From: “James M. Cobb” <jcobb@ahcbsd1.ovnet.com>
To: dlv@bwalk.dm.com
Message Hash: e18cab8b749a651f8e485eb0d6f82c787775b41a3ee10421a5cd4bb7fc6c91b1
Message ID: <Pine.BSD.3.91.960206082318.15126A-100000@ahcbsd1.ovnet.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-02-07 22:24:05 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 8 Feb 1996 06:24:05 +0800
From: "James M. Cobb" <jcobb@ahcbsd1.ovnet.com>
Date: Thu, 8 Feb 1996 06:24:05 +0800
To: dlv@bwalk.dm.com
Subject: Re: free speech and the government
Message-ID: <Pine.BSD.3.91.960206082318.15126A-100000@ahcbsd1.ovnet.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Dmitri,
On 02 03 96 you say:
I believe that any exception to unlimited free speech, be it
libel, or copyright violation, or child pornography, or Nazi
propaganda, or Chinese dissident materials, just isn't com-
patible with the cpunk agenda. No censorship is acceptable.
That's an absolute.
Censorship is founded on prying; and pryers have THEIR absolute:
On 2 January 1992, it was decided by the German Federal govern-
ment to open these [East German police] files...at 15 offices
throughout the former East Germany. It is worth pointing out
the extensive nature of these files. It was discovered that
husbands spied on wives, girlfriends spied on boyfriends, Cath-
olic Church confessionals were bugged by the 'Stasi' both with
and without the knowledge of the parish priest, Lutheran parish-
ioners spied on their pastors, telephone calls of both East and
West Germans were heavily monitored and the most innocent event,
such as going shopping or visitng the library, was included in
the files.
--Wayne Madsen [co-author of the upcoming new Puzzle Palace].
Handbook of Personal Data Protection. Stockton Press. 1992.
Page 4.
Pryers agree! No censorship is acceptable.
A*N*Y*T*H*I*N*G goes.
But let's be scientific about it:
Some 30 miles from Boston is a radio telescope called Beta, run
by the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics, that day and
night searches the northern sky for artificial radio signals as
it makes continuous swathes through the heavens.
It must pick up all the naturally-caused radio sounds as well,
which engineers call "noise" as opposed to "signal". This means
that it collects an enormous quantity of information that can be
processed only by a specially-built supercomputer. Every second
it captures enough data to fill a CD-Rom, which every day adds up
to 22 trillion bytes of data, the equivalent of 52 million novels.
--Adrian Berry. "Watch This Space." File: nspace04.html.
Home News. 02 05 96 The Electronic Telegraph.
A USEFUL gadget, isn't it? Censorship of even 1 byte of the 22 tril-
lion is unacceptable.
E*V*E*R*Y*T*H*I*N*G goes.
Between two absolutes, what decides?
Cordially,
Jim
PS: I can't help wondering whether "all the naturally-caused
radio sounds" are really all the artificially-caused microwave
signals within range.
Of all the intercept stations built during the 1950's boom,
the ultimate in both ambition and failure was in the remote
Allegheny hollow of Sugar Grove, West Virginia....
Since its beginnings in the mid-1950s, the secrecy surrounding
Sugar Grove has been intense. The cover story throughout the
entire life of the project was that the six-hundred-foot dish
was purely for research and radio astronomy, permitting scien-
tists "to tune in on radio signals as far as 38 billion light
years away"....
--James Bamford. The Puzzle Palace. Penguin Books. 1983.
Pages 217f, 220.
Supposedly, the only person allowed to look into each of the
East German police files was the "data subject," the person who
had been looked into.
Return to February 1996
Return to ““James M. Cobb” <jcobb@ahcbsd1.ovnet.com>”
1996-02-07 (Thu, 8 Feb 1996 06:24:05 +0800) - Re: free speech and the government - “James M. Cobb” <jcobb@ahcbsd1.ovnet.com>