Good Bad Attitude 653
teidou writes "Paul Graham has posted a new essay titled 'Good Bad Attitude' talking about the hacker attitude toward rules and government regulation of Intellectual Property. Choice quote: "(Hackers) can sense totalitarianism approaching from a distance, as animals can sense an approaching thunderstorm.""
Except... (Score:3, Insightful)
Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd say that, generally, old-school hackers are more respectful of intellectual property than new-school hackers. (yes, that was a generality)
For example, most grey-beards that I know don't really favor the idea of p2p being used to share files against the wishes of the author.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Interesting)
Grey-beards and those who are gainfully employed in the non-IT segment of high tech.
I work with a couple of fellow hackers and we always get miffed with our co-workers wo e-mule this and kazza that . .
I'm only 28 and yet I find myself in a position which is very conservative when compared to my peers.
On the IT note, I don't know quite why it is but those who are in IT positions vs. those like myself who may perform the occasional IT function as part of a larger job scope tend to have remarkably different attitudes. . . good or bad I don't know, but different, yes.
-nB
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Interesting)
IT folks are consumers of software. Fairly empowered consumers, but still consumers at heart. Whereas the guys with the "larger job scope" are likely to be, at some level or another, producers as well.
Stealing software suddenly seems alot less cool when it might be your software that's being stolen.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Insightful)
I used to share their mindset, but that was when I couldn't afford to purchase those items on my own. Now I can, and it's simply more convenient to purchase a DVD than it is to wait a day or so for it to download via bittorrent, while maxxing my cable connection and being unable to do much else.
The only exception to this is when something is unavailable and doesn't appear likely to become available for a while. An example is Ghost in the Shell 2. I haven't seen any announcements for its cinematic (let alone DVD) release in Australia, so I willingly grabbed it off a friend. However, as soon as it comes out in Australia on DVD, I will be buying a copy.
People who willingly pirate for the sake of it, not because they can't afford it, are the epitome of leeches.
Exactly (Score:5, Interesting)
When I'm a student, or too sick to do anything, I certainly can't afford to buy DVDs or CDs. I still buy the odd used game, but $10 for a game that will provide twenty to fifty hours of entertainment is within ANY budget.
But whenever I have dinner with my aunt and uncle, he regales me with stories of all the free software he downloads. It kind of disgusts me since he can obviously afford to purchase it legit. I switched to Linux precisely to get away from having to pirate software. I always encourage people to switch, so that they can benefit from truly a free operating system and office suite. I've gotten quite a few people to switch to OpenOffice.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3, Informative)
Region 1 DVD Release: Dec 28, 2004. Source: Main page of AnimeOnDVD [animeondvd.com]. It was announced a couple of days ago. Though I do agree that there has been no Australian release date set.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3, Interesting)
The website in my sig? The money I make from that pays for my DSL line and the excess will be paying for Halo2 (already pre-ordered). I'm as broke as you, yet I don't pirate. . . go
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3, Interesting)
If you have you will no-where find tools or instructions for piracy of games. I have two open letters to M$ about homebrew content on their console. I have received numerous visits from M$ IP addresses three DMCA notices, though I post no (C) IP on my site. I understand the double standard that is apparent and I see plenty of irony. The difference is that homebrew does not take money away from the game studios, piracy does; same for ripping and distributing movies.
-nB
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the actual use of P2P software to upload or download files might be unethical, but the phenomenon of file sharing in general is nothing more and nothing less than the invisible hand attempting to correct the price of the media being distributed. It's no more unethical than the phenomenon of male Lions killing cubs when they take over a pride. It might be nasty when each individual does it, but the practice has helped Lions survive as a species.
The simple fact is that the market is hardwired into humans. Trade is in our nature. We may argue with actions people take, but there's very little that can be done to stop anything completely. We can no more stop file sharing than we can the drug trade or prostitution. There's demand, there's supply, the market takes care of the rest whether we like it or not.
The problem with those trying to stop it is that they're fighting human nature. Human nature won't change. It's not that the **AA is wrong (or at least, exclusively wrong), it's that their goal is not achievable. They will either continue to fight, capitulate, or compromise. My money's on compromise, but no bets on when.
The price of the media in question is higher than the market is willing to bear. I'm not saying it is or is not a fair price, only that it's higher than people are willing to pay. As a result, there were a lot of people that wanted the media but didn't want to pay for it. To the tune of several times the total volume of legitimate sales.
Napster was growing 15% a day for several months. And I've got news for you, Napster sucked. That just doesn't happen unless there's a huge unmet demand.
