required to create such a spark...? I'm just .. um... interested... you know... O:-)

      [Seriously... If you could describe the atmosphere of such an environment... would make a very interesting read for most of us. :)]

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    53. Re:Just wait ... by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      Extremely poor economic conditions, usually, along with civil unrest.

    54. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I misread that as "wireless shovels" and wondered exactly what the fuck they were.

    55. Re:Just wait ... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, four could read "Congress shall make no law..." and understood that McCain Fiengold was clearly infringing. And five managed to parse "shall not be infringed." and rule the DC gun ban out of bounds.

      Rubbish. I doubt you even read either of the decisions you refer to- because neither of them can be interpreted in the way you believe. In fact, in the latest Supreme Court case regarding the DC gun ban, every single justice went ahead and said that gun laws are not necessarily unconstitutional, despite the black-letter law.

      And now it is clear, we won't be agreeing on much because you serve the forces of darkness. You can't just "ignore" the Bill of Rights and remain a nation of laws. What you pine for is a dictator who will make all of your decisions for you.

      Again, rubbish. I can indeed ignore the Bill of Rights and remain a nation of laws, because it's not law. The Bill of Rights is a set of handy suggestions, but as law it fails miserably- and as I've said, every single Supreme Court justice since, well, practically forever, agrees.

      And we have the answer to how so many educated Supremes can fail to read the Constituition and not get the right answer. They understand perfectly, but being Socialists they simply don't give a damn what it says.

      Of course they don't. The constitution is a black and white document, but we don't live in a black and white world. Necessarily, the constitution is overrated and must be ignored. Rational, reasonable people accept this. Many of them even made it to the Supreme Court.

      Anyway, what the hell does this have to do with socialism? Are you unable to separate economic theory from political, or are you just trolling?

      Note that it IS perfectly acceptable to disagree with the 2nd Amendment, private possession of arms, etc. and still be an American. But you can only do so by first proposing the repeal of the 2nd Amendment. Remember that the Founding Fathers were very wise men, but they were not God Kings handing down the law on graven tablets, thus they realized that their laws might need to be adjusted for differing times, and the procedure for Amendments. Done that way it doesn't turn us into a nation of men instead of laws.

      Of course you will repeal the 2nd Amendment only after I have fought you to my last breath and last dollar.

      I don't need to repeal it. Doing so requires far too much effort. The 2nd Amendment isn't worth the paper it's printed on; why would I attempt to have it overturned? All I need to do is curb its interpretation, and that is perfectly sufficient. It also requires only five people.

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    56. Re:Just wait ... by MadnessASAP · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, the internet as YOU know it will be dead. Not every internet user lives in USA. Your country will likely become much like China, either you follow the rules or you find tho tolls to get around it. My guess is that if such a "iPatriot" act were to be passed much of the high tech industry would just leave USA for other countries with less restrictive laws. I personally live in Canada so what happens in the USA does have a certain effect on me, at least until we can get that idiot Harper out and fine a government with the balls to stand up for itself.

      --
      I may agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to face the consequences of saying it.
    57. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's like a regular shovel, but over there.

    58. Re:Just wait ... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Would be a first. A huge ass makes the world better.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    59. Re:Just wait ... by Al+Dimond · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It isn't just people in their private lives; it's also corporations. You know, the ones that own the government? They like the freedom of the Internet and the ability to communicate securely and freely, because it helps them make money. They've already moved their taxable income to other countries. They can take their servers elsewhere easily if they want. It probably wouldn't take them too long to move the jobs, too, if they had to.

      It's not just like they could let big business have exceptions or poke through with VPNs. Countless small businesses fuel the high-tech economy, too, and start up from practically nothing. Think they don't have any clout? What about the investors and banks that profit off of their growth? Some of them are pretty big, and would certainly have mouthpieces in Congress.

    60. Re:Just wait ... by TheLink · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why are so many people so keen on a revolution?

      In most revolutions the person or group willing and able to exert the most violence will rise to the top. Thus violent revolutions tend to lead to Dictatorships.

      Only an extremely few dictators will promptly relinquish their power to the people.

      This is why so many communist countries are actually dictatorships - because Marx put violence in the Communism "implementation plan".

      While you have some semblance of democracy you should fix things by voting.

      Most of the US people still have the vote (diebold notwithstanding, and for some strange reason many convicted felons don't get to vote).

      Given Bush was _reelected_ it is clear to me that the voters do not really object to the policies of the ruling government. Do significant numbers actually vote for some 3rd party in desperation? No.
      If people are dissatisfied with both parties they should "throw away" their vote on some other party, rather than keep throwing it at Twiddledum and Twiddledumber. If those votes start to add up, T & T may notice, and so those votes aren't really "thrown away".

      Anyone trying to spark a revolution in a somewhat democratic country "for a good cause" is doing the wrong thing.

      --
    61. Re:Just wait ... by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      but the internet as we know it will be dead.

      I think we have already passed that point and its just not sunk in yet.

      How does that go again about the frog in boiling water?

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    62. Re:Just wait ... by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Its not there yet, but perhaps someday. It took the founders a while too, and the oppression touched daily life of most every citizen of the colonies.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    63. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the way our economy is going, mayhaps this isn't too far off...

    64. Re:Just wait ... by ArmyOfAardvarks · · Score: 0

      I'm knowingly going off topic here, so feel free to give me bad karma :) ...But I think it's unfortunate that we seem to be incapable of using a tool like the Internet without letting it develop into a crutch. We survived for millenia without networks of any kind. We should be able to deal with the Internet going down for a short time without it being a big deal. But as we're humans, we've allowed the Internet to develop in a way that we can't live without it. Just like everything else, we've allowed it to go from tool to crutch.

    65. Re:Just wait ... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
                              "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
      <html>
      <head>
      <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">

      <title>Lessig Predicts Cyber 9/11 Event, Restrictive Laws</title>

      <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="screen, projection" href="//images.slashdot.org/core-tidied.css?T_2_5_0_214a">
      <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="screen, projection" href="//images.slashdot.org/comments.css?T_2_5_0_214a">
      <!--[if IE]><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="screen, projection" href="//images.slashdot.org/iestyles.css?T_2_5_0_214a"><![endif]-->
      <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="print" href="//images.slashdot.org/print.css?T_2_5_0_214a">
      <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="handheld" href="//images.slashdot.org/handheld.css?T_2_5_0_214a">

      [copy-paste of NINE MORE PAGES of the HTML SOURCE for your post]

      Me To!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    66. Re:Just wait ... by Martin+Blank · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I can indeed ignore the Bill of Rights and remain a nation of laws, because it's not law. The Bill of Rights is a set of handy suggestions, but as law it fails miserably- and as I've said, every single Supreme Court justice since, well, practically forever, agrees.

      The Constitution disagrees with you. From Article VI, Clause 2:

      This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land

      The Bill of Rights are a part of the Constitution, and hence they are law. They are neither statutory nor regulatory law, and hence do not spell out all the details of what is and is not allowed, but they were never intended to perform that function. Their purpose is to provide a framework within which statutory and regulatory law may be constructed.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    67. Re:Just wait ... by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Just like that? "Build a better network"? And how are you going to wire that "last mile" for everyone?

      My modem still works, and as long as it does, I can create another (vastly slower, but still working) network.

    68. Re:Just wait ... by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      I love you, PopeRatzo, truly I do, but as extraordinarily knowledgeable as you are, I'm afraid you are still missing the macro picture, guy.

      The national election has been gamed - by those soulless ones - from every direction. With millions of Americans - who aren't aware of it yet, and many will never be - unregistered by their Secretaries of State (each state's senior election officer) - thanks to that passage of HAVA and - as you made mention of - those DRE voting machines which have been exempted form any "election reform" laws - thanks greatly to recent legislation by Bush-dog Democrat, Diane Feinstein of CA - along with those voters who mail in ballots which, when not counted, will have no way of knowing their votes have gone by the wayside; and all those states now requiring ID, etc., etc., ad nauseum ---- Lotsa frigging luck!!!!

      I'm afraid we're at the point where the only solution is the French solution, as the US is now experiencing a depression (while the corporate McNews - majority-owned by 5 corporations - quibbles about what a recession is); and the rest of the planet has entered into the first stage of a Global Depression (while the global corporate McNews - primarily owned by 6 multinationals will clamp down on this factoid) - things will only get worse...

      And please allow me to repeat: US gov't debt obligations (officially - probably a lot worse considering all the neocon major thievery) is approx. $64 trillion. (USD)

      Global GDP: Approx. $68 trillion (USD)

      Credit derivatives market: Approx. $516 trillion (USD)

      Credit Default Swap of that $516 trillion, approx. $43 trillion (USD).....

    69. Re:Just wait ... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

      The Constitution disagrees with you. From Article VI, Clause 2:

      The Constitution, which I argue is not a valid law, disagrees that it is a valid law. Well, isn't that an interesting conundrum... let me see, history backs me up and not the constitution. Isn't that odd?

      The Bill of Rights are a part of the Constitution, and hence they are law. They are neither statutory nor regulatory law, and hence do not spell out all the details of what is and is not allowed, but they were never intended to perform that function. Their purpose is to provide a framework within which statutory and regulatory law may be constructed.

      Except that statutory and regulatory law are not created within that framework. That makes them mere suggestions, nothing more and nothing less.

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    70. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Read about the French Revolution and the Russian Revolution.

      Most people just want to be able to get on with their lives. It is only in extreme conditions, where that is not possible (i.e. people are hungry), that the conditions for revolution exists.

      Revolution represents the failure of a system.

    71. Re:Just wait ... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      The Constitution, which I argue is not a valid law...

      Ah, so we can do that now? Just say that laws aren't valid laws and then ignore them? Fuckin' cool, man! Why didn't anyone tell me this sooner? For starters, I'm gonna go ahead and say that the law prohibiting me from taking your (or anyone's for that matter) stuff is not a valid law--it's black and white, after all, and we don't live in a black and white world.

      If the Consitution isn't a valid law, not one single law ever passed by our government is a valid law, since they were given the authority to pass said laws by the constitution. Your arguments that the Constitution can be ignored showcases your complete and total ignorance of the system of government that we have. Not that I'm gonna stop you--I mean, hey, go ahead and do what you gotta do, that's your right. But don't blame the rest of us when we sit around laughing at your sheer ignorance.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    72. Re:Just wait ... by jtgd · · Score: 1

      Until they just indiscriminately block all packets they can't identify.

      If they do that then by definition they are blocking all SSL packets. If they do that then that is the end of banking over the internet. Will the banks stand for that?

      --
      J
    73. Re:Just wait ... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 0

      Ah, so we can do that now? Just say that laws aren't valid laws and then ignore them? Fuckin' cool, man! Why didn't anyone tell me this sooner? For starters, I'm gonna go ahead and say that the law prohibiting me from taking your (or anyone's for that matter) stuff is not a valid law--it's black and white, after all, and we don't live in a black and white world.

      Except such a law is not absolute. The fact that you believe it is does nothing more than showcase your own ignorance.

      As I said, it's not just my word against yours that the constitution does not constitute valid law- it is the entire history of jurisprudence.

      If the Consitution isn't a valid law, not one single law ever passed by our government is a valid law, since they were given the authority to pass said laws by the constitution.

      What a shockingly ignorant grasp of political theory. The constitution does not grant the power to create law; in fact, it does exactly the opposite. It is a self-imposed limit on the exercise of sovereign power.

      Your arguments that the Constitution can be ignored showcases your complete and total ignorance of the system of government that we have. Not that I'm gonna stop you--I mean, hey, go ahead and do what you gotta do, that's your right. But don't blame the rest of us when we sit around laughing at your sheer ignorance.

      You do that, and while you're at it, look up some of the decisions of the United States Supreme Court- say DC v. Heller. That, after all, is a decision that blatantly ignores the constitution as it is written. Not that that stopped the Supreme Court, of course.

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    74. Re:re:Re:Just wait ... by pennyloafer · · Score: 1

      i agree

      Re:Just wait ... (Score:3, Funny)
      by morgan_greywolf (835522) * Alter Relationship on Tue Aug 05, '08 04:49 PM (#24489011) Homepage Journal
      Re:Just wait ... (Score:1, Insightful)
      by mvh (9295) on Tuesday August 05, @07:07PM (#24488549) Homepage
      Which will hopefully, in turn, force us to create a better network. And perhaps we can start again and this time try to avoid Eternal September.
      Reply to This Parent
      Re:Just wait ... (Score:2, Funny)
      by chris_mahan (256577) on Tuesday August 05, @07:09PM (#24488593) Homepage
      me too!
      --

    75. Re:Just wait ... by pilot1 · · Score: 1

      Port 443 is *already* effectively blocked for anyone who isn't centrally approved. Have you seen the error message you get in IE or Firefox when you try to visit a site with a self-signed certificate?

      Yeah, and without the message SSL would be vulnerable to MITM attacks and become entirely useless. The solution is to get certs for open CAs like cacert.org installed by default, not to abandon encryption or render it useless by making it vulnerable to MITMs.

    76. Re:Just wait ... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except such a law is not absolute. The fact that you believe it is does nothing more than showcase your own ignorance.

      The laws against theft are every bit as absolute as the Constitution. What it says is absolute, unless amended. There can be exceptions, but they have to be made law to mean anything. I can't just steal from the local Wal-Mart, and get away with it by claiming (as you ludicrously claim about the Constitution) that it's merely a guideline, and because I found a situation where (in my view) it's reasonable to have an exception, I can just ignore the law. There may well be a need for an exception, but that exception needs to be written into the law before I can utilize it.

      As I said, it's not just my word against yours that the constitution does not constitute valid law- it is the entire history of jurisprudence.

      It is not impossible for a great many people to be wrong, even for a very long time. I remind you that, until a certain point in our world's history, one could have made the same exact defense for the doctrine that the world was flat.

      What a shockingly ignorant grasp of political theory. The constitution does not grant the power to create law; in fact, it does exactly the opposite. It is a self-imposed limit on the exercise of sovereign power.

      Sir, it is you who displays a shockingly ignorant grasp of political theory, not to mention the history of the formation of the United States. While I won't go so far as to say that you're malicious (Hanlon's razor applies here), your misinformation is precisely what we must guard against, because the malicious will use that kind of thinking against us. I only hope that more people in our nation don't subscribe to the same bullshit, because if they do, our nation is doomed to slide into tyranny. It may not be in our lifetime, or even near our lifetime, but it will happen if enough people have this false belief that the constitution of a government is not binding upon it. It's only a matter of time.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    77. Re:Just wait ... by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      Send me $20 right now.

      No? I'm amazed at the number of people who can afford $20/month for internet access but can't afford a *one time charge* of $20 so I can have more money for no good reason.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    78. Re:Just wait ... by Metasquares · · Score: 1

      The majority of people don't need to care. Only the ones who actually keep the Internet running do. Do you think that the people considering these laws have the ability to run the network themselves? I can't see them ever acquiring that sort of skill.

      And without the basic systems upon which they are built, things like MySpace, Facebook, and eBay do not exist. The public would notice.

      I just hope it never comes down to that.

    79. Re:Just wait ... by hjrnunes · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Well, I'm not American and my country is pretty much a joke democracy, not in the sense that it is authoritarian but in the sense that is run by a particular kind of people retarded in some mystical mediterranean french-copied way that you would only understand if you lived there.

      Anyway, it seems logical to me that the best candidate would always be the one closest to science and scientists, an actual scientist would be perfect. Pity there's not much of them... I think it was probably one of worst things of the last 50 years Al Gore lost the election against GWB. I think we're (that's right, we) gonna pay that for a long time.

      One last thing, I find somewhat disturbing the fact that a country so powerful that it can change and influence things everywhere in the globe and yet no one but it's citizens can influence it... Not that I'm offering a solution, nor am I saying it is an easy one... But it sure is something someone will have to work out...

    80. Re:Just wait ... by neomunk · · Score: 1

      And let us not forget packet radio. Hell, I bet I could coax a handshake out of 2 big LED flashlights and 2 telescopes from a good distance. Yep, being that there are open source versions of network stacks, the internet is here to stay.

      Streaming HD media might be out of the question, but (encrypted) text-only communications is forever out of the bottle.

    81. Re:Just wait ... by lubricated · · Score: 1

      you mean it will be like the old days again . . .

      --
      It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
    82. Re:Just wait ... by lgw · · Score: 1

      The only solution to that will be steganography

      The technology already exists to inject random noise into packets carrying sound and video in order to destroy any steganographic information without at all affecting the quality of your typical YouTube video - and ISPs are already playing with it.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    83. Re:Just wait ... by Atario · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing, no, not the same wingnuts. Different ones.

      What's your point?

      --
      "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
    84. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Keep in mind, the Executive branch has relatively EQUAL power to the full Legislative branch, and judicial branch.

      In what country? Maybe in pre-9/11-America, but certainly not post-9/11-America.

    85. Re:Just wait ... by Atario · · Score: 1

      On the upside, Obama has expressed a lot of "we need to work together on things" and "this is all about you, not me", rather than Dubya's "I know what's best and I'm sticking to it no matter what". So at least you may have a shot at getting him to straighten up and fly right when he screws up. Not to mention his stated positions are largely 180 degrees away from the Bush/McCain let's-drive-the-bus-off-the-cliff direction.

      I'm not saying the guy is flawless or anything -- far from it, I was a Kucinich man, and after he dropped out, an Edwards man (for like five minutes, before he dropped out too). But let's face it, till we go to a Parliamentary system or change from First Past The Post to Approval Voting, it's either going to be Obama or McCain. And I don't think I need to tell you which would simply continue the current disaster.

      As they say, let's don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

      --
      "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
    86. Re:Just wait ... by Atario · · Score: 1

      And we have the answer to how so many educated Supremes can fail to agree with me. They understand perfectly, but being $IMAGINED_EPITHET they simply don't give a damn what it says.

      Fixed that for future reuse.

      --
      "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
    87. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One word: Autosteganography.

    88. Re:Just wait ... by flex941 · · Score: 1

      If you dont feel like voting for one of them, do not vote for anybody. Actually this could make all the difference.

    89. Re:Just wait ... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      The tighter your grip becomes, the more Nets will slip through your fingers!

      Fear will keep the outlying nets in line. Fear of an army of cloned DHS personnel. Darth Cheney will see to that the iPatriot act is enacted on time.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    90. Re:Just wait ... by wellingj · · Score: 1

      What about the First (and hopefully not last) American Revolution. I don't think they were starving until they were fighting...

    91. Re:Just wait ... by wellingj · · Score: 1

      Anyone trying to spark a revolution in a somewhat democratic country "for a good cause" is doing the wrong thing.

      That's a value judgment based on your own definition of a revolution. There are other definitions, not all are violent.

    92. Re:Just wait ... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Eternal September always reminds me of the Nazi phrase "Septemberling" - someone who joined the party only after it became the second largest party in the September 1930 elections.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    93. Re:Just wait ... by wellingj · · Score: 1

      They had an oppressive tax on tea.
      We have an oppressive tax on gasoline.
      Something tells me a present day Boston Tea Party would be significantly more jarring than the last one.

    94. Re:Just wait ... by wellingj · · Score: 1

      Both Obama and McCain are authoritarian, just in different ways... If you can't see both sides of that coin toss then the media really does have you fooled.

    95. Re:Just wait ... by iamapizza · · Score: 0

      Too late. They're all on MySpace. And already killing each other.

      --
      Always proofread carefully to see if you any words out.
    96. Re:Just wait ... by Quicksilver_Johny · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how not voting would help anyone. You would have absolutely zero affect, simply being another lazy american nonvoter in the statistics. Instead, I would suggest voting for a 3rd party candidate or a write-in who you could support. You would almost certainly have no affect on the result of the race, but at least your statistic would be meaningful and hopefully encourage supporting of your ideals in the future.

      Also, although I am no fan of the lesser-of-two-evils, you could always inform them of why you're not supporting them in an attempt to have them reverse their unfavorable policies.

    97. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you mean Lenin. Marx didn't have an "implementation plan". Leninist Marxism contains violence as the means. Marxism per se does not. In fact if you read Marx he's quite clearly talking about a collapse of capitalism, not a violent revolution at all.

      Since you got the specifics wrong I'm sure your generalizations are accurate.

    98. Re:Just wait ... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why are so many people so keen on a revolution?

      The problem is intellectuals (defined as "people who think they can do better", or, only partly joking people who think "if everybody did what I say there would be world peace"). We both know slashdot is rife with them.

      They have the big problem that Joe Schmoe cares for exactly what you'd think he cares for : his ability to drive his/her car as far as he wants. Food, luxurious food, a big house, toys, children ... and that's it. (Or as Barack O states they care for "guns and religion", which is not true, they care for getting their ass comfortable, guns and religion simply help too much to give up)

      So a democracy will always be in favor of increased private spending, and increased energy usage, which today means "more co2 release". Which is the very antithesis of most "progressive" (socialist/communist) policies. Let's not forget that it's "progressives" (albeit not American ones, though it did include many European ones) that engineered the USSR famines, and for example China's one child policy is also of progressive making (the Nazi's, also socialists, had similar measures).

      This is NOT to say that they're nazi or communist, but it is beyond obvious when listening to Barack O. or Al Gore that what they really want to do is massive, involuntary social re-engineering (whether it's energy usage, "tolerance" as defined by giving money to the day's "popular victims", or "genetic purity" (which was big in socialist circles between 1920 and, well 1960-70, google for "eugenics movement"), they want to re-engineer the whole of society to fit their image of an ideal society). These people are also responsible for the current Iranian government AND for the ascent of power of people like Saddam Hussein (and they were in favor of them on many occasions, why ? Because of their political leanings. Those little details of genocides like the halabja campaign of Iraq, or the recently "impossible to locate anywhere" marsh arabs of Iran, are but pesky problems that can be ignored for the "greater purpose")

      The problem is beyond obvious : they expect economical sacrifices of Joe Schmoe, which they will never get from him/her voluntary.

      So without violence, the ultimate, massively irrefutable argument, their policies won't be implemented. However they are intellectuals : in an open fight ... they lose (and lose big, as cannot be illustrated more thoroughly by the events in Iran in 1972. First progressives overthrew the government. Next the government started executing gays. Something must have gone wrong. It's easy to find out what exactly went wrong : the terrorism of khomeini).

      It should be obvious to even the 5 year old daughter of Obama that the energy reductions necessary to reduce carbon output will NEVER be implemented voluntary. The other idea of the green movement, "limiting population", you can guess how much enthousiasm people will have for that one. Some of the greens, by the way, are discussing genocide in order to implement this, though fortunately it's the lunatic fringe for the moment.

      This is why so many communist countries are actually dictatorships - because Marx put violence in the Communism "implementation plan".

      While you have some semblance of democracy you should fix things by voting.

      But the solutions of the socialists (and the greens these days) are utter disasters for the common man.

      Reducing co2 output is painful. VERY painful. It will never really happen in a democracy. And before you state that Europe proves otherwise, I'd like you to check 2 little details :
      -> who has the power in the EU ? Does the composition of that body make the EU democratic ... or not ? (the commission is the lawgiving instrument of the EU, not the parliament, as you might think. Again, google this)
      -> exactly how many coal fired power plants are being constructed in the EU ? Zero right ? Oh wait ...

    99. Re:Just wait ... by HungryHobo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's not just like they could let big business have exceptions or poke through with VPNs

      Sure they could.
      many companies in China have a vpn to the outside world and so are not affected by the firewall but individuals don't get the same thing.

    100. Re:Just wait ... by HungryHobo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fear. Wait for the government to start locking people up/bringing people in for questioning just based on their Internet browsing habits, then make sure everyone knows about it.

      if you get to this point it's too late, they can just send anyone found to be using the new network to the gas chambers.

    101. Re:re:Re:Just wait ... by hostyle · · Score: 1, Funny

      Remove me from your mailing list please.

      i agree

      Re:Just wait ... (Score:3, Funny)
      by morgan_greywolf (835522) * Alter Relationship on Tue Aug 05, '08 04:49 PM (#24489011) Homepage Journal
      Re:Just wait ... (Score:1, Insightful)
      by mvh (9295) on Tuesday August 05, @07:07PM (#24488549) Homepage
      Which will hopefully, in turn, force us to create a better network. And perhaps we can start again and this time try to avoid Eternal September.
      Reply to This Parent
      Re:Just wait ... (Score:2, Funny)
      by chris_mahan (256577) on Tuesday August 05, @07:09PM (#24488593) Homepage
      me too!
      --

      --
      Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.
    102. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      They were just greedy.

    103. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but they're black Republicans!

    104. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "and for some strange reason many convicted felons don't get to vote"

      In the States.

      This is a common exaggeration. Once they've served their time they are once again allowed to vote. it's only while incarcerated or on parole that they are forbidden.

    105. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not if those people have been overthrown by the gov't. BTW Bush wasn't elected, Al Gore was...

    106. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the game is already over and it could require a lot of blood and sacrifice to win back the freedoms we've already lost"

      Unfortunately you're over 100 years too late. You're talking about the freedoms you won in the war of independence. You lost them in the civil war. You now have centralized government, high taxation, and everything else your forefathers left Europe to escape. That's been true for more than a century. I know they lied to you about this in high school, but there's no point bleating about it now. Just keep singing "Land of the Free, Home of the Brave" and remember that brief period in the 1800s when it was true.

