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Hacker Crackdown? 299

rombouts noted that Salon has a good piece on the liability of programmers. From Napster, to Freenet, to DeCSS, on down. If you're scared by any of this, you should be. There are a lot of cases out there right now that are gonna change the world, and folks, it could go either way.
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Hacker Crackdown?

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  • Well, the first thing I have to say here is that a significant portion of the population (not all, or even most, but significant) don't agree with the current drug legislation, either. Personally, if it has a sane disclaimer on it, then the decision to take the risk of using the drug should be up to the adult. Now, if a drug dealer sells you pot laced with something else, and claims that it's pure mary jane, that's product liability. In the same vein, I feel that the tabaco companies may have a liability for their additives - but aside from that, if people choose to smoke, that's their decision.

    Getting back to the software question...

    Let's examine napster. Written by a college student who wants to trade mp3s with some friends. Alright, this is illegal. But no more illegal than trading dubbed copies at this point - it's still among friends.

    Time goes on, and napster grows in popularity. At some arbitrary point, it's no longer trading among friends, it's trading among the general populace. Napster itself is a company at this point, selling a service (not a product - the software was necessary to use the service, but it was the service that offered the illegal mp3s).

    The point in all this? The software was used both legally and illegally in the above example... the differance was in scale and method, which the author has no control over (at the point of authoring).

    It was the decisions of Napster as a company that made it illegal - not the software itself. The software itself is just a collection of 1s and 0s, a set of instructions.
  • Yes! Most analogies attempting to compare software to something in the real world fail at some point. This one seems to be rather exact.

    I guess the main difference is that we have a long tradition of making our own documents , but we don't have that much tradition of making our own audio recordings (despite the fact that the technology has been around for a while.) So "Digitized Audio Clip" is presumed to be "Copyrighted material." After all, music isn't something that just anyone can make, it requires the funding of a big record label to produce.

  • by Upsilon ( 21920 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @05:37AM (#874348)
    I think you hit the nail right on the head there, but I think I'll generalize your point to reflect a certain belief I've had for a long time (watch out for the abuse of html tags):

    Creating laws which cannot be universally enforced leads to arbitrary enforcement

    OK, I'm kind of stating the obvious there, so I'll explain further. If we as a society create laws which have no hope of being enforced consistently because of the number of people already breaking these laws, then we are opening the doors to abuse by the government and police. We end up with a society in which everyone is guilty of something, but the only ones being punished are those who are disliked for some reason. The reason can be just about anything. You give the example of racism, which is a very good one, but is also unfortunately only the beginning. We could end up with a society in which a reporter uncovers some dirt about somebody in power, and ends up going to jail because of it. Sure, the reporter in question could never be directly prosecuted for uncovering dirt (hopefully, although the way our society is going...), but those in power might tell the police to go and arrest the reporter for a crime that everyone commits. This creates an atmosphere in which people are afraid of criticising their leaders. Unfortunately, we are already headed down that path. How many of you can honestly say that you never do anything illegal, and that if the police were watching you 24 hours a day they could find nothing to arrest you for?

    Unfortunately, more and more laws are being made that can never (and should never) be effectively enforced. It's not part of a grand conspiracy, but the end result is the same. The reason is simply that the people are always screaming for the goverment to do something, but they never seem to care whether or not what the government did had any effect. They just want laws to "protect the children" and whatnot. But this doesn't simply result in a bunch of worthless laws that we can all laugh at and go home. It ends up creating an environment that is practically asking for government abuse. And abuse they do. And it's only getting worse...


  • I find bribing politicians distasteful, plus I tend not to be able to afford it after paying the mortgage.

    I do vote, I do write to my MP (UK Member of Parliament) and I do not post anonymously to Slashdot.

    I personally am glad that I am in a profession where a scarcity of quality people gives me a lot of individual bargaining power with my employers - the threat of me leaving to get a job elsewhere tends to be sufficient pressure to ensure good conditions, salary, etc - even though I seldom actually raise it as a possibility.

    I do act ethically within my job, I do tell management honestly what I think of them, and I do take into consideration my colleagues (both techy and others).

    My response to the article as posted is that to protect myself in future, any source code/software I release as myself (rather than through an employer) I am going to release through a limited liability company - they're cheap and easy to set up here, and can go out of business without cost to me personally should someone get unreasonably litigious.

    ~Cederic
  • Beer, if it were introduced as new today, would not make it to market.

    Why not? Aspartame did. If that poison is legal, you should be able to sell a kick in the nuts as a safe product.

    --
  • I agree with most, however you can't just create a program and let it run rampant, and not expect any repercussions.

    "The authors can't otherwise control what's done with it."

    If you create something destructive and get it out to a bunch of people, you are the creator and should face the music. You can't hide behind the actions of other people when you had the primary role. That's like Big Tobacco blaming people for smoking. The companies themselves never lit a cigarette for a consumer.
    ______
  • It's already happening (almost).

    I'm fortunate to live in one of those progressive cities that is suing the gun makers because criminals use guns and when people get injured during crimes, public money is used to pay hospital bills.

    Actually, the city can't balance it's budgets so it's looking for an easy (read tort) source of funds.

  • Alan Turing was gay and if he lived in the usa now then he'd no doubt claim you were picking on him and launch a counter-suit...
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Thinking back on it, I can see where the products of many RIAA recording artists have changed my life.

    DREAM
    In '97 I killed my wife after listening to "Enter Sandman". In '99 I killed my dog after first hearing Britney Spears.
    /DREAM

    In many ways my life would have be better had I never listened to these artists, therefore I am suing each and every one of them as well as the RIAA for giving them a voice.

    Anybody know if Johnny Cochran is available?

    Sorry, couldn't resist. ;p
  • Don't underestimate the litigious nature of our culture. Beer, if it were introduced as new today, would not make it to market.

    Its often said Aspirin would not make it to market today.

  • by dsplat ( 73054 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @05:47AM (#874356)
    Which of the following can't be used to distribute pirated copyrighted data?

    • ftp
    • Apache
    • nntp an your favorite newsreader
    • E-mail clients and transport agents


    An important question to ask is whether more piracy has been committed using Napster or Microsoft Outlook Express. Measure it in incidents or megabytes. How much copyrighted material has been e-mailed, posted to Usenet and posted on Web sites using Microsoft Outlook Express and read using it as well.

    I want to be very clear about this. I am not criticizing Outlook Express. I also don't believe for a minute that Microsoft every intended it to be a piracy tool. Nor do I believe that Microsoft should be liable in any way for the fact that it can be used that way.

    Any tool that allows us to publish any data can allow us to publish someone else's copyrighted data in violation of that copyright. Failing to hold the person who committed the violation liable and attacking the programmer who wrote the software instead is at best simply choosing a target of opportunity, who may have partial culpability. At worst, it is scapegoating and a search for deep pockets.
  • It was told to me many years ago by a Swede. ;-)

    I can imagine! :-) You bet, Norwegian and Swedes have tons of jokes about each other, the content is the same of course, it is just a matter of who's telling it... :-)

  • Following this reasoning, victims' relatives could then sue gun manufactures for every person ever killed using one of their products.
    Why stop there? how about knife manufacturers?
    let's sue them as well.
    And forks, oh yeah they can very dangerous in the wrong hands.
    And baseball bates.
    And chainsaws, and hammers, and scissors and staplers, what the hell, let's sue everyone in this f***ed-up country.
  • So long as a programmer did not build something that can only be used for illegal purposes, I don't see how this can go anywhere.

    If so, should we hold baseball bat manufactures, lead pipe manufactures, or gun manufactures responsible anytime their devices are used to commit a crime?
  • Heh... I'm American of above average intelligence, and I still have to look that word up when I'm writing. Thanc gof dor spel chec! =)
  • As for the soldier, well he really is just a link in the chain, since that's the way the military works. He just follows orders, he doesn't need to worry about them. He can't decide which are the "real" orders and to which ones he should say "That's immoral/unethical, I'm not going to do that".

    No. That is exactly the attitude which makes crimes against humanity possible: "I was just following orders". It doesn't stand up. Each individual is responsible for his or her own actions. You know, this has been the main point of every trail on war-crimes since WWII, and indeed, you bet top nazis where convicted, while they were "just following orders". Why is this wrong? Because if you are willing to follow a lunatic on top, then you are contributing, because if you hadn't followed orders, it had never gone that far. You are all individuals! (No, don't give me that "I'm not!" :-) ).

    As for the nuclear bomb, it was the scientists who should have stopped it, because only they could possibly be able to see the consequences of what they were up. Policymakers does not have the proper education to understand that, only the scientists.

    As for technology in general, yes we do have a responsibility. As above, you can't just say you are a part of the chain, you will have to take responsibility for what you do. BTW, see Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility [cpsr.org].

    If designers of Napster designed it with the purpose of taking away somebody's rights, then, they must take responsibility for it. Ulrich felt that his right to decide how his music was to be distributed, and he has a point there. If Napster creators can convince people that there are more important concerns, then they must do it. It is still their responsibility, they can't run away from it.

    In the case of DeCSS, I think the creators are assuming the responsibility for what they have done, and it is no small responsibility, it could prompt massive social change, and it is my firm belief, that it is social change for something good. It is not the DeCSS that should be illegal, but CSS. CSS was designed with the intention of taking away fundamental rights, notably the right for fair use. The creators are hiding behind copyright laws, not assuming the responsibility for something so bad they should have said "no, this stuff is not good, I won't make it". The same goes for a lot of things /. flame about, like spyware.

    In conclusion, you must assume responsibility for what you do. Now, it is not ethically minded hackers that I'm most concerned about, it's all the coders who will do anything if you pay them big bucks.

  • by FreeUser ( 11483 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @05:55AM (#874364)
    In fact, an even better example of how companies can be litigated against for what they do would be the cigarette company litigations that have won billion dollor settlements.

    Well, the tabacco companies deliberately and knowingly increased nicotine content to maximize the addictiveness of their product, and added a known carcinogenic substance to improve flavor despite protests by their own scientists that doing so would kill even more people.

    The reason the jury awarded such high damages was the willful and deliberate manipulation of the product to make it even more dangerous and harmful to consumers than it already was. It was not because people think tobacco should be illegal.

    Put another way: it would not be a bad thing to put the tobacco companies who did these things out of business. Someone else could start a tobacco company with more ethical marketing and production policies (read: selling the natural substance, not doping it with more nicotine and additional carcinogens, and not marketing to children and young teens). Tobacco should not be illegal, but doping it with substances known to cause even more harm, and manipulating its addictive properties to make quitting physiologically more difficult should be -- and just like bars who abuse their liquor licenses, tobacco companies which abuse their priveleges should be shut down and put out of business.

