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The Year In Tech Law 96

Selanit writes "CNet has an article rounding up the year in IP law. Perhaps the most interesting thing about this article is that the SCO case gets only one paragraph out of a fairly lengthy article. It's good to get a reminder that there are other issues out there, including content filtering in libraries, the potential for a tax on Internet access, pop-up ads, domain name legislation, and of course file-sharing."
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The Year In Tech Law

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  • And here I was thinking that I'm gonna get my daily SCO fix....

    I wonder how many slashdotters immediately stopped reading after realizing this is not about SCO?
  • Perhaps the most interesting thing about this article is that the SCO case gets only one paragraph out of a fairly lengthy article. It's good to get a reminder that there are other issues out there that would be a good reminder for the editors, too...
  • by ObviousGuy ( 578567 ) <ObviousGuy@hotmail.com> on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:06PM (#7799042) Homepage Journal
    The SCO case introduces no new law. The case relies almost solely on existing law.
  • Think about it, how many Cnet readers even know what Linux is? Ok that's sarcasm but you get the idea, Windows users are not horridly affected by Darl McBride/SCO and company. However this regulation has many people in the Linux community wondering (well duh).

    Spam on the other hand affects all of us, and the effectiveness of the new law will bring a shrug from most of us. If it's effective, great; if not the battle rages on...

    Pop-ups? Same thing, affects everyone, legislation in any direction would be interesting to all.

    Illegal music downloading also has popular appeal. The draconian efforts of the RIAA affect anyone who could be sued (including the grannies they were suing who barely knew what a computer was...)

    Domain names? Got a fair amount of mention apparently, the reach on that issue is medium, lots of people own domain names these days.

    Taxes, DEAR GOD NO!!! Good they're not going anywhere yet...broad reach so gets decent mention...

    So in the end this is the reporting I'd expect from CNet...
    • by AKnightCowboy ( 608632 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:43PM (#7799305)
      Pop-ups? Same thing, affects everyone, legislation in any direction would be interesting to all.

      Pop-up? What's a pop-up?

      -- Clueless Mozilla user.

    • Okay, so I don't have unending faith in CNet, but I'd at least expect some savviness to at least know about Linux (CNet does acknowledge the SCO case as "Perhaps the most far-reaching high-technology legal issue in 2003"), so they're not blind. The problem is that the public, the average Windows-Hotmail-IE-Kazaa computer user has no idea that the case is significant.

      It's sad, because it certainly is significant to the ordinary computer user. What happens if open source is allowed to collapse like this (and it won't)? Well, much of the present software developed has been more than a little derived from open source or open research (IE derived from Mosaic or even modern UIs hijacked from Xerox research).

      Sure, the ordinary user doesn't care about Linux for his or her own system, but what will happen to these users if open source folds?

      All the servers and other systems that form the framework of the internet could become increasingly propietary by rogue distributors like SCO and make the Internet more costly to run/access, whatever. Researchers wouldn't be willing to develop formerly open source software because they'll simply be padding Darl's pockets for free, so there could be a sort of stagnation of new and creative ideas (users didn't think all the UI innovations were Microsoft's idea, did they?). Decreased (albeit somewhat slight) competition for Microsoft's monolithic OS. The list goes on ....

      Basically, it's sad to see CNet (a technology portal) give more face time to an (avoidable and preventable -- with Mozilla or blockers) issue like Pop-Ups (and misleading domain names, etc ...) than to something at the core of the computer revolution (and hence at the basis of all these issues) as the open source case. CNet should be trying to educate users, not pandering to their sensibilities.

      But I guess I know what Linux and SCO is and everything, so I have a different perspective.
      • Xerox's UI was neither open source nor "open research"; Apple may have ripped it off, but Microsoft -bought- it (license to use it). Xerox didn't intentionally give it away for free to anyone.

