A Tech Lover's Call to Arms 163
PrinceofThieves writes "CNET technology columnist Don Reisinger has issued a call to arms for all journalists and tech junkies to join him in his crusade against the forces that attempt to ruin the sanctity of tech. 'Now, a new group of people has emerged to confront the tech lovers all over the world and stop them from being able to do what they want with the technology they own. And while many have tried to confront them on an individual basis, it has not worked. And it's for that reason that we must all come together and fight the ridiculous impositions brought upon us.'"
Sanctity of Tech? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Somebody who really needs to get a grip on what's important in life. Poor fellow: "Everyday when I wake up, I'm constantly reminded by how limited we are in our rights with technology." (Proceeds to rant about RIAA and friends).
OK, all you slashdotters who continually post the same whining about teh evils of said RIAA and the importance of being able to freely copy anything you can get your hands o
Re:Sanctity of Tech? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes. Saving human life in Darfur is more important. Political expression in Tibet is more important. Economic recovery in the USA is more important.
But here we are at Slashdot, where the subject is our own lives. To probe, inspect, disassemble, analyze, and modify the technology we use is what we do. We are curious, we are inventive, and we are resourceful.
There are many who openly wish we were none of those and seek to prevent us from doing these things. They fear what they do not understand, even as their bogeymen are less often nefarious and duplicitous, and more often simply curious, inventive, and resourceful.
This message, that tinkering is not to be feared and that understanding is key, is important. It's not on the front page of the papers. It's not life or death. But it is its own little message of freedom. And that's something worth taking a stand for.
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When did this happen?
What should we do about it?
Who is John Galt?
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As in, with regards to all the true things that are important in a person's life and what should be worried about, technology should pale in comparison to, in the case of most men, finding a nice girl, raising a family, spending time with your kids, etc. THOSE aspects of life are what count to most people - the pleasures in life that are respected far more than one's crusade to protect the "sanctity" of technology.
Re:Sanctity of Tech? (Score:5, Insightful)
But let's look at this from the perspective of children, sure. Do you want them to grow up into a world in which the vendors control everything they can do with their devices? A world in which learning is impossible unless you're the best cracker who ever lived, and the economy is in the gutter because industries aren't adapting to new technologies? No, you probably don't.
And what if we replace the word technology with the word freedom? Are you going to continue being so cavalier about fighting one losing battle after another, small as they may seem?
As aimless as that article may seem to us who already know about all the abuse, maybe it'll actually reach someone who doesn't read slashdot.
Start promote free technology (Score:2)
It's time that the technology industry gets intelligent and stops being stupid. Intelligently design your technology.
Napster was a great idea, it's decentralized. The way to solve this is to decentralize by design and bring as much power as you can to the user through the design of the software itself.
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Especially considering it has the opposite causal effect, likely they are too mentally lazy to realise they stand to loose the most from this selfish attitude. Anything that stifles innovation within the technology industry, threatens it (umm, pun unavoidable?). Laws constructed to artificially support old business models should be resisted because these type of laws stop our industry from evo
Re:Sanctity of Tech? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Close....chasing women to get laid is a good thing, but, that part about raising a family, etc, well, that just sucks all your time and money away from fun things like tinkering with stuff, travelling, buying fun toys, and chasing women to get laid with.
I suppose if you make a LOT of money...they I suppose you can have it all, but, that takes a LOT of money. And if you marry, you risk losing half of that
Re:Sanctity of Tech? (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with you, but I think there's a flaw in your argument. Sure, life in Darfur is way more important, but it has been the allowing of people like the RIAA run rampant in one area that has set the example for others. If you can, say, screw over everyone because you're a record company, why can't I as something else do the same? Why can't I, as a doctor, screw people over, since I see lawyers getting away with it all the time? I don't know who said "rot from the core spreads outward" but he missed the mark; rot doesn't have to be at the core to spread.
Or maybe this only makes sense with a lot of beer.
Design your revolution (Score:2)
Revolutionary software and hardware designs will bring you a revolution of options.
If you want a call to arms, the best ideas would be new legalese licensing schemes to protect privacy rights, and the rights of the tinkerer.
