Bookseller Purges Records to Avoid PATRIOT Act 560
Skyshadow writes "Vermont Bookseller Bear Pond Books has announced that they will purge their sales records at the request of customers . This would effectively sidestep typically insideous a provision of the PATRIOT Act which allows government agencies to secretly seize sales records. The store's co-owner, Michael Katzenberg, put it this way: 'When the CIA comes and asks what you've read because they're suspicious of you, we can't tell them because we don't have it... That's just a basic right, to be able to read what you want without fear that somebody is looking over your shoulder to see what you're reading.' Now if only certain other booksellers would show that same conscience, we might have something here."
Law Enforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
Vote some decent congressmen in and maybe we can win the country back!
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:3, Interesting)
We should:
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
I have been thinking of Cincinattus of late, how he was called upon by the people of Rome to leave his farm, become the dictator and lead the Romans to war against the Truscans (I think). He does so, leads his people, defeats his enemies, and then returns to his farm after the war has ended.
I want a leader like that! Well, multiple leaders. I agree here, select people who at least have some education. President Cletus may get us into a war with Alabama simply because his sister's name has been desicrated on a water tower.
At the same time, get the hell rid of those people who are lifetime people in government. Those that serve who ever is in power, and help with the status quo.
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, I agree. Let's all hope that Dubya keeps his hair short.
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Law Enforcement (Score:4, Insightful)
Only if they vote in a studied, deliberate manner, rather than simply taking in traditional campaign rhetoric. If you vote just to vote, you're adding noise to the signal of people who did study carefully. And if you choose a candidate on some litmus-test issue -- like abortion or gun rights, as many do now -- then you get... well, a system much like we do now, where it's all partisan perception and no real policy and statecraft.
We don't need more voters, we need better voters. [metafilter.com] That's what Thomas Sowell thinks, and I think I'd have to agree.
That would be nice but... (Score:5, Insightful)
I have com to the the conclusion that in general us Americans give up lots of our rights (think freedom) without a fight for the illusion of protection. We are no better protected than we were before this abomination to our freedom, American politics at its finest.
Think about that while you eat your red, white, and blue cake.
Don't blame the people, blame the two parties (Score:5, Insightful)
The people have on paper usually two choices. Two choices isn't a choice, it's a coin flip and a mockery of representative republican values. Both parties have tried for years to convince the public that having 10-190 people officially registered on the ballot is irresponsible because it creates chaos somehow. Having two people on the ballot is akin to having only one choice in most races. Hell in my last congressional election, we had literally only one choice for the House.
The average slashdotter is too sheltered or politically and socially immature to see most of those points. Who here thinks a lot of the Right loves the PATRIOT Act? FreeRepublic is a very right wing website and when the PATRIOT part deux was discussed, no less than 85% of the posts were calling for Bush and Ashcroft's heads on pikes out on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue if they seriously pushed it.
Re:Don't blame the people, blame the two parties (Score:3, Insightful)
FreeRepublic is a very right wing website and when the PATRIOT part deux was discussed, no less than 85% of the posts were calling for Bush and Ashcroft's heads on pikes out on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue if they seriously pushed it.
And thus was hope restored to my world.
Blame the eligible voters. (Score:4, Interesting)
"It comes from a very ancient democracy, you see..."
"You mean, it comes from a world of lizards?"
"No", said Ford, who by this time was a little more rational and coherent than he had been, having finally had the coffee forced down him, "nothing so simple. Nothing anything like so straightforward. On its world, the people are people. The leaders are lizards. The people hate the lizards and the lizards rule the people."
"Odd", said Arthur, "I thought you said it was a democracy."
"I did", said Ford. "It is."
"So", said Arthur, hoping he wasn't sounding ridiculously obtuse, "why don't the people get rid of the lizards?"
"It honestly doesn't occur to them", said Ford. "They've all got the vote, so they all pretty much assume that the government they've voted in more or less approximates to the government they want."
"You mean they actually vote for the lizards?"
"Oh yes", said Ford with a shrug, "of course".
"But", said Arthur, going for the big one again, "why?"
"Because if they didn't vote for a lizard," said Ford, "the wrong lizard might get in. Got any gin?"
"What?"
"I said", said Ford, with an increasing air of urgency creeping into his voice, "have you got any gin?"
"I'll look. Tell me about the lizards."
Ford shrugged again.