    What the tobacco companies did was heinous and unacceptable by just about any standard, and unless we want such irresponsible behavior to continue unabated it is important that they pay the full price for what they have done.
  • by Wah ( 30840 )
    it's not all laws that need to be re-written, (IMHO), but those that deal with copyright and IP (keeping on-topic). Because there now exists the possibility for citizen run and supported media networks, the law should allow for it also. I think it's very simple (at a high level), only the person who holds a copyright can profit from digital artifacts. This produces a situation with high motivation to disseminate works, but only allows creators to make money off them. Interpretation would define the nuances over time, but I think this is a good foundation.

    Enforcing distribution rights will lead to civil rights decay like we've seen during the onerous War on Drugs (except the ones with good lobbyists).
    --
  • by J.J. ( 27067 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @06:01AM (#874368)
    I'm disappointed in the Salon article. They typically do a decent job of getting things in perepective - but, as you've probably guessed from my expression of disappointment, I think they missed the boat this time.

    I think this issue makes more sense when you divide it into two:
    1. The growing trend of companies being held accountable for the use of their products.
    2. The accountability of software authors

    The salon article uses the industry that gave us guns, bombs, car and pantyhose as examples of product's creators being separated from the usage of their products. Their argument was valid five years ago, but today it's shot to hell:
    • Cars: There's an entire industry based on car manufacturers determining whether a defect in one of their cars is worth the cost of a recall. Remember Fight Club [imdb.com]? Edward Norton character's lawsuit price v. recall cost equation?
    • Guns: In the past two years, lawsuits have sprung up in a number of major cities in America aganist the gun manufacturers themselves. They were insisting that the manufacturers didn't include the best safety controls, or that they provided a prolific number of guns down south, where gun laws are less strict, knowing full well that they'd trickle back north to the large cities. Read this [cnn.com] and this [cnn.com]. They're appaling!
    • Tobacco: Do I even need to make an argument here? Big tobacco has been held accountable (to the tune of hundred of billions) for the actions of their customers, who knowingly smoked the cigarettes, even while being warned continously from a number of angles.

    When you take a step back from our little microcosm and look at the rest of the world, you can see the growing trend of companies being held accountable for the usage of their products - either intended, in the case of tobacco, or unintended, as with the gun industry. The system is primed and ready to take poor Shawn Fanning and his little Napster upon the gallows for a good ol' public execution. Hanging might have gone the way of the Dodo, but the effect is going to be the same.

    The second issue is accountability of software authors, specifically. Hey folks - if you've just been skimming, pay attention now and let me tell you something: Holding software authors accountable for their software is a good thing! (It's also inevitable, but you'll see that) I know I'll get flamed for saying that, but give me a second.

    This discussion comes up on Slashdot about once a month. Folks gripe about companies paying the kid down the street to make them a web site, because the kid will do it for far cheaper than a real professional, and have similar results. But once the kid delivers, the company still doesn't have the product it was looking for. So then, they come to the professional.

    There needs to be a way to differentiate between you, the professional software engineer, and the kid next door. Sure, you can get MCSE, CNA and a whole slew of other acronyms after your name, but that's not working. Every other engineering discipline has a certification exam that allows you to personally ceritfy yourself as a Professional. Once you're a Professional Engineer, you're held responsible for your work. Civil Engineers are held liable for their bridges, Mechanical Engineers for their machines, and it's a Good Thing. It forces the engineers to hold to their design process and keep the level of quality high.

    Every software engineering text that I've read supports this trend towards accountability. The process of creating large software products is slowly becoming more and more of a formalized process. Formal procedures are good, because software design is inherently a very difficult process to make step-by-step. Changing requirements, ignorant customers, bad technology, they all work aganist you. This formal specification of the software design process creates accountability, in the form of Software Requirement Specifications (SRS). A contract, between the company and the customer, outlining the expectations of the new piece of software. The beginning is there.

    Companies are going to be held liable for their products. That's inevitable, given the larger trend in our system. But is it fair to hold a kid, be it the DeCSS kid or the Napster kid liable for making public the result of their late-night tinkering? I don't agree, but then, I've got the perspective of the tech-savvy.

    Napster probably will be shut down. Shawn Fanning probably will held accountable. We're liable to see a veritable witch-hunt begin over the course of the next couple years as a result. But, in the end, the legal system as well as the software authoring world will be a more mature place. Will a formal system of accountability get set in place? (shrug) The ball is rolling. Which direction it takes down the hill, and what bumps it'll hit are unknowns. But it is rolling.
  • It's a sign of the times. We're a nation- no a world of victims. We are not responsible for anything, and we spend our energies looking for an easy out: how can I profit from somebody else's work?

    This whole idea of coder responsibility for others' use of software is merely the latest power grab by these whiners. I'm so glad I don't live in Atlanta any more, where gun makers are under threat of suit for people shooting each other. I just have to shake my head. What's wrong with sending the shooters to jail? Oh, yeah. It's their wretched childhood that made them do it.

    Here in Florida, smokers are getting paid to smoke. No. Really. Long-time smokers, people that have been smoking since the European explorers came here and found the natives burning leaves and inhaling the combustion products, are suing the companies that provided them with the instruments of their chosen leisure activity because "we didn't know it'd make us sick!" Baloney. It's common knowledge that smoking will make you sick, and even kill you. But cigarettes and tobacco products are legal. There are warning messages in all advertising. On even the packaging of the products! In newspaper articles and medical research reports. These people have no excuse, other than themselves, for their continued smoking. Yet we find ourselves in the midst of an amost trillion dollar settlement.

    About ten years ago, people clammored for air bags in cars. The automakers were reluctant; air bags were a relatively unknown quantity, even though conceptually they held much promise. The Government, out to save us all from ourselves, stepped in. A law was passed mandating air bags in vehicles. Soon after, accidents starting happening where children were hurt or killed by these "life-saving" air bags. Now people are clammoring for "slow-deploying" or switchable air bags. Tell me, if air bags become switchable, how long is it going to take before the first law suit is filed claiming that so-and-so was killed because their air bag was turned off? How negligent of the auto maker to allow car owners the option of turning off safety equipment!

    Even before air bags was the seat belt. Cars didn't come with them standard originally. But about 40 years ago books were written and lawsuits came about that end the end meant that every car on the road had seat belts. Cars cost a little more, but hey, now they were safe. Except nobody would use them (well, I like seat belts-- keep me from sliding around :) So fifteen or so years ago, the Government stepped in, and a law was passed requiring seat belt use. Whew! Now we are safe in our cars.

    Unless you drive a small car. Ten you are in danger from those of us that choose to drive our urban tanks (personally, I drive a 1995 Firebird). Your chinzy little car may get dramatically better gas milage, may be easier to drive and park, and even cost less. But get in a scrap with your neighbor's Suburban, and you're toast. Tell me, what do you think: Should he not be allowed to have his Geo-Eater, or should you be required to buy a Urban-Sherman?

    In each of these cases the Government has stepped in, and in each case we've been told that we're too dumb to live our own lives making our own decisions. It used to be that a boy became a "man" early in his teenage years. Later it was put off 'till his eighteenth birthday. Afterwards, 21, because "men" could drink. Today, I think that about age 83 is right for becoming a "man." Before age 83, we're too dumb and inexperienced to handle our own lives.

    We, as a group, want to be coddled. We've come to live in Neverland, and it's populated with nothing but an army of Peter Pans. We never grow up, we never take responsibility.

    It's stupid and I resent it.

    Jeff

  • and bands like Metallica are liable for kids going on killing sprees after listening to their music.
    They keep trying, see the following articles:

    http://www.freedomforum. org/news/2000/04/2000-04-07-01.asp [freedomforum.org]

    http://www.freedomforum. org/news/2000/07/2000-07-31-08.htm [freedomforum.org]

    http://www.freedomforum. org/news/2000/08/2000-08-03-03.htm [freedomforum.org]

    I'm not sure if the First Amendment still works or not, but it's getting closer and closer to the day when its just a hollow promise with no effectiveness in law.

  • On TV you can see all sorts of things that 20 years ago never would have been allowed.

    I don't know where you are from, but from where I sit, that sentence is utter bullshit. TV is even more constipated today than it was in the 1970s, at least here in the United States. Sure, you can see more tits and ass, as well as more asses (i.e. iditots) on television, but you don't see much on TV anymore that is truly controversial. Do you think that in today's climate in the U.S. that any studio would think to make a show like ALL IN THE FAMILY? Fuck no!

    What is happening is that the powerful groups of oligarchs who really control everything are giving you the illusion of more freedom. Their idea of freedom is "consumer choice," but only so long as that choice is Coke or Pepsi. What the Hell do you think Jose Bove is about, or the protests in Seatle? Rampant consumerism is no replacement for real freedom.

    It's time you wake up, open your eyes, and take a good, hard look at what is going on in the western media and in people's day to day lives.

  • by HiQ ( 159108 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @12:35AM (#874378)
    They should go after the guy who invented TCP/IP... No wait, get the guy who first thought of networking... No wait, the guy who first thought of computers, he is definately the guilty one!

    *Sigh*


    How to make a sig
    without having an idea
  • What if rather than writing the file sharing program (which i am actually writing) I merely distribute details of the protocol.

    It could be that I tell my mates down the pub the details of the protocol and it's up to them if they wish to implement it. More likely i'd stick it on a webpage/freenet.

    That way I am merely excersising my right to free speech - just as there is nothing wrong with distributing instructions to make bombs and drugs.

    (Dont confuse this bit with the DeCSS/Copyleft/MPAA case because that was arguably a proprietary piece of code)

    Now similarly I could include a reference implementation with the knowledge of the protocol (standard practise), showing people how to implement it. Using the meatspace example I attach to my book pictures of all the chemistry-like apparatus i need to make amph3tamines (this is hyphotetical mind).

    At which point have I gone too far?

    Anyway if you can pass the buck for the Gnutella problem back to justin at nullsoft then what stops him passing it on to Microsoft/Borland/Watford (depending on who's tools he uses). They can probably pass it onto intel as well because after all gnutella would never have been possible without intel's aid.

    My feeling is actually that most of the blame for the mp3 revolution lies with the CD drive manufacturers. There is (as far as I can tell) no legitimate use for 8x DAE - sure 1x is useful if you need to play cds over a network or on a laptop that doesn't have a pass thru wired from it's cd rom drive - but 8x DAE is designed for ripping, and yet companies like samsung, plextor and creative (to name but a few) deliberately built this feature for their own financial gain.

    As for the software/hardware dispute, anyone here should know that computers are finite state machines and as such any computer application can be created using a hardwired set of transistors or even valves... surely this makes it evident that software is not a service but a product??
  • by DeICQLady ( 150809 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @03:54AM (#874382) Homepage Journal
    Other than the question of the extent of a programmers liability, another point the article brought up that I thought important was "Unless technologists take a leading role in shaping the legal debate, says Jennifer Granick, a San Francisco lawyer who regularly defends people accused of computer crimes, Oppenheimer's legacy of freedom could be lost."

