New "Dark" Freenet Available for Testing 424
Sanity writes "The Freenet Project has just released the first alpha version of the much anticipated Freenet 0.7 branch. This is a major departure from past approaches to peer-to-peer network design, embracing a 'scalable darknet' architecture, where security is increased by allowing users to limit which other peers their peer will communicate with directly, rather than the typical 'promiscuous' approach of classic P2P networks. This means that not only does Freenet aim to prevent others from finding out what you are doing with Freenet, it makes it extremely difficult for them to even know that you are running a Freenet node at all. This is not the first P2P application to use this approach, other examples include Waste, however those networks are limited to just a few users, while Freenet can scale up almost indefinitely. The new version also includes support for NAT hole-punching, and has an API for third-party tool development. As always, the Freenet team are asking that people support the development of the software by donating."
Hooray! (Score:5, Funny)
Re: Hooray! (Score:3, Informative)
Will this ever succeed in full? (Score:4, Interesting)
I wish there was a way that I could view websites without giving any IP or client information. However, that kind of information is important to webmasters and business.
Re:Will this ever succeed in full? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Will this ever succeed in full? (Score:5, Informative)
Failing that, you could always buy a laptop/PDA/etc. and a cheap wifi card and connect to random WAPs using a spoofed MAC address.
Re:Will this ever succeed in full? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Will this ever succeed in full? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Will this ever succeed in full? (Score:5, Informative)
Anonymizer.com, cotse, and many others.
There's some loss of functionality. For example if you have Java turned on then a remote web site can grab your IP even through a proxy. So you have to turn off Java, and Anonymizer disables Javascript as well.
Much needed (Score:4, Insightful)
Practical measures (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Practical measures (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't let projects like Freenet lull you into failing to protect your liberty. Get involved in the world around you and make your voice heard against those who would remove your liberty.
Freedom != Liberty. There are lots of situations in which you have the freedom to hold any opinion you want, but are not at liberty to express those opinions. Unless you have been brainwashed, you always have the freedom to choose to die for your opinions.
Completely agree (Score:5, Insightful)
- Ian (Founder, Freenet Project)
Re:Completely agree (Score:3, Insightful)
Or am I reading it wrong
Re:Practical measures (Score:4, Interesting)
What these darknets do (in this context) is allow speech to be distributed only among a select few people. Furthermore, you can exclude those you are making allegations against, allowing you to say whatever you like, true or false, and they have no access to this information (PATRIOT Act, anyone?). In other words, you've crushed their ability to respond to allegations like the Gestapo. But I guess that's okay in your mind, because it's individuals doing so, and not the government. Might I suggest you read up on factory life in the US before the government started regulating the factories, especially with regard to unions and blacklists?
As for myself, I shall always be a proponent of true freedom of speech (and I might add that do not require anonymity for that purpose).
Re:Practical measures (Score:2)
Autocracies are shielded by force, not anonymity.
Re:Practical measures (Score:2, Insightful)
Again I
Re:Practical measures (Score:5, Interesting)
Regarding your second point, it's true that private communication can exclude the people who are being discussed. Allegations (and conspiracies) are usually made behind closed doors. But the powerful will always have access to private communication. The question posed by Freenet and similar networks is whether the less-powerful should also be able to communicate privately. Comparing Freenet to the Gestapo (although required by Godwin's Law) misses the point: the secret police don't need to use Freenet, because they already have overwhelming power. It's the citizens of a police state who need private communication.
You misunderstand the structure of darknets. (Score:4, Informative)
Also, you've even misunderstood the "select few friends" thing. It's not that you can exclude people. It's that you have to actively include people - and you have to have their permission first.
An analogy would be: passing messages between people by telling a trusted friend, he tells his trusted friend, and so on until it reaches the destination.
Great! (Score:5, Interesting)
Not related to freenet but in the definitely in the same sphere of anonymous networking is I2P [i2p.net]. For anybody that interested in that kind of technology should check that out... it's a fairly well functioning network ATM but the main coder is putting off any big announcements until he's sure it's ready.
Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
I understand the reasons that they use Java, but still, Freenet is one RAM and CPU-hungry beast.
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sigh (Score:4, Interesting)
But there are plenty of natively compiled portable languages that have exactly the same stack and buffer safety, but less overhead than Java.
There's the ML family, for example - fast implementations like OCaml and MLton are usually more efficient and more concise than C++. OCaml has already been used to implement other P2P applications (MLDonkey). And if you absolutely must have braces, there are things like D and Felix, which bring the same benefits to a familiar C++/Java-style syntax.
Judging all compiled languages by C++ is like judging all interpreted languages by Python. Deciding to use an interpreted language because compiled languages "suffer from buffer overflows" is exactly like deciding to use a compiled language because interpreted languages "have significant whitespace", i.e. it's complete and utter bullshit.
Java is coming along (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Java is coming along (Score:2)
Use GNUnet (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Sigh (Score:4, Interesting)
There are many java programs that are larger and do more intense work that run just fine.
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Interesting)
I've run Freenet for ages. It is an excellent idea with a not so excellent implementation. Freenet is currently taking up over 300MB of RAM, and is eating a lot of CPU.
I'm not saying Java is always less efficient. Maybe this could be improved in their codebase. I don't code Java - but I do write C/C++, and I'm certain that Freenet in native code could be orders of magnitude better than what it is now.
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
Mozilla/Firefox is written in C/C++ and regularly consumes 300MB of RAM over time on my machine with moderate usage.
I'm not saying Java is the best solution, but it is a good one. I am also glad computer science is still e
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
And may I remind people this is something that's supposed to run in the background 24/7? Freenet if you just "jump on" when needed will be a really shitty network. A permanent drain of 300MB + CPU time is a lot. That said, there's a lot of encryption/decryption, IO and buffers involved so it wouldn't be a "light" C++ daemon either but I think you could do quite a bit better.
Slow networks (Score:5, Insightful)
The speed at which any of these services run reminds me of when I had dial-up. Except these darknets don't even guarantee you can connect to even the most popular darknet sites. Even when I tweaked all the settings I couldn't ever get decent connections on freenet.
These sites are not going to be very viable until a lot of people use them, and a lot of people aren't going to use them until they reach something at least comparable to speeds of the regular web.
I appreciate all the effort of the people who make these pieces of software, but I can't help but feel much of their energy is misdirected.
Just my thoughts.
Re:Slow networks (Score:5, Insightful)
By making the web browser / HTML the means by which one navigates Freenet and retrieves content, they've forced people into an inappropriate model. Web browsers require you to sit there and monitor their activity, then click links and wait some more. No good when your latency is O(1 hour).
A better UI solution would have a two-tiered model, say one that spiders large amounts of metadata in a single pass (say overnight), lets you browse through all of that in a few minutes and pick the things you want to download, then queue them up and wait a couple of days for them to arrive. Sort of like the model used for BitTorrent: WWW for finding and selecting torrents, then the actual BT client for queuing files and managing downloads.
Re:Slow networks (Score:4, Interesting)
The first one is based on a presumption that Freenet scales superlinearly. My impression is that with a larger network, the average path length goes up, and it doesn't get any better. Yes, data retention *might* improve (assuming you have more non-unique content = more copies/data) but that again requires accurate routing. My impression is that Freenet's routing is not accurate enough.
As for speed, no anonymous network will reach neither the bandwidth nor latency of direct connections, but in Freenet's case it is the latency. The speed can actually be fairly decent on a large file with 200 threads, but waiting for one link can take ages.
Trust...whom? (Score:5, Interesting)
But if you don't know three people who are using Freenet 0.7, hop on IRC (which is not the least bit anonymous) and see if some random stranger will give you their noderef. Random people who don't know each other exchanging noderefs over IRC provides what advantage over the prior Freenet implementation, exactly?
I don't know 3 other meatspace people who use Freenet, much less Freenet 0.7. I can't imagine that trading noderefs with some random person on IRC is any more secure than maintaining a node on 0.5.
