On Hacktivism 246
z84976 writes "Oxblood Ruffin, of cDc fame, has produced a nice article discussing various aspects of hactivism and some of the approaches used by their own Hacktivismo group in supporting freedom (of thought, mainly) on the internet. Check it out over at The Register when you get a chance."
Hacktivism (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hacktivism (Score:2)
You will be suprised.
Re:Hacktivism (Score:2)
Sheesh, first article I check out today and see one of my posts with someone else's fuckin name attached.
At least give credit.
Ass.
Civil disobedience (Score:4, Funny)
If anyone is ever in a cybercafe in Mauritania or Elbonia, let's mail them 64k of encrypted random data. Let the government snoops try to decode that!
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
(or was that Elstonia?)
Random data versus encrypted random data? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:1)
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:3, Funny)
Just put the "PGP Message Follows" header thingy in front of your random data. Hours of enjoyment for the whole family.
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
It's like finding a treasure map, finding the treasure, digging it up, only to get an empty box.
They should play it backwards (Score:2)
Like playing Ann Murray's Snowbird backwards and getting the message about the impending Canadian invasion...
Re:They should play it backwards (Score:2)
Post Article (Score:2)
Svend Robinson, the NDP Foreign Affairs critic, also criticized the government. "If ever there were any evidence needed that Canadian troops should not be in Afghanistan under United States command we have seen the tragic evidence of that," Mr. Robinson told a news conference.
"If Canadian troops cannot be certain that they're not going to be fired on by Americans we have no business being there."
This just shows how far from reality Svend Robinson is. Military operations (even training) are inherently risky. Co-operative operations with nations that operate usually with different equipment, protocols, and ROE are even more risky.
There has never been a military operation where one group of troops could be certain that they would not be fired on by another group. And it is usually the infantry on the short end of the stick. That doesn't make it right, but right doesn't have a lot to do with war.
And the day a nation becomes so averse to casualties taken (for any reason), it ceases to be able to exert itself even in the cause of peace or stability.
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
If an infinite number of monkeys decrypted a message for a very long time...
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2, Insightful)
If a computer were programmed to find patterns in the data and derive a message, it could come out with something from seemlingly random data, given sufficient time.
Maybe someday anyone who sends messages will be subject to prosecution because the powers-that-be will always be able to find an incriminating message in every transmission. Even plaintext could contain hidden messages.
Yeah, I know. It was meant to be funny.
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:5, Informative)
The legal burden is on the owner of an encrypted file to prove that they never had the key, and anyone using encryption is guilty until proven innocent, on the basis that anyone using encryption must be a snuff-child-porn baron
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
It would be like asking someone on the street to prove they didn't have the key to the house they happened to be walking by.
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
Wrong (Score:2, Interesting)
So yes, if you were being monitored by the police and suspected of a crime, and you were sent an encrypted message, you might forgive the police for trying to decode it.
That said, there is a lot about the RIP bill that is controversial. But compared to the Patriot Bill over in the US, it's pretty tame; warrants are still needed here for surveilence.
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
They can go to prison for 2 years if they fail on request by the police to decrypt it.
The Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 [hmso.gov.uk] is a bit more complicated than this statement suggests. For instance, the explanatory notes [hmso.gov.uk] say the act creates civil liability for unlawful interception on a private telecommunications network and defines who may bring an action, namely the sender, recipient or intended recipient. For example, where an employee believes that their employer has unlawfully intercepted a telephone conversation with a third party, either the employee or the third party may sue the employer.
Interception normally requires a warrant from the Secretary of State. It would not be sufficient for him to consider that a warrant might be useful in supplementing other material, or that the information that it could produce could be interesting. The word 'necessary' means 'necessary in a democratic society'.
The act provides for a tribunal as a means of redress for those who wish to complain about the use of the powers.
The provision that forces disclosure of the decryption key assumes that the investigator has authority to read the email in the first place.
The suggestion that the British practice resembles a dictatorship is preposterous.
Re:Civil disobedience (Score:2)
I'm sure that'll be quite a consolation to the suspect as he's being tortured [amnesty.org] by agents of the Crown.
Ummm... (Score:2)
Can anyone back up this claim? I mean it doesn't seem like good business sense to just give things away for free to a competiting nation...
