Posted on 06/28/2002 11:53:26 AM PDT by Scott McCollum
A clip:
Regardless of what some leftist self-appointed libertarian Internet watchdogs and privacy advocates will try to say, the citizens living in the nineteenth century are nowhere close to being as 'free' as those fortunate enough to be alive now. The privacy advocates are right about Microsofts vision of Palladium; it is a technology that wants to turn the Internet from lawless Wild West into an orderly suburban neighborhood. You know, gated communities much like those hypocritical privacy advocates live in.
Spoken like a true Socialist. Here's a small list of things they didn't have to deal with back then:
The same way the XP security keys were cracked before Office and Windows XP were shipped.
Go get your guns boys! We have some rogue charity clinics to shut down.
Report immediately to the reeducation camp, citizen.
That should be "citizen" :)
But the comparison of "Wild West" to a "Surburban Neighborhood" sounds more like the whining of a pencil-necked control freak than anything resembling a legitimate argument.
Give me the Wild West Please!
And PS, maybe we need to do something to "secure" our "wild west" and keep these pansy control freaks out!
I realize you'd rather just have a cut-and-paste of the whole copyrighted article here at FR, but that is illegal (illegal via a court ruling - regardless of what your personal opinions on copyright are).
Plus, why respond to the parroted remarks first heard by Richard Stallman 30 years ago? You know, the "we are the only freedom fighters - we are the only samizat - we are the only ones who stand against oppression - it's all a big conspiracy" cult chants heard here or at ZDNet, CNet, TechTV, CMP or any of the other mainstream tech media sites?
Hey, if you want to get me fired, it would be better to post all the evidence that I'm lying about all this on World Tech Tribune.com's forum or emailing my publisher so-- Oooh, no - wait! I forgot... Posting on that website is part of the conspiracy to silence the freedom fighters' samizat.
Forget I said anything. Return to your basements/garages and wait for the encrypted all clear message from Alan Cox. Remember: "The condor flies at midnight."
Hokay; I'll click on the link and read the whole thing:
The page cannot be displayedWell, that was certainly enlightening....There is a problem with the page you are trying to reach and it cannot be displayed.
Please try the following:
Open the worldtechtribune.com home page, and then look for links to the information you want.
Click the Refresh button, or try again later.HTTP 403.2 - Forbidden: Read Access Forbidden
Internet Information ServicesTechnical Information (for support personnel)
Background:
This error can be caused if there is no default page available and directory browsing has not been enabled for the directory, or if you are trying to display an HTML page that resides in a directory marked for Execute or Script permissions only.More information:
Microsoft Support
The link will work on the evil Internet Explorer browser, which comes standard with any copy of Windows since 1995, but is available for Mac OS and the good commercially-available flavors of Unix like Sun Solaris.
If you haven't quit yet, try using IE rather than viewing the page in some third-rate open source app with all the adherence to today's web standards and functionality of a tweleve year-old version of Nexus running on NeXT.
ISO images containing the corporate OEM versions of Office/Windows XP were posted on multiple newsgroups and P2P sites by open source cultists working for Dell Computers in Austin, Texas.
Thanks to the anonymity afforded by the Internet and so valued by cyber libertarians, no prosecutions or arrests were made. Dell employees and England's The Register all know the pre-activated copies of XP products on the Internet were leaked by open source cultists at Dell.
Dude, I run cracks on all my XP software so, keep telling me how it's a myth...
(But the software is all legal. I just refuse to let MS "approve" my installations.)
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