    107. Re:Just wait ... by jmhoule314 · · Score: 1

      Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. -Declaration of Independence

    108. Re:Just wait ... by Magada · · Score: 1

      Read some history. You could do worse than to start with the history of the RAF (the terrorist group, not the flyboys) or that of the Russian revolution.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    109. Re:re:Re:Just wait ... by naglep · · Score: 1

      Please remove me from this thread

    110. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no 3rd party desperation vote because every single candidate in the running for anything significant is already playing the totalitarian "democracy" hand. The choice between Republican or Democrat is simply the choice between getting fucked in the front or fucked in the back.

      People are keen on a revolution now for the exact same reason they were keen on a revolution when the US was formed. Their government overstepped the bounds of its power. The only difference is that this government operates under the pretense that it is "for the people."

      well anyway, none of what the revolutionists say is going to matter at all to the rest of the voting population who seem to be fine with being completely controlled by the government as long as they get their big mac meal with coke.

    111. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jews have established an effective shadow government in the United States, so it really doesn't matter who you vote for.

      Whether a "shadow government" exists or not, I would ask: if someone claims to be Jewish but doesn't actually give a rat's behind about the people of Israel, should you be calling them a Jew?

    112. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone grab WiFi/Wimax devices and start mesh networking. Freenet/Tor on top of it and we'll see how far we go.

      Personally I'm not afraid of a cyber 9/11.

      The approaching ECONOMIC 9/11.. that what everyone should be worried about!

    113. Re:Just wait ... by Elldallan · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, there is an oppressive price on gasoline not an oppressive tax, atleast not in the United States.

      The average state tax on gasoline in the United States was 28.6 cents per gallon in the first quarter of 2008. During the same period the gasoline tax in Germany was 7.6 dollars per gallon and 5.2 dollars per gallon in the United Kingdom.

    114. Re:Just wait ... by dangitman · · Score: 1

      What modern "democracies" are, are government by media manipulation of the bottom two-thirds of society.

      I'm certain that there's plenty of manipulation of the "top third" of society, too. What makes you think that they are immune? Hell, who could ignore the huge corporate contributions to and from the wealthy elites?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    115. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't see them ever acquiring that sort of skill.

      Don't be silly. They have the money. If you think there aren't enough opportunistic bastards who will do anything for money, you're delusional.

    116. Re:Just wait ... by wellingj · · Score: 1

      When any government (including our own) makes more profit on the sale of gasoline than the actual companies producing and selling, I'd say that is oppressive. Saying 'It's only X' is the tolerance for government that has brought us to this sad state of affairs in the first place.

    117. Re:Just wait ... by wellingj · · Score: 0

      You are absolutely right. How dare they be so greedy to want no taxation without representation and civil rights for the individual. Every one should give those up for the sake of their government. What good citizen needs freedom anyways?

    118. Re:re:Re:Just wait ... by computational+super · · Score: 1

      It's not a mailing list N00B Aoloser

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    119. Re:Just wait ... by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      "We have an oppressive tax on gasoline"

      Bwahahahahahahahahaha! You guys have gasoline that costs a bit over 1 buck per liter. We have gasoline that costs about 1.4 EUROS per liter, and we are doing fine.

      What a bunch of fucking crybabies. "Gasoline is too expensive!". Boo-frigging-hoo!

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    120. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why I'm voting Nader. Look at what he supports, and more interestingly, what Obama DOESN'T support: universal healthcare, for one. Obama is just another corporate tool who will continue to waste public money on military spending to open up foreign markets, rather than feeding, clothing, healing, and educating Americans right here at home.

      http://www.votenader.org/issues/

    121. Re:Just wait ... by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      If you get hung up on the FISA thing, you don't understand political science. This election is a battle for the soul of America, and effects the entire world. If Obama doesn't win, then McCain wins, and we step even farther away from civil liberties, and you lose even more than you were supposedly saving by rejecting Obama. Period. Change is slow, and we have 8 years of bullshit to undo. If you can't stand a few blemishes on your candidate, then you will never make the compromises necessary to achieve your end goals.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    122. Re:Just wait ... by Dark_Gravity · · Score: 1

      Of course you will repeal the 2nd Amendment only after I have fought you to my last breath and last dollar.

      ...and last round of ammunition.

    123. Re:Just wait ... by dogeatery · · Score: 1

      As a socialist myself, let me assure you that there's nothing socialist about the Supreme Court.

    124. Re:Just wait ... by fooDfighter · · Score: 1

      Whether we like it or not, CO2 reduction will eventually occur as a result of market forces (increasing fossil fuel costs). The ONLY question is whether we should start working on alternative energy sources sooner rather than later.

      Measures like Kyoto are simply a way of artificially inflating the cost of fossil fuels in an attempt to spur development of alternative energy. They try to force the markets hand to work on solutions to inevitable problems a little sooner than they normally would.

    125. Re:Just wait ... by TheLink · · Score: 1

      "In fact if you read Marx he's quite clearly talking about a collapse of capitalism, not a violent revolution at all."

      You're the one who hasn't read Marx:

      The Communists disdain to conceal their views and aims.
      They openly declare that their ends can be attained only by
      the forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions.
      Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communistic revolution.
      The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains.
      They have a world to win.

      English version:
      http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/61/61.txt

      German version:
      http://www.mlwerke.de/me/me04/me04_459.htm

      Go get someone to translate the German version if you don't think the English translation is correct about forcible/violent overthrow.

      See also:
      If the proletariat during its contest with the bourgeoisie is compelled, by the force of circumstances, to organise itself as a class, if, by means of a revolution, it makes itself the ruling class, and, as such, sweeps away by force the old conditions of production, then it will, along with these conditions, have swept away the conditions for the existence of class antagonisms and of classes generally, and will thereby have abolished its own supremacy as a class.

      My emphasis: swept away the conditions... and will thereby have abolished its own supremacy as a class.

      Go ahead and believe Marx and Engels. I might not be that smart, but hindsight shows they got that rather wrong.

      Sweep away the conditions and install a Dictatorship so far has proven the rule for any revolution that involves violence.

      --
    126. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow! Someone else who thinks like me. I just wrote a similar email to the Obama campaign yesterday evening.

      The solution, as I see it, is to vote for Nader. At this point, I don't really feel like McCain could make a bigger mess than a principle-less wimp like Obama, even though the former makes me puke. I know Nader won't win, and I understand why we need instant runoff voting to make elections fair, but at least it's satisfying.

    127. Re:Just wait ... by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Sure but please see context.

      I was replying to someone who said: "Until the majority of people recognize that oppression has become intolerable enough that they become willing to kill or die in order to end it... it's probably not time."

      If the majority of people find the people _they_ the voters _elected intolerable, then they should _vote_ for someone else. Not start killing people.

      If there is no candidate suitable, then the voters deserve what they get, since out of millions of voters none want to stand as candidates despite things being "oh so intolerable".

      As I said, anyone "sparking a revolution" where there is a semblance of democracy is doing the wrong thing.

      In countries which are Dictatorships there are a few options:
      1) Keep having violent revolutions and hope you get a dictator that's benevolent. This could eventually happen.
      2) Wait till the violent Dictator hands over the reigns to someone less willing to be violent (or has a looser grip on the reins) - this can happen, since the violent Dictator would usually get rid of people too much like him (they would pose a threat to him), so the people he voluntarily hands over to tend to be slightly milder.
      3) Wait for an external country to defeat the Dictator, and hopefully install something better.

      --
    128. Re:Just wait ... by TheLink · · Score: 1

      "This is a common exaggeration. Once they've served their time they are once again allowed to vote. it's only while incarcerated or on parole that they are forbidden."

      Really? My references:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felony_disenfranchisement#United_States

      http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1553510,00.html

      --
    129. Re:Just wait ... by KevinIsOwn · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There's nothing oppressive about adjusting for market externalities. The US isn't doing enough to adjust for them, and probably won't in the future, but a higher gas tax would do more to make the price of gas reasonable than lowering the gas tax, ironically enough (Higher gas tax combined with more money for clean energy/transportation research)

    130. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For those of us that DO live in the US, remember, nothing short of a landslide victory for Obama is going to keep the tin-pot dictators of the GOP out of the White House this time. Don't fuck around, folks. We have to win or this time, there really won't be anyplace to run.

      What is the problem? Are you saying that the vast majority of US posters on Slashdot do NOT hold some sort of college degree and thus unable to emigrate from the USA should $TINPOT_GOP_THUG wins in November? Choose cameras or prayer rugs? No, it will be adding prayer rugs to cameras. I suspect that the vast majority of the posters here can 'run back' based on ancestry.

      It's high time to leave the basements of the parent's homes, lose the musician hair and mouth gaskets, shower, dress professionally and pull you own fscking weight. Earn that money. Pay those taxes. Get into debt. Get some stress on those tickers of yours so you can demonstrate that you are responsible individuals.

    131. Re:Just wait ... by l3prador · · Score: 1

      Until they just indiscriminately block all packets they can't identify. ISP are already itching to do that.

      Sure, but we can do them one better: camouflaged encryption. Couldn't we come up with something that looks like MySpace or an AIM conversation, for example, but isn't?

    132. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're well on our way to the first criterion!

    133. Re:Just wait ... by archont · · Score: 1

      I don't want to get all uptight and start lecturing anybody, nor do I want to sound like your 50-year old conservatist middle-high class male complaining about the world today. I'm not that old really, and I could rather accurately say I'm part of the new generation.

      Which is also why I find this more depressing.

      Today's generation doesn't believe in ideals. There's a huge difference between being a patriot and being a nationalist. Between being a man who knows his rights and the rights of others and one who raises hell for the sake of it. I've seen few of the first. And they weren't the brightest souls either. In fact the more intelligent people tend to become anything from conformists to apathetic nihilists.

      I was raised in a nation that lost and regained it's freedom times and times again during the generations. Perhaps such a mindset wakes only when in face of danger, but the people of my age today would fail to show any initiative, regardless what would be thrown against us.

      It's hard to have a good comparison of how the moral spine of the world rises or falls, partly because it involves such a long time span. Taking for example religion we can see that it's role has declined sharply. Even though I personally am an atheist I'd be a fool to dismiss the integrating and strenghtening effect it has on society. It's role however is declining, even though religion was still popular long after it was commonly disproved by science. That would appear to indicate that it's not really the advancement of technology and rational thought that's responsible, as much as a global shift in mindset.

      But returning to the original topic, I don't believe society today could react in any meaningful way. Essential liberties could and will be taken away taking us, step by step, into a 1984-like world. I can only comfort myself in the fact that living in a socially and economically weakened eastern-European country I can expect a 10-year lag between the new trends of oppression in the US and here.

    134. Re:Just wait ... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I think you don't understand political science. If we keep rewarding the Democrats for betraying us, they'll never change. They should have learned the lesson in 2000, they cannot win by abandoning their leftist base. They're going to have another chance to learn that lesson when Obama loses. Eventually they'll figure it out and actually stand up for the people they're supposed to be representing. Either that or another political party will gain ascendence. Either result will be better than continuing with the status quo.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    135. Re:Just wait ... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Well the interesting thing, I think, is that as well as lower level need starvation leading to revolution (which seems obvious), at least once in history a group successfully revolted because of a sense of starvation of higher order needs. I think this is unusual. But the fact that it occurred (at least) once is noteworthy.

    136. Re:Just wait ... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      "The masses" may have a problem when they can't upload their pictures to Facebook because the building/billboard/whatever else in the background is copyrighted and they failed to get a model release for everybody in the shot. That and their annoying background music on MySpace is also copyrighted.

    137. Re:Just wait ... by KudyardRipling · · Score: 1

      There are not enough single men with interests in 'politically applied sciences' and have nothing to lose in the USA yet.

      --
      Submission as evidence constitutes plaintiff and/or prosecutorial misconduct.
    138. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are so many people so keen on a revolution?

      In most revolutions the person or group willing and able to exert the most violence will rise to the top. Thus violent revolutions tend to lead to Dictatorships.

      Only an extremely few dictators will promptly relinquish their power to the people.

      This is why so many communist countries are actually dictatorships - because Marx put violence in the Communism "implementation plan".

      While you have some semblance of democracy you should fix things by voting.

      Most of the US people still have the vote (diebold notwithstanding, and for some strange reason many convicted felons don't get to vote).

      Given Bush was _reelected_ it is clear to me that the voters do not really object to the policies of the ruling government. Do significant numbers actually vote for some 3rd party in desperation? No.
      If people are dissatisfied with both parties they should "throw away" their vote on some other party, rather than keep throwing it at Twiddledum and Twiddledumber. If those votes start to add up, T & T may notice, and so those votes aren't really "thrown away".

      Anyone trying to spark a revolution in a somewhat democratic country "for a good cause" is doing the wrong thing.

      I agree with you 99.9%...however I'd like to see the citation where Marx puts "violence in the Communism 'implementation plan.'" If the Manifesto is your reference then check out Capital Vol 1. Marx was an economist, not a philosopher or revolutionary. Other people (like Lennon and Engels...see Capital Vol. 2) took his models and warped them in his absence. Remember it was Engels, not Marx, who helped Lennon overthrow Russia...Marx died.

      Blaming Karl Marx for the problems of Communism is like blaming Max Planck for the atomic bomb

    139. Re:Just wait ... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      You have to ask, "which government". The federal goverment tax rate is not nearly what Exon's profit margin was (8.5%, 11.68 Billion profit on 138 Billion revenue). State tax varies, so including state tax with federal tax does get you into the same ballpark.

    140. Re:Just wait ... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      >Today's generation doesn't believe in ideals.

      And what "generation" would that be? Those born since 1980 or so?

      Why do you make such a blanket statement? What research have you done to support your premise?
      I see so much pure idealism today that I consider it to be a problem because people have unrealistic expectations.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    141. Re:Just wait ... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      "Land of the Free, Home of the Brave", but it took a move to centralized government to eliminate slavery, exactly the cusp you refer to as America's loss of Freedom. Do you also believe Black is White, as well as that Freedom is Slavery? Does it hurt, thinking like that?

    142. Re:Just wait ... by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      The US Defense budget is somewhere around $600 billion a year. Divide that by the 7.5 billion barrels of oil we use every year and that averages to $80 a barrel. How much of that $600B is to keep the world safe for oil? Oil has gotten a free ride with massive subsidies.
      It's true the retailer makes a very slim profit margin, but that's because gasoline retailing has very little value added. Most of the profit has been extracted by the time it's sold wholesale. Even more so with Zone Pricing. The little guy, in this case the small businessperson who owns the gas station, gets the shaft.

    143. Re:Just wait ... by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      >Read about the French Revolution and the Russian Revolution.

      Yes. Whatever conditions exist that cause divisions among the people, must be so pervasive that the divisions also run through the chain of command of the military. If you envision a bunch of citizens with deer rifles going up against a fully mechanized army, put that out of your mind. Envision a scenario where the division between factions is so fundamental that even the military structure breaks down, and even the financial and industrial means are divided. This has been the case in almost every military civil war and revolution.

      So with that in mind, what issue do you supposed exists in the US that would be so divisive to cause entire military organizations, together with large swaths of industry, to take a stand against the established government?

      For all the talk of us heading toward civil war or revolution, little is said about what the issues actually are.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    144. Re:Just wait ... by comment() · · Score: 1

      but individuals don't get the same thing.

      Sure they do.

      Just google for "buy vpn china" or something like that. There are plenty of choices for someone who wants to VPN beyond the Great Firewall. Yes, in most cases you have to pay for it, and that certainly is not nice and a deal-breaker for a number of people. But the possibility is there, even for individuals.

    145. Re:Just wait ... by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      "Land of the Free, Home of the Brave", but it took a move to centralized government to eliminate slavery,

      Nope, not a bit. It took ratification of the 13th Amendment of the US Constitution by the states to eliminate slavery (in the US). Which part of that process "took a move to centralized government"?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    146. Re:Just wait ... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      ...In a land crawling with armed - and armored - SWAT teams, with operatives from innumerable federal agencies packing heat and happy to use it, a land where more than 2 million people languish in prison (many of them captives of an endless "war on drugs" that has done nothing to curb substance abuse but has greatly augmented the power of the state and the criminal gangs whose laundered money enriches Establishment elites), a land where almost every transaction is wired up to some national grid, where national ID cards are now being imposed - a land where you literally cannot exist without placing your liberty, your privacy, your very life at the mercy of a government apparatus besotted with violence, coercion and intrusion, there is no place left for the kind of action that Thoreau advocated. His way - and that of Gandhi and King, who took so much from him - envisions a state opponent which one could hope to shame into honorable action by the superior moral force of principled civil disobedience. But the very hallmark of the present regime is its shamelessness, its utter lack of any sense of honor or principle, its bestial addiction to raw power...

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    147. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just don't know what to do. Who am I supposed to vote for? Voting for an independent does little good. Most of them have even less sense than the current candidates. It may sound ludicrous, but sometimes I get the sinking feeling that the game is already over and it could require a lot of blood and sacrifice to win back the freedoms we've already lost.

      My suggestion is that you should vote for the candidate you feel is less bad for now, even if both might seem bad right now. After the election, you should start sending letters to the president, congress, senators and so on in order to help them do a good job. If the letters are carefully written, it should help them understand the topic and the problem.

      Even if that won't work, at least it might remind them that they are actually working for the entire U.S. population rather than small subsets of it (e.g. corporations).

    148. Re:Just wait ... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

      The laws against theft are every bit as absolute as the Constitution.

      Rubbish. Have you read any of the laws against theft lately? Let's see. California Penal Code section 484. up to about section 500 cover theft. They're not only far more precise (in that they more exactly define what situation they are to be applied toward), but there are exceptions defined, there are interpretative civil procedures codes that are relevant, and so on.

      And on top of that, you can slap on Supreme Court precedent that materially alters the mechanism by which those laws are applied. No law is absolute because it was written by an entity which is not absolute. Our legal system recognizes this, and makes provision for such.

      What it says is absolute, unless amended. There can be exceptions, but they have to be made law to mean anything. I can't just steal from the local Wal-Mart, and get away with it by claiming (as you ludicrously claim about the Constitution) that it's merely a guideline, and because I found a situation where (in my view) it's reasonable to have an exception, I can just ignore the law. There may well be a need for an exception, but that exception needs to be written into the law before I can utilize it.

      Pure bullshit! I don't know who's been upmodding you, but they obviously know nothing about the law. The judicial process is all about arguing exceptions to it that don't exist before you argue them. That's how precedent is created. Of course you can argue exceptions that don't exist!

      It is not impossible for a great many people to be wrong, even for a very long time. I remind you that, until a certain point in our world's history, one could have made the same exact defense for the doctrine that the world was flat.

      Again, rubbish. People have known the Earth was round for millennia; as long as we've had civilization and codified rational thought.

      It may not be in our lifetime, or even near our lifetime, but it will happen if enough people have this false belief that the constitution of a government is not binding upon it. It's only a matter of time.

      I've snipped out your ideological bullshit, but once we get past that, I never said the constitution was not binding upon the government. I said that the constitution is a self-imposed limit on the exercise of sovereign power.

      A sovereign, by its very definition, has the exclusive right of governance. By that very definition and that very right, it cannot be bound by any entity superior to itself; it must choose to be so bound to any restrictions imposed upon it. The same is true here. The United States can alter the constitution at will, because it is not some document which is handed down to it from on high; it is a document that the sovereign has committed itself to following.

      There are, in fact, two ways to alter the constitution; one is more complicated than the other. The former involves voting and this and that (again, rules set down by the body that it must follow; it has the ability to change those rules at will), but the secondary method exists because the constitution creates within itself an ability to be changed; that is, it creates for itself arbiters of interpretation. Whatever those interpreters decide the document to say is what, in fact, it says; however, there is no requirement in the document that they be bound to any strict proceeduralist interpretation of the document itself, and they have never shown themselves to be so bound.

      Moreover, get off your high horse. There are plenty of governments across this planet with no constitutions at all, or with constitutions that grant the government the power to ignore them at will (The United Kingdom and Canada, respectively, for those of you not keeping track).

      Neither of those governments are any more tyrannical than the government of the United States, and some might say, in fact, that they are less so.

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    149. Re:Just wait ... by Walkingshark · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're right, in a stopped clock kind of way, about Joe Q. Public not wanting to give up dangerous, polluting things. Sadly the bulk of your post is a bunch of straight up bullshit, distortions, outright lies, and just enough half truths to make it a floater instead of a sinker. Chances are you're aware of this and just don't give a shit, as long as you can keep your toys. Thats fine.

      Here's the thing though: Its not sustainable. That'ss not ideology, that's just how it is. Joe Q. Public is living an unsustainable lifestyle, and that means that eventually, either something important is going to run out, or some combination of important things are going to become too expensive all in quick succession, and the rather robust system we live in is going to have a terminal shock. We can eat a certain amount of damage, but eventually the slams will hit resonance and the whole thing is going to go into a tailspin.

      Is it possible to prevent this by preparing, planning, and mitigating? Sure. Will we do that? Not enough to save everyone.

      When it comes down to it, it won't be citizens vs the military, it'll be everyone for themselves. Tanks, bombers, attack helicopters, and all the big toys are highly dependent on logistics and resupply and tend to break down if not given a lot of care. Small arms, especially the fun ones like the pump action shotgun and the AK-47, can stay in operation for years and years with minimal resource requirements.

      The rifled barrel is the great equalizer. You don't need that much training to use it, and a band of starving English majors is going to be just as dangerous as anyone else after a year of pure survival mode. The lone survivalist libertarians will be off in their isolated patches, sitting on valuable stores of food, ammunition, clothing, and other supplies. They'll be the first to fall, either from the above mentioned pissed off gun toting liberals or the vestiges of the military-industrial-government overlords that still have a few working heavy weapons and a desire to get their hands on some easy canned goods and shotguns.

      Nobody will be safe, and it will all be because douchebags today do their best to convince everyone that the people who are trying to work cooperatively, together, toward a common good are the enemy. You're sowing it, you better well fucking expect to reap it.

      As for me, I'm fat, dimwitted, and have food allergies. I'll die quick, but I'll see you in Hell.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    150. Re:Just wait ... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      "Sweep away the conditions and install a Dictatorship so far has proven the rule for any revolution that involves violence."

      I would revise that slightly, thus:

      Sweep away the conditions and install a Dictatorship so far has proven the rule for any revolution that involves violence AGAINST THE EXISTING RULING CLASS (or any class viewed as "privileged").

      Unless you don't think the American Revolution involved violence? ;) But it wasn't just a bloody purge, which is what most "revolutions" really are. And while I'd agree America has fallen a long way from its initial freedoms, what you and Marx are evidently talking about is a dictatorship immediately following said violent revolution.

      I always think of the French Revolution as the quintessential bad example, tho I'm sure there are plenty more.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    151. Re:Just wait ... by mrraven · · Score: 1

      What's the alternative? You know we can't keep up an economy with an exponential doubling period of 30 years, right? And it's doubtful private corporations worried about quarterly bottom lines and competitors in their own industry are going to make more than baby steps.

      Like it or not "elitists" in countries like China and Germany are getting it right with heavy investment in high speed rail and wind power. They will be laughing at us hard core when we are using our useless SUVs to store potatoes in next to third worldesque poverty shacks because we were too short sighted to plan for the future.

      If people are too dazzled by shiny car ads to change their behavior then yes they will have to be led, hopefully in a Green decentralized way, but if not, not, our survival is too important to be led off a cliff like Lemmings by the Rush Limbaugh oxycontin/consumerist junkies of the world.

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    152. Re:Just wait ... by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      Except that our tax on gasoline isn't repressive, it actually happens to be one of the lightest gas taxes in the civilized, developed world. The problem isn't taxes, its how the tax money is spent (or not spent).

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    153. Re:Just wait ... by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      False analogy. Tax revenues are not profits. Please try again, this time with critical thinking.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    154. Re:Just wait ... by nuttycom · · Score: 1

      Either that, or the bread and circuses will just keep up until there's a bloody violent collapse.

      The point of this whole democracy thing is the orderly transfer of power and incremental steps towards making things better for everyone. Since we all disagree on exactly how to do that that there will never be such a thing as an ideal candidate. Although the Dems have unarguably betrayed the left, they have done so in the process of representing some segment of our increasingly right-leaning society. I attribute that rightward drift in part to the propaganda machine of the currently empowered right, so I see any movement to the left as having at least the power to start mitigating the effects of that propaganda. Thus, even if Obama isn't an ideal candidate, I see his candidacy as a step in the right direction.

      I'd love it if other parties could gain some fraction of power, but that's just not going to happen until we get rid of plurality voting. And THAT is certain never to happen under a Republican administration, while I think that with sufficient cajoling and convincing the Dems might be convinced to work toward changing the system.

    155. Re:Just wait ... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      Rubbish. Have you read any of the laws against theft lately? Let's see. California Penal Code section 484. up to about section 500 cover theft. They're not only far more precise (in that they more exactly define what situation they are to be applied toward), but there are exceptions defined, there are interpretative civil procedures codes that are relevant, and so on.