Re:Ummm... (Score:2, Interesting)
Just because a nation adopts communism as their economic model does not make them an enemy of the US, of the world, or of any person or ideology. Communism is an interesting economic structure which has good points and bad points. Capitalism is another interesting economic structure which also has good points and bad points. Together a lot of their good points will overshadow the others bad points . . . like maybe there is some optimal mix of the two.
Of course I'm an AC, what with McCarthy still very much alive in some powerful people . . .
Does anyone think that the Chineese really want to continue to annex land? If so, then we need to bring some diplomatic efforts to try to resolve the situation. Sharing of technology should be viewed as a Good Thing, as we are increasingly a global society. Otherwise we should be bringing diplomatic efforts to them in the areas of space exploration, global resource management (they are a huge chunk of land), and environmentally sound industrial practices. Anyone who thinks that we can't learn from each other is simply ignorant, or truly stupid.
This is probably Offtopic -1; Flaimbait -1; Troll -1; Treasonous -10
Live free or die
Re:Ummm... (Score:3, Interesting)
I spoke to a friend who spent some time travelling around Laos. Apparently the system's worked pretty well for them. They've got better education and nutrition now, access to healthcare, and at least some hope of sending their children on to something beyond a subsistence-level existence in a small village. And when you're operating on that scale, I really can't see how capitalism could be argued to be that much better.
Empirical evidence would suggest, however, that communism hasn't worked out terribly well for the long term in larger implementations.
Re:Ummm... (Score:2)
What I object to isn't the economic system -- it's the lack of individual freedom and the oppression of those who choose to go against government fiat. The economic system of China is very much like the USA, only the government owns all the corporations instead of the corporations owning the government
It's still possible to speak your mind in the US without being run over by a tank... unless you're *really* on the fringes of society (e.g. Waco)
(Disclaimer: IANAA -- I am not an American.)
Re:Ummm... (Score:2)
Re:Ummm... (Score:2)
Re:Ummm... (Score:2)
Re:Ummm... (Score:4, Informative)
Once the product is in China, then the reverse engineering can start. This has happened with a couple of rocket launches a few years ago. Also, it is purported that the former US administration allowed classified technologies into China.
Unfortunately, I cannot provide links to help prove this post ... and that appears what you wanted in the first place ...
sport huh. (Score:2)
The more people who have contact with one another, the better.
-- Shaolin Punk,
Proxy Boss,
Hacktivismo
Yea, totally. I'm routing for the Bears!
Re:sport huh. (Score:2, Funny)
Yes, that is one possible joke in this context
The other would be "I'm rooting for the Bears!"
MOSTLY. (Score:2)
Long on Talk, Short on Substance (Score:2)
If you consider some of his topics and questions that he introduces, there is no resolution. While trying to detail what hacktivism is, he makes one statement about it being about creating, rather then destroying, but on the other hand he says that people should be writing disruptive code. Also in the same vein, while talking about writing disruptive code and what should be made, there is a big Closed source bad/open source good (except when you want to hide something malicious). P2P turns into H2H, why napster shut down.. blah, blah, blah.
While I applaud the use of key phrases and liberal use of rhetoric, I walked (or clicked) away with the sense that I wa no more enlightened...
Re:Long on Talk, Short on Substance (Score:2)
He described a problem, described the first step (design), and only hinted at implimentation (open vs closed code, and using P2P -- er, H2H -- systems), but primarily we the readers are meant to be inspired to find, rather than spoon-fed, the solutions (which may not be even be known yet).
Re:Long on Talk, Short on Substance (Score:1)
It's just you. I found it pretty informative. I have known that other countries had been censoring internet access for their citizens for a while, but it never occurred to me that I should try to do anything about it. What I do not feel, having read that, is that I have a clue as to what to do.
Was that supposed to be a speech for people who already know what to do? Or was it supposed to just make me aware and get me thinking? I thought that he said we shouldn't be writing disruptive code, but that we should practice dissonant compliance. (I know that wasn't the term, but that's what it sounded like.)
It was beautifully written. I have to give him that.
