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Questionable Data Mining Concerns IRC Community

Posted by CmdrTaco on Sun Dec 02, 2007 12:30 PM
from the that-eliza-can't-keep-her-mouth-shut dept.
jessekeys writes "Two days ago an article on TechCrunch about IRSeeK revealed to the community that a service logs conversations of public IRC channels and put them into a public searchable database. What is especially shocking for the community is that the logging bots are very hard to identify. They have human-like nicks, connect via anonymous Tor nodes and authenticate as mIRC clients. IRSeeK never asked for permission and violates the privacy terms of networks and users. A lot of chatters were deeply disturbed finding themselves on the search engine in logs which could date back to 2005. As a result, Freenode, the largest FOSS IRC network in existence, immediately banned all tor connections while the community gathered and set up a public wiki page to share knowledge and news about IRSeeK. The demands are clear: remove all existing logs and stop covert operations in our channels and networks. Right now, the IRSeeK search is unavailable as there are talks talking place with Freenode Staff."
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  • IRC is pretty much a shadow of its-self from the good old days of perhaps 10 years ago. Does anyone really even bother with it now? Between the scams/spam/abuse, why bother?

    And no, I'm not trolling, i was there in the beginning, but watched it degenerate into a virtual cesspool years ago, and got out before it hit rock bottom. Has it improved?
    • by epiphani (254981) <epiphani@[ ].net ['dal' in gap]> on Sunday December 02 2007, @12:40PM (#21552567)
      IRC has always been about social groups. If you have one (or more), then its still good.

      I think DALnet has done quite well handling abuse. We've switched our infrastructure over to an anycast model that seems to have made us fairly resilient to DOS attacks, and we have made major progress in dealing with drones and abusing bots.
      • by kestasjk (933987) on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:51PM (#21553165) Homepage
        Freenode is also a good place to get help with various problems, and you do get a sense of community in most channels.

        Back on topic; I already knew about this, and don't see what the big deal is. I often run into chat logs while googling, sometimes they have useful info. Does anyone really consider a public IRC channel to be a private place?
        A lot of the things I've said on /. since 2005 I would probably cringe if I reread it, but if you don't want it to be public don't say it in public.
        • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 02 2007, @04:30PM (#21554467)
          if you don't want it to be public don't say it in public.

          This attitude is widespread, but very problematic, because it is a departure from long standing social norms and communication modes: A free society has a need for public communication which isn't set in stone. If your only options are to keep something private or have it recorded for all eternity that you said it (and when, where, to whom), many important things will not be spoken publicly. It's not so much a problem of privacy or no privacy: A public channel is not private. It's a matter of forgetting the mundane, so that people need not worry about having their every public move inspected and reevaluated later on. The grace of oblivion is not implemented in our information systems. This lack robs us of our chance to change or start anew, and that stifles public discourse. Again, it's not so much the expectation of privacy which is violated by these archives, it's the perceived transient nature of IRC (and Usenet before DejaNews.)
          • It's a matter of forgetting the mundane, so that people need not worry about having their every public move inspected and reevaluated later on.

            This is just one more part of a larger gradual buildup of online personas and histories. Ten years ago, few would've had Myspace or Facebook profiles for their employers to find; conversation logs, I think, are just more of the same. They really aren't that different from Wiki edits or Slashdot posts.

            Instead of forgetting the mundane, what if it were kept forever available... and forever mundane? So Username1 said something stupid on IRC ten years ago, and Username2 made a mistake on a Wiki edit five ye

              • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                But when Clinton did it, how many of the millions overlooked their own infidelities and called for his impeachment?

                Point of order... Clinton was impeached nor for getting a blow-job by his intern (or even making her play the Human Humidor). He was impeached for lying under oath (a.k.a. committing Perjury). If you or I were to have done so to cover our asses as defendants in a civil lawsuit, we'd go straight to PIMTA prison for it. Remember, Clinton was a defendant in a sexual harassment lawsuit, and sex in the office was relevant to the whole deal (now whether it was justified or not isn't the deal - fact is he was t

        • by Shakrai (717556) * on Sunday December 02 2007, @03:41PM (#21554057) Journal

          What about all the people openly trading kiddy porn?

          That's the fault of the protocol? I'm sure bittorrent is used for kiddy porn too -- but if I pointed that out in an argument against bittorrent I'd have 50 replies pointing out how it's also used for Linux ISOs, game updates, etc, etc.