I'm no Freenet hater, I've been running it for years and I've made several donations. Freenet showed me the "Diebold Memos" and other interesting items. I'm just looking for a plain-English explanation as to how 0.7 is an improvement over the prior Freenet implementation.
What part of "testing" don't you understand? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What part of "testing" don't you understand? (Score:2)
I wasn't responding to the Freenet Project website, I was responding to the Slashdot story. Something tells me that this particular Slashdotting was premature, but that tends to be the way it goes for Freenet; Slashdottings, as much as others may welcome them, are typically a bad thing for the Freenet networ
Re:What part of "testing" don't you understand? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Trust...whom? (Score:2)
Re:Trust...whom? (Score:5, Interesting)
I find the problem intractable from a theoretical standpoint, given current IP protocols and network implementations.
Here's the two steps to make it tractable:
1. Put your web pages behind an SSL connection. Any web browser today can visit https as easily as http, but an ISP wanting to (or being forced to) snoop those connections will have a monumentally harder time.
But what, your web pages are nothing but an electronics tutorial and a photo album? So much the better. The point isn't that you need to find anti-totalitarian political tracts to translate into Chinese, the point is that if *everything* on the web starts moving to encrypted connections, those sites which need the encrypted connections can use them without sticking out. Web storefronts have done far more to make encryption indispensable than political activists ever could, but every little bit helps. We want to make the Web a place where trying to cut off your people's ability to talk to SSL sites would be like cutting off your own hand.
2. Put proxy services up on your web server. Whether it's an remailer gateway, a web proxy, whatever - the idea is to make it impossible for censors to ban or monitor network access by IP. SSL doesn't protect the IP of the websites you visit, it just protects the content you send and receive from them, and sometimes that's not enough. If you're an ex-Mormon trying not to get kicked out of BYU, it's probably a good idea not to have a lot of exmormon.org IPs in their network logs regardless of whether the content of what you read and write is there as well.
That's it, two steps: first make encrypted communications more common, then use those encrypted communications to make private communications less suspicious. The second step is going to take longer than the first, but it'll get here. The price of bandwidth for proxy services hasn't fallen as fast as the price of CPU time for SSL encoding, but they're both still getting cheaper. From a theoretical point of view, it's always possible for the Chinese government to say "No encryption for you!", but from a practical point of view we can make that equivalent to disconnecting from the internet entirely.
Re:Trust...whom? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Trust...whom? (Score:3, Interesting)
No - like I said, bandwidth is still too expensive for many people, including myself, to be anything other than paranoid about how much we give away to strangers.
That's not freedom - that's irresponsible, self-centered bullshit masqurading as a political stance.
The ability to send anonymous and pseudonymous messages is freedom - it's one of the most fundamental freedo
Re:Trust...whom? friend-to-friend aka F2F (Score:3, Interesting)
For more information see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friend-to-friend [wikipedia.org]
Recent post on Freenet mailing list (Score:5, Informative)
> This isn't about *technical* support, I just wanted to tell Matthew
> thanks
> for working on this project. The US government is really scaring
> me and
> I'm glad someone's working on this. You're doing a great job man.
>
> One question I have is that the paypal balance on the home page
> usually
> says something like a few hundred $, and I was wondering if it's
> actually
> generating the required $2300 per month, or if it's falling short.
> I've
> had a monthly donation set up for quite a while now, and I just
> want to
> make sure everything is going well financially for the project.
We have been fortunate enough to generate just about enough to pay
for Matthew for the past few years, but donations have been tailing
off as we haven't put out any new releases in quite a while due to
our work on 0.7, and the financial situation is actually quite
precarious just now.
Our hope is that with the 0.7 alpha release we will get some
donations, but if anyone can contribute, now would really be the time
(as there can be no guarantee that the 0.7 alpha release will
generate the level of publicity we have seen for previous releases).
Ian.