"Some people say that the lizards are the best thing that ever happened to them." he said. "They're completely wrong of course, completely and utterly wrong, but someone's got to say it." - Douglas Adams, So long, and thanks for all the fish, chapter 36.
"It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it." - Eugene V. Debs
Re:Don't blame the people, blame the two parties (Score:3, Insightful)
If you are voting in Massachusetts or Texas, and you vote against the state-wide party bias, your vote is thrown away. The winner takes all the electoral seats in the state and you wasted your time voting. (The electoral college, by the way, should go, too, but it's small fry compared to the other problems). This is the main reason the two parties are still in power.
The problem with proportional voting, is that the winner may not have a mandate (not that that has stopped Bush, but in theory it should be a problem). So, if no candidate gets a majority, you have a run-off among the top contenders.
Think of how this would have worked in the last election. The people who were on the fence about Nader vs. Gore would have voted for Nader. Nader would have won somewhere between 5-15% of the vote, enough to be an obvious contender instead of being covered up with statistics (he got no electoral votes, he couldn't have had an important position). Then, Bush and Gore would have had a run-off, with a Dem/Rep winning. So far, it's business as usual. In 2004, Nader's party would have much more clout since they got somewhere between 1/9th to 1/3rd of the votes that the major parties got. They would be able to get more air-time and respect instead of having to start over from basically zero. A multiparty system would appear within 4 election cycles.
Now that I think about it, getting rid of the electoral college would have the same effect as insisting on proportional represntation of electoral college seats. If 15m people live in a state, and 13m votes go to the Republican candidate, the other 2m would protest if their votes were also counted as votes for the Republican. However, since there is this "electoral college" gimick, people don't seem to notice/care that they aren't represented.
Re:Don't blame the people, blame the two parties (Score:4, Interesting)
"Winner takes all" only applies in presidential elections. There are a number of other problems which apply in all elections. The plurality voting system is chief among them.
Bad idea. Learn about the problem with Instant Runoff Voting [electionmethods.org]. The same problem applies in any runoff, instant or not. Sometimes the best "compromise" candidate may get eliminated first, and you're stuck voting between two bad choices - exactly what we have now. Yes, plurality voting is bad, but IRV isn't really any better (even though it seems to be). The system you want is Condorcet [eskimo.com] voting [electionmethods.org]. Same ranking method, but you consider all preferences simultaneously rather than sequentially.
Not really. True proportional representation by popular vote forgets that the states, as political entities, should be represented in the federal government too. (That's what federal government means, the federation of individual states.) In Congress we have one house that represents the states (at least we did until that lousy 17th Amendment) and one that represents the people. The EC is an attempt to unify the interests of the states and the people when voting for a singular office (president). That's why the number of EC votes a state has is the total number of Senators and Representatives from that state.
I do agree that "winner takes all" is a broken system. The legislators that put it in place were very short-sighted - in giving more power to "their state's party" in presidential elections, they didn't think that the balance of power in their state might swing another way in the future and end up hurting "their party". NE and ME allocate their EC votes (less two) proportionally by congressional district to the plurality winner of that district. That's a good attempt at compromise. I think it would be better if we used Condorcet, better still if the last two EC votes were decided in the state legislature (if they are supposed to represent the state's interest) and we scrapped the 17th Am. while we're at it. Remember, these issues are decided by your state legislators, not DC. This gives you much greater ability to make a change to the system. It's closer to you, and hence more responsive.
I've also heard people say that we don't have enough representatives in Congress. With only 435, each has far too many constituents to respond to. The Constitution originally called for a 1:30k ratio. Maybe several thousand would be a tad excessive, but with modern technology I don't see why the number couldn't be increased without hampering the ability to debate. This means you'd have more chance of your view being represented in Congress, and combined with the idea of allocating EC votes by CD, a better chance of picking the president too.
Re:Don't blame the people, blame the two parties (Score:3, Interesting)
Another problem is that third parties have a hard time getting on state ballots. Here in North Carolina it is almost impossible for candidates to get on the ballot. For example, there was a Write-In candidate for Senator last election, but he wasn't able to get his name on the ballot. They had a blank for you to write his name on. How hard would it have been to put his name as a choice, rather than printing "Write In _________"? I wrote his name on my hand before voting so I wouldn't misspell it...
Re:Don't blame the people, blame the two parties (Score:3, Insightful)
This says it all right here. Why should I give a fuck if I can drive my SUV, possibly buy a house, not be hungry etc...