    • by Minupla (62455) <minupla&gmail,com> on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:04PM (#21552761) Homepage Journal
      Strangely enough I made the same decision in about 93, so I'd say 15 years ago is when it went downhill (I remember +channels, before #channels!). I'm not sure if there's not a formula related to number of years out of college you are as to when 'IRC went downhill' :)

      Min
    • by Ash-Fox (726320) on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:05PM (#21552765) Homepage

      Does anyone really even bother with it now?
      I use IRC daily and the amount of conversations and users have increased in my time of using IRC. And I've used IRC back when you had to dial into a BBS to use it, back when ANSI color codes were the norm (I was pretty young then, and couldn't type very coherent sentences).

      And no, I'm not trolling, i was there in the beginning, but watched it degenerate into a virtual cesspool years ago, and got out before it hit rock bottom. Has it improved?
      That really depends on IRC network and their channels. The places I goto haven't degenerated.
    • There are two types of communication on the Internet. One is broadcast communication. In it, a user sends a message to a medium, and the general public can access the medium. Examples include the SlashDot forum and a channel on IRC. A user of such media should assume that whatever she writes is readily available to the FBI, NSA, etc.

      The second type of communication is peer-to-peer. A user sends a message to a specific user. Examples include e-mail, phone communication, and the like.

      Anyone can ensu

        • If I've had a channel with my buds for years then I probably had a right to be surprised when the complete logs of our discussions appeared in a database somewhere. Granted, I have no right to privacy, but still.... how underhanded is it that they did this with stealth bots pretending to be real users?

          The problem is, it's not quite like that. In your case, if so, I'd find it hard to believe that you had this user idling there for years without you ever once talking to it or figuring out that it was someon

    • by Alioth (221270) <no@spam> on Sunday December 02 2007, @02:15PM (#21553379) Journal
      I don't agree. IRC isn't some homogenous thing that can go downhill - there are thousands of networks and maybe millions of channels - so while a particular network may have gone 'downhill', others may well have improved.

      I've been using irc since about 1991. Our channel doesn't suffer from spam, bots or abuse.
    • IRC was and is a great thing. I was on IRC back when channels had plus signs instead of pound signs. I frequented a channel on EFNet of a particular clique I was in, or really a sub-culture. Many of the people from my local area I had known even before joining the channel, but I got to talk to people in that scene from around the country. When they came out here we would show them around, and when I traveled around I was often greeted warmly in a foreign city by the local group, whom I may have never ha
        • by RLiegh (247921) on Sunday December 02 2007, @02:53PM (#21553697) Homepage Journal
          I was on IRC ten years ago too, and IMO it's stronger today than it was then -simply by virtue of the fact that it's more popular. Ten years ago it was very rare to see irc channels mentioned on people's pages; but now half the time you're reading some web comic or whatever you'll see a 'join us on # on ' message. The big names have petered out, but irc itself seems to be more pervasive than it was in 97 from a cultural point of view.

          Oh, and I think that as far as networks go -rizon.net and quakenet (just to cite to examples off the top of my head) have done very well for themselves. I'm sure if I paid attention to IRC I could rattle off more networks.

          IRC isn't dying any more than BSD is dying -less so, probably.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        But it was designed in the 1970s and the world has moved forward a bit, and with IRC being design by commitee, IRC just hasn't kept up.

        I think by "1970s" you mean 1988 [wikipedia.org], and by "commitee" you mean "a guy".

        Anyway, didn't anyone learn from DejaNews? The response to this IRC transcript thing sounds exactly the same as when people on Usenet suddenly discovered that the stuff they wrote on their "ephemeral" public medium was being archived.

      • by Shakrai (717556) * on Sunday December 02 2007, @03:37PM (#21554035) Journal

        WTF? Do you even know what the point of IRC is?

        Netsplits - my primary hate object. Since IRC is adfree and without a corporate backer, the service levels are often poor to terrible.

        Anybody who has used IRC for awhile knows how to handle netsplits. They are a fact of life with the way the protocol works. And what do you mean "IRC is adfree without a corporate backer?" There is nothing called "IRC", there are individual IRC networks, most of which are volunteer efforts. Nothing is stopping you from finding or starting a network with corporate backing if you think it will be more reliable. Personally I think the fact that it's all volunteer run is a plus and not a negative.