New software designs which promote tinkering and interaction, such as free software. Use your creativity to promote your liberty.
Google needs to sell hardware (Score:2)
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In my mind, and I apologize for getting too philosophical, this is really about a rebellion against the very concept of purpose
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Because not being able to find plans on the Internet will obviously be a real barrier to anyone with the resources to build a working transportable nuclear device.
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I read the summary twice and still had no idea what he was talking about.
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And the freedom to do anything you please with something you rightfully own - most especially an object.
But so long as the burden is on Them to have to sue Us one by one to exercise their so-called "rights" and "licenses", I really don't see a real threat to these freedoms - at worst a nuisance. Possession is nine-tenth's the law, after all.
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Tech has sanctity (Score:2)
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What kind of idiot actually thinks there is some sort of "sanctity" to tech, or anything tech-related?
You didn't read TFA and you're the same kind of idiot as the author. The author nearly hits the mark, but his case would have been stronger if he had used software patents as his example instead of petty copyright violations by users of technology.
"Tech" helped rebuild the ruins of Tokyo after we stopped bombing it. High technology is raising many people out of poverty in India, and I hope my sons are able to do the same sort of thing in their Mother's birthplace - Mindanao (by becoming local jobs provid
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Interesting but no direction (Score:3, Interesting)
What does everyone else think?
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Re:Interesting but no direction (Score:5, Interesting)
The internet provides the means by which the majority can regain control over politics and laws. The internet redefines how the public mind scape is formed and shaped. The mass media, greed is every thing message is dying, along with celebrity worship and the mindless messages that celebrities sell.
So a campaign of re-regulation, a campaign of corporate executive culpability and liability, a campaign of not only protecting what we have but also taking back what has already by stolen via corporate corruption of the political system.
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NOT MORE REGULATION (Score:3, Interesting)
What is it that they say about insanity? Doing the same thing over and over, expecting a different result... something to that tune. We do not gain freedoms from more laws. Fouling up the code further for people on down the line
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actually making those offensive practices illegal and, punishable by long term imprisonment.
Be careful what you wish for. There are far too many ill conceived laws on our books already and they do plenty more harm than good. There is no inherent right not to be offended. If we start passing laws against practices which some people find offensive then it will be the first step towards the end of freedom. This is what separates us in the civilized Western world from those in the east who live under religious law defining what is and is not offensive both in practice and speech with punishments suc
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Are you now or have you ever been a... communist?
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Why would wanting to ensure legal accountability for corporate executive officers be considered communism. Taking legal and moral responsibility for your actions might be considered a long
Forget politics. Build and innovent. (Score:2)
Liberty through creativity!
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I'm with you on most of your other points...but, I like the idea of the EC and how votes are done. This is to keep the votes more equal between the states...populous and not as populous. Remember, you are citizens of your state first, then a US citizen, and if it were just straight popular vote, then smaller states would never be represented
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"The Electoral College (bypassing the will of the people."
I'm with you on most of your other points...but, I like the idea of the EC and how votes are done. This is to keep the votes more equal between the states...populous and not as populous. Remember, you are citizens of your state first, then a US citizen, and if it were just straight popular vote, then smaller states would never be represented....and ALL states in the union deserve
The gas bag (Score:2)
As if babbling on about the "sanctity of tech" wasn't pretentious enough.
Now again we have the geek talking boycott.
In markets where he is less sigificant a presence than the sixth grader with her first cell phone.
You'll keep hearing it (Score:5, Insightful)
You will keep hearing all these things until your "experts" go on TV and intelligently explain your position to a media interested in death, sex, and scandal.
You will keep hearing all these things until your lobbyist "educates" misguided lawmakers.
I could keep going in that vein for quite some time, but what it fundamentally boils down to is either changing the structure of the debate or co-opting it for your own message. But honestly, who's going to pay for a 30 second TV ad with a montage of straight-A students saying "I play violent video games and I've never killed anybody"
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Seriously! At least Eminem makes a good point about the violence he spouts, it's just MUSIC, if your kids decide to go blow away their class mates, maybe you should look at yourself and not try to blame everyone else for your lack of parenting. My parents raised me to be responsible for my own actions and
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Because when you take Rockstar out of the picture most of the problems go away.