    Not only will that leagacy be lost, we will stand by and watch a group of people, some of which have relatively little knowledge of how our "baby" (the industry) works, molding it and creating it into what they are used to and are familiar with. The scary thing about that is we have never been exposed to such bombardments and tests on defining or having to redefine copyright or amendment rights et al., therefore we run a grave risk of never having legislature evolve to encapsulate our new ways of communicating, sharing ideas and innovationg.

    I think what we should do is treat this whole phase of redefinement (sp?) and growth like Linux: if there is something you don't like and | or you think it can be done better, make an effort to say something that will only benefit us in the long run, and reduce chances of implementing *permanent solutions* (ahem, law) that sucks the innovation and enthusiasm out of our baby. (The engineers, scientist and techs will get left out and the marketing and finance people and lawyers make all the money!)


    Nuff Respec'

    DeICQLady
    7D3 CPE
  • by goingware ( 85213 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @12:40AM (#874383) Homepage
    I say this all the time here, I think it is important. It is very pertinent to programmer liability (although more from a safety or cost of failure perspective) - read the Forum on Risks to the Public in Computers and Related Systems [ncl.ac.uk]. It is also available on the Usenet News as comp.risks [comp.risks].

    If you think programmers can really escape liability for their products (or should), think about what kind of effort and investment companies like the tobacco industry and auto manufacturers of automobiles and childrens toys and food put into defending themselves from lawsuits and government regulation.

    It's only a matter of time before the public rises up and demands accountability for software. Imagine a senator getting elected on the platform of promising to put programmers behind bars for writing software that is unreliable. Or a district attorney setting out to put programmers behind bars, not for hacking or writing viruses, but for writing products that don't meet government standards.

    I haven't read it yet, but the Software Conspiracy [softwareconspiracy.com] looks interesting.

  • by Greg@RageNet ( 39860 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @09:18AM (#874389) Homepage
    A problem

    Unfortuantely american society (among others) is leaning in a direction where the individual is no longer accountable for their actions. Liability for individual's actions are being shifted to product manufacturers. This is mostly thanks to lawyers and greedy americans who think they can get the 'big score' by suing large corporations. Additionally large corporations use lawyers and litigation to intimidate individuals out of behavior that while technically legal is contrary to the way corporations believe things should be done.


    You aren't responsible when you spill coffee on yourself, McDonalds is.

    You aren't responsible when you get a terminal desease for using a product you knew was unsafe for twenty years, Philip Morris is.

    You aren't responsbile when you shoot someone while mugging them, Smith and Wesson is.

    You aren't responsible when you pirate music, Napster is.


    The terrible end result of this strategy is that your individual rights and fredoms are stripped from you by government because you keep proving time and again that you do not want to be responsible to weild these rights. Government turns into a big babysitter.

    Thats the big picture; damn sad where we are going. But to focus on what you can do today to protect yourself:

    A solution

    Anyone who is considering doing something that may draw the wrath of lawyers should consider incorporating. Incorporation provides protection to those who work for corporation so that these people are not fiscally liable for the actions of the corporation. Thus if you write something somebody does not like and you sign all rights to this code over to your corporation (and licensing this code out with GPL or equiv). Then when the lawsuit comes they can only go after whatever assets your corporation holds, rather than your personal assets.

    Incorporating is fairly simple, and involves either some research on your part or paying a lawyer to get things moving. I'd say you probably won't be set back more than $1000, and probably around $150/yr to maintain it (could be more depending on which state you incorporate in and how much research and accounting you do yourself).

    It's cheap insurance if you anticipate legal threats. One caveat is to ensure you act within your corporation's framework; if you do things that blurs the line between you 'the corporation' and you 'the individual' you could become personally liable again.

    -- Greg

    IANAL, so go seek one's advice if you'd like to learn more about incorporating and liability.
  • Interesting. That's the way publishing and copyright used to work in the bad, old days before the Western Nations underwent democratic revolutions. You used to have to get permission from the King or some government agency empowered by the local despot to be able to publish your books. If the ruler didn't like you or what you had to say, tough luck, you have to move to Holland, where the press was pretty much free, and where most of the truly interesting books of the time were printed.
  • Contrast the Napster thing to the lawsuit against cigarrette corporations, and then let's compare it to the gun industry and the pantyhose industry (wait, this makes sense).

    1. Cigarrettes have absolutely no beneficial or good use whatsoever. Every time a cigarrette is smoked, it does harm to someone -- there is no way to use a cigarrette without helping to slowly kill someone, maybe a few people w/ secondhand smoke, mostly yourself. You can't even use an unsmoked pack for a doorstop, it's too light.

    2. Guns can be used to murder innocent people, but hey, you can hunt for deer or protect your home from intruders. Okay, so maybe it's stretching it a bit.

    3. Napster can be used for evil (stealing music), but it can also be used for good purposes (gives up and coming bands a way to distribute their demos). Although I have to say that much of the music I've downloaded I know for a fact is "stolen", and the rest may very well be for all I know. Yeah, I know the music industry is corrupt, etc., but two wrongs don't make a right. Okay, so this could go either way.

    4. The pantyhose industry makes products that are mostly used for good purposes (so women can wear them and feel like they look better), but every once in a while a bank robber puts a stocking over his/her face so the security cameras won't recognize him/her. C'mon, give 'em a break, they just wanted to make women beautiful, they didn't know this would happen!

    Now, which of these industries do we shut down: 1, 2, 3, or 4?

    Answer: we shut down 3, because it's NOT a huge industry, it's just one guy! Easy, we can take him out like THAT! Plus, he's pitting himself against, you guessed it, another BIG industry!

    Even if we assume that the maker of a tool can ever be held responsible for evil that is done with the tool, it's still obvious here that the real reason they are shutting down Napster has nothing to do with that.
  • >A soldier has a duty to disobey an illegal order.

    Y'know, I've met so many people that were in the
    US Army, and I've decided that it's so big, it has more than one culture.

    There are soldiers who were trained and believe as you do, that they learn to question stupid orders.

    Then there are soldiers who would do no such thing, that any order would be followed. It would have to be a very immoral thing to rise to the level of being questioned.

    The US Army is so large that it's not one organization, I suppose.
  • by Detritus ( 11846 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @04:03AM (#874400) Homepage
    As for the soldier, well he really is just a link in the chain, since that's the way the military works. He just follows orders, he doesn't need to worry about them. He can't decide which are the "real" orders and to which ones he should say "That's immoral/unethical, I'm not going to do that". And yes, this IS straight out of "A Few Good Men".

    A soldier has a duty to disobey an illegal order. That is the policy of the U.S. Army and it is International Law. That is what I was taught when I was a soldier. You can be court-martialed and convicted for carrying out an illegal order.

  • The programmers who create file-swapping software are doing so with full knowledge of how it will be used, to share copyrighted material. They are producing a tool that will be used by the public for (mostly) illicit purposes, although of course they could use it to share public domain material.

    The entertainment examples you're talking about are an entirely different issue - some make the argument that actions and attitudes portrayed in the media influence the actions and attitudes of the viewing public (makes sense in the macro case, but hard to pinpoint in the micro).

  • by Sanity ( 1431 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @04:13AM (#874407) Homepage Journal
    If this type of thing is permitted to continue then we risk creating a society where, instead of rewarding creativity, it is demonised. And why? So that those who lack the wit to adapt don't have to.

    Ian Clarke.

    --

  • Long-time smokers, people that have been smoking since the European explorers came here...

    That is definitive proof that smoking isn't bad, mmmkay. Smoking for *that* long, and still alive?


    How to make a sig
    without having an idea
  • by KahunaBurger ( 123991 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @06:22AM (#874413)
    My previous example was indeed a bad one, so I will make a better one. A user creates a web-page of file aliases. He then posts random_file_00416.mp3, adds 5-10s of buffer whitespace to throw off file size checkers, and lists on the webpage that random_file_00416 is indeed a metallica mp3. Once again, the actual name means nothing. Give it a little more time, and a Napster client clone might even incorporate such alising and make it transparent.

    Thank you, this is a different issue and somewhat more relevant. The first question seemed to be "What if the filters accidentally block 'legitamate' content?" Which seemed to me to actually be deliberately misleading content, and thus not legitamate. The second question is "what about people getting arround the filter to still post illegitamate content?" The answer is the three simple words that make or break a company in terms of liability :

    GOOD FAITH EFFORT

    Contrary to what some Napster supporters would have you believe, they do not need to prevent anyone from ever using their product or service for piracy. What they must do is make a good faith effort at prevention and reduce the piracy use. Instead, they seemed to do everything they could to encourage illegitimate use of the service as part of their business model. This is why they're in trouble. (Its also why the Salon article was so silly, but thats another part of the thread.)

    A service of that size can't reasonably be required to verify more than the filename or link name within their web page or servers.

    Very true, though they could also de-annonymize it to the extent that when illegitamate use is demonstrated they can kick the violaters off and have it mean something. But those efforts combined would show enough good faith to get them mostly out of the hot water they've dunked themselves in, even if it doesn't eliminate all illegitimate use.

    The liability world is all about good faith efforts. This is why an anti-harrassment program will reduce a company's liability if harrassment does occurs. Its not useful to ask "can they ever stop all illegitimate use of their service?" You have to ask "Are they making a good faith effort to reduce such use?" On this point Napster fails, and if we focus on that failure we can make sure that an artist centered venture suceeds.

    IMHO, it is the Napster advocates who are endangering the use of the net as a promotional tool for unsigned artists. By claiming that Napster cannot prevent illegitimate use, they are handing the RIAA the amuntion it would need to shut down a service meant to promote artists (who want to be promoted). After all "even advocates of on-line music admit that nothing can be done to prevent infringing use of such a service". If we focus instead on good faith efforts, it leaves Napster screwed (which they are anyway) but leaves the door open for legitimate ventures to promote music on the net. Just a thought.

    Kahuna Burger

  • "But the law is a lot more powerful than people realize. It has the ability to severely retard or stop these things entirely."


    The ability to severly retard. That's the best summary of the legal process I've ever seen.

    Steven

  • Seconded. Drawing a parallel from the world of negligence (UK edition), the question of whether the Defendant is in breach of his duty of care (where one has been established) is put in this way: Did he, having regard to all the circumstances, the chance of harm occurring, the extent of harm foreseeable and the cost of preventive measures relative to the foreseeable harm, take all reasonable preventive measures?

    If Napster takes those measures and people are still spoofing them, that is not their fault. It's the difference between posting a sentry who happens to miss an intruder and leaving the door wide open.