        No offline messages. Since there's no single backer, you can't send a message to someone that they'll get when they return.

        Some networks have services that will do this. On others you can use a private bot to do it. You think it should be done at the protocol level instead?

        No support for smileys/other short animations. No, it's not just teen girls using those

        That's a client-level function. WTF are you bitching about? I'm sure there's a script out there for mIRC that would give you smilies and animations if you really want them. IRC is just a protocol for communication between servers and clients. It's up to the client to format and display the data. AIM is no different in this regard -- your wink is still sent as ';)' -- the client just puts a pretty graphic on it.

        No support for mic, webcams etc

        You could do webcams with sound with a decent script in most clients. But if that's what you want then IRC probably isn't for you.

        DCC sucks terribly particularly with firewalls and NAT

        Yeah and sending files on IM also sucks with firewalls and NAT, unless you have opened up ports or your client and router support upnp. Again, what's your point? How is this something lacking with IRC?

        You can register for a nick on most networks, but that doesn't stop someone else from taking it so messages go to the wrong people

        If those people are basing your identity solely off your nick then they don't understand IRC very well. And as you say, some networks have nick registration if this bothers you. Some will even auto-kill people using your nick.

        Doing some of the more advanced features like sharing a folder with someone (fserve) is a lot harder than in modern chat programs

        So write a better client if this bothers you that much. Or even a script for an existing client. There's very little you can't do with the scripting language in a modern client like ircII epic.

        he hacks to allow other clients to access those networks aren't exactly helping the uptake of an open standards backend either

        IRC is one the most open protocols there is. All of the various ircds are well documented and most are open-source (if not GNU) projects. The underlying IRC protocol itself is simple enough that anybody with Wireshark and half a brain could reverse engineer it if they wanted to do so. Hell, I largely taught myself scripting/coding and protocol analysis by playing around with IRC and tcpdump back in the day.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Say what you want, but the masses aren't running to IRC anymore. It's Jabber, MSN, Yahoo chat etc that are being used. Now you can answer GP with smart questions like 'it's solved at the client level' and while you are right, the point is that there is a lot more development effort aimed at the IM market.
  • by evolvearth (1187169) on Sunday December 02 2007, @12:37PM (#21552527)
    Our nicks on IRC provide a level of anonymity, and we know that actual people do keep logs of us. Many of our quotes even end up on http://www.bash.org./ [www.bash.org] I go onto IRC knowing that my conversation is not necessarily private, and if I ever wanted to discuss private details of myself to someone on IRC, I could simple private message him. I could even set up a private room if I have to discuss private matters to a group of people. I don't know why I'd discuss private issues with those on IRC, but some people may for whatever reasons. It's silly to expect privacy on IRC. Never say anything in public that you don't want to come back at you. If anything, just set up a passworded channel if you're planning a violent revolution.
    • by epiphani (254981) <epiphani@[ ].net ['dal' in gap]> on Sunday December 02 2007, @12:53PM (#21552687)
      A level of anonymity is one thing, but given that my nickname is also linked to my real name, I'd prefer that my prospective employers can't pull up something I said in a moment of stupidity five years ago.

      Many of us out there started our technical exploration on IRC. Some people get into computers and then find IRC. Some are the opposite - find IRC and then get into computers. I can credit IRC and the people on there with my entire career choice.
    • by A beautiful mind (821714) on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:19PM (#21552901)
      It's the difference between letting passers by see you on the street and having a 24/7 surveillance network watch you in every public moment of your life, with total search capabilities.
    • Sorta (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Moraelin (679338) on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:38PM (#21553041) Journal
      Let me tell you my favourite "in Soviet Russia" kind of story. The story of how a handful of Party officials held some hundreds of millions of people in line.

      Yes, everyone knows about Stalin's brutal mass executions and deportations. Very distasteful business, that. It also created so much resentment that it was unsustainable in the long run.

      So it evolved into something more subtle: the idea that somewhere there's a dossier about you, containing a lot of the stupid things you've said in the past. You don't know exactly what or how much. (After all, they were the non-computer kind.) And you don't know when or how it will bite you in the arse later.

