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73 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3578
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Title: HPR3578: Linux Inlaws S01E54: Electronic Freedom Never Mind the Civil Rest
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3578/hpr3578.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 01:44:47
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,578 for Wednesday the 20th of April 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Linnix and Laws Sayy, Electronic Freedom Never Mind the Civil
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Rest.
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It is part of the series Linnix and Laws.
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It is hosted by Monochromic and is about 87 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is a discussion with members of the Electronic Frontier, Georgia about Electronic
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Freedom Civil Rights.
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This is Linnix and Laws.
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A podcast on topics around free and open-source software, any associated contraband, communism,
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the revolution in general, and whatever else, fanciful.
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Please note that this and other episodes may contain strong language, offensive humor,
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and other certainly not politically correct language.
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You have been warned.
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Our parents insisted on this disclaimer.
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Happy mum?
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Thus, the content is not suitable for consumption in the workplace, especially when played
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back on a speaker in an open-plan office or similar environments.
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Any miners under the age of 35, or any pets including fluffy little killer bunnies,
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your trusted guide dog unless on speed, and Q to T-Rexes are other associated dinosaurs.
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Welcome to Linnix and Laws, season 1, episode 54 of Thing Martin.
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How are things in the Kingdom?
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They are very windy, very windy, yes.
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But I just...
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Probably not so much.
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You're me, right?
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You've got to hold on them between before it gets there, sir.
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I understand that Lizzie has corded to today, or over the weekend.
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Lizzie sent me a mail saying, sorry, I got it too.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, so she can't make it on the show, I'm afraid.
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Yes, for those people who are not in the loop, we are talking about the queen of the Kingdom
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who apparently has caught COVID on the outstretched, I'm afraid.
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Lizzie, if you're listening, you may...
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I hope this is over by now, because we may release this a little bit,
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kind of later than we actually recorded.
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But this is not about COVID, or Queen Elizabeth, unfortunately, I'm not at,
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because I can speak for Martin too, we are just at the very bottom of our heart.
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We are not only loyal, this is what we are right, this is all right.
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Martin, I'm joking, we're not.
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But this is not about the right, it's all the Kingdom, there was a lot of other species.
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But this is rather about the Georgia, and before I get this wrong, guys, why don't you introduce
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yourself?
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Okay, I'll start.
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This is Scott Jones, I'm Acting Director of Electronic Frontier's Georgia.
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I've been, let's see, Electronic Frontier's Georgia was founded in 1995, I've been active
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in it since 1996.
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And this is, essentially it's a hobby, and my day job, and my day job, I'm a system administrator
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and I've been a developer in the past, so I'm familiar with technology, I've worked
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in technology for quite some time.
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Excellent, over to you, Chuck.
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Okay, Chuck Delozer, I am with Electronic Frontier's Georgia, when it has been, when we've
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needed it, I have called myself the community outreach coordinator or things of that nature.
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I have been the person who's going out to reach out to a lot of different groups that
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are doing other work that are not necessarily technology related, but find that in the work
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that they're doing, whether it's some type of political issue, or maybe it's with homeowners,
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wherever they are, they find that technology is in their lives, and so I wanted to try
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to be a liaison to get them involved in the kind of work that EFGA is interested in at
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a state and local level, which is defending civil liberties and privacy.
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And Keith.
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Keith Watson, I just recently retired from Georgia Institute Technology, where I was ahead
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of information security for the College of Computing.
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I'm a G.A.C. Certified Institute, Security Institute, handler, and my original life,
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I was a submarine Navy Electronics Technician, working in cryptography and civil intelligence.
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I used to sponsor, when I was at Georgia Tech, I captured a flag team for them.
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I'm co-founder of Atlanta Locksport, so if anybody's in the lock picking, I love lock picking.
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I also host the look at chapter of EFCon here in Atlanta called DC-404.
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I'm a moderator of Atlanta Cybersecurity Engineers Discord server, and a member of Atlanta 2600 chapter.
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And I'm also co-developer of a capture of the flag called Network King of the Hill,
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where we host monthly capture of the flags at DC-404 and at 2600 meetings,
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when we're not in the middle of COVID.
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So when we get back to meeting and personal, we'll go back to hosting those.
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I'm not only do we have...
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Sorry, go ahead.
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I've known Chuck for many, many years, and when...
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Not sorry, Chuck, Scott.
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I've known... Actually, Chuck, I've known you for a while too.
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Scott, I've known for many years, and when he told me about EFGA,
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I immediately volunteered for working with them.
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Primarily, I do a valuation of bills that come online this year.
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We've got a spade of them that all relate to privacy, security, online safety,
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that sort of thing.
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So governments tend to measure with my crometer,
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mark with chalk, cut with ax when it comes to their bills.
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So we try to give them some semblance of guidance
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in regards to information security and privacy,
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so that the bills don't cause more damage than good.
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That's the basic idea.
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And before we go into the background of the EFGA,
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let me round a little bit about the beautiful South.
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Nevermind.
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Georgia Tech.
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And more than please have actually somebody from Georgia Tech on the show,
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because that brings back more front memories
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while the trading through Georgia and Atlanta specifically.
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Guys, we are more than happy to have you on the show.
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But enough ranting.
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Why don't we start?
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Because I reckon there are about two listeners out there
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who do not know what the electronic frontier is.
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Nevermind the electronic frontier foundation.
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So why don't we go into a little of the history
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about the EFF and the EFGA in general?
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OK, let me start talking about the EFF.
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EFF is the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
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It was started in the, I guess, around 1990,
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or based on events that happened around 1990.
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There was a small...
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Which were?
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There was a small gaming company called Steve Jackson Games.
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They're still around, but they got rated by the Secret Service.
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And they were innocent at the time.
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But at the time, I think there was a lot of concern about...
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There was a lot of concern about...
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We had this new technology coming in.
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And we had law enforcement that didn't understand it at all.
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And so the founders of Electronic Frontier...
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People got together and eventually decided
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there needs to be an organization that would speak
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on behalf of people in this technology sector
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and people who were working in technology
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who had issues with their rights.
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And so a couple of people got together and founded
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Electronic Frontier Foundation.
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It's often been called the ACLU of Cyberspace.
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And the mission is...
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The mission is kind of at the intersection of technology,
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civil rights in the law
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and how the law interfaces with technology.
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We find a lot of times, even today, years later,
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we have legislators, judges,
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that other people that in positions of influence and power,
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that they don't quite get how technology affects
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people's rights.
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And that's been part of the problem.
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And so that's kind of been why EFF
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needed to be created or founded.
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So again, we have an American organization called
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the American Civil Liberties Union or the ACLU.
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And so, I'm sorry, EFF has often been compared
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to the ACLU, but they're dealing with technology
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and technology-related issues.
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And so they have been called the ACLU of Cyberspace.
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Go ahead.
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For the Stosure People, I'm an active sponsor of ACLU
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for the simple reason that I believe in their goals.
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So let's forget about the EFF.
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Let's talk about American civil rights
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and other stuff from it.
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I'm joking.
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I'd be more than happy to talk about that, actually.
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No, no, don't decide.
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I reckon we'll use our finalist name in case.
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But no, let's go back to the EFF.
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But I find the analogy to the ACLU
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quite more than fascinating, actually,
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because I fully concur.
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These two organizations have a lot in common
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from a, I wouldn't say philosophical perspective,
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but almost, and probably we get shot for this
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from a communist or socialist perspective.
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But we go into that, I reckon, in a minute,
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with regards to, you know, a five-year-old,
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and all the other stuff, right?
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Sorry?
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You mean you share the same principles, right?
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I think what are you trying to say?
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Exactly, yes.
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Martin White, because you are actually one,
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but kind of, the prototypical communist on the show,
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why don't you chip in now for a change?
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No, I'm not really...
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Not on not the real communist.
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I don't think we need to bring
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the political preferences into the...
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We do, Martin, we do.
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No, we do.
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And probably we do, it's hard to get away from that in Georgia.
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Extra, extra likeness.
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By the way, for anybody who's listening to this
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and interested in that original case
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with Steve Jackson Games,
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there's an excellent book called The Hacker Crackdown.
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You can get it on Amazon.
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It might be available free now on Gutenberg,
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but it's about that entire case.
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The interesting thing about the book
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is it's written from both sides of the issue.
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The author wrote from the perspective of the people involved
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and from the perspective of the government
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and how they collided
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and the aftermath of all that occurred.
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It's a really interesting read.
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Wow, okay.
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Why don't we kind of shed two more minutes,
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shed a little bit more lives like two more minutes
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on the EFF, its origins and the history
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before we go into the EFGA in more detail.
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And your aims, ambitions,
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world domination, all the rest of it.
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So you want to know more about the electronic frontier
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foundation?
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Yes, because I reckon that at least two of our three lists,
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well, four lists, maybe,
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maybe haven't come across the EFF in that line of detail.
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We did a show on the OSI about,
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what was it about, half a year ago?
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Maybe it's about this.
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We also had somebody from the FSFE,
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FSFE, sorry, the FSF Europe on the show,
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but the EFF kind of has escaped us so far,
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but now that we have you on the show,
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apart from the Georgian kind of focus
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or focal point rather,
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why don't you shed some light on the EFF history
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and that sort of thing?
