Human Rights and Echelon 78
Anonymous Coward writes "Proposals for a new definition of human rights now before the European Parliament, writes Duncan Campbell in Telepolis, would ban ECHELON and update data protection rules to latest developments in telecommunications technology." Compare and contrast to the United States, where the only legislative proposals before Congress are to increase government spying on the citizenry. Hey, the FBI says "If there's going to be a Big Brother in the United States, it's going to be us. It's going to be the FBI." What more is there to say?
We're from the Government. We're here to help you. (Score:1)
Would this be the same FBI that wanted Systems & Network Admins to download a binary from their site and run it? :-)
Who are you trying to kid? This is the USA. (Score:1)
It'll never happen. This is America.
We're too busy lying to ourselves about our supposed "freedoms" to get up off our fat asses and establish any.
If the Bill of Rights came up in Congress today, it would not pass. Everybody to the right of the Green Party would lobby against it night and day.
Forget it. Don't even waste your time talking about it.
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Re:It is a Balance (Score:1)
I wish I had a nickel for every time someone said "Information wants to be free".
Re:Vicious Circle, anyone? Was Re:Who are you tryi (Score:1)
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Re:Time for a privacy const. amendment. (Score:1)
The 9th and 10th amendments taken together tell us that people MAY have a right to privacy (enumeration "shall not be construed to deny or disparage others [rights]"), but one could argue that powers which are contrary to privacy may be among those "reserved to the States", allowing the states the choice of whether to make privacy a fundamental right or not.
Re:Is that our only choices? (Score:1)
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Today, noone wants a gun to protect themselves from the government, they want one to protect themselves from the other idiots who have guns to protect themselves from the other idiots who have guns to.. Well, some people do have guns in case the Gov't goes bad, but they live in compounds in Montana, waiting for the day their conspiracy theories unfold.
Today, taking away peoples guns won't make a damn difference. Even if they were allowed to keep guns, would it make a difference the day Freedom of Association was ironed over 'for the children' or 'to stop drugs?' Oh wait, that happened, only it was 'for capitalism to stop the Red Scare.' Well what's next in line.. Speech? Well don't worry, as long as people think you're only after pornography and bomb-making instructions, you'll even get them to actively agree with you. Oh right, that's happened too. And did anyone owning a gun make a fscking difference? Food for thought.
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
I say this very seriously. Your rights are slipping away, but at such a slow rate that it is mere erosion. More importantly, it is not only the government who is after your rights, corporations are as well.
You talk about 'figuring it out' but people have historically shown themselves to be idiots and morons. The status quo. You don't risk throwing your way of life away just to grasp at Rights that have slipped away so slowly that noone knows what they are. Reactionary changes (things getting 'messy') only happen during times of drastic change. And that's just not happening.
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
My 2 euro's....
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* Hey! I made a post. Damn ubehageligt...
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Well, guess what. I'm sick of the British way of spelling things, and then trying to claim it's the US that spells it wrong. They're two different dialects, and within themselves, they're both right. Deal with it.
Now, this is the typical response from a country which once was another country's colony. When they become independant, they quickly screw up the language so that it dosen't look like the original too much. Why? Well, maybe same reason Microsoft uses EEE....
Regarding the free right of speech, even though the American Constitution says you are garanteed this, are you really free to speak about anything you want in America? Hell no, not if you happend to be a minority of some kind. The freedom of speech only counts if what you are saying is strictly mainstream.
Other countries, even though they are granted the right of free speech from their government, are more free on this topic. E.g. Even if you are a Nazi, you are free to speak out your message. Now I'm not, and I don't like extreamist groups, but still if you want to have free speech, it just HAS to include everyone, not just the ones that follow the current political agenda.
Finally, let me just add a little anti-slashdot message, I'll bet this message dosen't get moderated up, simply because most of the messages getting modetated up contains a hell of alot of bull, and this one don't. "I don't like the way this group is turning, better leadership might help".
PS: Thanks for posting all the askslashdot's I've sent over the years... NOT! But then again, they were actual technical questions that deserved a discussion, and no bullshit. Maybe thats the American side of Slashdot, not being able to accept critisism....
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* Thats all folks.
Trust, whats that? (Score:1)
Your trust in the government is quite touching, and is unfortunately shared by many that have never run afoul of one. It seems most have forgotten Hoover's FBI and the excesses of the 50's-70's rather quickly, even with reminders like Waco. (Note that the FBI also did some good things for civil rights in that time period, nothing is ever simple.)