      Maybe you can kiss any chance of traveling abroad goodbye. Maybe now your chances of promotion or of finding a better paid job, just became nil. Or maybe you're just this far from having to explain it all to the secret police and, if you're lucky, looking forward to a long career somewhere in Siberia. Or maybe it will bite your kid in the arse, if they can't get you. Etc.

      In a nutshell, the idea was that you don't have an expectation of privacy. Anything you say, even nodding approvingly when comrade Piotr swears at the government at the pub, might become permanently attached to you and a factor in which way your future goes.

      Worse yet, how do you know if comrade Piotr isn't an agent provocateur, trying to get you to say something you'll regret?

      So people learned to think twice before opening their mouth, and avoid saying anything that might be used against them. It turned them into a mass of isolated (and thus vulnerable) individuals, because not many risked saying (or even listening to) anything that could have been the start of an organized resistance.

      And now back to the topic, here's what I wonder: why the heck do we allow the same in the West, if it's done by corporate PHB's instead of the Communist Party?

      The effects, way I see it, can be exactly the same: anything you ever say or do is recorded _somewhere_. Be it Google, or such recorder bots or whatever. And in an age where HR drone routinely google employees and prospective employees, it can come back to bite you in the arse.

      And to get even more back on topic: even if you started a private conversation with comrade Piotr, how do you know if he's not just baiting you for something to post on Bash?

      Yes, nicks are a privacy tool, but for most people it's not as unbreakable as they think. We already know that most ISPs would give away the owner of an IP address without even asking for a court order. Did you ever register that nick? Because if you did, now the IRC server has information linking that nick to an email address. If you think none can be bullied into giving it away, think twice.

      Plus, are you paranoid enough to keep _all_ conversation at the level of "I'm evolvearth, you don't need to know my RL name and telephone number"? Well, kudos if you do, but most people don't. For most, online communication seems to be just an extension of RL communication. (And please don't imagine that said in a condemning tone or anything.)

      So basically, all these attempts of recording everything we say or do... will they just turn us into some obedient serfs to our corporate overlords? You know, better not say anything that makes you sound like a maladjusted anarchist, because some HR drone will google you. That might be your job you're throwing away there. Better not say anything against the government too, because you don't know when your (current or future) company gets a chance at a government pork-barrel contract that requires a thorough background check. Etc.

      Yes, you can password protect channels, do it all in private channels, etc, but I'd say even that might not help you much once enough people learned to just keep their mouth and fear strangers asking about certain matters.

      Just some (admittedly pessimistic) stuff to think about, if you're bored enough ;)
      • Re:Sorta (Score:5, Insightful)

        by j0nb0y (107699) <jonboy300@yaho o . c om> on Sunday December 02 2007, @04:25PM (#21554427) Homepage
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            I'm not alone. There's the comic's author for one. Then there's the /. mods that modded my post up. Five is not a huge number, but it's a start.

            I refuse to live in fear about what people may think about what I've done or said. I'd rather live with consequences than live in fear. Even if that means I'm first against the wall...
        • Best summary ever (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Moraelin (679338) on Sunday December 02 2007, @04:27PM (#21554439) Journal

          The problem with Soviet Russia, and currently in the U.S., is that the people are afraid to say things in public for fear of losing or not gaining employment, of being arrested, and just simply being blacklisted. That is how we lose our freedoms to begin with.


          Essentially, yes. You've summarized my concerns better than my verbose roundabout style ever could. Thanks.

          My only question was just how much such logging bots, "do no evil" Google, etc, just move us closer to... well, slavery. "Do no evil" Google has brought a lot of good, for example, but also brought us the reality where you _will_ be googled by your potential employer, and might suffer the consequences for some dumb thing you've said in freshman year.

          Sometimes the road to hell can be paved with good intentions. Sometimes the government is just one of the possible evils.

          Perhaps I'm still naive since I have a year left till I even have to worry about the world of graduate school, but I hope my potential employer is reasonable enough to hire me based on my qualifications and the opinions expressed by my colleagues over my silly behavior on IRC.


          1. To start with the most important part: If you're a highly qualified expert -- I fancy myself one too -- you have that option. Most people don't. Most jobs involve interchangeable peons. Noone will lose any sleep over whether they hired someone uber-qualified to operate the cash register, or just the obedient peon who doesn't rock the boat. In fact, in most cases it can be argued that hiring the latter is the _better_ thing to do.