Bioshock entered the market to rave reviews, healthy sales and nary a word of complaint. Half-Life has been on the shelves for ten years now. There are dozens of other examples.
The games that strike a raw nerve, the games that mak
A righteous rant, but no focus (Score:5, Insightful)
There is no rational plan of action, no believable tragedy for attack, and no suggestion for doing anything but throwing open the windows and screaming into the night.
Until we either change the laws we are pretty much stuck with the current situation of constant turf wars, suits and counter suits until the absurdness of it all starts to sink in.
There are signs that it IS starting to sink in. But not due to whining of the masses, but rather people suing ISPs, counter-suing the RIAA, etc.
Real actions. Pony up for the lawyers and go to court. The soapbox gets you nowhere.
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Liberty through creativity (Score:2)
You understand the technology, they dont.
You understand the code, they dont.
You designed the hardware, they cant.
You created the protocols, napster, linux, slashdot, programming languages and compilers, encryption and decryption software, etc.
Start by making sure everything you design and create in the future increases the liberty of the user, call it user-centric design. No more client-server, or slave master designs. Peer to Peer, and Hive designs are the answer.
Decentralize and distribute.
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"Why won't you see that movie?" your friends may ask, and you can answer "Because its made by Sony pictures and they support an abusive and unfair form of property rights" you can answer.
"So you are not planing to get anything in HD that won't work with Analog component video or strait DVI?" answer "Yes because HDMI is evil, it offers you nothing that DVI with AC3 on digital co
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That's what gives life meaning.
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Lots of Hot Air (Score:5, Insightful)
Sanctity of technology? I'm a software engineer. I help created technology but I don't worship it. I love when my code is nice and elegant but I also make trade-offs when needed because what I make has to work in the real world. Sanctity? What is this guy trying to sell? Only fanboys and snake oil salesman talk about technology as some Platonic ideal or traded as an object of worship.
Where has this guy been? Did he JUST now noticed the RIAA, MPAA, and corrupt lawmakers trying to subvert the spirit of intellectual rights and freedom? This didn't just happen over night. The DMCA was passed when Clinton was president.
Lastly, at the end of the rant, he has a call to action. What does he want us to do? Give us a plan. A rant without a plan is just a rant. Unite and rise up? Seriously man. We're not some Bolsheviks trying to overthrow the tzar. Get a sense of reality. The entire "article" is a bunch of hyperbole, obvious statements, and a total lack of any actionable items.
Give me a break. It's an insult to our intelligence.
Re:Lots of Hot Air (Score:5, Insightful)
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The debate is if unauthorized sharing of content is wrong, not about copyrighted materials in general. ( which is a RIAA tactic to confuse the issue. )
Oh, and i don't agree with your statement that its 'evil'. it might ( or might not ) be legal, but its not 'evil'.
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I can point you to 1000's of example where the copyright holder specifically requests that that you share. ( be it music, video, software,
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Grow a spine, be spiritual about your work. (Score:2)
Wouldn't you rather code with a purpose?
Anyone can be a software engineer, don't you want to change the world?
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Organize, he wants us to start discussing these issues in a manner that encourages others to join the cause.
And while he sounds like he's on a soapbox techies are like cats, each has their own morality (often defined by Star Trek) and while most are idealists who suspect that their real peers will see things exactly the way they do some recognize the need for compromise.
Some points for discussion: Do we believe in freedom of speech if allows; internet pedophilia, copywrite
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I must say, (Score:4, Insightful)
If in 20 years we still refer to our "toys" as "technology" I would be damned.
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Fire and the wheel are still technology. It doesn't matter how old a technology is, it's still technology. Perhaps that puts it in too stark terms for you? People would be pretty outraged if they couldn't light a fire or breathe oxygen without paying licensing fees. But that's the way it's going. So, perhaps the term is unexpectedly apt?
Personally, I find "tech," "technological" and "IT" to be more offensive and abused than "technology." What do you think it should be called?
