US-Made Censorware Used To Oppress Burma 199
An anonymous reader writes "The Christian Science Monitor is reporting that US-made censorware is being used to oppress the people in many countries, including Burma. That in itself may not be surprising, but a more interesting point is that according to lawyers interviewed by the CS Monitor it appears to be legal — in spite of all the economic sanctions against the country, and even though people know it will be used to hush up any mention of things like attacks on peaceful protesters."
This is news? (Score:5, Informative)
This just in, companies are legally selling the same Internet filtering software used by companies, libraries, etc., to Burma, and the government is using the software for its own purposes.
Websense, one of the Internet filtering "censorware" companies mentioned in the article, had a partnership in place with Cisco starting over a decade ago to integrate URL filtering into Cisco PIX firewalls. That's how far from new this concept is. Burma could have bought all the parts they need used on eBay.
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The problem isn't the fact that this is new technology. The fact is that Websense or anyone else could have denied Burma the purchase. But they won't, because they don't care about anything else but profit. THAT is the problem.
If I hadn't ratted on Anne Franke, my neighbour would have anyway, right?
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Khmm, this reminds me of the arguments in the file-sharing debate... When content-owners were going after the makers of the software used primarily to exchange copyrighted media files (against the wishes of the copyright-holders), all of the freedom-loving Slashdotters were defendin
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Legal doesn't neccessary equal morally sound. Global corporations using child workers in vietnam doesn't neccessarily break the law.
Censoring software is not killing anybody -- it prevents (or makes difficult) an activity, that did
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Uh-oh, "morally"... Morally the music-trading sites (like Napster) are indefensible too — except on Slashdot, which insists, the individual abusers should be targeted, not napsters themselves.
Nobody "did the killing". Anne died of malnutrition at the camp. Her father survived, for example. But ratting the family out meant condemning them to gr
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Infringing copyright does not deny anybody anything, all it does is break the artificial government enforced monopoly. You don't want people to use your ideas, then to be blunt, ke
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Yes. I'm a capitalist.
Is there much of a difference between selling "censorware" and guns to a foreign government? Probably not, other than the specific words likely to be used by the permanently hyperbolic press to describe the sales.
Re:This is news? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not your fault if you're not aware of just how oppressive and violent the government is there (how could anyone keep up with all the monsters in the world?), but it's pretty bad there.
And no disrespect intended, but being a capitalist does not mean being a nihilist in business. There is absolutely no sense to that idea. Capitalism was invented by Karl Marx, by the way, as a way of describing the absence of an economic system. In other words, nature.
In favoring free markets, there is no reason not to disincentivize barbaric governments.
But I agree with you insofar as you make no distinction between this type of software and bullets.
This is like selling rat poison to Hitler. Sure, there could be a legit use if we bury our heads in the sand. Sell Burma medicine, food, heating oil, basic things like that. Don't sell them weapons or tools whose main purpose is to impose policy. Generally speaking, there is a broad category of things that are inherently about control. Weapons and this software are included.
Re:This is news? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not my business how someone uses a product I sell them. It's your business who I'm selling to, though. If you don't like who I do business with, then don't do business with me. People like Hitler have a habit of ending up dead, and if my only customer base is megalomaniacal homicidal dictators, I'll run out of customers pretty fast...
Weapons are just as much (if not more so) about breaking controls and defending freedoms than enforcing them and taking them away.Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Morality is the basis of law. What else are we supposed to base our laws on? Efficiency? That's utilitarianism. If we know something is immoral to a level that is outrag
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Then at least be creative and use Pol Pot or something... :)
Lots of things have undesirable uses. Medicines are a good example of that. I'm not saying that a company should
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I just like to rag on Hitler.
It's an interesting perspective to see black markets driving up the price as evidence that it is more cost effective. You're right... but this still makes like harder for the subject of the prohibition (the drug user or Burma for censor software). Still... my fault for putting it in the perspective of the seller. I think it could be argued that it's not more cost effective for black marketers. Al Capone did not do as well as Anheuser-Busch does. Though Al being
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It's not just more cost effective because the price has gone up. Once you've decided that you're going to engage in an illegal business, then there's no reason to follow legal business practices. Labor standards? Payroll taxes? Import tariffs? Minimum wage? Why bother? You're already doing something you'll go to jail for, so save the cash on compliance as well...
Yeah, right (Score:3, Insightful)
One day, people will realise that this sentence belongs in the same league of:
Market is powered by greed. Greed may improve the economy, but if you think greed is going to do any good to democracy, well you're in for a surprise.