          What I'm getting to is:

          A) Most people don't have that option to be defiant. So if saying the wrong thing can spell even one extra month of unemployment, they'll rather say what a potential employer wants to hear.

          B) A world where only the upper 1% experts can afford to speak their mind, is a world which has lost the battle. A small inteligentsia can be bought, arrested on trumped charges, discredited, whatever. Stalin did that too.

          If everyone except you is too afraid to even listen to your crusade, you've already lost. You've just become the liability to a totalitarian regime -- either the totalitarian government kind, or the corporate-owned kind -- and they'll find a way to render you harmless.

          2. In an ideal world, every employer would be logical like you describe.

          In the real world, employers are swamped in resumes, and are just dying for a reason, any reason, no matter how arbitrary or lame, to discard some. Some will just mix them discard the bottom half of the pile. Some smart and successful people argued that you should discard anyone whose email address you don't like the sound of, or whose picture looks unprofessional, or whatever. At least one corporation is using numerology. Add the numbers for each letter in your name (where A=1, B=2, etc), add the digits of the result, repeat the last step until you have a single digit. If it matches the digit for the company's name, you're eligible, if not, noone will even read your resume. At all. Several corporations use tarot. Literally. Etc.

          The only thing that matters is having a repeatable criterion, and one that doesn't fall afoul of discrimination laws. So even if you're not allowed to refuse employing someone because they're black, you can safely refuse to hire them because their name sums up to 3. Or because your HR department found something they dislike when googling them.

          So even for the top experts, some will realize that they increase their chances of a better job, if they just keep their mouth shut. Even if it's a slight increase, hey, every bit helps. If keeping your big mouth shut gives you even a 1% chance of landing a better paying / more stable / better quality-of-life / etc job, there will be people who'll gladly take that advantage.

          For the replaceable peons I've mentioned before? Doubly so. In fact, make it 10 times so.
          • by ShieldW0lf (601553) on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:45PM (#21553103) Journal
            Oh so it's okay to pirate movies, TV shows, books, etc. because they are all publicly available?

            No, it's obligatory. If you pay for them, you're part of the system of oppression, which makes you an enemy. If you're not with us, you're against us, and a part of the Axis of Evil, and no longer subject to the bounds of common morality and ethics. People who pay for media should be caned.
  • Freenode as OSS? (Score:3, Informative)

    by epiphani (254981) <epiphani@[ ].net ['dal' in gap]> on Sunday December 02 2007, @12:38PM (#21552543)
    So what exactly makes an IRC network FOSS? Almost all the major networks have been publishing their code since their inception. Given that I've been part of the coding team for DALnet for the last seven years - and publishing Bahamut as GPL the entire time, saying that freenode is the "largest FOSS network"...

    As a side note, DALnet has banned tor nodes quite a while ago, because of services abuse coming from those IP addresses.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      It's that the network is dedicated to supporting and promoting FOSS, not that the networks code is FOSS (although it is).

  • If you're posting something on the internet, you should have the expectation that everyone in the whole world may someday know it was you who wrote it.

    David Brin's essay on the end of privacy is probably appropriate reading here...
  • So anonymity for individual people is a privacy right of the holiest nature, but anonymity for bots is bad because then you can't discriminate against them. Hmm.
  • Wow... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Blakey Rat (99501) on Sunday December 02 2007, @12:47PM (#21552623)
    The three people who still use IRC are going to be *pissed!*

    (Last time I used IRC was in an attempt to get support on a particular open source software package. Worst. Support. Ever. In a room with 50+ connected people, seemingly every single one was AFK for a solid 5 minutes. Of course when someone got back, they just told me I was in the wrong IRC room to ask that question, [you know, the one in the product's documentation!] and I was stupid for not knowing it. The other 49 AFK people never said a word, so I kind of wondered why the hell they even bothered to connect. Of course, maybe they were all secret IRC logging bots, heh.)
    • Re:Wow... (Score:4, Informative)

      by radarsat1 (786772) on Sunday December 02 2007, @12:55PM (#21552701) Homepage
      I agree that IRC is an odd medium to get support for a piece of software, but I've personally had the exact opposite experience. I've been getting to know git [git.or.cz] lately. Seeing as it's a bit of a strange beast, I've run into a few problems occasionally due to using the wrong command or whatever. Twice, I decided to try popping onto freenode (using Pidgin) and had my answer within about 10 seconds.