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This article seems to claim that there are tech lovers and tech haters. Even those who work for the RIAA have their fancy cell phones and laptops and iPods. Even music labels are tech savvy in that they are all over iTunes.
Another word
Question about this "to arms" thing... (Score:5, Funny)
And of you want me to go outside at all, forget it.
Geek Voting Block (Score:4, Interesting)
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Maybe more of us need to run for office so we can educate the lawyers in Congress about what affect their policies on technology have!
I would say let's start our own political party but so many of us are of different opinions on non-technology related politics. (as seen by the ramped Ron Paul debates seen on
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Geeks decide elections. (Score:2)
It's the geeks that rigged the voting machines.
Geek Wakeup Call (Score:3, Informative)
This manifesto is going nowhere. At least not this weekend.
It's not that I'm apathetic... (Score:4, Funny)
Technology must be stopped! (Score:3, Funny)
New American Theology of Civil Submission (Score:2)
If you want to know why technology must be stopped, it's because technology is making all the wrong people smart and successful. Also technology promotes disobedience and the point of society is to promote and maximize submission.
-> New American Theology of Civil Submission [youtube.com]
just like real life (Score:2)
A motherboard with OpenBIOS would be a good start (Score:1)
Wikipedia's Open source hardware page [wikipedia.org] otoh informs me of numerous Open Hardware projects, but still, no coordinating entity/s.
Sure some may argue that they don't want to be organised and would rat
YES!!! PERFECT SOLUTION! everyone read the ^ post! (Score:2)
The open hardware solution is the ultimate solution.
The question is, how do we make it cheap enough for the masses to get involved? We don't own factories in China yet.
What about through non profit organizations? How about we form a church?
Missed the point (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a problem, but the article managed to barely graze it on it's way to somewhere else (I'm not sure where).
The part about ripping was there and made sense but that's about it. The real problem is things like media companies driving efforts to force manufacturers to design hardware primarily to make sure it doesn't do what the owner wants.
In turn, that makes open hardware a real problem to obtain. Not that I think we would otherwise get firmware source with a new DVR, but I'll bet manufacturers would make a lot less effort to hinder hacking if they weren't forced into it.
There is a nasty trend towards more expensive, lower performance, and less versatile standards just to please a 3rd party (HDMI cables anyone?).
Part of Vista's problem is that so much of it is designed to prevent the user from (God forbid) copying a movie. Meanwhile, all the electronic "tilt switches" will surely drive up the cost and lower the performance of video cards with no benefit to the buyer whatsoever. An estimated 10% of the nice new CPU you paid for is dedicated to making sure you haven't modified the video card you bought.
In truth, the lot of it is interferance with ownership.
Really old news (Score:5, Insightful)
mod parent up (Score:2)
The EFF are a bunch of lawyers. (Score:2)
What if we don't want to give money? what if we want to actually DO something ourselves using our own talents?
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Then study to be a lawyer
If the opposing side has lawyers, you generally need one too. Hell, even to get basic government services like worker's compensation you often need a lawyer.
Lawyers seem to be the socially accepted (mandated) way to solve problems today.
The Vote (Score:2)
-He's for net neutrality so that becomes assured for another 4 years at least and would give the internet time to become even more dependent on the concept. There's a certain threshold with internet where network neutrality needs to be maintained for a long enough period to which the public gets educated enough on the concept that they won't accept an un-neutral internet.
-Advocates copyright reform.
-Advocates patent reform.
among other t
Vote for the submission party. (Score:2)
It doesn't matter which party you vote for or which church you go to, they all teach submission.
Submission Theology [youtube.com]
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http://www.barackobama.com/issues/technology/ [barackobama.com]"
Obama's copyright changes in the link you provided seem to be promises to increase protection for copyright holders at home and abroad. This is pretty much in line with the voting record of both major US political parties, who only ever change copyright laws in ways that benefit corporations.
Why are women forced to pay ridiculous sums... (Score:3, Informative)
"stop them from being able to do what they want"? (Score:2)
The tip of the iceberg... (Score:2)
I couldn't disagree more; I think organizing against this sort of stuff IS important and is one of the few things people can do to push back against this consortium of corporate and government interests who have aligned against the people.
