

Libraries Asked To Destroy Reports, Databases 675
unix guy writes: "Our good friends and protectors in the U.S. Gov't have decided that what we used to know we can't know any longer. This LA Times story talks about libraries being ordered to destroy existing government reports and data sources in the name of homeland security." Is it really a fair trade to give up readily-available information about "airports, water treatment plants, nuclear reactors and more"?
nothing new here (Score:2, Flamebait)
welcome to the united police state of america
Re:nothing new here (Score:2, Flamebait)
Anytime information is destroyed its a bad thing, does not matter if its by a private corporation or the goverment (especially the government).
Instead of asking the libraries to make this information MORE SECURE*, they are asking that the information be destroied.
* security could be something as simple as..
a) stored in a reseved area
b) accessiable only after you have presented a drivers license or some other photoID.
Re:nothing new here (Score:2, Insightful)
Once it's destroyed, it's not coming back. Safe storage would be a MUCH more acceptable solution!
I wonder how far this is going to go - you know, it would be POSSIBLE for someone who has access to this information to become sinister and then use it against us. Or even sell the information. Maybe we should monitor those people 24x7?
Because of one terrible terrorist act, WE THE PEOPLE will be the ones paying the price for generations to come it looks like. I would rather live in a society that's not as "safe" but have more freedoms. Our freedom is being limited day by day. Some day we'll just hook up to a Borg regenerator at birth and spend our 70 or 80 years there till we die. Safe! Not fulfilling.
Re:nothing new here (Score:3, Insightful)
Or did they just drive around New York and Washington until they saw 3 fucking great big buildings?
Re:nothing new here (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes. Yes, it is.
Re:nothing new here (Score:5, Insightful)
Compare the number of deaths each year due to car-accidents and due to terrorism. Now look at the actions being taken to stop them from happening. Liberties are being grabbed away right, left and center, all in the name of stopping terrorism.
Don't you think this is exactly what terrorists aimed for? They want americans to feel scared.
And the worst thing is that I don't think it will help much at all. There will be more terrorist attacks in the future: raising security will not stop this: it will serve primarily to terrorise americans further.
Re:nothing new here (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, I'll throw my hat into the insensitive ring too.
Of course it is! Do you have any idea how many of us have died to procure that very right? If we were talkin 500 million I'd listen to the arguement, but hell we already gave up most of our freedom because the idea of losing 5,000 million in a day is pretty damn frightening.
I thought we were on the path to eliminating at least the most ill concieved of those like the confiscation of property on a guilty until proven innocent basis. The Supreme Court even had a case saying you couldn't keep people locked up forever in INS jails before the 11th.. Now we've already adopted KGB tactics and people are actually talking about moving on to Nazi police tactics on PBS. I'd expect that from talk radio, but it's the policy makers who're on PBS.
And all this over just 5,000 people?
I think it's mostly just the bruised pride of the empire we're dealing with in these 'you unpatriotic asshole' type posts.
I don't think you really give a damn about those 5,000. I had two dozen friends in that building, none of whom were for this kind of idiotic descent into book burning. And the only Bush voter who got out is still against it. (All but 2 got out.)
As a New Yorker I really loath this power grab by the Nixonian cronies in the White House. Meanwhile the congress tells New York to screew itself when it is looking at a 200 Billion dollar hit, with only 21 coming from Congress (If all the promises are kept, congress wants to reduce it to less than 10 Billion, that PR allocation earlier being just a little to brash.) The vacancy rate is UP! in downtown NYC despite the fact that more than 1 million square feet were taken off the market that day. I have very strong friends who are taking psychoactive drugs for the first time because they just can't handle seeing their friends in a huge unmarked grave every day. I started smoking that day.
But reading the news just gets worse and worse each day, I hold little hope that congress will ever get the sense and the balls to oppose our president and the likes of you.
New York is a city that values democracy, those 5,000 would not want to live in the world Herr Bush asks for. I have my doubts whether Bush really wants to either.
This is absurd. (Score:5, Informative)
If the damned terrorists want to know all about our nation's infrastructure, the information is readily available in A LOT OF PLACES, not all under government control. The ways of getting at such data are simply innumerable.
This is wrong, and yes, I'm going to mention 1984 here. How much closer do we have to get? The government is, in effect if not by intent, enforcing the concept of revisionist history. I don't pretend to understand how to deal with our current problems (here in the U.S.), but this isn't the way.
Maybe it's time to really step up efforts to archive data in places out of the reach of such efforts. Data warehousing might be what saves us in the future from this sort of insanity. Yes, it would have to have significant funding to work, but that funding could come from anywhere, anonymously if necessary. I for one would contribute.
Of course, even given that, the government would no doubt make accessible such digital troves illegal at some point, potentially classifying the very action of such access as "terrorist in nature".
Nobody is going to tell me I can't access public domain information and knowledge. No matter what, people will find a way. Sorry about the rambling here, this just pisses me off.
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Re:This is absurd. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is absurd. (Score:2)
Wow, Orwell couldn't have said it better. The implications here are quite frightening. Our (U.S.) government has taken the current situation as a green light to go on the offensive against a whole host of civil liberties and freedoms, and this is just "another brick in the wall" (gratuitous Floyd reference).
You know, growing up, I told myself I'd never need to own a firearm. I'm sad to say my view on that has changed recently. The most disturbing thing is the possibility that before long, we'll have a hard time deciding who's doing us the most damage: (1) evil people who terrorize our nation and others, or (2) governments that poison the minds of our children.
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I disagree. (Score:2, Insightful)
A) By making each piece of sensitive information harder to get to, you make it exponentially more time consuming to query FROM vast realms of it. e.g., if the terrorists wanted to know the exact engineering specifications used for all the nuclear plants around the country to look for a particularly weak design.
B) By making information harder to come by, we can up the ante by forcing the terrorists as a GROUP, to become more sophisticated/educated. e.g., the size of the effort rules out the few top level people, but the scope/difficult rules out the average ignorant terrorist.
C) By making information harder to come by, we can make the act of looking for that information much riskier. For instance, rather than merely having to go online or to any public library (anonymously), they must go to a few enumerated locations and risk being spotted and/or creating a trail after the fact.
D) By clamping the flow of information, we can force the terrorists to work with far many more unknowns.
Lastly, these various elements play off each other greatly. Just as widespread efficiencies in capitalist markets have allowed for expontentially more efficient production, so to can this widespread "inefficiency" make it vastly harder for the terrorists to get _all_ the intelligence that they need.
The Press uses your same argument in defence of some of their more questionable publications. Besides being a disingenious assertion, it very much under-estimates the value of good intelligence. Intelligence is even more important for the terrorists in many ways, because they need to make their relatively few resources stretch much further. The further they stretch, the more they expose themselves and the fewer manhours they can devote to actual acts of terrorism.
Btw, I would not at all be surprised, for instance, if Saddam Hussain got more worthwhile intelligence from the likes of CNN (e.g., troup movements, morale, technology, etc) in the comfort of his bedroom than he did from his entire intelligence service during the Gulf War. The Press can use their apparent legitimacy to get DIRECT, NEAR REAL TIME, and RISKLESS (for the enemy) access to top level officials; whereas with proper controls in place this kind of intelligence would require a capable intelligence agency with significant resources.
Re:I disagree. (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll put my rights in a #10 envelope and send them right off to Ashcroft.
I'm so much happier now! That Guy Montag is an asshole. I'm glad they got him.
Re:I disagree. (Score:2, Insightful)
Can you at least admit the possibility that some information is a FAR greater threat to our collective rights than its absence? It's not at all a stretch to assert that this kind of information exists, even the most brazen free speech advocates have seen the wisdom of moderation of some restrictions during times of war and in other cases.