How long has organized crime, one of the major responsibilities of the FBI, been with us now? They have reduced their power I'm sure, but it's an equlibrium at a cost, like the RICO and zero tolerance laws. If you expect them to eliminate terrorism in the US, you are expecting too much. We are talking about trading freedom for some extremely small absolute increase in safety. It's important to estimate the amounts on both sides, even if you believe in such tradeoffs.
There has been nothing to stop terrorists and criminals from using one-time pads properly for many years, yet somehow the FBI has struggled on thru techniques like infiltration. These work just as well against digital keys I would think.
The FBI isn't evil, but its part of our job as citizens to keep it's power limited, because all truth and justice loving organizations want to grow and tend to perceive the world in black and white. Trust is nice, but verification never hurts, right? When the FBI talks of expanding powers we need to let them know when the cost is too high, that's all. If the country is still worth saving, they work for us.
It is a Balance (Score:1)
That is what it comes down to, balancing privacy concerns and security concerns.
The general population isn't very scared of a loss of privacy, but they are terrified of being victims of crime.
People need to learn that privacy is an important thing, until then the government will have popular support to decrease personal privacy.
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
>canada is a monarchy
He didn't say it wasn't. He said the Charter of Rights stated things a certain way, and he's right. The Charter is roughly analogous to the US Bill of Rights, but as he pointed out it has that arrogant descended-from-monarchy thing about granting us poor Canucks whatever rights we think we have.
I may not be American, but I certainly admire the principles the US was built upon. Of course 70 years of Big Government have mostly destroyed those principles, but you still have some options left. Once they finish taking away your guns, you won't, but hey, 230 years will have been a pretty good run for Liberty
Re:SEC Proposal (Score:1)
Linux rocks!!! www.dedserius.com [dedserius.com]
Re:If you are legit, you have no worries (Score:1)
Using the FBI in this kind of witch-hunt is possible, however the current laws restrict it to a limited amount. Thus we should be vigilant about any further erosion of privacy rights, but realize that there should be a limit, such as when there is probable cause to believe someone is conducting illegal activity, then the FBI can get a warrant. If you allow investigation wholesale, you run the risk of the information being used not to procecute illegal acts, but persecute associations and legal actions which you might prefer everyone didn't know.
Re:This Does Not Look Good... (Score:1)
A. EU support of eschelon is cut, but the rest of the network remains, no pollitical [sic] change in the US.
The NSA will always continue to monitor communications regardless of whatever political compromise is struck. SIGINT is part of NSA's very reason for existance. From NSA's FAQ: [nsa.gov]
"We collect, process, and disseminate intelligence information from foreign electronic signals for national foreign intelligence and counterintelligence purposes and to support military operations. The requirements driving NSA's collection are set at the highest levels of the U.S. Government. NSA also is tasked with preventing foreign adversaries from gaining access to classified national security information."
As long as there is the NSA, there will be SIGINT. You just won't know about it. We're all kept in the dark as a matter of "National Security".
If you read the Telopolis article, you'll note that: "According to the five page proposal, all future interceptions must "have a legal basis, be in the public interest and be strictly limited to the achievement of the intended objective". My guess is that we'll agree to this, and continue monitoring under the the protection of 'public interest' and 'national security'. Result? Status quo.
And, as an aside - I've formerly held security clearances - it is amazing all of the mundane stuff that is labeled 'classified'... Don't want that embarassing fact to slip? Well, classify it!
-jerdenn
Re:What more is there to say? (Score:1)
I agree that /. is infamous for taking out of context quotes, but at least they link to the full story - the slashdotteri are free to read the original story and make an educated evaluation themselves (unlike many other forms of conventional media). Unfortunately, the TTL for a slashdot story seems falling - there is usually no more interesting posts to a story more than a few hours after it is released. Everyone here is usually in a rush to fit their opinion into this 'window' - they skim the article and then hurry to post.
-jerdenn
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
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DeCSS source code! [metastudios.com]
Re:I'm not so sure it's a misquote... (Score:1)
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Hmmm.... I know that saying the government can't take away the right to free speach is good, but it has problems. It still lets corporations take away your right to free speach, although I haven't read the amendment in question (not being an American). Also, I believe hearing some people talking about repealing the sections of the constitution about possession of weapons as the "right" method of gun control. Couldn't the government just repeal the sections saying they can't restrict your freedoms of speach?
