Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Libya

So the United Nations agreed to impose a no-fly zone over Libya in order to prevent Ghadafi from using air strikes against the rebels.

Now everyone is talking about whether the United Nations should arm the rebels. The rebels will need a full spectrum of ground combat weapons and training. It will take time to arm them, train them, and wait for their victory. And while we wait, we have to pay for their expenses and for what it costs us to maintain the no-fly zone.

Why not just send in a professional military to defeat Ghadafi and hand the country over to the rebels? We can achieve victory faster and spare the lives of many Libyan citizens in the process.

There's also no need to maintain a United Nations "peace keeping" force there later - just issue a warning to all countries that if they attack Libya during its reconstruction phase the United Nations will defend Libya and counter-attack the attacker's country - not just to get them out of Libya but to disable the attacker's own military for a significant enough amount of time that the attacker would be vulnerable to attack by their own neighbors.  Such a warning is a good deterrent - and if it's tested a decisive follow-through will ensure that the next such warning will be an even better deterrent.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Copyright Infringement for Network Software

Game maker Blizzard sued bot maker MDY Industries for copyright infringement because MDY sells subscriptions to bots that allow Blizzard's customers to play the first few levels of the game automatically. This capability was in demand by gamers who like to skip to the really exciting gameplay, I guess, without spending a lot of time on the first levels that they feel are uninteresting after playing them too many times or if they are too lazy to master the first levels and want to cheat. Using bots is against Blizzard's published terms of use of its game software.

I think that copyright law should be about making copies, not about rules for using legitimately purchased copies.  I agree with Blizzard that if they set terms of use for the network servers and their customers are violating them using the client software that Blizzard can terminate access to those customers. I disagree that copyright law has anything to do with it.

Should it be illegal to create software for the explicit purpose of helping a person violate one or more specific agreements? Maybe. This can cause an undue burden on the violated party to enforce their agreement. Customers who don't want to abide by the agreement should just cancel it entirely and stop doing business with the other party instead of circumventing it.

Should it be illegal to create software that can be used by a person to violate any agreement? This one seems too broad and presupposes a fixed set of agreements into which people may enter. This is not the case. Tools are routinely used for something other than their intended purpose and this should not create any liability for the manufacturer or the software company. Even if a tool has been clearly created for a specific purpose, the software industry standard is to disclaim any liability for its use. So when people use it for some purpose, it's those people who should be sued for violating the agreement, not the makers of the tools they used.

Should it be illegal to create software for the explicit purpose of helping a person violate one or more laws? Maybe. A hardware analogue would be: should it be illegal to create hardware for the explicit purpose of helping a person violate one or more laws? My first thought was cars and guns but these are not good examples; cars guns aren't made specifically for the purpose of breaking laws - laws are made to regulate the use of cars and guns. Lockpick kits? These are made for picking locks but is there a law against that? I don't know. What if a person needs to pick a lock to get into his own property because he accidentally locked the key inside and prefers not to drill out the entire lock? Dubious but possible. This actually happened to me and I chose to drill out the lock.  But then should a drill be illegal to use since it allows people to break and enter into property?  Clearly this line of thinking doesn't result in a sensible rule.

Blizzard should have sued for violating their terms of service, not their copyright.

However, a judge, after seeing numerous cases of people being convicted for using a specific set of tools to commit a specific crime or tort, and not seeing any other lawful use for those tools at all, even after making a determined effort to uncover lawful and non-damaging uses, may order the manufacturer of the tools to pay a fine for creating something that has been used exclusively to hurt others. That fine should not be in the amount of damage caused because that is the liability of the individuals who used the tool. That fine should be for the amount of profits made by selling that tool from its first sale until the day the fine is ordered. The fine should be applied towards the justice system operating funds.  The company is free to continue creating tools, and should not be ordered not to make this tool or that. But after having to give up the profits -- not gross income, just profits -- from making that tool, it may be prompted to re-evaluate if it wants to continue making it, or if it wants to restrict who can buy it from them in order to ensure that it isn't used to damage other people. Such actions will not free it from future liability for items sold after the fine is ordered, but they may prevent damage from being caused by their tool which would allow them to continue making it without being fined.


Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Modern-day slavery?

From a story on CNN: "But how widespread is what many experts call modern-day slavery?"

It's still slavery. Why is any expert prepending the words "modern-day" to a concept that isn't any different now than it was a hundred or a thousand years ago?

If they just mean slavery today, they should call it early 21st century slavery. That way the label will still work in 50 years when the definition of modern day changes. 

US Embassy websites

US Embassy website domain names generally look like countryname.usembassy.gov. That's good.

But some embassies have a second website. For example, we have mexico.usembassy.gov and we also have www.usembassy-mexico.gov.  Why??

Then we have US Mission websites. We have "missions" to the UN, EU, etc. These are generally assigned domain names like www.us.usmission.gov.  First, there's really no point in putting "us" in front of the mission name. It's already a US mission because it's under a US government TLD - .gov.  There should absolutely not be any other country's missions or embassy websites under our TLD. So they should just be un.usmission.gov and eu.usmission.gov, or spelled out like unitednations.usmission.gov and europeanunion.usmission.gov. 

Monday, March 7, 2011

Excessive Government Power

Government is just a collection of individuals. They have roles. They have ambitions. Governments can have many forms but ours is a form that is currently seeking more and more power. Surveillance. Mandatory insurance. Definition of marriage. Mandatory back-doors for security systems and built-in taps for communications systems. Some of it is in the name of saving every sick individual. Some of it is in the name of protecting us from every crime and every enemy. For making the government the un-defeat-able, all-powerful guardian of citizens.