I don't see any suffering in this world so it probably can't be that bad.
Never mind the fact that we have killed more inocent civilains in Afganastan than those that died in the towers. Are their lifes some how less important?
Funny how suposedly libertarians and Greens are "extreme" when yet the average joe has no fucking clue what are CIA does or what it has done. Their is no accountability for the elite members of our country. When oaklahoma city gets blown up what do we do? Reward the FBI with more money of course, but yet that isn't enough to stop 911. So of course lets give them more money, but you know what? That amount won't be enough either.
The war on terrism is going to be like the war on drugs. Since the war on drugs, we have more drugs in this country. See a pattern? Get ready for a police state.
watch: http://www.guerrillanews.com/crack/
Fyi: I vote for both the Green party and the libertarian party. How strange that I'm on both sides of the fence huh?
Re:That would be nice but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Congressmen come from State and local politicians.
These are elected based on apathy, and the jobs are not considered to be worth much except as starting points for national politics.
If we would simply be involved in local government, by actually voting, and by developing personal relationships with the politicians and party staff, we would end up with national politicians who actually represent the will of the people.
Another view, which terrifies me, is that we ARE doing this, and the national politicians DO represent the will of the people. We are greedy, insular hawks who know or care nothing of world politics or domestic diversity.
Close... (Score:3, Interesting)
Amazon (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Amazon (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a brilliant move by this small bookstore. People talk about Amazon driving small stores out of business. Amazon can't compete with this though.
Re:Amazon (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure Amazon will sorely miss the couple dozen paranoids who switch over.
Honestly, do you think the average consumer really cares about stuff like this?
Re:Amazon (Score:2)
Purging records? (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Hey! (Score:2, Interesting)
Obstruction of justice (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:5, Informative)
Not unless they destroy it after it has actually been subpoenaed or otherwise requested.
If they or you destroy data that no one wants, then, hey... that's life.
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:3, Interesting)
IANAL, so I don't have a reference handy, but I do recall reading that if you have reason to believe that materials will be subpoenaed in the future, and you destroy it with the express intent of avoiding having to comply with the subpoena, then that counts as obstruction of justice.
I'm really curious to hear from someone who actually is a lawyer on this point.
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:3, Informative)
This is not legal advice, of course. And if you are interested in real legal advice, you ought to hire an expensive lawyer.
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:2)
Records to tie purchases to people, anyways. Sure, you can keep track that you've sold 230 copies of "The Road Ahead", and that customer Bob has used his Visa to purchase $400 worth of stuff, but just don't tie names to books.
Not keeping the records at all, I think, would be a safer defense from obstruction charges.
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:3, Interesting)
I could go on ad nausem about the other pitfalls of your "not keeping records at all" idea, but hopefully you can already tell it holds no water.
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:4, Insightful)
Assuming that Bob is willing to admit buying it in the first place
Re:Obstruction of justice (Score:5, Informative)
From what I gathered, they are informing their customers of a new customer service policy. They only keep records from customers that agree to it and they are giving everyone equal footing by purging existing records by request.
It's also an "all or nothing". They are not purging individual items from their database.
This is typical retail practise. Customer wants their information purged from the company's system, fine. Bear Pond is just making it sound like they're the only one doing it.
Policies at my campus (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't keep squid (http cache) logs logs at all
In my humble opinion, Your admin shoud do the same
Problem Solved (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Problem Solved (Score:2)
Seems that ebay isn't a great guardian of your privacy [privacydigest.com].
W
Re:Problem Solved (Score:2, Interesting)
Only drug dealers use cash and drug dealers fund terrorists, therefore, you sir, are a terrorist.
Ipso Facto.
Ok, a bit of a stretch. Well, unless you buy something for more than $10,000. Then you have to actually *prove* you're not a drug dealer.
All they have to do now is gradually lower the bar.
KFG
Re:Problem Solved (Score:2, Informative)
Farenheit 451 anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
I still don't understand how Mr. Ashcroft and his DoJ thugs [usdoj.gov] got PATRIOT through Congress. Oh wait, I forgot! Our US Congress was so freaked out by September 11 and thought that somehow if they took away Americans' right to privacy and freedom from harassment that this world would somehow be a better place!
Re:Farenheit 451 anyone? (Score:2)
Oh, and it's USA PATRIOT Act, USA PATRIOT being an acronym...
