Posts from January 2013

Facebook: Rad Geek People’s Daily 2013-01-24 – On Being Pretty Much O.K. With That. (Factories, Corporate Sec

Facebook: Art show canceled because of offensive images – 01/22/13 OFFENSIVE ART/CHRIS (W/PICS) TALLADEGA

Facebook: January 23, 2013 at 02:55PM

Dear LazyWeb: I am looking for Wiki software to experiment with, where the back-end data store would be based on a git repository rather than a relational database such as MySQL. I’m open to trying out most things but an ideal case would be something that supports templates and transclusion in a way at least kinda-sorta similar to MediaWiki. Any suggestions?

Facebook: Air Force Uses Martin Luther King Jr. to Promote Nuclear Warfare

Facebook: “Abortion Reform: The New Tokenism”, by Lucinda Cisler, Ramparts Magazine, August 1970, pp. 19-22

radgeek on I am Stephan Kinsella, a patent attorney and Austrian economics and anarchist libertarian writer who thinks patent and copyright should be abolished. AMA

That's a problem if you think that "corporate espionage" is a problem. I think that corporate business models that are heavily dependent on secrecy and institutional opacity are the problem, and that "corporate espionage" is a predictable reaction, and a symptom of a broken business model. If companies can adequately keep their secrets by means of contractual agreements and simple property rights (e.g., controlling who has access to sensitive locations or documents in their possession) then they will keep their secrets. If they cannot adequately keep their secrets by these means, then they will fail at keeping their secrets. And if their business depends on keeping secrets, they will fail at their business. That doesn't mean that nobody will go into business; it means that people who go into business will find it to their advantage to adopt alternative business models, which don't depend so heavily on secrecy. Again, you need to actually give an argument if you want to establish that this is an unjust, or even an undesirable outcome.

radgeek on I am Stephan Kinsella, a patent attorney and Austrian economics and anarchist libertarian writer who thinks patent and copyright should be abolished. AMA

Stephan's view is that if they didn't sign the contract, then their actions should not be prosecutable. The reason they should not be prosecutable is because they didn't violate any rights that they were bound to respect. This means that only people who have agreed to keep a secret can be bound to keep it; if that arrangement causes a problem for companies being able to police their own secrets, then we may well end up with fewer businesses whose business models depend on keeping information secret. Well, OK. It's not obvious, to me at least, that this is a bad outcome.