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If you are a game.
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Well, I'm completely qualified to talk about the history,
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per se, but I would say when you mentioned
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free software foundation, Europe or wherever they are,
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I think the electronic frontier foundation
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is focused more on the law.
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And they do have a lot of lawyers who go over
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a lot of technology related legal cases.
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And what the EFA, the Electronic Frontier Alliance,
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which our group, the Electronic Frontier's Georgia,
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many similar names and you have to keep them all straight.
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I think that what is another piece
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of the EFF's history that is noteworthy
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is that they have created the Electronic Frontier Alliance
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to enable groups all across the United States
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to form of their own accord and to be citizen advocates
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and citizen activists.
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That's how I found Scott and eventually,
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because of Scott, that's how I found Keith.
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And that's where you can be an average person like me
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who while I did go to Georgia Tech for a while
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and I was in a design program and architecture,
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my background is not technology related per se.
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I'm more of somebody who's a hobbyist and very interested
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and said the Electronic Frontier Foundation
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has enabled someone like me to learn from the kind of issues
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that it highlights on its website at eff.org,
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but plug that.
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And it also allows me to meet people that are like Keith
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who is an ex-military person who has worked for many, many years
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at very high levels in technology
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and someone like myself and many of the other people
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that we meet at EFGA events
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would never have the opportunity to meet someone like that
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or Scott in the systems administrative position.
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And so the EFA has allowed people to come together.
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And I think that's something that we should highlight here
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about both our group here at the state level
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and what the Electronic Frontier Foundation
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has done across the country.
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So it's a fact to say that the EFA bridges somewhat
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the gap between, I'm exaggerating now,
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but bridges the gap between the EFF
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and some of the aims that the ACLU stands for.
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Yes, yes, in fact, we as a group here
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Electronic Frontier's Georgia will contact the ACLU
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and the ACLU will contact us
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because we will be able to provide support to one another.
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And I know that from other, you know,
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conference calls that I've been on
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over just either as a viewer or sometimes as a participant,
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that happens across the country.
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I mean, I've learned about technology related issues
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in California because of the EFA groups hosting something
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that the ACLU of California has done or for instance
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and things like that.
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So it really is kind of an umbrella
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that is bringing a lot of different groups together.
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Great.
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Excellent.
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Martin, sorry, I had a question too.
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I was going to ask, so all three of you
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come up at the angle from a technology perspective.
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And you're looking at laws and bills.
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How do you get around all the legal speakers?
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Would you have lawyers in your group as well?
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Or are you able to deal with that angle of the review as well?
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Well, we actually don't have, yeah, this is Scott.
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We actually don't have attorneys on staff.
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We do have attorneys who have volunteered their time
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and energy at times.
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They had either worked, he'd either worked, I guess,
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for gratis or maybe for very low rates on certain cases
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that they felt were important to where it is important
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to make a precedent or some situation like that.
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But again, we don't have any staff attorneys
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or anything like that.
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And we are kind of light on the legal expertise side.
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But the good news is that through the electronic frontier,
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or electronic frontier alliance,
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we have a connection to electronic frontier foundation
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where we can talk to their attorneys at least indirectly
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or we can discuss a particular problem that we may have.
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They can run it by their legal department
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and they can come back to us
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and give us some advice on the legal side.
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Now, we do know local attorneys here,
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but with the local attorneys,
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they're basically doing it nights and weekends
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kind of as a favor to us.
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Whereas electronic frontier foundation,
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it's their day job.
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So they're able to jump on things more quickly.
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And we do talk to some of the other organizations in town
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including ACLU of Georgia, the Georgia chapter
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and they have staff attorneys as well.
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So we don't have attorneys on staff with us
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or attorneys that are 100% dedicated to our group,
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but we do have access when we have a legal question.
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And also, it's not impossible to understand legal issues.
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People assume that it's written in some strange language
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we can't read.
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It's actually written that you can't understand it.
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Sometimes you have to look up terms.
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Over time, as you expose yourself to it,
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it becomes more accessible.
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So I'm an advocate for just jump in and start somewhere,
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read about it and learn about it.
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As citizens, we have some responsibility
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to be involved in the process.
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By definition, well here in the United States,
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our government is sort of predicated on the idea
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that the government should have limited power.
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And what power it does have,
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it should be observed and monitored at all times.
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And it's our duty as citizens
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to make sure they're getting it right.
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Okay.
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And if we don't and something goes wrong,
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it's our fault for not having intervened.
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So it may be perceived me from abroad,
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but yeah, it's different.
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I realize that in other countries,
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they're going to look at this like,
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I've got three heads that makes no sense to them.
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So I understand that.
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I've lived abroad, so I do get that it's very different
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in other places.
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There's in the case of the United States,
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where we're called upon to actually be directly involved.
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And those people don't pick up and run with that.
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We have the opportunity to do so.
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And it impacts all of us.
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There have been some very bad laws that got passed.
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The DMCA, the,
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I can't think of it right off hand.
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The cyber crimes bill that was passed
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that have some very, very bad side effects
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that are still being worked out.
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Recently, we had one, two years ago,
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called SB315,
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which was going to criminalize cyber research
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in simple terms.
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Like if I noticed that a website had a vulnerability,
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I just happened to notice that,
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and I reported it,
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then I could be prosecuted for criminal hacking.
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And so we were able to get a working with not only the FGA,
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but a great number of other people
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chimed in on that bill
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and was able to get the governor to veto the bill.
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So that would have caused all kinds of havoc.
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There was a recent case here in the US
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where a reporter
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noted I was looking at a website
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and pressed F12 to view the source code,
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which is not an uncommon thing to do.
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And noticed that on the webpage it didn't show up,
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but in the source code,
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it had the social security numbers
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of all the people working there.
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So he reported it.
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Yeah, and he reported it.
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And the governor of the state wanted him prosecuted
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for hacking, criminal hacking.
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Now, yeah.
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And so everybody in the industry,
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people like the FF,
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also other cybersecurity experts in the country
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said, no, governor,
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I don't think you understand
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and explained what F12 does.
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And that viewing source code is not criminal hacking
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and that he was completely offline.
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And he doubled down and said,
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no, no, I want him prosecuted.
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And it went through several rounds of that.
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And eventually, just recently,
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I think two weeks ago,
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the prosecution in that state
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said they were not going to pursue the case.
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And so the governor's students
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and prosecuted, but the prosecutor said,
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no, we're not pursuing that.
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But those are the kinds of problems you have.
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I'm finding the rules.
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Yes.
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Yeah, you know,
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sometimes legislature wants to do,
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now mind you, this is a bit hyperbolic,
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but they'll want to do things like,
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math is too hard with pie being interrational.
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And but couldn't we just make it three to make it easier?
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And they do the equivalent of that
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with some of the bills
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and that they try to pass related to technology.
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They don't really understand
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how the technology works quite often.
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In fact, there's one bill I'm reviewing currently,
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where in essence, the bill says,
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insert magical technical wand here
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to solve other problems.
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And that's, sorry, that doesn't work that way.
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Or AI will fix our problem.
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Well, AI doesn't,
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isn't a magic bullet.
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It doesn't fix everything.
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It doesn't solve those kinds of problems.
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And quite often we find out
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it can't be relied on upon
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in a way that we think it can.
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So those are the kinds of issues we deal with
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in talking to the legislators
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in trying to get them to understand
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the technical underpinnings of what's actually possible.
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And those things which should be moderated
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and those things which should not be moderated.
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But Keith, you see, at the end of the day,
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despair not, I'm tempted to say,
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because there is hope at last.
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For example, I mean, I'm a great admirer
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of, for example, the American Constitution.
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Because the people wrote the American Constitution,
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knew what they were doing.
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And this is a red line that goes through your legislation
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at the end of the day.
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For example, you can only do two terms.
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So at the end of the day,
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Trump had a maximum of eight years.
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I hope it stays at four.
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But that's my personal opinion.
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The point that I'm making here, guys,
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you just have to take a close look.
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And this is federal legislation, this is state legislation.
