Full Disclosure mailing list archives

Re: RE: [ISN] DARPA pulls OpenBSD funding


From: yossarian <yossarian () planet nl>
Date: Sun, 20 Apr 2003 13:46:32 +0200

Is "them" including corporate interests if they conflict with personal
freedom? Probably, since the companies = the shareholders = people.....
Are you including DMCA / Patriot Act / etc.?

What have they got to do with this ?  Nothing so far as I can see.

A lot. Under patriot act, bookstores can be asked to inform authorities who
buys what books. This can and does include books we in the security industry
consider must have reads. It might include a new book on hardening IIS,
considered 'unfair' and 'not wise' by MS - whatever the reasons. Under this
legislation, knowledge can be considered a WMD, and the population must be
datamined. If you break in to the connection your fritz chip opens to see
what info it sends on your computer use - i.e. want to know how far your
privacy is invaded - you break DMCA. If your behavioural patterns match a
predefined risky lifestyle ... enter demonisation.

Is this including being
prepared for being put in the slammer since someone in uniform dislikes
what
you put on your T-shirt? Funny how judicial people get to work around
the
principle of freedom of speech. How many here went to law school? Speech
is
not necessarily verbal.

BTW, whose wellbeing is suffering by Theo's statement? If you are that
sensitive, forget the Internet and travel abroad.

My comments were not specific to this particular instance of implied
impairment of free speech but rather to point out that with it comes
the responsibility of speaking in a fair and wise manner and that if
you are careless with your words then expecting the notion of "free"
speech to protect you is somewhat naive.

Who is to decide what is fair and wise? Limiting free speech by these
non-defined values to be decided on by undefined external parties is imho
very dangerous, so a statement believing  you have free speech, so can say
and think anything you like, as long as it is fair and wise, is naive at
best. What i think is fair, my be considered unfair by others, which it
probably is. The "Responsibility to be Fair and Wise' thingie may sound
ligit, but are the ultimate weapons for self-censorship, which is much more
effective and never illegal, than government led censorship. Relate self
censorship to the forum you are on, plz.

As an author on security issues, you will not disclose on vulns in certain
systems, since it is not wise, since it is a threat to national security,
but you will on other systems. Why? cause they are not used by the
government. Wait a minute, you cannot just 'not disclose' on systems used by
the government, but also that of its 'willing' allies, so don't disclose on
these either. Lemme give you another thought - disclosing on security flaws
in any US software is allowing economic warfare against the US - let us only
disclose on say, russian, french and german software. Oh, well, and on
Syrian, North Korean and Iranian software. There isn't any worthwile
software from these countries? And if there is, it is probably used by the
US, one of it's allies or a corporation in one of these countries.
Corporations? Yes, damage to say, MS, is major damage to the american
economy, so it is damage against its national interests = security. Well
then, let us be responsible people, let us not disclose at all, close this
list, get a haircut and a real job.

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