Isolationism is history.

From: Day Brown (daybrown_at_hypertech.net)
Date: 01/30/04

  • Next message: Fraser Campbell: "Converting rpm to deb with alien loses dependencies"
    Date: Thu, 29 Jan 2004 20:05:36 -0800
    To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
    
    

    Get over it. Just as we here hope for the improvement of a global system
    and the global tools like debian to use it, so the entire government and
    economy is wrapped up in it. Whether we like it or not, capitalism
    demonstrates that it's lots cheaper that way, and the market rules.

    What worries me, is that there are large organizations which try to
    manipulate the rules. The main reason the open source movement is taking
    off, is that the programmers like myself have realized that whatever you
    craft, they have enuf lawyers and enuf judges to keep you in court
    forever, and that it is *they* who will get the patent, (and the profit)
    and not the artist who created it.

    And just as the USA has tried to manipulate the rules, others in other
    regions have realized this, and as a result have adapted, and quit
    investing so much in a game which they cannot win.

    One of the things we could do, is offer a minimal setup that would fit
    on a floppy, which was able to get online, and from that bootstrap,
    download the connectivity to post on this list.

    One of the problems we have, is that the communication which people
    receive has been limited to the transnational media and/or the
    traditional received authority. The former reflects the priorities of
    the governments and transnational corporations which are terribly short
    sighted, threatening ecological disaster. The latter tries to keep the
    women barefoot and pregnant. The only thing they want, they only thing
    they have always wanted, is more sons to go into battle to steal more
    women for the alpha male warrior class leaders. That's what they been
    doing, in Iraq and elsewhere, for 5000 years.

    If you have the time to read this, you are not likely in either set
    above. But to increase the numbers, and therefore the power, of those
    who can read this list, we would do well to examine the entire setup,
    not just the operating system. You can go into the gray/surplus computer
    hardware market and buy all the parts for a computer
    (case,mthbd,dram,kybd,mouse,monitor) for less than 200$- *retail*. Right
    now, the 20$ mthbds and 20$ cpus are good for 300-600 mhz, which will
    run debian just fine.

    but- from your modem on, *they* own all the rest of the hardware and
    software. I dont trust the bastards. I Know they dont have the
    competence they claim, and I see the sabotage software take hits on them
    all the time. The last report I saw said that windoz has 95 *million*
    lines of code. Neither Gates, nor anyone else, has a handle on it. It
    includes software which has been stolen, and I already know of one case
    where a programmer, fearing he'd be screwed, inserted sabotage code in
    his work in that event.

    For the near term, ASAP, we should setup a VPN with a way for debian
    users and servers to communicate with each other which has virtually
    *NO* windoz servers inbetween. Ironically, such a system already exists
    in parts of rural India and the developing world. They dont have phone
    lines. each village put up a pc hooked to a radio transceiver, and went
    long range wireless. Each village is solar powered. It dont matter what
    happens to the government, dont matter what happens to the telephone
    system, dont matter what happens to the interent, the villagers can
    still contact friends and family in the region.

    Villagers are way ahead of us. Which is why Isolationism is History. If
    the net takes a serious hit from sabotage or just plain simple stupid
    greed cutting corners, and it goes down, the police and law enforcement
    can go down, banking and credit card servers will quit, the economy will
    tank, and we'll see a crash that makes the 1929 debacle look like a
    fender bender.

    I have hacked into the binary of Microsoft code. It is like a house
    that, as soon as it was built, the carpenters walked out, and left their
    tools in the hallway for the new owners to trip over. Breakpoints and
    error traps are all over the place. These code snippets can be
    deliberately, or inadvertantly triggered. To get an idea of the scale of
    the problem, consider ATTRIB.EXE, which is used to mark files with
    A)rchived, S)ystem, H)idden, R)ead only. Pretty simple. The usual MS
    version runs about 25-30,000 bytes. But if you go to the dos hacker tool
    lists, you can find ATTR.COM ... all 627 bytes of it. What does
    Micky$loth do with the other 25,000 bytes? Nobody knows.

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  • Next message: Fraser Campbell: "Converting rpm to deb with alien loses dependencies"