Re:Farenheit 451 anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)
Nothing is safe comrade. Nothing.
I think Jame Fennimore Cooper is fairly safe under any concievable future, but Twain is right out. ( If you can stomach Cooper, see Twain. Oh the irony).
KFG
Re:Farenheit 451 anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Farenheit 451 anyone? (Score:5, Interesting)
The american people are starting to get pissed off and the movements against these insanities are growing as more people are being educated.
Re:Right to privacy (Score:5, Informative)
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
==
Just because you're not specifically guaranteed the right to privacy anywhere, doesn't mean you don't have it. The only way you _wouldn't_ have it would be if the constitution specifically said, "the federal government shall have the right to invade the private lives of citizens."
Re:Right to privacy (Score:3, Insightful)
First, I've always personally associated a right to be secure in my person, papers, home and effects (Ammendment 4) to be a reference to privacy of some sort. Maybe I'm just weird.
Second, when thinking about privacy issues we would, I think, do well to distinguish privacy and anonymity.
Re:Right to privacy (Score:4, Funny)
GAAAAA! use the fourth! (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not quote the 4th amendment? It's very clear about what circumstances are required for the government to invade your personal life:
Amendment IV 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. [archives.gov]
Indeed, the bookstore records should be considered "papers" and protected, so this whole business of "knocking down stovepipes" between government and private databases is FUCKING UNAMERICAN!
The language of the constitution is so clear and the intentions are so obvious, that it is equally obvious that it has been broken. You have the right to assemble, to say, pray, and publish what you will. You have the right to bear arms. You will not be put upon by the military. The government can't harrass you without real evidence you are a criminal. The court system will not be used to abuse you. You will have a jury if you are sued. Bail will not be used instead of a conviction. You will not be abused in jail. All of these things have been violated recently with perhaps the exception of the 3rd. I'm not aware of any involuntary quartering of troops, unless eminent domain aquisitions for military bases are considered.
Re:Right to privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps then we wouldn't continuously get ourselves into cycles of Constitution shredding/rebuilding. What's missing from the US Constitution is, quite frankly, consequences. There's no provision for punishing a bad, or abusive sitting government. What's worse, in today's surveillance society, a good old fashion revolution is downright impossible. Since when is it treasonous to save your country from your government?
Re:Right to privacy (Score:3, Informative)
IANAL, but as far as I can tell, the Fourth Amendment seems to imply it:
I don't think it is too big of a stretch to apply "papers" to modern electronic records of purchases, medical records, email, etc. If my reasoning is correct, then the Fourth Amendment would not only forbid the CIA from searching our purchase records without a warrant, etc., but it would also forbid something like the Total Information Awareness database.
I think the Fourth Amendment is kind of a sibling to the Fifth Amendment. Whereas the Fifth protects us from having to testify against ourselves, the Fourth protects us from having our bodies, homes, things, and records (including electronic?) testify against us, at least without some kind of due process.
The people who wrote the Constitution had suffered under British rule. They had soldiers forced upon them, living in their homes, going through their things. If the soldiers saw anything suspicious, they would just report it, and that person could be sent to England for trial. (Think about the TIPS program, replace the soldiers with the cable guy, and you have the exact same situation.) These people knew what privacy violation felt like, they had had no privacy, not even in their own homes.
That this right to privacy, to "be secure in our persons, houses, papers and effects", was one of the first to be violated by the Attorney General is reprehensible. That it was violated (and continues to be violated) in the name of "security" is ridiculous. But then, we are living in the times where CNN ("the most trusted name in news" -- what a laugh) has declared that Congress does not believe in the First Amendment. Heck, I'm surprised they let the company execs of Enron, et al, take the Fifth!
"The path of peace is yours to discover for eternity."
Japanese version of "Mothra" (1961)
This deserves more than a comment (Score:5, Insightful)
Where's a HERO tag when you need one?
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Are you surprised by this? (Score:2, Insightful)
Welcome to the NEW New World Order.
Re:Are you surprised by this? (Score:3, Funny)
That's enough, my son. I absolve you.
Good way to go. (Score:5, Insightful)
I am upset that people are associating the Patriot Act with conservatism. Violation of my rights isn't conservative, its facism. Fellow conservatives need to speak up. We DO need some stronger laws and enforcement tools, and I do believe this is a passing problem, but only if we speak up.