I'm not meaning to be offensive, I'm just trying to clear up something I don't quite understand...
-RickHunter
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
You took Article 10 and presented it out of context of the whole document. Specifically you forget mentioning Article 17 and 18, which state that the expressed rights can only be restricted as far as allowed in the declaration itself.
So, yes some of those freedoms expressed in the declaration may be restricted up to a certain extent, but only as stated in the whole declaration. Same applies for the US constitution.
(The European Convention of Human Rights and Fundamenal Freedoms can be found here [www.coe.fr].)
Re:Yeah, that's what Joe Strummer said. (Score:1)
I believe you made a typo-- didn't you mean to type "shouting" instead of "shooting"? But don't be too hard on the Brits-- they don't even know the proper day to celebrate Thanksgiving-- one of them told me that they celebrate it on the 4th of July in Merrie England.
Correct danish (Score:1)
I can know that being dutch
Re:Big Brother? Concern yourself about little brot (Score:1)
OK, so it wasn't. :P (Score:1)
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
canada is a monarchy
monarchies dont have presidents they have kings and queens, offcourse in most of the today modern monarchies they dont have any real power. power is in parliement or govermants hands.
If you are legit, you have no worries (Score:1)
Re:This Does Not Look Good... (Score:1)
Snort... Giggle... yeah...
yep, I can just see it. European troops are massing in Canada, giving us a deadline before invasion... the call goes out for soldiers to defend our borders. No one responds! Interviews in a small kentucky town yield young men and women who say "well, my gran'dad fought for us in WWII... my dad lost a leg in Vietnam and came home to protests. I always said I would be proud for my reserve troop to be called up, but with the NSA wanting to filter people's email transmissions for possible warnings of terrorism, I just can't stand in the europeans' way." Navy and Airforce pilots refuse to go into the air to prevent bombing runs over new york, boston and LA. "They're just right," they say shaking their heads. "The US is in the wrong on this one, and if they want the bombings stopped, they should just surrender and do what the EU wants. We can't stand in the way of a just war. Americans' rights to a level of computer privacy that most of them don't care about is just more important than a few thousand lives and the destruction of our cultural heritage." The US surrenders in fear and cheering crowds emerge from the bombed out ruins to greet the EU troops who have brought them freedom.
I really hope that was meant to be funny.
-Kahuna Burger
Re:Who are you trying to kid? This is the USA. (Score:1)
Still, are you willing to accept the lowest common denominator as politically inevitable?
Like Adlai Stevenson said - "In a democracy, people tend to get the government they deserve."
Or P.T. Barnum - "No one ever lost money underestimating the intelligence of the average American."
Ludicrous like previous EU privacy positions... (Score:1)
Also: remember EU's vaunted personal privacy regulations do not apply to governments - only corporations. So not withstanding the blather in the European parliment, Big Brother is alive and well in the continent that gave us the modern police state
Re:The *REAL* reason EU want's to ban Echelon (Score:1)
http://www.newsroom.co.nz/Story.asp?S=17556
Vicious Circle, anyone? Was Re:Who are you trying. (Score:1)
I agree that, more likely than not, we will lose some -- maybe almost all -- the battles despite our best efforts. But without our efforts, we still lost them by default. As quixotic as it may be, I still believe the modern democracies are capable of self-government and that we can correct these anti-freedom tendencies. But it won't happen if the truly thinking people voluntarily remove themselves from the debate.
In the end, it's not the winning that matters. It's the fighting of the good fight that matters.
Re:What more is there to say? (Score:1)
The last time I checked the VAST MAJORITY of the havoc is being wrecked by governments (particulary the US government which is the world's dominant power) not by the people the FBI is going after. For instance the government that you "trust" has killed about a half a million children in Iraq over the last 8 years through sanctions which are not supported by the democractic opposition in Iraq (see the Unicef Report). It has blown up a medicine factory in Sudan, launched cruise missiles into Afganistan, invaded Yugoslavia, blown up the Chinesse embassy in Belgrade, etc... and this is just in the last couple of years. Why you want to give more power to these people is way beyond me
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
There is no difference. Saying "We don't take away freedom" and "We grant you freedom" means essentially the same.
The question is only how easily the document granting the freedom can be (de iure or de facto) abolished. The US Constitution is no different here than others, it just uses a wording typical for older and Common Law texts.