Re:Long on Talk, Short on Substance (Score:2)
How often do most Internet users take take advantage of the fact that most major world newspapers are online, and a fish [altavista.com] away from being comprehensible in their own language? I certainly can't speak for any Chinese, but the case for truth and light coming shining through the Internet seems vastly overstated to me. I think the reason is that putting the case for lux et libertas et machina is that you get to hack the firewall and call it progress, instead of cleaning up oozing wounds on people afflicted with AIDS.
I admire the concern for social problems and the desire to get the tech community (indisputably among the world's richest few percent) involved. Let's just remember: technology won't solve a problem unless the remainder of the infrastructure exists to do the task at hand. You could definitely build a massive shipping database in Equatorial Guinea, but that wouldn't get shipments anywhere any faster than the donkey walks.
World War III (Score:4, Insightful)
I firmly believe that this is true, and is going on right now. But I wonder if it is appropriate to mix this concept with hacktivism. Consider Bush's current position. He's convinced most of the world (most of the US, anyway) that he should be given free reign to wage war anywhere in the country, all in the name of fighting terrorism. I'll keep theories about military-industrial complex profits to myself, at this point.
The point is, he is using major media outlets to spread his message, and in the mainstream media, very few people are questioning him. And at the moment, it is the mainstream media that carries the perception that it reflects the national consciousness.
Not enough people have switched off their TVs and let their corporate newspaper subscriptions expire to make hacktivism effective. It's unfortunate, and I expect (hope) things will change in the coming years, but for now, it's largely irrevelevant.
Go Hacktivism, Down with TV (Score:1, Insightful)
The media is a mouthpiece of corporate America, and therefore corporate America has been able to HIJACK the government largley through obfuscation of the facts and manufacturing consent.
Turn of the TV. Go for a hike. Smoke a joint. Hang out nude with a good friend at some hot springs. Then think about what a good life might be and see if TV is a part of it. If it's not, turn it off and throw it away.
Anonymouse, but not cowardly.
Re:World War III (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:World War III (Score:2)
Re:World War III (Score:2)
Besides, the mace story doesn't deserve wide coverage. Some idiot MP throwing a temper tantrum isn't as important as, say, the 3 boards of inquiry looking into the two US F16 pilots that killed 4 soldiers.
Re:World War III (Score:4, Informative)
Re:World War III (Score:2)
Re:World War III (Score:2)
He also has "Círculos Bolivarianos", which are groups of armed men in the poorest neighbourhoods, there to produce terror and instigate civil unrest (and pro-Chavez feelings amongst the poorest elements of society)
That doesn't make any sense: you can't generate support for you by terrorizing people! You must really think we are a bunch of idiots to say things like that! The fact is, the great majority of the people stand behind Chavez because he has tried (with moderate success) to address the wide gap between the rich and the poor in Venezuela and tried to dismantle the network of corruption (of which you are obviously a part of) that poisoned the country.
If you really don't like Chavez, vote him out, don't break the law with a coup. This whole story has a real embarassment for the U.S., and the whole world has noticed. Don't expect much more help from them in the months to come...
Re:World War III (Score:2)
I know quite a lot more about South American politics that you'd give me credit for: no left-wing government has ever seized power by vote-rigging and intimidation - that has always been the perogative of militaristic juntas. AFAIK, the only non-elected left-wing government in Latin America is Cuba. But even then, if you actually took the time to look at how their political system worked, you'd see that they do elect representatives, who do exert influence on how the country is run. While I would prefer if Castro called in elections (he would probably be elected anyway), Cuba is still more of a democratic country than, says, Colombia.
For your information, it wasn't the army who conducted the coup, it was a coalition of generals, industrials, union leaders and church leaders - in other words, all of those who really profit when democracy remains just an empty shell. Most of the lower officers and foot soldiers supported Chavez, hence his return to power. For someone calling me ignorant, you sure need to read up on this a little!
As for indymedia, it is no more biased than The Economist or The New York Times...it's just that its bias doesn't agree with your own. It really doesn't matter, however, since most of the information I've gotten on this matter has come from "mainstream" source (such as the NYT, the Washington Post, Reuters, Associated Press, the Irish Times, the International Herald Tribune). So don't try to pigeonhole me with your condescending attitude - I'm confident my media sources cover a wider range than yours...