Some may compare our current situation to that during the Civil War (oxymoron if there ever was one) when Lincoln suspended Habius Corpus, but I don't feel the two events can be compared in this way. The threat is real, more real than that era, but not as localized.
Until then, destroying sales records is a legal way to not comply with this over reaching Act. Hopefully, others will follow their lead.
Re:Good way to go. (Score:2, Interesting)
I would recommend that you inform those who you politically support that conservatives don't support this any more than liberals. And quite honestly, watching congress go like a bunch of sheep to pass this atrocity, it's clear that it's not just a left/right issue. Nonetheless, the self-proclaimed conservatives have draped themselves in the flag and put this abomination forth to begin with (let's hear it for Johnny Ashcroft, who is getting his revenge for being beaten out of his senate seat by a dead man).
Re:Good way to go. (Score:4, Insightful)
Bullshit. The military is nothing more than a gigantic make work program, to keep nitwits from causing trouble. We have wars to make people content with bad economic times and to make people accept a temporary command economy. I won't even get into the supposed economic benefits of redirecting wealth to irrelevant industries to produce war related shit we don't need. Every single war of the 20th century was simply a tool of social control, nothing more.
You and your father were nothing more than willing participants in a gigantic scheme akin to prison, except the illusion of freedom is maintained.
Violation of my rights isn't conservative, its facism
I have got news for you, standing armies, forced schooling, government directed industry, those are all the tools of every fascist regime.
It all goes back to Germany. After Napolean's defeat of the Prussian army in 1807, a huge transformation took place. You see, Germany's primary source of revenue back then was renting their huge mercenary army. Remember the British sending the Hessian soldiers to America? To see the world's foremost professional army defeated by Napolean's peasant army was unbelievable.
When Germany regained their independence, their entire society was transformed into a military machine. Prior to this, forced schooling didn't exist anywhere in the world outside of caste schools in India and to a lesser extent in China. Children were ripped from the families, and drilled in the mindless art of discipline all in order to make them better soldiers. Eventually, the entire society conformed to a hierarchical military system.
Perhaps you aren't aware of the huge influx of German immigrants from 1830-1880. There wasn't a place for the independent farmer of tradesman in that military machine, so they left and came to the US. Thats why, they just wanted to be left alone. This is also why the trades died far more quickly in Germany than the US. While in the US, fathers taught their sons their art, in Germany that pretty muched ceased by 1880. Thus, shit modern architecture can be quite ancient there.
Anyway, the legacy of this is our own military society. Every company is structured like a military. The classic bussinessmen's suit is a copy of late 19th century military style. Classroom schools are the same size as typical military units. Discipline is the goal, rather than education. There is a reason schools make people stupid and passive. Soldiers are not particularlly good at taking orders when they have the ability to question them.
Anyway, look into. You have been duped into believing you are free, but you have been spending your entire life doing what you were trained to do: Take orders, and do so willingly.
Heil Hitler!
Re:Er.... this constitution thing... (Score:3)
Then go read it before you express an opinion on it.
How about this? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's of little comfort (Score:3, Interesting)
And even if they don't have lists, they might have knowledge in their heads or on scraps of paper or whatever. All this is fair game when it comes to the law... perhaps just not as accessible as an explicit list.
I remember when my sister was asked about her former (fired) boss by her new boss. "Don't worry", he said, "we'll seal all this so that you can talk freely".
Nothing was written down. But when the new boss took the stand, he discussed the details of what my sister had said.
So much for records; so much for corporate promises.
Re:It's of little comfort (Score:3, Insightful)
Except for one minor problem... (Score:4, Interesting)
And I highly doubt they would be interested in what books a person reads, but that's just me.
Re:Except for one minor problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Section 901 of the USA PATRIOT Act would empower the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency ("DCI"), to establish the priorities for the collection and dissemination of intelligence information gathered in the U.S."
And I highly doubt they would be interested in what books a person reads, but that's just me.
Uh, they want to know if people entering the US asked for meals without pork [slashdot.org]...
This could be a subtle atempt to outlaw certain books. People would be scared away from 'subversive' material if they knew that the Gov't was watching their every move.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Absolutely incorrect... (Score:3, Informative)
Wow, someone who actually believes this. You should be tranquilized, tagged, and returned to the wild so scientists can study your habits because you are a rare and fascinating aberration.