We limit your right to yell fire. We limit commercial speech. We limit your right to speak intentional lies about people (e.g., slander/libel laws). All are generally recognized to be in the public's best interest. Why is it any less legitimate to not allow the public 100% free and open access to sensitive and detailed information? Many of the supposed harms inflicted by these acts are not necessarily harms at all. For instance, I've heard the argument that students of engineering need to know the principles involved in building a dam. Fine, but they don't need to know exactly the structural weaknesses of particular sites, or who would die if it were, or the schedules of security. Their needs can be met without significantly putting the public at threat. Where there is significant intersection, it's at least reasonable to put some controls on that information.
If you have particular grievances, fine, then enumerate them. You're reacting to one extreme (e.g., the scenario depicted in F451) by going to another extreme. It may be true that some legitimate information may be temporarily unavailable, but it may require substantial time to sort through all of it to make those distinctions, in the mean time, terrorists can have their way with us. Cost/Risk vs Benefit...it simply doesn't compute with the vast majority of the information listed.
Firstly, it's "you're", not "your". (Score:2)
Re:your a fool (Score:3, Insightful)
You might live down stream from the dam and want to know the possiblity/probablity of complete collaspe if some nut wanted to ram a plane into it. I really doubt that nut would want that information at all, or even most of the information being removed.
There is legitmate reasons about wanting data about things near where you live or want to live. Would you like to know that a chemical plant exchanges its water near where the cities intake is? Most of this information was used to calculate risks in areas and to know who is doing what. Taking it away does nothing to really help national security, but does everything to pervent people from being informed about what the government and others are doing to the communities in which they live.
You just don't get it... (Score:2)
To counterbalance this, laws have to be crafted to make them impossible to disobey. For example, rather than saying "action x is prohibited" (which anyone can do) you say "action x is punishable by sentence y" (which then leaves the matter to the courts to obey or disobey, and obeying the law is basically what courts do, so you're safe).
If you want to prevent crime, there is only one way: education, not legislation. And even this will fail sometimes. That is something a free society must accept; sometimes the bad guy will get away with crimes, but this is worth it if the innocent remain free because of it.
All governmental actions like this do is keep the information out of the hands of innocent, law-abiding citizens who have legitimate reasons (or at least non-malicious ones) for not wanting the data. Criminals will get whatever it is they want, no matter what you do, so the difference that these orders make is negligible at best.
Re:I disagree. (Score:2, Insightful)
And what of this has changed one iota for you? Libraries still exist. Financial information on companies still exists (very much so). We're talking about very specific and detailed information that a very small part of the population can even claim to have the most remote of interest in.
Oh please. Why? Justify your belief in reasoning that US policymakers are out to shaft its own people, rather that being motivated for the same reasons that I'm arguing for (e.g., the defence of Americans and other people). What do they gain by unreasonably restricting actual rights other than gaining the hate of certain interest groups? If this were say, no "hate speech" against Corporations, that might be one thing. But oppression for its own sake...? Gimme a break. These people need to get re-elected.
Re:I disagree. (Score:3, Insightful)
Defending the rights of minorities is the hallmark of a republic. When I was in school my professor explained the difference between a democracy and a republic this way. A democracy is a lynching of a black man by ten white men. Ten votes for, one vote against. In a republic lynching is not acceptable because the right of minories are not up for vote.
"Oh please. Why? Justify your belief in reasoning that US policymakers are out to shaft its own people"
you are kidding me right? Is it your position that the US policymakers never shaft their own people? How many examples of this would it take to convince you that the US policymakers reoutinely shaft their own people?
"Gimme a break. These people need to get re-elected."
All they need to get elected is a bunch of money. Most americans are sheep and will vote for whoever the TV says to.
Re:I am getting sick of the "obviously" argument.. (Score:3, Funny)
Come on, it's plainly obvious how it would have worked:
Re:This is absurd. (Score:2)
Indeed, if things keep going in the direction they're headed, we'll be very close before long.
"Yes, but if it's going to take lots of time and resources to find out they can be discovered."
Sounds like you're advocating security through obscurity, something which (1) doesn't work in the world of software, and (2) doesn't work in the world at large. How about fixing the problems in our world that lead to such devastating consequences in the first place, instead of taking extreme measures after the fact?
The medical community has started to truly focus on preventive medicine only in the last couple of decades. Perhaps governent should take a cue. And no, enforcing the removal of this information is NOT preventive medicine. I mean that in the sense of looking into the underlying social problems that cause violent eruptions in the first place. Our nation hasn't been particularly good at that througout most of our (brief) history.
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Re:This is absurd. (Score:2)
"I'm all for fixing as many problems as possible but just waiting for large scale chemical attack while doing it is not a very good thing to do."
Shameless prediction on my part: This will in no way whatsoever reduce the chance of a large-scale chemical attack. It will however, get Joe Sixpack more accustomed to the idea of large-scale government censorship. Which will probably turn out to be more useful for the government than we can possibly imagine.
"Some problems can't even be fixed. There are a number of terrorists out there that wants to destroy everyone that doesn't have the same religion for no particular reason at all. How do you fix that? You can't."
I agree completely that there will always be insanity in this world. However, this isn't the way to reduce it or diminish its effect. This *is* a fine example of our citizens paying their government to strip freedoms away using our own tax dollars.
I think the best we can do is work on the social problems that cause such unrest. If madmen still feel intent on pursuing recourse via terrorist acts, the best we can do is deal with those individuals and groups.
It's agreed that the world is not black and white. We will always have a hard time balancing the freedoms of the people with national security. This issue is rather clear, however.
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Re:This is absurd. (Score:4, Informative)
Wow, are you dumb. The knowledge on "how" has been widely available for decades. It takes a not-too-sophisticated knowledge of some simple physics. Heck, some university graduate programs assign the shielding calculations, etc., as questions on their qualifying exams!
What is hard to do, and generally denied to terrorists, is the laborious process of amassing enough fissionable material to make the bomb work. That is not an information thing -- the materials are themselves rare, expensive, and tough to produce. In fact, the best way to combat the true threat of nuclear terrorism is to educate the public about what steps must be taken to keep that material in safe hands. Knowing more, not knowing less, serves the interest of public safety.
I can't wait until Ashcroft's thought police break down the door to my classroom because I dare to teach the principle of relativity and quantum mechanics that make nukes possible.
Re:This is absurd. (Score:2)
When you start getting sick, the food processing plant on the edge of town that's pumping brown slime into a big pit swears it isn't them, and the government isn't on the ball, you're telling me you'll rest easy knowing that at least the terrorists don't know about those pipes, either?
Sad... (Score:5, Interesting)
Tom Ridge also has a history of denying information to his citizens. As the former governor of PA, he made it illegal to have cellular phone programming information if you were not directly related to a cellular company, whether a seller of phones, repair shop, etc. The Black Crawling Systems BBS archives formerly for sale by l0pht could not be sent to PA because of my wonderful unconstitutional legislature and governor. I fear what else Tom Ridge will try to take away.
Re:Sad... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sheesh... what a pity you can't clone phones and steal service anymore. That was no different than saying that it is illegal to duplicate a skeleton key. If you've ever seen such a key, you might notice something on the key that says to the locksmith, effectively "don't duplicate this key or you could get in trouble".
The main problem with this kind of stuff is that the hacker's legitimate rights to experiment are running afoul of the need to translate the physical lock and key into the "virtual" realm. If hackers had a clue, they would have lobbied for something like a "student locksmith license" with a nominal fee and ethical guidelines as to how it could be used.
Instead they elevate their base desires to moral posturing and attempt to wrap themselves in the 1st ammendment. They refuse to recognize the need for people to protect their services; refuse to work with the authorities and insist on working against them. It's no wonder they get no respect.
Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.
Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
This is the most upsetting story I've ever read on Slashdot; it reminds of Fahrenheit 451.
Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.
We can't. Akira's forgotten to take his drugs again.
Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
For those of you who have not read it or do not remember, it is set in Future America where the "firemen" destroy books and control access to information. How did it get to be that way? Bit by bit -- incremental removal of information that offends some minority, is "dangerous," etc. Posessing and/or distributing proscribed information meant that you were an enemy of the state.
The U.S. remains a powerful, but insular, nation in this future. And it has plenty of enemies. The government is apparently making war -- on who, and why, people don't know. But citizens are drafted to fight in it.
It's not clear that the U.S. wins the war.
Everyone should read FH451. The author's not in the back was very interesting as well, talking about censorship of his works, FH451 even, by publishers. Including in textbooks which include his works.
His book, and afternote, reminded me of the "DVD censorship" software
Everyone please go read FH451, the Constitution, and the Declaration of Independence. Read a little Medieval history; the Church (the also the state) caused the Dark Ages! It burned books, burned heretics, and controlled information. Irish heretics preserved the old works, which allowed the Renaissance and Enlightenment to happen. Not coincidentally, the power and influence of the Church dropped and Western Civilization was reborn and the enlightenment and science progressed.
The authors and backers of the DMCA, SSSCA, and similar laws, and the "copyright holders" who wish to further erode the Public Domain, are of a kindred spirit with the Firemen in Farenheit 451 -- limit information, but include lots of commercials! Be a good little citizen.
Someone please dig up the Founding Fathers.
Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
Can it actually work this way? Since the invention of the printing press, I can't recall a single instance in which society allowed itself to be censored into ignorance by the existing govenrment. There have been numerous cases where a revolution has led to information censoring and revisionist history. New leaders and new power structures may seek to control the flow and dissemination of information, but they tend to do so in broad and blunt strokes.
I tend to doubt that the genie of information can ever be substantially eroded by anything short of revolution. This seems to be true to an especially high degree in America where citizens often believe in their right to free information to a higher degree than anywhere else on earth.
Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
This is the most upsetting story I've ever read on Slashdot; it reminds of Fahrenheit 451.
Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.
(bleh. I was so shocked that a nation of freedom could do such a thing that I screwed up my analogy and forgot about the preview button.)
We can't. Tetsuo forgot to take his pills again.
I don't think that I'll ever forget that scene from Akira where Tetsuo loses control of his powers. This is what's happening: our government is trying to control a power it never should have had in the first place: censorship. It never was designed to have that power. Now, because the people share the sentiment of censorship, the whole thing is mutating out of control. There's nothing we can do about it, even if we wanted to.
It already is too late.
Libertarians WAS: Re:Upset; ... Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
Please, citizens of the US, stop your government before it's too late.
I normally don't push libertarianism in this forum, other than via my sig, but this is getting way out of control. If we want to do something about this long-term we need to work on getting people in office which share our ideals.
After being fed up the last presidential election with the Republicrats, I decided to go out and look at the different parties. After much searching I discovered the Libertarian party.
Without going into a long post about their ideals, I'll just summarize by saying I hear a large portion of the vocal slashdot community spouting those ideals. Perhaps the most relevant portion of their platform to this discussion is this:
We oppose any abridgment of the freedom of speech through government censorship, regulation or control of communications media...
I'll spew one or more two references and then shut up. If you'd like to figure out where your views really fit in with politics, the libertarian party has The World's Smallest Political Quiz [lp.org] which is a set of ten questions which will rank you into which area you best fit.
For more info on the Libertarian party, click on the link in my sig...
Re:Upset; reminds me of Fahrenheit 451 (Score:2)
"Let's make LIBRARIANS destroy this information for us! Hey, come to think of it, they have records of who's checked out various books, don't they? Let's make all librarians federal employees and give them powers to go to people's homes and destroy any copies of information which has been withdrawn! Who better to do it?"
Actually, I was reminded of a SF author's work as well, but it wasn't Bradbury- it was Asimov. Remember that bit in the Foundation trilogy where Hober Mallow's just learned a spy^H^H^Hmissionary has been let onto his ship? And he relieves the guy of duty immediately- and what he says about that?
"There's no merit in discipline under ideal circumstances. I'll have it in the face of death, or it's useless."
What use is freedom that only works under ideal circumstances? What good are rights that only apply if you won't use them? We ARE looking at freedom in the face of death- as we learned painfully. Unfortunately it seems like a lot of people instantly conclude, "Oh- never mind!" and only gave a rat's ass for their freedom and rights so long as nobody was getting hurt. It doesn't work like that. We need to embrace our freedoms MORE in the face of death- they are all that separate us from the Taliban itself.
Yes, this is a US citizen saying this. Sorry, but I'm a stranger here myself... do you really think we are in control here?
What's the problem? (Score:4, Insightful)
It is dangerous to give people Education, Information and Freedom. After all, they might be terrorists like the evil Taliban who refuse to give their citizens Education, Information and Freedom.
Hey, did anyone watch the debate a couple of weeks ago on CNN where they discussed giving U.S. federal agents the right to use torture?
Get ready for the future: it is murder - leonard cohen
Why can I not mod this +1, "Tragic"? (Score:2)
Re:What's the problem? (Score:2)
We're nerds we don't get to have sex.
Besides, as every prisoner knows, that's not a constitutional requirement, nor a human rights issue!
So that's OK then!
Good grief... calm down (Score:3, Insightful)
I argue it never should have been so carelessly deployed in the first place. The hype and the rush to make information available on the web could have been more carefully evaluated, especially by the holders of the plans. Not just plans to dams and waterways, either. Now it's deployment-readiness is being re-evaluated. I doubt it's much more than that.
It is time for our government to introduce the same amount of security that we've been deploying on company webservers and mail systems for years.
I dont believe for a second that this information will now not be inaccessible to someone who is interested for any non-deadly reason.
I believe in Librarians too much for that.
Re:Good grief... calm down (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sorry but information on how to design a water filtration plant should be public knowlege and should be a required class for high school kids. Designs and research on civil engineering projects is a vital and valuable resource to engineers, scientists, and the members of the public that have brains that are consisted of something other than jello.
The only way to breed the geniuses for the next decade is to give them complete access to how things were done and accomplished. Yes studying the plans for the Hoover Dam will teach a student far better than point to a picture and this is a dam, it holds back water... mmmm kay?
Our society is content with breeding morons and holds contempt against anyone that has an interest or knowlege above the "norm"
Yes, I know how a nuclear bomb works, but there is no way in hell anyone with just the raw materials can build one. and any of these over-hyped "terrorists" could never accomplish it.
All they were able to do was crash a few planes, devastating as it was, it's not rocket science.
Yes I demand access to all that science has to offer. I demand access to microbiological research. and I demand access to chemical research... I demand access to engineering and civil design research.
and sadly, being a scientist (anyone interested in science is a scientist so bug off phd weenies) I'll probably be among the first targetted by my own government in the name of security.
Have to go to China now (Score:4, Insightful)
If I want to find out about US weapons I'll have to get a brochure from the manufacturer, or ask military in another country about how they perform in combat conditions (I'll just need to go to Latin America).
Seriously, any street map or telephone book has military value, but that is no reason to go overboard and ban them. If information is only a tool of the state, the state will soon run out of people that can use information.
get your facts right (Score:2)
You also wrote:
I argue it never should have been so carelessly deployed in the first place. The hype and the rush to make information available on the web could have been more carefully evaluated, especially by the holders of the plans. Not just plans to dams and waterways, either. Now it's deployment-readiness is being re-evaluated. I doubt it's much more than that.
I can't think of information that would be of more public interest than whether my community is at risk from a poorly built chemical plant, from an ill-placed dam, or whether a watershed or water supply is at risk from logging or contamination.