Darknet + Bittorrent = Mass Appeal ! (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Bittorrent/utorrent inside Darknet support. (i.e. encrypted semi-anonymous file transfers)
2) Full IP anonymity
3) Multi-port support (i.e. when firewalls block it, you can change ports).
4) User selected periodic chaotic deep packet protocol emulation. Say what?! Imagine if you could download from a list of popular standard protocols & configure your Darknet client to emulate most of these protocols (one at a time & announcing the new protocol to your group of file-exchange-buddies)- anytime you want. You'd periodically select a new protocol (i.e. FTP, HTTP, OSPF, DNS, etc every time some advanced firewall blocks you) & BAM
5) Proxy bounce support
6) Open source API for additional protocol bounce support. (i.e. allows for crackers/hackers of restrictive/oppressive nations to piggy back Darknet inside a legit Server running say FTP or something of the sort) - Once the trusted server is infiltrated, it could allow for proxied clients to connect through it and out to the rest of the world.
I'm sure some of you could come up with more utopian anonymous & liberative strategies.
Cheers
adeptus_luminati
Re:Darknet + Bittorrent = Mass Appeal ! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Darknet + Bittorrent = Mass Appeal ! (Score:3, Interesting)
I like this idea a lot, but the problem is that you need to build a model of a protocol in order to imitate it, and the eavesdropper can probably use the same model to determine that your traffic is fake. Let's say you want to make your darknet traffic look li
I for one... (Score:5, Funny)
You "child porn"-arguing people miss the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Certain people are going to do unsavory things to children regardless of whether or not they have an audience. I have always failed to see the extra harm done through dissemination of such material. Would you rather that no evidence be distributed, so that the children suffer in silence? Certainly the extra indignity is insignificant in comparison to the original act.
Truly, I do not understand. Do you somehow think that the urge to abuse children is somehow viral, and that child pornography will "infect" others?
Any way I look at it, all objections to Freenet seem to boil down to one of two things:
1. "By golly, we have to do something about all of this child pr0n!"
2. "I don't want to get in trouble with the authorities."
The problem with #1 is that there isn't anything you really can do about it, and any symbolic act has the effect of harming legitimate use. IANAL, but I think that since, by probability, there isn't necessarily anything illegal flowing through your node, you have plausible deniability. As long as you run it on computers for which you have permission to use in this way, it's unlikely that you will get in any trouble.
If you don't want to participate, then that's fine with me, but make sure that you remember that convincing others not to use Freenet provides no viable benefit to children under abuse and harms legitimate attempts to exercise free speech.
Re:You "child porn"-arguing people miss the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You "child porn"-arguing people miss the point (Score:5, Interesting)
Does the bible belt think that pornography will lead to promiscous sex acts? Do people in Europe think hate speech leads to hate crime? Do people in China think anti-communist information will lead to anti-communist movements?
That's not the issue, the issue is what you're doing when you're building infrastructure, communication networks. Let me play the devil's advocate: The pedo down the street probably has a lot more use for broadband than I do. Without it, I could still head over to the nearest CD/DVD/game store rental, he couldn't. Should we just roll back time?
Whenever I pay for that infrastructure, I contribute to his as well. It's just that I pay an ISP to build bandwidth, rather than donate it directly. That doesn't mean I support or condone it, but that when you build a common resource somone might misuse it.
I think the concept of a server-less repository where you publish some information and have it distributed by a global net of cache-servers (which is all Freenet is, in a sense) has lots of interesting and valuable possibilities. Potential for misuse? Certainly. But I'm not going to take a larger blame for that than that the pedo down the street now has broadband, i.e. none.
Re:You "child porn"-arguing people miss the point (Score:4, Insightful)
First some people might fight their unwholesome thoughts, but cease to when confronted with evidence that others are actually doing what they'd like to do.
Second even if those people don't act, they might like to watch. This creates a demand for the material, and therefore it has to be on offer somehow. The theory goes that is demand is stiffled, there won't be such an incentive for the supply and therefore less abuse.
Anyhow, I can't see how one can turn a blind eye to child abuse.