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You have more checks and balances that you know of
|
|
or that the common Joe blog in the street perceives
|
|
and there is light at the end of the time.
|
|
That's what I'm saying here.
|
|
And if you read the Constitution carefully,
|
|
it's already built in the whole thing
|
|
on a constitutional level.
|
|
Of course, there are things broken
|
|
like the Electoral College.
|
|
Yes, sorry, I'm derailing completely here,
|
|
but hear me out.
|
|
The Electoral College and correct me if I'm wrong,
|
|
was built at a time when the population
|
|
was quite different in the US,
|
|
because you had much more people living in rural America
|
|
than you had now.
|
|
So the Electoral College reflects a state of the nation
|
|
about 200 years ago.
|
|
There is no, there's no surprise reading
|
|
that now, of course, with the whole shift
|
|
in the overall democracy,
|
|
what do I remember before, a population spread
|
|
that this is not adequate in modern times.
|
|
Let's put it this way.
|
|
So Bernie Sanders and friends do have a point
|
|
when they say the structure is broken,
|
|
but I'm tempted to say the whole idea is the valid.
|
|
Of course, I'm derailing now because
|
|
this is not a podcast, American history,
|
|
but the part that I'm making here is,
|
|
it's quite straightforward.
|
|
Your country has a lot of things going for it.
|
|
And your constitution, never mind the things
|
|
that come out of it.
|
|
And Keith, what you're saying there,
|
|
it just makes the point still applies.
|
|
Yeah, I would agree with that.
|
|
The, in the fact that it still applies,
|
|
you can have a whole, there's a whole debate
|
|
over the validity of our election system right now.
|
|
In fact, one of the things that we've had to deal with
|
|
over and over and over again is our election process.
|
|
In fact, I've had to go to battle multiple times now
|
|
over how we do our ballot counting,
|
|
what machines we use, the process we use.
|
|
And the most common thing that comes up constantly
|
|
is when somebody says, we put a man on the moon,
|
|
why can't we vote online?
|
|
But at the point.
|
|
And the problem is they don't actually understand
|
|
the underlying things that voting has to do.
|
|
In other words, what are called constraints.
|
|
I would run into this all the time
|
|
with students at Georgia Tech,
|
|
where they would say, why can't we do X?
|
|
Because from their point of view,
|
|
this constraints were very minimal.
|
|
And they just don't understand all the things involved
|
|
that are trying to be solved.
|
|
And if they did, they've come to a completely different
|
|
conclusion.
|
|
And on the surface, it looks simple.
|
|
So an analogy would be, we put a man on the moon,
|
|
why can't we build a bridge from California to China?
|
|
And you say, well, wait a minute,
|
|
you realize the ocean's deep
|
|
and we have limits on material technology
|
|
and construction methodologies.
|
|
And there's things like shipping lanes
|
|
and hurricanes or in our case typhoons in the Pacific.
|
|
And there's all kinds of mitigating issues
|
|
that you're not taking into account.
|
|
It's not like technology could wave a magic wand
|
|
and solve all problems.
|
|
If we put a man on the moon, why haven't we cured cancer yet?
|
|
You could easily say that as well.
|
|
Or why haven't we cured COVID yet?
|
|
We put a man on the moon.
|
|
Those are the same kind of arguments.
|
|
Well, those are the kinds of simplistic mindsets
|
|
that commonly crop up in these bills.
|
|
They're trying.
|
|
They're just, you'd think they're not trying hard enough.
|
|
One of the things I've noticed,
|
|
and I always kind of thought of this
|
|
at first when I started doing this,
|
|
was I was doing the legislators homework for them.
|
|
Isn't this their job to research this stuff
|
|
and find this stuff out?
|
|
Well, I then looked at how many bills
|
|
actually just in the state of Georgia.
|
|
There are several hundred, when I say several,
|
|
five, 600 bills per session for the state,
|
|
for the house and the Senate.
|
|
So there's like 500 plus bills in the Senate,
|
|
500 plus bills in the House,
|
|
some number of those percolate to the surface,
|
|
get some amount of viewing, get voted on,
|
|
pass over and cross over to the other side,
|
|
some process goes through,
|
|
and some of those come out the other end
|
|
and actually become bills or laws that get signed
|
|
by the governor of veto in some cases.
|
|
That is astounding, I'm out of work,
|
|
that the legislators are responsible for,
|
|
and there just isn't enough time in the day
|
|
to be that level of expert necessary
|
|
on all those subjects.
|
|
So when it comes to things like electronic freedom,
|
|
privacy and security, that's where the EFG comes in
|
|
and acting as a source that they can rely on
|
|
to give them that kind of in-depth,
|
|
technical understanding of what they're trying to do.
|
|
And that's the problem.
|
|
We can build technology which takes a great deal
|
|
of depth of understanding to do correctly.
|
|
And technology is a forced multiplier.
|
|
It is very difficult and takes exceptional focus
|
|
and detailed work to get it right.
|
|
In that case, it's a forced multiplier for good.
|
|
But on the other hand, it's really easy to get it wrong.
|
|
And when you get it wrong, it's a forced multiplier for bad.
|
|
So we've got it going against this
|
|
and that it takes hard work to get right.
|
|
It's easy to do it wrong.
|
|
And by simply not paying attention to all the constraints
|
|
and making assumptions like we put on a man in the moon,
|
|
why can't we do X?
|
|
Those kinds of things can lead to disaster.
|
|
So we try to prevent that as much as possible
|
|
and try to put some sanity in that process.
|
|
And it's all up to volunteers.
|
|
Nobody makes us do this.
|
|
We hope that other people would join us.
|
|
By the way, if anybody's listening to this,
|
|
we'd like to join EFTA.
|
|
Feel free.
|
|
The membership constraints are really, really heinous.
|
|
You have to show up and care.
|
|
That's basically it.
|
|
So things within the show notes, of course.
|
|
People, yes, I couldn't have put it better,
|
|
but at the end of the day, I'm almost tempted to add here.
|
|
And this is kind of the internally baked now.
|
|
Would you rather prefer the legislation to come down
|
|
from the hill as in Washington, D.C.
|
|
or being done on a state level?
|
|
I mean, let me take a step back here.
|
|
There are two nations, two types of nations on the planet.
|
|
I'm exaggerating now, but you know what I mean?
|
|
Centralistic ones, like the Kingdom, like France,
|
|
like Russia, what remains to exist, of course.
|
|
And there are also other types of nations,
|
|
like Germany comes to mind.
|
|
Of course, the US and other nations
|
|
that have a more federal system in place.
|
|
Both types have advantages and disadvantages,
|
|
but at the end of the day, I reckon the federal system
|
|
and the small personal opinion has a slight advantage
|
|
because it's more democratic at the end of the day.
|
|
Are you starting to be corrected for enough?
|
|
But let me just go ahead, sorry.
|
|
OK, I'll say this about it, because the internet
|
|
is kind of ubiquitously everywhere at the same time.
|
|
And so it seems like if you're regulating it,
|
|
it would make more sense to do it at the federal level.
|
|
But we found that special interests
|
|
who can't get their way at the federal level
|
|
will try to go to the states and get what they want with the state,
|
|
get what they want from the state.
|
|
So in other words, if you can't pass it at the federal level,
|
|
if you can go pass it 50 times at the state level,
|
|
you can essentially get a de facto federal bill.
|
|
But sometimes that's bad legislation
|
|
because it favors a particular special interest
|
|
and is really not in the general public interest.
|
|
So that's a tactic that you see sometimes
|
|
within the states with respect to state legislation
|
|
versus federal legislation.
|
|
However, on the other hand, there are times
|
|
when the activist community is wanting
|
|
to try out a legislative initiative or something like that.
|
|
And they start at the local level first,
|
|
and then they go to the state level
|
|
if it succeeds at the local level.
|
|
And then maybe they take it from the state level
|
|
to the federal level.
|
|
So there's good reasons, and maybe not
|
|
so good reasons to change what I might call the scoping
|
|
as to whether it's local state or federal.
|
|
But ultimately, the internet is kind
|
|
of ubiquitous everywhere, and a consistent model is helpful
|
|
because it's pretty much the same everywhere.
|
|
One last interjection here.
|
|
Of course, on the federal level, you
|
|
have a concentration of funds because it's
|
|
easier to lobby on the federal level
|
|
than on an invisible state level.
|
|
It goes without saying.
|
|
So if you just put a cup of millions onto the hill,
|
|
you can save billions on the state level.
|
|
I'm joking, but you know what I mean?
|
|
Well, actually, this is a really good,
|
|
this is a really interesting topic, actually,
|
|
because there's theory of what's better,
|
|
centralized, or a federated system.
|
|
One of the advantages of a federated system,
|
|
and a good analogy of this, is imagine
|
|
all the products and services you use in your life.
|
|
Are all of them provided by, to pick on Apple,
|
|
are they provided by Apple?
|
|
And the answer's no.
|
|
And that's because Apple has an invented or thought
|
|
of every product or service that you want to have.
|
|
They've thought of good products and services,
|
|
but not all the ones that you would want.
|
|
So when you get into a centralized system,
|
|
you end up with a one organization trying
|
|
to come up with solutions for everything.
|
|
Well, if you think about it, all the solutions that we have
|
|
in life today are not created by a centralized system.
|
|
They were created by individuals somewhere who had an idea
|
|
and ran with it and got a bunch of other people who said,
|
|
hey, I like that idea too, and joined in on it.
|
|
And it eventually became an Apple or a Microsoft or a company
|
|
in some cases, or just a good idea in other cases.
|
|
So, and the good idea spread.
|
|
Well, the minute you say that we're no longer going to allow
|
|
those decentralized ideas to flourish
|
|
in a sort of an intellectual marketplace,
|
|
that it all has to come from the central location.
|
|
Well, that assumes that that central location
|
|
will invent, think of, and solve all the problems
|
|
from all the myriad ways that all those people manage
|
|
to come up with throughout history.
|
|
And that's not a possible solution.
|
|
So, it's kind of like saying, rather than using this gigantic
|
|
multi-processor supercomputer we have called the world
|
|
and all the individuals in it,
|
|
let's just use one IBM X86 computer down in the basement
|
|
of some government building instead.