But government is just a collection of individuals. With so much power, it inevitably draws very ambitious individuals to itself. And what if some of these individuals become the enemy of the people, using government power for their personal gain? Who will defeat them?

Do you think it never happens? How do you think dictatorships all over the world past and present come to be? They don't arise by themselves, they are products of ambitious individuals and the governments that preceded them.

We have to change our ethos.

We know that sometimes people behave badly, and regarding crime the government must be the minimum necessary to keep our bad side in check. That's all it should be.

Government should protect every citizens right to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness, just as our founders wrote in the constitution.

In this role it must simply punish anyone who violates the rights of others. It is not the government's role to prevent crime, although fear of the punishments and some practical measures such as guards may do a lot to deter it.

To get into the business of preventing, rather than punishing, requires a lot more resources. It requires a way to find out what people are doing before they do it. It requires invasion of privacy and it will drive back the threshold of punishable action to merely talk so that trials may be conducted before a person has committed a real crime - a person will be guilty merely of thinking or talking about a crime. That is how crimes will be prevented if we allow it. And we must not allow it. It's not worth the risk to us all. All talk about establishing or guaranteeing security is a smokescreen designed to exploit our human frailties, our fear of violence and death, in order to blind us to what is being done in the name of our safety. It's wicked.


We have to decide that invasion of privacy is a crime, and that the government isn't allowed to invade our privacy in the name of preventing one thing or curing another.



We have to decide that we are willing to risk some safety in order to guarantee freedom. 


We have to decide that our right to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness means the right to make decisions and to succeed or fail on our own merits. To be more responsible about our decisions and not to throw our arms up in the air and demand that the government protect us from this or that.

The government should only control what individuals cannot - punishing crimes, regulating the use of the environment in order to preserve it, encouraging research in useful new directions, and the building of infrastructure.

That means no government bail-outs of big companies that failed because they made bad decisions, because that is a wasteful use of everyone's hard-earned tax money. That means no mandatory health insurance, because people should have a choice of how to spend their money. That means no definition of marriage, because that's between individuals and their society.

To be accountable to its role, the individuals who form the government must be fallible. And in order to be fallible they must not possess extreme powers over the people.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Burkas in France

Last year France passed a law that bans the public wearing of full head & body coverings. The law provided for 6 months of announcements of the new law before it takes effect (next month).

Approximately 80% of French citizens support the law.

Amnesty International claims it violates the right to freedom of religion of Muslims in France.

Compared with places like Saudi Arabia, which doesn't even allow Jews to enter the country (actually they backtracked on this after some pressure from the USA but they still don't allow anyone with an Israeli stamp on their passport), and has no tolerance AT ALL for any public appearance or practice that is not Muslim, France is still very, very free.

The burka is just a style of dress, and there are dress codes in every place in the world. I think French citizens have a right to say that in THEIR country they don't want to see people wearing burkas. Maybe it's painful for them because of everything that burkas are associated with. Maybe it's a first step in forcing Arab immigrants to assimilate to French culture instead of living in their own enclaves isolated from society.

And forcing assimilation is not a bad thing - if the immigrants want to live just as they did at home, well, then they should go back home. There's a REASON they immigrated to France. Whatever that reason is (and let's assume it's not to execute a peaceful takeover by simply outpacing the French birthrate) it will be best leveraged by assimilating to the French culture.

And since French people don't wear burkas, the immigrants shouldn't be either - yet they do, and they're isolated, and they're teaching their kids to behave in ways that are contrary to French law, and it's caused a lot of friction with the rest of French society - hence the new law against burkas.

Arabs have countries where they can force all people to behave like Arabs and refuse to allow certain kinds of people to even visit... so they shouldn't complain that the French want people in France to behave like the French.

Amnesty International should respect that.

The biggest lie of modern history is that religion can be completely separate from state and politics.  Religion teaches politics!  Every religion teaches how to behave towards other people. Every religion is based on some ideas of what is best.  And all the religions that I've studied define what is a crime and prescribe some reactions to people who commit crimes. And what do states do? States define crimes and prescribe some reactions to people who commit crimes. Many modern states have values that stem from the dominant religion of the people within the state. Some states acknowledge their values stem from religion, and other states pretend that their "secular" values stand apart from any religion.  Notice that in states that claim to allow freedom of religion, they still prosecute people whose religious practices happen to be a crime in the state. For example: animal sacrifices, honor killings, polygamy, sodomy, child molestation. How is that freedom of religion? It's not - it's tolerance of religion as long as its practice stays within the bounds of the state law.

In France, by the way, young Muslim men have caused quite a lot of trouble. It seems that their religion, as practiced by them, is not very compatible with French law. I remember stories I read a few years ago about young Muslim men in France raping girls who they thought didn't dress conservatively enough. Now, other men in France have raped too, and France has a law against this, and rapists who are caught get punishment. But it's interesting to note that only the young Muslim men actually cited their religion and conservative cultural practices as reasons to rape a girl.  This is what I mean when I say their religion is incompatible with French law.

And that's why it's a good thing that France is passing laws to force Arab immigrants to assimilate. By mixing into society more they are more likely to learn French values and trim their religious practices to the subset that is compatible with French law.

When in France, do as the French do.

I think it's strange that Amnesty International, a group devoted to the defense of freedom of religion and opinion, should choose to defend people adhering to a religion that, when fully adopted by a state, is the source of the most oppressive regimes in world history.