Your view is the traditional "security through obscurity". It doesn't work: it only puts people at risk from accidents and exploitation. Vulnerabilities need to be corrected, not hidden, no matter how inconvenient that may be for industry or the government. A smart terrorist has lots of time on his hands and doesn't need the library to figure this stuff out for one target; the people who need that information are environmentalists and citizens, who cannot devote their whole lives to this stuff but still want to protect and create livable and safe communities everywhere.
Re:get your facts right (Score:2)
Previous post:
Of course this guy wants security through obscurity -- look at how well it worked with "I love you," "Red Alert," "sadmind," et cetera!! Since companies do so well with their "security," why shouldn't the government emulate that?
What'samaddayou, you some kinda think-nik? Don't worry, the "Peace Police" will be 'round shortly to round you up.
does anyone remember... (Score:2)
Everything happening parallels the prologue of the morrow project awefully closely... Governments destroying knowlege databases and books, and controlling access to information in the name of security.
I urge many of you to start an information cache. If you must, bury PVC vaults with information in them in safe locations (Geocaches)
Myself? I have all of my water filtration information from when I ran a water planet 3 years ago.. I have all of the theory, chemistry, microbiological and design information. (Heck I think i even have a copy of the plant's bleprints from 1929 and the revisions from 1978.)
Whats next? ban chemistry and chemistry information for the safety of the country?.. Outlaw science outside sanctioned government departments?
Re:does anyone remember... (Score:2)
Damned typos... water PLANT is what was supposed to be there.
Urban Exploration (Score:2, Interesting)
Is scientific information next? (Score:5, Interesting)
At the end of this path is a society in which a few, carefully screened individuals have all the knowledge and the rest of the population lives in ignorance. In fact, throughout history, we have had societies like that. The "knowledge elite", of course, derives lots of power and wealth from their knowledge and soon dispenses with the need to consider input from the masses, who don't know what's going on anyway.
It is up to us in a democratic society to decide how far we want to go down that path. At least we still have the choice for now--once we are too far down that path, democracy inevitably disappears, since you can't make informed political decisions if you don't have information.
This has been going on for *years*... (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, he got a data tape from either the state or federal government (I don't recall which) of a bunch of bridge-related information. It was my job to pull the data from the tape, and do some initial checking to make sure we read the data correctly. In order to make sure everything looked OK, the tape came with a record definition, showing each field in the record, its size, and the type of data it contained.
The interesting thing was that two fields were listed in the record definition, but were zero'ed out on the tape -- the latitude and longitude of each bridge. It turned out that the agency responsible for the data would not release that one datum; the concern was that the data could be militarily significant in time of war.
So making data harder to find in the name of homeland security is nothing all that new...
Ed
Publicly burn them (Score:2)
They should publicly burn [historyplace.com] those documents. It's the only way to be sure.
Damn Google Cache... (Score:2)
Speaking of flow, how about some USGS dam safety links at
http://www.wes.army.mil/ITL/damsafe/sites.html, what??? 404? Not found??
Lets try this google cache thingy [google.com]
Wow. I can still see the website. We had better shut down that evil Google
Hummm. (Score:2, Insightful)
Scary, really, scary...when you consider that it is not the "powerful" aspects of the DMCA, but the more subtle/incidious/recurring detriments of the act/law.
What I find even more sad is that even though you consider the damage Bin Laden did, it pales to what we are doing to him. We are taking his life, his livelyhood and turning his own people, much less the whole world, against him.
Be careful what you wish for, eh? He wanted to see those towers come down, I believe was the direct quote.
So, limiting access to information in this way, well what happens when the people who need it can't get it? And the damn breaks quite literally and figuratively?
Again, I say, be careful what you wish for.
Re:Hummm. (Score:2)
Spooky (Score:5, Insightful)
The debate here is between the idea there is and that there is not a net benefit in having an open society, where individuals by virtue of citizenship have access to whatever information they want so long as it doesn't post an immediate and vital security threat. Once you start censoring papers and publications because they can fathomably be used to hurt the government, you limit the public's ability of oversight in public health, security, and spending. No longer can public-interest groups review and recommend changes to public works and such. You also reduce accountability of the government to the people and the press: if the plans on public works are state secrets, graft and corruption become much easier and less dangerous. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, because this style of censorship does not have a clear standard of justification - a 'clear & present danger', say - the issue of a slippery slope comes into play. There is, I suppose, one fundamental questions to be asked: first, is the realistic danger of the censorship greater than the realistic danger of the information being censored?
Hey, (Score:2)
Next we won't need to vote because terrorists could go to the polls and vote for terrorist friendly politicians
Illusion of Security (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem is that everybody's still shell shocked over the Sept 11 attacks and everybody wants closure over this and the feeling of security. Sure, airports security has been stepped up, but has it gotten any better? They're collecting far more nail clippers now, but they're still getting knives through. [go.com] No matter how much security they place at the airport, or any other place for that matter, "bad stuff" will still get through. And even if they made something completely safe, the terrorists will simply go elsewhere.
Let's face it, had the government pulled this shit a year ago, people would have been absolutely pissed. People would have been writing to their congressmen, there may have been protests, but bottom line it would not have happened. Does anybody out there think that government documents like this would have been pulled a year ago? Do you think there would have been an anti-terrorism bill a year ago?
The only good thing is that this will probably come full circle. Maybe it will be in a year, maybe two years, maybe longer, the general public will want this stuff public again. Some accident will occur, people will want to know more about what their local chemical plant is doing, people will want to know where their water is coming from, and after all this terrorist fear has blown over the people will want this stuff back.
Just wait.
Oh. (Score:2)
Oh.
Ok.
I feel so safe now, knowing that the people in charge of so-called homeland security are a bunch of idiots.
It reminds me of the whole "STOP DECSS" thing.
I take offense to this not because these documents are being lost to the memory tubes, but that the administration is showing their incompetence / ignorance.
What's the penalty for noncompliance? (Score:2)
Are they actually classifying the data now formally (eg, slapping a Secret or Top Secret designation)?
If not, I don't know how it could be justified. What happens if someone doesn't comply fully (eg, secretly burns a copy of the CD?
Preserve this stuff! (Score:2)
Slashdot paranoia (Score:2)
As for you Orwell, F451 folks, no one I've dealt with (up to the General level) has any interest in censorship or any of that nonsense. These people are extremely pissed off and want to go kick someone ass, but since they're techies they need to stay in the US and do some tasks here.
As for the top politicos in Washington, I have no first hand knowledge, but 3rd or 4th hand knowledge tends to support the belief that they are concerned with securing our country, not a bunch of Mr. Burns' holding their hands saying "Excellent!" while contemplating implementing censorship.
I wish I could go into more detail, but I can't. Of course, all of you now think I'm a lackey of the establishment anyway. Oh well, I tried.
Re:Slashdot paranoia (Score:3, Interesting)
I wanted to point out that
To bring it together, there are people who believe that the level of info out there is too much. You may disagree, but I may disagree about what you want to keep private.
Hope this helps clarify my position.
What next? (Score:2)
I'd heard of it before, but never actually read it. My curiosity was piqued and I fed in the info to Google. Luckily enough, they have a section devoted solely to this compiliation. I managed to find it after the second or third link.
After agreeing not to use the information improperly, I found it laying before me... the Anarchist's Cookbook, in its entirety, along with an added bonus of the Terrorist's Cookbook.
I soon found myself thinking rather nasty thoughts and reading up on interesting sections in the Anarchist's Cookbook.
By chance, I happened to look outside my window and noticed three police cars, lights flashing, less than 50 yards from my house.
They weren't there for me, but the effect was chilling enough. I swear I have never ALT-F4'd, deleted my History, and cleared my browser location bar so quickly in my life.
Whew.
