Digging For Truth Online Is Up To You 124
An anonymous reader writes "Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has released the second annual report on obstacles to the free flow of information online. Vint Cerf wrote the forward, where he argues it is the responsibility of every citizen to test the truth of information on the Web, and draw attention to incorrect information, rather than the government's responsibility to dictate the 'truth.' ZDNet Australia has an article on the report."
Holy shit! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Holy shit! (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Holy shit! (Score:5, Funny)
No - it just means you have to check facts found on the internet by asking in slashdot forums (always truthful) before acting upon them.
"Vint Cerf wrote the forward," (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:"Vint Cerf wrote the forward," (Score:1)
Re:"Vint Cerf wrote the forward," (Score:1)
Re:Holy shit! (Score:2)
-But
-That's different.
WMDs (Score:2)
Should I believe? (Score:4, Funny)
Mother, Should I Trust the Government?
Re:Should I believe? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Should I believe? (Score:1)
Government control of speech on the internet (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:5, Insightful)
I suggest the text "And if you want to know what PR-spun bullshit this firm uses to justify this, click >here" be used
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:5, Informative)
The US government isn't any saint when it comes to stifling free speech. The only difference is that the US government does it in an underhand way using whatever tactics it can to bully or coherce to get what it wants, rather than by using laws. Which is better? At least with laws it is out in the open and gets discussed in a transparent manner.
A worrying development: Bush's government are trying to coherce NGOs to promote positive views of the government and the USA, saying that NGOs (that's Non-Governmental Organisations) are just another arm of the government. Read more here:
Now Bush wants to buy the complicity of aid workers [guardian.co.uk]
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:1)
Wait, are you saying that laws get out in the open and are discussed in a transparent manner? Ha ha...
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:1)
Again, legislation and reality clash. When will people realize we live and die by our own sense of morals, regardless of what they write in their books?
(What was the topic again?)
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:3, Insightful)
The reason these kinds of law exist is not because the media are making money, but because a large number of people may read what they print. Without such laws, successful papers could use their power at will against third parties. In what way is a popular blogger in any way different? Or any non-prof
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:2)
Seriously, I don't see how this is any violation of freedom of speech. It's speech+ not speech-
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:1)
However, if I say something about another company, it is only fair to provide a link to that company's reply (and of course, for that reply to contain a link to my reply to... well, you know where this is going) Not everything uploaded is ideal for analysis and discussion - at least, not on my dime :)
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:3, Informative)
You won't be paying for the bandwith.
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:1)
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:1)
that's funny. isn't there a connection between making money and presumed size of audience?
the government, intimately connected to big business, has many options to allow it to reduce competition. requirements that have unequal impacts on small and big producers is one of those.
Re:Government control of speech on the internet (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe Germany should stop doing those kinds of efforts and do like they did just before Hitler came to power. Have all media more patriotic than the other in a time their mark was loosing grounds to other currencies, when their country was living a recession (wait a minute isn't that what is happening in the US right now???). Damn I just had a thought and that isn't popular right now.
I better go watch CNN so my
Not True? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not True? (Score:1)
Re:Not True? (Score:2, Insightful)
The first type is a cookie-cut worker who will put in his 9-5 for minimum wage (without even thinking the word "union") then take his pay and spend it on whatever fad advertising tells him he can't live without
The second type goes on to university, performs useful research and/or innovates to fuel the next generation of fads (under the exclusive contract-locked control of the market
Re:Not True? (Score:2)
Re:Not True? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Not True? (Score:3, Informative)
Did she by any chance use the Dihydrogen Monoxide Research Division (DMRD) [dhmo.org] site? It's really hilarious, especially
Re:Not True? (Score:2)
Get over it...exercise due diligence (Score:2)
Sheesh, it is really that complicated? Here are a few principles for critical internet reading:
Cross-check new "facts." If something is bogus, someone out there has probably already pointed it out. On the other hand, if it is true and significant, you can probably find the same informatio
Hydrogen Hydroxide (Score:1)
The problem was that she neglected to mention that Dihydrogen Monoxide (DHMO), Dihydrogen Oxide, Hydroxyl acid, and Hydric acid are just as prevalent and just as dangerous.
you're telling me (Score:2)
Sounds like either you're got outstandingly fucked schools or we still haven't heard the worst news about the state of US public education.