Here's a brief summary of what the Church Committee came up with in 1975: link [labournet.net]. A few select quotes from the article sited:
Here's a fine page with many links to goverment documents such as the Church Committee's and the Rockefeller reports on CIA abuses within the U.S.: link [history-matters.com]
Now of course all these things are in the past, and the Church report defanged the CIA right? Right? Surely the CIA would never do that again... But it really doesn't matter, as the USA PATRIOT Act gives the CIA pretty much a free hand at intelligence gathering in the US anyway.
-dameron
Could the feds (Score:3, Interesting)
I mean, they're out in the public saying they're knowingly taking steps to hinder a possible request from the Feds for information.
This could be stupid... (Score:3, Insightful)
I wonder if the management has thought through all the implications of their new policy.
an added clause here, a lost right, there (Score:5, Insightful)
On another sobering note, in 1983 the Supreme Court of Canada allowed evidence of a newspaper clipping found in an accused's home as sufficiently probative to admit, despite the potential prejudice of propensity evidence -- aka: "See? He's the kind of person who would do this." He had been charged with heroin smuggling from Hong Kong. The article was titled: "The heroin trade moves to Pakistan." This flew in the face of all caselaw on that point, but has been followed since. The lesson being: what you read can be held against you! The case is R. v. Morris [1983] 2 S.C.R. 190, if anyone is interested.
Publicity Stunt (Score:2, Insightful)
This is overall a great thing, but still an elaborate publicity stunt ;-). I'm pretty surprised that this made /. news, but then again.
--sex [slashdot.org]
Amazon Lists (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Amazon Lists (Score:2)
-B
Remember that AD? (Score:3, Interesting)
Remember that???
Re:Remember that AD? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a pretty powerful ad to me.
It is nice to see... (Score:3, Interesting)
The truely sad part of this, is that this is not the worse. This admin has been not only stealing so many of our rights, but also taking away our ability to know what is going on. Public scrutiny of all processes (check and balances) is just as important to prevent abuses.
what about public libraries??? (Score:3, Interesting)
But if Google retains all data, it's cool, right? (Score:3, Interesting)
Google saves your cookie ID, your IP number, your search terms, the date and time stamp, and your browser configuration with every search request you make to Google, and Google retains all this data indefinitely, and Google will not comment on their dealings with the authorities.
But this is cool because Google has cute colored letters in their logo, right?
Support your local retailer (Score:5, Insightful)
Buy local (Score:5, Insightful)
Tinfoil Hat Syndrome (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Tinfoil Hat Syndrome (Score:5, Interesting)
Lastly: get a clue and toss in some fucking line breaks.
Re:Tinfoil Hat Syndrome (Score:3, Insightful)
What exactly is your point? You seem to be acknowledging the fact that the Patriot Act allows the FBI to search bookstore records without a warrant to find out what people are reading.. Your only defense of this clear infringement upon of our civil liberties is "they're only going to use it in cases related to 'terror threats'".
So what? Anyone can become SUSPECTED (please notice this oh-so-important adjective) of being a 'terror threat' and therefore everyone should be concerned about it.
You still hold this notion that people concerned about this have 'tinfoil hat syndrome'. In your first post, you said it was because that this specific provision of the Patriot Act did not infringe upon our civil liberties 'one single bit'. In your second post, however, you seem to concede that you were wrong about this, but yet you still throw around this "tin foil hat" nonsense?
Wearing a 'tin foil hat' is a reference to someone who is extremely paranoid about threadbare conspiracies and imaginary threats. That is clearly not the case in this instance. The threat, as you have now acknowledged, is real and they're doing it right in front of our faces. If you feel that giving up these civil liberties is worth fighting ambigious 'terror threats', that's fine; make a reasonable argument for it. Please, however, don't throw around erroneous insults intended to stonewall debate.
-Arizona Bay
and by that time there was no one left to speak up for me...
Re:Tinfoil Hat Syndrome (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's assume for the moment that you are right, and Ashcroft and Co. don't care what I am reading (and it is a good assumption I believe). That is not to say that in the FUTURE they wouldn't start scanning bookstore and library records, scanning for key words and tricky phrases. The order of events is now turned--they scan the records, THEN start pursuing individuals that have suspicious reading habits. I read up on the theory and evolution of the nuclear bomb because I find it scientifically interesting. I also happen to be working towards a pilot's license. Does this make me a terrorist? No, but it might raise a flag due to the key words "nuclear", "bomb", and "pilot." Now I have the Feds investigating me for no reason at all, other than my own intellectual curiousity. I am now viewed as "suspicious" for no reason.
