Summary: A very recent talk from Professor Eben Moglen
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Comments
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2010-05-07 22:24:50
@phel I raised exactly this point earlier today and last year. I still use USENET very heavily.
Very few services are peer-based these days. Those which remained are being labeled "piracy".
phel
2010-05-06 23:25:23
Listening to this one thing that comes to mind is usenet. It is slowly dying because it is being suppressed by the IPR and content industries with the telcos and ISPs doing the dirty work. Usenet as a communication channel has some unique features which no web-forum can offer like de-centralised storage and limitations on censorship which require community-wide consensus to block anything. There are issues with spam, but which service dont have that. It could also do with some cleaning up, like possibly ditch the binaries. Yet, I'd really like to se "freedom activists" (speech/software/etc) stand up for the usenet and promote it. Every decent service provider should as a minimum provide a decent text-only feed for their users, and the service should be marketed as one of the fundamental internet services like it once was. Many of the users who joined the net in the last 10 years have never even heard about it, and that's a disgrace.
So-called "hey hi" as they define it now is all about large companies or regimes remotely controlling the processes running on your machine and even your very own behaviour on your machine, which is in effect no longer your machine but some remotely controlled apparatus
It's very troubling and a symptom of a broken society/system when particular laws or rules are applied and enforced against some people but not against others
Comments
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2010-05-07 22:24:50
Very few services are peer-based these days. Those which remained are being labeled "piracy".
phel
2010-05-06 23:25:23