It's the **AA's fault for ignoring the market. While I might consider the actions of the file traders themselves to be unethical, I recognize that they're following human nature.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:4, Insightful)
Illegally downloading songs (or any other entertainment) off of a P2P network only gives more power to the RIAA(/MPAA/whatever). They can bloat their piracy numbers and complain about lost sales; common people will believe the figures because everybody downloads music! But, if you go support an independent then you REALLY do something subversive. You go outside the mainstream, into the areas that aren't controlled by the large industry organizations. Most importantly: You give the indies that don't sell their creative freedom for a long shot at "stardom" a chance to live off of their abilities. As an indie computer game developer, I can attest that it's often hard to make a serious living off of providing entertainment to people.
Supporting the independent artist is the best way to beat the system, something that intrigues all hackers both old and new. Unfortunately, too many people want to be entertained for no effort, and are willing to do whatever they can to justify their illegal activities. Let that "do-it-yourself" hacker attitude shine through and go look for the alternatives. We're out there if you choose to look past mainstream advertising.
Have fun,
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:4, Interesting)
Add value that P2P can't match. Allow for purchase of miscellanceous artwork, interviews with the band, behind-the-scenes, crap like that. Keep a well organized discography database with links to similar artists. Allow downloads or mailing of the CD insert and stick-on labels so the customer can make their own CD's (Ha! Have a service that will create CD labels for custom mix CDs. Just specify the bands and/or albums and they'll send you a label with a montage of all the requested artwork). Allow downloads or streaming for free in crap-quality 48kbps MP3 and sell in a multitude of popular formats (MP3, OGG, lossy, lossless, whatever) and bitrates. Allow downloading of entire albums at once. Give promotionals for things like posters and concert tickets and t-shirts when you buy the album. And for the love of god, do not cripple it all with DRM shit that doesn't work!
Have the customer keep a PayPal-type debit account, so they can deposit a few bucks periodically and then just buy whatever song or album they want with a simple one-click purchase system.
Will the songs end up on P2P networks? Absolutely. But so what? They'll _never_ stamp it out; there will always be files available for free. The RIAA members need to have this fact drilled into their skulls. But this way they could at least compete with it. Look how will iTunes did, and that was expensive, limited, and had nothing I couldn't get from P2P. With a system like this in place, they could sweep illicit music trading under the rug almost at once and make even more money than they are now. I mean, there's almost no distribution costs apart from bandwidth. No middle-men, it's all profit.
But, no. Instead they declare war on the people who give them money. That's much better.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3, Insightful)
amoral doesn't mean illegal. (Score:4, Interesting)
This is the exact logic that has allowed Betamax (and other analog devices capable of duplication) to exist. If the device has a legitimate use then the device is legitimate. If the maker or marketter of the device or service specifically argues an illegal purpose then the service should be shut down or the specific marketter or seller should be targetted, but that does not mean that the users should be targetted unless it can be demonstrated that they are breaking the law.
Companies that sold multifunction card readers and writers, as well as blank cards were marketting these with the claim that it allows one to watch Cable or Satellite TV for free. This marketting strategy is illegal, and businesses advocating the illegal activity are subject to prosecution. The devices, however, have legitimate uses beyond TV, as the subscription TV industry risked using an industry standard card rather than developing their own technology. Subsequently I feel that prosecution solely based on the purchase of such equipment from one of the aforementioned retailers is wrong. If they can prove that the customer is actually using the devices for illegal purposes then they have grounds, otherwise posession is not a crime. Since posession is not a crime, there is no justification for even a search warrant to examine the customer's equipment. If the customer then has turned around and started selling copied key cards and the TV subscription company can prove this though obtaining one then they can make a case.
If I and a bunch of associates had such equipment and were all served, I wouldn't hesitate to find a lawyer with experience for this and counter with racketeering and extortion claims as a group, and to attempt to convince the local attorney general to criminally pursue the matter.
Portions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act related to devices capable of copying or playing copies need to be re-evaluated and repealed, for the logic that copying can be done legally of material not protected by copyright, therefore DMCA is restrictive.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Interesting)
I think what you're seeing is the way a person changes with age. If you go back 20 or 30 years, those same grey-beards might have had different attitudes.
Consider the picture at the top of Graham's essay. It shows two guys who are now grey-bearded hackers (Jobs and Wozniak) messing with a blue box (a device for making free phone calls, illegally).
