Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 2nd Jan 2012 19:12 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 502520
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE: Using free software doesn't change anything
by zima on Mon 9th Jan 2012 23:34
in reply to "Using free software doesn't change anything"
There are partly (largely?) technological solutions to those problems, strongly anonymous darknets and such. And here the best part: you can trust software which implements them ...pretty much only when it's open.
So saying "...free software doesn't change anything" isn't warranted.




Member since:
2012-01-07
However, using free software doesn't change much for a couple reasons.
First of all, it still doesn't work on how the admin can simply change the source codes to allow filtering of certain protocols, like BitTorrent, or Tor. And we can't change it back, because we need to be upgraded to admin to change it back, and to apply it.
The second reason is that it wouldn't stop SOPA, or DCMA from being worked. People can still do, and will be forced to adjust it, even if the source code be free.
The last, and most important point is that when we connect to other computers, networks, servers, etc. we would have to trust the other person to keep it private and not show to the other people. And more often than not, when the government ask for these things, the person owning the servers would simply give the data to them.
That's why free software isn't the "magic bullet" to solve these problems.