The European Convention of Human Rights [www.coe.fr] is IMO more safe: It features a Court of Human Rights, which is extraterritorial for 40 of the 41 member states of the Council of Europe [www.coe.fr] (and could move).
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Not really. The essence of both is exactly the same: "You have the freedom and we won't take it away." You can't have one without the other.
Actually, I was inexact above: The other human rights documents don't say "we grant" but "they have".
The difference between "everyone has" and "we don't take away" is only that the first one tells us the result the government must achieve whereas the other just tells us what the government must not do to achieve the very same result (which is not even named explicitly).
The only reason I can see fot this difference is that the US Constitution is older and thus uses a more outdated understanding that focused on procedures.
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Re:No, how do you *really* feel? (Score:1)
To your information:
Hans Bethe was German
Leo Szilard was Hungarian (and was really sick of Europe as a whole)
Enrico Fermi was Italian
Niels Borh was Dutch
Sometimes I feel ashamed of our close-minded anti-Americanism. There's no paradise on Earth, neither in America, nor in Europe. Every culture has its bright and dark sides. And chauvinism is a Bad Thing (tm) wherever it shows up.
Re:What more is there to say? (Score:1)
Re:What more is there to say? (Score:1)
I trust the people that are close to me. I trust my parents and my little brother. When I have kids I want my kids to trust me; I don't need the government to raise my kid for me, nor do I need the television either.
The problem I have with the current trend is that it takes away power from the individual to manage his/her life as well as the lives of their children. We don't need laws to "protect" children from "offensive" material on the Internet. We need parents to get off their fat ass and be a friend to their children.
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:1)
Information is a human right (Score:1)
Just think... the boys in the Pentagon, Capital Hill, CIA HQ, and in so many smoke filled corporate boardrooms would have to think twice about some their more heinous acts if the public had the guaranteed right to know what was going on (and not just 25 years after the fact.)
This Does Not Look Good... (Score:2)
A. EU support of eschelon is cut, but the rest of the network remains, no pollitical change in the US.
B. A happens but then the EU goes on to presure the US to cease such activities. The US eventually gives in...
C. B happens but then the US does not quit its dirty ways and a new cold war develops between countries who value their citizens' rights and authoritarian countries... (we would be on China's side. =\ )
D. C would happen but then after a few years the EU decides to shut down Eschelon via military force. Naturally the US would be hard pressed to recruit soldiers to defend an unjust cause, the US would inevitably loose the war (which would last no less than 10 years...) and the federal government would be abolished and the states would join the UN as independants... The most hopefull outcome would be some really cool tech... but if it goes nuclear then we would be hunting for our food again... =(((
On the other hand this initiative could fail, probably due to US diplomatic influence, and then we'll be back to hacking on freenet and 128 bit encryption... =((((
mailto:alangrimes@starpower.net
Re:What a bunch of dorks (Score:2)
Well, let me clue you in honey, PP and all the other abortion providers sell their mailing lists, and it goes on your medical records, anyway.
First of all, even if they do sell your name, they are not allowed to divulge any information on the procedures you've undergone. That's part of your medical record, which they aren't allowed to give out or sell.
When you sign a job application, you're giving permission to get your credit and medical history.
Not sure about anyone else, but I've never signed anything for any company I've worked for that would allow them to have access to my medical record or credit history. The most I've agreed to is a drug test. (except when applying for a government security clearance, which allows the government to root through my credit history and pretty much anything else they like, but they have this capability anyway)
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:2)
Oh right, that's happened too. And did anyone owning a gun make a fscking difference?
People aren't going to go out and try to overthrow the government over censorship. It's going to take something much more grievous than that. The vast majority of people don't just start shooting because the government pissed them off. They have to really feel threatened. This has only happened a few times when the government has confronted some of these groups living in "compounds in Montana", and we've seen how those usually end.
One day the government will likely go too far. People might not even realize it at first, but we won't be happy, and we'll eventually figure out why. That's when things could get messy.
I'd like to understand something... (Score:2)
Being in a country that suffered intensely from anglo-saxon domination for almost a quarter of a millenium now made me interested in anglo-saxon history, and having studied it more than averagely, I wonder that given the facts that:
So, given all this, then can somebody explain why in thell it is mostly in anglo-saxon countries (USA & U.K.) that you find the most blatant attempts (both by the State and by [big] private companies) to squash individual freedom, liberties and privacy????