      That said, I personally don't really _expect_ "good support" for FOSS, I usually assume that it's up to me to figure it out, and otherwise, that mailing lists are usually the best place to look. I'd say that about 95% of the time someone else has previously had the same problem and I can get my answer through Google in a few minutes.

      Sure, there are times where I have to browse through pages and pages of hits, but often it's a really special corner case, and then I decide to make a post so that my question and answer might be archived somewhere for someone else to find. Don't forget to check newsgroups! Google Groups in particular contains tons of answers.
      • Re:Wow... (Score:5, Funny)

        by Alioth (221270) <no@spam> on Sunday December 02 2007, @02:25PM (#21553463) Journal
        I was searching Google Groups in about 2002, for information on a linking problem when building Nethack (a missing library) on a rather oddball MIPS machine running Linux. The first hit that came back... ... was me, asking exactly the same question in 1992.

        It was a very strange moment.
        (Incidentally, no one had an answer then, either. I don't remember how I solved it then, or how I solved it in 2002, but I do remember eventually solving the problem).

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Here's the greater point, why do people even go INTO channels if they're not going to chat? There were 50+ people in the channel I was in, and only one of them typed *anything* in 5 entire minutes. If I didn't know better, I'd just assume that IRC was a buggy POS that didn't work. (Look it says 50+ people are here but I can't see what any of them are typing!)
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            Many, many people idle on IRC; logging out means ^A-d in screen or disconnecting from their bouncer, especially the geekier people you probably want to talk to. Barring network hiccups and reboots I've been connected to FreeNode pretty much 24/7 for the past 3 years. I do speak on the channels I'm on, but your chances of having me respond to your particular query (assuming I want to and know how to help you) in the space of 5 minutes are pretty slim, especially if you're on the other side of the globe fro
          • Re:Wow... (Score:4, Informative)

            by AlXtreme (223728) on Sunday December 02 2007, @02:32PM (#21553511) Homepage Journal

            Here's the greater point, why do people even go INTO channels if they're not going to chat? There were 50+ people in the channel I was in, and only one of them typed *anything* in 5 entire minutes.

            Welcome, you must be new here!

            Seriously, IRC is not IM. A lot of people are in multiple channels or are merely idling while they are actually doing useful stuff. You can't jump into an IRC channel and expect support on-the-spot. IRC doesn't work that way. Join, lurk a bit, if you notice some activity launch a question and don't expect an answer immediately.

            I use IRC as a secondary support method (next to a mailinglist) for a project with a small following. The people who get IRC are relaxed and polite, even if they have to wait half an hour for an answer and I go out of my way to help them out. The people who don't get IRC frequently leave the channel just seconds before I help them out. C'est la vie.
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                Wow indeed! I log into #gentoo and when I do, I stay online. And you ask me why? Wow indeed!

                Because I am a user, not a master! I get help and I try to help. I don't know most of the things. But I occasionally look into the window if some question is asked that I know. I am there to tell what I know. When I don't know, I stay quite.

                Or did you wanted someone to tell you as soon as you asked a question that "hey! I don't know. I feel sorry for your problem and it should not have happened, bla, bla?". See, it i
  • just like DejaNews (Score:3, Interesting)

    by m2943 (1140797) on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:31PM (#21552993)
    USENET used to be similar to IRC, in that it was used for casual, short-lived conversations, with expiration times for articles ranging from days to a few weeks. Post-1977, those articles should be automatically copyrighted and companies should not have a right to repurpose them from their originally intended usage. Well, that didn't stop companies like DejaNews from putting everything up on-line and making it searchable. Now, this company is doing the same thing for IRC.

    I'm actually all for the principle that if you put it on the web or in a chat or on the public airwaves, people should be able to copy it, archive it, and redistribute it. However, such a principle needs to be formulated and enforced uniformly; it simply isn't right for some groups to get away with ignoring copyright and others to get charged with copyright infringement.
  • It seems very silly (at best) to expect "privacy" on a public communications channel, especially when probably a lot of the participants keep their own logs anyway.
  • by A Guy From Ottawa (599281) on Sunday December 02 2007, @02:31PM (#21553507)
    Communicating through plain text on the internet no longer considered private.