      And all of that stuff is absolute. Are you even listening to what the hell I'm saying? The laws are absolute, but that does not mean they have no exceptions. It means that the exception must be codified into law before someone can utilize it.

      Pure bullshit! I don't know who's been upmodding you, but they obviously know nothing about the law. The judicial process is all about arguing exceptions to it that don't exist before you argue them. That's how precedent is created. Of course you can argue exceptions that don't exist!

      In the vast majority of cases, bullshit. The judiciary is merely ascertaining whether someone broke the law, not whether what they did should be illegal. In the cases where they are doing the latter, it's only because some meta-law (like the Constitution, say) gives them authority to do so.

      Again, rubbish. People have known the Earth was round for millennia; as long as we've had civilization and codified rational thought.

      Who the fuck cares if one person knows it? For a very, very long time, almost everyone except some men with radical crazy ideas was convinced the world was flat. That is my point. You're saying that the history of the judiciary proves your point, I'm saying that your evidence is irrelevant, as it is perfectly possible for large groups of people to be wrong over long periods of time.

      I never said the constitution was not binding upon the government.

      Bull! That is EXACTLY what you've been saying the ENTIRE time. The Constitution is just a guideline, and the government can break it whenever it feels it necessary.

      Neither of those governments are any more tyrannical than the government of the United States, and some might say, in fact, that they are less so.

      Considering the number of stories we see here about the UK turning into a 1984-like state, they're about the weakest example you could have picked.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    156. Re:Just wait ... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Well. Even in military. If you take their comrades to jail over bullshit and make them poor so that they start to starve and oppress basic needs of existence, they will flip out and revolt. And there needs only to be one higher level military guy who takes his whole division (I'm not good in military terms. You know what i mean.) with him, to get thousands on the other side.

      Well... If the revolution comes, I hope it's not that much of an epic fail as in some 3rd-world countries, where the head of the revolution imitates the last guy... only worse. :\
      Or is bought by another government, like in the Ukraine (The one was bought by the USA, the other one by Russia. Nobody cared about what the people want.)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    157. Re:Just wait ... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      I guess it's like in the Netherlands, where the police was/is the drug dealer. (Before it became legal. I don't know how it's today.)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    158. Re:Just wait ... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Either that, or the bread and circuses will just keep up until there's a bloody violent collapse.

      Which would still be better than the status quo.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    159. Re:Just wait ... by nuttycom · · Score: 1

      Either that, or the bread and circuses will just keep up until there's a bloody violent collapse.

      Which would still be better than the status quo.

      But would it be better than measured, gradual change for the better? I think not.

    160. Re:Just wait ... by I+cant+believe+its+n · · Score: 1

      Moreover, get off your high horse. There are plenty of governments across this planet with no constitutions at all, or with constitutions that grant the government the power to ignore them at will (The United Kingdom and Canada, respectively, for those of you not keeping track).

      I see your point, if someone else is lacking these rights, shouldn't americans as well? The chinese are also ignoring their constitution (just in case you wheren't keeping track) They seem to be doing fine.

      Neither of those governments are any more tyrannical than the government of the United States, and some might say, in fact, that they are less so.

      Yes, I agree, but does that not suggest that americans should keep their guns?

      --
      She made the willows dance
    161. Re:Just wait ... by sir+fer · · Score: 1

      No, there is an oppressive price on gasoline not an oppressive tax, atleast not in the United States.

      What's the difference at the end of the day? Benjamin Franklin wrote: -"the refusal of King George III to allow the colonists to operate an honest money system which freed the common man from the clutches of the money manipulators was probably the prime cause of the revolution.", and I think if anyone knew why the revolution happened, it would be him.

      --
      Debian FTW ;o)
    162. Re:Just wait ... by bky1701 · · Score: 1

      Until they just block all HTTP from "unauthorized servers", which is pretty much the basis of net non-neutrality in the first place.

      What is coming is not something we can face from out basements. There is rarely a technical solution to a problem purposefully created by those who control you.

    163. Re:Just wait ... by Buelldozer · · Score: 1

      HOLY CRAP! The slope your describing isn't just slippery it's pointed straight down and slathered with grease!

      What you just stated is so frightening that it makes me shiver. Your interpretation is a rocket sled into REAL tyranny.

    164. Re:Just wait ... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I personally live in Canada so what happens in the USA does have a certain effect on me, at least until we can get that idiot Harper out and fine a government with the balls to stand up for itself.

      But if you do, you're within easy reach from the US, and you have oil. Just saying.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    165. Re:Just wait ... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Is it possible to prevent this by preparing, planning, and mitigating? Sure. Will we do that? Not enough to save everyone.

      I thought you people believed in Darwin. Evolution works because species grow until they reach a "balance".

      Now what does a balance mean and what does it NOT mean :

      It does NOT mean policies pushed by lying idiots. In other words a "natural balance" is not a political thing.

      Mathematically you will have a natural balance if about 29% of any given generation dies, either due to violence, or food shortage, or (most likely) both. That's what's called a "natural balance".

      Now let's get one thing straight : if there is any truth at all to evolution, this WILL happen (unless you want to claim that evolution doesn't apply to humans, but I assume you're not). It's only a matter of when and how, and to who it will happen, not if.

      In other words the real bullshit is this :

      Nobody will be safe, and it will all be because douchebags today do their best to convince everyone that the people who are trying to work cooperatively, together, toward a common good are the enemy. You're sowing it, you better well fucking expect to reap it.

      This is idiotic anti-evolutionism. It's "mama I don't want to" cries at the first day of kindergarten.

      The only cooperation evolution really allows for is simple : cooperation in killing "the others" (for all sorts of definitions of "others", but basically once someone is 3 degrees (parents = 1st degree, siblings = 1st degree, nephew = 2nd degree, grandparents = 2nd degree, ...) removed from you they basically got to die.

      Unless you have, well faith ... what else to call it ?, that evolution doesn't apply to humans, there is nothing to do. And there is no-one to blame if you don't have faith. It's just the way it is.

      And yes without faith the prediction is that you're going to lose all your little toys (and I mine), and we're going to pick up weapons and attempt to kill eachother once oil starts to go down significantly.

      But then again, blaming is a very human, and very counterproductive activity, so just blame it on Bush. The Lord knows everyon else does, so if that makes you feel better, just blame him. Or republicans (I imagine you'll have to switch to McCain at some point, right ?).

      The real problem is your ideology (shared by too many ohers). And yes, this problematic ideology is atheism. Unless something overrides Darwin, we won't even try to save ourselves.

    166. Re:Just wait ... by Elldallan · · Score: 1

      The difference would be that taxes is something the government can do something about, the local prices of a global product is something that would be very hard to affect except maybe through subsidizing the price though thats something I doubt the US government could afford at the moment due to the Iraq war and all that.

      The only price the government might be able to influence is any nationally produced oil.

    167. Re:Just wait ... by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      You're mixing up evolution, or the process of speciation through natural selection, and population growth. I feel safe assuming you're a creationist, since you use all the standard issue discovery institute talking points.

      Your repeated invocation of "natural balance," which as near as I can tell is some kind of pet food supply company and/or a spa in Brooklyn, in relation to Evolution, simply shows that you do not know what you are talking about. You are moderately good at memorizing and repeating things, and due to the fundamentally broken education system you've probably been rewarded for all or most of your life for doing so. Sadly, your inability to actually critically think about or otherwise process information makes trying to argue with you akin to trying to shove the shaving creme back into the spray can. Annoying, messy, and ultimately pointless.

      On the off chance that your brain isn't an unrecoverable pile of Dittos and prayerful supplications to some asschewing character from popular fiction, here's a rundown of where you fail:

      Cooperation has evolutionary advantages. See the bacteria in your gut for a good example.

      Religion causes more conflict than any other topic because it ultimately can not be reasoned out. Religionists lose every argument they begin about their particular popular fiction because its just some arbitrary shit they made up. Living without religion and arguing ethics and morality from first principle values is the basis of successful civilization, as harmony can be found when people declare values, argue to principles from those values, and then try to find ways to cooexist without conflict.

      Genetic evolution can be supplanted, guided, and even overridden when sufficiently complex memetic processes become involved. Religion is only one of the memetic processes that are capable of doing so, and one of the least useful for a long term open, free, and peaceful society.

      Finding fault and assigning blame are important steps into identifying and rectifying problems. Failure to recognize this is, in fact a problem. Without blame, there can be no punishment, and without punishment many animals will not be sufficently incentivized to behave correctly. In fact, casting blame is one of the fundamental guiding principles of all of the Judeo-Chrislamic faiths. See Judgement day, eternal punishment, etc.

      I'd flesh this all out a bit more, but then I'd be doing your homework for you. Please learn to reason so that we can have a proper argument. I suggest you start with some google searches.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    168. Re:Just wait ... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      So you believe that making a law eliminated behavior? I would suggest you are overlooking enforcement. Oh wait, I forgot, we eliminated recreational drug use by making that illegal too.

    169. Re:Just wait ... by Arrak+Esterhazy · · Score: 1

      In that case, we just go back to Sneakernet.

    170. Re:Just wait ... by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      Well, true enough. So how did a move to centralized government eliminate slavery, then?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    171. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a retarded analogy. Slavery is much more than a behavior. It is a legal definition of property. You don't think moving from a society that condoned the buying and selling of people as property to one that condemned it was a huge step towards eliminating slavery? Instead of punishing escaped "slaves" today, we punish their "owners". In quotes, b/c there is no such thing as slavery in America today. We have "false imprisonment" and "kidnapping" and some other CRIMES that have a similar practical outcome as slavery. But you can't own another person. But you see that as merely a semantic difference, huh? Too much recreational drug use, I'm guessing

    172. Re:Just wait ... by jZnat · · Score: 1

      And Europe has a much better public transportation system along with better city layouts that don't encourage hour-long commutes in order to have a job. In the US, however, this is a big problem.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    173. Re:Just wait ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      one of the things the DOJ will go after first is porn.

      in case you're retarded, porn has been one of the primary driving forces behind the acceptance of basically every huge leap in media technology from VCRs to the internet.

      if you take our porn and/or the means to get at it, we'll figure out a workaround...

    174. Re:Just wait ... by flex941 · · Score: 1

      If enough people vote for nobody then this might make all the difference. Really, what's good of president that has the support of (for example) 11% of population when 80% of the population didn't want to see none of the proposed candidates at the wheel.

  2. Richard Clarke by jmorris42 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Well I wouldn't exactly haev a lot of confidence in anything Richard Clarke says. Besides being dimwitted enough to be supporting Obambi (says a lot about how serious he considers the threat of Islamic terrorism doesn't it....) he didn't exactly cover himself in glory in the portmortems of 9/11.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Richard Clarke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      -1, lamebait

      Obambi? Seriously? Maybe it isn't Clarke's dimwittedness that you should be concerned about

    2. Re:Richard Clarke by jmorris42 · · Score: 0

      Yes, Obambi. The terrorists will be dancing in the streets when[1] he gets elected. Expect things to get very bad during his single term in office.

      [1] I'm under no illusions on the when part. McCain has no more chance of defeating Obama than Dole had vs Clinton in '96. Primogeniture is a bad way of picking nominees, wish the Republicans could figure that out.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    3. Re:Richard Clarke by cayenne8 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "Yes, Obambi. The terrorists will be dancing in the streets when[1] he gets elected. Expect things to get very bad during his single term in office."

      I'm not Obama fan, but, really.....are you that concerned about a terrorist attack?

      I'm really not...I feel I have less a chance getting clipped by a terrorist attack, than I am about having my own continuously paranoid government infringing on my rights and privacy here in the US. I feel most of the things they have been doing, are highly misdirected....why aren't they concentrating more on shipping containers and the like where a nuke might likely come in? Stuff like that, rather than impeding my right to travel without a RealID, or strip search before getting on a plane, etc....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  3. Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need to start encrypting basic stuff. We need a full encryption suite built into Firefox and available for other browsers to include right away. We need a more redundant DNS and we need public sites for checking against the scrubbing of news sites.

    Unless we do this, the terrorists will win.

    1. Re:Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      We need to start encrypting basic stuff.

      Until the US government demand ISPs start blocking all encrypted traffic that doesn't have an SSL certificate provided by 'authorised' suppliers.

      Remember that to stop someone doing something, non-essential: not eating or breathing, you just need to make it hard enough to be not worth their while. An example of this is the Chinese firewall, people know the government are watching, so they don't bother looking at anything that isn't authorised. In this case, if nerds start demanding everyone encrypt everything, they'll be ignored. Who can be arsed to purchase an SSL certificate, just to run a small Web site, or IM their friends?

    2. Re:Encryption by lordofwhee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know, there are other forms of encryption besides SSL that don't require a certificate of any kind.

      Anyway, when this becomes an issue (trust me, it's a 'when'), who signed the certificate will be totally ignored, because the only way to get a certificate that isn't self-signed would be through the .gov, defeating the purpose.

    3. Re:Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh...a lot of my non-nerd friends have asked me about encryption. Why pay for SSL unless you are required to by the state?

      PGP supports non-broken keylengths. I suspect the government can crack one if they try hard enough, but if it actually became standard?

      Nothing stops them from blocking it of course. But encryption is easy and free.

  4. A video?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i know we are in the web2.0 thing, but please, link at least a transcript, so i don't waste ten minutes of my life listening a crappy recording.

  5. Well gee... by ZarathustraDK · · Score: 1

    Fear makes people more likely accept restrictions on their freedoms, news at 11.

    --
    If you quote this signature there'll be 72 copies of Windows ME waiting for you in Heaven.
  6. So, who originally wrote it ? by mbone · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Who wrote it ? In which administration ? Curious minds want to know.

    It was obvious to me in 2001 that this had been previously prepared, and it astounded me that anyone would fall for this BS.
    Unfortunately, history indicates they would probably do it again.

    1. Re:So, who originally wrote it ? by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, history indicates they would probably do it again.

      And did it before. Look at the Japanese internment camps after the pearl harbor bombings, they were US citizens who happened to be Japanese. Now it is they are US citizens but have internet access. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_internment_camp

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:So, who originally wrote it ? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      The NSA Probably have had this, or similar documents for years.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:So, who originally wrote it ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno who wrote it but i'm pretty sure this was the template

    4. Re:So, who originally wrote it ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Who wrote it ? In which administration ? Curious minds want to know.

      It was obvious to me in 2001 that this had been previously prepared, and it astounded me that anyone would fall for this BS.
      Unfortunately, history indicates they would probably do it again.

      Before he became the self-promoting book-selling prophet of 9/11, Richard Clarke was raising the alarm of a "digital Pearl Harbor":

      http://archives.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/12/08/security.summit.ap/

      U.S. cyberspace chief warns of 'digital Pearl Harbor'

      December 8, 2000
      Web posted at: 1:52 PM EST (1852 GMT)

      REDMOND, Washington (AP) -- The nation's top cyberspace official Friday called on the next president to shore up the government's computer security to prevent a "digital Pearl Harbor."

      "What this presidential election year showed is that statistically improbable events can occur," Richard Clarke of the National Security Council said at a Microsoft-organized conference.

      "It may be improbable that cyberspace can be seriously disrupted, it may be improbable that a war in cyberspace can occur, but it could happen."

      On coming to office, the next president will find that several nations have created information-warfare units, Clarke said.

      "These organizations are creating technology to bring down computer networks. Some are doing reconnaissance today on our networks, mapping them," he said.

      Clarke, appointed by President Clinton as the first national coordinator for security, infrastructure protection and counterterrorism, spoke at the SafeNet 2000 summit, which brought together computer experts to discuss ways of improving Internet security and privacy.

      Clarke said the next president should appoint a government-wide chief information officer, with authority to oversee all the government's computer security, and whose appointment would need confirmation from Congress.

      He also said the Clinton administration is creating a scholarship program to increase the number of government computer security experts. Students who study computer security would receive $25,000 a year in return for each year they agree to work for the government.

      Another way to improve security throughout the Internet is to create secure lines of communication between the technology industry and the government, Clarke said. That way, they could share information about hackers and viruses without worrying about the public learning about it.

      Clarke said the plan would require an exemption from the Freedom of Information Act.

      Others at the conference expressed the same notion. Harris Miller, president of the Information Technology Association of America, said that a nonprofit organization of 18 companies would be created early next year to share information.

      "You'll want to have the ability to share high-level intelligence on an anonymous basis, without believing it's going to show up in an AP article the next day," Miller said.

      Copyright 2000 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

      RELATED STORIES:

              U.S. official: Superpower status risks cyberattack
              August 25, 2000
              U.S. government agencies shape cyberwarning strategy
              August 15, 2000
              Hackers are naughty and nice at Def Con
              August 3, 2000
              Report finds progress in cybersecurity in private sector
              December 6, 2000
              Industry group: Security key to 'next generation' Web
              November 8, 2000

    5. Re:So, who originally wrote it ? by dogeatery · · Score: 1

      There's a really interesting theory called "shock democracy" and also another called "disaster capitalism," whereby governments take advantage of the collective shock and fear caused by disasters and use that time to push through the most painful forms of legislation, either out of perceived necessity or because nobody's paying attention. This is particularly true for economic "reform" and was conceived by Milton Friedman, who had Nixon's ear. The Patriot Act definitely falls into this category

    6. Re:So, who originally wrote it ? by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      A naive Kaspersky engineer who didn't really know how sold out the IT media is made a huge mistake mentioning such a possibility years ago.

      Also if I remember correct, it was pre 9/11. I remember even the fact that company being run by Russians (so it should have no clue?!) racist-like stuff brought up.

      Look to storm worm and imagine what would have happened if it wasn't owned/run by spammer gangs. Or just imagine if someone else than white-hat Kaminsky figured the DNS thing.

      I would be extremely glad if I could find the original news mentioning the conference but as you know, searching "kaspersky internet crash" like stuff doesn't really make sense ;)

  7. And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by unity100 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    in u.s.

    remember what happened to u.s. tourism after that patriot act shit was dropped in the congress ? u.s. tourism sector NEVER recovered from it.

    excuse me but the rest of the world cant take that kind of shit from u.s. again. if that happens, we all will just create another internet, complete with its root dnses (possibly in brussels), and get done with it. and then u.s. broadband, backbone providers can shove the fibers they laid in those senators asses. because they will be good for only doing that afterwards.

    1. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah! Let's make our own Internet. With blackjack. And hookers. In fact, forget the Internet.

      And the blackjack.

      Ahh, screw the whole thing.

    2. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by oldhack · · Score: 4, Informative

      remember what happened to u.s. tourism after that patriot act shit was dropped in the congress ? u.s. tourism sector NEVER recovered from it.

      The US tourism is recovering now, due to the falling dollar.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    3. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by natedubbya · · Score: 3, Informative

      Umm, the u.s. tourism sector did recover. Now that the dollar is so low against the euro, european tourism is way up. Don't use the word "never", and check your facts.

    4. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Why I went to the US this year just so they'd take my old laptop from me. I needed a good excuse to buy me new one.

      "Honey, they took my computer! Now I'll have to buy a new one for work. Gosh, darn it..."

    5. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still doesn't change the fact that after traveling to dozens of countries on a world trip I have to wait 8 hours going through your stupid security and be fingerprinted.
      Fuck that, never again.

    6. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by Nimey · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why foreigners would want to come visit here, with all the bullshit customs and airport "security" stuff, and the possibility of being mistaken for someone else and getting sent off to be tortured in Syria.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    7. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by oldhack · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hey, we still got some good shit: grand canyon, niagara fall, inner city detroit, compton, burning river, tijuana

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    8. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Only if other countries don't pick up the "great idea" and run with it. If the Patriot Act told us something, they easily do.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    9. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

      Yeah the "u.s. terrorism sector" took a hit after the patriot act. Oh wait ... your talking about the "tourism" sector.

    10. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IIRC, Niagara is in Canada, and the Grand Canyon is in Mexico. Oh, and Tijuana too. And no one wants to see your shitty late-19-century-industrial cities. We have that crap all over the world, they look all the same like ford's cars.

    11. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by Builder · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah? I'm still withholding the $20,000 per year that I used to spend on visits to the US and I know a lot of other people in the same situation.

      Not all of us care enough about the falling dollar to compromise our morals.

    12. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by fprintf · · Score: 1

      The Grand Canyon is perhaps in 'Olde Mexico' but it is very much inside the borders of the current United States. It is only a short helicopter ride from Las Vegas, Nevada... which is hundreds (thousands?) of miles from the U.S./Mexico border itself.

      --
      This post brought to you by your friendly neighborhood MBA.
    13. Re:And that would basically mean the death of I.T. by natedubbya · · Score: 1

      But once you get through the "stupid security", you can travel through 50 states. Last I checked, 50 is alot more than a dozen.

      I don't know why europeans always forget how big the US is, as if the borders between european countries are somehow much more important than a border between two US states. So you can travel from Italy to Germany without a security check. Wow amazing. I can travel from California to Maine without a security check, and last I checked, that's THREE times the distance.

      All this means is that the States have managed to make nice with its stately neighbors, and Europe is only just getting around to it 200+ years after the USA did.

  8. PPP by JustOK · · Score: 2, Funny

    Pay per packet plus lower ping times for people with the "Clear" pass.

    --
    rewriting history since 2109
    1. Re:PPP by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

      Yeah, until someone steals a laptop with all the Clearpass data.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    2. Re:PPP by supernova_hq · · Score: 1

      Then a month later you get a letter in the mail saying they've lost a laptop with all your mac addresses in plaintext.

  9. >obvious< by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Your government hates things that it can't control or plausibly threaten to control.

  10. happy to serve uncle sam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The telcos will only be too happy to help. Obtaining immunity obviously isn't a problem.

  11. the quote at bottom right is appropriate enough: by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

    "Inform all the troops that communications have completely broken down."

    --

    "Piter, too, is dead."

  12. Think so? by Panaqqa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And what happens if ISPs are ordered to block all encrypted packets for which the DHS doesn't hold the keys in escrow? And phone companies are ordered to block all unauthorized modem carriers? Difficult to get around restrictive "cyber laws" when the government can exercise control over the infrastructure.

    1. Re:Think so? by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      And what happens if ISPs are ordered to block all encrypted packets for which the DHS doesn't hold the keys in escrow?

      You use encryption that doesn't *look* encrypted. Slower, but that's the way of it.

    2. Re:Think so? by mrogers · · Score: 1

      Difficult to get around restrictive "cyber laws" when the government can exercise control over the infrastructure.

      Then we'll have to manage without infrastructure: neighbourhood wireless networks, sneakernet with Bluetooth phones and memory sticks, password-protected zip files sent over "authorized" IM networks. Maybe it's not exactly the bright cyber-future William Gibson had in mind but it still beats watching TV.

    3. Re:Think so? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      And what happens if ISPs are ordered to block all encrypted packets for which the DHS doesn't hold the keys in escrow?

      And what if an ISP has the balls Qwest showed showed when asked for it's records? Qwest itself could do it again.

      Falcon

    4. Re:Think so? by ncryptd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      what happens if ISPs are ordered to block all encrypted packets for which the DHS doesn't hold the keys in escrow?

      Not gonna happen. This would be insanely computationally expensive. Real-time DPI hardware for an OC-192 link costs about $10K (IIRC), and that's just for unencrypted packets. Checking against a list of RSA, AES, etc. keys for each connection would require an astronomical amount of computing power, and that's just for one backbone.

    5. Re:Think so? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you send your un-escrowed packets thru encrypted on the outside with an escrowed key. Can probably create an entire character to word dictionary, throw in the dictionary, all it gets you is the unescrowed crypto-text, and then it really looks like a large to extremely large plaintext encrypted with escrowed keys.

    6. Re:Think so? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The real loss of freedom comes when you make it illegal for people to use unescrowed encryption. You can try to be cute with stenography and onion-routing your way past ISP firewalls, but what if it becomes illegal like in China? Would you risk a prison sentence trying to circumvent government restrictions? Even if you consider the odds of getting caught on par with getting sued by the recording industry, the penalty would be a lot higher. Thank god(s) we still have free speech and can go complain about these things.

    7. Re:Think so? by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Just 'cos they have the key in escrow doesn't mean they'll check more than a tiny, tiny portion of all the traffic. I mean, for more than that they'd have to redirect all internet traffic to a location where the escrow keys are available, and that's not going to happen. So you just put your *real* encrypted channel inside an escrowed VPN. Double encryption is no big deal with current PC hardware.

    8. Re:Think so? by mounthood · · Score: 1

      Do they control the carrier pigeons??

      --
      tomorrow who's gonna fuss
  13. Frequent topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These guys often cover cyber terrorism in their macro-economic section on security. Other readers may find interesting.

    AG.

  14. Would this be enough to make us move? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Over the past eight years or so, I've occasionally ranted, and heard other people rant, about how I/we were just one more liberties-reduction away from moving to Canada, Europe, Antarctica, etc. But we generally just grumble for a while and then get used to the new "normal".

    Is this any different? Are there any of us for whom this really *is* the straw that breaks the camel's back?

    I just got back from Austria, and I've got to say, it's pretty fsck'ing nice over there.

    1. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Bieeanda · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Insert that old 'First they came for the...' thing here. People are creatures of habit and comfort. Unless someone comes into their house, brandishing a rifle or a club, most aren't going to react on that kind of a scale. They'll talk about it, but the logistics of moving out of your home country are extremely difficult to work through unless you're already mobile or have been planning such a thing for years.

