Posts Tagged ‘freedom’

2
May

09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0

I had no idea a number could be copyrighted.

Anyhow, what is it?

It’s the HD-DVD Processing Key for most movies released so far.

I was not aware that a string of numbers and letters was copyrightable.

Perhaps its just my ignorance but it seems that someone is abusing the DMCA again.

This means the (admittedly long) number is precisely the key you need in order to decrypt and watch HD-DVD and Blu-Ray movies, stripping out the DRM. And the fact that it’s out there, spreading like wildfire, is killing the types at the movie studios right now.

http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?t=123311

http://blog.digg.com/?p=74

I wonder if you’d get busted passing around this one as well (for nerds only):

13,256,278,887,989,457,651,018,865,901,401,704,640

or even better, this one

1001 11111001 00010001 00000010 10011101 01110100 11100011 01011011 11011000 01000001 01010110 11000101 01100011 01010110 10001000 11000000

All your base are belong to us.

Digg fights user revolt over HD-DVD ban – Digg founders took HD-DVD sponsorship.

http://texyt.com/Digg+founders+took+HD-DVD+sponsorship+00071

16
Jan

My Social Philosophy

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

The nature of government past and present tends toward eternal scope creep. If Libertarians were to sweep all 3 branches of the US government tomorrow and hold power for a decade, we would still not live in a system that actually *had* zero regulation of businesses, complete abandonment of any sort of social safety net, or total privatization of all that is currently in the civic sphere.

Despite my heavy Libertarian sympathies, I do believe that some things *belong* in the public sector. The Libertarian philosophy may appear extreme to you, and it may in fact be extreme. However, Democrats and Republicans alike have lost sight of any sort of sane boundaries on what belongs in the public sector. I can’t imagine a pure Libertarian philosophy ever really being actualized, but I think an extreme dose of it would bring sobriety and balance to bear against government’s inexorable tendency to intrude further and further into what should be the private sphere.

Think about it – you surely can see extremity of some sort in the Democrat and Republican parties alike, no? But does this country look entirely like an incarnation of the desires of either one of them? No; it’s a hodge-podge of policies — sometimes contradictory — hailing from all over the political spectrum. So in the end, infusing the system with a bunch of anti-scope-creep politicians would merely introduce some friction to retard the expansion. Like any other party, if they took it too far, populism would push the pendulum of power away from them and things would drift back in the other direction.

27
Oct

If Not America, Then Where?

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

Happen to read this discussion on slashdot earlier and thought it was a fairly good discussion, so I decided to post a sample of what one person said so eloquently:

http://ask.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/10/24/1810233


So this is what it has come to, has it?

You quit.

That’s it?

It’s over?

You’re going to let your country expire because you’re too lazy to get up off your asses and take it back? The US is (or was) the perfect example of a country. You were oppressed by some ruling class that wanted to tax you with representing you, take away your rights, and treat you like the lousy commoners you are. Instead of leaving to go to other countries, your ancestors said, “Hey, that’s not right. We can do a better job.” You overthrew the government and made the biggest, roughest, smartest country that the world has ever known. You invented electric lights, developed flight, split the atom, and you walked on the fucking moon. You showed the world, “This is what we are capable of as human beings when we work together. Man and woman, rich and poor, white and black, side by side.”

Yeah, you’ve had some rough times. A few dickheads have metagamed and bent the rules towards their own sociopathic ends. It’s hard to stage a revolt and take back your country when there are laws preventing you from doing so.

But you know what? There were laws against revolting from England, too. I’m sure that your founding fathers would have been hanged (lethal injection not being around at the time) or sent to The Tower (Gitmo not being around at the time either). Yeah, you might die. You might have to go to war. You’ve done that before – twice, and internally! – so that the side of freedom would prevail.

I am not an American. I think that for the most part, you’re a bunch of arrogant assholes. But you know what? You deserve to be arrogant. A large part of the hostility you get from foreigners is jealousy. Yes, jealousy. You’re a young country. You’re less than 300 years old. How does that make a 3000 year old country look when you completely surpass their technology, human rights, and standard of living? Yeah, they’d look stupid for just sitting around in the desert when they could have been using the tools that were just lying around. You are the most powerful nation in the history of the planet. There is nothing in this universe that you cannot do. All you require is the will to do it.

If you leave, if you give up, that jealousy will turn to hatred – hatred that you threw out one of the best things that’s happened to the world. And you are. Yeah, sometimes the US is a belligerent force. You’ve made some mistakes – and we all know what they are. But when there are earthquakes, the US is there. When there is starvation, the US is there. When there are floods, tsunamis, or hurricanes the US is there. Sometimes you go to the wrong places or have misguided or corrupt leaders. For the most part, you are a force for good. At least, you try to be.

We all make mistakes. Mistakes can be forgiven.

Don’t give up.

If you don’t like what’s happening to your country, then don’t quit it. Fight it. Fight to keep your country safe and secure. The only threat to your country comes from within.

Be strong. Stay and fight.

Move? This is exactly what ‘they’ want. Down the road ‘they’ won’t have to worry about you if push comes to shove.

