Schneier: We Need a Better Way of Regulating New Technologies (schneier.com) 123
An anonymous reader writes: Last week, when a Brazilian judge shut down WhatsApp, it affected roughly half of the country's ~200 million residents. It's not the first time — or the second, or the third — that WhatsApp has faced legal pressure, and Bruce Schneier says it's clear evidence of a "massive power struggle" between internet companies and traditional companies. Central to this struggle is the inability of our lawmakers to quickly and effectively regulate new technologies. He says, "Traditionally, new technologies were adopted slowly over decades. There was time for people to figure them out, and for their social repercussions to percolate through society. Legislatures and courts had time to figure out rules for these technologies and how they should integrate into the existing legal structures. ... This isn't a simple matter of needing government to get out of the way and let companies battle in the marketplace. ... We need a better way of regulating new technologies. That's going to require bridging the gap between technologists and policymakers. Each needs to understand the other — not enough to be experts in each other's fields but enough to engage in meaningful conversations and debates. That's also going to require laws that are agile and written to be as technologically invariant as possible."
Respect (Score:2, Insightful)
That's a bit disingenuous. The motto of the "disruption" crowd is explicitly 'better to have your lawyers fight for dismissal than ask for permission', particularly when it comes to the structure of laws and regulations that have been put in place to protect the general population from damage and exploitation. How about a commitment by the technology-pushers to obey the law to start with?
sPh
Re:Respect (Score:5, Insightful)
The reach of technology is, in most cases, world-wide. Do you expect people to be able to abide with all the rules and laws of all the countries on the planet? What's legal and morally accepted in one country is totally immoral and unlawful in another.
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Tough shit; those countries will have to come around to the idea that they cannot continue to oppress their citizens.
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Tough shit; those countries will have to come around to the idea that they cannot continue to oppress their citizens.
Like in most jurisdictions of the US, where public nudity is forbidden and punished?
It's not like that in parts of the world.
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Possibly because few people with "high levels of technical skill" have the social skills or desire to persuade those without technical skill to allow them to make policy?
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Maybe its like the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. People who bother to convince others they are intelligent or talented are actually not.
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Expected...perhaps.
They should all get used to disappointment.
I don't need an excuse to ignore laws.
Re: Respect (Score:1)
Then they have an excuse for arresting you. Ignoring laws is... Unwise.
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One of the downsides of making everybody a criminal is there is no longer a reason to attempt to remain legal. You're doomed anyhow so fuck it.
Just don't get caught. It's all any of us have.
At least I usually know when I'm breaking the law and keep my head on a swivel. Most law abiders break the law by accident and will be blindsided.
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Ignorance of the law is no excuse for not obeying it.
Not anymore, if a cop is ignorant of the law there's no punishment for that and too bad for the other guy.
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That's a bit disingenuous. The motto of the "disruption" crowd is explicitly 'better to have your lawyers fight for dismissal than ask for permission', particularly when it comes to the structure of laws and regulations that have been put in place to protect incumbent business models from damage and exploitation.
Fixed that for you.
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Actually, it's both. Law has been used to shield culture as well as business from disruption.
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Uber is a good example. The existing options for transport were:
public bus service - fixed route, infrequent times (1 hour or 2 hours + delay due to traffic), may require walking some distance
company shuttle service - fixed route, frequent times, may require walking some distance
taxi service - point-to-point route, requires 60/30 minutes notice, expensive - The waiting time depends on city licensing and demand. Somewhere like London, you can simply hail a taxi, and it will stop. In the Bay Area, you would h
Re:Respect (Score:5, Insightful)
Uber also routinely breaks numerous law put in place to protect consumers and citizens, often as a result of hard-won experience. Not sure what the legal or moral justification for that is, other than "I wanna".
sPh
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The rationale is that many of those laws have nothing to do with consumer protection, and of the ones that are, most of them can be done better by Uber itself.