        (Of course it would have been disastrous if the courts had upheld "look and feel" copyrights, even though overlapping windows are braindead and it would have been better if they had flopped).
  • No Eldred mention? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by tepples ( 727027 ) <tepples.gmail@com> on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:08PM (#7799058) Homepage Journal

    Why wasn't the Supreme Court's upholding of serial copyright term extension (Eldred v. Ashcroft) mentioned?

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Not really a tech issue. A hundred years ago, that case would have been just as relevant.
      • Moreover, copyright expiration is not relevant -at all- to software, because by the time any copyright on a piece of software expires (which will start in about 40 years), it won't be useful to run it, even if possible. There is currently no public domain in software except what was placed in it by the copyright holder, and for practical purposes there never will be. There is no software copyright expiration.
    • Kaaza is full of (C)Copyrighted material like:
      1 /*
      2 * linux/lib/errno.c
      3 *
      4 * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Linus Torvalds
      5 */
      6
      7 int errno;
      8
      We assert our rights to this proprietary intellectual property and you must pay ONE BILLION DOLLARS for this violation!

      • Love,
        • Darl "Bill Gates" McBrideand
        Kevin "Mini-Mc" McBride
    • Because it doesn't matter - life + 50 or life + 70, either way, I'll be dead by then, so why should I care? Which is, of course, exactly the point, but oh well.
      • Because it doesn't matter - life + 50 or life + 70, either way, I'll be dead by then, so why should I care? Which is, of course, exactly the point, but oh well.

        Actually, as bad as an extra 20 years is, what was really bad is the 20 years is retroactive. That means stuff that would have entered the public domain in your lifetime won't.

  • At one time (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cluge ( 114877 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:10PM (#7799069) Homepage
    At one time we didn't NEED internet law. It was understood that certain standards of behavior we're required so that we could all "get along". People that refused to follow the rules were "banned", essentially made non citizens of the global eletronic world. It was a brutally effective punishment.

    Now we have no real accepted standard of behavior, and no penalty that is effective. Thus we have to create "Internet Laws" and find someway to enforce them. The early system was elegant and egalitarian. The current system is simply a miserable failure. I do not pine for the early days, I do not secretly sit in a dark corner complaining about the unwashed masses. I am vocal and write to my representatives when internet issues come before them, I try to enlighten my friends and family on the issues. Perhaps someday we will have some represntatives with a modicum of internet savvy. Then and only then can we start to write good internet law. Until then, 2003 was merely a stepping stone in a long arduous process.

    AngryPeopleRule [angrypeoplerule.com]
    • Re:At one time (Score:4, Insightful)

      by jjjack ( 302285 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:20PM (#7799132)
      I think the reason "internet law" wasn't necessary in the early days is that the internet wasn't actually used for all that much, and those who used it tended to be scientists and/or people very technically-inclined. You can't bemoan the fact that the internet is now used by the general public, that's just how it's happened. As a result, innovation on the internet boomed in the late '90s, and created a lot of issues which are now being considered. Along with this, general interest in the Internet of course created major commercial interests.

      So the important thing to do now is to get educated individuals with a "modicum of internet savvy," as you put it, to represent the public interest to our officials (yes I know that's their job, but if they aren't doing it correctly, we need to help instruct them) in order to counter the often amoral and anti-innovative opinions of the invested commercial interests.
      • Re:At one time (Score:5, Interesting)

        by astrashe ( 7452 ) * on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:34PM (#7799239) Journal
        There was another explanation, something that some people believed in.

        The idea was that the net worked because of shared protocols. You didn't have a cop enforcing thing in the center -- people followed the protocols because it was in their own interests to do so. If you didn't follow the protocols, then you'd be unable to communicate.

        Protocols that allowed people to cheat were bad protocols. I used to hang around on the cypherpunks list, and that's where I picked up this world view. But the idea is that a good protocol will prevent people from cheating, usually cryptographically.

        The idea was that if you were a solid net citizen, and pushed for strong, well designed protocols, and if you were responsible (ie., you applied your patches), then you would be safe.