When I was a college student in the 80's, I routinely taped my roommates' albums if I liked them. Now I'm older, I have a real job, and I can afford to buy my music, so naturally I disapprove of my students when they trade MP3's :-)
There's also something about having kids that makes you become a lot more cautious...
If you control for age, I think there might be a trend in the opposite direction of what you're suggesting, toward radicalism. The open-source movement has caused some hackers to reconsider some of the basic institutions of our society (like property laws), and organize to resist them. Hacking as a critique of society didn't even exist 20 years ago.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Insightful)
And I have no respect whatsoever for little brats who think they're somehow morally justified in taking what I've produced simply because they can. If I write a book and you want a copy of that book, you can goddamn well pay for it. Don't want to pay for it? Then fuck off already; you have no 'right' to make a copy of that book to avoid the gate fee.
Patents and copyrights should only be there to encourage creativity. Nothing more.
The only way they "encourage creativity" is by allowing folks like me to profit from our endeavors. Otherwise we'd be working as garbagemen or lawyers or programmers and spending our free time on more important things, like family. And then you wouldn't have the opportunity to buy the book, the music, or the invention at all.
And don't go off on any college-kid horseshit about 'artists' doing their thang anyways, in the copious amounts of time they have after spending 8-12 hours a day working at a job, then taking care of the family, then trying to find some small amount of time for personal entertainment, or projects, or chores, or household repairs. It doesn't happen very often in the real world, Skippy. Without the lure of money and the ability NOT to work away our lives first at a paid job, and then an UNPAID job on top of that one, many of us have no problem telling those of you who yammer on about the 'greater good' to go fuck yourselves.
If you see the world as a gravy train you're entitled to ride, you can write your own damned books, make your own damned music, and come up with your own damned inventions. But then, if you had any ability at all to do any of these things, you wouldn't be flipping burgers at McDonald's, now would you?
Max
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is precisely why there were no works of art produced before copyright law was enforced.
Re:Old school hackers vs. new school hackers. (Score:3)
No, frankly, I don't. Copyright laws today do not encourage creativity. They encourage intellectual hoarding.
In the 'old days' the execution of the idea was at least as valuable as the intellectual copyright. So what if you steal the "idea" for the mona lisa? You could never create a painting that equalled it, because if you had that kind of skill you would be spending the time creating something of your own that was equally as
Re:Except... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hackers have many advantages over the animals. They have linksys routers running open source, they have thumb drives, they have coding skills. Even if a new dark ages were to come, there still would be guys using old TiVos, discarded mobile phone LCD screens and coat hangers t
Spider Sense (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Spider Sense (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Spider Sense (Score:4, Insightful)
Hacking predates computers. When he was working on the Manhattan Project, Richard Feynman used to amuse himself by breaking into safes containing secret documents.
I love the recognition here that hacking is a bigger thing than computers and geeks, its all about aquiring knowledge.
Re:Spider Sense (Score:3, Informative)
Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't an attack on you by any means, just something I've noticed in most people. When they are beaten in a debate, or the issue is not provable (see religions / politics / whatever) they fall back to:
"Sure, but the truth is...X"
"Yeah, but in the REAL world, X"
"You have to admit X"
Where X is their (unproved) position. Interesting.
Alternately, they fall back to arguing 'common sense', which is extremely subjective, despite an OBJECTIVE name.
People are odd
Obligatory quotation: (Score:2)
"The skill of accurate perception is called cynicism by those who don't posses it" - Alan Millar
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm a hacker, and I'm a little idealistic and somewhat optimistic. But I'm also rather good at seeing structures, and getting a feel for emerging patterns. That's a large part of what hacking is about.
If the patterns (in this case government and corporate policy changes and actions) are negative despite what I'm being told via the media, I notice. Just like many people didn't when the whole Nazi thing was going on in the beginning.
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:5, Funny)
Hacker's know Godwin's Law [wikipedia.org].
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:5, Interesting)
That's exactly the problem, though - humans are so good at detecting patterns that we often detect patterns when they don't exist. The need to rationalize the often irrational world around us is one of the reasons that I feel that a lot of otherwise intelligent people tend to gather at the conspiracy/tinfoil hat fringe - because to them it's better to have an explaination (even a scary one) than to feel that they can't understand all of the crazy stuff going on around them. Random sequences often don't look random, and with the sheer number of events happenning in the world every day, strange coincidences are to be expected. And hey, isn't it nice to have something/one ("the Man"/Ashcroft/whatever) to blame for the woes of society?