For instance, the problem of asshole drivers who scam riders by taking long routes could be fixed by a regulator having a bigass PDF on their
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Actually, the number of medallions in NYC grew by like, 25% from 2008-2013. And those restrictions were put in place because the traffic jams caused by unlimited taxis made it so that while you could hail a cab very quickly, max speed was like 2MPH.
Re: Respect (Score:5, Insightful)
Probably because you can never have nice things if you always had to ask before you made them. Imagine if Sony had to ask permission to create betamax, I guarantee you that the government would have said "Oh, copyright infringement tool. Nope."
Most of the time, perceived risks (or rather, doom and gloom dystopias) never materialize.
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Most of the time, perceived risks (or rather, doom and gloom dystopias) never materialize.
Imagine if somebody had said "Elixir sulfanilamide?" and then questioned the ingredients.
Copyright infringement only results in fiduciary harm in most cases, in other situations, well, we have different standards.
Re: Respect (Score:3)
Re:Respect (Score:5, Interesting)
Even as a pretty adamant liberal I recognize that a lot of lawmaking is the result of regulatory capture. Whenever a large commercial entity sits in an entrenched potion and siphons up money because regulations raise barriers to entry, we have a problem. Progress stagnates. Money gets wasted.
Disruptive businesses have a place. Sure they may skirt the law in new and interesting ways but they force industries to churn and change. The courts eventually settle matters. Luckily, law-making is an old institution that runs at a slow pace so disruption happens before regulatory capture can take hold.
Ride-share is a perfect example. Yes, Uber is obviously exploiting worker law loopholes and are likely exploiting their employees. Yes, they're skirting taxi law that's necessary to protect riders.
But on the flip side taxi institutions are some of the most abusive and exploitative examples of corrupt regulatory capture one could imagine. As a customer you pay way too fucking much for shitty service. Taxi drivers get shitty compensation for their work, face stifling fees, and work for companies that have obvious corrupt ties to local authorities that locked out competition.
The taxi institution NEEDED to be shakes down and broken. Mobile internet opened up a new type of service better than traditional taxi. On the upside the genie is out of the bottle. The public loves it. Uber likely won't go away now.
When the dust settles we'll likely see employment protection for Uber/lyft/whatever drivers, better service for customers, re-born taxi institutions forced to update in order to compete. Everyone will win, except the people who wanted to maintain the (awful) status quo.
See also: The hotel industry and the new internet-enabled room sharing services turning it upside down.
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Re:Respect (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Respect (Score:4, Insightful)
As a technology pusher, I'm perfectly committed to obeying the law. However, that still means I can push technology that subverts the intent of a law and demonstrates how stupid it is.
Those are usually the kinds of laws that one has to observe to the letter, but that ought to be subverted for the good of the people.
Re:Respect (Score:4, Informative)
How about a commitment by the technology-pushers to obey the law to start with?
No one really obeys the law, it is too vague and imprecise.
Re:There's also another problem (Score:4, Insightful)
Or too experienced to be seduced by the shiny new new thing without some measured consideration. Your viewpoint may vary.
sPh
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While it is true that youth tends to latch on to what is touted as new and shiny whether it really is new, and really is valuable, or not....
The greater problem is that politicians, specifically, are not technicians and are very isolated from mainstream culture. Technologies which are shaping the culture of millions upon millions of people are completely new and foreign to them, and they don't have the time they need to really get their heads around the tech and what it means.
The recurring theme of needing
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Or more accurately, the problem is that politicians have the power to inflict the consequences of their misconceptions on the world, whereas the young "new and shiny" lovers are basically powerless except in terms of mass cultural shifts (aside from the few who are actually involved in creating new kinds of shinys)
Re: There's also another problem (Score:3)
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Re:There's also another problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Most of the people who are in power and makes laws are too old to even begin to comprehend how things work and how much they are a part of modern society.