        Cypherpunks had actually extended their experiences on the net to a form of libertarian politics. They thought that by applying these ideas, the state could -- would inevitably -- shrink, and that people would become less dependent on central authorities enforcing rules.

        DoS attacks tend to argue against that point of view, I think, as does the power of inertia that old protocols like SMTP have.

        But on the other hand, you have to admit that the net is remarkably usable, remarkably complicated, and remarkably free of central administration.

        I would be pretty surprised if the powers that be didn't break it over the next decade or so.
        • I wonder how many other former Cypherpunks readers/lurkers hang out on Slashdot? Probably quite a few. It's amazing to think about the influence that list and the culture that grew out of it had on the growth of the Internet and the techie culture of the net.


          It's pretty amazing to think now that for a number of years it looked like strong crypto was going the way of the dodo bird.

      • You can't bemoan the fact that the internet is now used by the general public,

        Bah! I bemoan it constantly. :-P

        YLFI
    • Re:At one time (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Tim C ( 15259 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:52PM (#7799355)
      At one time we didn't need any law - what the village elder(s) said, everyone did. Failure to comply would generally see you left to fend for yourself, banished, or killed.

      Then society got too big and too complex, and laws had to be made, and people employed and charged with upholding them.

      I see the net as being similar. Back when it was small, as you say everyone agreed to get along, or was kicked out. Now, it's too big for that - you get me kicked off my current ISP today, I'll be back with on new one tomorrow.

      On the other hand, with its distributed, no single owner nature, I'm not sure how we can make laws for the net as it is. There's simply no-one to enforce them.
      • Re:At one time (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Saeger ( 456549 )
        I'm not sure how we can make laws for the net as it is.

        You can only make laws for the "corporate net" [msn.com] with links to the real world that everbody uses for things like paying their taxes online; it will be the one to get infested with soul-sucking DRM. The OTHER "sideband freenet" will always be a self-governed anarchy (like slashdot) just the way I like it.

        --

    • Was there snow and hills, too?
      lots of walking up the latter and through the former, I'm sure.
    • what "system" are you talking about? you're remembering a time that never existed. yes, in fantasy-land there's no need for rules. everyone just listens to the words of the fairy princess and lives a happy, productive life.

      in the real world there are rules governing all types of behavior and there have been since well before the dawn of the internet.
    • Re:At one time (Score:5, Insightful)

      by adjuster ( 61096 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @08:51PM (#7799698) Homepage Journal

      At one time we didn't NEED internet law. It was understood that certain standards of behavior we're required so that we could all "get along". People that refused to follow the rules were "banned", essentially made non citizens of the global eletronic world. It was a brutally effective punishment.

      It's still a brutally effective "punishment" today. No one is stopping users (corporations, individuals, etc) from installing pop-up blockers, subscribing to blacklists, using alternative DNS roots, and generally mangling the hell out of the traffic they receive from the Internet.

      The thing is, on the whole, we're not exercising our freedoms to shun others and "police" the Internet ourselves. The public support needed to really make these "punishments" work isn't here, and the waves of unsecured "zombie" computers give ammunition to those who would seek to thwart these "punishments" with denial-of-service attacks. We need better software solutions to help people "police" their view of the Internet, more secure client computer operationg systems (and no, I don't mean "trusted computing"), and more social education about acceptable behaviour (i.e. never buy anything you see advertised in a spam, stop patronizing companies that you see advertised in spam, etc).

      United States legislators are more concerned about passing new laws to outlaw very abstract types of "crimes" ("illegal spamming", as defined by the direct marketing lobby, for example) than they are about working to see that our law enforcement has the necessary appropriations and tools to enforce those existing laws that are being broken now (spammers breaking into PC's and using them for spam factories, for example).

      I think we'd all agree that modifying bits bound for somebody else without their express consent is a bad idea, but modifying bits that I've requested is a-okay. Firewalls, proxy servers, intrusion detection and response systems-- all of these "technologies" function on that principle.