I try to use PGP whenever I use e-mail. Do I have something to hide? No. Is my correspondence anybody else's business? No. You use an envelope when you mail a letter. If you have nothing to hide, why use it? Why not send a postcard? Simple answer: privacy. Just because you have nothing to hide doesn't mean you don't want your privacy.
It's far easier now to prevent such a precident from forming than fighting it after it has been set. An ounce of prevention and all that...is it a bit of paranoia? Maybe--I hardly think it is as intrusive or Orwellian as some make it out to be. BUT, you can't let it get that way. I'd rather be a bit paranoid and defend my civil liberties while I still have them than be complacent and have to try winning them back later on. You have to admit that our government isn't the most trustworthy or careful organization on the planet (Carnivore, lost laptops, Watergate, etc. etc.)
Would you rather defend your civil liberties or have to fight for their return?
have you guys ever wondered ? (Score:3)
All you goatse terrorists , you better stop.
Nice, but purge the Patriot Act, too (Score:5, Interesting)
Which politician is man or woman enough to lead the fight to undo these un-American powers? We know that in the Senate only Feingold resisted, although colleagues have become braver since. And yet the nation remains enthralled to right wing fantasies, driven hysterical by an irresponsible administration and its cynical Democratic allies who use fear to control the public as ranchers use cattle prods.
The hour demands a Lincoln; all we have is a Bush! Is there no one in office with love great enough for our freedom to save it?
We don't keep email or backups of email (Score:3, Interesting)
Nice, but old concept... (Score:4, Informative)
And the reason is simple - all this junk needs to be stored, which costs money, and managed - which costs more money. Then, if someone wants it (and you have it), you have to find it - that's a ton of money... then the lawyers etc. get to review it, and that's a fortune, over a freakin post-it note that would never be used in your favor, meaning at best it won't be used against you in a suit... more often than not, it'll simply provide the cause needed for them to request more documents.
Yick.
Coming soon on Amazon.com (Score:5, Funny)
That's a cheap shot at Amazon (Score:5, Insightful)
Every order is organized by year newest to oldest. Every order is clickable to bring up the exact specifics of what was ordered: the number of shipments, the tracking numbers, what was order, it's price, and totals (shipping, tax, subtotal, grand total).
Attack the source problem *cough* Patriot Act *cough* not Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, or whoever you want to smear because of some hivemind mentality.
If you don't want even record of the sale you need not shop at all, online or offline.
There is always going to be some paper trail; no matter if its a reciept, a CC statment, or the cashier remembering you.
Aint gonna happen... (Score:4, Insightful)
A business in this era of consolidation purging it's records, thus disabling itself from selling you more crap in the future via Spam or (at a minimum) junk mail? The only way that would work is if they were only in the business of selling books. That isn't going to happen as long as they can afford a consultant who can whisper fairy tales about that mythic beast "synergy" in the CEO's ear.
Face it. Most businesses these days are not what they claim to be on their signs - booksellers, grocers, bakers. They're many businesses lumped together under one roof that are just as comfortable selling you your morning coffe or a cemetary plot. Thanks to consolidation, only multiheaded hydras survive. And sometimes, the customers suffer instead of benefiting.
Protecting Peggy's privacy. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Protecting Peggy's privacy. (Score:4, Funny)
A thought on voter education... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
That is why the USA PATRIOT act is so stupid... it does very little (if anything at all) to increase security and everything to limit the rights of everyday citizens.
Governments who attempt to have complete control over it's citizens never work out. They fall. I believe America will fall unless Bush 'n pals are taken out of office and we congress gets it's act together.
Real US patriots would never put the USA PATRIOT act into place.
Re:Very Respectable (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A principled stand (Score:2)
Now that's what I call patriotism.
Re:oh man if the founding fathers were alive today (Score:3, Insightful)
I trust you don't have a lock on your door? If so, you're sacrificing a little bit of liberty for a little bit of security, and therefore deserve neither.
I trust you're legally allowed to kill anybody who annoys you? No? Because then they'd be able to do the same to you? Ooops...liberty for security.
Just because a dead white man says something, and you (mis)quote (and mis-attribute, but that's beside the point) it, out of context, no less, does NOT make it the wisdom of the ages.