The issue isn't only DRM or the RIAA - that is but the tip of the iceberg and the government certainly knows that. All of these issues are related; DRM an
The "Technology War" began awhile ago. (Score:2)
One small example? Radar detectors being illegal in my state. Another example? DRM. Another example: Photographers rights to take pictures in public coming under fire.
Plea
Email me when this works (Score:2)
Re:Maybe people should stop stealing music? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Maybe people should stop stealing music? (Score:4, Insightful)
At the end of the day...what it boils down to is the societal slant to defer consequences and responsibility on others, in this case...the minorities.
RIAA: Our system is dying, the consequence should be to invent a new system. But we will slough it off and punish the innovators so the old bags of shit still running the cartels can stuff their pockets and keep paying for the whores and crack.
MPAA: We are similar in situation to the RIAA except we produce MegaTons of shit and expect people to overpay for it. We should screen the shit we decide to produce more but instead, we will punish those we should be embracing so we can also keep paying for our whores and crack.
Pro-Familly and Anti-VideoGame Violence: Holy shit, where do I begin? We refuse to admit that the reason the youth of today is in a downward spiral of self-destruction is because we pamper our children to the point where they believe they are more righteous than we, the parents and teachers are. We refuse to expose them to the realities of life because it may damage them but when they lack the psychological tools to deal with life once it hits them in the face, we blam everyone except for ourselves because frankly...we are not to blame. Video Games and Movies and Music teach our children to do drugs, shoot guns and kill people. I mean...sure Grand Theft Auto is rated M for Mature and 17+ but I will buy it for him/her anyways. I mean...it's just a video game...but I will blame the development companies when my 12 year old swears like a sailor and tells me to frack off because...well...he saw it in the video game they made....It's not my fault...
The Gov't (In this, I include the Canadian and US Governments because they are just as bad as the other in this...): All of the above can pad my pocket for millions of dollars so they must know what is right for everyone...right? I mean, what harm can passing a bill that a Lobbyist proposed do? Net Neutrality? The Internets? All those tubes? Sure! Let the ISPs control them freely! After all, China had it right, except for all that killing. We just need to figure out a way to do it without everyone noticing....and anyone that refuses? I hear Guantanamo Bay still has a few empty cells.....
That Jack Thomson guy seems so nice! He really has the people in mind and he does think of the children!
I think I covered most of them....putting myself in their frame of mind actually hurt....alot. Where's that bottle of whiskey?
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Ahhhh, we have a philosopher. Whiskey and tears my friend, whiskey and tears.
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Another reason I prefer purchasing online is the fact that I don't have to pay for all the songs on an album. I usually don't like between 30-50% of the songs o
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What are you, some kind of islamist hacker terrorist?;)>
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Re:Maybe people should stop stealing music? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Maybe people should stop stealing music? (Score:5, Insightful)
You just admitted you don't know, but you're sure it piracy. Does that make sense?
Maybe they're not coming to your store because they don't like the hypocrisy of some Jesus Freek pulling a Dirty Harry on teenage kids.
> fought the War on Drugs with skill.
Either you're Nancy Reagan, still with the blinders on, but after a real heavy binge, or you're a shill for the *AA.
Regardless, if you can't see that your business is doomed - or you _do_ see that it's doomed, but you persist - then you deserve whatever untoward fate befalls you.
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I got sick of paying $17+ for music that amortized itself before I was born!
Re:Maybe people should stop stealing music? (Score:5, Funny)
Get the hell back to 4chan you moron.
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Everyone who doesn't agree with him, of course. That's the way rants work,
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A single physical copy that the doctrine of first sale says you can do anything you want to with.
You did not buy the legal right to copy it, though you may have that right by virtue of laws and court rulings.(YMMV)
Use of the word "content" can be somewhat misleading in the context of Imaginary/Intellectual Property rights.
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Don't believe the industry's own propaganda about protecting the interests of artists, because the only people they think deserve any money is themselves. Artists a merely a vehicle for getting that money, and the companies do everything possible to approach their ideal of ending up with a situation where those artists actually owe them money after everything their accounta