      It's going to be really, really disturbing, though, when we all wake up and find out that we can't run our "popup blockers", use our blacklists, and filter responses through proxies anymore. It'll be "made illegal" to alter the contents of packets that we receive from the Internet because of "intellectual property" bogosity.

      It's going to be even more disturbing when we all wake up and find that none of us have "root" access on our computers anymore. All our packets on the Internet are going to be authenticated and cryptographically "secured" (i.e. "secured" from US), and the content publishers and distributors will hold all the keys.

      I may be overly pessimistic now, I guess, but I feel like we can't stop it. The Internet, as we know it now, is going to be gone sooner rather than later. There will be "other internets" that will be similar to this one, but the age of a single, unified, global Internet is going to pass quickly, and idiotic legislation, content publishers and distributions, and "intellectual property" are going to be the forces that break it apart.

      • by Qrlx ( 258924 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @10:40PM (#7800349) Homepage Journal
        It's going to be even more disturbing when we all wake up and find that none of us have "root" access on our computers anymore. All our packets on the Internet are going to be authenticated and cryptographically "secured" (i.e. "secured" from US), and the content publishers and distributors will hold all the keys.

        I don't know diddly about crypto... but what you've described is exactly why Hollywood wanted CSS.

        If Xing had protected their key better, we might still be trying to crack DVDs. (I'm not really sure how strong CSS is.) But take note of the approach -- a combination of leveraged industrial power, tech, and legislation. I think we'll be seeing this hybrid approach more and more. Try to lock 'em out, and if(when) the hackers find a way in, make sure the path they took was an illegal one, and a federal case to boot.

        To wit: "Content providers" believe that when you skip commercials in TiVo, you're "stealing" from the networks. New TiVo's don't have this feature. (Or maybe it's ReplayTV, I'm a bit ignorant since I barely watch TV.) When you decipher Adobe's eBook, you go to jail for a few months -- the Sklyarov case being the equivalent of the Feds dipping their toes in the hot tub. Linking [2600.com] is looking less and less like protected speech. Jon Johansen gets retried for DeCSS. Microsoft rams Product Activation down our throat, and Windows XP loves to phone home [microsoft.com].

        While everyone's caught up looking at the trees, here's what's happening in the forest: We're inching ever towards limiting the common man's access to "intellectual property" (whatever that is). In doing so we're walking away from the past five hundred years of intellectual freedom brought about by Johannes Gutenberg and Martin Luther.

        This is a huge, gigantic assault on the philosophy of the Enlightenment, on which (to some extent) our country was founded and our Constitution based. Yet my impression is that most comptuer geeks only see the tip of the iceberg --e.g. "I can't legally play my DVDs on Linux" or "ROT13! WTF J00 AD0B3 LAM3RZ!" The strongest fight is coming from librarians. I think librarians are the only ones to realize that, were libraries to be invented today, they would promptly be sued out of existence by the RIAA for illegal filesharing.

        Though I think the librarians missed the obvious solutions when faced with CIPA and COPA: Deny Internet access to minors, and let adults surf unfettered. Let's see how Mommy and Daddy respond to that.
        • point of order: as was explained recently in a /. story, Jon Johansen wasn't re-tried, as we Americans think of it (a la double jeopardy); rather, he went thru a level of appeals which, in his country, means there is some kind of trial which happens in front of the new panel of judges. so if you compare that to the American system, it was more like the continuation of his previous trial -- the continuation of his entire legal process. i believe in America the appellate court simply *reviews* the proceedings
    • At THIS time! (Score:3, Insightful)

      by ShaunC ( 203807 )
      >At one time we didn't NEED internet law.

      We still don't NEED internet law.

      Everything that's illegal "on the internet" was already illegal to begin with, offline. Copyright infringement ("piracy")? It was illegal long before the internet came around. Fraud? That was illegal before computers were even invented. Breaking and entering ("cracking")? Already prohibited by law. Child porn? That wasn't OK before the Intarweb either.