For the 900lb. gorilla, only one thing matters: its own interests. Similarly, democracy is only important for the U.S. government if it suits America's national interest. This has been the case since at least 1953, with the CIA -backed coup against Iran [gwu.edu] and has been going on ever since. I know it, you know it, so let's drop the bullshit.
For the record, the suppresion of democratic protest at Tiananmen Square was a tragedy. On that we agree. But to draw a parralel with what happened in Venezuela is both ludicrous and misleading. Note, however, that the anti-democratic repression in China did not prevent it from keeping Most Favored Nation status (for trade purposes) with the U.S., allegedly the champion of democracy...
Re:World War III (Score:2)
I just realised he still is... That's scary!
Re:World War III (Score:2)
Perhaps it's time we hit our neighbors, friends and faimlies with a quick reality check.
Run on sentence, spoken with accending pitch
"Over half the country is on the Internet using hundereds of different instantanious media sources reporting at contantly increasing levels of detail all run and funded by competing conflicting interests, and you still wait for six o'clock to wade through a half hour of drivel and meaningless commercials that mean nothing to you to get to the one thing of interest on the TV news..."
"...uh huh..."
feel free to use :).
Pick your cause before you pick the site... (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally I think 'hacktivism' is a grossly overused excuse for vandalism. Hacking sites as a 'service' to the operators is passe... now the kiddies have to act like they've got some sort of noble political agenda.
Re:Pick your cause before you pick the site... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Pick your cause before you pick the site... (Score:2)
Save the trees (Score:1, Troll)
hacktivism.com (Score:1)
Nothing New (Score:2, Interesting)
This article tells us of some of the horrible things going on in the world and all, but it is nothing we didn't know was going on.
Hackers collaborate over the web to fight oppression and close mindedness!
Sound at all like a certain upstart OS?
I really did like this article, don't get me wrong but it is very lite on the important information like what they are actually doing about it. I doubt making it easier for a Chinese person to rip music off of the internet is going to bring them to the enlightened western thinking necessary to invoke social change.
What apps are you creating to further this change, where can I get the source (since you sited open source as being the obvious choice among hacktivist coders)? What can I do to help? This article, while being interesting, served no real purpose.
Uhhhh.. Sorry? (Score:4, Funny)
So if the war is being waged on the Internet by civilians would that make the
Open source Food (Score:4, Interesting)
I have two things to say about this article.
1) It was VERY VERY long2) I really liked the analogy of OSS to Resturants.
Think about it. The majority of people never think twice about never seeing the ingrediants, but there are some who feel "I'm putting this stuff in my system, I have the right to know what's in it!". Some even have good reasons like peanut reactions and so forth.
The resturant will say "If we tell you how we made it, we will lose business". I think that's nonscence personally. Ten to one, I'm not going to be able to cook that by myself anyway, and I'm just going to come back to the restaurant to get it donecorrectly. Plus if I do make it and feed it to all my friends and they say "where did you get that recipie?" and I tell them, don't you think they are going to go check out the menu for themselfs?
And finally, what if the majority of the people eating at your restaurant wanted the food cooked a different way, but didn't have any other choice on the menu? They are going to take those ingrediants and make the food better. If the cook was smart enough, he might be able to learn from what the other cook did, and make his own product better!
Am I making my analogy clear here, or is this just gibberish?
Re:Open source Food (Score:3, Insightful)
Lookup news on MacDonalds, GM crops, and hormone-injected beef in France.
Also lookup the US trade-barrier-attacks on French roquefort and fois-gras.
Maybe MacDoSerfs in america don't care about the shit they eat (yes, that claim can be proven) but if "You are what you eat" then yes, Europeans do care about the recipe used at their restaurants.
Re:Open source Food (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Open source Food (Score:2)
a competitor can easily figure out the recipe. but generally they put their own style on it. it make it a little different.
Hybrid ! (Score:1, Funny)
Someones created an Ostrich-Troll hybrid ! It sticks its head in the sand to ignore whats going on around it, while simultaneously attempting to wind up its neighbours !
Everywhere (Score:1)
Even Deutsche Bahn [slashdot.org] threatens Google [google.com]. And the COS threatens everybody who mentions "xenu.net" (oops!). It's an all-out assault on free-*.