    More at eleven.
  • by pongo000 (97357) on Sunday December 02 2007, @02:35PM (#21553543)
    FWIW, IRSeeK seems to have had a change of heart, or at least is being receptive to privacy concerns:

    http://www.irseek.com/blog/ [irseek.com]

    Sounds like a genuine response of concern to me...
  • by EddyPearson (901263) on Sunday December 02 2007, @02:48PM (#21553653) Homepage
    This is just a sure fire way to cause more chans to go invite only (+i).
  • by wikinerd (809585) on Sunday December 02 2007, @03:14PM (#21553857) Journal

    As an IRC user I dislike IRSeek's business model and practices very much. Discussions on IRC channels are by definition available only to the people who join in, and making any log available without asking is bad etiquette and in most places it is against the terms of use. If we wanted to make our discussions public, we would speak in a Web forum or USENET newsgroup, or we would use our own logging facility and post the logs on our webpages.

    People who believe IRC is dead or don't appreciate it are obviously not worthy of being called nerds. IRC is alive and well, and it is very interesting and useful. Remember that there are many IRC servers across the globe and many channels in them, just as there are many USENET newsgroups. If one network or channel is touched by the Eternal September, go to another server and at some point you *will* find interesting people.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      "How many times has someone come into a linux channel asking for help when the same question was answered 5 minutes earlier."

      If that question is asked as frequently as you make it seem to be, the person asking it could have found the answer with a websearch. The fact that they didn't search the web tells you that they certainly won't use an irc search engine first either.
    • by lostfayth (1184371) on Sunday December 02 2007, @01:28PM (#21552955)
      It's a feature.

      8.4. You should hide the list of Tor relays, so people can't block the exits.

      There are a few reasons we don't:

      1. We can't help but make the information available, since Tor clients need to use it, so if the "blockers" want it, they can get it anyway.
      2. If people want to block us, we believe that they should be allowed to do so. Obviously, we would prefer for everybody to allow Tor users to connect to them, but people have the right to decide who their services should allow connections from, and if they want to block anonymous users, they can.
      3. Being blockable also has tactical advantages: it may be a persuasive response to website maintainers who feel threatened by Tor. Giving them the option may inspire them to stop and think about whether they really want to eliminate private access to their system, and if not, what other options they might have. The time they might otherwise have spent blocking Tor, they may instead spend rethinking their overall approach to privacy and anonymity.
      http://wiki.noreply.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ#WhyBlockable [noreply.org]
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        but in most states a conversation is illegal to record unless all parties expressly allow it. The owner of a bar can't just start audio recording at all the tables if they want to...(video is OK with NO audio, and audio is allowed in "general" or at a register, but recording individuals is highly unethical and probably illegal, let alone to publish that somewhere. I don't see how IRC is any different other than it's "written" because it's typed on a computer so that may change the rules.. from an oral con
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I don't see how making things opt-in and the bot easily identifiable is a demand to go out of business; it sounds very reasonable to me.

      Some channels (particularly support types) will have use for a search bot.

      It seems a bit underhanded how they disguised the bots as a human and used tor to hide the activity. Look at the web: the only search engines that try and disguise themselves and which ignore robots.txt belong to spammers. Legitimate search engines obey robots.txt and are easily identifiable by their
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      You're right. Someone should just be allowed to follow you in public and record all your conversations in a public space on a tape recorder, transcribe them, and then post them online in a searchable database for the world to see. After all, you have no expectation of privacy in a public space, right?
    • Re:hmm (Score:5, Insightful)

      by shakestheclown (887041) on Sunday December 02 2007, @03:19PM (#21553897)
      What would make you more upset?

      1) You walk into someone's office at work and find a list of the funniest quotes by you, that they had remembered from previous conversations.

      2) You find out that they have been secretly tape recording every conversation you had with everyone at the office.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      It's DejaNews all over again.

      The first thing I thought of was DejaNews, too. There was a lot of knee-jerk resistance to the idea of a universal Usenet archive when it first got going (although there have always been smaller archives of particular groups, and there's nothing stopping anyone from doing it), but now I think it'd be tough to find someone who doesn't find it occasionally useful. (Google Groups, the web-to-news system separate from the archive, on the other hand...) Many newsreaders today are even built with integrated supp

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        The thing is, all the channels that want archives - the software development channels, etc - already run their own which they control and can prune information out of that they don't want public. (In practice, I think a decent proportion of the Freenode-based channels I spend time in have some sort of official public log.) I can't see this going down well at all.