I'm not saying that there isn't trouble brewing or that hackers aren't necessarily better at seeing this than others, its just like all the hackers that predicted the death of the internet for the last few decades... They saw change and picked up a pattern that turned out not to be there.
I'm a little concerned by the attitude on slashdot that the sky is falling when in reality, we're dealing with the same kinds of political problems we've always had - presidents being elected without a popular majority and decided by someone other than the people (1824 election), our rights being eroded/Patriot act (Sedition Act, McCarthyism during Red Scare), and a general distrust of politicians (even our founding fathers distrusted politicians!) I really don't think any of this is new, or that we're doomed. This country has had our dark moments and our bright ones, but has survived many things and will continue to survive. Maybe it will not be the same, but this "slippery slope" falicy that so many people call upon when they look at the compramises that are made in our name will not be our end. As long as we're alive, there's hope that things will get better, and there is always something we can do, even if it's small, to make the world a better place.
Now, of course that might be just a bit optimistic on my part, but I feel that those who have power tend to want to keep things nice and stable so they can keep it, and part of that means keeping the masses happy, so we're probably OK.
Cheers,
Justin
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe it will not be the same, but this "slippery slope" falicy that so many people call upon when they look at the compramises that are made in our name will not be our end. As long as we're alive, there's hope that things will get better, and there is always something we can do, even if it's small, to make the world a better place.
I think you've put your finger right on it. If we value freedom, if we love liberty, then every year should see more freedoms, less restriction on our liberty, than every year preceeding it. There is far too much oppression in our society as it is. We aren't on a "slippery slope", we're already here! The situation is intolerable right now, and has been for some time!
And yet we are regressing! Despite our hopes for improvement, life in America is worse than it was last year, and worse still than the year before that! Compromises? That is putting all too pleasant a face on the degeneration that has afflicted our lives. The politicians are leading us to hell by our noses, and all we do is try to be polite about it.
The best thing we can do to make the world a better place is strike their hand from our face, turn around, and walk the other way into a better future.
-- TTK
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem with this is that many hackers, while quite well versed in topics related to computers etc, have most likely not done any form of sociolical or economic field research. There is a lot that goes into analysis of trends and statistical information, as well as spe
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow, I'd hate to see how bad our score is then, considering that that seems to be about all we're capable of (repeating the mistakes of yesterday, but with new spiffy technology to amplify it)
Quick example: rea
Re:Except Animals are more likely to be right. (Score:3, Informative)
I expect that at least one [campusprogram.com] or two [campusprogram.com] of the exiles from Nazi-controlled states would be classed as 'hackers' by the modern definition.
--
"Hackers can sense... (Score:5, Funny)
Is it just me or is this one of the more ridiculous sounding things you've heard in a while? Let's see what other deep sounding vacuous statements we can come up with:
There is no group with such an ability for singleminded devotion to the pursuit of universal betterance than the New York Cab Drivers association.
More than any other group formed since the first descent of man from the trees, Sanitation Engineers are able to ensure the future of democracy in our nation.
I bet I have more support for either of these than he's got for his hackers. Too bad there's no taxidot.org or cleandot.org so I could get an article posted too.
Re:"Hackers can sense... (Score:2, Funny)
American taxidermists have always championed feminist principles, often protecting innocent would-be victims of alley rape with their uncanny intuitive abilities and superhuman strength.
Nice work. (Score:2)
It's You (Score:5, Interesting)
It's you. I thought the thunderstorm was a nice metaphor. Here's another good line:
"A society in which people can do and say what they want will also tend to be one in which the most efficient solutions win, rather than those sponsored by the most influential people."
But here in the Rush Limbaugh era, we place as much value on making fun of something as on making an actual point. Oh well, too bad for us.
Re:It's You (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's You (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead, I'll propose that perhaps what happens is that people who interact meaningfully with humans come to equilibrium with the rest of society much more quickly. So if there's some process by which people are being made to believe that certain infractions of their rights are okay, or even desireable, people who interact strongly with society will be more susceptible to picking up the same reasoning than people who
Re:It's You (Score:4, Insightful)
The point isn't that this is some magical special power that hackers and hackers alone have. It's that the ability to perceive threats to specific things depends on how much you care about said things, and that hackers as a fringe group are more likely to have something they consider their right taken away
than a group that is not on the fringe.
Lunch Money! Now! (Score:5, Funny)
You are so dead in third period dodge ball, nerd!
Re:"Hackers can sense... (Score:5, Insightful)
To be fair, however... we're also much more aware of whether Han shot first...