    2. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by russotto · · Score: 1

      Over the past eight years or so, I've occasionally ranted, and heard other people rant, about how I/we were just one more liberties-reduction away from moving to Canada, Europe, Antarctica, etc. But we generally just grumble for a while and then get used to the new "normal".

      The first problem, even for those who are serious, is that those other places tend to either have similar restrictions, other restrictions which aren't similar but are just as bad or worse, or look ready to pass one or the other or both. The second problem is that immigration is difficult, particularly if you don't speak the language.

      Most people, though, will tolerate nearly anything, provided it doesn't happen to them. And a good number will, even if it happens to them, still tolerate it and assume they deserved it. Orwell got it right; the future of government is a boot stomping on a human face, forever.

    3. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by tylernt · · Score: 1

      Over the past eight years or so, I've occasionally ranted, and heard other people rant, about how I/we were just one more liberties-reduction away from moving to Canada, Europe, Antarctica, etc. But we generally just grumble for a while and then get used to the new "normal".

      Mainly it's the lack of anyplace better that's holding me here. I've yet to find a place that combines the equivalent of 1st, 2nd, 4th, and 5th amendment rights in sufficient quantities.

      If you know of any libertarian paradises though, please let me know.

      --
      DRM 'manages access' in the same way that a prison 'manages freedom'
    4. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by a_real_bast... · · Score: 1

      Try Finland; while the tax burden will make any libertarian's head explode, they seem to cover the specified amendments okay. They also have a history of being thoroughly uncomfortable people to pick a fight with (see "Winter War" for people doing to Russia what Russia would do to the Nazis). Plus, those taxes pay for nifty things like under-street heating.

      --
      You're making me think. You won't like me when I'm thinking.
    5. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      've occasionally ranted, and heard other people rant, about how I/we were just one more liberties-reduction away from moving .... I just got back from Austria, and I've got to say, it's pretty fsck'ing nice over there.

      Austria? Yeah, good choice. It's not like fascism had any roots there.

    6. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > they seem to cover the specified amendments...

      Oh really. Seems they have made it to gun licensing already, confiscation always comes next. Hate Speech laws are already on their books and arrests are being made so forget free speech there.

      And thus the problem. The US is sliding down the slippery slope to a Worker's Paradise but everyone else seems to be ahead of us leaving nowhere to run.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    7. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      I'm leaving this country as soon as I graduate college. You lot can all get screwed together.

    8. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      Australia? Australia even censors video games; you can't legally sell certain video games over there. Sounds great!

      Grass is always greener...

    9. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Opportunist · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      *sigh*

      Austria.

      Please do me a favor and tell the people here you're not from the US, so we don't have to put up with the stereotypical "US citizen knowing jack about the rest of the world" posts.

      Ain't it interesting that everyone knows about Germany but so many people have no clue about Austria? The US occupied parts of it from 45 to 55, for crying out loud, or was that just part of Germany for all you were concerned, since the language is (almost) the same and Germany occupied Austria 38-45, so technically it was all Germany when you got there?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    10. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      Where are you gonna go? It's not like France is going to host you as some bullshit political refugee in a system you refuse to participate in.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    11. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Ha'eretz shel ha'am sheli: M'dinat Yisrael.

      No, seriously, I'm not some kind of hippy. To prove my point: The Bush Administration is a symptom, not the problem. I'm leaving even if Obama gets elected.

    12. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      Well good luck with that. I don't speak Hebrew, but if you're headed for Israel, that's a whole new level of conservative oppression waiting for ya.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    13. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by HungWeiLo · · Score: 2, Informative

      The draw may have already been broken...or at least someone thinks it will be soon...

      You will be taxed on all your assets if you give up your US citizenship

      . This little-known provision was passed as part of the Heroes Act of 2008 on 6/17. Looks like Congress foresees a mass exodus of Americans at some point in the foreseeable future - at least the ones that matter.

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    14. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by bscott · · Score: 1

      rant, about how I/we were just one more liberties-reduction away from moving to Canada, Europe, Antarctica, etc. But we generally just grumble for a while and then get used to the new "normal".

      Is this any different? Are there any of us for whom this really *is* the straw that breaks the camel's back?

      I reached the point of "disgust" long ago, but it took the birth of my son to actually force me to go through the enormous rigamarole involved with moving to another country. (fortunately, I'd had the foresight to marry an Australian, so we ended up somewhere nice...)

      It takes enormous time, lots of money and sustained effort to actually get a residency visa, arrange for shipping your crap overseas, and then re-establish your life - job, home, car, etc. I don't see any single example of political malware triggering that sort of thing for most people. No matter how dumb you think your politicians are, they're smart enough to introduce the concentration camps slowly, while distracting you with shiny things, car crashes and sex scandals.

      I miss my home and hope to return someday; I also want my son to have full advantage of his dual citizenship and be comfortable in both cultures as he grows up. But I don't want to trust the educational, medical and political system of the U.S. for his crucial formative years. So I now live in a country where booze prices are 4x higher and there's nothing resembling NewEgg...

      --
      Perfectly Normal Industries
    15. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      I've moved out over 5 years ago and to be honest, seeing how my last trip to the states went, I won't be coming back.

    16. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but the logistics of moving out of your home country are extremely difficult to work through unless you're already mobile or have been planning such a thing for years.

      4 years ago, I moved my wife and 4 month old daughter to the US. 2 months ago, we moved back.

      The second time is easier, but the first time required about 2 months planning, not years.

      The US issues 65,000 H1-B visas a year. If it was 'extrememly difficult'' to move, this number would be lower.

    17. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by fprintf · · Score: 1

      Good on ya mate for making the move. As a dual citizenship holder myself (United Kingdom by birth, United States by naturalization), I will tell you that it is somewhat overrated. Apart from being able to get in the shorter customs line at the airport, having citizenship from a country closely aligned politically with the U.S. does not prove to be a bonus elsewhere.

      I keep my U.S. passport current and travel on it. However if I were to travel on my British passport I'd get the same reactions as when I travel on my U.S. passport. There are few places in this world that recognize any difference between the two. I suspect, unless things change between our countries in the next 20 years, that your son will find the same. If things do change, however, it is very nice to think you have options.

      --
      This post brought to you by your friendly neighborhood MBA.
    18. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just got back from Australia, and I've got to say, it's pretty fsck'ing nice over there.

      There, fixed.

    19. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would've left a long time ago except for a few minor details.... medical and age! Just as in pre-Hitler days, there are people here who would leave given the opportunity, but are destined to just sit, watch, cast their useless votes and hope for the best.

      Countries that aren't accustomed to treating and discarding their populations like rubbish, usually have restrictions on who can enter; with age usually being one of those restrictions. You can't blame those countries for wanting new citizens to contribute to their societies before being granted the full rights of citizenship.

      Unfortunately, though I always thought our country would improve with age (and still hope it will), the last 8 years confirm that I stayed to long. To have sat and watched all 3 branches of government tow the party line against our Constitution, Bill of Rights and International law well......

    20. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Have you ever actually been there, Mr. "Conservative Oppression"?

    21. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are some liberties reductions away from Europe, if you think of Europe as only the UK.

      I'd say US is already closer to China or Russia. Liberty-wise, you started creeping backwards at about the same time as Eastern Europe started leaping forward.

    22. Re:Would this be enough to make us move? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you think they wouldn't pass similar laws in those other place as well, eventually? After 9/11 many western governments eagerly followed suite, because the same people who gave you the Patriot Act in the US also exist in other countries and governments.

      If something major goes down on the Internet, which prompts the passing of this i-9-11 Patriot Act, something like this will come into effect in many other countries as well.

      I wrote about that here.

  15. Godwin Jr's Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    All sufficiently long forum threads about a policy where the US government might become involved shall include at least one reference to 9/11 and/or Al Qaida.

    1. Re:Godwin Jr's Law by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 1

      Except that unlike Nazis, current US government policy is largely driven by 9/11 and/or al Qaeda, so the reference is much more apt.

      --
      If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
    2. Re:Godwin Jr's Law by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      Except that unlike Nazis, current US government policy is largely driven by 9/11 and/or al Qaeda, so the reference is much more apt.

      Not quote. Current US government policy is entirely driven by the military/oil/industrial complex, with 9/11 and/or al Qaeda used as the EXCUSE for the destruction of civil liberties in exchange for something that looks superficially like security. Big difference.

    3. Re:Godwin Jr's Law by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 1

      Semantic games.

      You can say that the policy is driven by the military industrial complex, with 9/11 and al Qaeda as the excuse. I can say that the policy is driven by 9/11 and al Qaeda, with the military industrial complex overseeing and guiding. Ultimately it's the same thing.

      --
      If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
    4. Re:Godwin Jr's Law by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      It's hardly the same thing. One is a reaction to an event or organization, the other is a group of people in power to are just looking for an excuse - any excuse - to crack down on society so they can make more profit.

    5. Re:Godwin Jr's Law by Adambomb · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nah, this is plain old Godwin.

      Any story that involves the Patriot Act will have it compared to the Order of the Reich President for the Protection of People and State.

      Course, its an apt comparison but still holds with the original law.

      --
      Ice Cream has no bones.
    6. Re:Godwin Jr's Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same way in any country." -- Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering, Nazi founder of the Gestapo, Head of the Luftwaffe

    7. Re:Godwin Jr's Law by Jack9 · · Score: 1

      This is Quirk's Exception. boo.

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
  16. depressing by ocularDeathRay · · Score: 1

    hey everybody...
    If I ignore this issue will it just go away? I am a typical American insensitive clod, so I was hoping I could use my usual tactics on this one...

    excuse me, I hafta go watch some baseball.

    --
    Obama is a twitter sock puppet
  17. And that would mean the death of I.T. Outsourcing by Culture20 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're joking, right? This would mean the end of Outsourcing U.S. I.T. jobs to India and other places. Someone in the U.S. would need to pick up the slack. There would be more I.T. security (contract) jobs; someone has to implement the new restrictions.

  18. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Fear makes people more likely accept restrictions on their freedoms, news at 11.

    I'm a brit, born in the seventies. The IRA was part of my life.

    Way, Way, Way back before 911 us brits lived with terrorism on a daily basis. Terrorism that was funded via NORAID.

    My grandfather nerely died in the early 60s from an IRA bomb in the centre of London during a national exhibition.

    In central London, for as long as I have known we have never had refuse bins on our underground system, the reason being 'because if we did, the IRA would put bombs in them'

    wtf is going on here?

    I can't believe how low we have fallen. Why is the current threat any different from the old threat from the IRA that we faced. (that our friends in the USA funded)

    Fsckwits

    1. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Fsckwits

      root$ fsck wits
      BAD SUPER BLOCK

    2. Re:Anonymous Coward by a_real_bast... · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't have posted AC; you deserve a karma boost for that one. ",)

      --
      You're making me think. You won't like me when I'm thinking.
    3. Re:Anonymous Coward by Bob9113 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I can't believe how low we have fallen. Why is the current threat any different from the old threat from the IRA that we faced.

      Simple: Marketing. Your fascist pricks in the 70s didn't go to the same cut-throat business schools as our fascist pricks in the 00's. Our modern fascists are vastly more educated in the art of enhancing and capitalizing on irrational fear.

    4. Re:Anonymous Coward by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Funny mods don't boost karma.

    5. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, Islamic militants are more than a bit less reasonable than the IRA was. I'm not saying the IRA were/are nice people or something, but compare and contrast 1970s IRA leader Martin McGuinness (that video is him being interviewed by renowned interview-asshole Jeremy Paxman...) and Bin Laden, say.

      Simple test: If the USA and Britain pulled out of the Middle East tomorrow, would Islamic terrorism stop? Hell no. The very existence of western scientific rationalism is a threat to those people. If Britain pulled out of Northern Ireland, would the IRA terrorism have stopped? Yes, duh.

      The IRA just wanted Northern Ireland under Irish rule rather than British. That is all. They didn't want to convert the world to extreme forms of Islam, bring down allegedly-freemason-run western capitalism (well, they tended to be left-wing, but not completely crazy), or any of that nonsense.

    6. Re:Anonymous Coward by Puffy+Director+Pants · · Score: 1

      Why is the current threat any different from the old threat from the IRA that we faced. (that our friends in the USA funded)

      Well, I'd say that the Irish terrorist are, as a whole, a little less scary than the Muslim fanatics who will go forth with a smile on their face because they know they're going to Paradise. The IRA members don't have quite that level of eagerness to die. They're still afraid of going to Hell perhaps?

      Plus the conflict has been around longer, centuries even, which means it isn't something entirely unfamiliar. Might be there's a bit of psychological adjustment to it.

    7. Re:Anonymous Coward by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's really simple - very few people appriciate something they've always had and never had to fight for. I've never had my civil rights violated, I've never feared the government would come and arrest me if they didn't like me. If someone started to blow up people like me, getting the choice between liberty and security (even if that was an either-or) would be a lousy option. I'd like to turn back time to when I was neither restrained or in danger so I can have my cake and eat it too.

      The fall to totalitarianism is a slow one, despite a few things pointed out here and there I don't think we're quite in DDR with STASI and Gestapo just yet. Do you really understand what it means to be without your civil liberties if you haven't experienced it? The founding fathers knew what it meant. Those who fought in the american civil war too, but they are long dead and buried. Yes, I know soldiers went and died in WWII and Korea and Vietnam and Iraq and whereever, but the US people hasn't lived with occupation, war or oppression for close to 150 years now.

      I don't claim to be a stellar example, I have some second-hand understanding from talking to people that lived through WWII and the nazi occupation. But I think I at least got a glimpse of what it means not to have the rights I take so for granted. Almost the entire bill of rights is about protecting the people from the government. I really do not think people understand what they do when they insist the government protect them from terrorists, which obviously hide among the people. It seems all good sense of why the government was chained in the first place has been thrown overboard.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    8. Re:Anonymous Coward by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The terror back then was aimed at you, a person. The terror of today is aimed at high finance and business.

      The IRA (together with ETA and Hammas and all the other "old school terrorists") weren't interested in hitting some high profile targets. They just blew up their bombs in trash bins, in (school) busses, in pubs, all places a high profile target (i.e. some rich person) can easily avoid, since the target was the common man. The idea behind terror, you should fear it.

      Today's terror has higher aims. There's a reason those planes hit the towers and not some apartment complex. The target was commerce. When a schoolbus explodes, nobody that counts cares. It hits you, your kids, but never him. His kids go to a private school and he has someone drive them there. When his buildings collapse and with them his business, it does hurt him, even if he himself doesn't get hurt, but even that's no longer out of the question since he is the target.

      See the difference, and why one is important and the other one isn't?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    9. Re:Anonymous Coward by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Doesn't make general sense, though. When I look at the recent development in Poland, it's not much different from the development in other countries. Now, the Poles at least should remember the times of a lack of personal freedom, injustice and standing up against an oppressor. They should remember the times of Jaruzelski and Solidarnosc. It's only been about 20 years for crying out loud!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    10. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Uh. Check your history. Your thesis seems iffy, almost backwards.

      The IRA merrily targetted high-profile commercial financial targets like the London Stock Exchange itself and other parts of the City, Manchester city centre, the docklands, etc. Doing billions of british pounds of damage for each bomb(truck-sized, btw, typically about a tonne of low-yield explosives), and killing surprisingly few civilians (warnings to evacuate usually telephoned in in advance).

      Whereas the islamic terrorists in Britain have managed to kill tens of "common man" people on the tube and bus and did relatively little commercial damage. The WTC attacks in the USA are another matter, but it seems highly likely the US government wanted that "reichstag" type event to justify fascism.

    11. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every one of you should first read the book of the great Webster Tarpley "911 Synthetic Terror". Available at Amazon. Then and only then will you understand who we are.

    12. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My grandfather nerely died in the early 60s from an IRA bomb in the centre of London during a national exhibition.

      And my cousin WAS in fact suffocated when he went on hunger strike in a fucking limey prison in 1917. He had been arrested for speaking out anbout bloody Brit-fuck rule in Ireland.

      His son of a bitch jailers didn't want any embarrassment when he went on hunger strike (an ancient and honorable tradition in Celtic culture). So they tried to force-feed him by ramming a tube down his throat. But the incompetent savages only succeeded in killing him.

      Tiocfaidh ar la!

    13. Re:Anonymous Coward by Filip22012005 · · Score: 1

      They didn't want to convert the world to extreme forms of Islam, bring down allegedly-freemason-run western capitalism (well, they tended to be left-wing, but not completely crazy), or any of that nonsense.

      How come you think this is what Islamic fundamentalists want? Is that what your TV told you? I don't speak Arabic, so it's difficult to be really sure what they want, but more objective news sources suggest that Osama bin Laden wants to tear down Middle-Eastern dictators. Because Americans fund the dictators, he's picked a fight with Americans. Knowing that, it's easier to see why they choose the strategies they choose. Why take down the WTC if you want people to convert to your religion? Why release video-messages in Arabic rather than English if you want the whole world to listen? Islamic fundamentalists, while of course quite evil, don't want anything to do with the Western world.

      --
      When the policeman of the tie, rule you violate, hello punishment of the kitty?
    14. Re:Anonymous Coward by eoinmadden · · Score: 1

      "The IRA just wanted Northern Ireland under Irish rule rather than British. That is all. They didn't want to convert the world to extreme forms of Islam" But that is not what British mainstream media reported at the time. They reported that the IRA wanted to enforce communism and republicanism on the whole of Ireland and Britan.

    15. Re:Anonymous Coward by eoinmadden · · Score: 1

      On the other hand the IRA killed far more people in the UK than Islamic terrorists have. So why the disproportionate response?

    16. Re:Anonymous Coward by aproposofwhat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So the Docklands bomb in Feb 1996 wasn't targeted at commerce?

      That's why there's a 'ring of steel' around the City of London - not because of the Islamic threat, but because 12 years ago the IRA set off half a ton of fertiliser, killing two newsagents and putting the wind up the bankers along the way.

      And the 7/7 bombings had no 'higher aims' - they were murder, pure and simple.

      I don't see the evolution of terror attacks in the way that you do - the targets are always targets of opportunity, and the skill levels of the individual terrorists determine the opportunities available.

      Take Brighton, for example - a sophisticated bomb with a very long duration timer, planted by experts.

      Now that was an opportunity generated by the skill and intelligence of the IRA unit responsible - the only error was that they used too little a charge and missed the prime target.

      --
      One swallow does not a fellatrix make
    17. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a brit, born in the seventies. The IRA was part of my life.

      Way, Way, Way back before 911 us brits lived with terrorism on a daily basis. Terrorism that was funded via NORAID.

      I'm Irish, also born in the seventies. The IRA were part of my life, as was the UDF, UFF, RUC etc.

      Way, Way, Way back before any of those groups even existed, the Irish lived with terrorism on a daily basis. Terrorism that was funded _and carried out_ by the British Army, Government and people. So cry me a fucking river about your bombs, the terrorism started hundreds of years before that and didn't stop until after the bombing campaigns. Did the IRA level entire towns? Did troops of IRA men storm in murdering and raping innocent people? Did the IRA take everything you own and make it theirs? Do the IRA still maintain control of any parts of your country?

      Honestly, I hated the British for a long long time (so would you if you had to put up with foreign soldiers sitting behind mounted guns on armoured vans in your street every day). When I got older/wiser you just get on with things and forget about all the crap. But posts from Brits whining about IRA bombs in England, when the atrocities carried out by the brits for 800 fucking years makes anything the IRA did pale in comparison, really piss me off. You havn't a fucking clue, and what you do whine about is your own damn fault.

    18. Re:Anonymous Coward by catenx · · Score: 1

      The Stasi and Gestapo are two excellent examples more so because they are from very recent history. With plenty of other examples of government-done-wrong, meaning oppression of the people, you'd think we could learn from our past. You'd think we could gather a few lessons and progress.

      I believe the wrong lessons are taught in school. While we learn about WWII, aren't we just studying words that might as well be in the sepia-toned irrelevant past. It's more than learning from history though. Clearly the repetition of corruption and oppression stems from something other than lack of knowledge.

    19. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      go forth with a smile on their face because they know they're going to Paradise.

      If we really wanted solve this problem we would try to treat it's root cause rather than it's syptoms, and start treating religion like the delusional disorder it clearly is.

    20. Re:Anonymous Coward by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      You do realize what you're saying, right? That Americans are so gullible they can't differentiate between marketing and information.

      Sadly, I find that to be the truth.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    21. Re:Anonymous Coward by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Bought into the propaganda, have you?

      I bet if westerners pulled out of the middle east tomorrow, and took Israel with them, the Islamic militants would certainly leave the west alone (not that they've actually been attacking us much anyway).

      There'd be a bloodbath in the middle east, of course, but it wouldn't involve us.

    22. Re:Anonymous Coward by edsousa · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward's don't have karma to begin with.

    23. Re:Anonymous Coward by sir+fer · · Score: 1

      Todays terror is STAGED, just like the Reichstag fire.

      Staged to turn you into a fearful jibbering sycophant. How can I say it was staged? Because of the fact that the most powerful military nation in the world was struck by a bunch of alleged rag-tag "terrorists" based in the non-existent cave complexes of Afghanistan, while the USAF and other military forces did nothing for over 2 hours. Because of the fact that building 7 collapsed in a style almost identical with a planned demolition even though it was not hit by a plane. Because I am a physicist and the official story does not make sense in light of well-known and used physical theory...

      --
      Debian FTW ;o)
  19. US Missiles by Pincus · · Score: 1

    2009 - e-9/11 hits
    2010 - i-Patriot Act becomes law
    2013 - Internet as we know it effectively dead
    2014 - High speed satellite provider launches overseas in developed, unfriendly nation (China?)
    2015 - US shoots down privately owned foreign satellites??

    1. Re:US Missiles by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

      A couple weeks later in 2015: China flexes military muscle and knocks down 8 US satellites.

      January 2016, World population: zero.

      4081: World completely back to normal, sans man.

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    2. Re:US Missiles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you forgot

      2016 - PROFIT!!!1one

    3. Re:US Missiles by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

      There won't be an e-9/11. This is just hype. Nothing on the internet can cause thousands of people to die.
      Oh wait, they weren't thinking about people where they?

    4. Re:US Missiles by Pincus · · Score: 1

      Won't you people think of the LOLCATS?!

    5. Re:US Missiles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any disaster powerful enough to make the human species extinct will also cause the extinction of almost all land life and a good chunk of sea life as well. We are intelligent, adaptable, numerous, and widespread. As a species, we're not that easy to kill relative to most other species.

      I doubt we are powerful enough to exterminate all human life "accidentally" by trying to kill each other, even if everyone launches every nuke they've got. Only by intending to wipe out all human life could we make the human species go extinct. Steering a large enough asteroid in our direction would do it, but not much else within our power would.

    6. Re:US Missiles by adri · · Score: 1

      I call bullshit. The increasing amount of related-to-public-infrastructure stuff that has some access to the internet, even temporarily, makes an e-9/11 completely feasible.

      I mean, hell, all it would take is one upset hacker getting an infection vector into say, the local water or electricity company/utility. People scare easily - it'd be possible to deploy something like this to scare the hell out of the populace with minimum physical impact.

      People sometimes forget that you can infect a network without requiring that network to be connected to the internet 24/7; you just need some way to sneak code in behind the lines.

      I'd hate to see what would happen if someone decided to attack the SCADA systems on mine sites via this method; having a small number of mines off-line could trigger an economic disaster.

      It is all completely in the realm of possibility.

    7. Re:US Missiles by chris_mahan · · Score: 1

      Nuclear winter. No food for dozens of years. Existing food supplies contaminated by radiation. Massive changes in the atmosphere (as we all know, of global reach). Disease, pestilence, war.

      See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_winter

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    8. Re:US Missiles by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1
      I remember the August 14 blackout, I don't remember the year exactly, maybe 2003. There was absolutely no

      panic. The government and utilities people said it wasn't a terrorist attack, just a random chain reaction. No one died. The hospitals ran their backup generators, and the people decided to take a walk outside for much needed fresh air and maybe buy some bottled water.

      Attacking refineries, water treatment plants, and/or power plants for a day or two might cause a few stocks to fall. But still no large group of people are going to die. I stand by my assertion that nothing on the internet can kill thousands of people.

      However, if there were a tower built, in which the floors were levitated by the current running through the internet, and if the internet were attacked, I'd agree that a few floors pancaking would probably cause a large number of deaths.

  20. My internet's down Hoss by c0d3r · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There are plenty of places out in the country that does well with little internet. Only major cities that depend on external systems and greedy business people will be impacted.

    1. Re:My internet's down Hoss by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of places out in the country that does well with little internet.

      But the little internet that they use is highly leveraged by farmers to remote survey their crops & farm machinery, to check market price, and a thousand other things.

      Business worked fine without the internet.
      But we've seen that Business + the internet is better.

      The closest analogy I can come up with is giving cell phones to farmers in Africa. They use the phones to check prices in the cities and find out where the best price is for their crop. The farmers make more money which helps to lift them and their families out of a sustenance lifestyle. Yea I know, phones != internet, but they represent the same thing... more information and in a timely fashion.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:My internet's down Hoss by c0d3r · · Score: 1

      Farmers think differently. There is no way they'd depend on the internet for their crops. Just the same reason why they prefer classic pickup trucks without computers.