Being critical (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Being critical (Score:4, Insightful)
Most teachers and schools I can think of would rather their students not be too critical. They'd rather have a room of docile students that jot down everything their teacher says than to have them ask too many questions.
Re:Being critical (Score:1)
Re:Being critical (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Being critical (Score:2)
I fear the day when we can build robots that can do this work cheaper than us. For if you judge how much we care about eachother by our schools. The only logical conclusion is that we'll simply let the unproductive masses starve if they can't afford a job. We don't bring them to school to educate them. But we'll see.
At least I still have a few braincells left. I'll be useful until at least the second generation of robots come
Politicans want it? (Score:1)
At a top level, everyone acting predictably makes economic planning possible.
Re:Politicans want it? (Score:2)
I still don't understand exactly what goes on at that level yet. But I think its more intense than simply predicting trends, but actually manipulating, creating and setting new direction or controlling and blocking natural movement.
For some strange reason I think our economy and media can be manipulated to affect our environment in subtle ways, but eventually changing the overall tone of both our external environment and its reflection on ou
Re:Being critical (Score:5, Insightful)
You need a bullshit detector, and that's what critical thinking skills provide for you.
You also need a healthy dose of skepticism. Most of us Slashdotters (well, the non-posers anyway) are the people who have lived the online experience before it became commercialized. We almost inherently KNOW to look at things skeptically. Look at every article on
But that's one of the inherent problems in American society. It was on TV, so it must be true! That's transforming into "I saw it on the Net, therefore it must be true!"
For every piece of truth you'll find on the Net, you'll find at least two pieces of complete, total utter bullshit. It's up to the reader to decide for him/herself what's truth and what's just something some idiot is spouting out off about he either doesn't understand -- or worse -- that he does understand but is trying to manipulate you into agreeing with him or even worse giving him money.
Don't buy it. Wear your bullshit detector. And if you don't have one get one. I highly recommend Asking the Right Questions: A Guide to Critical Thinking [amazon.com] by Browne and Keeley. It was the text I used in college, and is still used in many, many college critical thinking classes.
Re:Being critical (Score:2)
But sadly what phycheology taught me was that school is designed to prepare a person for work instead of make them a critical thinker. Want to be a critical thinker? Read some books about the topic and be a critical thinker, school won't help you much.
I would love to perform some psychelogical op
Re:Being critical (Score:1)
The problem is that such critical thinking is inefficient. Those who want schools to produce worker drones and cannon fodder do not wants the kids learning that authority is fallible. The executives do not want the public
an easy cure (Score:2)
Once they've read a few, hopefully they'll wonder just what else they're reading that ain't so.
I understand completely. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I understand completely. (Score:1)
+5? (Score:2)
Glad I could help.
Easy (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Easy (Score:1)
Try posting something pro-microsoft and see how much strift you get from slashdotters (and ms *must* have done something right in the last ten years, although possibly accidentally; they are sueing spammers for instance :)
Uh oh... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh no! I just hope no one finds out about slashdot or they'll have a field day!
Oh... hang on a sec... No... my mistake, I was thinking of the NYT.
Re:Uh oh... (Score:1)
Just on the web? (Score:5, Insightful)
Which culture (Score:2)
Hmmmn, I wonder which culture he was referring to?
Public monitoring of accuracy - right here (Score:4, Insightful)
The internet's strength - it gives everyone a voice - is also it's weakness because there is too much noise.
Filtering the signal from the noise is the challenge, and it's one the government is not up to.
We need a new /. moderation... (Score:4, Funny)
/. moderation as a tool (Score:1)
I even believe -most- webboards / mailing lists would benefit from using the Slashcode.org... but again, you need time, software knowledge & hardware to implement a slashcode-slashdot-like solution.
... dreaming of the day metamoderations will be used in more places...
Re:We need a new /. moderation... (Score:1)
Knowing Slashdot, it should be
+1 I "think" its True
--
SuaraMalaysia.com [suaramalaysia.com] - Driving free speech initiatives in Malaysia
One of the best things (Score:4, Interesting)
Especially with more people making the Internet read/write instead of read-only, with blogs and Wikis for example.
As DRM systems come into play, I wonder if they will also be applied to text, not just music and video. If so, that will lock up more content, and be a serious barrier to information flow. Imagine if 90% of slashdot outbound links became pay-per-view. Maybe the silver lining of such a scenario would be that blogs and other bottom-up content would have even more importance.