But apparently we can't sense... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:But apparently we can't sense... (Score:2)
6th sense (Score:3, Insightful)
I sense an approaching bad essay [paulgraham.com].
Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov't (Score:5, Insightful)
One problem is that young people seem to think that the wealth and the power is on THEIR side. They seem not to see that the the upper 10% of America owns most of the wealth.
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:5, Interesting)
Which is not to say that we shouldn't try to make it better, because we should. Just that it's going to be many many orders of magnitude harder to get anything useful accomplished.
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:3, Interesting)
Great! So now you've defined what to hack and its unique problems. Sort of like getting your PC and its strange sound card to work with Linux AND have it dual boot so other members of your family can use it too.
Nothing you have pointed out makes it impossible to hack. Is it hard to hack? Sure, but no
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:5, Interesting)
Limited government and free markets undermine that entire system.
(And seriously... if you're going to say that we should use tools to get back at the wealthy, why stop at government? Why not expand into physical coercion with guns, like government seems to?)
You almost made some sense, there! (Score:3, Insightful)
you wrote:
You completely neglected to mention the FACT that the wealthy use government to deter competition and maintain their control.
I COMPLETELY AGREE! At least that is the case here in America. And that tactic has a LOOOONNNGGG history!
Now go over to Sweden, Finland, Norway, or Denmark (or study them over the Net), and tell me if you think that also applies to the same degee with those countries...
Limited government and free markets
Re:You almost made some sense, there! (Score:3, Informative)
EVERY SINGLE Scandanavian "socialist" nation, is, once again this year, in the top ten as regards such minor factors as:
per capita income
GDP
"standard of living"
life expectancy
You know, minor things like that. The U.S., if you're curious, is number 2 on the list. The "godless commie" state of Finland is number 1.
Plus the chicks there are totally hot. Not that you would or will ever know.
Thankfully, your idiotic way of thinking is f
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with the intellectual elite is just that - they are the intellectual elite. Often times, smart solutions on paper is not the same as applying them in the real world - socialism/communism is a classic example of this.
You can see this at work in real life, when you notice that geeks make bad business men. True, some of what the businesses needs is some amount of bullshitting capability, but that's not always true - it's not enough if you can just code up a smart hack. You need to be able to market it and sell it, if you want to be able to sell it to the _layman_. Hackers miss that vital element - they are almost quite incapable of thinking like the common man.
The common man does not care about the things that hackers care about, his needs are simpler - get the food on the table, buy the new SUV and get a holiday week off to some tropical island.
The problem is that the other side (corporate/government) is extremely anti-liberal, while hackers are most often extremely liberal. Both of these are bad, and a balance needs to be stuck.
We need that - a balance between the two. But entire control of America under hackers may not be a good idea.
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:5, Insightful)
What pray tell, made you decide that you were more complex than the common man? Indeed, what prey tell, made you decide that you weren't just another common man?
That's a ridiculously pompous statement. Meant or not.
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:5, Insightful)
Ex.
If person has signed paperwork then it is legally binding. So if there is a contract with general information and small print or using uncommon vocabulary and the person signs it they are still legally contracted. So the rigidity of that law allows the lawyers to hack the system and scam people and government to do things that are not nessarly right.
Or if there is a law that is vague. Lets say a zoning law about that says your house needs to be in good repair. So if there is a house that could be borderline the lawyer could push the case any way he needs it to be done.
Lawyers generally hack the laws to get things done for their clients most of the time they do it to help out the people in the community but there are a lot of them who use the laws beyond their intent.
Re:Now if hackers could just learn to hack the gov (Score:3, Insightful)
Man, The House ALWAYS wins.....
Re:((((GROAN)))) (Score:4, Informative)
>> look at what is happening in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Belgium, France, etc
> Stagnant economies with high unemployment? Thanks, I'll pass.
You are not very well informed. I'm from Norway, the country with the lowest unemployment rate in Europe, larger growth than the USA (last year or over the last 10 years) and (according to the UN (UNHDR 2004)) the highest standard of living in the world.
Sweden came second in UNHDI, Belgium sixth, US of A: eight.
The United States has the highest human poverty among the 17 high income OECD countries included in this year's human poverty index-2 (HPI). Source: HDR 2004.
I'd pick any of the countries instead of the US, thank you very much.
Oh, link to the facts? undp.org [undp.org].
Not sixth sense, rather... (Score:4, Insightful)
"(Hackers) can sense totalitarianism approaching from a distance, as animals can sense an approaching thunderstorm.""