I'm reminded of a quote (Score:2)
All this crap being done under the name of "homeland security", just wait till it doesn't go away after the war is over. If they ever declare the war over.
Awwwkkkkk FSCK!!! (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sure it's all a big plot to clug the bandwidth so people stop leeching warez and vids and go buy them for all the trouble it'll take to get them for free...
...brilliant...
heh
What about.... (Score:2, Interesting)
It kind of makes me want get the information and put it up on web server located in switzerland.
Break out the flame throwers! (Score:2)
It's ok for certain things to be classified, because for something to be classified, it must be registered and must be deemed worthy to classify by two government officials. There are checks and balances to make sure that things aren't just classified for no apparent reason.
Just deciding that something is sensitive and then making all these rules about giving access to it is just ridiculus. Anyone can access classified information too, they just have to be able to demonstrate a Need-To-Know and have received appriorate security clearance.
So now, you can be deined access if your background is shady and to be able to view this material, you must present a need to know.
Gee, sounds to me like there is a new level of classification that is bi-passing the safeguards of classification.
If it can be reasonably assumed, that the undisclosed release of this information is likely to cause damage to national security, then it should be classified and be treated with all the same safe guards as anything else that is confidential.
What this is, is a loop-hole. And it probably is illegal.
Wrong, wrong, wrong... (Score:2, Funny)
Most effective (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe we should just get to the heart of the matter and outlaw terrorism. Oh, wait...
Foolish... (Score:2)
Wonder if cryptome has any of this laying around?
Data warehousing (Score:2)
The Xerox Machine has been used for decades by people who wanted to read a reference or other unborrowable book on their own time, now it will be a handy tool for keeping certain pieces of content available.
Sure, its an inelegant solution, but if enough people do it and make multiple off-site backups in the public domain, the appointed censors that keep passing stupid edicts like this will have to do something REALLY stupid and REALLY public.
Ironic, isn't it? (Score:2)
Ironically, the story mentions another bit of government suppression of information:
So the same government that has been invading our privacy and publishing the data now says that "some things shouldn't be made public." The same government that says we shouldn't be allowed to hide things that might be used against us has decided to hide things that might be used against us. I wonder if this new-found interest in information security will also be applied to our personal information. (Now taking bets.)
Seen this before... (Score:2, Informative)
Time for me to go dig up that old 'Ask Slashdot' article about which country now most deserves the title "Land of the Free."
No brainer. (Score:2)
"Information at your fingertips" (Score:2, Informative)
Find your local Federal Depository [gpo.gov] - the 1,350 libraries that they are asking (telling? ordering?) to destroy documents.
Go talk to the librarians, ask their opinions, voice your opinion, read some documents, see how or if they are actually disposing of them, etc.
I wonder how long it is before we can no longer access this list.
Freenet Now! (Score:2)
Orwell said it best (Score:3, Insightful)
It's true that our American way of life is under attack...at least Bush, Ashcroft and the rest of them got that one right.
If knowledge is outlawed... (Score:2)
God help this country (Score:4, Insightful)
Information is the lifeblood of a free society governed by the consent of the governed. If information is destroyed (or even made inaccessible to all but the most determined individuals armed with subpoenas), the practical effect is that the governed don't know what we're consenting to. Policies that prevent open disclosure of information are ripe for exploitation as tools to conceal embarrassing information. Public outrage is a powerful motivator in an open society, but how can the public express outrage when the information that would prompt such outrage may be cloistered away by embarrassed bureaucrats who can simply claim the information could be dangerous in the wrong hands?
I have news for everyone: almost any information can be dangerous in certain circumstances. What our illustrious and infallible (ok, only 89% infallible) administration has apparently decided is that information no longer need be imminently dangerous to fall subject to the censors. Unfortunately potentially dangerous covers a lot of vague territory (or perhaps fortunately if that information contains something personally embarrasing to you).
Now if the chemical plant down the street is poisoning your water, you just have to hope that the regulators responsible for letting the water become contaminated don't decide that the chemicals aren't too scary to talk about. If you live downstream from a dam, don't bother asking why/if the security team failed their last test. Just trust that everything will be Ok; you don't need to know about it!
This isn't about not trusting government. I don't distrust government, rather I doubt that everyone in government will always necessarily do the right things. Individually government consists of people with emotions, agendas, visions, and goals that I may not share. I can't trust that without meaningful oversight and clearly defined standards for making information secret, that everyone who governs will always do the right thing. You see, open information means I don't have to trust those in government.
Unfortunately, it is in times of crisis that open government is most important, because it is easiest to precipitate abuse when there is 89% approval and everyone is looking the other way. In fact, it is considered unpatriotic to even suggest that times of crisis are times of opportunity for abuse.
We know that with attention diverted, this would be the perfect time to make politically unpopular decisions: give vast tax breaks to huge companies, strip away environmental regulations, invalidate laws in states that legalize doctor assisted suicide, etc... Why can we rest assured that no lower level bureaucrat might take advantage of the situation to obfuscate potentially embarrasing or dangerous agency screw-ups?
Our military has many legitimate secrets, but as the agency given the greatest freedom to keep its activities secret, it has not done an excellent job of obeying the spirit of the law. Now with civilian agencies also keeping secrets (that I believe everyone agrees are less threatening than military secrets) isn't the potential for abuse proportionally greater?
If there is necessity to obscure information -- and sometimes that's hard to say because we don't know what information is being blocked -- then there should be extremely clear guidelines on exactly what should be controlled. Information that does not pose an imminent security danger should still be made available, but perhaps with some authentication of those requesting it, i.e., require written request and valid ID. Finally, the clearly defined regulations limiting access should automatically expire after five years unless Congress decides that there are ongoing security risks that require an extension of the controls. Of course it goes without saying that the information should not be destroyed.
Doubtless some of you may take the view that we need to surrender some of our typical openness to secure the safety our our nation. To this I would respond that: a) by surrendering openness we're simultaneously surrendering security -- we just don't know how much; b) if something must be surrendered we should consider very carefully what should be surrendered and how we should do so; and c) we must keep in mind that information is a double edged sword and our society is based upon the assumption that openness is our guarantee of freedom. This country would look very different without freedom of information; please consider very carefully where to draw that line.
There are consequences to viewing open information as our enemy. I can only hope that more rational minds soon prevail; rights surrendered in times of crisis are rarely returned.
Of course, all this is an aside to the question of the efficacy of blocking the information...
It would be much easier to avoid the allusions to Orwellian horrors if our own government didn't insist on Orwellian policies labeled with positively Orwellian names.
Of course, Farenheit 451 also hasn't been more relevant anytime in recent memory than now. I hope everyone reads it.
God help this country.
Bin Ladin has Aleady won (Score:3, Insightful)
in 1999:
44,536 deaths from Alzheimer's
28,874 persons died from firearm.
19,102 persons died of drug-induced causes.
19,171 persons died in 1999 from alcohol-induced causes.
In 2001:
~5000 ppl died in 2001 due to terrorist.
~5 ppl have a died from a local terrorist group with anthrax.
So where do we focus our energy and money?
On stopping dangerous information from going out to US citizens. BTW, more money is now being spent on "homeland defense" than on Research.
Pretty soon it will be the "fatherland" that must be protected at ALL cost.
The funny thing is, this information is available in libraries in britain, italy, france, canada. Basically in all free countries. Bush and cronies are stripping us of our rights and liberties and many have not learned from our and others past abuses. This information that bush/ashcroft want hidden is easily gleaned from so many other sources that ony we suffer.
It is amazing that these idiots who understand the danger of having our gun rights stripped would so quickly strip us of our information rights and liberties.
Our government is making us LESS secure (Score:4, Insightful)
Destroying information in public libraries, restricting requests through the Freedom of Information Act, Bush's executive order that allows a sitting president to seal presidential records indefinitely - all of these events result in less information for the public to properly judge the actions of our government. This is inexcusable in a republic.