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Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:2)
This is total OXDUNG. Your half-witty piece of paper only applies to the State. Nothing prevents any private concern from taking away your free-speech rights, unlike the european and canadian charters, which apply to everyone, even big companies.
This is the PROBLEM with the U.S.: the big companies have all the power they want over individuals. Just like lords had in feudal France.
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Re:This Does Not Look Good... (Score:2)
E. The EU mandates the use of strong encryption on all communication links that terminate in EU member countries. Other countries follow the EU's example. After several years, Echelon is shut down due to its ineffectiveness.
Big Brother? Concern yourself about little brother (Score:2)
Re:It is a Balance (Score:2)
Why is encryption regulated as atomic weapons?
Why is encryption of communications unlawfull in france?
--The knowledge that you are an idiot, is what distinguishes you from one.
Re:Peer review (Score:2)
Oh, really. I doubt it, severely.
Whatever the problems in the FBI, and there are a slew and a half of them, they have one thing that is in short supply among the intelligent half of Slashdot.
That commodity is real experience with law enforcement and the criminal element.
We don't even have more theory than the FBI does, and theory is always subordinate to real-world experience.
The FBI does a lot of things wrong, but they do a lot more things right; it's only the former that we notice. The FBI's main job is interstate law enforcement, and they do a much better job of that than a bunch of Slashdot geeks would.
Because of our different perspective on things global, we could teach them a lot. But that doesn't mean that we could replace them.
Re:What more is there to say? (Score:2)
If the FBI has a file on me with private information, my problem isn't that the FBI might want to screw me over. My problem is that there are ten thousand FBI officers with the magic passwords, and if one of them is crooked, he's going to want to screw me over.
I can trust the FBI. I can't trust 10,000 of its officers, when it only takes one.
Re:Vicious Circle, anyone? Was Re:Who are you tryi (Score:2)
Re:Is that our only choices? (Score:2)
This is a variant on the "Washington Monument Scam".
The term refers to the hardball tactic of making budget cuts calculated to cause the maximum possible PITA (e.g. closing the Washington Monument to tourists) when the politicians deadlock or when the citizens refuse to vote for all the taxes/loans the politicians want to spend. Effectively, the most visible and desired services are held hostage to protect the pork and fat.
Similarly, some elements of law enforcement (typically the upper bureaucrats, not the street cops or field agents) want to hold basic citizen security hostage to protect the ability to snoop on political dissidents.
/.
Re:It is a Balance (Score:2)
Certainly, and the government has no business overruling my chosen balance in the matter (absent a specific reason to suspect me of a particular crime, supported by warrant or affirmation). I'm glad that we're in complete agreement.
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ECHELON wouldn't be that big of a problem. (Score:2)
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"I already have all the latest software."
Re:SEC Proposal (Score:2)
tsunake
First ON TOPIC post (Score:2)
I goofed, I'm sorry (Score:2)
Thanks, Guys
Re:It is a Balance (Score:2)
You were doing so well until here. Why do "people need to learn"? What makes you think they have anything to learn? Have you ever thought that another person could be just as well informed as you, thought just as much about it, be just as intelligent, and yet come to a different conclusion than you have? Guess what, it happens a lot on all sorts of different topics.
There are worse things than losing a little "privacy". (I put privacy in quotes due to a /. tendency to claim privacy rights to the particular way they are observed in explicitly public places.) It is the judgement call of every individual based on their experiences and logic to decide how much loss of privacy balances how much gain of security. It is the conservative composite of those judgements which will guide our society's responses to law enforcement.
On the main subject, I can't help but think that we're looking at a culture that still allows genital mutilation of infants, and their next big step in human rights is gonna be protecting the obsolute privacy of your email? Lets hope there's a bit more to this proposal.
-Kahuna Burger
bakunin was right! (Score:3)
The *REAL* reason EU want's to ban Echelon (Score:3)
Re:What a bunch of dorks (Score:3)
This is wrong. People typically believe that certain "common sense" privacy measures actually exist - but they don't. There's no law that says your doctor, employer or HMO can't sell every bit of information they know about you, from your cancer status to your counselling for depression to the abortion you had when you were 14. There's no law. Not in the U.S. Show me otherwise if you think I'm wrong. You can't.
Most people believe that there are some sort of minimum privacy standards protecting medical records and the like. But there aren't.