Letting someone else do the dirty work (Score:1)
That's right. your fathers and grandfathers fought and sometimes died, defending your right to free speech.
So why aren't you, Oh Dead Cow cultists? A bunch of slackers dicking around with BackOrifice is nowhere near the same as actually defending your country and free speech.
Free Information (Score:3, Interesting)
I've heard enough of both sides on the P2P debate over music trading to understand the premise behind both sides and can even see their respective points. This only means to me, that eventually, using my thoughts above that music will be changed forever and "profit" from "selling" your music will be something totally different than we have now and probably something we will not see coming. In the same way, enough people want free information, that I believe that everyone will eventually have access due to the efforts of a small number who fight to make the holes in the walls larger.
Re:Free Information (Score:2)
Your romantic notions of information have all the appearance of leftover's from the 1960's.
hacktivism (Score:1, Troll)
I'd post the address here, but what's the point, since this post will be modded off-topic by slashdot fanboys who burst into tears every time their beloved editors are criticized. Ooh, I bet someone will start snivelling about how if I don't like slashdot, I should stop reading it.
Re:hacktivism (Score:2)
start snivelling about how if I don't like slashdot, I should stop reading it
Well yeah, you'd be stupid to do otherwise. Unless you're a sado-masochist. Anyway, at least stop posting if all you're going to do is bitch about how the link you have will be modded down. Not that it necessarily would. Instead of spending my mod points to up I'm posting to point out why you're wrong.
If you get all bitchy and complain how you submitted this and it was rejected, of course you're going to get modded down. If you say, "hey guys, in addition to this story I have this link for something similar" you'll most likely get modded up.
Who cares who submits a story anyway, unless you really have to have the credit, then it's you who's the fanboy. Worrying about your karma and whether or not you get your name on the main page, sheesh.
Re:hacktivism (Score:2)
Feel free to click on older stuff, and read the thousands of posts I have put up on slashdot. Only a handful of them mention this subject. Hence, that's not "all I do".
Who cares who submits a story anyway, unless you really have to have the credit, then it's you who's the fanboy. Worrying about your karma and whether or not you get your name on the main page, sheesh.
I've publicly advocated making it so the submitters are anonymous in stories; that would cut down on the people who submit just because they want to see their name on the front page.
The problems I have with the current system are this:
1) I've timed how long it took to get a story rejected. Used to take as much as an hour, now I've seen stories rejected literally in under 2 minutes. For them to complain that they're just overwhelmed with story submissions is incorrect, if that's how long it takes to clear it. To put it another way, I think I am justified in being a little irritated if I take 20 minutes to carefully research and write a story submission, and it's rejected without apparently being read.
2) The ones they do pick usually aren't that interesting. When he was running it out of his house, fine, but if he wants a commercial operation that advertises itself, charges subscription fees, and has intentionally positioned itself as a commercial media enterprise, then they should be better able to handle criticism and suggestions. Don't they constantly run Jon Katz editorials about how internet media is superior because it's more in tune with the "community", and is more egalitarian? Then accept that if a lot of people complain about something, there might be something wrong.
That's probably the most annoying thing; they get all offended over any criticism, and either ignore it or lash out at us for daring to suggest that maybe a few comp sci majors with no journalism experience might be doing a few things wrong.
The problem with linking it to your ego, you come out looking foolish. Look at the April's Fools debacle; so many April Fool's posts, NONE of which fooled that many people, and they still had the nerve to announce at the end that like usual they had tricked all these people with their clever fake stories.
Re:hacktivism (Score:2)
Anyways, hacktivism? Why even mention it? If you mean in IRC space, there's wars between whiny clans all the time
What I dont get (and I am catholic), is those poeple who risk their life to spread........ Bibles. 1 Bible = death, so why not spread munitions to groups like Falun Gong? If you're going to be dead anyways, I'd rather go out with a bang (on their soil).
Last, I hate those fanboys as much as you do. In a Commodore 64 article, I said commie. Mod to 0 cause some dipshit was too stupid to relate commie to commodore.
Off Topic (Score:1)
Re:Off Topic (Score:2)
It's Michael Jackson before his surgery.
back in 1995 (Score:5, Interesting)
My argument was that the Chinese and other repressive governments would be sure to set up national proxies with filtering that blocked out sites the government didn't want people to see and kept track of what people were accessing.
