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Episode: 1135
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Title: HPR1135: TGTM Newscast for 12/01/2012
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1135/hpr1135.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:37:51
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---
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Hey everybody, this is Poki from Hacker Polic Radio.
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We're putting on another party like the New Year's Eve party we had last year.
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If you have a computer and you can get mumble working on it, we want you to join us on New
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Year's Eve.
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When is the party going to be?
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It's going to be all day.
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It's a 24 hour party, so you have plenty of time to call in and participate.
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If you're a podcaster, if you're a podcast listener, come and join us because this is our
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thing.
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This is our party we're getting together and we're doing it live.
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We're going to stream it live and we're going to re-broadcast the recording later in
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the show.
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Any information is all available at hackerpublicradio.org.
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Please come along and join us on New Year's Eve.
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You're listening to Tokikumi News, number 83, recorded for Saturday, December 1, 2012.
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You're listening to the Tech Only Hacker Public Radio Edition to get the full podcast,
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including political, commentary, and other controversial topics.
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Please visit www.tokikumi.us.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me.
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Please send your comments to dgatdeepgeek.us.
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The webpage for this program is www.tokikumi.us.
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You can subscribe to me on Identica as the user name DeepGeek or you could follow me
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on Twitter.
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My username there is DGTGM as in DeepGeek Tokikumi.
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Hello, you may have noticed that last week Tokikumi News, TGGM News, had a guest reader,
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Poki from the hacker public radio community.
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Of course, I'm just thrilled to welcome his assistance he promised to record once a month
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all I have to do is write the dog thing.
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I'm very grateful that the community stood up and decided not to let my humble project
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falter.
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I'm very proud to try to put out 36 newscasts per year or three per month.
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So hopefully this new partnership will be very fruitful and beneficial all around.
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So far I love it and let's wish it continued success in the future.
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Now the tech round up.
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From eff.org in November 29th, 2012 by Mark M. Jake Hox and Rainey Wrightman.
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Attempt to modernize digital privacy law passes the Senate Judiciary Committee.
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AppKa reform moves forward to require a warrant for your email, a amendment to weakened
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video piracy protections reigned in.
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By today, the Senate Judiciary Committee passed a bill that would require the government
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to get a warrant before accessing private electronic communications like emails and Facebook
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messages.
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The bill could now proceed to the Senate floor for a vote.
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The package that passed out of committee included an amendment championed by Senator
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Patrick Leehee that would mandate that the government receive a probable cause warrant
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before accessing private electronic communications.
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This would close a dangerous loophole in the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy
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Act, which the Department of Justice has argued allows them to access private emails that
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are more than 180 days old without a warrant.
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This runs contrary to the privacy users expect in their digital communications as well as
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a fourth amendment as the Washington Post said in an editorial yesterday.
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If you left a letter on your desk for 180 days, you wouldn't imagine that the police could
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then swoop in and read it without your permission or judges.
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According to Lee Tien, EFF, senior staff attorney, with this amendment, Congress is sending
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a strong message to the Department of Justice that our digital fourth amendment rights don't
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expire after six months.
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While there's still much work ahead of us to ensure that these common-sense legal protections
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are enshrined in statutory law, today we saw the Senate Judiciary Committee hauling our
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K-Claw into alignment with modern technology.
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The bill would also amend the strong Video Privacy Protection Act, the VPPA, allowing companies
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like Netflix to get blanket consent from consumers before continuously sharing their video,
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watching habits with social media accounts, or even data brokers.
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While EFF thinks updating the VPPA is unnecessary and potentially harmful for consumers, we
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are pleased to see Senator Diane Feinstein and Al Frank and successfully co-sponsored an
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amendment that limited the duration of this blanket consent, ensuring that video service
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providers have to get consent from consumers once every two years.
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We hope others and Congress will share our commitment to safeguarding the privacy rights
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of internet users.
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To read the rest of the story, follow links in the show notes.
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Havana Times.org dated November 28, 2012.
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Cuba government creates biotech pharmaceutical conglomerate.
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Havana Times, the Cuban government, has approved the creation of a business group that will
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bring together 38 state companies in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries
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to fields on which Raul Castro government is placing much hope.