  21. Re:And that would mean the death of I.T. Outsourci by idontgno · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There would be more I.T. security (contract) jobs; someone has to implement the new restrictions.

    And in fascist police states, selling jackboots to jackboot-less thugs is a growth sector. The jingle in the pocket doesn't make the boot stamping on a face forever any more palatable.

    And, oddly enough, we'd probably still outsource bootmaking. Cuz, you know, face-stomping has to be cost-effective to maximize shareholder value.

    --
    Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  22. Lots of docs, lots of speculation by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The "think tanks" generate many documents and plans, many of which never see daylight. This is part of the normal "what if" analysis or things that might happen and how to deal with them. It is no more suprising that they have a plan ready to drop in place after 9/11 than if they had a plan to drop in to place to quell riots or handle a gas shortage or any other scenario. Apart from disaster management, these plans also have political agendas.

    One major political function of these plans is to have PR: look like you can command decisively and keep the population confident in your abilities. Another is to be able to turn these disasters into an opportunity to pass legislation/budget that the people would normally choke on. GWB played both these cards really well.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Which doesn't really answer the question. There's left leaning thinktanks and right leaning thinktanks, etc. The Bush administration clearly used plans produced by neocon thinktanks, but it's likely that the next whitehouse tenants will be using plans from a different bunch of thinktanks. So the real question is, for each candidate, which group of people does the "thinking" for them, and what have they published so far?

    2. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Exactly, and even if it's not serious maybe they made a training exercise. A plan to attack for example Iran would involve very hot intelligence and very restricted information. So what do you do as a "rookie" exercise? I don't know, maybe make a plan to invade the UK? You got most the figured from NATO and whatnot, so just let them have a go. The truth is that there's very few actually realistic possibilities, so you make something up. You don't send fresh recruits into a live war zone because the "real thing" is the only way to learn either. I wouldn't be surprised if the US has full battle plans for fighting aliens with superior tech just for the hell of it.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    3. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by Mspangler · · Score: 1

      Normal planning exercise. There was a minor scandal several years ago when it leaked that the Pentagon had a plan to invade England. Their counterparts overseas revealed they had a plan to retake the Colonies.

      It's the more cerebral version of a war game. Where would I go first, what would we need, how do we handle logistics. If nothing else, it's a good training exercise. Where do you think Rumsfeld picked up his "unknown unknowns" speech?

      It's not odd that the civilian government also has plans in the filing cabinet. FEMA did not have the right plans in the drawer, and look what happened to them when Katrina hit.

    4. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "think tanks" generate many documents and plans, many of which never see daylight. This is part of the normal "what if" analysis or things that might happen and how to deal with them.

      Then the title for this article is really horrible.

      Lessig Predicts Cyber 9/11 Event, Restrictive Laws

      This suggests that Lawrence Lessig is forewarning us that a 9/11-scale event is going to happen online.

      My title would be something like:

      Think tanks write up documents recommending draconian legislation in the event of a disaster the scale of 9/11

      A more accurate description that really exposes this for a non-story. But, of course, that doesn't drive up ad hits and infuriate readers as much.

      Welcome to Slashdot: FUD for pseudo-intellectuals, editors that suck.

    5. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is not that there are plans, the issue is what those plans say. If you make a contingency plan for a major internet attack that addresses the attack, fine. If you have a plan that uses a major internet attack as an excuse to, um, attack the foundations of the internet, that's evil.

    6. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Excellent point, EmbeddedJanitor, excellent point.

      It is worth noting that on page 930 of that 9/11 Commission Report there is mention made by the Markle Foundation for the "necessity" of a national ID system in America (aren't they already implementing that in the UK - with help from that company that Rumsfeld's monkey, Stephen Cambone, went to???).

      Now many aren't familiar with the "think tank" the Markle Foundation, part of the network of Rockefeller Foundations, which is highly interconnected with the US intel establishment (their members go back and forth, etc.), which is now the privatized US intel establishment.

      Of course, having a national ID system wouldn't have mattered the way 9/11 went down, even assuming one accepts the Bush administration's conspiracy theory....

    7. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      normal "what if" analysis. That's a load of garbage. You know it's an inside job.

    8. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So where was the plan when 'New Orleans' happend?

      Oh wait a second, maybe the plans don't always work. :(

    9. Re:Lots of docs, lots of speculation by kinkos · · Score: 1

      I guess Katrina must have REALLY caught them by surprise...

      --
      Open Source, Open Mind
  23. Paranoid Linux is your friend by thesuperbigfrog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Cory Doctorow's "Little Brother" describes a Linux distro called "Paranoid Linux" which has nice features for this kind of thing. Such as distro is already in the works: http://paranoidlinux.org/

    --
    42
  24. Cyber 9/11? by Darkness404 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What could possibly count as a cyber 9/11? Honestly, other then security holes that need to be patched and some government's website being hacked, there isn't much that can go wrong with the web that isn't already happening or has happened before.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    1. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Fumus · · Score: 1

      That sounds so dirty.
      "Wanna cyber 9/11?"

    2. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here's what you could do:

      1. Set the fecal chloroform counts for the reservoir monitoring systems at max. SCADA + Internet connection + SBO = Good Times.

      2. Set every traffic light to green in all directions (or cycle the lights quickly enough to cause massive accidents)

      3. Disrupt the trunking radio system (used by first responders). It's simple to make one, and only obscurity keeps bad guys from making an undetectable jammer. Worse, P25 (new US government mandate) requires Internet connectivity.

      4. Overload a few older transformers like in Vancouver two weeks ago.

      So what you've got now is the water supply shut off by the sensors, and traffic is so backed up with crashes that the engineers can't get to the site to reset the system. That gives you 2-3 days until people start dying off. Even if you get it fixed in a day, people will fucking panic like Home Depot shoppers in a flyover state.

      The police, paramedics, fire, buses, etc can't co-ordinate anything since their radios aren't working.

      Then the backup power goes out.

      Good times.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    3. Re:Cyber 9/11? by naasking · · Score: 1

      Widespread cell network outages, telecommunication failures like 911 outages, power outages, stock exchange attacks. Need I go on?

    4. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Vexorian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The question is not whether a cyber 9/11 is possible but whether the press can hype it enough to make it look as bad.

      --

      Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
    5. Re:Cyber 9/11? by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > What could possibly count as a cyber 9/11?

      You aren't nearly paranoid enough. Those of us who have thought the unthinkable can see dozens of really nasty possibilities. I'm more amazed that we haven't had a major attack yet. Seems that some parts of the government is actually functioning since we haven't been attacked physically or over the net since 9/11. Sad that the only parts that are still working are the parts nobody can talk about.

      Remember that 9/11 wasn't about killing people, athough that was certainly a goal. The point of terrorism is to terrify civilian populations with the goal of effecting the policy decisions of the government, or to so disrupt a civilization that it can't continue. 9/11 came a lot closer than a lot of people want to admit to achieving that second goal. The world economy tettered on the brink of a total collapse for several weeks. Only a massive tax cut sufficed to jump start the economy, something that can't be repeated all that many times without itself causing serious problems to economic stability.

      So, given the goals of terrorists, what sort of things could they do that would have similar disruptive effects to taking out the most prime block of real estate in the world? What could qualify as a 'cyber 9/11?'

      Number one on my list would be to go for the ultimate prize. Destroy the entire Internet economy. Not wanting to dwell on specifics for obvious reasons, but how hard would it be to destroy public confidence in ecommerce? Think dark thoughts along those lines and you will get scared pretty goddamn fast. Microsoft's chronic insecuity could very well end up destroying our very Civilization.

      Or leverage an Internet attack into a wholesale attack on the banking system. Steal enough credit cards and launch a massive fraud attack right at the peak of Xmas shopping. Does Mastercard & Visa cease operation for a few weeks (and tank themselves and most retailers) or allow the fraud and hope to pick up the pieces without going broke?

      Remember the goal is fear, panic and chaos. Dead people are just one way to create fear, not even the best one since (as they discovered) killing Americans has a nasty tendency to piss us off and cause us to break things.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    6. Re:Cyber 9/11? by mjmeyer · · Score: 1

      * Successfully attack all 13 root name servers simultaneously.
      * Middle-east underwater fiber-seeking backhoes from earlier this year immigrate to USA. (If it happens close to home, it's terrorism!)
      * Something like the Storm worm starts emailing randomly-named child pornography to everybody (everyone's a criminal).

      ...to name a few possibilities. That's probably some hypothetical scenario which eludes me which could lead to a legal requirement to have your private encryption keys on file for the government. Inevitably, the database of private keys would be abused and/or stolen.

    7. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Wanna cyber 9/11?"

      I put on my cloak and wizar^H^H^H^H^H turban.

    8. Re:Cyber 9/11? by garett_spencley · · Score: 1

      Remember the goal is fear, panic and chaos. Dead people are just one way to create fear, not even the best one since (as they discovered) killing Americans has a nasty tendency to piss us off and cause us to break things.

      One theory as to why Bin-Laden / Al-Qaeda attacked the US was because Bin-Laden wanted to wage a long drawn-out war against the US that would cripple their economy much the same way it did the Soviet Union. There's no way that Al-Qaeda could win a war on US soil so they attacked the US, knowing that they would opt for nothing less than war. Al-Qaeda lured the US into Afghanistan where they could slowly bleed them dry over a few years just like they did to the USSR in the 80's.

      Of course they underestimated the US army who pretty much kicked ass in Afghanistan very quickly. It seemed that the US was not going to fall prey. That is, of course, until they invaded Iraq, gaving Bin-Laden everything he could have possibly dreamed of and then some.

    9. Re:Cyber 9/11? by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > Successfully attack all 13 root name servers simultaneously.

      Nope. You won't able to actually subvert more than one or two since there is a good diversity in the hardware and software... and none run on Windows. (ok, uncalled for bitchslap but what the heck) A DoS attack could slwo things down for a day or two but I'd expect swift action to clear things up long before it caused a total meltdown. Hell, they would cut whole countries if it took it to stop something like that.

      > Middle-east underwater fiber-seeking backhoes...

      Nah. There isn't as much redundency as there should be anymore, but I doubt that could cause a full meltdown. Truckbombing a couple of the NAPs might have possibilities.

      > Something like the Storm worm starts emailing randomly-named
      > child pornography to everybody..

      But once it because known it would be impossible to convict anyone, besides which the cops aren't that stupid. And AQ probably doesn't even want to be associated with kiddie porn, they have SOME standards. They might marry em at 9 like their pedophile prophet but they probably wouldn't encourage posting pictures of it. (Think that can get me to -1 Flamebait?)

      You are starting to think the unthinkable, now just think bigger. When you get there though, probably not a good idea to post those thoughts.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    10. Re:Cyber 9/11? by ScottCooperDotNet · · Score: 1

      An electronic Operation Northwoods which won't require anything further than the government "investigation" blaming whoever is our enemy of the decade. Please report to the nearest DHS office for debriefing.

    11. Re:Cyber 9/11? by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > That is, of course, until they invaded Iraq, gaving Bin-Laden
      > everything he could have possibly dreamed of and then some.

      Except it appears that after a lot of missteps, bungling and otherwise doing the wrong things we turned things around in Iraq. Turned it around to the point AQ has pretty much abandoned the field and shifted thier efforts into a last ditch attempt to salvage Afghanistan and/or destabilize Pakistan.

      But yea, for several years there it looked like Iraq might have ended up in the loss column and the consequences had that happened would indeed have been horrific. Iraq was a huge gamble. But the thing about huge gambles is that while losing will hurt bigtime since by definition they involve putting lots of chips on the table, winning them is usually game changing.

      I was, to say it nicely, rather dubious on Bush's belief that self government was possible in such a third world pesthole, but I'm now hopeful that he is going to get the last laugh when the history books are written. That change in conventional wisdom won't happen in time to change this election cycle though.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    12. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fecal chloroform? That'll sure knock you out!

    13. Re:Cyber 9/11? by mikael · · Score: 1

      Some people infiltrate and study how a botnet works, find out how its command and control structure works, and at the right time (eg. election time), direct a spam or denial-of-service attack at a particular government network, then use this as an excuse to tighten up access to the Internet.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    14. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bwahahahahaha WIN!

    15. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like the plot line to "Live Free or Die Hard."

    16. Re:Cyber 9/11? by CharlieG · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Around here Item #1 requires the guy who is already there 7x24 to double check - yawn
      90% of traffic lights are not internet linked - they are dumb mechanical timers - kinda hard to cyber that
      P25 - go to talk around mode
      Overload the transformers - way easier said than done, but when that usually happens, a breaker pops, you lose a substation - OK, they find the short, away we go

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    17. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you

      Sincerely,

      Osama

    18. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Don't you mean Obama

      *hides as karma burns*

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    19. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh* Who writes your material?

      That shit will sure knock you out.

    20. Re:Cyber 9/11? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I am almost starting to agree with you on your last few points. It's almost as if the worst thing Bush did wasn't actually attacking Iraq, but rather the horrible and bungling way he approached every single angle of it. Really quite astounding.

      --
      Qxe4
    21. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before you change fecal coliform bacterial counts in our water treatment systems, you should at least learn how to spell it correctly.

    22. Re:Cyber 9/11? by tick-tock-atona · · Score: 1

      > What could possibly count as a cyber 9/11?

      You aren't nearly paranoid enough. Those of us who have thought the unthinkable can see dozens of really nasty possibilities. I'm more amazed that we haven't had a major attack yet.

      ...and that is why you are wrong. There will not be a 'Cyber 9/11' in the near future because people simply haven't had enough practice and the attackable systems aren't in place.

      Remember that physical terrorism (eg. blowing stuff up, backing bloody coups etc.) has been happening for centuries of years. Terrorists have failed and succeeded and others have learned from their attempts - they know what works. From the days of Guy Fawkes through to the CIA and Al-Qaeda, the methods that worked and those that didn't meant that 9/11 could be planned with reasonable confidence of it working (eg. people have been hijacking planes for decades. They just hadn't flown one into a skyscraper before.).

      On the other hand, no physical harm or injury has yet been inflicted through "cyber-terrorism" attacks. The best that's been done is spam or DoS. Both of which can easily be defended against fairly quickly.

      So until there has been a background of lower profile "cyber-terrorism" events around the world doing real damage, for at least a few decades, we are pretty safe.

    23. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you've forgetton one small minor fly in your ointment ....Bruce ..Willis ...

      =P

    24. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please do us all a favor and stop giving the Chinese ideas. Thank you and have a nice day.

    25. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bye-bye Beardo. When you get to Gitmo, tell the guys I said hi.

    26. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Around here Item #1 requires the guy who is already there 7x24 to double check

      Wow, someone is there 7 hours a day, 24 days a week?

      Impressive .. most impressive.

    27. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I'm not quite sure violence would prevent or stop violence, I agree that in the overly optimized (for profit maximization) world with too many selfish people, everybody will be on their own, come a serious disaster of some sort.

    28. Re:Cyber 9/11? by level4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      9/11 came a lot closer than a lot of people want to admit to achieving that second goal. The world economy tettered on the brink of a total collapse for several weeks.

      Jesus Christ, over-dramatic much? *Total collapse*?! Even if the entire city of New York had been nuked into radioactive glass the world economy wouldn't have come close to total collapse. You think the farmer milking his cows for my breakfast tomorrow is going to just give up and shoot himself because some financial market in the USA is no more? Give me a break.

      The whole continent of North America could disappear into a black hole tomorrow and the world would go on. Sure, there would be massive disruption, stockmarket crashes, years of setback, corporate bankruptcies, bank runs, etc. But the world would go on and after 10 years you wouldn't even be able to tell.

      And the most important financial city in the world, for your information, isn't even NYC - it's London.

      America has less than 5% of the world's population. Sure, it has the largest concentration of wealth in a single country - for now. It's still the single most important country financially, but nothing like the titan it was even 10 years ago. Geeze, look outside the window once in a while, why don't you.

      Microsoft's chronic insecuity could very well end up destroying our very Civilization.

      I don't know exactly what type of drugs you're on, but here's a bit of advice anyway: take less of them.

      --
      Let my new 7-digit UID be a lesson to all - write down your passwords.
    29. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Before you change fecal coliform bacterial counts in our water treatment systems, you should at least learn how to spell it correctly.

      I think that was meant to confuse the real terrorists. And now you spelled it out for them. Thanks a lot...

    30. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      90% of traffic lights are not internet linked - they are dumb mechanical timers - kinda hard to cyber that

      I imagine the other 10% would be more than sufficient, particularly if it happened at about 4:00pm.

      Overload the transformers - way easier said than done, but when that usually happens, a breaker pops, you lose a substation - OK, they find the short, away we go

      That's why this step comes after causing multiple simultaneous traffic accidents. Google found this; it sounds like you're being overly optimistic about the state of electrical infrastructure in a lot of places.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    31. Re:Cyber 9/11? by BlackCreek · · Score: 1

      What could possibly count as a cyber 9/11?,

      1. A virus that manages to brick a PC?
      2. A symbian virus that bricks all symbian phones?

      Now imagine if it manages to hit some 2% of all PCs / Symbians in the US?

      Ok, it doesn't need to actually "brick it" in the most strict sense. A virus that corrupts the BIOS to the point you need to have special cables to reflash it would suffice.

    32. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen this movie before.. I think it ended with someone saying "yippe kay yeah, motherfscker"

    33. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you've seen "Live free or Die Hard" one too many times.....

    34. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Kgosi+Makwati · · Score: 1

      What could possibly count as a cyber 9/11?

      Cracking into SCADA system?
      Deleting medical and credit records and thus destroying companies dealing with these?
      ......

    35. Re:Cyber 9/11? by mlush · · Score: 1

      I see a botnet as the weapon of choice, buy a nice quiet worm/day 0 exploit, release it then sit back and wait.

      As I understand it botnets upload instructions and updates from a central server so the Lampton Worm could easily masquerade as another budding spam net and hopefully not attract undue attention

      Then few days before the attack get your followers to help out. They could wander round busy WiFi sites with infected laptops (hospitals and airports would be excellent targets), leave infected USB drives in power station carparks, send targeted email to people in juicy targets. Then on August 8th (for a nice catchy date) every infected computer uploads the toxic payload and overwrites any hard disk it can find with copy's the the Lampton manifesto.

      For extra class you could limit the attack by IP and roughly target by location.

      Even without help there are bound to be a few infected computer in hospitals airports, power stations etc. and it does not matter if they were not attached to anything important, the news story's will be all about how the Lampton worm nearly caused planes to fall, patents to die and 'endangered' the Grimbledown nuclear power plant.

      Later on they will move to human interest story's about how the Gumby family lost every precious picture of their dead daughter, along with vastly inflated estimates of the total damage done and productivity lost and the new draconian security policy's that companys now 'have' to enforce.

      Sure its no 911 and may not appeal to your typical bomb throwing nut, but perhaps it would appeal to a radical Anti-capitalist group, religious cult, student jihadist wannabes or loan fruitcake.

    36. Re:Cyber 9/11? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      From the sound of it, the terrorists don't need to do anything more. Their goals are being met nicely.

    37. Re:Cyber 9/11? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Um... looked up Afghanistan lately? There's still lots of bleeding going on there. It's mostly your allies doing it though, since you guys are busy bleeding in Iraq.

    38. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the end user may not be aware that the radios are failing. You'd just be unable to get a traffic channel when requested and you wouldn't hear any incoming traffic.

      I'd rather not go into detail. When I showed the problem to my supervisor, he was rather alarmed. When I showed it to my boss, I was reprimanded and told I didn't have enough experience to make that kind of judgment. If I knew then what I knew now, the conversation would have gone a lot differently. Oh well.

      If the lights aren't online, then you could just make the signals that the police / ambulance / fire have to turn them all red. That wouldn't be as costly in terms of damage, but it would sure fuck people up.

      None of the lights in my city are mechanical timers. They're all magnetic sensors. None are online.

      We don't have someone at our reservoir 24/7/365.

      For maximum awesome, I'd suggest doing this kind of thing at about 5:15 on the Friday of a long weekend.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    39. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

      Typical internet guy, eh?

      "You mis-spelld 1 word LOL so UR hole argmuent is rong."

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    40. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or leverage an Internet attack into a wholesale attack on the banking system. Steal enough credit cards ....

      Would the 46 million card numbers recently hijacked and sent to Russia and eastern Europe meet your specs?

    41. Re:Cyber 9/11? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      What could possibly count as a cyber 9/11?

      Nastier payloads, basically. It's easy for people who don't run Windows, to forget just how many people do run Windows, and how many of them are infected by .. something. Up to now, for all the malware out there, most of it isn't really all that malicious. I don't know why, but payloads have historically been damn near benign compared to what you can think up with just a few seconds of imagination. Not that being part of a botnet isn't a bad thing, but compared to what is possible .. c'mon!

      If they did something actually destructive, and all detonated at the same time, that's a funfest for millions of businesses and hundreds of millions of in-duh-viduals.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    42. Re:Cyber 9/11? by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > Would the 46 million card numbers recently hijacked and sent to
      > Russia and eastern Europe meet your specs?

      That would be a major component yes. If the Russian mob does their usual crime with the information it will be a managable problem. The Russians want to milk actual money from the deal instead of just sow chaos.

      Imagine a worst case scenario. Instead of mining a retailer or card clearing server imagine a trojan harvests the millions of card numbers along with other information from the victim PCs. That additional info is what would make it nasty. Add in some manual labor to sift the raw data and you work up a list of say half a million people ALONG with a list of plausible associations for each mined from their documents and address book. Now you wait until the Xmas frenzy is upon the retailing world.

      You launch a bot that hits major etailers, sites that the cardholder is already known to use and you order expensive gifts for associates of that target and have them shipped to their address. Repeat at different etailers until the card bounces. The ultimate twist is on machines you still 0wn you get the cardholder's own machine to do the deed so they can't even pick up on the bad orders via geolocaton..

      The card companies will see the spike and within a few hours realize what you are doing but now it gets fun. What do they DO? Stop people from sending presents via ecommerce? Whatever happens, once it hits the MSM confidence in ecommerce will be somewhere between zero and null for years.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    43. Re:Cyber 9/11? by sir+fer · · Score: 1

      and all this requires, as happened on 9/11, is for the people in a supervisory / protective role to do nothing while it's happening.

      And then they get a promotion and or a raise

      --
      Debian FTW ;o)
  25. Or.. by gerf · · Score: 1

    If Congressmen start getting theirs, and their kids' laptops and iPods searched at the border for copyright violations, and summarily sued... or maybe to expedite this, a hacker illegally breaks into their systems and posts proof of their hypocrisy to the world.

    I am not condoning the second method, however, and do not have anything resembling the skill to do so. (Please don't arrest me Republican Overlords!)

    1. Re:Or.. by pxlmusic · · Score: 1

      congress assholes affected by the same bullshit legislation they enact?

      unpossible! /seriously

      --
      "If for any reason you're not satisfied with our service, I hate you."
    2. Re:Or.. by xSauronx · · Score: 1

      but havent there been congressmen and other officials who have been held up by airport security and such? Christ, I want to say Ted Kennedy was one of them but Im too lazy to fact-check so....wasnt Ted Kennedy one of them? ;)

      --
      By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
    3. Re:Or.. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      When this starts to apply to politicians, rest assured their status will be upgraded to diplomatic for immunity reasons before you can say "third reading".

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  26. seems kinda stupid... by onionlee · · Score: 1

    Team Terrorists - FINAL SCORE: Massive DNS Meltdown ****Bonus Round**** i-Patriot Act

    1. Re:seems kinda stupid... by BPPG · · Score: 1

      A DNS meltdown probably isn't the worst they could do. It'd be one of the more confusing tactics, but if they wanted to do some real damage, they would target something specific.

      --
      What's the value of information that you don't know?
  27. all the more reason by drDugan · · Score: 1

    to (re)move the control of each piece of the Internet and each organization that manages Internet assignment and standards - and move them away from being controlled by any sovereign state (government), USA or other

    comments like his underscore such hubris, ... to imagine that any single government could control or even direct the totality of human connection and communication

    even worse, and more to the point for Clark and his ilk: such stupidity to think that under the fear-driven false guise of "protecting us" those charged specifically to support and defend the Constitution would restrict the actions and freedoms of the very people from which all their power derives. I'd like believe that accountability will come back into favor in '09

    such a cyber9-11 would be most interesting if it happened and restricted the Internet because it would directly affect the one right left to USians that will (could) get them out of the hole of degrading personal rights they continue to slide into: assembly

    1. Re:all the more reason by edsousa · · Score: 1

      such a cyber9-11 would be most interesting if it happened and restricted the Internet because it would directly affect the one right left to americans that will (could) get them out of the hole of degrading personal rights they continue to slide into: assembly

      Here, corrected for you

      Humm, I like the sensation of being a grammar Nazi

  28. Contingency Plans by Nymz · · Score: 1

    Having a contingency plan in case of emergency is not only smart, but required by law in many areas. There are plans for many emergencies like an earthquake, fire, hurricane, building evacuation, chemical spill, conventional war, cyber war, hijacked plane, running out of coffee, etc. Just because Lessig has legitimate concerns about any particular act, does not mean the Illuminati is just waiting around for the right moment to spring their Global World Domination Plan (tm).