      No, we don't NEED internet law, the current laws already apply to just about a
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:11PM (#7799074)
    I had to read this twice before understanding the full extent of the possible repercussions. IANAL, but I think now the 9th circuit court could invalidate the ruling, which would be a disaster for many of us:
    In its first ruling on COPA, a divided Court said that definition does not by itself render the statute substantially overbroad for purposes of the First Amendment, refused to lift an injunction against enforcement of the act and sent the case back to the lower appellate court, which in March 2003 found COPA unconstitutional.
  • by jsav40 ( 614902 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:11PM (#7799080)
    I feel as if I've lost a whole slew of civil rights as far as anything connected to computers goes. Starting with libraries, continuing on to my "illegal" linux DVD software and culminating with DCMA. The fact that congress is taking every opportunity to connect *everything* to the "war on terror" does not bode well either.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:14PM (#7799093)
    The article claims that the outcome of this SCO case could affect the future of Linux. Wooo, scary! Just the kind of statement they want!

    How about a more accurate statement like: "Unless SCO comes up with some evidence behind their so-far meritless case, SCO is likely to accelerate their self-destructive business trajectory."

    There is simply no conceivable way SCO can win this case. The future of Linux has a better chance of being affected by the second coming of Cthulhu.
  • It's an overview. No single case gets more than a brief mention, and although there has been lots of FUD and SCO has made an ass of itself, there hasn't yet been much action in court. In any case, there is a sidebar menu for "most popular headlines" which includes a link to a page about the SCO case [com.com].

  • by Anonymous Coward
    These stories shouldn't be run until February!
  • Is that one of those things people who don't use Mozilla get? :-)
    • No, I believe it's one of Microsoft's inovative(tm) new(tm) features that is going to be put into Windows XP Service Pack 2. Imagine the thought! Not having to look at pop-ups on the Internet! I just wonder how long until the OSS community rips this off..... Oh wait. OSS has already had that for a long time! Hmmm! Microsoft isn't inovating this!? Microsoft is ripping this off?! Say it ain't so!

      Oh and hear Longhorn Service Pack 3 is supposed to have the inovative ability to only accept cookies from

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:29PM (#7799203)
    If someone said "IP" last year, people in the tech-world would probably assume they were talking about the internet protocol.

    This year however, its all about "Intellectual Property"
    Sad..
  • Let's not forget... (Score:5, Informative)

    by PaulK ( 85154 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:40PM (#7799283)
    The criminal arena. The first ever "felony" spam arrest [bizjournals.com], followed by two more spammers surrendering [wral.com].

    A cybersquatter goes to prison for pr0n linking to mis-spelled children [zdnet.co.uk] specific sites. Not trying to be redundant, but this article is informative.

    My personal favorite, "DVD Jon" acquitted [macworld.co.uk].
    • A cybersquatter goes to prison for pr0n linking to mis-spelled children specific sites.

      Let's also not forget this not so minor point...

      Zuccarini also pleaded guilty to one count of possessing child pornography.

      LK
  • by bodrell ( 665409 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:47PM (#7799330) Journal
    I find the ruling on libraries, requiring them to install site-blocking software, especially frightening. I know it's been said many times before, but plenty of legitimate sites get blocked--like those discussing reproductive health, or censorship itself. And although outright pornography isn't found in libraries, some books are considered pornography to conservatives. The best example I can think of is "Naked Lunch" by William S. Burroughs, which has some repulsive content, but the Supreme Court ruled it could not be banned as an obscene material. I'm sure an online text of the book would be filtered out.

    Of course then there's the software patenting nonsense. At least the patent office has enough sense to realize it needs to reform itself.

    • by tepples ( 727027 ) <tepples.gmail@com> on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @09:14PM (#7799804) Homepage Journal

      And although outright pornography isn't found in libraries, some books are considered pornography to conservatives.