Oh, FFS, stop blaming it on age. You want to argue it's because they are politicans, not techies? Sure, I'll buy that. Or that they haven't bothered to learn new things and keep up with changes to the world? Sure, I can buy that too. But age itself?
I am in my early 60's, at least as old as the average politician. Am i "too old to comprehend how things work"? I've designed parts of modern CPUs, and written C++ compiler optimizations targeted to them. I was on arpanet in 1981, and I wrote my first assembly language program in the late 1960's on a computer that filled a room and whose user interface had moving parts which could physically injure the careless.
You blame age, but I see young people cheerfully giving up every shred of their communications to companies like Facebook and Google. I see them preferring curated computing over free computing so that the former succeeds in the marketplace and the latter is dying out. I see them having NO awareness of whether their data is held on their own device or transmitted to a hundred unknown companies. I see them being increasingly unable to use computing systems with UIs more complex than I see as appropriate for grade-school children. I see them manually repeating trivial actions a hundred times in a row because they lack any ability to automate the task with a device invented to automate tasks. I see blank looks if I ask them to copy this file to that directory, because a grid of canned icons to launch the Facebook app and "like" selfies is the only way they are able to interact with a computer.
"Digital natives", my senile geezer ass.
My generation has legions and legions of technically clueless people, I will grant that. So does every generation. But the so-called digital natives are not exactly shining examples of wise decision making, taken as an entire group. I'm just along for the ride at this point, watching in abject horror.
Please, give the ageism a break.
Lawn. You know what to do.
Re:There's also another problem (Score:5, Insightful)
I second all this and would also add that this attitude has much worse repercussions than just to insult parent poster's "senile geezer ass." It also lulls people into a sense of complacency, with the thought that once the old guys retire and new blood gets in everything will be all better. That is certainly not true. For example, as pp points out, the Facebook generation isn't going to fight for open and interchangeable standards, since they hardly even know what those are. And one of my favorite /. sigs is the Woz quote about the cloud that ownership is what made America different than the USSR during the cold war.
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It also lulls people into a sense of complacency, with the thought that once the old guys retire and new blood gets in everything will be all better. That is certainly not true. For example, as pp points out, the Facebook generation isn't going to fight for open and interchangeable standards
Same senile geezer here.
You make an excellent point. Without understanding and awareness, it's difficult for people to make good choices even when they are well intentioned. Without wisdom, the situation is not likely to improve just because my generation dies off. Your point about open standards has been a peeve of mine for many years, but I've found it difficult to even have the discussion with non-techies (of any age), because it's a bit abstract. People don't intuitively see how open standards are c
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I've met plenty of aware, highly intelligent, and hugely curious people all across the age spectrum, from children on up. The difficulty is that those people tend to be drowned out by the ones who don't much care to think, observe, and learn.
How could you claim this is not true for any generation? Sure, you have decades of experience, and based on your writing and arguments I can see that you "care to think, observe, and learn". This ability is not based on your age, I bet if you were born in 90s you'd still possess ability to "care to think, observe, and learn".
Does your experience affords you better perspective and let you recognize cyclical trends? Absolutely! Still you don't need to be a graybeard sage to see that existing walled garden t
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How could you claim this is not true for any generation?
Same geezer here again.
That's true; I agree with you. Every generation has its share of people who think and learn.
The difference I perceive between today, and (say) the 1970's, is that in the 70's the only people interacting with computers "for fun" were people into the technology for its own sake. Today, it's everybody. Which is fine, and probably good in many ways. The side effect though is that the people who really grok technology were a high percentage of those dealing with computers and networks
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on a computer that filled a room and whose user interface had moving parts which could physically injure the careless.
OK, I must know. Exposed tape reels from before the cool vacuum chamber tape drives? Carelessly designed card punch or printer paper output path?
Re:There's also another problem (Score:4, Interesting)
on a computer that filled a room and whose user interface had moving parts which could physically injure the careless.
OK, I must know. Exposed tape reels from before the cool vacuum chamber tape drives? Carelessly designed card punch or printer paper output path?