I think it's less sixth sense and more the fact that some people just pay attention instead of shuffling around in a fog all day looking at their feet while they stroll (or follow other lemmings) right off the proverbial cliff.
Evidence (Score:4, Funny)
"This is a despotic system. I know this."
Civil liberties and GNP (Score:3, Insightful)
They are NOT property rights (Score:3, Interesting)
However, it can also be argues that the amount of protection of the individual's right to personal property (intellectual and physical) is also proportional
You're working on the assumption that intellectual "property" (copyright and patnet monopolies) are a property right. That's like saying slavey was a property right - no it wasn't! It was a form of controll over other people, and so is this.
Just because a bunch of people scream very loudly that something is a right doesn't mean that it is. Just b
Wake me up... (Score:2, Funny)
Paul Graham's next essay (Score:4, Funny)
From the Slashdot random quotes file... (Score:5, Interesting)
We question most of the mantras around here periodically, in case you hadn't noticed.
I think that sums this one up.
I'd put more money on the animals... (Score:3, Interesting)
True... but the fact is the animals (in the headlined quote from story) are much more keen and aware then many "hackers" out there. The problem is that many people posing as hackers are really just cheap and are trying to deprive legitimate and earnest copyright holders of the money due them. Hack all you damn want, just don't break copyright or patent law, that's what I say.
This country has been so innovative because of its encouragement through patents and copyright law. I'm not saying our patent system doesn't need reform... it most certainly does. But I'm tired of people who want to throw the baby out with the bathwater... who actually are just cheap bastards in disguise.
jay
Re:I'd put more money on the animals... (Score:2)
I Command You! (Score:3, Funny)
Mod me down if you like... (Score:3, Insightful)
I've cracked copy protection and digital rights management code a few times in my life. I did it because it was an interesting challenge for a few days (though it's rarely been much of an intellectual challenge, more mindless stepping through routines with a debugger). I don't pontificate about how I'm helping to preserve the freedom of people everywhere.
Re:Mod me down if you like... (Score:4, Insightful)
The EFF and others probably wouldn't appreciate that.
Choice quote? (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps that should be:
In other words, if the less-than-clever members of the population would refrain from stealing, no one would be copy protecting anything. Copy protection costs money, time and must constantly be reworked to have any effect upon the bottom line. The only reason that publishers of stuff bother with it is because they are trying to keep the intellectual rights they have loosed within the bounds they defined for that loosing in the face of a society that, by and large, winks at the thieves that bedevil them.
There's nothing honorable about being a hacker in the "I will invade your stuff for whatever reason" sense of the word. Speaking as a hacker in the "I am curious about everything but I completely respect the limits you put on your property" sense of the word.
Personally, I blame the parents.
Eeewwww (Score:4, Insightful)
Dude... a daughter's dress? In a discussion of IP matters? Nice to see you're one of those illuminated parents who doesn't consider one's feminine children property... or, uh, anything like that.
Re:Eeewwww (Score:3, Funny)
That's just fine. However, stay away from my daughter. I mean it.
Personally, I blame... (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I blame the parents.
Personally, I blame 100+ year copyrights and a system that made silence into private property in 1952.
Re:Personally, I blame... (Score:3, Insightful)
Original copyright law set the bar at a finite time (once 14 years/+14 years more with renewal). The way the constitution was set up, nothing was indexed to a variable time (as in one man's life may be much longer than another's - that's variable). People such as Thomas Jefferson specifically avoided using life or life+ variable time
Re:Choice quote? (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, come on. I'm a parent. An old parent. My kids are out of college, have degrees and do cool stuff with themselves, are having families of their own and so on (and they don't steal, either.) I know more about computers than most kids have dreamed of - yet. I designed the flipping things for years. Give me a break with the "poor, dumb, clueless parents" routine.
Parents missing current information can learn. Computers, intellectual property i
Dumb ass metaphor (Score:2, Informative)
People can sense approaching thunderstorms too, all you have to do is look around. Watch the leaves on trees. Smell the air. If that fails, look for dark clouds in the sky.
LK
Choice quote? (Score:5, Insightful)
that's more apt than you realize. After all, how many times have I gone jogging down the forest trail and seen every small furry critter flee in a blind panic because I happened to pass near by.
In other words - for every time a rabbit correctly "senses danger" they over-react to 99 completely benign events.
Re:Choice quote? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you think about it, a rabbit is quite an apt analogy... They may overreact to a lot of things, but that prevents them from getting dinged from some of the real threats.