      An erotic work will fall into one of two classes: "obscene" erotica without artistic or scientific value, and merely "indecent" erotica considered "harmful to minors" even though it may be art. The Supreme Court has long held that the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution does not protect the right to disseminate "obscene" material. The COPPA/COPA/CIPA controversy mostly considers 1. preserving adults' access to legitimate "indecent" erotica, and 2. preserving access to non-erotica that censorware miscategorizes [atari.org] as erotica, such as breast cancer pages, Philip K. Dick pages, pages that promote adoption over abortion or vice versa, Matsushita's site, etc.

    • although outright pornography isn't found in libraries

      While I agree with you in general, you are mistaken on that point. Libraries are free carry whatever they want, it's just that most have limited money available and choose to spend it elsewhere. Many libraries do in fact choose to carry Playboy [google.com] and more. Not only does the US Library of Congress carry Playboy, they even have it in braille! [loc.gov]

      This law is supposedly based on "community standards". Well if a local community runs a library and they decide th
      • While I agree with you in general, you are mistaken on that point. Libraries are free carry whatever they want, it's just that most have limited money available and choose to spend it elsewhere. Many libraries do in fact choose to carry Playboy and more.

        I guess I was unclear about the distinction between indecent, obscene, and pornographic. Someone else already clarified this point and defined indecent and obscene, so I won't do that again. I didn't mean libraries are forbidden to carry pornography--I

    • One the landmark precedences on this is the United States of America v. One book called "Ulysses" Random House, Inc.

      In the decision Judge John M. Woolsey spoke specifically to pornographic. He defined pornographic as written for the purpose of exploiting sexuality. In the decision, he defined obscene as "tending to lead to impure and lustful thoughts. With regards to pornographic, the generally accepted interpretation of the ruling is that the book was written as an honest attempt at art, and was the s

  • by bodrell ( 665409 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @07:57PM (#7799395) Journal
    Besides whitelisting, the only way I can think of to end spam is to get people to stop buying the advertised products. This can't be that hard to do. You could even buy spam-advertised products, as long as you didn't click the link in the email. Ex: rather than clicking the link in a Viagra spam, just find an online drugstore yourself and buy it through them. I know there are plenty of net-stupid people out there, but if everyone takes the time to spread the word, maybe we'll have a reduction in spam. Or, at the very least, keep some money out of the spammers' pockets. Someone second me on this. And for the lazy, it'd be a trivial New Year's resolution to spread the word about not clicking on spam links.

    And out of curiosity--there have been plenty of high-profile spammers interviewed in various publications; now that an anti-spam bill has been passed, are those folks all fair game for law enforcement?

    • by Artifakt ( 700173 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @08:15PM (#7799506)
      The problem is, spam only requires half a percent of the most cluelss or so to bite, and it's working. Fixing that CAN be that hard to do.
      A task like getting 80% of your local high school graduates to go on to college or trade school, or like getting a 50% reduction in the highway fatality rate by getting the worst 10% of drivers off the road, is a lot easier than getting the word to that last, clueless 1/2%, just because you can miss a half % or so completely, and still succeed, but here it's that last 1/2% that you have to find and convince instead, and nothinge else counts.
    • get people to stop buying the advertised products. This can't be that hard to do.

      Spam costs essentially zero to send and it is often profitable with a response rate of 1-in-10,000. Unfortunately more than that are mentally ill. Unfortunately more than that are senile. Hell, half the population is just plain stupid. It is impossible to stop spam by asking people not to buy.

      anti-spam bill

      This bill legallizes some formerly illegal spam. The direct-marketing association considers the bill (now law) to be
  • by PCM2 ( 4486 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @08:00PM (#7799418) Homepage
    Look for my forthcoming book,

    Laughing Stock: The Darl McBride Story

    The title works on so many levels...

  • by adjuster ( 61096 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @08:04PM (#7799438) Homepage Journal

    Who says I have to use "the" root DNS servers?

    Who says I have to use "official" ICANN IP address allocations?

    Am I committing a crime in the United States if I put up a private network running TCP/IP, put up some DNS servers that are authoritative for "CartoonNetwork.com" and put up some web servers to host pornography for that domain name? What about if I invite other people to participate in my private network? What about if I sell access to the public to my private network? What if I sell rights to corporations to join my private network? Where does the idiocy end?