Re:You "child porn"-arguing people miss the point (Score:3, Insightful)
I've spent time hunting down child porn networks, sending information to the police detailing where the sites are. For stuff I've administered, I've accepted coorporation with the police beyond what's really legal. And for a couple of cases where there was no reaction from the police after a lo
Re:argument (Score:3, Insightful)
Are you sure? Can you show evidence that greater access to child pornography leads to and increase in actual child abuse? Will more children be abused if more existing images are simply copied?
As an analogy, and quite a good one, will more music be written if people download it en masse over freenet?
I'm reminded of a few lines from Paradise Lost (Score:4, Insightful)
Beyond his potent arm, to live exempt
From Heaven's high jurisdiction, in new league
Banded against his throne, but to remain
In strictest bondage, though thus far removed,
Under th' inevitable curb, reserved
His captive multitude.
Paradise Lost, Book II, Lines 317-323
Fighting from our dark places isn't really going to win this battle for Freedom. I appreciate what Freenet is doing. It's securing our fallback position. We need that, but we need more a willingness on the part of our citizenry to take the fight to the day-lit streets of the Mall in Washington D.C.
I'd rather be free by liberty and than free by obscurity.
Tom Caudron
http://tom.digitalelite.com/linux.html [digitalelite.com]
Yep, it's kiddy porn for sure (Score:3, Funny)
Since the rights of the unborn (read: abortion) has become the ultimate litmus-test in meatspace, has kiddy porn become the Internet equivalent?
Of course that is a rhetorical question, and the answer is obvously a resounding "yes". So, from this point forward, in the spirit of intellectual honesty, let us all agree that any discussion of privacy, freedom of speech or anonymity on the Internet shall descend into a polarized debate over the evils of child pornography. Terrorism and illicit file sharing came in second and third, respectively.
You have officially "gotten the memo".
Re:Welcome! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Insightful)
I tried starting an ISP once, briefly, out of curiosity. While monitoring my customers' connections with a packet sniffer, I didn't notice any terrorism plans, but I sure saw a hell of a lot of people swapping child pornography. I turned off my routers, shut down my business, and never messed with providing internet service again.
I tried running a telco once, briefly, out of curiosity. Listening in on my customers' conversations, I didn't notice any terrorism plans, but I sure heard a hell of a lot of people discussing child pornography. I turned off my switches, burned my service trucks, and never messed with selling phone service again.
I tried being a mayor once, briefly, out of curiosity. Breaking into residents' houses at night with my police chief, I didn't notice any terrorism plans, but I sure saw a hell of a lot of people looking at child pornography. I shut down city hall, razed my city to the ground, and never messed with human communities again.
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Informative)
Which is fine if you think that's something worthwhile, but is quite different in practice from your examples.
Re:Fantastic (Score:4, Interesting)
I think the word you are looking for is absolve [reference.com].
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
Why would you think to trace any of it if you don't know the contents?
Anybody can set up local wiretap to confirm whether or not Person X is the source of Content Y on Freenet ("Gee, he never downloaded the content that's currently uploading..."). It doesn't get in the way of either a sufficiently far-reaching "Big Brother" government nor does it get in the way of of a law enforcement agency that has cause to b
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Interesting)
Everything on Freenet has a timestamp. If a wiretap shows your node pushing an original key with a timestamp newer than when the wiretap started, you're the source. They may not be able to pin older material on you (depending on how much they know about your cache size), but if you continue to put new material on (i. e. continue to molest children), a wiretap will catch you.
The FAQ even alludes to this [sourceforge.net].
"However, I would not be surprised for a jury to rule against you, should a case ever be brought up"
That's what appeals are for.
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Informative)
Say again? Bulk data keys (CHK) come directly from a hash of the source, no timestamp involved. Some Freesites have a rotating key system (really stupid) which means new keys must be inserted to keep a site alive which could sorta be what you're talking about. but I think these have pretty much died out and even so the timestamps could be forged.