  • How is writing software like selling drugs? Holding software authors liable for the criminal activities of others would be like holding hypodermic needle makers liable for people injecting heroin.

    Nah, rather like holding the chemist who discovered a new hallucinogen responsible for it's use.

    You discover such a substance - OK
    You publish a detailed description on it's effects and how to make it. - Morally questionable perhaps, but definitly legal.
    You cook some up and use it to get a trip. - Stupid, possibly illegal depending on how [over]protective your local laws are, but not a major offence.
    You cook some up and start distributing it for free among friends. - No biggie morally, though the law will disagree. However, you are not likely to get caught, even less convicted.
    You start cooking on an industrial scale and sell your product for a profit. - Beep, dead wrong!

    The sequence of bits named "napster" might not be illegal, and definitly impossible to remove. The service "Napster" is possible illegal, and very possible to stop.

    If company after company tries the same thing, RIAA might give up, but as long as they can fight a company or a person at a time, instead of half the internet, they are on their own territotry.

  • Hadn't thought of that, good point.
  • by laborit ( 90558 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @04:22AM (#874428) Homepage
    But there's the problem... they clearly will stop somewhere, even if the law doesn't make it clear why they should.

    An Oklahoma law makes it illegal to possess anything that looks like an illegal drug. Clearly Oklahoma's finest don't spend all their time kicking down kitchen doors and putting people away for having powdered sugar, oregano, or water. But in 1998 they did throw George Singleton in jail for a month, even though he was able to prove that he made his living as an herb merchant and that the plants filling his car were rosemary and mullein, two legal plants that he grew to treat asthma (and which, incidentally, don't look at all like marijuana).

    Anyone want to guess what color Singleton's skin was?

    Making (e.g.) Clarke liable for Freenet would be disastrous. It would put us in a state where most coders and inventors would be legally liable for something, but few would ever be prosecuted. This would give the government vast latitude to punish anyone they disliked, under a legitimate but overly broad blanket -- kind of like prohibition, in which everyone drank but only undesirables got busted.

    - Michael Cohn
  • by {LF}Ceres ( 115933 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @06:50AM (#874429)
    I have no problem with being accountable for the quality of the software that one distributes, and i think when u refer to the software engineering text that "supports this trend towards accountability", i think they are refering to the software makers being accountable for quality, and not making software makers accountable for it's uses. There is a world of difference between the two. To use the examples that you gave:
    Civil Engineers are held liable for their bridges
    ... if they bridge falls down.. yes, but what if someone is driving drunk and drives off the bridge and dies? Is the engineer responsible?
    Mechanical Engineers for their machines
    Someone uses a car to get away after robbing a bank, is the mechanical engineer that designed the car responsible for the robbers getting away?

    Anyway, you get the idea. There are many things to be accountable for, and when using that word it's important to remember that. In the case of an author being accountable for a piece of software it's as ludicrous(sp?) as the examples i gave above.

    Ceres

  • The Association for Computing Machinery recently considered the certification of software engineers and came out against it. (The terms they used might have been slightly different; I don't have the article at hand.) The reason, as I understood it, is that programming as an engineering discipline has not progressed to the point where coders can be confident they've made an airtight and unbreakable program. In other words, while liability is a worthwhile goal, prosecuting programmers is just a way of screwing them for something they can't fully control.

    Other posters (and people quoted near the end of the Salon article) have already distinguished between bad code that is dangerous or just buggy, and trying to blame a programmer for a socially destructive use that somebody makes of his or her program. Both are different from the copyright cases at the center of the article which simply use the threats in court to extend corporate power beyond its current limits.

  • by Hobbex ( 41473 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @04:29AM (#874434)
    Dear Bill Joy,

    As one of the head programmers of Freenet, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for making it possible. If we had not had your programming language, Java, and your editor, vi, I doubt we would ever have been able to get an implementation of Freenet working. You made it happen.

    Since you must have known that people would one day use your programs to write programs that people could use to avoid censorship laws, you would obviously not have written them if that is not what you wanted, and I'm glad you take responsiblity for it. I hope we will have plenty of time to discuss how the people should be controlled so that they don't learn how to do bad things while in our shared jail cell.

    Sincerely, Oskar Sandberg.

    (And since you asked CmdrTaco, no I'm not scared. Are we men or are we mice people?)
  • by VAXman ( 96870 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @09:48AM (#874435)
    Since you didn't read the judge's decision, the method she suggested for preventing piracy was to create a registry of songs whose authors have given permission for them to to be distributed for free on Napster, and every transfer would be checked against this. If it didn't appear on the registry, it would refuse transfer. Note that "this is not a metallica song" would not be registered since it's authors did not register it. If you write, perform, and produce such a song, then you can add it to the registry to be traded.

    This would be trivial for Napster to do, and there are other methods Napster could use to achieve this. The fact that they don't prevent piracy when they have such easy technical means to do so (as opposed to guns, which the companies have no control over after they are purchased) is the reason why every lawyer on the planet thinks that they will be shut down.

  • We've already estblished filename means absolutley nothing. "A rose by any other name..." I can send a number of "This_is_not_a_metallica_song.mp3", which might indeed be picked up by a metallica filter.

    And the problem with this would be? "Oh no, I created a file with a name meant to confuse the filters and it caught it, woe is me....."

    People who want to post non-copyrighted work and have it get through would be fully capable of it. People who choose to disguize non-infringing work as infringing work just to whine aren't contributing anything useful to the service, so why should we care if they get shut out?

    Two simple rules : track titles should accurately describe the content in a way that is computer-searchable. (Everyone knows "not metalica" will show up on a metalica search, misleading track names are chaff in the service and the service provider can ban them.) Second rule, infringing tracks (and any intentional attempts to mimic an infringing track) will lead to the removal of the user.

    "Hey I carried a model of a bomb through customs and they harrassed me even though it wasn't really an explosive! there's nothing illegal about strapping wires and silly putty to your chest! They're infringing on my rights for no reason! WAAHHHHHHH!"

    Your example of "abuse" is about as mature.

    -Kahuna Burger

  • You're right up to a point. However, up until the injunction, Napster was doing precisely jack about the illegal MP3s, and infringing files were being openly traded.

    With a filter in place for the obvious filenames and some reasonable effort in place to keep up with at least the obvious workarounds, Napster will achieve two things:

    1. They'll be making it difficult for the pirates to be obvious about it where they were previously able to trade without let or hindrance; and
    2. Any infringing material that gets through after they install the filter (which need not be other than a very dim piece of software) is then getting traded by reason of the users' attempts to fool Napster, not because Napster doesn't do a thing about it.

    They can then go back before the judge, hand on heart, and say that such copyright infringement as is now happening is beyond their control despite their taking all such measures as are reasonable in the circumstances.

    Remember always that injunctions require you to take certain actions, not achieve results. This is at once their strength and their weakness.

  • by gotan ( 60103 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @07:02AM (#874445) Homepage
    One problem is, that the internet fundamentally changed some things, especially in the case of software. One thing is, that software is easy to use, once it's in your computer you can run it, and nowadays there's a lot of computers. It's not like some description how to make an atomic bomb because creating an atomic bomb is a lengthy expensive process, getting the right materials is only the start.

    The other thing is the internet, spreading files blindingly fast aound the globe, once the thing is out of the bag and there's enough people interested in it, word will get around in a couple of weeks, together with the software. Something like gnutella is an ideal example: the internet can't be rid of it now that it's widely distributed, and it can be used with very little effort.

    So while before big corporations could face down their 'problems' by keeping them local and by introducing new technologies before something was widespread enough to affect their income this is no longer the case. Before it was more like squishing ants: if joe normal choose to copy and sell music the company holding the copyright could beat him up pretty nicely in court and then proceed to hold him up as a bad example (or keep silent about the case if it ended unfavorable).
    But now all those ants are darned fast, hard to localize and hit (try to make a big case of someone trading one musicfile), there's a lot of them and they're all attacking (their revenues) at once.

    Naturally the companies are looking for new targets to strike at, and what better target is there than a single programmer, preferably without enough money to go through all those courts before going broke. Minimum effort for maximum effect: hit one little guy scare a million others (in that case the fast, information spreading internet even works for them).

    But there's still hope: even the big business can't bring down the internet (especially without hurting themselves more than anyone else) and programs like gnutella and DeCSS will still surface and spread (maybe a little later than before) it will just become harder to track the sources down.

    One good start for this is involving more people in the process (maybe working in some forum to cobble together a nice protocol (e.g. for filesharing)), implement it in source projects, and if possible make general purpose tools (filesharing and anonymity have other purposes than just distributing MP3's).
  • From the GPL (modified to remove the uppercase because the Lameness filter did not like it):

    15. Because the library is licensed free of charge, there is no warranty for the library, to the extent permitted by applicable law. except when otherwise stated in writing the copyright holders and/or other parties provide the library "as is" without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. The entire risk as to the quality and performance of the library is with you. Should the library prove defective, you assume the cost of all necessary servicing, repair or correction.

    16. In no event unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing will any copyright holder, or any other party who may modify and/or redistribute the library as permitted above, be liable to you for damages, including any general, special, incidental or consequential damages arising out of the use or inability to use the library (including but not limited to loss of data or data being rendered inaccurate or losses sustained by you or third parties or a failure of the library to operate with any other software), even if such holder or other party has been advised of the possibility of such damages.

  • by umask077 ( 122989 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @04:43AM (#874448)
    First, apologies to non us readers, I refrence the US as ours only because of ease and the fact that most of the readers here are US citizens. Isnt it about time we solve the problem by ousting our current goverment? The constitution garuntees us the right to do it. Are we just to lazy? We are losing this battle against the legal systems and the corperates on every front, napster, decss, sites being shutdown cause they say stuff corperate lawyers dont like. IMHO there are more of us then there are of then. We are yielding to a moral minority. We have tried it there way. But we are the majority. Is it we fear the military reprucusions? Most of them are 17-25 years old and spend there spare time on napster too. I dont even use napster myself but Im sick of seeing the corperate world pushing people around. I think its time to replace our existing goverment with something better. Time to get rid of some the lawyers who block lifes progress. If you just look at the tax system which is far to complex for anyone to figure out it shows it needs replacement. Running a goverment isnt as challenging as they make it out to be. The only reason it is at all challenging is all the lawyers. Its time for change. Lets get rid of the old in favor of the new. I stopped using my 386 and bought a new machine when it became obsolete. Hell, my pentium 90 went obsolete so I upgraded again. Goverment shouldnt be made an exception to the upgrade process. If its obsolete throw it away and get something that does the job. Our goverment is obviosly obsolete.
  • by ScottyB ( 13347 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @04:44AM (#874451)
    Does anyone else here see the least bit of hypocrisy in that the RIAA/MPAA are trying to make producers liable for the actions of users?