--
Michael Sims-michael at slashdot.org
Time for a privacy const. amendment. (Score:3)
The only long term solution that would protect privacy from renewed attacks every four years, is a constitutional amendment.
Oh yea, and the Crypt
The FBI Reading Room (Score:3)
Is that our only choices? (Score:3)
The FBI says that the choice is between getting raped and murdered and losing "a little privacy"...well, do they have any evidence that losing privacy leads to me being safer? If they do, "Bring it out and show it".
Am I the only person who is harassed by police, etc. more often them I am harassed by criminals?
What more is there to say? (Score:4)
What's more is that when you only print one line from any source without the surrounding quote, you completely take the quote out of context and nine times out of ten misquote the person. This is what in the news world is called "bad journalism" and it has become a hallmark of YRO reporting on Slashdot (that's right, hallmark, like the standard identifying trait, like the one thing that discredits YRO more than anything else, including the paranoid posters).
What Paul George, the FBI guy, was saying is that everyone knows the FBI could be the Big Brother which is why they're regulated so tightly to prevent something like that from ever happening. He was making a point about how the FBI is being suffocated, prevented by law from being able to do its job, which is monitoring criminal activity, effectively because people are so paranoid that it could be them being monitored. You may not trust your government, but I trust mine, and frankly, I'm happy that someone out there is doing this because it's too damn easy for people to wreak havoc in this world. Trust me, the FBI can do it a lot better than a group put together by Slashdot ever could.
So what more is there to say? Try telling the whole story instead of just one line of it. Then maybe people can make informed, rational decisions instead of the irrational paranoia we see in YRO every other day.
I'm not so sure it's a misquote... (Score:4)
And yeah, the CIA can't legally spy on US citizens. So what? The US government and the various pieces thereof do illegal things every day. I very much doubt the CIA is any different; they're just better at hiding it.
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:4)
But every once in a while a truly insipid diatribe comes out, blindly attacking the US without knowing a damn thing. This is one of them.
I'm sick of them trying to make macho posturings about their military on the world stage, whilst not commiting a single soldier in Kosovo.
Strange; I see more than a few soldiers there.
I'm sick of their "moral" centre, whilst at the same time their Red Cross "missionaries" disrupt the lifestyles of villages across SE Asia which had been happy for hundreds of years.
Um... the Red Cross doesn't do that. It isn't even a religious organization; it's a medical one. You're thinking of that other kind of cross. I'm sick of those myself, but at least I have some idea of what I'm talking about.
I'm sick of the US and it's stupid lawsuits - the latest being the woman suing Nike for tripping over her shoelaces.
I haven't heard about this one yet. But I have to agree; the frivolous lawsuits here are way out of control.
I'm sick of the US way of spelling things, and then trying to claim that it's England that are spelling it wrong.
Well, guess what. I'm sick of the British way of spelling things, and then trying to claim it's the US that spells it wrong. They're two different dialects, and within themselves, they're both right. Deal with it.
I'm sick of the US claiming it is the greatest nation on Earth, when any number of other countries could in reality nuke the fuck out of it.
Do you really think a nation's greatness can be measured by its nuclear arsenal? I should add that any arsenal large enough to "nuke the fuck out of the US" would very likely destroy the rest of the world in the process. What, pray tell, is so great about that?
And I'm fucking sick of the US proclaiming that they are the only nation who are "free", when they know nothing about any other country in the world, and precious little about their own.
Here, it depends on your point of view. In one way, the US is actually right in this regard. Read the laws of most nations. To give you one example, take the European Convention of Human Rights, Article 10. It says all people have the right to free speech. The Canadian Charter on is another example, and says, again, that Canadian citizens have the right to free speech. Look, though, at the US Constitution. It doesn't say this. Rather, it says that the government is forbidden to take away the right to free speech. The difference is extremely important; a law can be repealed, thus revoking the right to free speech, but if the government's forbidden to take away free speech then there's nothing it can do. That's the difference; other governments grant freedoms; the US Constitution guarantees them. And there is a school of thought, one with which I happen to agree, that freedom which is not guaranteed is not freedom at all.
And yes, I know the government has been ignoring a good deal of the Constitution in recent years. Eventually that will catch up to it; even the US government can't run from responsibility forever. I don't know how it'll happen, but eventially it will. I certainly hope it comes in the form of something as peaceful as a major legal smackdown from the Supreme Court (the only US court whose job is to actually do justice, rather than simply interpret existing law), simply because that way causes the least suffering for people.