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The bio-cuba pharma group joins under one roof all those institutions belong to Polo
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Scientific Hope, Scientific Complex, and Quim Efe business group explained the official
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grandma newspaper.
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The measure which was approved by the Council of Ministers comes out of the hope for a
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new industrial conglomerate to boost the quote, Generation of Explorable Goods and Services
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Unquote.
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The newspaper reported its operation is governed by business principles it added.
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The medical and scientific sectors are historically two of the main stakes of the Cuban government.
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For decades, former President Fidel Castro promoted the development of the island's healthcare
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and scientific systems.
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Cuba has also been trying for a number of years to increase its income from medical services
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provided aboard form biotechnology production.
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Since coming to power in 2006, Raul Castro has launched several market reforms to update
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the Cuban economic model.
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Along these, it's a restructuring of industries under business principles for decades is for
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controlled by the state bureaucracy.
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In 2011, Raul Castro announced the demise of the iconic ministry of sugar in order to
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create a business group capable of resurrecting sugar industry, one of the oldest major industries
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on the island.
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The April 2011 sixth Congress of the Communist Party of Cuba institutionalized this reform
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process with guidelines that employ emulate economic adjustment models without political
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changes such as those implemented by China and Vietnam in past decades.
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Wire.com had an article about a student suspended for refusing to wear a school issued RFID
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tracker.
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While the terms of service of Wire.com to not allow or are in conflict with our creative
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common basis for this newscast, the commentary on the article by Thomas Commandman Gideon
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of the command line podcast is not.
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Therefore, we will link to the original article on show notes, but have instead Mr. Gideon's
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excellent commentary.
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Enjoy.
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David Kravitz, writing for Wire's threat level, had details of a story again that in
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this past week, a couple of other sources picked up on.
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A student in Texas was suspended for refusing to wear an ID badge, a school ID badge that had
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a radio frequency identifier tag or an RFID or RFID tag in it.
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She cited both privacy and religious reasons, but it sounds like more of the latter in reading
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the details of what Kravitz has put together and perhaps only the former in service of the
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latter the religious centrist.
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Later in the article, Kravitz quotes the family as identifying the badges as the mark
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of the beast from the book of revelations.
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I had dearly hoped this was a student more directly inspired by something like Corey
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Doctorow's little brother that, in a case of predicting the present, posits an environment
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that sounds actually quite a bit like what was at play here in this Texas school.
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Kravitz lists several other schools that have tried or are using similar tracking text
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so this is not new in the first instance.
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In most cases, the desire to do so is based on funding being based in part on student
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attendance.
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Before using badges and RFIDs, this relied on physical presence during roll call during
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home reading.
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You may remember that, I certainly do.
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Now, with more sophisticated technologies, the school can know if a student is present
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whether they are at a particular place at a particular time.
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I'm not entirely unsympathetic to the school's position here.
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Interestingly, any number of students may be involved with activities that pull them
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away from home room.
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In many cases, those activities would actually be strongly associated with successful students
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like clubs, sports, or student government and shouldn't cause schools to be penalized
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for encouraging those additional activities that speak so well of students drive motivation
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and ultimate success.
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I don't want to feed into demonizing RFID either, which is a legitimate, multiple-use
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technology, like many others of which I am an unreserved fan, like Wi-Fi or, well,
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the personal computer.
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The fact that the students, as a sense, are represented as barcodes on the badge and
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that undoubtedly the RFIDs are non-secure and open to any self-built reader, that's
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more concerning.
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And those are, I think, fixable things and fixable in the sense that not just in the specific
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implementation, but in the drivers to make sure that those using this technology are
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using it correctly and using it well.
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By way of example, I unavoidably possess a US passport that has an RFID in it.
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I just had to renew it too late before the option to have one without was concluded was
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no longer available.
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When it actually works at self-service kiosks, which it doesn't always, and more reliably
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at foreign customs and border checks, I'm a fan of how it makes an otherwise slow and
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burdensome process, relatively pain-free, more so than with a paper checks or having
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to use other identifiers.
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I can, however, act to protect my privacy outside of it being actively checked.
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That's something that I don't think the passport as delivered is a good job of.