    What about the "free expression" rights always demanded by movie and music makers, so-called artists who are making media even more sensational, whether through violence or sex, simply to increase profits? Popular culture (not art, mind you, since that is not a product like popular culture is) has been defended on the grounds of free expression for years, but it is a product and is in many ways responsible for the sensational reactions that viewers (i.e., users) have.

    The way I see it is this:
    (0) If code is seen as protected speech, then we should be in the clear.
    (1) If code is not defined as speech, then coders are in trouble since computer code will be a product and thus the producers, programmers, will be liable.
    (2) If code is speech, then it might not simply be protected speech. In this case, the case needs to be made that code is information, and that if the producers are still to be held liable, then producers of other information sold as products, like musicians (see here [digitalrenegades.org] for my arguments on music as information), should be held similarly liable, or vice versa.

    I personally think code is protected speech; that it can be useful as a tool only occurs if you have a compiler. I would agree that, especially when money is not being made off of it (i.e., somewhat different from Napster's case), code should be considered like an art form, deserving free expression rights.

    The bottom line, though, is that coders need to get vocal, and not just on discussion forums. Write the mainstream press, CNN, the Washington Post, the New York Times, with letters to the editor; write something that outlines your positions in ways others will understand. Heck, I'll post it on DigitalRenegades [digitalrenegades.org]. Just SAY something that others will hear.

    Though it may sometimes not seem that the US is a democracy, it is. And lawmakers always want to keep their jobs by getting your vote.

    SB

    Editor, DigitalRenegades [digitalrenegades.org]
  • Better that, than what happened to him in the U.K.
  • I think they should Blame Canada!

  • quick, start suing crowbar manufacturers! many houses each year are broken into using crowbars.

    //rdj
  • I'm am not a lawyer, but I can tell you from experience that it's not nearly this cut and dry. No warning and no contract is that iron clad these days, even when holding the manufacturer liable is simply ridiculous. Look at silicon breast implants. They simply aren't sold these days. They're not banned per se. The FDA has even declared them safe (yes, some leakage did occur, but it's been shown to be quite safe). What's more, it's been well established in the medical community that they're safe. Yet, no one sells them. The risks have been proven to be too great, witness Dow Cornings loss. What's more, I have discovered first hand that medical device companies can't even get these manufacturers to provide silicon for implantable devices (not breast implants, but just coverings and the like), not even through a distributor. Companies which attempt to purchase it are sent a very strongly worded letter, from the original manufacturer, threatening all kinds of legal action if their product is used.

    Both big and small businesses are scared silly of tort lawsuits. Don't kid yourself.
  • by fraserspeirs ( 113052 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @12:42AM (#874466) Homepage
    All these cases are just knee jerk reactions. Like the Salon article says, nobody has actually decided on a concrete definition of what software is, so were're seeing them take each case on its merits or demerits.

    I find it completely bizzare that technology is now seen as inherently good or evil, not neutral. It seems that it is Napster itself that is bad, not the actions of it's users who download copyrighted MP3.

    How come we have double tape decks? Surely that encourages copying? Maybe it's easier to shut down Napster than it is to criminalize millions of users then try to prosecute each one.
  • Blade Runner in particular shows a very decadent culture of the future (now only 17 years away, and damn if it doesn't look familiar now) where again human life and privacy and freedom are all for sale.

    I'm sorry, I can't help it. That sentence reminds me of the lyrics from a Bernard Lavilliers' song (Faits Divers):


    Comment va la vie? Il y a des endroits
    Elle vaut dix dollars. Combien je te dois?


    A translation into English is something like:


    How's it going for Life. There are places
    it's worth ten dollars. How much do I owe you?


    Scary, no?

  • A computer is one of the most powerful things in the history of humanity. One of the most powerful agents of change. Inherent in the very idea of distributed networks is that it makes what was once profitable unprofitable. Unfortunately, the people who are threatened most by this technology control the world-views of most of the people in this nation.

    Computers are a lot like the printing press in what its capable of, the dissemination of information, but it goes far, far, beyond the printing press in the amount of information that it can transfer. On the one hand the printing press ultimately prevailed, and brought great change to our society, but on the other it isn't the 1400s any more. And the very thing that makes computers dangerous to the establishment makes them dangerous to us. What's to stop the FBI from using Carnivore boxes to spy not on email but all network traffic, scanning for copies of DeCSS in transit, or hunting down traffic generated by 'illegal' network programs like Gnutella or Napster? If things go poorly now, in these courts, nothing.

    My personal opinion is that we are all pretty much screwed, although some of the reports from the congressional hearing do give me hope.

    We don't know how bad things are in north Korea, but here are some pictures of hungry children. -- CNN
  • by Veteran ( 203989 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @07:17AM (#874472)
    Profound observations. I would like to expand on them a little: there are already so many laws that even a lawyer can't know what all of them are. If you can't even know what all the laws are, how can you be legally responsible for obeying them?

    Of course, the Prosecutors of the world would say "Ignorance of the law is no excuse" and I would continue "because if it were we would have to have a reasonable system that anyone could understand, and that might work - so we can't have that, otherwise we couldn't push people around, and we wouldn't like that."

    The world is a screwed up place because there are people who want it that way.

    Remember the bullies you ran into in school? Did you ever wonder what became of them when they grew up? The answer is that they never did grow up, they just figured out how to get away with bullying people; if you'll check, you'll discover that most of them went into law enforcement.

    One thing which Ayn Rand got correct is her description of a "Conspiracy of Cockroaches". The law is an example of one; there is no formal conspiracy, there are just lots of like minded people who are seeking the same ends.

    People can be divided into two broad emotional groups, the emotional 'herbivores' - who just want to be left alone to 'chew the cud of their happiness' and the emotional 'carnivores', who want to 'eat other people's happiness'.

    The law is a great deal like the lions going to the wildebeests and saying to them "We notice you have a problem with wildebeests getting out of line. Why don't you let us handle the animals that get out of line? We'll make sure that everyone stays in line; we'll punish the ones who stray." And the wildebeests GO FOR IT.

    Most people are emotionally 'herbivorous', most lawyers are emotional 'carnivores', we are absolute fools for letting the 'carnivores' set up the legal system.

    The law, 100's of millions of lines of code, not one line of which has ever been tested to see if it works.

  • by macpeep ( 36699 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @12:44AM (#874479)
    I'm probably missing something here so please answer my question:

    If I write a piece of software which sole (or biggest) purpose is to help other people engage in illegal activities then why should I not be as liable for it as a drug dealer is for the drugs he sells?

    Bad quality (bugs) software is one thing and is merely a question of quality tolerance. Writing crime-assisting software is quite another.
  • If they'd sold it, from when they first figured it out, on the basis that "this stuff will kill you: don't say you weren't warned that a little pleasure now will be paid for with a lot of pain later" they'd have been watertight

    No, they would not have been watertight. Name another product that you could introduce from day one with a warning label that says, "Normal use of this product will result in a significantly increased risk of lung cancer." It's sale would not be allowed. And lawsuits would ensue if it were sold.

    Don't underestimate the litigious nature of our culture. Beer, if it were introduced as new today, would not make it to market.

  • Crminalising the "cause" and not the "effect" is something that has been happening for centuries, all over the world. You only need to look at the current drug laws to see this.

    Another example: you pay a premium on your blank media for those double tape tecks (Or CDR's), to cover the "cost" of piracy. The ability to do something is seen as the criminal act, rather than the effect of doing said act. We live in a crazy world my friend.

    Disclamier: That post may have made no sense. Sorry.
  • In fact if you read up on the cultural revolution in the PRC it doesn't take long to start seeing parallels.

    The slight diffence is that now it's about money, not politics.
  • If it comes to pass - as it seems to be wanting to do, every day I look on /. it seems like there is another attempt at abridging my rights as a human, not to mention programmer and geek.

    Could it be that people are jealous of my status as a geek? That I work at a "cushy" job, sitting at a desk with a computer in front of me, in an airconditioned office, typing on slashdot while my code compiles - being paid to THINK?

    Could it be simple greed? We think of the RIAA as "Valenti" - but this is rarely the case in big business - are these corporations actually filled with nice people, whose chaotic actions actually come down to create a malevolent company? Think of the cells in your body, who know nothing of each other, or each other's functions, yet by thier actions, make up "you"...

    Or is there one (or a smal group) of shadowy figures bent on destroying individualism at each of these companies?

    I really don't know - and it hurts my head to think about it too much. It hurts my soul, my being, my sense of humanity - to think of this...

    As a geek, I want things to be fair - I thought as a kid, things would be better in the adult world, as I grew older. For many things it is - but for many more things, the world is hateful of my status - of the ease at which I grasp things. So they turn to law to shut me up, to make me quit throwing things in thier face that say "See! I intuitively know something you CANNOT grasp."

    What they don't realize is that without us, the world goes back to a worse way than it is today. Or maybe it continues on - but still in a worse way.

    I have put out a large amount of code on the Net - I now am facing the idea that I may be sued (or worse) for something a bit of my code does because someone else used it in a product or something. My code isn't Napster, or any other file sharing system, but that doesn't make me any less vunerable.

    I put this code out so that others could learn. I didn't care what others did with it - what they used it for. I only wanted to contribute to helping others, who have no other source to learn from, to have something to look at to learn from. In my day, it was printouts traded, or magazines with code, or even hand scribbled notes (some of which I still have to this day!). No fear of lawsuits (wouldn't have known what one was then, anyhow), no fear of anything in those days - just the love to code, and the chance to teach another, to show them what it was like to really control the machine.

    MegaCorps, listen up!

    To my dying day I will fight for my right to code - know that I will do everything in my power and beyond to stand against you.

    YOU ARE NOT GOING TO TAKE AWAY MY TOOLS!

    YOU ARE NOT GOING TO TAKE AWAY THE ONE THING THAT KEPT ME FROM GOING MAD FROM THE TAUNTS, JEERS AND PHYSICAL PAIN I WENT THROUGH IN SCHOOL AS A GEEK!

    TRY AS YOU MAY, I WILL PERSONALLY SUBVERT ANYTHING YOU THROW UP AGAINST ME.

    YOU WILL HAVE TO KILL ME TO SILENCE ME.


  • by HiQ ( 159108 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @12:49AM (#874499)

    Well, when is a drug a drug??

    You can buy glue in a store, that helps you glue things together; but you can also take a nice deep sniff of it, and float quietly away, mmmKay? Same goes for software; you can program nmap to check for weak spots in your network, but you can use this tool for good and for bad.