Leave the article, look for the facts.... (Score:2, Interesting)
It's definitely a better read, and there're things I didn't even suspect....
Snake oil merchants (Score:3, Interesting)
Replying to an earlier post, the science teacher should not be too surprised that her class missed the point about hydrogen hydroxide. Only yesterday we had a link to an article in which a former head of a House Committee on Science appeared not to know the difference between helium and hydrogen, twice. Poor understanding of science is a general disease of society, not something the Internet has brought about.
Free Media (Score:5, Insightful)
---
SuaraMalaysia.com [suaramalaysia.com] - Driving free speech initiatives in Malaysia
Re:Free Media (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Free Media (Score:1)
What the hell does that mean? Do you have a link to these dastardly speeches? Or do you just not like Bush because he is Republican?
Re:Free Media (Score:1)
As for links, the convienant side effect of cnn altering stories is that the old stories I'm thinking of are, well, altered. A newer story does [cnn.com]
truth from the internet? (Score:2, Funny)
Hear hear! (Score:2)
That's what I've always thought! Finally, I have an argument for downloading and checking if the audio data in that mp3 truly represent what its filename (i.e. the "information" we see when using P2P software) suggest, since it is the responsibility of every citizen. Take that, RIAA!
Slashdot has needed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Slashdot has needed (Score:2)
If you're digging for truth... (Score:2)
This statement is false (Score:1)
More /. sarcasm...**sigh** (Score:5, Interesting)
The article's about taking some personal responsibility to fact-check the crap you read - turn your brain on instead of take what you hear for granted - whether here, on Fox or CNN, from the govt. of your choice or even the online rantings of your Uncle Morty... perhaps especially your Uncle Morty.
I wish I could convince this group that sarcasm isn't truth. It's not even entirely healthy - it's as dangerous as naiveté and certainly more destructive.
The big problem here always is signal-to-noise, and the weenies who stopped doing "FP!" now contribute with their idea of wit. But often "witless" comes closer to the truth, in every sense of the word. Will it spark some kind of discussion? 'Prolly not - I'll just get flamed out the wazoo for saying it. Whoops, there goes my lousy 2 karma points.
It's easier to jabber on, brain in check, no matter what you believe. Blind faith in the worst makes you no smarter, no wiser and no productive than blindly believing in the positive.
Got a gripe? Listen, think, act - how hard is it? DO something about it. Heathly scepticism is a good thing, as long as it's combined with an inquisitive mind.
Talk is cheap - even more so nowadays.
The parent post is so true. (Score:2)
No different than anything else (Score:1)
Let's start with ICANN, shall we...? (Score:2)
Cheers,
Ian
how to clean up internet information in one go (Score:1)
Pay for verification (Score:1)
Re:Pay for verification (Score:1)
my favourite (Score:2)
Self Defeating? (Score:2)
Ok, so how do you draw attention to it, but posting or linking to the site and saying, "This is wrong." Meanwhile the search engines pick up that the site has been linked to and increases the site's "score" for future searches.
This isn't idle speculation, I have seen a search engine come up with a high score site which has actually been incorrect. (I wish I could remem
An interesting historical quote (Score:1)
Re:An interesting historical quote (Score:1)
"Mein Kampf" which means "My Struggle". Just for future reference.
Newsfighter (Score:2, Informative)
There's an interesting project at Sourceforce called Newsfighter [sourceforge.net] that's working to build an open source reporting and colaboration system for fighting repressive control or censorship of information.
From their web site:
Weapons of Mass Destruction (Score:1, Offtopic)
How to Detect Bullshit (A Very Simple Guide) (Score:3, Informative)
I rediscovered this guide today after many years and had a good laugh when I ran into a few of the propaganda techniques after lunch.
After 15-30 minutes reading this guide, you'll be amused if you practice it on:
1. Fox News Channel (easy place to start for beginners--you can sometimes detect 5 different techniques within a few minutes)
2. Slashdot Posts (if you're into picking apart someone's flawed argument, you'll become a pro)
3. CNN Crossfire (watch 2 pros battle each other using these techniques)
IMHO, they should teach this (bullshit detection) in high school and assign homework to find specific examples of common propaganda techniques in advertising, news media, etc. Can you detect which one(s), if any, I'm using in this post?