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My passport, my personal passport, is an in-sconced in a radio blocking wallet when I'm
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not asked to present it for valid reasons.
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I wonder if this student or any others could make a case for doing something similar, I suspect
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not.
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As long as the automated role system still shows a more accurate count than the manual process,
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though, I can't see on what basis school administrators would object other than just a
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performance.
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Even if this student isn't a nascent privacy advocate, the idea of rolling the system
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out to all 110 schools in the district is much more likely to catch out such early activist
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and hackers with the kinds of questions that I think they should be asking.
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At least in this instance, a judge hearing the family's complaint has blocked the suspension
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in order to allow the situation to be investigated more thoroughly.
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Kids are clever.
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Far more than I think we often give them credit.
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If the school doesn't find a better balance in using this technology for its ends, which
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I've admitted, I think, are too degree valid, but at the same time, respecting the wishes
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and desires of the students, then the sort of evasion techniques really offered in little
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brother, and at most, one web search away for those that haven't read this young adult
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novel, will be deployed.
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Have no doubt.
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Breaking the system, rather than understanding reactions and working with them, will just
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make the situation worse and in the extreme case, lead to a clueless, ratcheting up that
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serves no one's agenda.
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From torrentfreak.com, date November 28, 2012, by Ernesto, TV Shaq Edmund, Richard O'Dryer
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will not be extra to the United States.
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Richard O'Dryer, the UK-based ex-administrator of the video linking website TV Shaq, will
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not be extra to the U.S. to face copyright infringement charges.
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After a long and hard battle, spearhead by his mother and support by Wikipedia found
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Jimmy Wales, O'Dryer struck a deal with the U.S. government, instead of being extra
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died, the student has signed a deferred prosecution agreement, which means that he keeps his freedom
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in exchange for paying compensation to the copyright holders.
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To read the RIS's article, follow links in the show notes.
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From techdirt.com, by Mike Masnick, dated November 28, 2012, six strikes delayed until early
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part of 2013.
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We heard rumors of this a couple of weeks ago from people involved in some of the six
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strikes program at various ISPs, but the strikes effort already delayed from its original
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planned starting date of July until around now has been pushed back again until the early
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part of 2013.
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The Center for Copyright Information, which is administering the program, claims that
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it's due to the unexpected factors largely stemming from Hurricane Sandy, but we've heard
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that's mainly an excuse for some other problems that meant the plan was simply not ready
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for prime time.
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Either way, the program will certainly begin at some point, that which point ISPs and the
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entertainment industry will proceed to piss off some of their best customers for no
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good reason.
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Can't see how it's going to increase sales, but I guess all those MPA lawyers who have
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anti-piracy in their titles have to feel like they're contributing something to justify
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their salaries.
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Other headlines in the news to read these stories, follow links in the show notes.
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BitTorrent Site Owners Fear European Domain Name Seizures.
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Yes, they're going to have test cases to adopt the American system, a wonderful system
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of economy that most people in the know really call fascism.
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The marriage between state and corporation.
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News from TechDirt.com and these times.com have had times that org and org of.com used
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under a range permission.
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Or you clip from the command line that net used under permission of the creative commons
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by attribution share-like license.
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News from torrentfreak.com and eff.org used under permission of the creative commons
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by attribution license.
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News from wlcentral.org and democracy now.org used under permission of the creative
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commons by attribution, non-commercial, no driver's license.
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News sources retain the respective copyrights.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me, please send your comments to dg at deepgeek.us.
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The web page for this program is at www.talkgeektoMe.us.
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You can subscribe to me on identical as the username deepgeek.
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Or you could follow me on Twitter.
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My username there is dggtm as in deepgeek talk geek to me.
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This episode of Talk Geek To Me is licensed under the creative commons attribution share-like
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3.0 on port license.
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This license allows commercial reuse of the work as well as allowing you to modify the
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work as long as you share alike the same rights you have received under this license.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on day through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener by yourself.
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If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dark Pound and the Infonomicom Computer
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Club.
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HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com, all binref projects are crowd-responsive
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by LUNA pages.
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From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to LUNA pages.com for all your hosting
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needs.
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Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons, attribution, share
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