|
|
And that's just by design, not a good idea.
|
|
You won't come up with all the novel
|
|
and incredible solutions that people were able to come up with.
|
|
Now, neither system gone to extreme is the solution.
|
|
You need some marrying in the middle.
|
|
And that's where this whole process
|
|
of the EFGA and government comes in.
|
|
There are some things that you do want to bubble,
|
|
take those ideas and take them to the middle
|
|
and use them in a government centralized manner.
|
|
And that's where you create a law.
|
|
And there's other things you want to just let
|
|
be done at the local level.
|
|
I'm pretty sure that where I live and I have
|
|
all kinds of wildlife in my backyard
|
|
that they do not want the same rules here
|
|
that they want in a lockdown dog park
|
|
in the middle of Los Angeles, the city of Los Angeles.
|
|
Obviously we couldn't even manage the wildlife here
|
|
like you would a dog park where everything's on a leash
|
|
and has to have somebody pick up after it.
|
|
You can't do that with wildlife in the backyard.
|
|
So those are examples of things that only work
|
|
at a local level at a specific location
|
|
and don't work universally everywhere.
|
|
So Tim Cook, if you're listening,
|
|
Stalin and Lenin are not role models.
|
|
Do not do as they did.
|
|
I'm exaggerating guys, but you know what I mean?
|
|
That is a precise example of the problem.
|
|
In fact, because Stalin decided to make
|
|
a centralized system that causes massive famine
|
|
that caused, killed a whole lot of people
|
|
when they had a working distributed system that worked.
|
|
And they decided to kill it and go to a centralized system.
|
|
And it had unintended consequences.
|
|
Yes, sorry, Martin, but I'm digressing.
|
|
Well, I would jump in and say the one thing
|
|
that I've heard everyone say in the last few minutes
|
|
is it is about product and service,
|
|
which I can understand some of that argument
|
|
that you can't ask for that to be filtered through
|
|
or audited somehow with one central location
|
|
at the federal level maybe here in the United States.
|
|
If we were using this as an example,
|
|
but I would say that the governance of things,
|
|
I think a lot of what I see happening
|
|
where it impacts a person's life, technology and surveillance.
|
|
I think the governance of that is very important.
|
|
And I think a lot of the missteps happen at a state level
|
|
because that's when states who for whatever social reason
|
|
or some other type of reason will do their own
|
|
patch on something and that's maybe an area
|
|
where the internet, if we want to just call it the internet,
|
|
I guess everybody kind of stumbles over what terms to use.
|
|
But I think that kind of federal level governance
|
|
or coming up with a set of guidelines
|
|
is something that we're greatly lacking.
|
|
And that's something that will end up having
|
|
a lot of unintended consequences
|
|
because the things that will be reactionary
|
|
that will happen at a state level will mean
|
|
that if you live in these states,
|
|
you will be able to act accordingly or be treated in one way
|
|
and you will have different experiences if you live in another.
|
|
And for me, the kind of utopian vision of the beginnings
|
|
of the internet world that we're all growing up
|
|
and living through now, it's more fractured
|
|
because of that type of arguing
|
|
without that overall kind of governance.
|
|
And I don't have an answer for how that should happen,
|
|
but I know that the United States is needing desperately
|
|
to step up its game and start looking at things
|
|
at a federal level and not allowing
|
|
personal information, medical private information
|
|
that they claim is always protected by HIPAA
|
|
and some other laws that we have here in the United States
|
|
or other very personal private areas
|
|
to be collected and data harvested out
|
|
to whoever the highest bidder is.
|
|
And states are acting on that
|
|
or they're purposely not acting on that.
|
|
And your life experience is very different
|
|
depending on where you live here in the United States
|
|
and because we don't have a federal guideline
|
|
for how the internet is involved in our personal lives.
|
|
That's how it makes sense.
|
|
Yeah, Chuck, you've touched on a recurring problem
|
|
that we run into all the time regarding these kinds of laws.
|
|
The internet moves at the speed of internet,
|
|
it's microseconds, things changed constantly
|
|
and in ways that we could never anticipate
|
|
and extremely quickly.
|
|
Unfortunately, people don't respond that fast
|
|
when it comes to policy, procedure and governance.
|
|
An example is Henry Ford decided to use this new,
|
|
fangled idea that he did not invent,
|
|
it had already been around a while called the assembly line.
|
|
And everybody in business at the time
|
|
told him that was crazy, that will never work,
|
|
that will be another failure.
|
|
50 years later, they were teaching in a business school
|
|
that if you weren't using an assembly line
|
|
and those kinds of methodologies in your practices,
|
|
you were brain damaged.
|
|
But it took 50 years.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
So at the speed of the internet colliding
|
|
with 50 year cycles or changes occurring in generations
|
|
or 20 year increments, yeah, you're gonna have a collision,
|
|
you're gonna have a lot of noise and problems and issues
|
|
that arise as a result of that massive difference
|
|
in speed at which these two things occur.
|
|
And that's part of what we're dealing with
|
|
is stuff's changing so fast,
|
|
we literally don't have time to absorb
|
|
what is the potential impact of this,
|
|
what impact would we like it to be?
|
|
And then the third problem is,
|
|
well, wait a minute, will that device or technology
|
|
actually do what it was intended?
|
|
And that's the idea of hacking in the original senses,
|
|
which I deal a lot with is discovering the difference
|
|
between what something was designed to do
|
|
and what it is capable of.
|
|
And sometimes that what it is capable of can be a good thing.
|
|
For instance, using a screwdriver to open a can of paint,
|
|
that's a good thing because you don't have the actual tool
|
|
necessary to open a can of paint for those who don't know
|
|
there is a tool made for opening cans of paint.
|
|
But a flat head screwdriver will work just as well.
|
|
Well, that's hacking because that wasn't the intended use
|
|
of the screwdriver.
|
|
Now, that's a simplistic idea of it,
|
|
but we'll wait a minute, would that cause a problem
|
|
if suddenly using a screwdriver to open a can of paint
|
|
caused an unintended consequence?
|
|
And that would require legislation to fix it.
|
|
That might take a while.
|
|
Well, when you're talking things like coming out
|
|
with baby monitors that are open to the internet
|
|
that anybody can access, they do a showdown search,
|
|
showdown is a service, by the way, SHODAN,
|
|
to find all the cameras and they can use it
|
|
for some nefarious purpose.
|
|
Yes, that has happened and happens regularly.
|
|
Well, do we need Registration to say that if you're building
|
|
a baby monitor, it actually has to be safe,
|
|
not just says it's safe on the package,
|
|
that it actually has to be safe,
|
|
and there's a standard for what that safe is.
|
|
Well, now you get into this political debate
|
|
that takes 20 years, and in the meantime,
|
|
they've sold five billion baby monitors.
|
|
A classic example of that is Android phones.
|
|
There's billions of Android phones out there
|
|
that are currently have multiple root accessible,
|
|
remote access, holes in them, security wise,
|
|
that cannot and never will be patched
|
|
that are going to be in service for years.
|
|
And there's nothing that says when they built those,
|
|
that they had to think of that in advance.
|
|
And that's the problem, was now that there's billions
|
|
of phones out there, they can be leveraged
|
|
to do some pretty heinous things.
|
|
What do we do with that?
|
|
That's just one technology.
|
|
That's just one device.
|
|
One operating system, from one company.
|
|
Multiply that by the number of companies,
|
|
number of devices, and the rate at which we can build new ones.
|
|
You got a serious problem on your hands.
|
|
That's where the EFGA comes in to try to help with that problem,
|
|
try to think through that ahead of time,
|
|
give our legislators a head up, heads up.
|
|
And things that the EFGA does,
|
|
we get ideas from other groups in other states.
|
|
For instance, if you have a state that comes up
|
|
with a really good template for a really well-thought-out
|
|
privacy legislation, we'll get wind of that through the EFF.
|
|
And then we can suggest that as a model for our state to use.
|
|
And if enough states do that, at some point,
|
|
as Chuck was saying, the federal government might step in
|
|
and say, you know what, there's so much fracturing here.
|
|
We're going to come up with an overarching one
|
|
that takes precedent over all those privacy
|
|
and give privacy to everybody, not just the states
|
|
that were ahead of their time that managed to give it
|
|
to their citizens.
|
|
We're going to give it to everybody.
|
|
That's the kind of thing that should happen.
|
|
No, whether or not that does or not.
|
|
That's another issue.
|
|
But we'll try to help help with that process.
|
|
I want to tell you, because you were kind of touching on this.
|
|
And Keith was kind of backing up what I was saying.
|
|
I don't know completely what's happening in Europe.
|
|
And I do follow some different groups.
|
|
I bookmark a whole lot of things.
|
|
But what Keith is talking about, like,
|
|
eventually, after the fracturing that the federal government
|
|
here in the United States may step in,
|
|
in the meantime, all of this calculation
|
|
that we're talking about with technology,
|
|
helping different IoT devices come online,
|
|
we have sensors in refrigerators.
|
|
As you know, I'm sure your listeners know all of this, too,
|
|
like in thermostats and all over the place.
|
|
But the problem is that we have to wait for all of these things
|
|
to be problematic enough and fractured enough
|
|
before the federal government comes in
|
|
and tries to really study something.