Without public accountability, our elected leaders will have carte blanche to commit aggregious acts in the name of our country. Any illegal actions that they take, clouded in executive priviledge and secrecy, could very well sow the seeds for future terrorist attacks.
We need to know exactly what our government is doing, particularly while we are at "war". The only way we will win a "war" against terrorism is to stand the moral high ground, and wage it with justified, measured response. If our government begins to wage it with illegal and extreme methods (in our name and without our knowledge) we are assured to locked in a vicious cycle of retribution and revenge that will only hurt ourselves in the long run.
This is part of a scary trend (Score:4, Informative)
Likely the cowed populace will ask for even more disenfranchisements.
Is becoming an expert illegal? (Score:4, Insightful)
"No, you don't need to and are not allowed, but here's a fine job at McDonalds; we're saving all those uninteresting curiosities for select Harvard graduates with connections since we only trust people who were raised and work in the establishment already."
I think maybe the reason this so agitates me (and many of you) is that I am a self-educated college-dropout security and technology "expert" with a successful consulting career. Many of America's greatest "expert" figures past and present: Franklin, Gates, Jobs, Wozniak, Ellison, Dell, Edison, Turner, F Scott Fitzgerald, were not college graduates.
Is denial of information not most importantly an insult to the merits of self-education and curiosity? Isn't that why it rightfully pisses off this community?
Braddock Gaskill
Sigh .. (Score:3, Interesting)
That's the mentality I see running the show inside the Beltway these days. When we need smarter security, we get dumb ideas like this -- and this one is worse than useless, because it makes people feel safer without actually providing any protection.
That's the upside of it. The downside is that now anyone worried that someone is going to find evidence of their scam, or screwup, in our Federal Depository Libraries can get that evidence destroyed under the watchful eyes of U.S. Marshals and not only can we not stop it, most of us won't even know when it happens.
Oh well
Re:Why bother. (Score:5, Insightful)
Think about it. These documents are, in effect, a way of saying "security weakness". By making the documents closed, we are promoting security through obscurity, which has been proved time and time again not to work.
Perhaps instead we should be concentrating more on how to secure those places which the documents, well..., document. We've already seen from September 11th that terrorists and the like are capable of incredible ingenuity, and we must not forget that they are capable of doing their own research - just because we consider them to be mad, doesn't mean that they are stupid.
Or to put it another way, burning all of the documents that happen to detail airplane security and it's weaknesses will not stop hijackers from taking a plane. ACTING on those documents and improving security will.
What was the example in the article - a cd containing a dam and resevoir survey? So why not consider the ways that the water system can be attacked, and then safe-guard against these kind of attacks?
The thing is... (Score:5, Interesting)
Such documents have been available for years. Terrorists already have them. They are already on the Internet. Closing the barn door after the horse is gone is needless. We just need to keep from declassifying anything else that ought not to be. Problem is, the three-letter agencies never want to declassify anything, and that would be even worse than declassifying dangerous infrastructure or nuclear information. I don't want terrorists attacking my country. But if my country becomes any more backwards and secretive than the Star Chamber it's already fast becoming, then I wouldn't mind so much if the whole thing gets destroyed and we have to start from the fundamentals again. I believe it was Jefferson who advocated periodic revolutions, to remove the "cruft" that accrues around any government.
In two centuries, we've gone from isolationist "paradise" happy to revel in our beautiful countrysides and stay out of world conflicts for our own good, to the Roman Empire of the modern world. I'm not one of these assholes who whines about how America deserves what it gets--certainly innocent people just going about their daily lives don't deserve to die--but frankly I'm not surprised nor dismayed, either. I don't really like my government. It did worse things than pulling easy-to-get-elsewhere data from libraries, even before Sept. 11. While I lament the deaths of the innocent, part of me hopes our government keeps baring its true fangs until everyone sees what it is and gets fed up with the cruft and corruption. Our government taxes us to death to do worthless things like give 2 BILLION dollars of aid ech year to Egypt, which hates us, hundreds of millions each year to Afghanistan, whose government sponsored terrorism against us, and BILLIONS to several other countries which almost all Americans couldn't care less about. Why should it be the responsibility of a teacher making near-poverty wages to subsidize third-world regimes? That's practically communism. After all, "to share everything and be poor together is madness." Why do we do it? The stock answer, political stability. The real answer, to subsidize regimes that are favorable to U.S. corporate interests, so that people who would cut off U.S. trade don't get into power.
That's what it's all about in the end. Take from the average working class citizen to subsidize corporations, corporations which get tax breaks to "stimulate the economy" (read: get companies to make more stuff and get people to buy more stuff, whether the stuff is necessary or not). The rest of the world objects to so much American stuff floating around and destabilizing their own native industries--and I can't blame them for that; I can sympathize since corporate America's stuff also destabilizes native industries here in America (average citizens can't compete with the Wal-Marts; we all become employees whereas in the old days many, many more of us would be owners, and could work towards being owners). In turn America is hated and attacked, though unfortunately foreign terrorists don't want to make the distinction between American citizens and the government which lords it over them. In turn the government acts even more repressive. The question is if and when we will reach the breaking point, where pressure leads to a breakdown in the economic and social structure. I have to say, I hope so. It would give us a chance we won't have otherwise to return to the core fundamentals of the Constitution, shedding all the strained and bogus interpretations and omissions which have been imposed in the intervening years--such as the fact that the Tenth Amendment is entirely ignored.
There are so many parallels between the U.S. and the Roman Empire--our history and development run along the same lines. Agrarian Republic to world-shaking Empire. True Republic to puppet government controlled almost exclusively by the elites. A country which avoids warfare once it consolidats itself and expands to its natural boundaries, to an Empire which thrives on warfare to promote economic interests.
This has digressed from the small topic of restricting information to the larger issues which have spawned such restriction. But it is undoubtedly an action which is a thread in this larger tapestry. We really ought to examine proactively the reasons behind our government's actions, rather than reacting to them one by one. This is the problem the media has--they promote dwelling on the small issues, while ignoring the bigger picture because it won't fit into a 90-second segment. We really need to examine these themes when incidents arise, instead of treating each as if it existed in a vacuum.
Re:The thing is... (Score:5, Insightful)
As for the first, it is more or less self-evident. We've had several different political parties come and go over the course of our history--the idea that we are a two-party system and better for it is a relatively new and completely untrue one. In any given geographical area, there were always several parties--groups of people interested in politics who wished to back and promote a candidate who agrees with their ideals. Some of these were directly affiliated with national parties which were the most prominent, such as Democrats or Whigs or later Republicans. While they therefore had an advantage thanks to networking and name recognition and improved fundraising, politics was essentially still local. Local parties had almost equal power to field candidates and get them recognized within a given district. And, an individual with a great reputation and local name recognition could build up his own group of supporters--essentially his own local party--and do damn well.
This is no longer true thanks to the fact that the national party structure is able to raise so much money for paid media advertising, that the national parties have raised the bar for entry of third-party or independant candidates ridiculously high, and that media outlets like television--which is now sadly the only way most people get information--only give coverage to the candidates from the Big Two parties in most cases, being motivated to save their costly airtime, and seldom cover third-party or independant candidates with equal vigor.
The current Big Two parties have secured through legislation their ability to get candidates on the ballot automatically, while anyone else has to work very, very hard to get his name there. In the old days, everyone had to work at the same level. Why give such preferences to an organization simply because it happens to be dominant at a particular time? If the Democrats and the Whigs had done the same thing back when they were the two most prominent parties, well, the Whigs would still be around and the Republicans would never have had a chance to rise to the same level.