Instead, stay and ‘fight’ for what you believe to be right, no matter if it KILLS you. There have been those who have lived, long before you (or I), that have died to uphold the ideals our founding fathers enshrined.

Is it better to give up, or be held in high-esteem for holding to principles that reflect the foundations of what this country was created upon?

http://www.boingboing.net/2006/10/23/getting_out_your_gui.html

30
Aug

Why Do Good Men Do Nothing?

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

In his book Thoughts on the Cause of Present Discontents (1770), the British philosopher Edmund Burke wrote, “When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one.” This sentiment has survived as, “All that is necessary for evil to succeed is that good men do nothing.”

Why do good men do nothing in the face of evil, especially when evil aggressively invades their lives?

The question has red-hot relevance to those who value the tradition of individual freedom into which America was born — a tradition that includes freedom of speech, the right to bear arms and to demand due process. These traditional freedoms are crumbling under the wheels of a run-away government. Through dozens of ‘alphabet agencies’ — the IRS, BATF, CPS, DHS, DEA, et al — government aggressors enter the lives of good men who do nothing to protect themselves or their families.

Some people are paralyzed by fear; some by denial. But many others are immobilized by an apathy that strips away the emotional will to act in self-defense.

In psychological terms, apathy is a state of constant indifference that is generally associated with depression. Apathy leaves an individual unresponsive to the world and creates a disconnect between what he believes, how he feels and which actions he takes. For example, a man might fully recognize that food is necessary to live but, because he doesn’t care, he doesn’t eat.

Translated into political terms, he might realize that a gluttonous government is feasting on his liberty, his wealth and even on his children’s future but, because he feels only numbness toward government, he doesn’t act in self-defense. He obeys even when the command is self-destructive. The question of why people passively obey government has haunted the history of political discourse. In 1552, Étienne de la Boétie addressed what he called the most important problem confronting freedom: people consent to their own enslavement. His analysis of ‘why’ resulted in the world’s first book on non-violent resistance, ‘The Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude’.

Modern historians ask the same question. During the mass arrests of Stalinist Russia, people reportedly slept in their clothing not in order to flee more easily but in order to be fully dressed when seized. In Hitler’s Europe, Jews reported on their own to deportation centers and to their deaths. Why? Part of the complex answer lies in what psychologists call ‘object specific’ apathy. That is, a person’s numbness is directed toward a specific situation and may not be manifested in other areas of his life. The same man who is passionate about music or his wife may feel impotent in the area of demanding or even wanting his own freedom. This response is a form of ‘learned helplessness.’ It is ‘learned’ because the response comes from relentlessly teaching an individual that he has no control over a situation and, so, his efforts are futile.

The original and now-famous experiment from which the term ‘learned helplessness’ derives involved shocking dogs with electricity until they developed the psychology of submission. When applied to human beings, ‘learned helplessness’ is most often used to describe people who have been institutionalized, for example, in prisons, mental institutions or orphanages. There, the regimentation strips an individual of the smallest choice and punishes the __expression of preference. In time, many institutionalized people accept the inevitability of their environment. Some of them lose all ability to feel their own preferences.

The depth of learned helplessness that comes from being institutionalized is rare. But most of us absorb a degree of this apathy through constant exposure to a society that attempts to control almost every choice in daily life: smoking, eating fast food, gun ownership, telling a rude joke at work, marriage and divorce, boarding an airplane, medical care, banking, making a phone call. It is difficult to find a choice that isn’t scrutinized by bureaucracy and covered by some form of government control. The message is clear: Conformity is rewarded; the ‘wrong’ choices are punished or otherwise
discouraged………..and the public school system is just one example of what could be called the institutionalizing or bureaucratizing of daily life.

‘The Castle’, a brilliant novel by Franz Kafka, offers a window into what happens to the psychology of a man who confronts bureaucracy. Due a mistake in paperwork, the main character ‘K.’ is summoned to work in a village as a surveyor but ends up as a janitor. The Castle is the summoning authority with which K. must, but cannot deal with because he cannot contact the proper official. K.’s long and agonizing exercise in futility reveals the impact that bureaucracy has upon the human soul: it deadens.

K.’s error was to accept the authority of The Castle in the first place.

The foregoing observation contains good news: bureaucracy and authority require consent. And, if that consent is learned behavior, then it can also be unlearned.

Something within the human spirit seems to want to shake off destructive programming. Call it a survival instinct. Perhaps it is the inbred urge revealed by every two-year-old who yells ‘no’ over and over again for the simple joy of exercising veto over his own life.

Adults need to recapture the childlike joy and power of saying ‘no.’ The words most feared by those in authority are ‘I won’t.’ Individuals with the habit of obedience may need to start by saying ‘no’ on small matters like refusing to fill in racial information on application forms. They may be shocked by how difficult it is to say ‘I won’t’ even to petty demands. But the difficulty is a sign of how important it is. Only when a person is able to say ‘no’ can he say ‘yes’ and have the word mean more that the obedient response of a servant. ‘Yes’ is properly the affirmation of a free man.


“You measure a democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists.”

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