Both Negroponte and Barlow told me that was impossible and would never happen. They also pointed out that the TCP/IP is designed to route around obstacles.
Well, I've been proven right (so why am I not running Media Lab or flying around the world giving speeches?). China and other countries (Singapore, etc.) have in fact put in national proxies and are blocking thousands of sites, tracking people's usage, and putting people in jail.
On the other hand, I think that there is a hope that Barlow and Negroponte will eventually turn out to be right in the end, as hackers and other renegades put in alternative links via satellite and other means, which bypass these government blockades.
If enough of that happens, the blockades will come down, since they won't be useful any longer.
But I think there will be a long hard struggle befoe that happens.
Re:back in 1995 (Score:1, Insightful)
Shit slimeball scum companies like Gator are already spying on me.
Re:back in 1995 (Score:2, Insightful)
When it comes to free speech, everybody is up for hactivism or activism. When it comes to responsibility......
Re:back in 1995 (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not my responsibility to keep anyone else's child away from things they don't like. If you want to shelter your kids from reality as a method of preparing them for it, you're welcome to do so, but not on my dime.
--blob
Re:back in 1995 (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:back in 1995 (Score:2)
Gee, I wonder why Singapore gets lumped in with China. A benevolent dictator is still a dictator.
Re:back in 1995 (Score:2)
It would not be too surprising if their entrance in the WTO eventually leads to greater unrest in urban areas, considering that the lowering of trade barriers will hurt the more inefficient state industries, and that the guaranteed-job entitlement may need to be sharply cut back...
Figure that they're also probably a bit more paranoid than most nations with regards to unrest, dissent and insurrections. They've had some pretty significant rebellions and civil wars in their long history, and they're even now still having to deal with separatist terrorists...
The definition of 'activist' : (Score:2, Flamebait)
Actions speak louder than words (Score:4, Informative)
Our definition of hacktivism is, "using technology to advance human rights through electronic media."
You might not know it from reading the manifesto, but cDc and Hactivismo have actually been working on a product called Peekabooty [peek-a-booty.org] that allows users to sneak through the firewalls that oppressive regimes set up to restrict access to the Internet.
Hacktivism chooses open code, mostly.
Peekabooty is open source under the GPL but the FAQ [peek-a-booty.org] advises people who would like to do testing: "You should have enough equipment to run at least three nodes, which means three MS Windows machines (we are in the process of porting it to Linux). You should also be skilled with tracing through code using Visual C++ or your own favorite debugger."
the main challenge for hackers is to keep focused on the goal of liberating the Internet.
There seems to have been some kind of falling out [cultdeadcow.com] between cDc and Hactivismo over Peekabooty. The lead developer Paul Baranowski (aka Drunken Master) said he has "decided to sever ties with the Hacktivismo group but he will continue to develop the Peekabooty app. Occasionally developers can't find the environment they need to do their best work and now is one such time."
Can somebody explain this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Now let's get a piece of that article linked above...
What's this about? Are they friend of foe??? And lastly, the thread was modded -1, offtopic. Evidently somebody didn't want us to see that....
josh crawley
Thoreau on Activism vs. Civil Disobedience (Score:5, Interesting)
So, in my mind, hacking a web page can never really be justified--no matter what the cause is. On the other hand, refusing to obey government censorship (in places like China) by hacking through their censors is, in my mind, is a very noble thing.
Re:Thoreau on Activism vs. Civil Disobedience (Score:3, Insightful)
refusing to obey government censorship (in places like China) by hacking through their censors is, in my mind, is a very noble thing.
To be consistent with Thoreau's ideas on civil disobedience, the hacker would be have to announce his actions to the authorities and be prepared to go to jail.
As political tactics, Thoreau's ideas may not be so effective in China. Considering the treatment of the Falun Gong [fofg.org] and other religious groups, appeals to the conscience of the Chinese authorities are likely to be in vain. They don't have any.
After Tianamen Square [amnesty.org] no one needs to lecture the Chinese on civil disobedience or the consequences thereof.