Re:Choice quote? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, if you there was some race of creatures that were ten times bigger than humans that would occasionally eat one of our kind then wouldn't you flee in a blind panic if they happened by?
Article is completely correct... (Score:5, Funny)
There is more on Earth than US (Score:4, Insightful)
US the last frontier? (Score:4, Insightful)
In all fairness, the US is like the last frontier.
As a US citizen, I can't stand how intrusive our government is with civil liberties and with taxes, and especially frivolous tickets and things like zoneing and sue-happyness .... but I've studied the stats of countries all over the world, and the simple truth is that there is a very very tiny number of countries that even have marginal improvement. I wish there was a "really" better, but there isn't and that's just the way it is.
I own property in a desert area just north of the border, and hundreds of people have died arround that area in the last 10 years just trying to get in - you can't say that about very many places. oh yeah, the border patrol - another dislike, I really don't have faith in their ability to protect us from terrorists, and I resent being "protected" from fruit pickers and others who just want to make an honest living.
Anyhow, I don't think it's too US centered - it's just that the information age and all it's problems happened here first. I can only hope someday that there will be a better frontier of freedom. Perhaps vast cities on the ocean, perhaps in space. But right now it seems here physically and cyberspace for everything else.
IMHO, For now the biggest issue is copyrights. They are effectively dead even if noone wants to admit it - God help us. You can just tell the shit is about to hit the fan and when it does all hell will break loose.
Re:There is more on Earth than US (Score:4, Informative)
>Really ?
Yes. I provided an example by showing that a disproportional number number of nobel prize winners reside in the US. As another example, take the listing of the top universities in the world [sjtu.edu.cn]. In the top 10, only Oxford exists outside of the US. In the top 25, only 6 are outside of the US. In top 100, the US holds over 50% of the slots. One of the main reasons for this is the ability for the US to draw in the best talent in science and engineering from around the world.
>You mean like stem cell research ?
>Ummm
Stem cell research is very active in the US. A simple google search would show you the research centers at NIH [nih.gov] and University of Wisconsin-Madison [wisc.edu]. Even California is floating a $3billion dollar bond to support stem cell research. However, yes, the current ban on the harvesting of embroyonic stem cells is not doing much good to foster research in this area in the US.
>I've always thought it wise to actually do the thinking part *BEFORE* the speaking part.
You obviously think one way and act another.
Graham's Essays (Score:5, Interesting)
Now that I've read a few in the space of a few weeks, I think I'm able to pin down what bothers me. Graham is really good at a certain rhetorical style: he talks at length about a topic that really isn't the topic at hand, until you start to wonder if you're really reading the essay that you thought you were reading, and suddenly the focus shifts to the target. "Maori customs are really a metaphor/synedoche for the perl philosophy!" or whatever. The change is so dizzying (because it is unexpected but not completly random) and such changes come so fast that the reader doesn't stop to evaluate the correctness of Graham's assertions or the depth of what he's saying. It's like a cheesy magic show...the magician distracts you by waving the wand around, so that you don't see that he's actually pulling the rabbit out of his sleeve, rather than out of the hat. To his credit, I think Graham does this trick really well, and it's hard to do.
The thing is, I can appreciate cheesy-magic-show writing, but at some point, I would like to take away an actual idea from what I'm reading. And what are Graham's ideas? Lisp is really l33t! Hackers are really l33t! Graham's ideas are really that simple; they're not refinements or unexpected corrollaries of ideas that were first trotted out ten or twenty years ago. After a few essays, it becomes apparent that all of these ideas really reduce to I, Paul Graham, am really l33t because I like this l33t stuff! I don't fault Graham in the slightest for thinking this, or even about writing it, but since I'm not Paul Graham, it's not a very interesting idea to me.
Re:Graham's Essays (Score:3, Interesting)
Somewhen I think Graham said something like he and Stallman and so forth were great men because they weren't afraid to say they were great. I think Graham's gone a bit too far down that path; I still respect RMS.
Re:Graham's Essays (Score:3, Interesting)
Really? It seems to me that I go into great detail. For example, in the third paragraph of this latest essay I explain the connection between the two senses of "hack." That's a substantial point, and new too, as far as I know. At least, it was news to me when I realized it.
Other quite specific points: that hackers get in trouble because authorities don't understand one of their biggest motives (curiosity); that young h
Missed it by that much... (Score:5, Insightful)
This would, of course, inflame those who have invested ego in the idea that programming is "a science" instead of an art.
They, in turn make bad scientists too, because good science is an art too.