Index of 10 common techniques
Word games
....Name-calling
....Glittering generalities
....Euphemisms
False connections
....Transfer
....Testimonial
Special Appeals
....Plain Folks
....Bandwagon
....Fear
Logical fallacies
....Bad Logic or propaganda?
....Unwarranted extrapolation
Source: http://www.propagandacritic.com/
Orwell and Bradbury (Score:4, Insightful)
When I recently reread Farhenheit 451, I caught a detail that I never paid attention to before. The firemen did not start burning books because the government wanted to eliminate them. The people demanded that thought-provoking, controversial and therefore disruptive works be destroyed. For any book, you could find some group who was bothered by it, so all books came under the kerosene.
I see aspects of a sort of reverse-Orwellian society today. Varied viewpoints and honest criticism may be available, but most people don't want to hear them, any more than Bradbury's society wanted their books. Given the choice between the happy myth and reality, people will choose the myth. How many Americans care about the truth of Iraqi WMD's, the Lynch "rescue", or whether Iraq was involved in the 9/11 attacks? Or that fuel cells are not an energy source? Far too few for my comfort.
This is worse than 1984, which envisions domination under an authoritarian government (as I remember; it has been a while). You don't have to beat down the people. Just tell the people the lies they want to hear, and they will do the rest. Whatever contradicts what people already want to believe will be ignored.
This is something fascinating about information access and the internet. The net does not serve to widely disseminate information, except in the most literal geographic sense. Instead, it allows people to form communities with others who already share the same opinions. Memes bounce around in a mostly closed community, building up power and credibility.
I can think of one concrete example. I received a forwarded email in 2000 of stupid statements allegedly made by Al Gore. I replied with an email from 1992 with the same set of quotes, but attributed to Dan Quayle. Did the original sender feel humiliated and send an apologetic retraction to everyone he had forwarded the message to? Of course not. The truth was easily available, but they liked the lie better.
Re:Orwell and Bradbury (Score:2)
I can think of one concrete example. I received a forwarded email in 2000 of stupid statements allegedly made by Al Gore. I replied with an email from 1992 with the same set of quotes, but attributed to Dan Quayle. Did the original sender feel humiliated and send an apologetic retraction to everyone he had forwarded the message to? Of course not. The truth was easily available, but they liked the lie better.
What makes you think that the 1992 email was accurate?
"Forward"? (Score:2)
Sheesh!
The Wisdom of Johnny Rico (Score:2)
Rico: "A citizen is someone who makes the safety of the human race their personal responsibility."
Re:But... (Score:2)
Re:The GPL: Intellectual Property or Intellectual (Score:2, Informative)
Provided you know about (and design for) the GPL in advance, kernel modules *can* be closed source. Changes to prewritten modules (patches, in effect) can't be, but then you aren't doing work youself, you are just bugfixing/improving what is already there. Certainly, certain makes of car are improved by adding multifocus mirrors to them, but that doesn't allow you to claim design ownership of any cars you modify, at best you can claim the mirror.
Re:The GPL: Intellectual Property or Intellectual (Score:1)
Equivalent access is teh way to go: if someone pays, logs into your site to get their binaries, and the sources are available in the same place, that satisfies your requirement, just as if you distributed them in the same package.
Re:The GPL: Intellectual Property or Intellectual (Score:1)
That's what I wondered. (Score:1)
WITHOUT this clause, they woudln't have to tell you.
It's sort of like how you have to give notice that you are vacating your apartment in writing.. it's just so it's clear the message has been given. I do not believe it's intended as a one time offer.
There is also a clause that allows you
Re:The GPL: Intellectual Property or Intellectual (Score:2, Informative)
The problem here was that you took source code and altered it so that you could re-sell it to your clients, but you didn't read the included license until after you had spent all this time coding with it.
I guess that this is your first time using free software or open source or yo
Either (Score:1)
The output of GCC is not governed by the GPL (nor the output of any other GPL tool). Read the GPL, see the fsf.org site GPL faq, or just use your head.
If you modified the kernel itself, your modifications would have to be GPL, unless you wrote a module with an existing module interface, that could be kept closed. Big deal, the tools and OS itself were free in the first place.
As you just said yourslef, this option was not even available to yo