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- RG>
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Why not? Please can you explain the benefit why that should remain legal?
But that's the proper response in that case: don't do business with someone who's business practices you find disagreeable, don't legislate them out of existence...
Again - can you please explain the benefit of that?
Let the market deal with it; if people care about the people in Burma, t
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Let's look at the facts here: if the market would solve these problems, the Burmese government would not have this software. They do, and that means that the market is not going to solve the problem.
This predefines Burma having this software as objectionable. So of course you can point at it and say something bad just happened free markets don't work. But ultimately that is a stupid argument, because you've already decided the conclusion and are defining the argument around it.
Ultimately, this is a
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Well, maybe there's a third hand here, somewhere between trying to satisfy everyone's sense of political correctness, and waiting until we are actually at war with a country to stop selling them bullets to stockpile against us.
I would say that the right standard is whether allowing such sales is against the common interest of (in this case) Americans. It's not an easy
Re:This is news? (Score:4, Insightful)
While both Smith and Marx describe the same system, the point of view is very different. Smith considers the system beneficial, seeing it when everything is working well, while Marx sees it during a catastrophic failure situation caused by the Industrial Revolution and the resulting simultaneous high barriers of entry - the capital needed to build a whole factory required to be competitive - and large oversupply of labour and naturally draws the obvious conclusion that it is the root of all evil and must be destroyed for the sake of mankind.
Both views are, of course, incomplete. Unfortunately, people have a tendency to get enamored with extremes, so we have free-market fundamentalists on one side and communists on the other, both trying to both trying to push their economic religion rather than actually thinking what happens to be the best decision in any given situation. Meanwhile the scoundrels and petty thiefs are taking advantage of the fighting and filling their own pockets by abusing the legal system, patent, and copyright systems - the ones who aren't engaged in outright stock or accounting scams, selling weapons for dictators, or launching wars for profit, anyway.
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Actually the problem is that people like Hitler have a habit of trying to make lots of other people end up dead...
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Of course we shouldn't sell weapons to Burma. You're kidding, right? That's like selling bullets to a semi-Hitler.
I take a bit of an issue with this. It requires that we take a side in a conflict that largely does not concern us. It also assumes that we are in such a position of moral superiority that we should in fact dictate who can and should own arms. My personal position is that we should sell arms to anyone who wishes to buy(revolutionary groups in burma as well) such that we give the tools nec
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I believe the term you seek is "Hydraulic Empire [wikipedia.org]"
He who controls the spice...
US-Made Censorware (Score:2, Funny)
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It's quite OK (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't see what the legal or moral issue is here...
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Governments are allowed to censor and suppress their populations.
I quite disagree. More accurately, in a country that respects the rule of law, the general public may in certain limited circumstances allow their government to censor or suppress certain types of information, for example secrets which impact on national security, or financial information crucial to the nation's economy.
Perhaps what you meant to say was governments which are not popularly elected and which are not accountable to their citizens can by rule of force censor and suppress their populations w
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Re:It's quite OK (Score:4, Insightful)
You are being cynical, right? I hope that this is the case and it was recognized by those who modded you +4 insightful. Governments are supposed to rule country for the good of the people. This is where they derive their power from. If a government does not act in behalf of the people it rules, it has no right to be in that position of power, and should be brought down. Oh and by the way, 'for the good of the people' does not mean 'whatever the government decides is for the good of the people'. Let the people think for themselves.
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Of course not. It means "what is good for the bottom lines of large corporations."
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"The government" is people. There is no such entity that is "the government" - it is just people making decisions about (and often for) other people.
Re:It's quite OK (Score:4, Insightful)
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I wouldn't narrow it down so specifically to the US though. Canada's been pretty dang nice as far as oppressive governments go.
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Judging by this story, the Almighty Dollar, acting through its servants, the US corporations, and justified by the often-demonstrated creed of capitalism that might makes right.
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Well considering the U.S. government has been known to engage in oppression, and you presumably don't have an issue with U.S. companies working with the U.S. government I'm not exactly seeing your point. The U.S. government using U.S. telco's to spy on its citizens is the obvious latest example. Rendi
Disgraceful (Score:4, Insightful)
An excerpt from the source article:
This is what's going on in Burma http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/09/28/myanmar-internet-blocked/ [globalvoicesonline.org]
How can any company with a shred of ethics or morality excuse the sale of their filtering product?