Re:If you are legit, you have no worries (Score:4)
And what defines 'arouse suspicion'? Whose definitions are we going by? Do your political views warrant monitoring? The FBI thought that Albert Einstein's did...
Albert Eienstein's FBI files, recently released under the FOIA [fbi.gov]
If you have no reason for the FBI to pay attention to you, they won't.
This is similar to the arguement that "You wouldn't use encryption unless you had something to hide..."
Just because I have nothing to hide doesn't mean that I enjoy being watched...
-jerdenn
Privacy is too easy to take for granted... (Score:4)
Recently, I started a small SourceForge [sourceforge.net] project (erm... my project's not much yet, I'll talk about it more later...), and to administer the project, I finally had to get around to downloading OpenSSH [openssh.com] ( the Linux Port [ibs.com.au] ), and felt a strange feeling as I watched it compile... the thrill of the would-be forbidden... that which the Powers-That-Be fought tooth and nail to supress.
Finally, after logging into SourceForge with SSH, a profound realization hit me: no third party can intercept my communications. Even if they did, it'd all be gobbledlygook to them. I laughed. True privacy, the most wonderful feeling in the (online) world...
After that, I can't wait until strong encryption becomes ubiquitously integrated into all communications software, (and all new Linux distributions! ;-).
The day when every person can communicate freely, without being spied upon from above, or snooped on from below, will be the greatest day in a very long time.
And don't give me that crap about "criminals" using it to coordinate terrorism. Any serious organized criminal or terror group in all probability has strong crypto, as well as countless other safeguards. Although, I'm not an authority on the subject. (Like Nixon, IANAC ;-)
Outlaw espionage!!?!?! (Score:4)
"Rule number four: no cheating!"
-- Merlin, Disney's Sword in the Stone
"The High Contracting Parties solemnly declare in the names of their respective peoples that they condemn recourse to war for the solution of international controversies, and renounce it as an instrument of national policy in their relations with one another."
-- Article I, the Kellog-Briand Pact of 1928, outlawing War.
"Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Indiana: It has been found that a circular area is to the square on a line equal to the quadrant of the circumference, as the area of an equilateral rectangle is to the square on one side. "
-- A bill introduced in Indiana c. 1897
"Your actions are illegal!"
-- Anonymous British officer, c. 1776
Re:I'm sick of the US (Score:4)
Thinking they have some God-given right to stick their noses into the rest of the world's business.
There is some truth in this. The USA has been laying mines in harbors in Nicaragua in the '80s, clearly an act of war. Americans feel they are justified to do this kind of stuff, because "we're the good guys", and "who's gonna do anything about it?"
The invasion of Grenada is another example. You don't have the right to invade another country just because you don't like their internal politics (it would be a different story if gross crimes against humanity were committed, but that was clearly not the case here).
As despicable as Noriega is, the invasion of Panama also left a bit of a strange taste in my mouth. Apparently you can just invade another country to arrest someone. Never mind about innocent until proven guilty.
I'm sick of them trying to make macho posturings about their military on the world stage, whilst not commiting a single soldier in Kosovo.
That's not entirely correct, I think. Also, I don't completely disagree with the argument that Europe has the first responsibility here.
I'm sick of their "moral" centre, whilst at the same time their Red Cross "missionaries" disrupt the lifestyles of villages across SE Asia which had been happy for hundreds of years.
I thought the Red Cross was a Swiss organization originally. Anyway, you can't credit/blame the US for what the Red Cross is doing.
I'm sick of the US and it's stupid lawsuits - the latest being the woman suing Nike for tripping over her shoelaces.
True, it's stupid, but it generally doesn't bother people outside of the US.
I'm sick of the US way of spelling things, and then trying to claim that it's England that are spelling it wrong.
That's too silly to get worked up about, but I guess you could argue that since US English is derived from UK English, Americans can not reasonably claim that the English spelling is wrong.
I'm sick of the US claiming it is the greatest nation on Earth, when any number of other countries could in reality nuke the fuck out of it.
I'm not sure about the nuking part. Fact is that, however horrible nuclear weapons are, they do act as an equalizer in the sense that no country can be protected from them. Not even the USA, and forget about SDI part II, it won't work.