    For instance, plans for invading Iraq were required of the Pentagon after Clinton reviewed the investigation report of the 1st World Trade Center bombing back in the early 90s. Bush was still just a governor at the time, but 'popular' history will remember it as his idea. Idiocracy anyone.

    1. Re:Contingency Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Contingency plans shouldn't be power grabs.

  29. vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by falconwolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At least then we stand a fighting chance of not losing the rest of what once made this country great.

    No, I'm voting for Bob Barr. Between McCain and Obama I'd vote for Obama, add Hillary to the ticket though and I'd vote for McCain if his running mate isn't too bad. If there wasn't another person running, but there is. McCain scares me but not as much as Hillary does.

    We've got a lot of knuckleheads who still need it spelled out for them, thanks to our corporate media and Republican party that likes to manipulate the weakest minds with ugly racism and sexism.

    On the other hand there's the Democratic Party, and the mass media that supports it, that wants to turn the country into a nanny state.

    For those of us that DO live in the US, remember, nothing short of a landslide victory for Obama is going to keep the tin-pot dictators of the GOP out of the White House this time.

    Yea, who needs the tin-pot, or socialist dictators, when you can have liberty instead by voting for the Libertarian candidate?

    Falcon

    1. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by philspear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Seems like people on /. always complain about the two real political parties being the exact same, but never care about it enough to make anyone else care about it.

      Voting for someone who shares your opinion on an issue not many people have an opinion on is a step in the right direction, but it's a small one. The real way to get it done is to get a canidate who has a fighting chance to endorse that position.

      With stuff like this, writing letters to the editor to raise public awareness are more effective than voting for a canidate who may or may not reach the double digits in the election. There are basically three groups who are interested in restricting the internet: idiot moral nannies, people who work in national security and want you to not think outside the box, and telecoms. All of them are doing more than voting to push their political agendas. What are you doing to counter that? If you're doing nothing besides voting and complaining, you're taking the choices someone else gave you, and shouldn't be suprised when

    2. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by DrgnDancer · · Score: 4, Informative

      Bob Barr? You're worried about a nanny state so you want to vote for Bob Barr? The guy wants to control your bedroom and your religion. He led the fight for the Defense of Marriage act (he won that). He led the fight to try and get the Army's first Wiccan Distinctive Faith Group disbanded (he lost that one). He's a real "Christian Nation" kind of guy. He's was a huge supporter of the War on Drugs and opposed to medical marijuana. He's recanted that last bit, I'll admit, but his overall pattern is on of a guy who supports people's liberties only when they fit into his personal moral code.

      I like some of his stances, but he has a habit of converting to a a stance in favor of rights only after he has voted to take those rights away. He regrets his PATRIOT act vote, and his medical marijuana work, but it's too late now, he already voted to put them in place. Add tot hat the fact that the Libertarians would demolish the what little control the government still exercises on Corporate America and I have to say Barr scares the Hell out me.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    3. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You're right about Bob Barr, but the whole "what little control the government still exercises on Corporate America" comment made me laugh.

      The United States government has a lot of control and regulations on corporations. If you don't think so, then you really have no idea how the system works, at all.

      Anyway, quit making corporations be the great big boogeyman and take responsibility for your own damn life. Don't like what a business is offering? Don't go there. Sounds too simple, doesn't it? Essentially, that's as simple as it needs to be; all control businesses has over the lives of people is either because of government contracts or deals or the fact they mass action willingly has handed it over to them (and isn't that the most democratic thing of all?) through purchasing the services or what have you.

    4. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by Mike610544 · · Score: 1

      Why are there so many Libertarians on Slashdot? Do we really want to allow Microsoft to become OCP? I'm all for smaller government, but the whole "free markets solve everything" thing seems incredibly naive to me.

      --
      ... also, I can kill you with my brain.
    5. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by ral315 · · Score: 1

      I'm not a Barr fan by any means, but it's worth noting that he has also recanted his position on DOMA. Whether you choose to believe his reversal is a personal point, of course; my main beef with Barr is his economic libertarianism, which you mentioned as well.

    6. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >He led the fight for the Defense of Marriage act (he won that)

      I think that DoMA is fine -- that's the one that says that each state can choose whether or not to hold as valid another state's marriages. It's the Federal Marriage Amendment that's a problem, which tried to force all states to ban same-sex marriages.

      I agree with you on the War on Drugs bit, though.

    7. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by fooDfighter · · Score: 1

      Anyway, quit making corporations be the great big boogeyman and take responsibility for your own damn life. Don't like what a business is offering? Don't go there. Sounds too simple, doesn't it? Essentially, that's as simple as it needs to be; all control businesses has over the lives of people is either because of government contracts or deals or the fact they mass action willingly has handed it over to them (and isn't that the most democratic thing of all?) through purchasing the services or what have you.

      Uh huh. The great "voting with our dollars" bullshit. So tell me, now that the upper 1% are making several orders of magnitude more than the lower 20%, does that mean each of them gets orders of magnitude more votes? How democratic.

      What you are describing is an Oligarchy where the rich effectively rule over the poor through their economic clout.

    8. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      DoMA also says that the federal government cannot recognize same sex marriages, even if states do. That means they can never be seen by the IRS, the Social Security Administration, the federal employee health insurance and life insurance programs, or any of the numerous other federal programs that might care, as valid. That means that even if all 50 states recognize same sex marriages asvalid and legal, they'll still be a "second class" arrangement without a lot of the benefits of "real" marriages.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    9. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      I hadn't heard that. Nice to know. Still it falls neatly within the framework of "vote or work for something that shows a contempt for personal rights, then feel bad about it later." The guy has been instrumental in chipping away at, or enshrining the lack of personal rights to do a whole slew of things, but always regrets it later.

      On the other hand, doing the research to respond intelligently to these posts, as well as the post themselves has given me a bit more respect for Barr. It does seem as though he has recanted nearly all of his formerly help positions on civil liberties. I still wouldn't vote for him, but if this continued for another 4 years I might look more closely next time.

      I 'm still not an economic Libertarian though, so that's a stumbling block, since it's a big part of their platform.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    10. Re:vote for Barack Obama, goddamn it by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      Yeah, cause like, I'll just chose not to have Internet because I don't like Cox's corporate polices! Never mind that I need it for my job. It's not like anyone else offers it here. I could also not have phone service or electricity. Thankfully I don't live in an area where Walmart is the only grocery store, otherwise I'd probably get hungry boycotting them. On the other hand, since I disagree with the polices of all of the oil companies I have another problem... I can't get anywhere in my car, since I can't fuel it (Plus I already gave up electricity). Boy that 3 miles to the store on my bike is gonna hurt... Well, not as bad as coming back with all the groceries...

      I love you people and your "vote with your dollars" ideas. Most of the thing we need in life are provided by companies that have bad policies. I boycott the ones I can (I don't go to Walmart, ever), but in point of fact I'd have to drop out of modern society to avoid most of the worst offenders. Worse, half the time, with no paid investigators who have the power to compel evidence, you'd never even know who was doing what. Government regulation controls (or tries to control) the industries that we cannot or should not have to control ourselves. Ever read Sinclair's The Jungle about the meat packing industry before government regulation? It's a nail biter, lemme tell ya.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
  30. Infowars Reported by AnyThingButWindows · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Alex Jones has reported on this as well. As we all know, 9/11 was a "turn" for the worse in society. Another fake, "global" war to get the yuppies to submit to power, government lies, and propaganda. 9/11 was a false flag event, the same as the Gulf of Tonkin, which is now declassified, and has come out that Israel actually attacked the carrier.

    What you will see, I would imagine is a false flag event, pulled off by those who are capable, and well paid, bring down the root servers. This has been demonstrated in the past, and is VERY possible, especially considering the recent DNS flaws that have spewed out in the media. They will come out, and say "Oh, we need Internet 2", and it will be totally censored. No porn. No free speech. And if you talk about a candidate, other than the 2 government run parties that are exactly the same, then you get unplugged. If you log on, without your DNA being uploaded, then they swat team you, and kill your family.

    The way that criminal governments work, is problem, reaction, solution. They create a problem, judge the reaction, then pose as the saviors. Usually, they come up with a solution that will piss off a lot of people, and they do it to diminish freedom of speech, right to bear arms, freedom of religion... the list goes on, and on. One day, just one day, you will be sitting there, wondering where all of your freedom went, while you are a slave on a global corporate plantation.

    http://www.infowars.com/?p=3753

    Endgame:
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1070329053600562261

    --
    When government fears the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny. - Jefferson
    1. Re:Infowars Reported by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alex Jones is my favorite comedian.

    2. Re:Infowars Reported by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you fucking insane?

    3. Re:Infowars Reported by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you trust your government that much, then you are nuts.

  31. Have you read it? by fishbowl · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I want you to read the "PATRIOT Act" before you try to discuss it with me.
    It's Public Law 107-56, easy to find, and not a difficult read.

    I want you to tell me, specifically, what sections you disagree with, and why.

    For the record, I have a few problems with the surveillance provisions, but it is a bigger problem that people who have not even read the Act, make comments about it as if it is somehow the source of all evil in the government. Such talk only serves to complicate things for those of us who take anti-government positions on various issues. And few of the pundits on either side of the argument seem to have much of a grasp on what the PATRIOT Act does or does not contain.

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    1. Re:Have you read it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of people who have not read the Patriot Act, not a single member of Congress was allowed to read it before voting on it. Dick Cheney said that any Senator who voted "no" on the bill would be blamed for the next "terrorist" attack.

  32. Obama by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    I was at the UofC when Barack Obama was a Constitutional scholar there. There are only a handful of people in this country who know the Constitution better than he does (read his articles from the Law Review). And from what I hear, he's a lover of freedom and a true believer in the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

    Can you show me where the USA Constitution authorizes Obama's health care plan?

    Plus, having a young black president will make the jackoff racists' heads explode, which will make for some great entertainment for the next 4/8 years.

    Agreed, but it doesn't require Obama. Before he stood up in front of the UN Security Council and said Saddam had all those WMDs, which I'm still waiting to see, I would have supported Colon Powell as president.

    Falcon

    1. Re:Obama by djcapelis · · Score: 1

      >Can you show me where the USA Constitution
      >authorizes Obama's health care plan?

      Yes, necessary and proper and the commerce clause among others. Naturally he won't be able to do it without the legislature, but the legislature has the power.

      Do you know why the legislature has that power? Because the constitution says that the Supreme Court gets to interpret the law, not you, not Obama and not some random congresscritter from Texas.

      If they say it's cool, then it is.

      Are you one of those idiots who think the income tax isn't valid too?

      --
      I touch computers in naughty places
    2. Re:Obama by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Yes, necessary and proper and the commerce clause among others.

      No. Don't even try the commerce clause. And forget necessary and proper as that is literally a unlimited license to legislate. Consider that the 9th and 10th Amendments were added after and thus superceed. And they explicitly say any power not spelled out is forbidden to the Federal Government.

      > Because the constitution says that the Supreme Court gets to
      > interpret the law, not you, not Obama and not some random
      > congresscritter from Texas.

      No, that was just a bad Star Trek episode you are thinking about. The "e plub neista" isn't just for Chiefs and Sons of Chiefs and it isn't just for Supremes to hand down from on high. The Constituition is a remarkably well written document that should be understandable by anyone with a basic compentecy in English. The Courts are indeed required to rule on corner cases, complex interractions between laws and various levels of government, etc. But any fool can see where the Socialists have been wiping their asses on the Constituition. And frankly it is about time we loudly and clearly called them on it, and if that doesn't work use our 'sporting goods' to add extra emphasis. While we still can.

      > Are you one of those idiots who think the income tax isn't valid too?

      Although some do make arguments that that Amendment wasn't properly ratified, questions of that nature ARE within the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and we have to abide by their rulings or declare a Revolution. Not quite ready for THAT. :)

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    3. Re:Obama by djcapelis · · Score: 1

      > The Constituition is a remarkably well written
      > document that should be understandable by anyone
      > with a basic compentecy in English.

      This appears to be the only point of agreement among the two of us.

      --
      I touch computers in naughty places
    4. Re:Obama by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      Then you should perhaps read it closer. It doesn't say what you think it says. "Necessary and proper", under your interpretation (an interpretation that goes against the belief in enumerative powers that the founders mostly all held) doesn't mean "anything goes as long as it's "good", it's not spelling out what the government can do; actually, it basically says that laws should be necessary and proper within what is already allowed under the constitution.

    5. Re:Obama by djcapelis · · Score: 1

      I'm very well aware of the meaning of Necessary and Proper. I'm also very well aware that SCOTUS has significantly permitted the expansion of that and the commerce clause to help recognize the growth of the responsibility that citizens have in a strong central government.

      It's not *my* interpretation that matters here, nor is it yours. It's the interpretation of the Supreme Court of the United States that matters, and last I checked, they were fairly comfortable with taking a wide view of how those clauses might be interpreted.

      Or do you just not accept the authority of SCOTUS to make those legal determinations? Because that's what all of these arguments boil down to.

      Do you accept the judgment of the Supreme Court and the doctrine of judicial review or not?

      I for one though Marbury v. Madison was a brilliant ruling. If you don't, I suggest you file a suit to challenge it or petition congress to rectify the situation.

      --
      I touch computers in naughty places
    6. Re:Obama by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Yes, necessary and proper and the commerce clause among others.

      Health care isn't interstate commerce, but he can try it afterall the Supreme Court allows the feds to deny states the right to authorize medical marijuana. As for others, what others are those?

      Are you one of those idiots who think the income tax isn't valid too?

      I don't know but I would abolish the income tax for individuals.

      Oh and you're the idiot for saying they are.

      Falcon

    7. Re:Obama by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > It's not *my* interpretation that matters here, nor is it yours.

      You are free to think as you will, please don't presume to make you lack of self confidence binding upon me. I can read and no amount of argument will ever convince me that the Supreme Court hasn't usurped it's legitimate authority. They do not have the power to amend the Constituition. So far they have removed the 1st, 9th and 10th Amendments entirely and came within a single vote of removing the 2nd. They are outlaws.

      At this point I'm still petitioning my government for a redress of grievences hoping for a miracle because revolution isn't even much of an option anymore.... a nation fit for self government wouldn't have allowed things to get this out of hand.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    8. Re:Obama by djcapelis · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I made nothing binding upon you, I explicitly pointed out that if you thought Marbury v. Madison was SCOTUS overstepping it's authority: "I suggest you file a suit to challenge it or petition congress to rectify the situation."

      I'm glad to hear you've done exactly that. I hope your petition is given fair and just consideration.

      (Oh, I am very much disappointed in some of SCOTUS's rulings, but I do think they should be authorized to make them. It is that which is the difference between between us.)

      --
      I touch computers in naughty places
    9. Re:Obama by djcapelis · · Score: 1

      >As for others, what others are those?

      You asked for one place and one's all that's needed. Stop being silly. There's certainly at least a constitutional argument for Obama's health plan it under the basis of the commerce clause and if it does end up being litigated, then we're likely to see this argument settled in a manner which is authoritative. The case you mentioned would very much reinforce the idea that the commerce clause would apply. Given the precedent, SCOTUS might not even take up a challenge against a national health plan on constitutional grounds.

      Your implication that Obama is ignorant of constitutional law is without merit.

      As for Gonzales v. Raich (or whatever it's called this week) I was frankly hoping the controlled substances act would be overturned, but I think the decision, legally, was the correct one.

      >Oh and you're the idiot for saying they are.

      I don't think the income tax system is good and personally would prefer the fairtax system, but if you think it isn't constitutional, then yes, to me that's the thinking of an idiot. There's very clear rulings on this. Why would I be an idiot for calling someone an idiot when they obliviously don't know how to read a SCOTUS ruling?

      --
      I touch computers in naughty places
    10. Re:Obama by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > .. but I do think they should be authorized to make them. It is
      > that which is the difference between between us.

      Ok, lemme get this right. You claim to be able to read so you have to know some of what they have been pushing on us is just an outright power grab, you even sorta admit it even, but in the end you insist they have the authority to do whatever they decide they have the authority to do.

      Straight up, if you believe they have the legitimate authority to excise three (and almost four) of the ten Amendments in the Bill of Rights, precisely what do you think is beyond their authority. And is it still possible to even use phrases like "seperation of powers", "rule of law" or "limited government" without it being a joke?

      It sounds like you either fear the peer pressure you might get if you started saying things like "The Supreme Court is outlaws" or just don't want to admit it to yourself because of what the logical consequences of that admission might be.

      Me, I don't care. If they tortured my ass enough I'd probably love Big Brother as much as Winston ended up doing. But mere peer pressue induce me to believing the Emperor is wearing clothes? No way, I'm the sort of prick who would shout, "Dude, put some fucking cloths on." and then run like hell from the pissed off royal guards.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    11. Re:Obama by djcapelis · · Score: 1

      I very much understand where you're coming from and I agree that Marbury v. Madison was a power grab.

      But I think overall it wasn't a terrible result. I actually like the ruling and it's one of those rare power grabs where I think "wow, that was actually really devious and really clever!" Someone did need to become the arbiter and I think that SCOTUS is the most appropriate body to accomplish that task. I don't have to agree with all their rulings to recognize that overall while at some points they've been incredible annoying and have eroded some important protections, at the end of the day, they usually get it right on most issues.

      That's more than I can say about most branches of government.

      So yes. I very much see where you're coming from and do appreciate your skepticism and do recognize that this is an awesome power that they have. But unlike you, I have a little faith in the SCOTUS as a body despite some of their recent performances and my dissatisfaction with the current people that happen to be sitting on the bench. (DC v. Heller *was* very much too close.)

      I also don't think the founders meant our constitution to be interpreted strictly and don't oppose a little flexibility where it's merited. While I do hate it when it's the wrong kind of flexibility. (and it so often is these days) I don't when it's the right kind. I think having the flexibility for the right kind of laws is more important than risking a lack of flexibility for the wrong ones.

      The question of "what is beyond their authority" is a troubling one. But taken to the extreme, any branch has too much authority if it's singularly and effectively organized and hell bent on overriding the other two. Fortunately, with two of our three branches, this situation is rare to occur and very hard to produce. Overall, the disagreement, bickering and lack of a unified view in SCOTUS and the legislature is precisely what ensures that we don't fall into a situation where our government runs too wild.

      Over the last 8 years, we've certainly seen what happens when one of the branches doesn't have enough disagreement within itself.

      As for the peer pressure argument, I think you have me for the wrong type of fellow if you think that's why I wrote my post. Anyone who knows me who read that someone on the Internet thought I was being too polite for fear of what other people would think would be very much amused.

      I think you'd find on quite a range of issues, you and I would agree more often than you might think, given this particular conversation.

      --
      I touch computers in naughty places
    12. Re:Obama by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Your implication that Obama is ignorant of constitutional law is without merit.

      The merit is based on there being no constitutional authority yet he's pushing for a national health care system. Some may argue, as you do, the interstate commerce clause may give the authority to the federal government. What those people don't say is that the constitution puts a limit on the power of government, it enumerates what powers the government has, and bars it from doing anything else. One it does not give the power for is national health care. The 10th Amendment specifically states that what powers are not granted are reserved for the states and individuals. If the federal government wants that power it also says how it can gain that power, by amending the Constitution. Unfortunately while amendments were originally used to guaranty right, the First 10 Amendments being the Bill of Rights, now they are used to expand the power of government.

      As for Gonzales v. Raich (or whatever it's called this week) I was frankly hoping the controlled substances act would be overturned, but I think the decision, legally, was the correct one.

      Originally it was Raich v. Ashcroft, Ashcroft being the Attorney General then. The vote itself was a 6 to 3 vote, the descending justices were Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, William Rehnquist and Clarence Thomas, O-Conner and Rehnquist being nominated by Reagan and Thomas was nominated by Bush Sr. The descending opinions weren't very flattering of the majority decision.

      >Oh and you're the idiot for saying they are.

      My bad statement, I realized that after posting. I should of used better wording, such as saying I thought that because I thought calling being disagreed with idiots was being idiot itself.

      I don't think the income tax system is good and personally would prefer the fairtax system

      I heard a number of "fair tax" systems, but I don't consider a tax on people's income to be fair at all. People shouldn't be made to pay tax on what they earn. The closest I come to agreeing with national taxes is on fuel, to pay for highways only, and a sales tax on nonessential items. However if the federal government had stayed within the limits put on it by the Constitution there wouldn't need to be a sales tax.

      but if you think it isn't constitutional, then yes, to me that's the thinking of an idiot. There's very clear rulings on this.

      So O'Conner, Rehnquist, and Thomas are idiots?

      Falcon

    13. Re:Obama by djcapelis · · Score: 1

      Going to be brief here because I need to focus on writing some software tonight... sorry, normally I'd love to continue our conversation.

      First, Fairtax *is* a sales tax: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairtax

      Second, I was aware of the history of the name changes and the case, I was making a joke when I said "whatever it's called this week."

      Third, it's not me that argues the commerce clauses gives them that ability, it was the majority of SCOTUS that did. I simply am telling you that this means there is a constitutional basis. I happen to agree that the commerce clause *ought* to be interpreted broadly. But I'm also glad there's people that don't agree and there's judges on that particular bench that *also* don't agree. This will keep things somewhat sensible.

      But to say there's no constitutional basis is wrong. The court has said there is, until that ruling gets overturned, there is constitutional basis. That's how precedent works.

      It is not as you say a situation where "Some may argue, as you do, the interstate commerce clause may give the authority to the federal government" but rather the authority *is* given to the federal government by this type of precedent, whether or not you agree with it or not.

      It's no longer an argument after it's been ruled on. Even if there was a strong dissenting opinion.

      --
      I touch computers in naughty places
    14. Re:Obama by lubricated · · Score: 1

      >> The merit is based on there being no constitutional authority yet he's pushing for a national health care system. Some may argue, as you do, the interstate commerce
      >> clause may give the authority to the federal government.

      There's also the necessary and proper clause in there.

      --
      It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
    15. Re:Obama by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Can you show me where the USA Constitution authorizes Obama's health care plan?

      Sure. Using the same argument many people (including yourself) use about the second amendment, the milita is comprised of the entire US male populace above a certain age (say 18). The Constitution clearly states Congres can equip the milita. Equiping our milita with health seems like a "duh" idea; they need to be healthy to fight. At the very least it is necessary and proper adjunct to the equiping of militia.

      14th amendment grounds would forbid denying access to such a government program based on gender, so women are thus included as well.

      Alternatively, one could claim it was a human right under the 9th amendment, similar to education. Which is why the Supreme Court gets involved with school standards.

      Lastly, one could state that Congress needs to be involved because of the equality of state citizens language in Section 4. This clause prevents Mass from creating a public health system only they can use, and thus prevents the "local solution" people tend to argue for.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
  33. The new 'First they came for the...' thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you asked for it... modifications appreciated:

    First they came for the terrorists, and I didn't complain, because I believed in fighting for my freedom.
    Then they came for the people with weapons of mass destruction, and I didn't complain, because I had no such weapons.
    Then they came for the people who defied the law officers, and I didn't complain, because I knew the officers were the good guys.
    Then they came for the outspoken people, and I didn't complain, because I always said the right words.
    Then they came for the music pirates, and I didn't complain, because I owned all the music I had.
    Then they came for the people with illegal content on their computers, and I didn't complain, because I'd never done anything wrong.
    Then they came for my freedom, and I couldn't complain, because I had no freedom.

  34. This is BS by Drakin020 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Cyber 9/11? Give me a break....

    On the real 9/11 thousands of innocent people lost their lives.

    Nothing on the internet could amount to what happened that day. No amount of terrorism will ever stack up to a "Cyber 9/11"

    Sorry it just pisses me off that people use that day so lightly...

    --
    The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    1. Re:This is BS by Rick+Genter · · Score: 1

      Unless the "cyber 9/11" ends up being corruption of some mission critical system, such as air traffic control, a power plant, a mass-transit system or some such that leads to hundreds to thousands of deaths/injuries.

      It's not total BS...

      --
      Don't underestimate the power of The Source
    2. Re:This is BS by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      Don't get me wrong, I'm sure that in the event of a Cyber Terrorist attack, terrible things can happen.

      But I view the two events differently.

      Where one event you have a building taken down by a plane controlled by a terrorist...

      The second...loss of contact with ground control. But don't you think they have some kind of protocol dealing with this? While no one dies immediatly from this attack, this still leaves control in the hands of the captain.

      I just don't see how something occurring over the internet could amount to the actual death and destruction caused by the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    3. Re:This is BS by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      The reference isn't so much to the damage that was done on 9/11 but the change in mindset it caused.

      After 9/11 happened, people were paranoid about terrorists everywhere even though the actual threat of terrorism hadn't changed. Yes it was horrible, but the aftermath has been even worse. More people have lost their lives due to the war in Iraq than due the terrorist attacks.

      The problem is that people act irrational when they get afraid - something which the government isn't afraid to abuse to get laws like the patriot act passed. That is what the reference is suppose to mean.