    All in all, your question is not so easy to answer; unfortunately, the worlds isn't so black and white, it also comes in different shades of gray


    How to make a sig
    without having an idea
  • You can buy glue in a store, that helps you glue things together; but you can also take a nice deep sniff of it, and float quietly away, mmmKay?


    Great. Next there will be stickers on S/W packages that read: "Use of this software inconsistant with it's labeled instructions prohibited by federal law."
  • by bartok ( 111886 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @12:52AM (#874504)
    Hum, hum I don't mean to be a troll gere but the rest of the planet keeps turning when something bad happens in the US. Americans have this anoying tendency to think that everyone want to be like them. Not that being an American is a bad thing but.. I guess most smart people have gotten my point..
  • DIY-code-freaks are what we call hackers (bidouilleurs in French).
    For example, somebody who codes (preferably against ISO9xxx heavy standards) practical tools for his own needs.
    If these tools could be used in order to gather illegaly copyrighted data, then, according to this article, the hacker could be considered as a pirate, or as a criminal.
    In case this happens to be accepted and hackers happen to be condemned because they created such tools then this would especially mean that whoever coding whatever will need a licence to be allowed to share it publicly so that his liability can easily be proofed whenever some malicious guy discovers some funny manipulation to be done with one of his programs.
    This is really frightening as Free Software can't afford to rely only on "licensed" coders.
    This just reinforce the gap between the way Internet was used 10 years ago and how it works today.
    But I still hope this is only Sci-Fi.
    --
  • Thus, if I do something stupid with it - drink it, inhale the vapour, shove it up my bum, etc. - I have no comeback against the manufacturer

    Your point is well made, but I still disagree.

    If they sell malathion as an insecticide and include directions for appropraite safe use, as well as warnings against unsafe use (such as drinking) then they are watertight against liability. But if they market malathion as mouthwash, no warning label can help. The difference: use of the product as the manufacturer intended will cause harm. The only way tobacco companies could get out of this, is if they claimed cigarettes were only meant for decoration and not for smoking.

    All this said, I think the attacks on tobacco companies are silly. Make it illegal or legal. Americans want it both ways. Legal to poison ouselves, but retaining the right to a big wad of cash when we're sick.

  • by delmoi ( 26744 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @01:00AM (#874527) Homepage
    Hrm... you don't sound like a troll

    If I write a piece of software which sole (or biggest) purpose is to help other people engage in illegal activities then why should I not be as liable for it as a drug dealer is for the drugs he sells?

    How is writing software like selling drugs? Holding software authors liable for the criminal activities of others would be like holding hypodermic needle makers liable for people injecting heroin. Hypodermic needles can be used to inject anything, just like Napster can be used to transfer any audio recording (or other file, with a bit of hacking) and DeCSS can be used to decrypt DVDs for lawful purposes.

    While a tool can be used for illegal purposes, the illegal acts are not the responsibility of the toolmaker, but rather the actor. The kid trading Metallica over napster is the drug-dealer, not the guy who coded it.
  • by ScuzzMonkey ( 208981 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @08:19AM (#874531) Homepage
    And to follow up these two already excellent points, here is another observation: The American system of government inevitably results in a glut of legal code. Why? Because being a legislator is a full-time job. We keep electing all these people and putting them in office for x number of years with a job description that basically says 'Pass laws.' And because they need to be seen, for the next election, as having done their job, they come up with all kinds of ridiculous, complex, and over-focused codes to put on the books. Take a look at what's on the docket for this Congress sometime: http://thomas.loc.gov/home/c106bills.html There are more than 5000 bills listed for the House alone. Go in; pick a few at random. How much of it looks useful to you? Think you could remember all of it to make sure you're not violating any Federal laws next time you leave the house? Multiply that by past congressional sessions and then add in whatever your state and local legislators have been up to (which will be the majority of what concerns you anyway). This will happen every year for the rest of your life. It's not just that there are some people out there who want to make things complicated for their own benefit--the system itself will inadvertently make things complicated, even with the best intentions. This was not as much of a problem when it was designed; if you had to travel for a month just to assemble the legislature, and then get home to supervise the harvest, you tended to get to the important business at hand and leave the fluff aside. But today, legislative sessions last longer then ever, and under the constant eye of the media, legislators put in long hours coming up with complicated ways to impress special interest groups and their constituencies. And it will only get worse.
  • by Hard_Code ( 49548 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @08:25AM (#874545)
    You make some valid points. Yes, creators of products (or services) cannot be entirely seperated from the results of usage of said products or services. But in the examples you cite, the products do EXACTLY what they were meant to do. Cheaply made cars break and kill people, well, because they weren't designed not to. Driving a car is not some strange and bizarre activity - in fact it is the activity the car was designed for. Tobacco also was designed (don't even try to tell me otherwise) to deliver a neurostimulant. Inherent to the fact of being a smoked neurostimulant follow many consequences. I think guns are a bit different because they are not failing to perform in the advertised manner or producing unwarrented results (when you shoot something it will get hurt - duh). Guns do exactly what they are supposed to (and what they're supposed to do is the issue, not the metal and wood of a gun).

    However, nobody is complaining that the product in question has bad side effects when *used correctly*. Nobody is being hit by shrapnel, or inhaling second hand smoke when they trade files. What is being claimed is that because some people choose to use an entirely valid product for a criminal purpose, the creator of said product, who may have nothing to do with this person, or even the product itself at this time, can be held responsible. Bombs and guns are not a good analogy - because they do *exactly* what they're supposed to do. A file sharing network is for sharing files, agnostic of their legitimacy or value. If somebody is using this service/product criminally it's not the creator's fault. E.g., are car companies responsible for bank heists or drug trafficking? Their responsible for cars breaking down or blowing up, but not for somebody doing something illegal with them.

    does that make sense...
  • The smokers knew that smoking would cause them many health problems, there was a warning on the side of the package for crying out loud.

    This is correct (with an important caveat mentioned below).

    Essentially the smokers sued the Tabacco companies for their own stupidity, and the ruling is almost sure to be struck down on appeal.

    The is incorrect (though it is what the tobacco firms in question would like you to believe).

    The smokers sued the Tobacco companies because the tobacco companies willfully and knowlingly made the substance more addictive and much more harmful than it was in its natural state. The warnings on the boxes did not notify the buyer that the tobacco company had added carninegentic materials to enhance flavor and doped the tobacco with additional nicotine to thwart smokers efforts to stop smoking.

    This is far and away beyond simply marketing a legal but harmful substance, and is why the jury awarded the plaintiffs such a large amount and is also why it is unlikely that an appeals court will overturn the ruling. Some amount of the award may be reduced, but it is unlikely that the ruling itself will be changed. Indeed, given the appalling and blatent behavior of the tobacco companies in question it is by no means certain that the appeals court will even reduce the award.

    Their own scientists came forward and blew the whistle on what they were doing: willfully and knowingly killing people[1] in order to pad their own bottom line.

    [1]By some estimates, as many as twice as many people per thousand were afflicted with cancer because of additives they willfully and knowingly added to tobacco, above and beyond what would have occurred naturally.
  • by smallstepforman ( 121366 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @01:07AM (#874550)
    Society should stop grinding axes and focus on educating people, since all problems which exist today stem from a lack of understanding. Beer manufacturers should not be held accountable for alchohol related accidents - drivers should be aware of how alchohol impedes judgement. The poor peasants in Serbia shouldn't be bombed for the insanity of one man - the west should encourage the citizens to seek a wealthier life. Software engineers should not be held accountable for a bug which causes an orbital rocket to deviate from its course and slam into a crowded school - management must allow adequate time for testing. Etc Etc.
  • Breast cancer rates have doubled since it was introduced in soft drinks. Yearly complaints to the FDA related to it's use quadrupled that year, too.

    It causes a whole hell of a lot of other problems than cancer in far lower doses, especially if you're diabetic.

    Do a little reading, it will scare the shit out of you.

    Feel free to find your own links, or start here:

    http://aspartamekills.com/ [aspartamekills.com] (They're obviously nuts, but just because you're paranoid doesn't mean "they" aren't out to get you. Good links, judge for yourself.)

    Aspartame is killing thousands. Anybody that doesn't think that's possible needs to go stare at a pack of cigarrettes and see if "nobody would do that" rings very true.

    --
  • Now there's a lovely thought - dehydrated Neutron Bombs, just add water.

    I don't think your analogy quite holds up. What you're suggesting is roughly equivalent to saying that the score for Beethhoven's 5th *is* the symphony, rather than just a detailed set of instructions for reconstructing it using only a concert hall, a conductor and a 150-piece orchestra.

    A positive step has to be taken once you've got the source for Beethhoven's 5th before it turns into an executable of the symphony on CD... (and yes, I know I'm driving this metaphor full-tilt over the Clifftop of incomprehension, but it's late and I don't care)

  • I think there's a slight difference between holding car/cigarette manufacturers responsible for the effects of their product, and holding programmers responsible for what they create.

    On one hand, you have global corporations who's every intention is to make money, and damn the consequonces(sp?), and on the other hand, you have a coder looking to increase his "noosphere"

    I don't know about anybody else, but sueing me for writing a GPL'd piece of code would be totally counter-productive, as anybody with an interest in the code could then develop it.

    Technology advances regardless of the law. Laws written to govern todays technology will be obsolete when tomorrows technology comes along.

  • I'm not american so you're gonna have to help me out here... isn't one of the reasons you lot are still armed because you reserve the right to fight for your freedom and resist dictators, etc?

    when exactly does the national rifle association (or whoever is fighting for your right to be armed) stand up and say "fuck it, that's just going to far" and declare civil war?

    To quote one of your own:

    Thomas Jefferson in a letter to William S. Smith in 1787. Taken from Jefferson, On Democracy 20, S. Padover ed., 1939:
    "And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms .... The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants."

  • An interesting read, and I took the trouble to read your comment in full. That said, you have a slight flaw in your argument regarding the creator's liability with what other people do with their works.

    Professional civil engineers are liable for the designs of their bridges. If the bridge falls down and it's shown to be a design flaw, then the engineer is responsible. This happened in Israel in 1997. A bridge built for the Maccabea (spelling is probably wrong) Jewish Games collapsed, and five members of the Australian team died as a result. An investigation into the incident revealed that the design of the bridge was poor, and the engineer responsible was charged.

    Here in Melbourne Australia, we have a very high bridge here called the Westgate Bridge. It is a popular place for people to commit suicide by jumping off, and so many people do themselves in by jumping off this bridge that it is alleged that someone is employed fulltime to retrieve all the bodies.

    In 1970, when the bridge was being built, a construction accident resulted in a span of the bridge collapsing, and 35 people were killed.

    The engineer of the Westgate Bridge was not charged for the construction or suicide deaths. Why? Because people are liable only for their own actions. The engineers of the Israeli bridge were charged because the poor design was found to be the problem. The span collapse of the Westgate Bridge was a construction accident, not an engineering problem. People killing themselves by jumping off a convenient high structure is not an engineering problem.