Re:Fantastic (Score:2, Insightful)
Now you run that statement through the same logical process you used before, and you come up with something like this:
"I used to driv
Re:Fantastic (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, that's exactly the point, isn't it?
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Insightful)
That's the flaw in your reasoning right there. You assume there is a "quantitative level of justification" when there is not. What you consider to be just in one case could be considered unjust by someone else. How do you determine who is right? You can't. Justice is a qualitative term.
The problem isn't with the original statement, it's with the kind of logic you're applying to transform it into
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
"Freenet's killer app is child pornography. I've never seen any evidence that any political dissident uses it."
Even if no
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Informative)
I've used Freenet off and on for a number of years and I don't see much churn in the number of free sites. The most active free sites tend to be FLOGs (Blogs on Freenet). Many of the sites in Freenet have been there since what seems like the beginning of time. There are new ones added (like someone mentioned the Diebold files), but they tend to not be kiddie porn.
Here's an idea... run a node, access the non-kiddie porn content, post your own content, and use the network. The network is changed by observing it, so by accessing non-kiddie porn, you are encouraging it to be replicated across the network, while also making the kiddie porn hard to find.
Andrew
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
The person wasn't spying on the users of his Freenet node. You can't, even if you want to, if Freenet meets its design promises.
What he did was look at published directories of Freenet content and how to retrieve it. He noticed how much of it was kiddie porn, extrapolated that a comparable fraction must be running through his node, and decided to get out of the avoid-law-enforcement game.
In other words, nothing comparable to opening envelopes, sniffing network conversations, or wi
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm getting tired of people ignorantly giving up their rights in the name of "catching the evil doers". And of course the all mighty reasoning... "If your not doing anything illegal/evil, you should have nothing to hide."
When and why did this become acceptable logic? Do people not think ahead and picture the outcome if we as a society were able to catch anyone the second they commit a crime? The same system put in place to protect you from harm, now prevents you from ever being able t
What freedom means. (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you are confusing Freedom [reference.com] with impunity. [reference.com]
They are neither contingent nor corollary. Many very [wikipedia.org] smart [wikipedia.org] people [wikipedia.org] would argue that they are often mutually exclusive...not least in so far as your freedom ends at my fist.
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
He could pass a "rule" saying "no" to it, but how would you enforce it?
The ethical questions are interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
Then there's the question: if Freenet is needed, is it right to decide not to run a node because you abhor some of the traffic?
I don't know the answers but do respect your decision.
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Insightful)
And although I do believe in free speech (no government censorship), I don't think that extends to child pornography
Neither does Ian Clarke. You've missed the point. It's not about protecting child pornography as free speech, it's realising that you can't protect other, legitimate forms of free speech without also protecting child pornography as well. It's the unfortunate reality of information theory. If anybody has the power to stop the kiddy porn, they have the power to stop the legitimate speech as well, e.g. dissidence. The only true protection of freedom of speech is incapable of distinguishing between kiddy porn and legitimate speech by its very nature.
If you've come up with some revolutionary scheme that can stop kiddy porn without harming the protection of the legitimate speech, then I'm sure Ian Clarke would jump at the chance to implement it. But there's every reason to believe this will be completely and utterly impossible forever. Think about it.
The sad thing is, no matter how many times this is explained, there's always somebody as ignorant as you willing to tell people all about how he thinks kiddy porn is free speech. Please stop that.
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Insightful)
"... He is actively helping people to distribute child pornography"
What you have posted is frankly libelous [wikipedia.org].
You can be sued, and unless you can prove that you know that he was helping to distribute child porn, you will lose. Otherwise, if you know this for a fact, I hope you have reported this to the authorities.*
Do you know for a fact that he is specifically helping to distribute child pornography, rather than simply building a general purpose network? *Any* communications network can be used to distribute child pornogrphy. Remember that usenet, AOL, and most recently Myspace [wpri.com] was used to distribute child pornography. Are you making the same claims that the creators and owners of usenet, AOL, and MySpace are "actively helping people to distribute child pornography", like you said of Ian Clarke?
