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[DMCA-Activists] Re: [DMCA_Discuss] Seth Finkelstein Greplaw Interview (
From: |
Andy Green |
Subject: |
[DMCA-Activists] Re: [DMCA_Discuss] Seth Finkelstein Greplaw Interview (DMCA, censorware, etc.) |
Date: |
Fri, 19 Dec 2003 18:08:53 -0000 |
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On Thursday 18 December 2003 15:08, Seth Finkelstein wrote:
> Seth Finkelstein on Censorware, Copyright, DMCA, and Blogs
> http://grep.law.harvard.edu/article.pl?sid=03/12/16/0526234&mode=nocomment
>
> posted by mpawlo on Tuesday December 16, @04:28AM
> from the interesting-people dept.
>
> "Seth Finkelstein is Mr Anti-Censorware. The MIT graduate and EFF
> Pioneer has devoted his talents into unpaid anti-censorware research.
Really good interview.
> Especially here, as I've seen a great deal of very odd double-think,
> which simultaneously holds that censorship can't work for governments,
> yet such control is cheap and easy and readily available for parents.
To be fair, as a father of two daughters, one 13, censorship and context
creation is a duty. Children are on a journey from being dependents to being
adults, as they go through the shades of grey it is the job of the parents to
be the tour guide and sometimes the dictator. At the end of the road the
blinkers are fully off and they control their own knowledge, that's clear.
But through the journey from a babe in arms to an adult the full raw feed can
only do harm, since, for example in the case of advertisments, the siren
voice is coming from those whose only desire is to control. Censorship is
one thing, control of the context is another.
> It's borderline. As any sort of influence platform, it's pretty much
> a failure. While some people might be
I appreciate your posts in DMCA_discuss, many people read it and its hard to
summarize the impact as a failure. We ARE the stakeholders.
> There was nothing unique to the meltdown of the Censorware Project.
> Many activist groups have seen someone try to pull a coup d'etat. There's
> an unwillingness to think about the problem, but when there's something
> of value, someone may try to steal it.
I can testify to the wisdom of this statement.
> Don't ever think "They can't get away with it". They can. Once someone
> has made the decision that for their own gain, they are willing to
> betray the trust that their friends have placed in them, then they will
> not scruple to lie to advance that goal. Remember, they've already
> decided to be a thief, so what do they have to lose? From a logical point
> of view, it's to their advantage to generate as much smoke as possible,
> since they can only gain from it. People will say they don't want to
> get involved, or the truth is in the middle, or everyone associated
> isn't perfect, etc. etc. Which all means the thief wins.
Oh yeah, this is the WORD!
> Operationally, copyright is a restriction on speech in order to facilitate
> a business model.
That's the hat trick! Great interview.
- -Andy
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