    4. Re:This is BS by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > On the real 9/11 thousands of innocent people lost their lives.

      So? Not trying to make light of the losses on 9/11 but the loss of life was not the major damage on that day. We got lucky, the loss of life could indeed have been much worse. But the damage to the morale and economic power of the US was almost incalculable. Had AQ been able to follow up with one or two similar attacks in the following months they just might have brought down the entirety of Western Civilization.

      There is the potential to carry out attacks of similar impact via the Internet entirely and/or use the Internet as a major component of a physical attack.

      It is the responsibility of some people to think about such things, plan for them and work on reducing the likelihood of such attacks. Those people don't sleep well with the current security state of the Internet.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    5. Re:This is BS by tgd · · Score: 0, Troll

      About 6000 people die in the US every day, day in and day out. Some days are higher, some are lower.

      Think about that when looking at 9/11 and considering what the fallout of it has done to this country.

      From the standpoint of someone who knows a couple people who lost their lives that day, and has direct connections with people who lost loved ones that day, I will still stand here and say very rarely a day doesn't go by when it doesn't piss me off how people have used the events of that day to control populations and steal from the American people for an event that represented barely a 5% blip in US deaths that week.

      How many people who died that day do you think would believe the deaths of several other Americans and perhaps a *hundred* Iraqis was worth their life? How many people that day would think the tattered wreck of our global standing and economy were worth it for vengence?

      Get off your fucking high horse. Our country could use a giant dose of taking it lightly and maybe taking real things that are happening seriously for a change.

    6. Re:This is BS by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      Look at this thread again, then.

      Pwning the water treatment facilities in a major city could easily lead to that amount. They might die more slowly, but...

      If I wanted to screw up the airports, I wouldn't crash the air traffic control system. I would just give incorrect info to the air traffic controller (who is only looking at electronic instruments, generally) causing two big jumbos to collide. Then erase my tracks. Then do it at another airport. And another.

      Or set it up so they all happen more or less simultaneously. Sure, some percentage will be lucky and miss crashing for a number of different reasons. 100 airports. 25% success rate of the 'sploits. 25% human error recovery suceeeds. Well, that's maybe 20 jumbo jets colliding all over the country. At a low estimate of 200 per plane, it's "only" 4000.

      Any power plants online?

      Hm, what about hydro facilities? I hear that those living below the big dams might not like it very much if all the water were released at once. Are there any dams near communities? Probably the max flow the dam could support would allow them to get out. And then the water shortage would kick in quite hard, I would suspect.

      Do you think someone could trigger another Bhopal from the inside of a plant? Well, then consider that many plants these days are connected to the net.

      A bit more complex along those lines:

      Knowing where our goods come from could lead one to consider that as an avenue of attack. China would make an excellent intermediary. Perhaps instead of directly buying off a plant in China for some alteration to a random set of goods being shipped to the US for use you could control their manufacturing remotely. I wonder if in the former case they would take your money and then turn you over or not.

      (for the oblig. joke: and how could you tell that from what we already get? *rimshot*, thank you i'll be here all week!)

      I suppose you could use US companies to do this too.

      They each pose a different set of challenges, technologically and socially. But I digress!

      Summary: It is possible to come up with scenarios where "cybercrime" directly affects the real world. At this stage of our existence (scarily) we have ways to actually crack* someone to death, or lots of someones. Kind of random for the other people involved, though - were you there, or not?

      What generally scares me is a perfect storm scenario. You get all the pieces in place. Wait for a major disaster and slowly degrade the state of the nation through a series of cascading failures that no one has time to analyze because it's all occurring naturally until realization is too late.

      These are all well known, and there are many, many more. Really. It's like science fiction these days, in some sense - the modern world as dystopic sci-fi. You, you self can probably think of ten more if you think of it in any of the same terms as people who do it as a profession (either artistically, like a writer, or like any number of different practical based specialties required to build such a plan - just like software).

      *please note connotation, kthksbye

    7. Re:This is BS by pavera · · Score: 1

      You're being a little naive there... I'm sure most if not all of the nuclear power plants in the US are connected to the net, I'm 100% confident that operation of those plants is handled by computers.

      Manage to hack into a couple of those, and, I dunno... turn off the cooling pumps. Bye Bye! to thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people, not to mention years of cleanup, high disease rates, etc.

      Sure they have fail safes, and maybe it wouldn't work, but even the threat of that, if a power company came out and said "we had to perform an emergency shutdown of the reactor because XYZ terrorist group hacked in and shut down the cooling systems", even if no one was hurt or actually died, the threat alone would be enough to get Joe Public to outlaw the internet, or in some other way seriously degrade the network, and the Gov't would be all too willing to go along.

    8. Re:This is BS by Carbon016 · · Score: 1

      turn off the cooling pumps. Bye Bye! to thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people,

      Um..no. Any fatalities would be limited to those working inside the plant and would be primarily of radiation poisoning. A "cyber-terrorism" event that affected the US economically, if large enough, could create a situation where recession leads to poverty which leads to riots or crime or hunger. But no, even if a "hacker" got into the control systems of a nuclear plant the worst case scenario (assuming everyone's incompetent) is the shutdown of that plant.

    9. Re:This is BS by mattsqz · · Score: 1

      "the threat alone would be enough to get the Gov't to outlaw the internet, or in some other way seriously degrade the network, and Joe Public would be all too willing to go along." there...fixed that for you..

    10. Re:This is BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Nothing on the internet could amount to what happened that day.

      Exactly! But it doesn't have to. The masses of people won't be as shocked about the event, sure, but the masses of people also don't understand the technology behind the Internet, don't value the civilization changing potential of it, and simply won't care (!) if more restrictive laws are passed.

      So, the passing of restrictive laws will be much easier for the Internet. It doesn't take an event of the same scale to get those new laws through.

  35. who originally wanted it ? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Bill Clinton, he wanted congress to pass the Comprehensive Anti-terrorism Act of 1995 which would have given him many of the powers the PATRIOT Act gave Bush.

  36. October Surprise? by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

    Will we have an October Surprise to make sure that the Heroic Global War on Terror continues for years to come?

  37. Probably proud Republicans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    > I can't believe how low we have fallen. Why is the current threat any different from the old threat from the IRA that we faced. (that our friends in the USA funded)

    The IRA had "Republican" in their name, so they had to be good! The Americans who funded them probably thought they were blowing up Democrats or fighting the Liberal party.

    You can't expect Americans to know piddling things that happen in the insignificant countries outside their borders. My Grandma always says, "I was born a Republican, I'll die a Republican, and don't confuse me with the facts!"

    And she said that for many, many years before FOX News was complaining about Obama saying that some Republicans are proud of their ignorance.

  38. Umm, the u.s. tourism sector did recover. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    It was only this year that international tourists to the US were at the levels seen before 9111, from the AP: "The number of international tourists visiting America should exceed pre-Sept. 11 levels this year for the first time since terrorist attacks crippled the travel industry, U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez said Friday." Notice it says "should" not does or did. Elsewhere: "Tourists skipping US sites", dated 5 July 2008 and "U.S. share of foreign tourists slipping, travel experts say" dated one day later.

    Falcon

  39. Over my Dead Body by skyggen · · Score: 1

    Ok, enough is enough. No big brother will never get a hold of the net FAR too many of the necessary high end IT staff needed to maintain their equipment and networks will revolt for teh love of god I know One in chicago that controls about 40% of the traffic for the midwest would hijack his own network to prevent that shit. I SAY "FUCKING BRING IT ON BITCHES!". We of the tech industry FUCKING control this country and FOR THE LOVE OF GOD IF I CAN'T TORRENT SOMEBODY IS GOING TO FUCKING GET KNOCKED UNCONSCIOUS, GANG RAPED, GIVEN A SEX CHANGE, GANG RAPED AGAIN, PUT THE FUCKING LOTION IN THE BASKET OR IT GETS THE FUCKING HOSE AGAIN, SO GOING TO DANCE AROUND NAKED WEARING THEIR LOVED ONES SKIN WHILE I RAPED THEIR MOTHER, FATHER, DAUGHTER ,BROTHER ,SISTER ,DOG, HOUSE PLANTS IN FRONT OF THEM WHILE PLAYING NEIL DIAMOND. so by far the greatest threat any organization has on the internet is from thoe of us who allow lusers the privilege to use it everyday. just ask Amy Banse, I bet her mouth still bleeds when she goes poop.

    1. Re:Over my Dead Body by CannedTurkey · · Score: 1

      Your ideas are intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

      --
      Ingredients: Turkey, Mechanically Separated Turkey, Water, Salt, Flavour.
    2. Re:Over my Dead Body by karbyn-aceous · · Score: 0

      > GANG RAPED, GIVEN A SEX CHANGE, GANG RAPED AGAIN Buddy, you got problems. So does the rest of your gang!

  40. Thank you, Bill Clinton!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remembering that the Patriot Act was dropped on Congress just 20 days after 9/11 â" the Department of Justice had had it sitting in a drawer

    And Slashdot still gets in a tizzy whenever the subject of Bush firing DoJ political appointees from that era comes up, and pines for the days of Bill Clinton's DoJ - the one of Waco and Elian Gonzalez.

    And apparently the Patriot Act.

  41. Do you actually think things can get worse? by copponex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The Iraq war is the best possible scenario for religious fundamentalists. The have pictures of dead Muslims to pass around, an excellent environment for cultivating new psychopaths, and a good place to train them. The orphaned children alone represent tens of thousands of new possible recruits.

    You're spouting the same nonsense that kept us in the Vietnam War, only this time we're actually going to lose some valuable resources if we are forced to leave Iraq. But don't worry your pretty little head. We have four permanent military installations that we will only abandon after our currency finally crashes from our national deficit and staggering military spending. The democracy we're pretending to support in Iraq is just like the one we helped the British with in Iran back in the 50s. And we all know how well that turned out.

    As soon as the $300 checks sent out to the Sunni mercenaries who have switched tactics for the moment cease to arrive, the "pre-surge" violence levels will return overnight. To quote one Shia resident, the terrorists have become the police, but for how long? Peace in Iraq is extraordinarily expensive, and soon we won't be able to afford it.

    Some folks can't learn lessons from history. I just hope the rest of the western world learns that destroying Arab secular nationalism always leads to the formation of religious fundamentalist groups. The PLO became Hamas, Lebanese turned to Hezbollah, the Afghanis turned to the Taleban, and the Iraqis have turned to al Qaeda. They don't just roll over and die, and in fact Hezbollah are the first military organization to have defeated the Israelis in a ground assault. If they had any comparable equipment, you'd see a different attitude towards Lebanon, just as the nuclear armed North Koreans got diplomacy instead of bayonets. It has made it clear to the rest of the world that we will leave you alone if you have a nuclear arsenal.

    If you think that the arabs are to blame for the conditions that allow terrorism to become acceptable to their culture, your history books must be pretty thin and biased.

  42. Bob Barr? by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're worried about a nanny state so you want to vote for Bob Barr? The guy wants to control your bedroom and your religion.

    The Libertarian Party would not have chosen Bob Barr as it's candidate if he still wanted control. He himself said he was wrong and now opposes government control. I once opposed him but now I can support him. Of course, as with all other politicians, he needs to be monitored.

    He led the fight to try and get the Army's first Wiccan Distinctive Faith Group disbanded (he lost that one).

    During the 2000 campaign Bush went so for as to say Wicca wasn't a religion "I don't think that witchcraft is a religion. I wish the military would rethink this decision." I'm not one myself but I have studied it and have friends who are Wiccans. Several years ago I probably gave my sister a shock, she's a Christian even though she doesn't act like one all the tyme, when she asked me if I wanted to join a church and I said I was thinking of joining a Wiccan Coven.

    Add tot hat the fact that the Libertarians would demolish the what little control the government still exercises on Corporate America

    Corporate libertarians perhaps. However: "B7. What would libertarians do about concentrations of corporate power?" Libertarians oppose the power corporations wield. Many corporations got their power by monopoly and Libertarians oppose monopolies. Corporations also offer stockholders limited liability, and Libertarians would end that thus making stockholders liable for actions the corporations take. It's Democrats, and others, who spread such lies that Libertarians would allow corporations to get away with whatever they want.

    Falcon

    1. Re:Bob Barr? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "The Libertarian Party would not have chosen Bob Barr as it's candidate if he still wanted control. He himself said he was wrong and now opposes government control. I once opposed him but now I can support him. Of course, as with all other politicians, he needs to be monitored."

      I've seen him on some of the Sunday morning news shows...and I gotta say, I am quite impressed with him now....I wish to hell he could get included on the 3 'presidential debates'....he can speak quite well, and I'd love to see him actually throw answers out there in the middle of the main parties candidates who love to say nothing so far.

      McCain can't seem to speak all that well, and if Obama got into a format where the teleprompters were turned off....I think Barr would actually make a good showing, and possibly even force the other two candidates to take some positions, or look like idiots afraid to answer a question...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    2. Re:Bob Barr? by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      During the 2000 campaign Bush went so for as to say Wicca wasn't a religion "I don't think that witchcraft is a religion. I wish the military would rethink this decision."

      I'm aware... I don't plan to vote for him either :-)

      I remain fairly unconvinced on the economic front. I'm just not an economic Libertarian. I think a good part of the reason that government exists is to help people when they need it and make sure that the playing field between rich and poor is somewhat more level. I don't believe that our government always accomplishes this, but I think that by trying it helps at least some. While it is true that inner city schools suck, it is equally true that if there were no government funding those schools would suck worse, assuming they existed at all. Same goes for welfare, Social Security, and Medicare. Yes it gives the government more powers, but history has shown me what happens when we just leave it to charities. Don't think that fiction like Les' Miserables or Oliver Twist were created in a vacuum. People really lived like that in countries that were, at the time, the richest and most powerful in the world.

      On the the other hand, I've researched Barr a bit more and like him more than I did. He's recanted all of his former anti-civil rights stances. I still don't trust him, he's done too much that scares me. I will, however, watch him for another 4 years, and might reconsider in the next election if his stripes don't change again. Even then though, I' not sure about the Libertarian Party's economic platform.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    3. Re:Bob Barr? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Libertarians oppose the power corporations wield. Many corporations got their power by monopoly and Libertarians oppose monopolies.

      Corporate power derives mainly from the sheer amount of resources even a small corporation controls in relation to individuals. An organization of two or more people is inherently more powerful than a single individual (on average). As the size of the organization goes up, the power divide becomes orders of magnitude.

      Since corporations are inherently more powerful than individuals, and utterly amoral on top of that, they need to be kept in tight leash. Libertarian campaign of anti-government would remove this leash, at which point there would be nothing to stop them from abusing their power at will. Dissolving monopolies wouldn't help at all, since by the time a corporation is in a position to abuse even a local monopoly, it is already beyond ordinary people's ability to defend against.

      Corporations also offer stockholders limited liability, and Libertarians would end that thus making stockholders liable for actions the corporations take.

      While this sound fine on the surface, it would make investing an unacceptably high risk activity for anyone who can't watch the company full-time. This, of course, means anyone who works for a living, as opposed to having enough capital to support themselves through investing alone. In other words, it would make the problem worse.

      It's Democrats, and others, who spread such lies that Libertarians would allow corporations to get away with whatever they want.

      The core libertarian principle of removing government control would allow powerful entities to get away with whatever they want, because with government power gone, who's going to stop them ? This may or may not be the outcome desired by the average libertarian; however, it is the one that would happen.

      Libertarianism would lead to the return of feudalism, which was, after all, rule by those who owned the land and could thus afford to hire armies to enforce their will, since the king was too weak to stop them. It was the growth of central governmental power that ended feudalism; removing that would return us to it. Libertarians don't get voted much because most people realize that in such a system they would be the serfs, so it is contrary to their interests.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  43. Ted Kennedy on the Do Not Fly lists by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    but havent there been congressmen and other officials who have been held up by airport security and such? Christ, I want to say Ted Kennedy was one of them but Im too lazy to fact-check so....wasnt Ted Kennedy one of them? ;)

    Yes, Ted Kennedy was stopped from boarding planes several tymes because his name was on the Do Not Fly lists. So was Cat Stevens.

    Falcon

    For those who don't know, Cat Steves was a popular singer song writer in the 1960s and '70s.

  44. Great Firewall by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Remember that to stop someone doing something, non-essential: not eating or breathing, you just need to make it hard enough to be not worth their while. An example of this is the Chinese firewall, people know the government are watching, so they don't bother looking at anything that isn't authorised.

    Except Chinese are able to get around the Great Firewall of China. Chinese do find ways.

    Falcon

  45. what a narrow vision by unity100 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    who is the internet market going to cater to when they are practically cut down from rest of the world ? excuse me, what was your population again ? ~300 mil. how much of that uses internet in a manner that will sustain it financially (apart from using only mail) ? probably ~100 mil. compare this number to the user number for the entire world, which is 1,463,632,361 , and youll see what will happen. http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm

    i hate to break it to you but an isolated economy cant survive. u.s. i.t. sector wont be able to live only doing small time automation websites/intranet bastardizations to mid size manufacturers. because thats what you will be reduced to when cut from rest of the world.

  46. killer comment by unity100 · · Score: 1

    The jingle in the pocket doesn't make the boot stamping on a face forever any more palatable.

    i just had to bookmark this comment.

  47. You have selective memory when it comes to a-holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember the War on Drugs (marijuana) was kicked into high gear when Clinton got a general to be his drug czar. Arrest the DOUBLED to the 750,000 a year level they are at now.
    I remember then a-hole supreme Clinton haveing the gall to tell Rolling Stone when he left that we should legalize marijuana.

    I remember the DMCA, COPA and the democrats giving radio to their buddies at Clearchannel.

    I remember that teh democrats last time around bombed more countries than the US. The WMD lies were just as big in kosovo if not bigger since the democrats supported and trained the LARGEST and BEST ARMED terror group in the world according to you own CIA, the albanians drug lords who control the majority of the heroin trade in europe.
    I remember seeing wanted criminals from INTERPOL sitting have coffee with our secretary of state. Same wanted terrorists ended up going to the democratic convention in 2004 to pay hommage to their benefactors.
    I remember that Bin Laden and thousands of his muhajeddins were working on our side in Bosnia (where we vetoed the first four international peace plans that the two other groups had agreed to) and finding it amusing that no one remembered taht a few yaers later.

    I remember working in europe about 10 years ago and seeing 450,000 people in the streets of Athens protesting Clintons visit. I remember a protest march in Rome that had 120,000 protesting the illegal war/bombings in the Balkans, with the news showing the same amount all over europe and the world but no reference of these in our free press.

    I remember the two Clintonista women going on their tour of Saudi Arabia clutching their korans
    while the Saudis were lavishing their Bosnian muslims brothers with millions for their spread of islam in europe and financing the construction of hundreds of mosques.

    I remember that following that prelude to the big lie in Iraq, 3 consecutive Al Quaeda leaders in Saudi Arabia were Bosnian Holy War vets. The last one coming with his bosnian muslim wife and passport.
    I remember taht the only arrest for the Madrid bombing was a morroccan traveling from Bosnia or the dozens muslims arrested after 9/11.

    I remember that Wesley Clark, a career weasel who got his position through massive forced retirements telling the world that bombing a smal country the size of New Hamphsire was to terrorize the civilians population and to make their lives miserable and a living hell. I remember thinking how fitting that this definition of war criminal was a democratic contender.

    I also remember British General Michael Rose biography where he claims to have refused a direct order by Clarke to attack russian troops in Kosovo and that NATO supported him by not suporting any calls for punishment.

    I remember secretary of Hate Madeleine Allbright and her belief that the death of hundreds of thousands of iraqui children would have been worth it had they had been able to capture Saddam.

    You of course, chose to forget all these things because it is more convenient.

    Are the republicans a**holes? Yes. But the democrats are no better. They just work the PR machine a lot better. And a black candidate is great PR. Will he be different he's black?
    That's as stupid as that retarded thinking from a few decades ago that women in power would somehow be more compassionate.
    Uncle Tom knows where the wind blows and who pays the bills.

  48. Why are there so many Libertarians on Slashdot? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Do we really want to allow Microsoft to become OCP? I'm all for smaller government, but the whole "free markets solve everything" thing seems incredibly naive to me.

    If Libertarians were in charge, Microsoft wouldn't have gotten as big and powerful as they have. Libertarians hate monopolies. But there's Democrats and others to blame for the fear mongering, FUD.

    Falcon

  49. Is anyone else surprised... by longacre · · Score: 1

    ...that someone who has worked at the White House over the age of 30 actually knows who Vint Cerf is?

  50. Bob Barr in presidential debates by falconwolf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've seen him on some of the Sunday morning news shows...and I gotta say, I am quite impressed with him now....I wish to hell he could get included on the 3 'presidential debates'....he can speak quite well, and I'd love to see him actually throw answers out there in the middle of the main parties candidates who love to say nothing so far.

    I doubt Barr, or any other presidential candidate, will be invited to participate in many debates McCain and Obama have. Michael Badnarik of the Libertarian Party and David Cobb of the Green Party were both arrested for trying to enter a debate in 2004. Yet not many people know that because the mass media didn't do their job and let people know.

    I think Barr would actually make a good showing, and possibly even force the other two candidates to take some positions, or look like idiots afraid to answer a question...

    That's why third party candidates aren't invited. But if the mass media did it's job, of informing people, more people would demand they be allowed to debate.

    Falcon

    1. Re:Bob Barr in presidential debates by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "I doubt Barr, or any other presidential candidate, will be invited to participate in many debates McCain and Obama have. Michael Badnarik of the Libertarian Party and David Cobb of the Green Party [reliableanswers.com] were both arrested for trying to enter a debate in 2004. Yet not many people know that because the mass media didn't do their job and let people know."

      Sadly, probably true. I've heard that Obama said that the 'normal' 3 debates will be all...

      Ross Perot got on to the debates back between Clinton and Bush....how did he manage to get on those?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    2. Re:Bob Barr in presidential debates by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ross Perot got on to the debates back between Clinton and Bush....how did he manage to get on those?

      Easy, Ross Perot got into the debates because he's a billionaire. He had enough money to buy the mass media, or to start his own.

      Falcon

    3. Re:Bob Barr in presidential debates by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      They also probably didn't consider him a threat. After he got 20% of the vote, the Big Two are a lot less likely to let a 3rd party get anywhere near them in a debate.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    4. Re:Bob Barr in presidential debates by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      That and, from what I've heard, the Democrats thought he'd "steal" votes from the Republicans and vice versa, so both parties were all for including him to their perceived advantage.

    5. Re:Bob Barr in presidential debates by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      ... if the mass media did it's job, of informing people, more people would demand they be allowed to debate.

      Uh, as far as I know, the media did report the arrests. Few people actually cared that a couple of minor party candidates were not invited and got busted trying to crash the event.

      Note that this doesn't mean that I agree that these candidates should not be invited or that I do not find the level of disinterest sad. I'm only that saying that the media did point out what happened. All-in-all, it's more a commentary on the high bar of popular inertia that you'll need to overcome to change any of this.

      --
      That is all.
    6. Re:Bob Barr in presidential debates by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Uh, as far as I know, the media did report the arrests. Few people actually cared that a couple of minor party candidates were not invited and got busted trying to crash the event.

      Yes, it was reported, but like how surveys are worded, how things are reported have a lot to do with the public's reaction.

      Falcon

  51. much worse than 'no spark'... by big_paul76 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, it's even worse than 'no spark'. It's much worse than the idea that the majority of people supported Bush.

    Both in 2004 and 2000, you had almost (within a couple of percentage points of, anyway) a 50-50 split. Which as some have pointed out, that's the sorta results you'd expect if a lot of people didn't really think that either outcome would make any difference. Like, if you had an "election" of "do you want person A or person B to be president of mars?" you'd probably see a similar result.

    Rightly or wrongly, it suggests that people don't think that it'd make much difference if Bush or Gore had been elected. I got no love for Bush at all, but I don't think that given 9/11 events, that the patriot act would've been vetoed by Gore or something.

    --
    The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
    1. Re:much worse than 'no spark'... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      It might not have been, but you can't really take 9/11 as given under a Gore. There's a lot about Bush that made 9/11 more likely, from his downgrading of bin Laden as a threat to his willingness to let the Saudi's slide on their complicity.

      While it's true that the CIA and the FBI would have jumped at the chance no matter what, but without the excited backing of the administration, they couldn't have got as far.

    2. Re:much worse than 'no spark'... by big_paul76 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I basically think you're right on this. Not a given, not a guarantee that it wouldn't have happened, but yeah, lot of at best incompetence under current administration.

      All I meant was, if it did happen, I think the patriot act would've been equally likely.

      --
      The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
    3. Re:much worse than 'no spark'... by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      50-50 split. Which as some have pointed out, that's the sorta results you'd expect if a lot of people didn't really think that either outcome would make any difference

      Yes, but it is not a causative, but correlative, relationship.

      A 50-50 split can be evidence of a "meh" attitude, or, as I think happened in 2000 and 2004, it can be evidence that half the country disagrees with the other half.

      Upon this, your entire argument fails.

      You should have just made the argument that 50% of eligible voters did not cast a ballot in 2000. That's a much more damning piece of evidence when making the argument that "most people don't care." It means 50% did not care who won AND chose not to vote. There are also people who voted what others told them rather than what they actually wanted.