|
|
And it's granted, they're not smart enough.
|
|
And they don't have the expertise in that.
|
|
But it is no excuse that they're not smart enough,
|
|
that they haven't asked many, many expert people
|
|
because look at me.
|
|
I don't have a degree in computer science,
|
|
and I'm a part of a group of civil libertarians,
|
|
and I get to hang out with other people,
|
|
and I've had the gumption to do this.
|
|
Like, oh, I don't know how to do this.
|
|
So I may ask Keith, and Keith says,
|
|
I don't know how to do that either.
|
|
Well, I don't want to try this.
|
|
Well, let's let this other person,
|
|
because they do know this.
|
|
Did you know that guy is like a nuclear somebody?
|
|
No, I didn't.
|
|
And so you literally can't find the genius all around you.
|
|
And I don't understand why we give the government an excuse
|
|
to not do that.
|
|
Meanwhile, your thermostat is being looked at
|
|
by the service provider.
|
|
And nobody's bothered to say to the poor guy that's there.
|
|
Do you realize that you're taking all of this information
|
|
about all of these households and just passing it on
|
|
to the rest of whatever it is on the other end?
|
|
And we don't know what they're doing with that.
|
|
And some of that may sound dark and bleak,
|
|
and maybe we laugh about it a little bit
|
|
because we shug our shoulders.
|
|
We don't know what to do.
|
|
But at some point, people around the world
|
|
are going to find themselves very unhappy,
|
|
I feel, with that kind of backlash that happens
|
|
while we're waiting to catch up,
|
|
while we're waiting on our governments
|
|
around the world to catch up to things.
|
|
And I will close this comment by saying,
|
|
one thing that I have found that I think might be hopeful
|
|
and interesting is, I don't know if you all
|
|
have followed the elections in South America
|
|
that Chile has a new young president
|
|
that they did not expect to win.
|
|
And I was reading about them redoing
|
|
their constitution in Chile.
|
|
And one of the interesting things
|
|
that they have decided to put in their discussion,
|
|
I guess it's a long process,
|
|
is they're going to be talking about neural rights.
|
|
And I found that to be extraordinarily timely
|
|
because that is another frontier of data harvesting
|
|
that will take place because you will have
|
|
many, many more medical devices of the future
|
|
that will be doing brain computer interfaces
|
|
and all kinds of things in the telehealth space.
|
|
And neural rights will be kind of a concept
|
|
that we're going to hear more and more about in the future.
|
|
And I thought that was brilliant.
|
|
That the new, I don't know if the new president
|
|
is behind us specifically there,
|
|
but I know that it's being talked about
|
|
in the constitution that they're reworking right now.
|
|
So I found that that was interesting.
|
|
That there may be a young group of people
|
|
will be the ones to lead the way into the future.
|
|
It's not so great.
|
|
It's not so much, go ahead.
|
|
But before we do this,
|
|
it's very, very advanced.
|
|
The Chile story that you told us.
|
|
But on this particular note, Chuck,
|
|
I don't know if you're familiar.
|
|
I think it was Kay Chapman of the Software Freedom Conservancy
|
|
who says actually or required on a federal level
|
|
that the software of pacemakers has to be open sourced
|
|
because that exactly goes down that alley.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
That's exactly right.
|
|
And we don't want to find with those types of things
|
|
that we are trying to play catch up.
|
|
And so we need to be serious about it
|
|
at a government level.
|
|
And we don't need to just, you know,
|
|
we don't need to so fear and doubt an uncertainty
|
|
about it all.
|
|
We need to actually be solving problems
|
|
and advancing the future.
|
|
In that case, exactly.
|
|
Just make a little comment.
|
|
And I think the bodies in the States
|
|
do an excellent lobbying work here now
|
|
in a very positive sense that exactly
|
|
that the organizations like the software
|
|
even conservancy basically lobby for this
|
|
on a state as well as as federal level.
|
|
And it just makes sense because same thing goes for cars,
|
|
same thing goes for a formative equipment.
|
|
If it's open sourced, everybody can take a look at it
|
|
and come up with a flaws if you're inclined to do so.
|
|
So if it's closed sourced, you cannot simply do this.
|
|
So I might go ahead.
|
|
Yeah, and I was going to say the same thing.
|
|
In fact, what you're doing is doing the same
|
|
what open source software is all about
|
|
is being able to review the laws instead of the code
|
|
and have many people looking at them
|
|
with their expertise as to give a good opinion on
|
|
whether something is sound or not
|
|
as the examples you mentioned.
|
|
And you can never achieve this by, you know, originally,
|
|
you can think of the government or the state needs
|
|
to hire more experts in this area,
|
|
but you're never going to be as good as the collective right
|
|
to that has many more eyes and many more viewpoints
|
|
and expertise is on any of these things.
|
|
So I guess that kind of makes the case
|
|
to how big is your organization
|
|
and how many people do you rely on
|
|
to do these kind of things, right?
|
|
If it's just two people that look at some laws
|
|
or 200, that makes a big difference, right?
|
|
So I guess that makes the case
|
|
for all your organizations in the same vein.
|
|
But are you actively trying to increase these numbers
|
|
or as you mentioned, Chuck, you rely on people
|
|
that you know as well for certain expertise as well?
|
|
But I think my answer is the answer that we always have,
|
|
which is yes, we would always welcome more help.
|
|
It is very challenging to do.
|
|
People are very busy in doing that.
|
|
And I think that when you find young people
|
|
that are in the college age, university level
|
|
or just right thereafter, there's a lot of energy
|
|
and that's a good recruiting ground.
|
|
And then you always find a good recruiting ground
|
|
with people who are nearing or going into retirement
|
|
as well because there's extra time available.
|
|
And it's when you're in between those two spots
|
|
that it's harder than ever to do it.
|
|
But one of the things that I think
|
|
that Electronic Frontier's Georgia and other groups
|
|
I've heard from try to do is do outreach
|
|
in different ways for different groups
|
|
or different demographics or ages perhaps,
|
|
in ways that will be accessible to them.
|
|
And I think, you know, I think Keith had said
|
|
for the four meetings that we have here in Atlanta
|
|
that we may do a hybrid when we're able to go back
|
|
because we're able to interact differently
|
|
with people doing the video than we do
|
|
when we would meet in this public space,
|
|
which, you know, you may not be able to make every meeting
|
|
but you could dial in.
|
|
And that wasn't always the case.
|
|
And so I think that's gonna be part of what we will have to do
|
|
because what we're interested in started out for me
|
|
just a few years ago even as something
|
|
that I did not have the opportunity to get involved in.
|
|
I had to read on the internet about laws
|
|
that were being passed or fought by the Electronic Frontier
|
|
Foundation on a website
|
|
and I did not know anyone in these groups.
|
|
And now it becomes a time where not only was I interested
|
|
and I got myself into a place where I met some people
|
|
but that the need for the checks and balances
|
|
are smacking people in the face
|
|
because everything is becoming more digitized
|
|
or automated or whatever technology does you or where
|
|
do you want to use.
|
|
It's right there with you and it doesn't matter
|
|
if you're interested in prison reform.
|
|
You can pick any kind of topic, agriculture, trees.
|
|
There will be some sensor or some monitor
|
|
or some something where technology will play a role in that.
|
|
And while that may not seem important
|
|
in maybe a job that you have
|
|
when you read the way people write legislation
|
|
they can really do great good or great harm
|
|
depending on how they verbalize technology
|
|
in the proposed legislation.
|
|
I think that's the easiest way for me to say that.
|
|
The words that they do lawyer in
|
|
or the words that they lawyer out
|
|
make a big impact on people's lives.
|
|
And that's where we need to have more people understand
|
|
that it doesn't matter what issue
|
|
you find to be passionate about.
|
|
There will be a technology related part of it.
|
|
And if you're looking at laws and you want to do
|
|
some citizen lobbying you need to be looking
|
|
in your local area in Europe or Africa or wherever you are.
|
|
What is my technology component to my area of interest?
|
|
And you'll find a goldmine of ways
|
|
that you can be more effective in lobbying
|
|
or catching the people
|
|
at doing the dirty deals behind the tables
|
|
because there's a lot of money in technology.
|
|
Otherwise, we wouldn't have to be talking about all of this.
|
|
All of us is indeed.
|
|
Yeah, I make sense.
|
|
So you mentioned a couple of examples
|
|
with the baby cameras and the social security numbers
|
|
on a website.
|
|
So, okay, just to talk about the process,
|
|
do you have an active, let's go and look at all these laws
|
|
or that are about to be passed
|
|
or are there people that give you some clues
|
|
about all the such and such companies
|
|
trying to push this law through, right?
|
|
And it's really needs some good attention
|
|
because I think you mentioned there's like five to 600
|
|
going on at any one point in time.
|
|
So how do you manage to keep track of all that
|
|
and find the ones that are being pushed too quickly
|
|
and all the kind of stuff, right?
|
|
It's, I use, able to stay on top of that.
