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Author Topic: Joe Biden declares war on internet; encryption & file sharing under threat.  (Read 429 times)
CalebJamesDeLisle
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« on: January 15, 2009, 12:20:46 PM »

Biden wants to:
Ban encryption (without govt. backdoors)
Tax and filter the internet
Make FBI into free investigation/legal services for RIAA, while criminal banks slip the last of the wealth out of the US, the FBI will be investigating songs and clip art!
Ban hacking of one's own computer to workaround copy protection schemes.

These intentions taken together add up to an organized effort to end the freedom of knowledge afforded by the internet.


http://gizmodo.com/5041044/vp-candidate-biden-is-no-friend-to-file-sharing-net-neutrality-protection-or-online-privacy


"


CNet's Declan McCullagh wrote up an informative history of Joe Biden's tech-related voting record—if Biden's name rings a bell, it's because he's the guy Barack Obama picked to be his vice president last Friday night. Maybe you don't care about the doings in Washington, but you may want to know that Biden considers a lot of what you do care about criminal activity. Here's what I'm talking about:

• He asked Congress to spend $1 billion to monitor peer-to-peer activity. (In fairness, much of this is to prevent child pornography, but the tactic is apparently a little blunt.)

• Two Biden bills have been explicitly anti-encryption, because you know, encryption makes it hard for the FBI to read people's e-mails.

• He has expressed support for internet taxes and internet filtering in schools and libraries.

• The RIAA seems to be one of his best buddies: Biden sponsored a bill that would restrict recording of songs from satellite and net radio, and another one that would make it a felony to "trick" a computer into playing back unauthorized songs or running bootlegged videogames. That latter one died when Verizon, Microsoft, Apple, eBay and Yahoo all argued against it.

• Biden was one of just four senators invited to attend a celebration of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act hosted by the MPAA's Jack Valenti and the RIAA's Hillary Rosen, two of American file-sharer's most wanted.

• When he was asked in 2006 about proposing net-neutrality laws, he said there was no need, since any bit-filtering violations would provoke such a huge public ruckus they'd have to hold congressional hearings anyway—and they'd be standing-room only. (Wonder if Biden reads Gizmodo.) [CNet]


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TheHouseMan
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« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2009, 12:32:41 PM »

Ban encryption!! Yeah... right... this is one of these extreme things you may read and think WTF, but the chances of any of this happening is Z-E-R-O. People are too savvy with technology. You just cannot ban someone from encrypting a file. It's impossible.
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« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2009, 12:37:45 PM »

I don't trust these guys with one eyelid kept tighter, you know what I mean?
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« Reply #3 on: January 15, 2009, 01:13:55 PM »

How does one ban encryption from those who understand encryption? Will he next suggest that a ban on coding be implemented as well?

Good luck, Biden, you are going to need it.
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CalebJamesDeLisle
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« Reply #4 on: January 15, 2009, 05:37:22 PM »

FBI launched largest hiring blitz in its 100-year history (wow, I "wonder" why)
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php/topic,78434.html

Get ready for your new job FBI agents!


I don't see why it would be so hard for them to ban any encryption which doesn't have the govt backdoor. All it takes is a big enough event (they were talking about a cyber knine el even a while back.) The only way to code around it is to disguise encrypted data as plaintext.

No (real) encryption will open the floodgates to industrial espionage. Biden is also building for the terrorists what they can't build without government help, now they need only put a mole in the NSA and they can get an early alert if someone's on to them.
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« Reply #5 on: January 16, 2009, 01:35:34 AM »

cabe, the FBI would be lucky to field an effective net presence like the Monty Python Spanish Inquisition. Impeccable timing and good acting.

This is what I imagine a network forensics team on the FBI payroll to be like.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3s8sEYzHWQ
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« Reply #6 on: January 16, 2009, 05:03:26 AM »

Democrats sneak Net neutrality rules into 'stimulus' bill

The House Democrats' $825 billion legislation released on Thursday was supposedly intended to "stimulate" the economy. Backers claimed that speedy approval was vital because the nation is in "a crisis not seen since the Great Depression" and "the economy is shutting down."

That's the rhetoric. But in reality, Democrats are using the 258-page legislation to sneak Net neutrality rules in through the back door.

The so-called stimulus package hands out billions of dollars in grants for broadband and wireless development, primarily in what are called "unserved" and "underserved" areas. The U.S. Department of Commerce is charged with writing checks-with-many-zeros-on-them to eligible recipients, including telecommunications companies, local and state governments, and even construction companies and other businesses that might be interested.