    4. Re:much worse than 'no spark'... by big_paul76 · · Score: 1

      Either way, you can make a strong case that the last 2 presidential elections indicate that it seems a great deal of people don't see either candidate making any difference to their lives.

      Remember the "Gush vs Bore" jokes?

      --
      The plural form of "anecdote" is "anecdotes", not "evidence".
  52. No it's not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It might have recovered a *little* with the falling dollar, but it is no where near what it used to be. The OP was correct, people from other countries are avoiding the U.S.. Heck, some are even afraid to come here.

    The other thing which has had a negative impact are the foreign scientists who are avoiding coming here, for tech talks as well as for business. We'll gradually see our scientific lead slipping away as well.

    The U.S. is headed straight down to a less competitive status. It seems the terrorists achieved their goals far beyond their dreams, along with help from George Bush and the U.S. Congress.

  53. No worrys! by ndnspongebob · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just wait for the singularity and these stupid government monkeys won't be able to keep up with the rapid change in tech

  54. Given Bush was _reelected by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bush wasn't reelected, Diebold gave him the election. Diebold's CEO even bragged he was going to give Bush Ohio's vote and Bush "won" because of Ohio's results.

    If people are dissatisfied with both parties they should "throw away" their vote on some other party, rather than keep throwing it at Twiddledum and Twiddledumber.

    Unfortunately the mass media makes out third parties as weirdos or on the fringe. Take Libertarians, most people thing Libertarians will allow corporations to run a muck and do whatever they want. However Libertarians actually hate monopolies, many large corporations got big by government granted monopolies, and would end the limited liability corporations get now.

    Falcon

    1. Re:Given Bush was _reelected by dangitman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Take Libertarians, most people thing Libertarians will allow corporations to run a muck and do whatever they want.

      That's because that is exactly what would happen. Libertarian philosophy's end result is corporate domination of the individual. They can claim they believe otherwise, but "pure" Libertarian principles applied to today's society means corporate fascism.

      BTW, the term is "run amok," not "run a muck."

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    2. Re:Given Bush was _reelected by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 2, Funny

      BTW, the term is "run amok," not "run a muck."

      Since he was referring to corporations, I agree. But if you add politics to the mix, "a muck" is the correct term to use.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    3. Re:Given Bush was _reelected by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      That's because that is exactly what would happen. Libertarian philosophy's end result is corporate domination of the individual. They can claim they believe otherwise, but "pure" Libertarian principles applied to today's society means corporate fascism.

      More FUD, that's hogwash.

      BTW, the term is "run amok," not "run a muck."

      I should have checked my dictionary, I just did. When I spelled it "amuck", like right now, my spell checker says it's wrong but it's right with a space. And you may now say I still have it wrong, using a "u" instead of an "o" however the dictionary says "amuck = amok".

      Falcon

    4. Re:Given Bush was _reelected by MrSnivvel · · Score: 1

      That's because that is exactly what would happen. Libertarian philosophy's end result is corporate domination of the individual. They can claim they believe otherwise, but "pure" Libertarian principles applied to today's society means corporate fascism.

      BTW, the term is "run amok," not "run a muck."

      Wrong. You fail to understand/see the major flaw in your argument, that corporations are creations of the state. If the state is downsized or eliminated, then the legal apparatus that makes and support the existence of a corporation is removed. Removing the ability of the state to give the benefits of a living person to a non-entity that also limits the corporations liability.

      Libertarianism is about restoring the full power and responsibility back to the sovereign individual.

    5. Re:Given Bush was _reelected by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Wrong. You fail to understand/see the major flaw in your argument, that corporations are creations of the state.

      Which of course, is bullshit, unless you believe in strange fairytales. Corporations would exist without governments to authorize them. How does Libertarian philosophy prevent them from existing?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  55. All the world knew :( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    French secret services produced nine reports between September 2000 and August 2001, http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL1612543820070416
    secret service declassified document, related to 9/11 attack --> http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,266291,00.html http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/France_knew_of_and_told_CIA_about_al-Qaeda_hijack_plans_prior_to_9/11 http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/041707J.shtml translation of http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,1-0@2-3224,36-896448@51-892780,0.html (a serious newspaper)

    All the world knew what was going on !!!
    was it intentional from the bush administration to ignore those alarms to take advantage of future blast to promote war in iraq ? i can't tell, but it seems the bush administration never cared of radical islamists prior to 9/11, seems since bush been elected, what was important was iraq (clinton's book "my life")
    Please feel free to sue clinton for what he says about bush, when they met on the white house, when he was leaving, for once, he would be sued for something serious, and not a private affair.

    My overall sentiment, simple, i think bush made fun of all of us, with HIS war in iraq.

  56. Mod parent up INSIGHTFUL by querist · · Score: 1

    I think you're on target.

    It's not about people. It's about businesses. It's about BIG businesses, the kinds that can contribute large sums of money to political candidates. They're not interested in the little Chinese restaurant in the town where I live. They're not interested in the local Chiropractor's office. They're only interested in significant contributors ... not significant contributors to society, but significant contributors to their campaign funds.

    This country is going down hill far too rapidly. How do I get off of this ride before it crashes?

  57. Wiccans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've found the vast majority of Wiccans are fat women about 20-35 years old. They prefer to think of themselves as "normal", but they are fat.

    Trust me, there's no hot chicks in the Wiccans.

    I don't want Wiccans banned, but I want them to stay fully clothed. At all times.

    1. Re:Wiccans? by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Wow, thats not how things are around here. My stats seem to indicate that most Wiccans are 14 to 16 year old girls. Their percentage body fat varies pretty much around the norm. Some of them are very *hot*, but totally jailbait. By the time they are of age, most are no longer Wiccan.

    2. Re:Wiccans? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Wow, thats not how things are around here. My stats seem to indicate that most Wiccans are 14 to 16 year old girls.

      I don't recall any Wiccans I knew who weren't at least 20, except for children of Wiccans, though some were middle aged or older. The same applies to Kabalists, though I only met a few.

      Their percentage body fat varies pretty much around the norm.

      In appearance and intelligence I didn't see much of a difference between Wiccans and the general population. Which kind of surprises me because with Wiccans believing their body was a temple in a sense I'd think they'd have healthier life styles than the general population.

      Falcon

  58. Transcript by Freeside1 · · Score: 1

    is there a transcript of the conversation available?

  59. Ohio Votes by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Bush wasn't reelected, Diebold gave him the election. Diebold's CEO even bragged he was going to give Bush Ohio's vote and Bush "won" because of Ohio's results."

    Diebold's CEO was speaking as a Republican political activist... he clearly meant that he and other party members in Ohio would help deliver the state through activism and campaigning, not through some black conspiracy. He'd be pretty damned stupid to make public statements that he'd conspire to cheat the vote, wouldn't you think? You don't think that if the Democratic National Committee had even a hint of real vote fraud that they wouldn't be fomenting bloody rebellion? Are you kidding me?

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:Ohio Votes by nuttycom · · Score: 1

      You don't think that if the Democratic National Committee had even a hint of real vote fraud that they wouldn't be fomenting bloody rebellion? Are you kidding me?

      You think that the Dems actually have that much of a spine?

    2. Re:Ohio Votes by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      You don't think that if the Democratic National Committee had even a hint of real vote fraud that they wouldn't be fomenting bloody rebellion? Are you kidding me?

      You mean the same DNC that is in on the con? You think if they were a real opposition party Nancy Pelosi would have taken impeachment "off the table"? The sooner we all admit that basically all the ones with power are in on the con, the sooner we can implement a solution to get us out of this asschewing fucknut of a situation.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    3. Re:Ohio Votes by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      You don't think that if the Democratic National Committee had even a hint of real vote fraud that they wouldn't be fomenting bloody rebellion?

      There ARE accusations, inside and outside the Democrat Party, that there was voter fraud in the voting in Ohio.

      Are you kidding me?

      I am dead serious. Even though I was not and am not a supporter of the Democrat Party or Kerry. In 2004 I supported Michael Badnarik. I don't even vote on party lines, I mostly vote Libertarian but I have also voted for Democrats, Reform Party, and Republican party candidates. I vote for the person who I agree with the most on the issues that are important to me. This year for president I support and will vote for Bob Barr, unless Jesse "The Body" Ventura enters the race. Then I'll vote for him.

      Falcon

  60. pure Libertarian? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    "pure" Libertarian principles

    Even Libertarians can't agree on pure principles. Which flavor are you referring to? Everybody from anarchists to anarchocapitalists to minarchists to Hollywood conservatives are calling themselves Libertarians.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  61. The Republic Dissolves by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Why are so many people so keen on a revolution?

    Only a very small minority is. The trick is figuring out how to undo Marbury vs. Madison, Santa Clara, and the Seventeenth Amendment to get back to a semblance of a Republic when those constructs have created a nasty positive-feedback loop that's disassembling what's left of the Republic. Many people give up and turn to violence. That should be the last resort, and the others aren't nearly exhausted, but for some it's 'easy' to go there.

    If you're in Oklahoma get on the horn to your State Senator so that state can put its foot down. Other states like New Hampshire have its foot down Constitutionally, but lack political will to stand on that foot. But if people who care about such things don't do anything, then nothing will happen. GOTO 1.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:The Republic Dissolves by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      The concept that courts should declare "illegal statutes" void goes back 200 years prior to Marbury vs. Madison. Are you suggesting throwing out everything to start over? If not the Court, then what body would you establish to provide the needed check? You do admit that review (be it Judicial, or another body) is right, proper, and necessary?

  62. McCain not Corporate by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    The fact is, both candidates are part of the authoritarian corporate class.

    McCain is an authoritarian, but he's not corporate:

    I got turned off by him in a personal meeting. I made a presentation to him that the government is wasting hundreds of millions of dollars in (technology-related) pork barrel spending. I showed that the pork barrel spending is not only fundamentally bad, but also harmful to the people getting the money, the semiconductor industry. When I got done with the presentation, he labeled the pork barrel spending "peanuts." He poked his finger in my chest and said that he's "going to get rid of your big fat stock options."

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  63. Shock Doctrine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This technique of waiting for society to be shocked before introducing unpopular legislation is described by Naomi Klein in her book The Shock Doctrine, http://www.naomiklein.org/shock-doctrine. A short film on the subject can be found at http://www.naomiklein.org/shock-doctrine/short-film.

    The book describes how Milton Friedman came up with the technique fifty years ago and shows how it has been used world wide since then, and how it has been used in America to push "free market" policies through exploitation of disaster-shocked people and countries.

  64. Back to Relevance by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 2, Interesting

    During a group panel segment titled "2018: Life on the Net", Lessig stated:

    There's going to be an i-9/11 event. Which doesn't necessarily mean an Al Qaeda attack, it means an event where the instability or the insecurity of the internet becomes manifest during a malicious event which then inspires the government into a response. You've got to remember that after 9/11 the government drew up the Patriot Act within 20 days and it was passed.

    The Patriot Act is huge and I remember someone asking a Justice Department official how did they write such a large statute so quickly, and of course the answer was that it has been sitting in the drawers of the Justice Department for the last 20 years waiting for the event where they would pull it out.

    Of course, the Patriot Act is filled with all sorts of insanity about changing the way civil rights are protected, or not protected in this instance. So I was having dinner with Richard Clarke and I asked him if there is an equivalent, is there an i-Patriot Act just sitting waiting for some substantial event as an excuse to radically change the way the internet works. He said "of course there is".

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  65. Try to Remember by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

    Fantastic!

    Try to remember
    The endless Septembers
    When Cheney and Rumsfeld
    Gagged us with their members
    Try to remember
    The days of September
    Now, swallow!
    Swallow, swallow, swallow...

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  66. Hernh? You're saying Saddam = Progressive??? by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    Agreeing or not, I was able to mostly follow along with your reasoning until I got to this baffling tidbit:

    These people [progressives and socialists] are also responsible for the current Iranian government AND for the ascent of power of people like Saddam Hussein...

    Whah? You've *completely* lost me. Iran went nuts the way it did in large part due to corporate money-grubbing. Look up what happened when the *popularly and democratically elected Iranian prime minister*, who happened to be notably pro-US and stolidly secular, decided with popular backing that British Petroleum was abusing its position in Iran and worked to control the nation's own resources. I'll give you a hint -- there was this guy called Shah Pahlavi who was whisked into power with enormous backing from the US (and, incidentally, BP), in a coup d'état staged with covert CIA and MI6 teams. Not very progressive nor socialist, really. Yes, I fully understand that the Shah is no longer in power, but we must recognize that Iran would be a very different place if not for direct covert US and UK intervention, and furthermore, any analysis of the current clerical regime in Iran *must* look at where it came from, and what it was reacting against.

    Now for Saddam Hussein. Let's just quote Wikipedia here:

    Various U.S. diplomats and intelligence officials have asserted that Saddam was strongly linked with the CIA, and that U.S. intelligence, under President John F. Kennedy, helped Saddam's party seize power for the first time in 1963.

    Saddam Hussein in the past was seen by U.S. intelligence services as a bulwark of anti-communism in the 1960s and 1970s. His first contacts with U.S. officials date back to 1959, when he was part of a CIA-authorized six-man squad tasked with ousting then Iraqi Prime Minister Abdul Karim Qassim.

    Hmm, more international skullduggery backed by the CIA. I don't know about all /. readers here, but my general impression is that the CIA is not widely known for its progressive or socialist leanings...

    Please correct me if I'm wrong in my reading of your text -- it's entirely possible that by "these people" you didn't actually mean progressives and socialists, although I must say that's what it sounds like after reading your post through again. I agree with a number of your points, but then again some of them seem to come in from outside the ballpark altogether.

    Cheers,

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  67. Mod parent up, not "flamebait" by mrraven · · Score: 1

    I don't know why you got moded "flamebait" your point about externalities being offloaded onto the public is 100% right. The U.S. model equals privatize profits, socialite costs, which is it's own unacknowledged form of socialism that benefits a very few corporate owners and large stock holders.
    The true health and environmental cost of gasoline is FAR more than 4/gallon, a cost being paid neither by oil producers, nor the direct cosumer at the pump, but rather society through higher health insurance rates, etc.

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  68. No, it's not BS by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    On the real 9/11 thousands of innocent people lost their lives.

    Thousands of people lose their lives every day, just from driving cars. In the long view, loss of life isn't what made 9/11 a big deal. Changing how people act is; the bad guys got us to pass wacky laws that are still around many years later, for example. That's why we call it "terrorism" instead of "murder." Murder is just the means. Policy change is the end, and cynics(?) might say that self-destructive policy change is the end.

    As more people get on the 'net and run insecure systems, the possibility keeps increasing that you can achieve similar goals, and without directly killing anyone. If millions of people's and business' machines erase themselves on a single day, that's enough to get politicians into "we have to do something" mode. And by now I think we all know that when politicians are in that mode, they can do unusually stupid and destructive things.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  69. pseudo-libertarian by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

    No, REAL libertarians don't believe in corporations. Corporate structures isolate people from responsibility, which of course creates situations where "domination" occurs.

    Libertarians believe in individual/partnership ownership, with joint and several liability for wrongs performed.

  70. First, Fairtax *is* a sales tax by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Okay, I've heard of an income tax that's the same percentage for all income levels instead of being progressive as being called a "fair tax".

    Second, I was aware of the history of the name changes and the case, I was making a joke when I said "whatever it's called this week."

    I wasn't aware of any name change but while checking the name I did come across the case, or a related one, as being called after Gonzalez.

    Third, it's not me that argues the commerce clauses gives them that ability, it was the majority of SCOTUS that did

    You also said it was idiot to disagree with the ruling, yet 3 of the Justices did disagree.

    I happen to agree that the commerce clause *ought* to be interpreted broadly.

    Reading papers left by some of the Founding Fathers, specifically Thomas Jefferson and James Madison come to mind, the Constitution is to be taken quite narrowly in meaning, both were for limited government but a broad interpretation gives government any power it wants. And Madison was a principle writer of the Constitution. I happen to agree with them, as I say above it not interpreting it narrowly gives the government any power it wants. So, what powers the Constitution does not explicitly give the federal government it does not have to power to do. That's why a way to amend the Constitution was written into it.

    Falcon

  71. Ross Perot by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    They also probably didn't consider him a threat.

    Yea, that's probably true.

    After he got 20% of the vote, the Big Two are a lot less likely to let a 3rd party get anywhere near them in a debate.

    They won't let in third party candidates now. In 2004 both Michael Badnarik and the Green Party candidate, I don't recall his name now, were arrested when they tried to get into a debate.

    Falcon

  72. history by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    history has shown me what happens when we just leave it to charities.

    History has also shown people what happens when everything is left to government. Let's see, between 1930 and 1950 or so some 70.6 million people were killed by government. The NAZI's killed more than 600,000, Stalin 20 million, and Mao some 50 million. History shows governments are the largest terrorists there are. I don't recall now but how many did Pol Pot kill? How many were killed in Rwanda? And though it's died down in the Sudan, how many have been killed there? Between the invasion of East Timor in 1975 and it's independence in 1999 200,000 East Timorese, 1/3 the population, were massacred.

    On the the other hand, I've researched Barr a bit more and like him more than I did.

    I absolutely hated Barr's positions in the early 1990s.

    Falcon

    1. Re:history by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      That's a bit of an unfair comparison. I don't advocate giving the government unlimited power, merely "Power greater than you think is absolutely necessary". I can point to societies (often very wealthy societies) that were historically set up more or less the way libertarians advocate (at least from an economic standpoint); and show that the underclasses suffered greatly in those societies. You cannot, I don't think, point to a liberal, modestly socialist society in which major atrocities were perpetrated upon the people.

      Libertarians advocate a completely market driven economy in which the government takes a hands off approach and provides few if any social services. I point out that such societies have existed and they created horrifying social stratification and a terrible existence for the lower classes. I advocate a government with very limited powers in the areas of personal freedom, but authority to make and enforce economic policy and provide services to those in need, and you point out that given unlimited authority governments do horrible things. It's a true fact, but it's not what has little to do with what I was suggesting

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    2. Re:history by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I can point to societies (often very wealthy societies) that were historically set up more or less the way libertarians advocate (at least from an economic standpoint); and show that the underclasses suffered greatly in those societies.

      Libertarianism isn't just an economic system but a political one as well and I can point out socialist societies that killed many people, NAZI Germany, Stalin's Soviet Union, and Mao's ROC come to mind. The same ones I listed before. On the other hand there are countries that once the economic system was opened many more people were helped. China being a good example, while I disagreed with almost everything Nixon did he was right about opening up trade with China. And while China isn't fully open, they are opening up slowly. With more people making enough to live on they are pushing for government that's open as well.

      And I believe if the US were to end the embargo on Cuba the same thing would happen there. Unfortunately Cuba has disadvantages China didn't. Such as the sugar cane growers around Lake Okeechobee, Florida. If Cuban sugar could be imported into the US those farmers would be hurt financially. That's while Brazilian sugar and ethanol isn't imported, high tariffs.

      You cannot, I don't think, point to a liberal

      What definition of "liberal" are you using, the original meaning? Or the one socialists use?

      modestly socialist society in which major atrocities were perpetrated upon the people.

      Ah, the socialist meaning.

      Libertarians advocate a completely market driven economy in which the government takes a hands off approach and provides few if any social services.

      That's right, we've seen what happens when government controls the economy, or regulates businesses. Because of regulations it's hard for someone to start their own lawn care business. The big lawn care businesses want these regulations to keep out competition. Growing up I used to cut neighbors' grass but it's getting to the point where a teenager will need a license now, I wouldn't be surprised if it got to where a person had to have a license to cut their own lawn.

      I advocate a government with very limited powers in the areas of personal freedom, but authority to make and enforce economic policy and provide services to those in need

      If you don't have economic control you don't have personal control. Nor can you start your own business and create jobs. A sister of mine started her own business years ago, she and friends of hers are Certified Public Accountants, CPAs, and they started an accounting firm. When she did I chatted with someone in Germany and he said it would hard to start an accounting business there. First, he said a lawyer had to start it. Then because of employment laws, if the business hires someone and they don't do the work they were hired for it's virtually impossible to fire them. As if it's better to drive someone out of business than it is to fire a bad employee. That's what those riots by youth in France a couple of years ago were about. The government wanted to make it easier for businesses to fire bad employees, so many youth rioted. However if employers could easily fire bad people they would be more willing to hire people to begin with.

      Simply, government laws and regulations are used by established businesses to keep out competition.

      Falcon

  73. umwut? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought the whole point of the internet being a decentralized network was to prevent an event like this.

  74. corporations by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Since corporations are inherently more powerful than individuals, and utterly amoral on top of that, they need to be kept in tight leash.

    Probably the single biggest reason corporations are so powerful is because they give stockholders limited liability. However, in general, Libertarians would end that limited liability. Personally I probably wouldn't so far as to totally eliminate it, because of the limit on liability a corporation can take more risks than individuals can. This is why corporations were granted charters to begin with. The first two charters granted to corporations were given to the Honourable East India Company in 1600 and the Dutch East India Company in 1602. Both were shipping companies facilitating trade between Great Britain and the Netherlands and India respectively. Shipping was a financially risky business, ships could be attacked by pirates or be sunk by bad weather. If a shop was lost the ship owner was financially liable, for both the cargo and for the lives of the crew. No matter how wealthy an owner was they could lose everything, even their home. So charters were granted to corporations to limit the liability of stockholders, the most a stockholder could lose was the money they invested in the corporation. With this limit more people were willing to invest in shipping which boosted trade and benefited a lot of people.

    However what is overlooked today was that a corporation had to serve the common, or public, good. If a corporation did not do so it could have it's corporate charter Revoked.

    While this sound fine on the surface, it would make investing an unacceptably high risk activity for anyone who can't watch the company full-time.

    Actually it shouldn't take that much tyme or effort, no more than people should take anyway. Stockholders should hold the corporation accountable. They need to read any and all proxies they get and make sure they understand them. They can support shareholder resolutions. They need to be Activist Shareholders. If that's too much work, then they can invest in Socially responsible investing, SRI, mutual funds. Anyway, those who are active in their investments and oppose something the corporation does that causes harm or supports responsible and sustainable activities shouldn't lose their limited liability. Also corporate executives should be held responsible as well. Other than the captain not one person was held responsible the Exxon Valdez nor was anyone held accountable for the Union Carbide Bhopal disaster.

    The core libertarian principle of removing government control would allow powerful entities to get away with whatever they want, because with government power gone, who's going to stop them ?

    Government control is not the same as the control a court can wield. I have not heard of one Libertarian who wants a weak justice system. Actually I bet many would prefer to make it easier for people to sue corporations. Then if it is found it is not serving the public good then it's charter can be revoked.

    Libertarianism would lead to the return of feudalism, which was, after all, rule by those who owned the land and could thus afford to hire armies to enforce their will,

    I suggest you research the economics of slavery. The economics of slavery was unsustainable. It cost more to hire and keep an army than it costs to pay freemen a living wage. It was Libertarians, then called Liberals as in

  75. Kaminsky may be the event by uku · · Score: 1

    The Kaminsky DNS protocol issue may be the best candidate so far for the "Cyber 9/11."

    IF it is as serious as the hype makes it sound (probable),

    AND if it is widely exploited, causing major disruptions to Internet commerce (too soon to tell),

    AND if the IETF, other standards bodies, and DNS implementers are unable to respond with effective mitigations in the protocol (seems likely given their current bickering over DNSSEC),

    THEN we can expect to see some sort of major initiative to "secure the web" and impose technical solutions by legislation. Then the U.S. will go one way, the Chinese another, and the rest of the Internet will fragment into balkanized confusion.

    Or the whole thing could just go away, like Y2K, and we will all wait for the next bullet.

  76. Let not the facts confuse the conversations... by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    The Dems in congress tried hard to pass a version without telecomm immunity. They proposed amendments to that effects. However, Bush has threatened to veto such versions. Thus, some of them chose to vote for the flawed law to avoid being painted as 'helping terrorists!'
    You could accused those as being cowardly. But you cannot call them rubber stamps like many of the GOPers this past 8 years.

  77. Look at the forest by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    Don't just look at single trees.

    Don't just look at nuclear power, look at policy toward ALL source of energies.

    "Obama's overall plan calls for a $150 billion investment in solar and wind power, $1,000 tax credits to consumers buying hybrids and $4 billion in incentives for Detroit to produce more energy-efficient cars. The goal is to wean the U.S. off foreign oil within 10years." NY Dialy News. 8-4-08

    McCann has a more modest plan focused around traditional sources including nuclear energy.
    His idiotic drone, "We have to drill here and drill now," is pandering of the first order. Nevertheless, the relevant question should be, "Will we be a better positions 10 years from now if we follow Obama's plan or McCann's?"

    Do not assume Obama is some sort of saint. He is a politician who will compromise individual points in order to implement his broad programs. He is also very intelligent, so do not judge him by the soundbyte messages. Study the nuances of his plans.

    For McCann, don't just listen to what the press says, look at what he's voted for and worked for.

    Look at each one in totality and estimate who will provide a leadership that you believe will be best for the US and the world 4-20 years down the road. (remember that more Supreme Court appointments may come up this next 4 year)