Basically, anybody who understands how much their daily work depends on the exchange of information will be drawn into odd persuits and will "sense totalitarianisim like animals sense an oncomming thunderstorm." (or whatever the quote was.)
To lionize "hackers" over, say "sound techs" or "teachers" is huberous.
The problem is that the world is full of machinests and sheep. Machinests want the world to conform to plans, and sheep want someone else to handle it. Between those two large groups, it is hard to get an artistic thought in edgewise.
So South America or Aferica will "be the next America" and it is almost too late to do anything about that. Europe has learned to turn-on-a-dime and will hopefully maintian a stolid bullwork in the current first-world economic structure. America will be the new Africa (but with some good natural resources to totally exploit into garbage) whith increasingly "Bushist", "we cannot possibly be wrong" tendencies to ossification that will ride us deeply into hunta-styled default and decay.
Then who knows?
As a side note, wihout space, as in outer space, as a frontier, expansionisim cannot be sustained; and all we humans are expansionest. We have until the count of "no cheap fuel" to get off this planet, elsewise we will have to eat our own offspring and call it meet. So all this short term lionizing means little, and the real issues remain. Will the machinists hold us to the ground and kill us all, or will we escape?
Screw the hackers, lets get the artists and the scientists moving again. If some of that art is computer programming, all the better.
But I ramble... 8-)
May I *never* be required... (Score:3, Insightful)
Choice of operators is as much an art as choice of words.
Bad artists make bad art. The "programming is not an art" people make bad code because they don't understand the nuance of their craft. [Some *are* artists despite themselves, but that is the profound exception.]
If you beleive that given the same plan, the same requriements, and the same docmuentation; twelve programmers of similar skill will each produce the same program, you are sadly mistaken.
Even the choice of the "n
Paul is amazingly correct (Score:3, Interesting)
Unforch, in about the first 75 or so posts, I didn't see a reply that even indicated the poster had actually read the article!
Color me an old fool maybe, but Paul has hit the nail of the problem square on the head, and his essay should be required reading for every congress-critter on the face of the planet, the american ones in particular. They are not just stiffling innovation, the innovation that made america what it was in the first 2/3rds of the past century, they are choking it to death and will not be satisfied until even the reflexive heaving of the chest, long after the heart has stopped, has itself stopped. Only when it is well and truely inspected by the attending physician and declared dead will the likes of Jack Valanti be happy.
I don't know how to make it any clearer to our senators and representatives, the damage they have done in the last 25 years, than to make Pauls essay required reading, and to have them say in public that they have read it and agree with Paul, and will work to revert these onerous laws, and do it before they get our votes on Nov 2nd. If they don't, then don't re-elect the incumbent, its that simple. We need a thorough house (senate too) cleaning that breaks the chain of $$$ command between hollywood, congress and yes, even the Supremes. If we don't do it now, by the next time election day rolls around, the disneys and the diebolds will have total control of the country, to rape and pillage as they please instead of undercover like they are doing now. Most of the Bill of Rights will either be ignored, or legislated out of existence. I give you the so-called Patriot Act as the worst example, but don't worry, they'll think up even worse ones given another 2, 4 or 6 years.
When that day comes, and if I'm still around, you'll recognize the likes of me, we'll be the ancient ones saying "I told you so". We remember when america stood for freedom, freedom to go out and make a million if you had a better idea, not spend the rest of your life and all your income in court trying to prove prior art against some copycat. We'll also have plenty of ammo loaded for when it gets noisy, and if it gets noisy before the message is heard, it will be a lot noisier than the Boston Tea Party was. We were relatively few then, but not anymore.
No Cheers this time, Gene
Re:Hackers are animals? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hackers are animals? (Score:5, Funny)
So this is why hackers shun social contact? They would disappear in a bright flash of light if exposed to sheep?
Re:Hackers are animals? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hackers, tell us when it will get here (Score:3, Interesting)
The threat to governments always lives in the gray, not the black or the white. Any destabilization of government takes the form of choices in the gray area, choices which
Re:Hackers, tell us when it will get here (Score:3, Insightful)
You are right: DVD copy protection is not really all that important in the big scheme of things. Worst case scenario, "all of your music and movies are belong to us". Not good, but it's not a catastrophe. The issue is that there are much more dangerous IP issues out there. What about patented vegetables? Monsanto is doing just that with genetically engineered crops. If the GE crop pollinizes yours, suddenly you're breaking the law. Worst case scenario: All sources of wheat/corn being owned/taxed by one or t