More interestingly, what I have found in the last four years is that Americans truly believe that the USA is the greatest and most wonderful nation on earth, in every aspect imaginable. You can't really blame them for this, since they have been brainwashed with this idea since they were born. Even so, even the most educated, intelligent and open-minded American cannot completely divorce himself from this idea. Although they can accept on a rational level that some things might be better in some other countries, there is always this subconscious part of them that can't fully accept the notion. I have found this rather disturbing.
And I'm fucking sick of the US proclaiming that they are the only nation who are "free", when they know nothing about any other country in the world, and precious little about their own.
Yes, and to give you some examples: even though there is freedom of speech, you cannot say 'excrement' on national television (see, even I'm afraid to use the proper word)
Less than 5% of adult Americans have a passport. So, 95% have never been ouside the US/Mexico/Canada. You can't live in every country, but a little travel now and then greatly helps to see issues from more than one side.
To balance this out a little, consider the following:
- The US Constitution is a brilliant document. Especially the part about being able to amend it is evidence of great vision.
- Americans are not shallow minded. This is a European prejudice that I had myself when coming to the US, and it is not justified.
What a misquote (Score:5)
What he was not saying is that the FBI does spy on people. He's only saying that the opportunity is there, but if you read the article, he goes on to say that there are strict laws regarding what the FBI can and cannot do, and those laws are in place for a reason.
Okay, so the FBI can go outside of the law. So what? So could Bill Gates. So could anyone with enough money. It's even more likely that a private company would be acting as big brother -- because there are fewer people watching the backs of private companies. No one is scared of a medium- or large-sized corporations, because they are all over the place. They are part of everyday life. But they are where the danger lies.
Peer review (Score:5)
You cannot run a democracy in the middle of a shroud of secrecy. Every American needs to know exactly what its government is doing, otherwise democracy falls apart because we can't make any informed decisions. Since the days of JFK we've been voting for a pretty face and a smooth talker. The reason we're resorting to superficial means is that we really don't know what our leaders and agencies are doing. If we knew what decisions our president made behind closed doors, we might not have reelected Clinton, maybe not even Reagan.
It's easy to argue that a degree of secrecy is required to run a government, that we have to keep secrets from other nations, but I think this arguement falls apart under close scrutiny. The method of government by secrecy is no different from the concept of security-by-obscurity that has been ripped to shreds so many times by computer security experts. It simply is not the best way to do it.
We are entering an era where we need to start acting like a planet rather than a huge tribe trying to make sure the other tribes don't step on our land. The internet has done some wonderful things for international communication, and it's just getting started. Once the communication infrastructure is in place, it starts to redefine the way people think. Within the next 50 years, nationalism will fall apart. People will not define themselves as Americans, British, French, or Japanese, but as people. Boundaries between people can only exist so long as boundaries to communication exists.
When people start thinking as one, the governments must follow suit and stop trying to function by isolation. The U.S. has traditionally been the slowest to notice this. We have blatantly stupid crypto laws because our government thinks for some reasons that only American programmers can write good crypto software, and if we isolate them from the rest of the world, the rest of the world won't get crypto. Yeah, maybe America used to be the software center of the world, but as the internet boomed, suddenly the shift focused. Everyone was shocked when no U.S. universities scored in the top ten at the ACM World Programming Finals. I would have been more shocked if we had maintained dominance.
There have been talks on here before about getting some sort of geek political action committee. We need way more than that, we need to get our ideas and philosophies, the wisdoms we take for granted, and apply them to our system of government in a practical way. The concepts we consider obvious aren't just for world domination of our operating systems, they can actually improve the world. The FBI could learn a lot from slashdotters if we could only teach it how to effectively apply what we know.
Re:If you are legit, you have no worries (Score:5)
More directly, the poster also says:
First, I happen not to feel it's a small sacrifice at all. I recognize your right to feel differently and I respect your exercise of that rightSecond, if these hypothetical terrorists are stupid enough to transmit in plaintext over unsecured routes, then they're so inept that the FBI would capture them without the email surveillance. Let's face it -- the proposed measures won't be effective against true, dedicated opponents. But they'd be perfect against the large, undereducated, unmotivated public.
Existing laws on surveillance, wiretapping, etc., have been (easily) extended to cyberspace. They protect, nominally at least, the rights of citizens. Although the FBI guy intended the oppositie, he's right: These things must be balanced. What worries me is that many (upper) law enforcement officials seem to place no value on citizens' privacy at all. They don't seem clued in as to why people get edgy about this.
Until the government does understand that privacy is a valuable right, I'd rather it not get any more powers to poke around my life.