|
|
So everybody listening, anybody wherever you are,
|
|
whatever your local jurisdiction is,
|
|
you need to look and find what the website is
|
|
for your local jurisdiction, your leaders,
|
|
your commissioners, whoever it is
|
|
that's making the laws and you need to go through
|
|
what's probably a clunky website that will not be as flashy
|
|
as the ones that you prefer to look at.
|
|
And you will find the legislation proposed there, hopefully,
|
|
and that's what we do as a group of people.
|
|
And it's not an organized fashion,
|
|
we know when the session is,
|
|
so we know that we should be looking a few weeks ahead of time
|
|
to see if someone's prefiled something.
|
|
And then if we use our library skills,
|
|
we are looking for certain keywords.
|
|
So you might say cyber security would be a keyword
|
|
or things like that.
|
|
And we then ask the website to pull up all the bills
|
|
in this area.
|
|
And so that's an easy way of looking to see
|
|
if there seems to be something relevant.
|
|
And you just have to really just go through them
|
|
one at a time, there's no easier way.
|
|
It is time consuming.
|
|
And then when you find something,
|
|
then we will bring it to the group
|
|
or put it on our action list
|
|
or I'll just send Scott a message and say,
|
|
did you see this?
|
|
It's like that.
|
|
And then we just start from there.
|
|
And there's a lot of interpersonal
|
|
and kind of networking stuff.
|
|
It's kind of like, if you see something of interest,
|
|
you build that kind of,
|
|
you build that kind of network,
|
|
not a literal technology network,
|
|
or just a collection of people that say,
|
|
hey, we like this kind of legislation.
|
|
If you see anything of concern,
|
|
send it our way and let us have a look at it.
|
|
Yeah, starting out from scratch,
|
|
as Chuck was talking about,
|
|
is a matter of one person can go to the website
|
|
and do some searches and find something
|
|
and something's better than nothing.
|
|
And then as you find more people
|
|
and more people find out about what your organization's
|
|
trying to do,
|
|
they will actually start reaching out to you.
|
|
You'll have friends who say,
|
|
who read an article in the paper,
|
|
they know that's an area of interest to you.
|
|
They'll call you and say,
|
|
hey, did you see that so and so over here
|
|
is doing something you should,
|
|
but based on what you said,
|
|
you might be interested in looking at
|
|
and I'll go check it out.
|
|
And so we essentially get more eyes and ears over time
|
|
through that networking that Chuck was,
|
|
or sorry, Scott was talking about.
|
|
That's how we find out about things
|
|
as well as our own research going into it.
|
|
And over time, you develop that group.
|
|
It doesn't start out of the gate,
|
|
but if you do anything,
|
|
however little, it's more than nothing.
|
|
And that starts the snowball down the hill, hopefully.
|
|
Okay, excellent.
|
|
No, that sounds like a good case to,
|
|
yeah, as you say,
|
|
it's a growing network of people
|
|
rather than putting a lot of technology in this case.
|
|
One more question from you and I'll leave it to Chris.
|
|
In the UK and Europe,
|
|
there are a lot of government contracts
|
|
that go out to tender and all this kind of stuff.
|
|
I don't know if you have the same in the UK,
|
|
but is that something that you would cover
|
|
in your work as well,
|
|
or is there a different organization does that
|
|
because as you may,
|
|
or suspect or not,
|
|
those of these contracts are written in a certain way,
|
|
favor certain directions, areas, preferences,
|
|
vendors, you know, what I mean,
|
|
it's them.
|
|
So is that something that you would cover?
|
|
Or is that something that you're more into
|
|
the legal aspects to protect people?
|
|
Well, government contracts,
|
|
the kind of contracts that can be led by government
|
|
are controlled by the law.
|
|
So in a sense, they are connected.
|
|
I think we did,
|
|
we did look at this kind of situation
|
|
with some of the concerns on the voting technology
|
|
that we have in Georgia.
|
|
And at first, we were looking at the law
|
|
and we were critiquing the law.
|
|
And then it got to the point where they had passed a law
|
|
that wasn't that great.
|
|
And so it goes down into the,
|
|
I guess it goes down into the purchasing phase.
|
|
And so once you're down in the purchasing phase,
|
|
then you are looking at the contracts and things like that.
|
|
I don't know,
|
|
it's not so much that we scrutinize the contracts
|
|
because once a law is passed,
|
|
the state has a certain amount of flexibility
|
|
to kind of do those deals behind the public's back.
|
|
And they can shield some things from public view.
|
|
But there was some public participation,
|
|
especially with the voting machine purchases.
|
|
And so we were watching it to the extent that we could.
|
|
Okay, is there a case to try and make that more open
|
|
that part of the person?
|
|
So what do you think?
|
|
Well, in a sense, that's a bigger problem
|
|
than just a technology problem.
|
|
That's the entire scope of purchasing in general,
|
|
goes above and beyond technology.
|
|
And I think if we have a particular example
|
|
or a particular item or a particular aspect
|
|
that we can work on, we can try to do that.
|
|
But it's all about procurement.
|
|
And government procurement, those processes
|
|
and procedures are much older than the kind of technology laws
|
|
we've had for the last couple of decades.
|
|
But what will happen sometimes is as they move
|
|
from a paper process to an electronic process,
|
|
then maybe some stuff gets kind of lost in translation
|
|
or they don't really capture the spirit of what the law was
|
|
when they move to an electronic process.
|
|
So that's another opportunity to kind of look at the process
|
|
and see if they're really doing what they should do.
|
|
But again, procurement is such a huge area
|
|
that we would be swamped if we try to take on all of it.
|
|
So we have to pick and choose what's in our interest area.
|
|
There's plenty of other laws out there
|
|
that I think have to do with social justice
|
|
or other kinds of justice that are just kind of out of our area.
|
|
And you have limits to what you can do.
|
|
So I think you have to make decisions
|
|
about what's really in your interest area
|
|
and what you can actually do or what you can actually accomplish.
|
|
Given that it's a volunteer organization
|
|
and you're not 40 hours a week or however many hours a week,
|
|
people have day jobs and you do what you can do.
|
|
There are some times we do get involved
|
|
with the purchasing process, but it's not direct.
|
|
Meaning we don't insert ourselves into the bidding process
|
|
or the request for proposal or any of that sort of thing.
|
|
Where we do get involved, however, things like two good examples
|
|
are ClearView, which is a facial recognition company
|
|
that was going out and courting police departments
|
|
to use their product.
|
|
And it was scurrying forth amendment laws.
|
|
And so we did get involved with that.
|
|
And where we saw police departments were doing that,
|
|
we would go and talk to police departments
|
|
or work with other groups that were talking
|
|
to police departments in regards to using facial recognition.
|
|
Another one is a product that we're working on right now
|
|
in trying to stop actually is a product called ShotSpotter.
|
|
And that's a gunshot detection system
|
|
that is being sold and deployed within here in Georgia
|
|
in several locations.
|
|
And it has some very honorous side effects
|
|
that have already been noticed in other jurisdictions
|
|
outside of Georgia and are several local cases regarding it.
|
|
So we do get involved in that sense
|
|
and that sometimes vendors come to law enforcement in particular
|
|
and say, hey, we've got this great surveillance technology.
|
|
You should really buy this.
|
|
And they do their sales pitch and they buy it.
|
|
And it wasn't a process of legislation putting it in place.
|
|
But now they're deploying this technology amongst us
|
|
and using it for law enforcement.
|
|
And in some cases, those methodologies
|
|
are using violate the law.
|
|
And so we have to go against that and work through legislations
|
|
on cases or through other organizations
|
|
to try to help with that.
|
|
And that's where electronic frontiers, Georgia,
|
|
since it does deal with privacy and security,
|
|
is it necessarily always focused on just legislation?
|
|
Okay, got it.
|
|
Yeah, just for the listeners that are not from the US,
|
|
can you explain to you?
|
|
The two ones, exactly, the shop technology to us
|
|
because that's on the other side of the world.
|
|
Oh, sure.
|
|
Shot spotter is a, that's the actual name of a product.
|
|
It is a web of microphones that are deployed in an area
|
|
like the put them on light poles and things like that.
|
|
It goes back to a centralized location
|
|
at the corporation, Shot Spotter Corporation,
|
|
where artificial intelligence monitors the audio that it hears
|
|
and says, hey, I just heard a noise,
|
|
it sounds like a gunshot.
|
|
And then based on which microphones hurt it at which time
|
|
they can do audio triangulation to say
|
|
where it probably occurred.
|
|
Assuming it says, hey, I think I got something,
|
|
it passes it to a human operator who purportedly reviews it
|
|
and says, yes, that was a shot.
|
|
They notify the police, the police then go
|
|
and respond to it as a shots fired.
|
|
Now, it has some rather interesting side effects.
|
|
For instance, if you've got an area
|
|
where there's a general higher level of crime than normal
|
|
and you've got the police responding
|
|
to what's considered a shots fired situation,
|
|
they're in high alert, they've got guns drawn
|
|
and it may be a false alarm.
|
|
In fact, that's part of the problem.
|
|
Is the false alarm rate for Shot Spotter is extremely high
|
|
on the order of like 80%.
|
|
So, in that level, how much that number is
|
|
is being debated right now.