OK. In my youth (early 70s) I worked on a computer in which the logic was all carried in the doors. They swung open and, being full of vacuum tubes, probably weighed in at around 100 Kg. Get hit in the head by one of these and you might wake up next week (or you might not).
To turn on the computer, you had to open the door (see above as a risk to others), reach past the exposed + and - 100 VDC buses, grasp the rubber grip on the drum memory drive shaft with your right had and spin the drum. Then you immediately turned on the power (remember the exposed power buses) with the left hand. If you didn't spin the drive, the electric motor generated too much torque for the system to handle and you got to spend a half hour replacing the sheared pin in the link between the motor and the drive shaft. See how many ways you can get hurt just turning the monster on.
If you find this hard to believe, visit either the Smithsonian in D.C. or the Computer History Museum in Mt. View, CA and looked at the Bendix (or CDC) G15 [wikipedia.org] computer from the 1950s. Both had G15s on exhibit last I knew.
This is just the case of one small computer from the dark ages. You could also look up the IBM Photostore [wikipedia.org] (which stored high density data on film) or the Datacell (both IBM and CDC made similar ones) [wikipedia.org] for examples of computer hardware that could seriously hurt you. And these don't touch the more common risks from IBM Hollerith card hardware.
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Or the serious injury from your boss if you didn't turn off your Burroughs L-4000 terminal in the correct order to keep from destroying the 32K word hard drive.
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I see them preferring curated computing over free computing so that the former succeeds in the marketplace and the latter is dying out. I see them having NO awareness of whether their data is held on their own device or transmitted to a hundred unknown companies. I see them being increasingly unable to use computing systems with UIs more complex than I see as appropriate for grade-school children. I see them manually repeating trivial actions a hundred times in a row because they lack any ability to automate the task with a device invented to automate tasks. I see blank looks if I ask them to copy this file to that directory, because a grid of canned icons to launch the Facebook app and "like" selfies is the only way they are able to interact with a computer.
That's the most depressing thing I've read all month.
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Lawn. You know what to do.
Who got your punch cards out of order?
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The digital natives believe themselves to be mechanics because they know how to drive cars.
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It is a pity moderation doesn't go to 10. (or 11)
Gems like this prove that /. isn't completely sold out to Dice.
-- /. in 2015
Summary of
MS/Apple/Google/Linux Monday
Bitcoin Tuesday
more-stupid-SJW-shit Wednesday
Stupid-Tech-Question "Let me Google that for you" Thursday
Fuckerberg Friday
Slow news Saturday
Slow news Sunday
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Bruce Schneier is 52. Is that too old to understand technology?
WhatsApp is just a messaging application. Messaging is hardly new; both SMS on cell phones and text messaging on computers are over 25 years old.
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Most of the people who are in power and makes laws are too old to even begin to comprehend how things work and how much they are a part of modern society.
40 is too old to comprehend how computers work? I'd bet money that there are plenty of members of Congress in their 30s and early 40s who lack the logical thought processes required to form an opinion on how technology affects society beyond thinking that the NSA needs to spy on everyone in order to stop all the terrorists who want to hurt your children.
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What's amusing is that they don't realize that we old people are the ones who built the infrastructure or developed on it. That same one that they're using to post the message is the one we watched, helped, and nurtured. You know, when we used our own hardware to do things like host a BBS. When we spent our own money to enable complete strangers to dial in and added extra phone lines so we could have more users. When we spent gobs of money to buy hardware (when a computer was the price of a car) so that we
Why regulate new technologies "quickly"? (Score:1)
We'd just have pre-breakup AT&T combine with MPAA and RIAA in lobbying the government to "regulate" the internet or cell technology.
Do you really want that?
Internet is all about permissionless innovation (Score:2)
That is the architecture of the Internet:
Dumb 'pipes' (routers) with any application you can think of and build at the edges (hosts).