    Idiotic legislation to attempt to control the behaviour of the Internet is going to result in "multiple internets". We may well end up with the "United States internet" and the "rest of the world internet". Hell-- we practically have a "Chinese internet" and a "rest of the world internet" now.

    Cooperation on the Internet works on the basis of social pressure, not on legislation. Legislation will only cause the Internet to fragment and "route around" the stupidity.

    • Too late. Never fixed my sig, but here's the link [24.125.12.101]. Personally, I think this is a good thing, I'd like to see them try to enforce laws there...
    • by Jerf ( 17166 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @08:36PM (#7799633) Journal
      Who says I have to use "the" root DNS servers?

      Shhhhh. Don't freak out the Senators.

      Am I committing a crime in the United States if I put up a private network running TCP/IP, put up some DNS servers that are authoritative for "CartoonNetwork.com" and put up some web servers to host pornography for that domain name?

      To the extent that an external, unconnected visitor might see this resolution of "CartoonNetwork.com", it probably would be a crime, but not really one of those new-fangled "internet crimes", it'd just be fraud and/or trademark violations.

      If it's purely internal then I can't imagine what the crime would be.

      Cooperation on the Internet works on the basis of social pressure, not on legislation. Legislation will only cause the Internet to fragment and "route around" the stupidity.

      Only to the extent that the legislation permits. I can imagine laws that can not be "routed around" in any significant way; an extreme, but perfectly viable, option is to ban the Internet altogether, or just whitelist it at the transport level. This is damned hard to just "route around". Unfortunately, this logic promotes just sitting back and do nothing ("they will inevitably lose"), which is a Very Bad Idea, not least of which is that there is still a difference between "not losing" and "winning".
      • by adjuster ( 61096 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @09:13PM (#7799799) Homepage Journal

        (Oh dear-- I just found your blog on a Google search about a minute ago, and here you've replied to one of my posts. Now that's fuckin' spooky!)

        To the extent that an external, unconnected visitor might see this resolution of "CartoonNetwork.com", it probably would be a crime, but not really one of those new-fangled "internet crimes", it'd just be fraud and/or trademark violations.

        If it's purely internal then I can't imagine what the crime would be.

        I wonder where the "line" between "internal" and "external" stops, eh? Suppose "my internet" was a private organization that you could join and particpate in. I wonder how trademark usage comes to bear in private communications between private individuals or companies. I don't know enough about how United States trademark law would work in this case, but I suspect that it's quite odious, given the mindset of "intellectual property" "owners". Our (worldwide) "intellectual property" law is outmodded and mismatched with technology.

        Only to the extent that the legislation permits. I can imagine laws that can not be "routed around" in any significant way; an extreme, but perfectly viable, option is to ban the Internet altogether, or just whitelist it at the transport level.

        I'm talking about countries, states, ethnic groups, etc that decide to simply "make their own internet" because "the Internet" isn't suitable for their needs anymore. Does this U.S. legisation that covers "the Internet" cover "my internet"? I seriously doubt these laws are sophisticated enough, and I doubt that there's necessarily jurisdiction for the United States government to control the operation of private computer networks-- especially those that are made up of physical components located outside their geographic borders.

        Unfortunately, this logic promotes just sitting back and do nothing ("they will inevitably lose"), which is a Very Bad Idea, not least of which is that there is still a difference between "not losing" and "winning".

        I'm not advocating that we "do nothing" because "they will inevitably lose". Rather, I'm saying that we might as well "do nothing" because (1) the emergence of private internets is inevitable, and (2) the interests of the public to freely communicate and exchange ideas have already taken a back seat to the greed of content distributors and "intellectual property" "owners".

        You may know of Douglas Adams' character "Wonko the Sane". He decided that the world was incurably insane after he read the instructions on a packet of toothpicks. He reasoned that any society that needed instructions to use toothpicks was so sufficienty sick as to be beyond hope.