The catch is that the federal largesse comes with Net neutrality strings attached. The Commerce Department must ensure that the recipients "adhere to" the Federal Communications Commission's 2005 broadband policy statement (PDF)--which the FCC said at the time was advisory and "not enforceable," and has become the subject of a lawsuit before a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C.

One interpretation of the "adhere to" requirement is that a company like AT&T, Verizon, or Comcast that takes "stimulus" dollars to deploy broadband in, say, Nebraska must abide by these rules nationwide. (It's rather like the state of Nebraska demanding that a broadband provider filter out porn nationwide in exchange for a lucrative government contract.)

In addition, recipients must operate broadband and high-speed wireless networks on an "open access basis." The FCC, soon to be under Democratic control, is charged with deciding what that means. Congress didn't see fit to include a definition.

The Bush administration has taken a dim view of Internet regulations in the form of Net neutrality rules, warning last year that they could "inefficiently skew investment, delay innovation, and diminish consumer welfare, and there is reason to believe that the kinds of broad marketplace restrictions proposed in the name of 'neutrality' would do just that, with respect to the Internet." A report from the Federal Trade Commission reached the same conclusion in 2007.

In addition, a recent study from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce says that the absence of Net neutrality laws or similar federally mandated regulations has spurred telecommunications companies to invest heavily in infrastructure, and changing the rules "would have a devastating effect on the U.S. economy, investment, and innovation."

Now, perhaps extensive Net neutrality regulations are wise. But enough people seem to have honest, deep-seated reservations about them to justify a sincere discussion of costs and benefits--rather than having the requirements stealthily injected into what supposed to be an emergency save-the-economy bill scheduled for a floor vote within a week or so.

Net neutrality requirements can, of course, always be imposed retroactively on broadband "stimulus" recipients. As recently as one day ago, a Democratic Senate aide was saying the topic would be addressed in the Judiciary Committee in the near future; there seems little reason to rush to lard up this particular legislation.

But it always seems to happen. Last fall's TARP bailout bill included IRS snooping. A port security bill included Internet gambling restrictions; the Real ID Act was glued onto a military spending and tsunami relief bill; a library filtering law was attached to a destined-to-be-enacted bill funding Congress itself.

It's enough to make you want to force our elected representatives to actually read the bills they pass.

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10144035-38.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20
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CalebJamesDeLisle
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« Reply #7 on: January 16, 2009, 01:58:48 PM »

Good info:

The FCC says about open access:
"
Although AOL/TW persist in arguing otherwise, cable broadband "open access" involves
much more than a choice among ISPs. What AOL and Time Warner have offered in their MoU does
not come close to true open access. Open access requires mandatory privately enforceable non-
discrimination in access for users and content providers. AOL/TW's voluntary commitment in the
MoU "to provide consumers with real choices among multiple ISPs," AOL/TW Reply at 10, falls far
short of this.
"
here: http://www.fcc.gov/transaction/aol-tw/exparte/cu_rplyopp052200.pdf

Network Neutrality in and of itself is no threat to anyone, in fact it is the standard. The worry is that the FCC will begin regulating the internet (a place which operates alright in total anarchy) while claiming to protect us from the ISPs but then will pervert the standards to block out free speech. As it is, a service provider can make trouble, but they can be brought down by a boycott.

I must commend the government in the way they are going about enforcing net neutrality by offering money instead of threatening to hurt people. This way, they are not breaking the first amendment.

They should limit the FCC to writing a standard which the government paid routers must follow but not allow the FCC to dictate acceptable high level protocols (tcp,udp...), encryption or content.

In other news: Google is talking about selling fiber to the home. You buy the fiber leading to the nearest datacenter and it improves the value of your house and you can rent cheap super fast internet from any of a multitude of companies. I think the latest tech allows 10Tbps over a fiber.
http://www.cbc.ca/consumer/story/2008/12/01/tech-fibre.html

Cogent says they sell 100Mbps lines competitively priced with a T1, if you want internet at the datacenter.
http://www.cogentco.com/us/pns_dedicated.php

If everybody owns part of the internet, it's hard for the govt to boss anybody around :-D
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Historically, it is when the elites begin to go after the creative people and forward thinkers that their empire fails due to lack of ingenuity.
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