Because of this artificial prominence, almost all the money goes to these two parties, since most people believe in the two-party mythos and believe--rightly since the playing field has become so tilted--that very few third-party or independent candidates can win. Such huge warchests and powerful backing and lobbying have been amassed behind the Republicans and Democrats, that few others can compete--television is now the primary medium, and it costs a lot of money to buy a little bit of airtime. Money is therefore primary to getting a candidate elected, whereas originally it was a minor consideration since most campaigning was done in person by stumping and through local newspaper coverage. Now, local newspapers are the things nobody reads that are given away at the grocery store and elsewhere; almost everyone reads their nearest big-city paper instead, which is usually more of a regional or national paper in which local issues aren't the most important, and so local candidates not backed by a major party are given little or no shrift. And nobody really stumps, since they can get more coverage by buying airtime and ads, and doing the occasional speech instead of hurriedly going around the election district trying to explain your beliefs to everyone in person. TV is just so much more effective, and so much more expensive...
The result is entrenched parties which will always be in power thanks to their artificial advantages. Would the Founders believe that two parties with great prominence at a pearticular time should be able to pass legislation to make getting elected harder for everyone else and easier for them? No. To make it worse, as Noam Chomsky points out throughout his writings and videos (though I don't take him seriously on many other things), the Big Two really aren't at all far apart in philosophy. They're both for Big Government and extreme federalism, just to different ends and in different areas. They seem different to the average person, because each party is for or against certain things like abortion--but at the core, they both agree on the same sort of system, the same sort of political philosophy; they only disagree on details, not on major structures. The result is that voters usually get to choose between two sides of the same coin. Where's the party that, for example, wants to reduce federal government to only those things explicitly authorized and reasonably implied by the constitution? Plenty of people want that--yet the artificial obstacles prevent such people from banding together and having any reasonable chance of fielding candidates.
As for the judicial branch, I think it went awry when it started interpreting the Constitution instead of just reading it as literally as possible. Today there is no dispute about whether we should interpret the Constitution or not--there are just "strict constructionists" who try to interpret it narrowly and "loose constructionists" who try to interpret it broadly. Why not just read the damn thing instead? If the Constition says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."--that's pretty self-explanatory. Congress shouldn't pass any laws regarding religions or churches whatsoever; it can pass no laws which restrict speech or writing; it can pass no law to prevent people from peacefully assembling. What's there to interpret? The Court should just decide what laws do and do not violate this; no interpretation is necessary. Interpretations are used for justifications of decisions, but unfortunately under our system they then become precedent and have the force of law themselves. So, don't interpret at all. Explain why a law violates or does not violate, but don't add or remove meanings by making grand pronouncements about what you think the Constitution means. It's written in plain language after all, and for good reason.
An example of what goes wrong when the judiciary interprets instead of simply reading the Constitution word for word is the mess about what the 2nd Amendment "means," hinging around interpretation of the word "militia". "A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed." Why does this need interpretation? Militia had a very simple meaning at the time--any able-bodied man over the age of majority and under a certain age, who was therefore eligible to serve in a military capacity. But that doesn't matter anyway, because just reading the sentence, any English major can tell you that that sentence is equivalent in meaning to this one, which is easier for modern readers to parse since they no longer teach us so well about subordinate clauses and such: "Because a well regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." Again, unless you are a moron you understand this sentence. It needs no interpretation. It is entirely self-evident. If you believe in gun control, fine--pass a Constitutional amendment to add restrictions; just don't try to read things you want to see into words which are so simple and straightforward. I should add that we can keep convicted felons from owning firearms, though, because felons do not have and never had full rights unless they are restored by legislative action, which is why we can keep them from voting, owning firearms, etc.
This is the cause of much of our legal cruft--people want to interpret the Constitution and the laws to suit their own desires, even when it obviously contradicts them. What they should do is campaign for those changes, not try to twist the Constitution and laws through interpretation to fit those changes. It demeans and diminishes the letter and spirit of those documents, and makes it progressively easier for everyone else to twist and tweak them to fit into their own ideologies and wishes--especially since we have a system of precedent. The Founders wrote the Constitution in very simple language--excruciatingly simple for the day, when flowery embellishments were the norm. It's simple to understand. People need to stop trying to make it conform to their own beliefs. Campaign to change it if you don't agree with it--just don't reduce it to meaninglessness because you want to interpret it to allow your opinions rather than what it clearly says.
Because of this judicial love of interpreting things to avoid the obvious, we've lost the last bastion of our rights. For example, the legislation passed recently to allow law enforcement agencies to read anyone's Net traffic headers without a warrant is blatantly contrary to the Fourth Amendment's admonishment that "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." You have to have a particular reason to look at anything which would otherwise be private, and you have to have a warrant which specifies exactly what you can look at. Pretty simple. But the Court can and will interpret these words however it wants, instead of just reading them literally and if need be asking the simple question WWTJD--What Would Thomas Jefferson Do? After all, he wrote those words. If they seem at all ambiguous--which they don't really--simply honestly thinking about what Jefferson and others directly involved meant by them is the only valid method of clarification. They were amazing people, a generation of thinkers and doers who threw off the bonds of subjugation and created a new and thriving, trend-setting nation. They wrote the Constitution as plainly and unambiguously as they could, to avoid the need for interpreting it.
And the Bill of Rights was an afterthought which many of them thought was unnecessary since such rights were so obvious at the time. It was a time when people and state governments were put ahead of the federal government. It was a time when national government was expected to conduct foreign policy, regulate interstate commerce and interstate disputes, and to otherwise leave us all alone. It was a time when the Ninth and Tenth Amendments still meant something: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." We had the full rights and protections of the Common Law. The federal government was there to assist the people and the states, not to extend its regulations into every facet of our lives.
Now our rights are not so obvious--at least to those full of interpretations and agendas, and to the majority of people who just don't know our proud history and heritage. Anyone who's read the writings of Jefferson and Madison, and Washington's journal, Franklin's papers, etc., knows that they would be appalled at our current system. Again, they were brilliant men, and created a system which still functions better than could be expected even after 200 years of cruft weigh it down and pervert it. There is no single government in the world which has operated for so long without very fundamental changes to its structure. (Before someone mentions England, it changed fundamentally at the beginning of the 20th century, when the House of Lords was finally rendered impotent.)
What I'd like to see is a return to this core. The Constitution should be enforced, not interpreted. The federal government should leave domestic law enforcement (except where it crosses state or national boundaries) and any other function not dealing with what the Constitution explicitly delagates to them, except for a few useful things not enumerated like printing the national currency, to the states. Most of our tax money could be spent at the state level, instead of having a national government dominated by pork barrel politics which loses big chunks of our money while filtering it back down to the states. Why not just have that money go directly to the states through state taxes? Why not have the federal government leave us alone, and just worry about protecting the people and their rights, as the Constitution charges it? Our federal tax dollars should be spent on defense and national infrastructure, not on foreign aid to bolster corporate sales penetration into foreign markets and on tax breaks to whatever interests got the President elected. Big political parties should be given no preferential treatment over small ones--they all need to jump through the same hoops to get on the ballot. Basically, I'd like to see a return to the federal government we had in 1805, with changes, additions, and subtractions only where obviously needed thanks to the changes that have taken place in the intervening years. It would be a small, lean, efficient government. It wouldn't need to hide things from the people. It wouldn't need to promote corporate interests. You wouldn't need to be in the pocket of a big corporate interest just to viably enter it.
But this will never, ever happen without outright revolution. Politicians would never willingly give up their corporate perks. Politicians are not visionary enough to look to the Constitution rather than their petty opinions. Politicians don't want to give up the powers they have which are not enumerated by the Constitution, since most things would become the province of state governments again rather than the national government--for example, abortion would be up to the States to decide individually, since the Constitution does not give the federal government the authority to regulate such things except where they become interstate issues. Unless a state violates a Constitutional right of its people, or an issue involves national defense or foreign policy, the federal government would largely let the state governments and the people who elect them decide what to do.