Re:Internet is all about permissionless innovation (Score:5, Insightful)
Dumb 'pipes' (routers) with any application you can think of and build at the edges (hosts).
And yet the typical user uses it mainly for Netflix and Facebook on their iPhone. So while "permissionless innovation" is one model that the internet supports, it also supports the "government enforced copyright monopoly" model and the "ask permission from big corporations" model. There is an old saying that democracies like capitalism, but capitalism doesn't necessarily like democracy. The relationship between the internet and corporations is somewhat similar.
Lack of regulation is not a bug... (Score:4, Insightful)
...it's a feature.
Let the market decide, and let regulation catch up later (if ever).
We don't need "better" ways to regulate new technologies, we need smaller government that doesn't feel the need to stick its tentacles into every orifice of the body politic.
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there is an elegant, technical solution to the Big/Small/Any Government problem. Its called Guillotine.
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...goes to human history.
This is a rare chance to lock down freedom from the hands of the power hungry, ye, even unto democracies ruled by the seductive-tongued.
Of course it is reasonable to limit things that offend the masses.
Of course it is reasonable to regulate to prevent lèse majesté.
Of course it is reasonable to filter news to stop the population from getting upset.
There is no limit a charismatic leader can convince The People of. There is more to proper government than infinite power in th
Re: Lack of regulation is not a bug... (Score:3)
Remind me again what corporations created the Internet and the world wide web.
Re: Lack of regulation is not a bug... (Score:4, Interesting)
Remind me again what corporations created the Internet and the world wide web.
Glancing through the Wikipedia discussion of ARPANET [wikipedia.org], I see MIT, RAND Corporation, BBN Technologies, System Development Corporation, UC at Berkeley, Honeywell, Stanford Research Institute International, UC Santa Barbara, University of Utah, DEC, and Scientific Data Systems.
After the commercialization of the internet and the advent of the world wide web, almost every active business and non profit corporation has been a contributor in various ways through buying bandwidth, providing services or information online, or more substantially through providing important infrastructure or inventing new uses, etc.
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Did they pay for it?
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It is kind of interesting from a political angle.
Progressivism as a movement came up on both the left and the right under the basic premise.
We are in a more complex age so we need a more powerful government to manage it.
It sounds great, but in reality, the very process of institution building creates complexities that make the complex environment too difficult to manage.
They push big unions and big tie in with industry. These relationships become entrenched with special interests that become difficult to ch
We need a better way of regulating governments. (Score:1)
We don't need new ways to regulate what consenting adults do with each other, or the agreements they make between each other. We need better ways to regulate the busy-bodies that seek to control everything for their own best interests.
Why When You Say... (Score:4, Insightful)
Do I hear
We Need a Better Way to Protect Established Players and Corrupt Governments
?
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Damned if you do, damned if you don't. (Score:3)
No matter what approach is taken, there will always be groups dissatisfied with the results.
Laws are generally reactionary. Just laws are created because entities see injustice and push for statutes to curb those injustices. For injustices to be acknowledged they have to happen, in order to happen, the population or a subset must gain experience with the particular concept or technology or action. To gain experience, if it's a technology, it has to be allowed to exist and to see how it's used, and potentially abused, and often, actual abuse might already run afoul of existing law anyway. When the laws are finally created as a reaction, some people get angry because their abusive actions are curtained. Others get angry because in order to curtail the abusive actions of others, their nonabusive actions must also be affected.
Some regulations are proactionary, being drafted and put into effect before abuses are documented. Persons wishing to use a technology affected by such regulations get upset because they're being prohibited from doing something that they feel that they should be allowed to do. It could be that what they feel should be legal is actually victimizing others, or they might have a poor understanding of the law, or they could even be right in that what they're being prohibited-from is going too far. Either way, they're angry.