I turned off the freenet myself because I thought it could be used for child porn, and I didn't want any part of it. I do not support child pronography. But, I cannot support you making such claims about a person without evidence. Put up or shut up.
*I have the feeling you do not know this specifically about Ian Clarke. If you do, you should report it to the authorities, and if you had reported it, you wouldn't be blabbing libelously on the internet. You have correctly understood that the freenet, like any network, can be used to distribute child porn, but I don't think you know this about Clark. If you do, for God's sake, don't ruin the investigation by blabbing all over the internet.
Re:Fantastic (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Fantastic (Score:4, Funny)
The creator of Freenet bringing forward a libel suit. Now that's irony!
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
All with the help of freenet. Sounds good to me.
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, if you think potentially allowing more people to VIEW child pornography is inherently bad, and will lead to more child abuse, for instance, this isn't much consolation. However, the supreme court has even ruled that *fake* child pornography is not criminal, so viewing animated or CGI child porn, for instance, isn't even illegal. So, as disgusting as it may be, there doesn't seem to be a concensus that individuals privately viewing something that appears to be child porn is bad for society, and will lead to serious crimes.
As an added bonus, the wider and more public spread of child porn, while it can't be traced back to the IP address that shared it, the picture can be tracked back using visual clues as to who is involved, and possibly making it easier for police to apprehend the actual suspects (just not the person sharing it, in this case).
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't agree with this idea. We're not really dealing with a good here where the demand decreases as the supply decreases. The demand for pornography (of any type) is there, no matter if there is a supply or not. Without the demand for it, you'd hardly see the amount of pornography available on the inte
Re:Fantastic (Score:5, Insightful)
So's your local mailman. I hope you didn't send out any Christmas cards last year, and you had better make sure you handle all your bills online, otherwise you're aiding that pernicious distribution medium of kiddie porn known as "First Class Mail" (which, while not anonymous, is physically and legally protected from inspection).
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
Re:Fantastic (Score:4, Insightful)
No, Clarke isn't *actively* helping to spread this any more than any other material. That's just how the protocol work. The eMule devs aren't actively helping to spread pirated material, Pirate Bay isn't actively helping to spread the latest DVD-R movies. They're just providing the service; it's people using it that spread the material.
And why the heck do you feel a need to mention "child pornography" at every chance you get? To make your point more clear? To show that you're against total free speech? Obviously, child porn is one of the things that appear on a network without censorship or easy tracking. Now, what do you think should be done with it while preserving anonymity? Try answering that instead of just throwing shit on the founder who just developed the purely technical service.
Re:Fantastic (Score:4, Insightful)
My ability to pass on free speech is part of my free speech. Let me ntroduce you to the two things Freenet understands: 0 and 1. Please express in those terms what constitutes free speech, and what constitutes child pornography.
Freenet could not possibly make that distinction, you would have to ban it outright. But that would be prior restraint of speech. Let me quote you the Supreme Courts position on that matter in Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart: What else could you do? Well, you could outlaw anonymity. Here's the Supreme Court's opinion on that in McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission: So in short, if you want to outlaw Freenet you had better revoke the First Amendment first. The Supreme Court has repetedly upheld the free and anonymous exchange of speech. In online terms, that translates to free and anonymous exchange of 0s and 1s. Not happy about it? Move to China.
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Interesting)
For your next act you should rant about how Tim Berners-Lee [w3.org] is actually in league with the phishers and scam artists who run websites on the internet. Or how Bram Cohen [bittorrent.com] is personally sharing every song, book, game, and movie ever created, all at the same time.
Re:Fantastic (Score:2)
That of course is a logical fallacy.
The killing is done by armies, controlled by governments, controlled by politicians, aided by media, elected by citizens (at least in a democratic state), and all of it financed by taxation/consumer-spending/lobbying/what-not.
Bu t because you are likely an authority and taxation hater, you chose the govern
Re:Fantastic (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't care to let them know what I'm reading, doing, looking at, or thinking. I don't want them to know who my friends, associates or business partners are.