What I see is a large bureaucratic government that has taken the place of the nimble and responsive government we once had. What I see is a government which seeks to monitor its people, without reason, without probable cause, without warrant. What I see is a government which killed Randy Weaver's family because he advocated gun ownership rights and was therefore branded suspect--and which does similar things all the time albeit with much less publicity. What I see is a government which wants to keep everything about itself secret, even to the point of not letting the public know if toxic nuclear waste is being stored near them. What I see is a government which is owned by corporations, and more directly beholden to them and their money than to the people themselves.
I've gone on and on far too long; everyone gets the point. But right now, I don't see the cruft being removed without a real Jeffersonian revolution. It's time to collect all the information and all the arms while it's still legal to do so, because at some point both may be outlawed just when they're most necessary. I love my country, and I love its history. But I want a real government of the people, by the people, for the people, to take the place once more of our current government of the corporations, by the corporations, and for the corporations. I want accountability where there is none. And I know I'm not alone.
Re:The thing is... (Score:3, Informative)
What's there to interpret? How about the following question: "What constitutes speech?"
The 1st Amendment only specifically mentions "speech" and "the press". What do they mean by "the press"? The freedom of the news media to publish what it likes? Or the freedom of individuals to use a printing press? Or the concept of physical publication and distribution? Or all of these? Or none of these? "The press" is *AMBIGUOUS*, and leaves us with no choice BUT to interpret.
So let's say you read the 1st Amendment completely literally. The only things that are guaranteed protection are the freedom to speak aloud, and the freedom to write, print, and distribute whatever you like. What about... artwork? If I create a piece of art that shows a caricatured black man with big lips and beady eyes supplicating before a regal white master, is that protected by the First Amendment? After all, I did not write anything, and I did not say anything.
But clearly it would be ludicrous to prohibit the expression of whatever it is that I'd be trying to express with that artwork. Yet the 1st Amendment says nothing about artwork. Now what?
Other things that are not explicitly mentioned in the 1st Amendment, but it would be (in my opinion) wrong to not consider protected: computer source code, any form of electronically stored data, sign language, rude hand gestures, facial expressions (for example, glaring at someone)... hey, how about THOUGHT? Thought isn't mentioned or even referenced by the 1st Amendment. Therefore we can prohibit certain kinds of thought, right?
My point here is that your position is untenable -- language almost by definition is ambiguous, and without something to concretely resolve that ambiguity, we are left with literally no choice but to interpret the language and figure out what it means. Unless, of course, you think that none of the above things I mentioned should be protected? Not that there's anything wrong with that -- you're entitled to your opinions, another side effect of the First Amendment.
Re:Why bother. (Score:3, Insightful)
"Security through obscurity" is not bad. It's only bad when it's your only line of defense. As an extreme example, I would be really upset if my credit card information was published online, but I could still cancel the card and have various insurance against abuses. Similarly, we shouldn't hand terrorists information to use against us, but we also shouldn't remain under any delusion that pulling documents is all the security we need.
IMHO, during the debate over destroying/not publishing government data you need to ask several questions before restricting information:
There will always be government (and for that matter, corporate) secrets, and they have a valid place in a security scheme, but just not the only line of defense. I can believe that there are some things that might be too compromising, but I hope that the US government continues to record what was destroyed and why, and that a copy be stored somewhere to await a more peaceful time.
Security through Obscurity myth (Score:2)
Security through Obscurity is not automatically bad. In fact, security through obscurity is pretty damn good, especially in the real world where reconaissance is much more difficult. (In the digital world, intercepting data or playing with a digital black box in your basement is much easier.)
A well-designed system AND obscurity is a harder target than a well-designed system alone. The warning about security through obscurity is to those amateur cryptographers who think that cooking up a secret algorithm will get them mathematically sound security. The rule just doesn't apply in the same way to physical security. (Would you post a sign on your door saying, "I have tens of thousands of dollars in my safe, but my vault is secure!"?)
That said, I'm still against hiding this information simply because it's ineffectual. They'd probably be better off tracking people who looked it up; that'd be just as bad a civil rights infraction, but might actually make a difference...
Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... (Score:2)
Hey moron, in case you didn't know..I AM THE GOVERNMENT, AND SO ARE YOU
. The govenment was created, and is there, to serve me, and the rest of the citizens. Those aren't the government's documents, they're mine!Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... (Score:2)
Good luck, drop me a line when you succeed.
I may be "part of the government" and "one of its bosses," but see if my individual voting brings the government back in line with the Constitution nd the principles the nation was founded on (NOT the Bible, BTW).
Re:Sheeeeesh..... this is absurd...... (Score:2)
first you remind us of our rights as US citizens, then you mock our democratic process. you are such a hypocrite.
In this case, security through obscurity is bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Russia for a long time made use of this method to protect their nuclear facilities: Obscure the facts, have everyone be watched by the KGB, and give the nuclear workers the best of ecerything. This worked in a closed society with closed borders because the nation was secure even if the facilities were not. However, this does nto work for Russia today, and their facilities are extremely insecure.
This is the wrong sort of security through obscurity to have in a free nation. Unless the NSA, CIA, and FBI want to join forces and spy on all Americans for evidence of terrorism (and maybe bring back the UAAC from the 50's) it prevents the dialogs from occuring that bring about better security policies...
Re:Exactly what's the problem? (Score:2)
How long before 1984 is removed from the libraries???
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! (Score:3, Interesting)
Congress did NOT pass a law abridging free speech in this case.
Apparently, the materials are ON LOAN from the government to these "depository libraries". The government owns these materials. It can do what it wants with them. Having the librarian destroy them just saved the cost of shipping them back so the govt. could destroy them. Perhaps it would have made less waves if they had shipped them back and destroyed them themselves.
So, if you want to hire a bunch of guys, do a survey of all the water systems in the US and then publish it, go ahead. If the government then refuses to allow you to publish, then you have a 1st ammendment case.
As representatives of the people, the government determined that the people desired this information only to the extent that it would not jeopardize our lives.
You can hardly argue that the government fails to represent The People in this case. The vast majority would agree that we are better off without uncontrolled access to this information.
There is a fine line that must be walked. Take away too much information, and we end up with Chernobyl--a classic example of what happens without an informed, active environmental lobby. Give out too much information and we end up with terrorists knowing where the Cole is docked and just where to ram it.
The fact that we are having this argument on /. and in the media is encouraging. When people are afraid to dialog like this; afraid to be controversial, that's when I'll be afraid.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! (Score:3, Interesting)
But we do have something called the Freedom of Information Act [usdoj.gov]. This requires the government to make non-classified information public. There are only a few exceptions to this, including the internal operations of agencies, personal memos, law enforcement, and this little piece:
(1)(A) specifically authorized under criteria established by an Executive order to be kept secret in the interest of national defense or foreign policy and (B) are in fact properly classified pursuant to such Executive order;
Now, IANAL, but it would seem like the government is breaking the law. As far as I know, there has been no Executive Order (re)classifying this information.
There is another question: can previously unclassified information be classified? Is this similar to trade secrets where, once its made public, its no longer subject to trade secret protections.
Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The Constitution is not a suicide pact! (Score:3, Informative)
Take for example, The CIA World Factbook [cia.gov], essentially a full-fledged atlas/almanac published by the CIA, yearly. See the copyright notice [cia.gov] on the publication:
Re:In slashdot style... (Score:2, Funny)
Of course I do. Only the shadow knows....
Sorry, wrong analogy (Score:2)
Re:I don't know what to think (Score:2)
Which, for all you pro-nukers out there, may be a good reason *not* to build nuclear power plants...