|
|
The company is saying, no, no, it's not that high
|
|
and there's other court cases saying, no,
|
|
it's even higher than 80%.
|
|
So there's the cost factor of deploying the police
|
|
regularly for false alarms.
|
|
There's the issue that when they do arrive,
|
|
it's like a SWAT team arriving with guns drawn
|
|
and it's a completely innocent situation
|
|
when people are in a heightened situation
|
|
and guns drawn, bad things trademark can happen.
|
|
So all of that's wrapped up in that fuzzy wobbly ball of mess
|
|
that's called Shot Spotter.
|
|
Sounds expensive to me, a false positive.
|
|
It's not cheap and that's part of the thing is,
|
|
they, it's determining, for instance,
|
|
would that kind of technology be a good idea
|
|
if it worked properly?
|
|
Well, if you think about it from a technical perspective,
|
|
yeah, that might be an interesting thing.
|
|
Since I do have opportunity to talk to police departments,
|
|
I could see whether that would be really useful for them.
|
|
If it could actually tell them,
|
|
this is roughly when and where Shot occurred
|
|
and they could respond to something
|
|
as opposed to waiting for somebody in a neighborhood
|
|
who heard it to call them.
|
|
That would be kind of a good thing.
|
|
But on the other hand, do you really want a network
|
|
of microphones placed throughout your neighborhoods
|
|
that records everything that's being said
|
|
with the near shot?
|
|
Yeah, that is a good or bad thing.
|
|
Probably yes.
|
|
Yeah, and so that's not grab isn't probably not, no.
|
|
Exactly, so that's one of the ramifications
|
|
as people said, oh, this is a great idea.
|
|
And they say, really, do you want them recording
|
|
the conversations you're having in your front yard
|
|
with your wife?
|
|
And it's like, no, maybe not.
|
|
Unless you're telling ads or something, that's okay.
|
|
But if you're not too bad.
|
|
Yeah, and so that's the kinds of unintended consequences
|
|
they didn't think of.
|
|
And then there's the issue of the AI.
|
|
There's case, I don't remember exactly where.
|
|
If anybody wants, they can always contact the FDA
|
|
and I can give them the info.
|
|
There's a case where a guy was actually prosecuted
|
|
and I think convicted over based on evidence
|
|
provided by ShotSpotter.
|
|
And they're treating ShotSpotter as if it's in court
|
|
as if it's a fingerprints or DNA that it's absolutely certain.
|
|
Well, evidence is it.
|
|
It's not.
|
|
It's AI says, I think.
|
|
And then an operator says, well, based on my best judgment,
|
|
it probably might be.
|
|
And well, that's not the same thing as a fingerprint.
|
|
And so let me guess, the open, the suffer isn't open
|
|
source and hasn't invented.
|
|
Oh, no, it is definitely not open source.
|
|
There you go.
|
|
Exception, there's an open source.
|
|
And not only that, it's not transparent.
|
|
I mean, when you said something about the money,
|
|
we don't really know.
|
|
There are sometimes you hear a figure,
|
|
but we don't really know how much the things are costing
|
|
to deploy.
|
|
There's a lot that people don't really know.
|
|
This was, in our particular area, it was,
|
|
I guess you would call it like an underwriting.
|
|
It was piloted by a local utility.
|
|
And in a small area, and to my knowledge,
|
|
there wasn't any kind of citizen input
|
|
as to whether or not you would even
|
|
like to be the test pilot of the area.
|
|
It was just something that was decided to do.
|
|
And that's not something that it was so problematic that they
|
|
pulled some funding on it, and I believe
|
|
is what they did here where we are.
|
|
Because they were seeing some of the court cases
|
|
pop up around the country, and there was probably
|
|
some pushback as things go.
|
|
But regardless, we don't have enough information
|
|
about something like this to really say
|
|
that it's a useful tool.
|
|
And my slogan, when they say defund the police,
|
|
I have a sense that people would not
|
|
like to be in a place where there were not police,
|
|
because it might be kind of nice to have some around.
|
|
But so the slogan that I came up with was not defund the police,
|
|
defund police technology is what my slogan is,
|
|
is because that's where the problems occur.
|
|
The people that are doing things have common sense,
|
|
and most of the time, again, have some training,
|
|
but the technology, the AI that's listening to something,
|
|
I'm the kind of person who would be like,
|
|
well, we wouldn't have that problem.
|
|
We just pulled the plug on that machine over there,
|
|
because the guy that I just talked to sounded like he had
|
|
some common sense, and would have followed the rule book
|
|
that he had in front of him.
|
|
And so because we don't have transparency about it,
|
|
and we don't have good information as to why you think
|
|
this would be important, and we've got pushback
|
|
from legal cases that show that it screws up.
|
|
I can't understand why anybody would want
|
|
to fund it in the first place without requiring that to take place,
|
|
but that's kind of where we are right now with it.
|
|
Guys, this has been more than interesting.
|
|
Unfortunately, we have a time limit,
|
|
but rest assured, this is the first part of a 100-part mini-series
|
|
on the EFF and the credits around.
|
|
You know, guys, I'm joking.
|
|
Before we finish off, of course, there's a little form
|
|
that we call the boxes of the week.
|
|
It's one of the picks of the week, the boxes.
|
|
So I'm losing it.
|
|
Martin, because you have a time constraint,
|
|
why don't you go first, Scott Keith and Chuck
|
|
is essentially what we do with the boxes is we name something
|
|
that crossed our mind worth mentioning.
|
|
It can be anything.
|
|
Legislation, movies, books, music, wild ideas.
|
|
So Martin, why don't you go first,
|
|
and then the guys can take it.
|
|
And I go last.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Under the spirit of anything goes,
|
|
I'm going to go with storms, because we had about three
|
|
or four in succession in the last week,
|
|
which is quite unusual, even for storms, of course,
|
|
not being the software, but rather with the weather phenomena
|
|
as well.
|
|
Yeah, just like high velocity winds.
|
|
And it just kind of makes you realize that, you know,
|
|
we have much technology, but nothing like the force of nature
|
|
that can put it on all pieces, especially if you live
|
|
on an island like some of us do.
|
|
Let's make it slightly more risky.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Guys, over to you, Chuck, who wants to go first, Keith, Scott?
|
|
So what is it that was something that just crosses our mind?
|
|
Anything worth mentioning, yes.
|
|
Anything worth mentioning?
|
|
From Trump.
|
|
Sorry, of course, no, you can't include Trump if you want to.
|
|
No, so I love to see films from around the world,
|
|
because you know, it's kind of like a passport to another country.
|
|
And I guess in the spirit of what conversation and the jokes
|
|
and everything that we've been having,
|
|
I'm going to say Super Amigos.
|
|
This is a film by Aturo Perez Torres.
|
|
It's a Mexican film.
|
|
And it's really fun to see, because it,
|
|
well, you just have to go and check it out.
|
|
Maybe you can Google it.
|
|
I thought you said the Spie Amigos amount.
|
|
I remember that one.
|
|
Nope, Super Amigos.
|
|
It's like super friends in English, but it is by Aturo Perez
|
|
Torres.
|
|
The old audience.
|
|
Links within the show notes, I suppose,
|
|
or link within the show notes.
|
|
OK.
|
|
Keith, Scott, you next?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So you mentioned during the interview,
|
|
you mentioned software freedom conservancy.
|
|
One of the reasons I like to do interviews
|
|
is because I learned things.
|
|
And I hadn't actually heard of either I
|
|
hadn't heard of software freedom conservancy
|
|
or I had forgotten about it.
|
|
So I went and looked it up.
|
|
And this is really interesting.
|
|
So thanks for mentioning that.
|
|
So software freedom conservancy looks
|
|
like it was established in 2006 with the backing
|
|
of the Software Freedom Law Center.
|
|
That's really interesting.
|
|
I'll dig into that a little bit more.
|
|
But thanks for mentioning that.
|
|
I hadn't heard of that.
|
|
If I had, I had forgotten it.
|
|
Links absolutely will be in the show notes.
|
|
Keith over to you.
|
|
Well, one thing that's, I've been thinking about quite a bit,
|
|
actually, is the result of COVID, is we've
|
|
done a lot of remote meetings, like we're having now.
|
|
And in some cases, like when we have a DC-4 formatting
|
|
or a 2600 meeting, we have people who
|
|
are in their area trying to do something similar.
|
|
And they'll join our meetings.
|
|
So we've had people from all over the world join
|
|
in our meetings.
|
|
And it's been a great addition to have these people
|
|
from all over with similar interests join in.
|
|
And I realized that when we go back to eventually
|
|
having our physical meetings, that we're
|
|
going to lose that input and lose that sharing, mind sharing.
|
|
And so I've been thinking about ways
|
|
that we can continue having that while still having
|
|
a physical meeting.
|
|
Now, this raises some, we're speaking of side effects.
|
|
It raises some interesting side effects.
|
|
DC-4-4, which is a chapter of Defcon, which
|
|
is the largest hacking conference in the world,
|
|
some of the people that show up where a tinfoil hat,
|
|
let's just put it that way.
|
|
And so not everybody but some do.
|
|
And to a point where we had a reporter show up
|
|
at one of our meetings, and nobody seemed to have any problem
|
|
with that.