Here in Canada we have the RCMP, CSIS and others. I don't worry about them in the Canadian legal context, but I do in an international legal context. There have been recent cases of the rendition of Canadians to so
C/C++ (Score:3, Interesting)
Its too bad its written in java.. if it was in C/C++ i would have run a node...
Just find a developer who does a C++ implementation based on the sample code of wyoGuide (http://wyoguide.sf.net/ [sf.net]). It shouldn't be that difficult and is cross-platform as well. Sorry, no I don't have the time to do it myself but I'll help with advice.
O. Wyss
Re:Waste (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, cross-platform coding sucks. When are these companies going to learn that we want proprietary binaries that need to be recompiled on each platform?
Re:Waste (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't that an accurate description of Sun's JVM :)
There are those of us who don't have the luxury of running a platform which Sun feels is important enough to warrent a pre-compiled propriatory binary for, and for us Java applications simply aren't an option.
Re:Waste (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, what platform are you using that doesn't have a Java implementation on it?
And, even more to the point... Just have a Freenet server running in the basement someplace and use it as a proxy out to the Freenet. Buy/find/build a computer (don't spend more than one Benjamin on it) and put Any flavor of Linux on it, then load the Freenet proxy. Don't forget to load up the RAM, as Freenet eats RAM like the passengers of a Las Vegas tour bus eat at Circus Circus.
Not only is this good for the network (permanent nodes == good nodes) but the upshot is that you don't have to locate the server anywhere near your main computer. So you can get a low-speed computer, slap a giant copper HSF on it, and remove the fans. Less fans == less points of H/W failure down the road. Since it's Linux, it never needs to reboot. Since it's only doing Freenet (and only has that port open to the world) then you don't need to update the kernel.
And yes, I know what I'm talking about. I've got a E-PC in my basement that's been running along happily for over 3 years now, and the only thing that I've ever changed on it was the Freenet install. Unload, upgrade, and restart the Freenet proxy. Done in 5min. Whenever i want to use the Freenet i just change my proxy in my browser to my Freenet server in the basement. Takes me 20 seconds.
So I want all these excuses of NOT running Freenet to stop. Anybody can find a 'junk' computer and put Freenet on it, no excuses! Get those nodes up and running--the more nodes that stay online 24/7 the better. And trust me... Once you see the amount of creativity that true total anonymity brings, you'll be glad you at least saw it. You might not like it but at least you know it's there and what it's about. And like GI Joe said--Knowing is half the battle.
And if your really worried about your electric bill--don't. Your bill will jump up at most
Re:Darknet + Bittorrent = Mass appeal ! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:intervention? (Score:2, Interesting)
*They could make all filesharing _programs_ illegal, then attempting to shut down distrobution of those programs (shutdown bittorrent.com, azereus, etc).
*They could shut down proxy sites.
*Really attempt to track down people in other countries who use this technology and provide outlets for it (piratebay, etc).
*Require ISPs to keep logs on traffic for much longer than
Re:Comment (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah... just like watching "normal" pornography makes you more likely to rape random women on the street. Just like playing video games turn innocent teenagers into criminals who shoot cops and hookers. Just like reading Stephen King makes you a psychotic murderer. Just like watching Spongebob makes children gay.
I find child pornography as disgusting and horrible as everyone else, but I think your reasoning is more than far-fetched. At best, you're making a cum hoc ergo propter hoc mistake - it might be that people who view child pornography are more likely to abuse children (i.e., the claim makes sense, a priori - it'd still have to be investigated, though, of course), but even if it is true, I don't see why there would be a causal connection. It's much more likely that there would be another reason that led people to see children as sex objects - which in turn would lead to both an interest in child pornography and actual abuse. But someone who isn't already predisposed towards children wouldn't turn into a child abuser merely because he's exposed to child pornography.
If I looked you up and kept on showing you child pornography, would you ultimately emerge as a child abuser? Of course not. And the same is true for everyone else, too.
Re:In other news.... (Score:3, Funny)
So that's why it's written in Java!