    To make designers and manufacturers for illegal uses of their products is just plain wrong, provided the product has a legal use.

    Wrecking bars and jemmies are sometimes used to break into houses. Should I sue all the manufacturers of wrecking bars if their tools are used to gain illegal entry into my house? Should I sue the car manufacturer if their car is used to take away the stolen goods? Should I sue the manufacturer of a knife if the burglar stabs me with it during the burglary? Should I sue the fuel refiner for making the fuel that went into the car that was used to take my stolen goods away? Should I sue the manufacturers of the stolen goods for making it possible for the goods to be stolen?

    If a product has a legal use, the manufacturers and designers should be protected from liability for the way other people use their products.

    Disclaimer: IANAL.

    --
  • by AndrewD ( 202050 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @01:32AM (#874583) Homepage

    Even with the unpleasant US laws on copyright and so on, I think salon are over-egging this one (and IAAL, but NAUSQL; mileage may vary from the US Bar). Look at a few examples:

    1. Napster provided a centralised service - their search engine - and that's what is being shut down; the trading of MP3s through less formal channels isn't being touched.
    2. The DeCSS action is about to founder on the First Amendment. The source code is very, very likely to be held to be protected speech.
    3. PGP got around the export restriction by publishing the source as a book: the protected speech could then be exported without restriction and OCR'd, rebuilt and used.

    In fine, the author of a piece of source code is OK. If he does something with it that is not protected, he's potentially in trouble. If he provides some other service that's an infringement of something or other, he's potentially in trouble.

    That's what Napster ran aground on: the injunction (which won't get stayed by the Appeal, according to a US attorney friend of mine) was against the inclusion of copyrighted material in their searchable database of traded MP3s, not against the non-infringing uses of the software or in respect of anything the users did.

    The injunction ordered Napster to do something they had previously declined to do: exercise some discrimination in the material they included in their list of tradeable MP3 files. Nothing to do with their authorship of any software.

    The Oppenheimer defence is available only where you have no control over the end use of the product and there is a substantial lawful end use of same and the product is not dangerous in normal use if it is meant to be safe. (This is a statement of general principle, incidentally: for the specific application in your local jurisdiction consult a lawyer qualified to practise where you are).

    Oppenheimer himself had no control over the end use, and that end use was (in the context of a major war) lawful. The product was dangerous in normal use, but then bombs are meant to be.

    Big Tobacco is OK all the way up to the danger point. They've been insisting that the product was safe for decades, and now that is coming home to roost. (If they'd sold it, from when they first figured it out, on the basis that "this stuff will kill you: don't say you weren't warned that a little pleasure now will be paid for with a lot of pain later" they'd have been watertight)

    DeCSS is perfectly safe to use, and there is a substantial lawful use (at least, lawful everywhere but the US) for a finished product (an executable). The source code itself doesn't do anything but communicate, so it's protected speech. The authors can't otherwise control what's done with it.

    Napster, on the other hand, is used almost exclusively (on the evidence in that case, and on Napster's own business plan) for copyright infringement, and Napster run their marketplace as a centralised service so they've got a clear control over what's done with it. It is this last that caught them by the main zipper; it is this that's going to make their eyes water.

  • Interesting argument, but at another hand, what about full-disclosure security lists where someone illustrates HOW to crack something by writing an exploit?

    Is this fundamentally wrong?

    Not to mention, the difference between a bomb and someone playing Metallica MP3's without paying. One destroy's property, and can cause injury or death. The other is a $10 economic damage.
  • by Ayon Rantz ( 210766 ) <qristus@hotmail.com> on Monday August 07, 2000 @01:34AM (#874585) Homepage
    It seems to me that the problem we're facing is too much legislation. Maybe it's time we started rewriting the laws from scratch?

    A good starting point would be:

    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.

    - Aleister Crowley
    Why should programmers be silenced for following their True will? Science is already bogged down and stupidified through the master-servant systems incorporated in all major corporations, the education system and politics.
    Communication is only possible between equals

    - Robert Anton Wilson
    If you have to go through the burden of bureaucracy, or resort to lying to your superiors because you know your real thoughts might get you fired or failed, you're already losing control over your own creativity.

    Controversial or subversive material such as Socrates' philosophies, the research and books of Wilhelm Reich, or Napster, will always be suppressed by the powers that Be because of fear of the Unknown. The majority of the general public will be fooled all the time. Lawsuits and threats of financial incapacitation have just replaced the poison cup or the burning of books as the establishments instrument of oppression.

    Maybe it's time to realise that electorial democracy is just another words for a self-imposed dictatorial oligarchy?
    --

  • So vote Libertarian and win a free country.

    --
  • by jetson123 ( 13128 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @01:39AM (#874594)
    So, if some company sells me a lousy piece of software that causes me to lose money, I can't sue them, because under UCITA they have absolved themselves of all responsibility.

    But if I write a piece of software that can be used for file swapping and someone uses it to commit copyright infringement, I may be held responsible for contributory infringement by the RIAA and MPAA?

    Even the language and analogy itself is disturbing: creating tools for letting people share information is now on the same level as creating nuclear bombs? Isn't the ability to communicate freely at the heart of a democracy?

    I think it's pretty clear what the deciding factor is in who can and cannot be held responsible for the software they create: people with money and political influence are exempted from responsibility. Remember that next time you vote and give the third party candidates a chance. Nader is looking pretty good...

  • I think history will record this time as a time of political ludites.
    Going after technology not criminals.

    We don't arrest people for wearing all black. We don't ban flashlights or lock picks. We don't ban things becouse a narrow few are threatoned.

    We do go after companys that do false/missleading advertising and/or produce shooty products.

    But in the high technology arena we let companys issue shrinkwrap liccenses that nullify consummer protection laws. We don't presue false/missleading advertising (to the point of it evolving into an art) and we don't hold the end user responsable for criminal acts.

    If a tool is used for a criminal act the tool dose not transform into the embodyment of evil. It remains a tool.

    This is the day and age of paranoia... a time of ludites and politics...
    It is a good day for ranting....

    In the long run... New tools and forums will be set up. Advocacy etc. A body of experence is built to prepair for any situation.
    20 years from now... someone will have a new situation.. a new macarthyism.. a new age of politics and fear... one internet search later and problem DIES!!!!....

    It's a pain in the backside to be in the fight. To be the ones fighting for freedom. It's not a bloody war this time. Just a legalistic one. Costing in millions of dollars instead of millions of lifes. But it's still annoying...
    Next time it'll be the cost of millions of hours...
    then it'll simply become a minnor inconvence...

    The price of freedom WAS the price of blood.. that price is paid.. now it's costing in hard cold cash.. when the cost is purely time we'll have pritty much secured our freedom for all time...
  • by Crag ( 18776 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @01:44AM (#874599)
    The article refers to making programmers accountable for the ways their software is used against other people, not for how good the software is. This is very different from the liability the automobile and tobacco companies are fighting. This is more like the lawsuits being pressed against the gun makers.

    That being said, this concept (programmer is responsible for how his program is used) is ludicrous. While it is important for people to be aware of the potential uses of their creations, the leaders who gave the orders to drop the atomic bomb are to blame, not the scientists who designed it or the works who built it.

    This issue is very complex. There is a lot of energy at stake, and a lot of confusion about what can and what "should" be done. The only sure way to solve all these problems once and for all is to hold the final decision makers responsible for _their_ actions. If you are holding a gun, only use it in self defense or for sport. While driving a car, respect the power of 2000 pounds of steal going 70+ mph. While holding a baseball bat, don't blame the manufacturer if you decide to hit someone with it.

    No matter what power you hold, there is noone better qualified to keep you from abusing that power than you.

    Blaming doesn't get us anywhere. The change we want is much deeper than making it more difficult to cause harm. We need to stop wanting to cause harm.

    (We also need to agree on what harm is - napster is certainly a grey area in many peoples' minds.)
  • If you think programmers can really escape liability for their products (or should)

    When I write free software and release it under the GPL, or any other major free software license, I expressly disclaim any warantee or fitness for any purpose. In effect, I'm saying that my software may not work as advertised, and that if it doesn't, it's your problem, not mine. In short, don't hold me liable. If that's not acceptable to you, don't use it, it's as simple as that. This is why you won't see things like perl at nuclear reactors, to pick a single example. Heck, they're only allowed to use accredited software to even _design_ the places, let alone run them.

    If I wanted to, I could offer a warantee. However, for this I'd need to invest time, effort and probably money into unit testing, formal proofs and so on. I doubt I'd be willing to do that unless someone was willing to reimburse me for that, and for the risk of having my ass hauled into court over it. If I did offer such a warantee, and then my software sucked, fine, sue away to your heart's content. But when I expressly disclaim any warantee or liability, forget it.

    Further, this stuff is fine where public safety and other "mission-critical" stuff is involved, but things like copyright infringement (eg. napster, DeCSS) are simply frivolous in comparison.

    To say that the DeCSS coders are liable for DeCSS's use in copyright infringements is the equivalent of holding VCR makers liable for pirated videos. Or CD-R drive and media manufacturers liable for pirated software and music made with their devices.

    Another potent analogy to draw is coding with writing (novels, for example). If a psycho goes out and commits a crime as laid out in some novel (fiction), you wouldn't hold the author responsible for the psycho's actions, would you? If the novel could be shown to be incitive or otherwise encouraging, well, maybe, but on the merits of only what I describe above, I fail to see how one person can be blamed to be responsible for another's actions.
  • Could we possibly protect our selves through a new form of licensing. If you have ever read MS licensing agreement you will find they are not responsible in any way of how well their software works or what you use it for. If someone uses IE to steal your cookies it's not MS's fault.

    The GPL focuses on protecting the software, not the author. Maybe we need a more protective license.
  • I don't know how the court case came out, but I recall that the book The Basketball Diaries by Jim Carroll had a scene of a student fantasizing about murdering someone, a teacher I think.

    When the movie came out and included this scene, a similar murder followed, and the relatives of the deceased sued the movie producers - I'm not sure but I think maybe Carroll got sued too, and he'd written the book years and years before the movie came out.

    Is the trial finished? Anyone know the results?

  • by wiZd0m ( 192990 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @01:50AM (#874611)
    "Fact: Highest standard of living -- Same Damn Place"

    Not according to the United Nations Human developement report 2000 on this page:
    http://www.undp.org/hdr2000/home.html

    In this document:
    http://www.undp.org/hdr2000/english/presskit/hdi .pdf

    Top five:

    1. Canada
    2. Norway
    3. United States
    4. Australia
    5. Iceland

    Worst Five:

    170. Burundi
    171. Ethiopia
    172. Burkina Faso
    173. Niger
    174. Sierra Leone

    wiZd0m
  • Yeah his facts were wrong, but still, that was one of his best trolls yet... lol
  • DIY-code-freaks are what we call hackers (bidouilleurs in French).
    For example, somebody who codes (preferably against ISO9xxx heavy standards) practical tools for his own needs.
    If these tools could be used in order to gather illegaly copyrighted data, then, according to this article, the hacker could be considered as a pirate, or as a criminal.


