Category Archives: News

$8 billion Ipod

The entertainment industries keep on claiming incredible losses due to music and video piracy. Are these losses really that great?? Cinema visits increase yearly, music revenues are going through the roof…

Sure, many people are downloading ‘illegally’. However, the question is, would these people have bought the CD or movie if it wasn’t for the Internet? I think not, but who am I to judge?

In the movie below Rob Reid introduces us to something called Copyright Math. It’s fun to watch and might open your eyes to their propaganda.

However, there is still a good reason to buy music or visit concerts; support your favorite artists!

SOPA and PIPA

I know I’m late with this, but this video deserves sharing. Especially because SOPA and PIPA won’t be the last attempts of the entertainment industry to limit us.

The message is clear, we should all continue creating and sharing. I’m not saying we should boycott the entertainment industry as they produce marvelous things, but we should show them and encourage them to participate in the co-creation possibilities that exist on the Internet. Many people want to create entertainment, many people can create entertainment, many people can improve the entertainment industries.

 

Internet based elections

A few years ago many people in Holland were mobilized to do something against the voting computers. They were not safe it was said. Two of the commonest arguments to disallow voting computers were the following:

  • There was no guaranteed privacy of your vote
  • They could be modified to favour a specific party without anybody noticing (if done correctly)

Voting privacy

In Holland (and probably all democratic countries around the world), it is your right to keep your vote a secret. If you do not want to tell who you voted for you don’t have to. Nice, you would think, now I don’t need to be ashamed that I voted for party X. Some people think that hiding your vote is a way to keep face with your peers. However, this is not true. The right to keep your vote secret is not a tool to hide your political preference from your neighbor. It is a tool to prevent a totalitarian government. By keeping your vote secret from the government, the government can’t do anything about you. (Offcourse, once you have a totalitarian regime this would not stop them from arresting you, but thats another story). By ensuring that your vote can’t be traced back to you the government only has voting totals and not a list of who voted for whom.

The right to keep your vote a secret is a constitutional right and should be handled with the utmost care. We should not allow the government or anybody else to weaken this right, not by law or by peer pressure.

 

Fraude

With voting computers it became fairly simple to modify the elections outcome to suit your case. As a totalitarian party you might be inclined to change the outcome of the votings in such a way that you might gain seats in the government. If done on a clever way people might never notice untill it’s too late. In the ‘old’ days when voting was done using a pencil and paper, fraude on a large scale was much more complicated. Where modifying a few thousand voting computers requires only a few key people to be included in the complot, modifying an old fashined election becomes much more difficult as you have to bribe all the counters. This would increase the risk of your fraude getting known.

 

As I said earlier, Holland managed to disallow the current voting computers because they did not guarantee our constitutional rights. Now, during and after our first offlicial old fashioned election since the voting computer politicians, journalists and civilians alike are clamouring for internet voting. Did they already forget why the voting computers were disallowed? Voting via internet comes with the same problems as voting computers only a multitude more serious. Hacking the elections would require only one skilled person now, but thats not all. Voting via internet requires the electorate to sign in on the election website. The website needs a way to verify whether you are allowed to vote. However, if you’ve logged in it is only a simple matter to match the vote with the voter, nullifying our right of privacy.

 

Elections via the internet should not be allowed, not now or ever! Sure, anybody can see the benefits of internet elections. You don’t even have to leave the house, you can vote from your work etc. This would probably increase the number of voters, which is all a positive thing. However, people that are lazy enough not to vote when they have to walk a maximum of a few hundred meters should not vote at all. They do not have the interests of the country at heart, only their own.

Privacy and its worth

What is privacy worth nowadays? The last few months many ‘important’ people have been quoted saying that the age of privacy is over. All accept the new reign of total control of your governments and more importantly the enterprises. All hail Big Brother!

 

 

Googles CEO Schmidt has been quoted saying “If you have something that you don’t want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.”. Apparently Schmidt applies the companies credo with verve “Don’t be Evil”. Which obviously he isn’t because everybody is allowed to know everything about him. Or is it? As google blacklisted CNet for publishing private information about Schmidt such as his salary. Apparently Schmidt already forgot about this incident as he strives to minimize privacy.

 

Another recent example is Facebook. First changing their privacy policy “To comply with our customers wishes”. Then as protests emerge they block the suicide machine. (The suicide machine is a tool for committing virtual suicide, thereby removing all data from profile pages like on facebook and substituting it with standard information). Facebook has been quoted on the matter stating that the suicide machine is against the user agreement.

 

Nearly ten years have passed since the attacks on the twin towers. However, security ‘improvements’ are still being made at the expense of privacy. Airports now use full body scanners to detect bombs or otherwise unwanted luggage. These machines were rapidly introduced on several major airports after a failed attempt to blow up an airplane. However, the manufacturer of these machines was quoted saying that its machines would probably not have detected the explosives that the bomber was carrying.

 

So what good is privacy now? Is it all just an illusion? Is it justified to sacrifice privacy for security? Benjamin Franklin once said: “He who sacrifices freedom for security deserves neither.”. In fact what we are doing is sacrificing our liberty, our privacy to our governments so that they can control us even better. We lose our privacy and our liberty. Total safety and security is an utopia whereas the complete lack of privacy and therefore also security is a distopia. The disturbing thing about this is that an utopia is unattainable, however distopias are easily found. We are coursing rapidly toward the distopia George Orwell described. But hey, we’re lucky that it’s 2010 now, so he was off by at least 26 years.

 

However, as Facebook was saying, it is what people want. Look around on the internet, people are dying to get attention. If they can get attention by sacrificing privacy they’ll do it. It’s all about your Facebook buddies isn’t it? This blog is also a way to draw attention, it’s also a little part of selling my privacy. But what can I do?

 

One day we might all look back to the last millenium and wonder where that freedom and happiness went.