Then you have the condition where something newish is starting to show signs of abuse, and regulations and/or law is put into effect in a minor way that serves to remind participants that they could be subject to regulation or rules, and they get upset. Some don't understand that they might be violating the rights of others or violating the rules that exist to protect all parties involved. Things like Uber versus taxis and how taxi regulations came to be. Things like how RC aircraft are coming under increasing regulation. Things like software that shares files in less-direct means. These are all technology changes that can be abused, and also can have legitimate benefits without abuse, but people get very, very passionate when their designs are questioned, even if they're ignorant of the law or the effects of their actions or choices.
There is no magic bullet. Someone will always be upset.
Regulating New Technologies (Score:1)
Translation? Censorship.
I hope out hope that "new technology" will make it impossible.
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Censorship is the legal problem. We technology to circumvent the problem.
Bad Intent (Score:2)
I think it's somewhat telling that the example was WhatsApp. Even if we stretch the idea of "new technology" to include a chat service, it's just that: a chat service. It's a product that literally cannot affect anyone unless they consent by instructing their device to accept these messages. What regulation could possibly be necessary?
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The ability to wiretap the communication.
Two birds, one stone (Score:3)
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They are playing whack a mole with a thousand holes.
And to the government, this is a non-problem. They can get more budget money to buy more mallets and hire more mallet wielders, and it's job security for life. It's a war that under the existing paradigm will never be won.
Regulate? (Score:2)
We need to regulate moron judges instead.
I don't remember the phone system ever shut down, even when thousands of kidnappers anonymously called their victim's loved ones for money.
Nor the postal system when people sent anonymous hatemail or ransom notes.
Schneier is wrong (Score:1)
That's also going to require laws that are agile and written to be as technologically invariant as possible."
"Agile" laws are invariably going to product badly written laws. It's beyond stupid to expect lawmakers to adopt a software development method to writing laws.
Choices (Score:2)
This isn't a simple matter of needing government to get out of the way and let companies battle in the marketplace.
Yes it some ways it could perhaps ought to be exactly that. You can't regulate that which you can't control and perhaps some things where there is very very broad public agreement about them.
Either the Internet gets less global (I think this might be the best answers) or it will do what its always done and route around the damage. As Joe Public does not see what is so wrong about an app, well they will go elsewhere to get it and you will only produce more scoff laws.
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Bring back the OTA (Score:2)
How about, in the US at least, Congress brings back the Office for Technology Assessment [wikipedia.org] so maybe, just maybe, our elected officials wouldn't have to "figure it out" but be able to ask a whole group of people who's job is to explain these kinds of things? I still can't believe that in 1995, the arguable year of the WWW explosion, the OTA was nixed.
I agree with Schneier (Score:3)
Would Be an Effective Ban on Hobby Programming (Score:2)
The ability for an unlicensed hobbyist to program arbitrary software on their home computer == "unregulated technology".
New boss, same as the old (Score:2)
The real problem with the WhatsApp affair is that it was even possible for the judge to shut it down. The Internet was invented as a decentralized system, and it would be extremely disruptive to shut it down for the whole country. But all these new technologies are designed for asymmetric computing, where the thing you have is only a terminal into someone else's computer.
Yeah, I know, there are technical reasons of battery life and network connectivity, why mobiles are not full peers on the Internet. Still,
All well and good in an ivory tower. (Score:2)
Yes, in a perfect world, you would have technologists (whose motivation is a close variation of "design stuff that will benefit all people, make society safer and allow us all to reap the benefits of technology") and politicians (whose motivation is a close variation of "partake in an informed debate which leads to the drafting of laws and statutes that provide protection for all individuals and allow the evolution of society into a more enlightened state") getting to better know how to communicate effectiv
Any system would instanly be captured by the old (Score:2)
Look at Uber. Local taxi companies are proving which cities have corrupt city councils and which don't.
Absolutely wrong (Score:2)
"Central to this struggle is the inability of our lawmakers to quickly and effectively regulate new technologies."
That inability is what keeps new technology useful, cheap, and powerful. As soon as the lawmakers catch up, they manage to screw it up.