    I hate to say it, but I don't see this as a bad thing, as long as it doesn't go out of control. In RL there are things that you can't do or make, and it should be the same way on the Net. Lockpicking tools are illegal to possess unless you are a certified locksmith. You can't make a bomb, even if you don't plan on exploding it. If something is overwhelming used to break the law, then it should be illegal. Notice, I'm not saying anything that can be used to break the law should be illegal. But if the general purpose of something is to use it illegally, then it should be illegal. I could use a lockpick set to break into my house when I lock myself out. But 99.9% of the time it will be used for breaking into someone else's house. A crowbar will be used 99% of the time for construction, etc, so it would be legal. If I write a program that mailbombs someone, there is very little legitimate use for that, therefore it would be illegal.


    In general, I agree that people should be responsible for how they use things, but if something has little legal use, then it should fall into the illegal category. If I build a nuclear weapon in garage, that's not okay, whether I plan on using it or not, and this same concept should be carried over to software.

  • Of course, there is already pretty good anonymity on the Net (mixmaster remailers, for example) which can be used to code anonymously or pseudonymously. Ian Clarke & Co. however have their identity revealed and are open to legal threats.

    Of course, suing them couldn't have any success -- the programs are usually open-source, and users will hardly accept modified versions that don't do what they want them to do. However, the industry might sue anway, just to make an example and to prevent others from developing similar schemes. A totally useless effort, obviously, as this would only drive developers underground.

    At all times in history, interest groups of a religious, economic or political nature have tried to prevent technological progress to protect their own health and wealth. Every time, though change also created victims, it was for the better of all of us. When the forces of regression and stagnation dominate, you can call that a Dark Age. This has happened several times in history, the last time after the downfall of the Roman Empire.

    That is exactly why we need anonymous and redundant information storage systems: To protect any kind of speech from censorship (and the speakers from persecution), be it hacking instructions, drug information or political analysis. This is an opportunity we have never had before in history. If we win now, we might not only win one battle between "good" and "evil". We might actually win the war.

    Join FreeNet [sourceforge.net] now. How often do you get the opportunity to save mankind?

    --

  • by DrWiggy ( 143807 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @02:34AM (#874619)
    While it is important for people to be aware of the potential uses of their creations, the leaders
    who gave the orders to drop the atomic bomb are to blame, not the scientists who designed it or the works who built it.


    There is a story I can tell here that links the software creativity "conundrum" and the very example you've just given. I used to know a guy who went to join the RAF as a trainee Pilot. In his interview they asked him how we would react if he were given the order to press the button to drop a bomb on a small village, and whether he would have any moral or ethical hangups over it. The answer he gave was that he was just part of a chain - he could not and would not take the sole responsibility for the dropping of that bomb as the ability for him to do so was shared amongst the scientists who created it, the commanders who ordered the bombing, even the woman who cooked him his eggs that morning in the canteen.

    In many ways it's exactly the same with software. If I write a piece of code that could be used maliciously (depending on what your definition of malicious is), am I really that responsible for it's use if there are other people who market that code, or who themselves take the source and adapt it so that it is even more malicious? In fact, would my parents not also be responsilbe for encouraging my interest in computers and technology when I was a teenager, and wouldn't those around me encouraging me to progress my careers also be responsible?

    My personal feeling is that if one person and one person alone develops a piece of software with deliberate malicious intent and then without encouragment uses that code for malicious purposes, they deserve everything that is coming to them. However, if a developer puts a bug in place by accident in a routine handling safety procedures at a nuclear power plant, is it not also the responsibility of his managment, his testing team, the people who taught him how to code and how to test his code as well as his own fault that the bug got through into a production system?

  • You're right in that DeCSS should be safe to use and distribute. However, in the US legal system (and most others, AFAICS), with a lot of money and PR you can usually twist the law in an extreme fashion. Consider cases of corporate misconduct. You can dump your toxic sludge anywhere if you spin the media sufficiently and are ready to fight in court. Of course, this gets more and more difficult the higher you get in the court system, as there's more and more media to spin and the bribes get higher and higher. (Also, the Internet is much harder to spin than traditional media.)

    So Damien Cave is right on when he notes that it depends largely on how much cash the content industries are willing to spend. And I tell ya, they'll spend their last buck if necessary. Of course, it also depends on how much money, time and effort, we, the people, are willing to spend, and how good we can organize (Class Action, legal defense funds etc.). And it depends on the other indutries and their interest groups: Don't forget that the EFF, for example, is also an interest group for parts of the IT industry. That's where their money comes from. And the same industry is lobbying Congress against stricter laws for content control.

    I believe we can win, but not if we just watch in phlegmatism as these century-defining legal battles rage on.

    --

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 07, 2000 @02:03AM (#874625)
    Surely if coders are liable for the users misuse of their programs then all writers and inventors are liable for similar misuse. Effectively this means that GunMakers and the NRA are liable for any killings that are carried out with weapons as they intended illegal usage when they created and upheld gunlaws and making weapons, and bands like Metallica are liable for kids going on killing sprees after listening to their music. KidRandom
  • This is the same trend that tried to condemn Oliver Stone [imdb.com] for Natural Born Killers [imdb.com] copycats and Ozzy Osbourne [ozzy.com] for Suicide Solution [crankster.com] suicides.

    Why can't they legally treat software as a work of art, protecting the author from whatever abuses that the users may come up with for their software?

  • by TMiB ( 169465 ) on Monday August 07, 2000 @03:00AM (#874632)
    The Salon article is interesting, but doesn't distinguish clearly enough between two very different things:
    &#149 warranty for the product: should the author be liable if the software doesn't behave as it should ? (eg the GPS sending you over a cliff example in the article).
    &#149 liability for third party use: eg should the authors of Gnutella or Freenet be liable if their software is used for unlawful behaviour (eg copyright infringement).

    Now for the first of these, I'd like to see more liability - at least for commercial software - rather than less. Microsoft's standard licence tries real hard to avoid / limit any liability. Should a commercial vendor really be able to say it's not liable, eg, if the fact that its spreadsheet can't do math leads an individual or a business to lose money ?
    (The GPL also has a no warranty provision. Dealing with non-commercial open source software shouldn't be a problem: not only is there no commercial benefit to the author, but in theory the user can look at the code themselves to see if it does what the user wants - and even change the code to suit the user's needs.)

    The second gives rise to more difficult problems, and this is where Napster is fighting. (Don't forget that Napster though is providing a service - the server - so if Napster loses it won't necessarily mean that the authors of Gnutella or Freenet would lose.)
    The test for a product (eg a VCR) is whether the product is "capable" of a lawful use. In the Sony case, a VCR was held to be capable of doing perfectly lawful things (eg time-shifting TV viewing).
    A network sniffing tool that could be used legitimately to check vulnerabilities (so they can be closed) would seem to be OK even if it could also be used to check vulnerabilities (so they can be exploited). Though if it was developed and published with the stated aim of checking and exploiting, a court may be reluctant to accept later arguments that the author shouldn't be nailed because it could also be used to check and close .

  • Well, they'd have been watertight as to liability. Whether or not the product was actually banned would be a different question.

    For example, in the days before I took to gardening organically, I bought a bottle of Malathion (a pesticide: nowadays my garden is visited by too many bees and butterflies for me to want to use that on the aphids). It's potent and unpleasant stuff, even after you dilute it, and there are warnings all over the bottle, the leaflet that came with it and the box that the bottle and leaflet came in.

    Thus, if I do something stupid with it - drink it, inhale the vapour, shove it up my bum, etc. - I have no comeback against the manufacturer.

    That's the position Big Tobacco would have been in if they'd come clean.

    Your point is about regulation: perhaps the sale of smokes would have been outlawed. On the other hand, big-money business that doesn't do any obvious harm tends to be able to sail those legislative waters quite safely (lunacies like Prohibition notwithstanding). My insecticide example illustrates it thus: the stuff is dangerous, but lucrative and does no short-term harm. (DDT did: DDT got banned) Thus it remains on the market, provided it comes with all those warnings about safe use. Those warnings serve the related but nevertheless separate function fo protecting the manufacturer against civil liability.


  • Your credibility takes a considerable hit when you continually use the word 'fucken'. Please either use a real word the rest of us can understand or leave it out completely.

    I suspect the post was a troll anyway. For what it's worth, my POV:
    World's highest standard of living: Probably Sweden. Maybe Japan. Not the US. Especially if you're black and live in LA.

    Lawyers: We need them, admittedly. They are not however, good at making laws. I wont say they are bad, but they are no better than anybody else. Sure, they can help word things so that there are fewer holes, but when it comes to IT, lawyers don't have a clue and so shouldn't be the ones making decisions. It is blatantly ludicrous that as a software developer, I could get shafted sideways by big business, purely because some users of my program have decided to break the law. They may use my software in a manner I didn't think of. I may write software that performs only legal tasks in one jurisdiction, that in another country entirely breaks every law on the books - am I meant to know U.S. law inside out when I don't even live there? I think not.

    I think this article on Slashdot was posted as being something of interest to developers worldwide, as a cause of concern to them that political and corporate actions may be making our profession essentially untenable. And I for one will not allow that to happen without causing a lot of grief.
    If a few lawyers get their pride bruised along the way, I consider that a bonus.

    ~Cederic
  • In fact, would my parents not also be responsilbe for encouraging my interest in computers and technology when I was a teenager, and wouldn't those around me encouraging me to progress my careers also be responsible?

    Only if they were encouraging you to write malicious stuff, or were aware that you were writing malicious stuff but turned a blind eye.

    As for the soldier, well he really is just a link in the chain, since that's the way the military works. He just follows orders, he doesn't need to worry about them. He can't decide which are the "real" orders and to which ones he should say "That's immoral/unethical, I'm not going to do that". And yes, this IS straight out of "A Few Good Men".

    Similarly, the scientist doesn't know a priori whether the bomb he develops will be used to wipe out a small village of innocents, or to wipe out an ammunitions dump (and possibly enemy soldiers) which is a threat to many innocents. Their "malicious" bomb may be used to save the lives of innocents just the same as it may be used to end their lives. It's "just the same" because in both cases its function is the same - it blows up.

    IMHO, the commander(s) issuing the order to drop the bomb should take the responsibility, since they decide what gets used, and how.

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