RTFA (Score:2)
The essay posits a new, more constructive definition for hacktivism, which doesn't include what you're using the word for. Here's the relative bit:
Our definition of hacktivism is, "using technology to advance human rights through electronic media....." From the cDc's perspective, creation is good; destruction is bad. Hackers should promote the free flow of information, and causing anything to disrupt, prevent, or retard that flow is improper. For instance, cDc does not consider Web defacements or Denial of Service (DoS) attacks to be legitimate hacktivist actions.
Your example of defacing a web page certainly doesn't fit into this definition. What you stated as noble (hacking through government censors) is what the article supports as hacktivism, and I agree with its classification as activism rather than civil disobedience. Regardless of the definition of hacktivism, activism and civil disobedience are well-defined and agreed upon.
Civil disobedience requires putting yourself out in the open, blatantly violating the law and likely getting arrested. Activism is simply working hard to support a cause-- there's nothing amoral about it. You can be amorally acitivist just as much as you can be amorally civilly disobedient.
The problem, as you've aptly demonstrated, is that certain words take on connotations that people don't want associated with them, and have to be wary of. While I've rarely seen activism associated with amoral (it's generally seen as highly moral), "hack" is one of those big bad words in the public eye. Calling someone a hacktivist will likely have most of the world thinking they're some evil guy who steals their credit card numbers from Amazon and uses them to buy guns for guerrillas.
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
If you go by the commonly bastardized version of Civil Disobedience used to justify various forms of activism. The term was really coined though by Henry David Thoreau in his essay, "On the Duty of Civil Disobedience" and can be summarized best by the following passage: Civil Disobedience is about maintaining both order and individual autonomy in a state. Do not confuse civil disobedience with other forms of protest (such as satya agraha, or truth force) where violations of the law are justified in that "the ends justify the means."
Civil Disobedience comes into play only when an individual is trying to preserve his moral beliefs. Non-violent protests are not examples of civil disobedience.
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
He came into town one day to pick up his shoes that were being repaired. The town tax-collector asked him to pay his poll-tax which he had no paid in 6 years. He refused because he wished to refuse allegiance to a state that would wage an immoral war against Mexico and keep 6 million of its citizens in the bondage of slavery. So, the tax-collector threw him in jail. He sat in jail quietly overnight, was released in the morning, got his shoes, and went back into the woods.
There was no great public event, or grand protest. He simply refused to obey a law that he felt would cause him to violate his morality, took the punishment for it, and went about his business.
That is Civil Disobedience.
Re:RTFA (Score:2, Funny)
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
adj : without moral standards or principles;
"a completely amoral person"
[syn: unmoral] [ant: moral, immoral]
Not to be confused with:
immoral
adj 1: violating principles of right and wrong
[ ant: moral, amoral]
The former suggests that something has absolutely no relation to morality, which I believe activism doesn't. Activism is self-serving. An activist is neither moral, since he is not trying to do right, nor is he immoral, since he is not trying to do wrong. Therefore, the activist is amoral, or is acting outside the scope of morality.
Perhaps the poster wouldn't have responded so negatively had he actually understood the English language...
China, rant. (Score:3, Informative)
If I said I could *quadruple* the living standard of the poorest 20% of the globe in less than 3 decades, would you laugh? If I really did it, might you be impressed?
The Chinese govt did just that between 1972 and 2000. Quadrupled the average income of the nation from about $800 to $3,600. Without spilling buckets of blood (see Stalin, Mao South America). http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos
Yep, their govt is corrupt from stem to stern, a true cleptocracy. But it is undergoing change much more rapidly than gov't in the west, (which are selling their children's health and souls to big corporations).
Can you really claim they the Chinese persecution is worse that the US war on drugs? Or the Israeli's treatment of the Palestinians? Or the US in central America?
Don't fight them, wait, watch, keep perspective. Change is happening.
The Oxblood essay is kind, progressive and well intentioned. But if you want to make a huge change in people's lives, stop playing in the
Internet, go where help is needed and pick up a shovel. Or sign a check to feed a starving kid. Or help develop a better strain of rice. Or
It's easy to be Robbin Hood. High-profile heroics is more fun than the hard work, but doesn't feed more people. Which, oddly enough, is
what the chinese govt has been doing with amazing success.
rant over,
=brian
Re:China, rant. (Score:2)
You might want to ask yourself whether selling a monoculture to the Third World to replace indigenous crops is really a good thing.