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I'll assume you meant in general, not just the sale to Burma.
Filtering software continues to sell because companies don't want to risk sexual harassment lawsuits from people who've accidentally seen someone else surfing porn. Or from someone who has seen one jpeg spam too many and decides to try to hit the lawsuit jackpot. If you want to get rid of filtering software, you'll need to get rid of the lawsui
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Oh that's easy:
1 - the market must be free, the business man's only obligation is to grow the wealth of the shareholders. If it's immoral, then society should take care of making it illegal.
2 - the free market will solve all the world's problems, so we can not legislate anything.
3 - if the market does demonstratably not solve a problem, well then it's because people didn't sufficiently care about it.
N
Re: Disgraceful (Score:2)
US made guns used to oppress Burma (Score:5, Insightful)
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I bet this is a general trend (we all remember the iraki embargo in the 90's that resulted in tens of thousands children death by lack of food and medecine and the continuation of Sadam reign), the public intention of the west is to fight against dictatorships, but th
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Why would they bother? You can get ten soviet guns that are just as good (or arguably better) for the price of one American gun, secondhand or not.
Hell I just want an M1911, and I've paid less for cars than what some people are asking...
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A pistol? Are you serious? Based on what, exactly? What country, for that matter?
Even though they make 10 round magazines for it? That's crazy. I mean, the Chinese knockoff AK-47 I had was legal to hunt with as long as I used the 5-round mag... That reminds me, I need to get a larger capacity mag for my 742 before
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Of course, they're the easiest weapon to defend yourself with... :P
Yeah it's semi-auto, a company in California specialized in importing them as sporting rifles years back... Good gun. Someone screwed up the firing mechanism on it, though, before I got it... Would occasionally fire
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There were similar issues in the US after the NFA (National Firearms Act) was passed in 1934 placing restriction on machine guns among other weapons. Occasionally, .22 rifles would show up with barrel lengths of 16 inches that were actually smooth bore. BATF figured these were a
Guns are Not Important. (Score:3, Insightful)
Shouldn't we clear this up first, before going after software that can not be used by people to kill people quite as directly as guns?
No, the software is more important. You may recall the 1994 Rwandan Genocide [wikipedia.org] where the primary weapon was machetes, an intentionally cruel method of murder. What's being demonstrated in Burma is that a non free network can be used to target and eliminate unarmed dissidents. The guns are secondary.
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That's a false dichotomy - there is no reason you can't do both, outlawing the software sales doesn't hinder your efforts to prevent them from getting weapons.
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OSS? Anyone? (Score:2)
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How would the GPL deal with this? The GPL says you can not limit the use of the software from a specific group. So you wouldn't be able to say "The military can't use this software" because it limits who uses the software... is this an issue for anyone else?
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Nevermind Burma (Score:2, Insightful)
What happened to "information wants to be free"? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What happened to "information wants to be free" (Score:5, Insightful)
So, it's perfectly possible to preach that information "wants" to be free* and be for software that can help that in difficult situations, while still being against software that can only be used to restrict information.
(* Although dropping the advocacy for a moment, I've always hated that phrase)
At least not unless you're willing to split the moral/ethical hairs for all the "good" software too.
Again playing Devil's Advocate, we do that already with all sorts of objects and services; why should software be any different?
Re:What happened to "information wants to be free" (Score:2)
Are we at war with Myanmar or something? What makes them an "enemy state"?
Re:What happened to "information wants to be free" (Score:2)
Software that allows you to dictate what happens to your data == Good
Software that allows me to dictate what happens to your data == Bad
Software that allows you to dictate what happens to my data == Bad
See the difference?
Censorship and guns (Score:5, Insightful)
"News for Nerds" (Score:2)
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US guns have also liberated people.
Or do you blame the Soviets every time someone is killed with an AK?
If that's the way you think of it I'd say you're likely an American. It's popular in America today to blame the producer of a tool instead of the user who uses it for destruction and corruption.
Frankly, it's a sickening trend since it diverts attention from the real issue.
Crapware isn't new (Score:2)
Re: Crapware isn't new (Score:2)
Censorware tyranny (Score:2, Insightful)
If the US doesn't deliver it, someone else will (Score:2)
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OFAC on Burma (Score:2)
There is no prohibition on the exportation of goods and services other than financial services to Burma.
Note: there are restrictions on imports from Burma. Perhaps the law should be changed (to prohibit certain or all exports).
