Warning this article may contain opinions of the author that you and iTWire don't agree with.
Visit the last page to have your say in our forum.

No. 1 Story

Mobile operators get fixed price spectrum renewal in $3b Government windfall

The Government has offered Australia's three mobile operators, and vividwireless, renewal of their existing spectrum allocated on 15 year licences in the late 90s and early 2000s at set prices, while the Government expects to rake in $3 billion.

read more

We have the technology...but so do the bad guys

Opinion and Analysis

It reported how law enforcement agencies in 20 countries had "smashed the oldest and most sophisticated Internet paedophile ring ever known," and how over the two year investigation they had watched the same small girl "grow up on film" as she was regularly abused and the images and videos posted on paedophile sites for the gratification of members.

She has now been located and freed after "hundreds of investigators, including the FBI, trawled for tens of thousands of hours looking for clues to her identity among the captured catalogue of depravity that had been her life."

The report went on to say that the obstacles to identifying her location and releasing her "cannot be overstated...the reason the paedophiles had not been caught or even detected as a network was their level of security. To get into the inner sanctum a member had to go through stages of passwords, highly sophisticated encryption and security and code names...Police had never seen anything like it before...Members of the network even boasted among themselves of being able to defeat any law enforcement agency in the world."

Conroy's vision of regulation by 'code' if it can be achieved could  make it impossible for such activities to escape detection, but I'm not holding my breath: every advance in technology seems to be exploitable by the good and the bad alike.

However while Conroy may be enthusiastic about the supposed benefits of regulation by code, the vision Lessig conjures up is less benign: it is one not merely of effective regulation by code: it is one of effective oppression by code.

In his preface, he cites two science fiction writers - Vernor Vinge and Tom Maddox - addressing the 1996 Computers, Freedom, and Privacy" conference: "As this network of control became woven into every part of social life, it would be just a matter of time, Vinge threatened, before government claimed its fair share of control. Each new generation of code would increase this power of government. The future would be a world of perfect regulation, and the architecture of distributed computing—the Internet and its attachments—would make that possible...[Maddox's] vision was very similar, though the source of control, different.

"The government's power would not come just from chips. The real source of power, Maddox argued, was an alliance between government and commerce. Commerce, like government, fares better in a better regulated world. Property is more secure, data are more easily captured, and disruption is less of a risk. The future would be a pact between these two forces of social order."

Loading comments ...



- sponsored feature -

The Death of Traditional BI: What’s Next?

How to Make Business Discovery Work for Your Business IP PABX BUYING GUIDE

Business Discovery takes its cues from consumer apps. Like Google, it encourages us- ers to hunt for and explore data without worrying about or even noticing the underly- ing technology. Their entire experience is working within an intuitive interface to get real-time, self-service results with only minimal training. ...more