You might want to ask yourself what kind of pesticide, fertilizer etc. support these high yield first world crops need in order to grow.
You might want to ask yourself how many people you're ready to kill in your efforts to save them from having third-world level food supplies, which they generally do have.
You might want to read what this Indian scientist has to say [abc.net.au] on the matter. IP-wary slashdotters will be particularly interested as, in her talk, she covers her experience of an American company patenting an indigenous crop of her valley, Basmati rice, which grew in India for centuries. Reading her is amazing, she is so familiar with the intimate details of how 'globalization' is screwing India and destroying their economy. And well she should as she lives in India- but it behooves the rest of us to have SOME clue as well, or we'll just parrot off what we're told to believe, even if it kills people.
Sorry. But I've never been able to forget the reality of that 'better strain of rice' meme once I got a clue about it.
Re:Article read better with special hat (Score:2)
This is in keeping with the biblial imperative:
"Thou shalt not kill"
Torture is another matter entirely, however.
Re:Article read better with special hat (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Article read better with special hat (Score:1, Offtopic)
I'll get modded down for this (and you) are completely off topic, but toture [crosswalk.com] is just as bad.
Interesting read? Try Matthew 5 - 7: Sermon on the Mount [crosswalk.com]. That's some radical religious thinking for you.
Don't mean to stir up a religious battle or flamewar. Just thought I'd respond to your misperception.
Re:Article read better with special hat (Score:2)
Of course, I should have inserted irony tags, since the purpose of most surviving world religions is a better world, peace, etc. Although local definitions of what this means will vary. YMMV
And of course, most people can only view the world based on the instructions of their own personal demons and devils.
Pick the hot button of your choice. Use often.
Re:Article read better with special hat (Score:3, Interesting)
Rather, it's more like the oft-spoken-of boiling frog - if privacy is taken away in tiny little increments, then before long it will be compromised in a big way without any substantial opposition.
I'm not saying that we should all wear tinfoil hats - but constantly recognizing (and opposing, where necessary) the gradual erosion of our right to privacy and governmental abuse of information is our only defense against being... boiled alive.
The government wants to know more and more about us these days - the excuse du jour is homeland security and counter-terrorism. Throw in stopping child-porn and just about any legislator will support any bill that enables more monitoring of citizens.
Better to be watchful and vocal - without screaming that the sky is falling - than to sit quietly, watching the privacy we enjoy now disappear for our children.
Irony so thick you can taste it (Score:2)
Out of curiosity, at exactly what points are "rights being killed"? Your argument seems to be that if the entire free world doesn't come to an end with chaos in the streets, that a particular trend in society isn't anything to worry about.
The right to personal privacy and the right to free speech are perhaps ill-understood and used as an excuse to justify crapulent behaviour, but that doesn't change the fact that those rights are the cornerstone of quality of life in a civilized country. Rights can be destroyed all at once (Communist invasion of Czechoslovakia fer instance) or eaten away at gradually (recent trends in the G8). The end result (given enough time) will be fundamentally indistinguishable if the brakes aren't put on.
Maybe you'd prefer to examine your rights in the context of "things I can identify because I used to have them", but I'd rather not....
Re:Article read better with special hat (Score:2)
Hey really? Do they sell them at ThinkGeek? I want one with Tux painted on it!
Re:Ya but... (Score:1)
Re:cDc blocked (Score:1)
Re:cDc blocked (Score:1)
"This site may contain explicit descriptions of or advocate one or more of the following:
adultery, murder, morbid violence, bad grammar, deviant sexual conduct in violent contexts, or the consumption of alcohol and illegal drugs.
Then again, it may not.
Who knows?"
You can see it for yourself at:
https://proxy.magusnet.com:443/-_-http://www.cult
Re:cDc blocked (Score:2)
I put that up when my mum was blocked from reading my own website at school... I don't know which would be worse, someone at her school blocking a free-software/free-speech site, or the site being added by censorware companies themselves.
I'd add an anonymiser myself if I had the bandwidth, but it would give people too much false-security to be able to use one without an HTTPS connection