|
|
We announced that there was a reporter there
|
|
to observe the meeting.
|
|
And then, toward the end of the meeting,
|
|
the reporter asked if they could take any photographs.
|
|
Now, we realize that some people might be sensitive to this issue.
|
|
So we said, hey, the reporter would
|
|
like to take a few photographs.
|
|
We'll stage the area.
|
|
So if you do not want to be in the photograph,
|
|
we'll make sure that you're not in the area.
|
|
And just saying that, two people stood up,
|
|
took their backpacks and walked out of the room for us.
|
|
And so there are some people that are extremely sensitive
|
|
to that idea.
|
|
The fact that everybody in the room had a cell phone camera
|
|
and got regularity to take pictures
|
|
without asking any permission whatsoever,
|
|
and how many security cameras they walked by getting there
|
|
seemed to be irrelevant in the conversation.
|
|
But that idea that they're very sensitive to that
|
|
is an issue.
|
|
So when looking at a physical meeting and a hybrid meeting,
|
|
where people are coming in from the outside,
|
|
and you don't know who they are or where they're coming from,
|
|
how do we share that?
|
|
How do we create a hybrid meeting that allows people remotely
|
|
to join us in those meetings?
|
|
This has another benefit in that, like now,
|
|
we're from all over the world having this conversation.
|
|
How do we allow people to join in in a conversation
|
|
and do presentations in our meeting?
|
|
Who aren't physically present?
|
|
Normally, we can only draw on the people who live within Atlanta,
|
|
or we'd like to draw on the world.
|
|
So how do we solve that problem?
|
|
And so I've been talking to Scott and several others
|
|
about the technology to do that.
|
|
The next problem is, how do we make that technology accessible?
|
|
What I might consider a minor purchase here
|
|
might be a month's person's wage in another country.
|
|
And we want to make it so that this technology
|
|
or this idea is accessible so that anybody from anywhere
|
|
with limited skill set and limited access to funds
|
|
would be able to join in and be participant in it.
|
|
So that's what we've been thinking about.
|
|
So your POX would be like BBB as a Big Boopletton,
|
|
or just see or something?
|
|
Yeah, actually, one of the part of that solution
|
|
is we're considering using Big Blue Button.
|
|
It's free.
|
|
The upside of Big Blue Button is it is open source, it is free,
|
|
but there's no online service hosting it for free.
|
|
So that means if you want to use it,
|
|
you must host your own instance.
|
|
Now, in our case, we have a person here in Atlanta
|
|
as part of DC44 who hosted on his service.
|
|
He has a commercial hosting service
|
|
and he hosted it for us for free.
|
|
He also hosts that for the EFGA.
|
|
We also, and 2600, he hosts all of those on his server.
|
|
And that was a generous thing for him to do.
|
|
But that's not necessarily accessible to everybody.
|
|
There's another open source product called Jitsi
|
|
that does provide hosting for free.
|
|
And so we're looking at things that lower the bar
|
|
for everybody.
|
|
And we would suggest, I happen to like Big Blue Button
|
|
for a number of reasons, for instance,
|
|
it makes it very easy to save the chat,
|
|
whereas there are other options that make it very difficult
|
|
to do that.
|
|
So yeah, there's a lot of technology involved here
|
|
and how we do it.
|
|
And also, maintain the privacy and the security,
|
|
the people actually physically attending the meeting
|
|
that if they don't want to be known by those not in the room,
|
|
we'll accommodate that as best we can too.
|
|
So that's kind of mixing all of that together.
|
|
It's going to be difficult.
|
|
But we'll figure it out.
|
|
I mean, finally, I mentioned that Keith,
|
|
because here in Germany, there are quite a few institutions
|
|
that offer a free BBB instance for the public domain.
|
|
And I'm that sure that there must be something
|
|
similar in the US too.
|
|
It's just a matter of research and finding it.
|
|
Wow, I'd be very interested in finding it.
|
|
I did look for it and didn't find anything.
|
|
So now that I know they're in Germany,
|
|
that gives me a place to look at.
|
|
It's possible they have outlets here that do similar things.
|
|
Or a company in Germany might also do it here.
|
|
The Chaos Computer Club, at least once run, as far as I can recall,
|
|
runs at least one free instance of BBB.
|
|
I'm not to show about the details,
|
|
but I'm not going to have to put you in touch with them.
|
|
Yeah, well, I know.
|
|
I know the Chaos Computer Club.
|
|
I know very much.
|
|
Yeah, I, yes, I go and watch her presentations online.
|
|
I have not been able to attend in person.
|
|
It has been a goal of mine to do so.
|
|
In fact, many, many years ago,
|
|
I was invited to buy another speaker to go with him
|
|
to that one of their events.
|
|
And I wasn't able to go and I, I wish I could have.
|
|
I did.
|
|
So yeah, I definitely wear them.
|
|
I watch your presentations online.
|
|
They have some excellent presentations.
|
|
There's one in particular about anonymity online
|
|
and how it's a double-edged sword.
|
|
It was very, very good.
|
|
Yeah, they're normally running a Chaos Communication conference
|
|
or something like this between the two years.
|
|
And this is really worth checking out.
|
|
Links, maybe, the show notes.
|
|
They also publish, they also publish articles online,
|
|
they're very good.
|
|
They do, yes.
|
|
Also in English and German.
|
|
And that nice, it leads us to my poxies, or my pox, rather,
|
|
is actually more than one at the moment,
|
|
not at the moment, rather, in general, for this week.
|
|
Almost tempted.
|
|
And this is a first on Linux and loss.
|
|
The pox, or my pox of the week is actually
|
|
the American Constitution, as I mentioned this earlier.
|
|
But I'm tempted to.
|
|
I'm getting to it.
|
|
No, no, no, no, no, rather than quoting it,
|
|
I'm tempted to just mention the author.
|
|
So with the author, you, and this is, of course,
|
|
a word, term, premier.
|
|
So let's go ahead.
|
|
It's James Madison, Richard Henry Lee,
|
|
Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, James Wilson, Roger Schieman,
|
|
John Dickson, Dickinson, sorry,
|
|
Governor Morris, George Mason,
|
|
Elbridge Gary, Jerry, James McHenry, Rufus King,
|
|
James Pickney, William Patterson,
|
|
you Williamson, William Livingston,
|
|
George Reed, Jonathan Dayton, William Bloomfield,
|
|
Thomas Simpson, Simpson's, Irishman,
|
|
John Langdon, Nicholas Gilman,
|
|
William Samley Johnson, Gunning Bedford,
|
|
Daniel of Son James, Jason, I think,
|
|
P.S. Butler, another Irishman, Tom Smithing,
|
|
Robert Morris, Charles Cosworth, Richard Bassett,
|
|
Emma Pendleton, Luther Martin,
|
|
not came but just Luther Martin, Caleb Strong,
|
|
William Jackson, Emma Redlow, John Marshall, and that's it.
|
|
Guys, you probably not listening,
|
|
but thanks to a great piece of legislation,
|
|
still living on, still going strong,
|
|
you could have done much, much worse.
|
|
And if anybody's interested in hearing the behind-the-scenes
|
|
discussions, so to speak, that led to it,
|
|
and the debates over the ideas that led to what was
|
|
eventually codified in the Constitution,
|
|
go look up the Federalist Papers and read them.
|
|
Yes, I absolutely advise you.
|
|
Of course, the Constitution is online,
|
|
the links will in the show notes.
|
|
These people knew what they were doing.
|
|
Tempted to add.
|
|
And with that, people Keith, Scott, and Chuck,
|
|
thank you very much for being here.
|
|
It has been more than interesting,
|
|
and we are really looking forward to having the show soon
|
|
once again.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Thank you very much.
|
|
Thank you guys, thank you.
|
|
This is the Linux in-laws.
|
|
You come for the knowledge.
|
|
But stay for the madness.
|
|
Thank you for listening.
|
|
This podcast is licensed under the latest version
|
|
of the Creative Commons license, type atribution share like.
|
|
Credits for the intro music go to blue zeroosters
|
|
for the song-solid market, to twin flames
|
|
for their piece called the flow used for the second intros.
|
|
And finally, to the lesser ground for the songs we just
|
|
use by the dark side.
|
|
You find these and other dd's licensed under cc
|
|
at Chimando, a website dedicated to liberate
|
|
the music industry from choking copyright legislation
|
|
and other crap concepts.
|
|
We normally record about four to six hours
|
|
depending, we normally then cut this down to about two hours.
|
|
And HBR's head is just further down to an hour or 45 minutes.
|
|
I'm joking guys.
|
|
I've never had anybody honor the constitution
|
|
by reading all of the authors off.
|
|
I feel like I did something very special.
|
|
That was pretty cool.
|
|
It's funny how the Europeans seem to know more
|
|
about the constitution than the average American on the street.
|
|
Yeah, that's sad.
|
|
That's gratifying, but sad.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
|
|
at Hacker Public Radio does work.
|
|
Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener
|
|
like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording podcasts,
|
|
click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
|
|
Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by
|
|
www.unsthost.com, the Internet Archive and R-Sync.net.
|
|
On this address status, today's show is released
|
|
under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
|