Couple of facts about Burma (Score:5, Insightful)
2) Burma has lots of oil reserves, China does not.
Next time you see some proposed UN sanctions against Burma vetoed by China - you'll know why.
Re: Couple of facts about Burma (Score:2)
2) Burma has lots of oil reserves, China does not.
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pointless (Score:3, Insightful)
If the US wants to stop censorship and human rights abuses in Burma, it needs to do it the traditional way: persuasion, politics, trade, and/or military.
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I wouldn't bet on it; far bigger crimes against humanity have been committed and are largely forgotten.
What the Civilization games have taught us (Score:4, Funny)
wow. slow news day? (Score:2)
1) European union using American made operating systems! Stay tuned for more!
2) Chinese web filters running on US made systems! End the oppression!
3) North Korean propaganda machines run on US made computers! Film at 11!
Those Americans sure are some 3v33l d00dz!
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Export restrictions mainly cover encryption (Score:2, Informative)
I really don't understand why that's not illegal...isn't this why there are so many restrictions on where certain programs can be legally downloaded?
That's usually due to encryption capabilities of the software being "exported." IIRC, there used to be export versions of IE that were limited to 56-bit encryption due to US export laws which classified certain types of encryption as a "weapon." But I think that's pretty much a non-issue in the developed world nowadays. Someone could correct me if I'm wrong.
Re:Hmm? (Score:4, Informative)
So yes, it's illegal but the company doesn't care.
Re:Hmm? (Score:5, Insightful)
So the company apparently does care and it isn't yet clear how this software came to be in use in the embargoed nation. For all anyone knows it was pirated by a Burmese government sympathizer who worked for another company that attained it legally. Let's not pile on this company in undue haste.
Re:Hmm? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmm? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Hmm? (Score:4, Insightful)
Example: US group writes open-source "net-nanny" type flexible program. Burma government, like all of humanity, has access to this software and uses it to censor political speech.
Guess what: US-made censorware just got used to oppress Burma!
So, the fact that a US-made (or norweigan-made) software program was used for censorship (or military encryption, or...) should not itself be alarming. The title should be more like, "US firm sold censorship software to Burmese military".
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Come now! You're losing all of your slashdottedness! If the headline doesn't make it sound like President Bush personally made a phone call to make sure that a US firm, no doubt owned by Halliburton, has tech support people on site helping with deployment, raping village
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If the headline doesn't make it sound like President Bush personally made a phone call to make sure that a US firm, no doubt owned by Halliburton, has tech support people on site helping with deployment, raping villages on weekends, and sending back container loads of gold and diamonds to Dick Cheney's gardener, who buries them in the back yard under a tree shaped like the Masonic logo... well, then, that's just not a slashdot story then, is it?
Hey if you know more than what is divulged by the article you should submit your own story. This sound promising !
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Re:Hmm? (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact is the the western governments (mine included, I am British) do not like banning the sale of arms to these sort of countries as it damages our economies and may cost us jobs. The only time we ban the sale of arms is when we fear they may be used against us, if they are just going to be used to surpress indiginous pupulations we generally don't mind.
If anyone wants to prove this to be incorrect then please be my guest. Post a quote from the document proving me wrong. Modding this post down as flamebait or troll does not contribute to this discussion in a positive way.
Re: Hmm? (Score:2)
Re:Hmm? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Because the link above is to a summary of the newest batch of sanctions. What you need is the Treasury Dept's complete list [treas.gov]:
537.517 Noncommercial, personal remittances.
(a)(1) U.S. depository institutions,U.S. registered broker
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Anyway, nevermind th
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I am especially against schemes like the Exp
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No, but I think they'd rather spend the money sniffing cocaine off the tits of a $10k/hour prostitute than an overpriced easily broken toy from the US when they can get ten sturdy, equally functional tools practically for free from an old Soviet satellite state.
Please note I am not disparaging US rifles, just pointing out that they're not what most thugs look for in a weapon. They're designed for a well disciplined, organized, and funded fightin
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When was the last time you heard of Windows, the Big Mac, and the Credit Card as "US-Made"? All have done damage to the world at large.
Another vote for kdawsonfud.
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Because bittorrent and encryption are communications enabling technologies, and internet filtering software is a communications censoring technology? Much as I often disagree with the Slashdot conventional "wisdom" on things, I'm not seeing a philosophical inconsistency here.
Re: old street fighter buddy (Score:2)
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