        In that mindset, then, I knew we were "fucked" when, a few years ago, a simple piece of software that allowed users to make shared annotations on web sites (a piece of software that users consented to using by downloading and installing themselves) was held up as some kind of violation of intellectual property by content creators. If I remember correctly, the content creators bitched about "derivative works" and somesuch. The content creators were saying "They're still our bits, even when you're using your computer to display them". It's the same logic that says that making "mix tapes" should be illegal. It's the same logic that says that you shouldn't be permitted to make annotations in books that you've purchased. I don't believe the manufacturer of the software was litigated out of existance, per se, but I'm sure that any effort to do something similar today would be.

        Once I saw that this logic was at play on the Internet, I knew we were fucked, and that there wasn't much point in doing anything else.

        • I wonder where the "line" between "internal" and "external" stops, eh? Suppose "my internet" was a private organization that you could join and particpate in. I wonder how trademark usage comes to bear in private communications between private individuals or companies.

          This is a good question that nobody is addressing.

          In that mindset, then, I knew we were "fucked" when, a few years ago, a simple piece of software that allowed users to make shared annotations on web sites (a piece of software that users
    • Pacificroot had alternate servers running years ago.

      More recently I don't know what the status is. But it was sure nice being able to type in www.bbc.news and get the proper website!!!
      • Pacificroot had alternate servers running years ago.

        Oh, I'm not arguing that they don't exist-- just that nobody really uses them.

        I'd love to see what would happen, though, if someone "collided" with an existing ICANN TLD. I would expect that criminal proceedings could well be touched off.

    • Cooperation on the Internet works on the basis of social
      pressure, not on legislation. Legislation will only cause the Internet
      to fragment and "route around" the stupidity.

      Be realistic. Legislation is an easy way to generate social pressure,
      far easier in general than rational argument. When the two come up
      against each other, there is certainly no reason to assume a priori
      that legislation will lose. Indeed, "social" pressure on the internet
      has nothing to do with society; net standards are determined by

    • If internet taxes pan out, I suspect that there may well be several thousand "Secret United States internets" all connected via a massive sneaker network and a "Rest of the World Internet" that is taxed if Americans want to use it.

      Wouldn't you be willing to bury a fiber-line to every friend you have in the middle of the night if you would be taxed per-email and per-webpage if you didn't?

      The per-email tax has already been struck down once but you know how persistent those loons in Congress are.
  • by mbstone ( 457308 ) on Tuesday December 23, 2003 @09:16PM (#7799820)
    Case law gets made when somebody loses their case, it goes up to a court of appeals, and the appellate court either affirms or reverses, issuing an opinion. So it's neither interesting nor surprising that the SCO v Linux case isn't mentioned in the article, that case is still at the trial court level.
  • Grateful (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Lord_Dweomer ( 648696 ) on Wednesday December 24, 2003 @01:06AM (#7800971) Homepage
    You know, while everybody here has been discouraged over the downfall of our online freedoms (and i'm right with ya on it), I feel grateful. The internet spreads information at such speed that it speeds everything up. Including the evolution of societies. The internet is a society. It is a culture.

    We have been fortunate enough to be able to live through the "Pilgrim" days of the net, as well as the "Wild West" which we are just starting to come out of. We've experienced many exciting things, and it doesn't look to be slowing down any time soon.

    In 5 or 10 years from now, we may all be under the draconian rule of M$, the RIAA, the MPAA, or whatever organizations might strip our net freedoms, but they can never take away our memories of what it was like in the golden days.

    I hope it doesn't come to that, but if it does, I will be sure to tell my future children and grand children of the glorious days of yore when you had to be a real computer geek to even access a BBS, or when almost any song or movie or software program could be found online for free if you knew where to look.

    Take a step back and absorb all you can about the great things we take for granted on the net right now, for you may log on one day to find out they've disappeared over night, like a broken link.

Air pollution is really making us pay through the nose.

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