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States Pass Thousands of Info Restriction Laws 158

nebaz writes "The AP has published an article analyzing over 1000 laws passed by state legislatures since 9/11, and discovered a disturbing trend. More and more information is being made unavailable to the public. Some of this information may seem reasonable, dealing with national security and all, but there are other things, such as safety plans at schools, medication errors at nursing homes, and disciplinary actions against state employees, that are becoming restricted." From the article: "In statehouse battles, the issue has pitted advocates of government openness - including journalists and civil liberties groups - against lawmakers and others who worry that public information could be misused, whether it's by terrorists or by computer hackers hoping to use your credit cards. Security concerns typically won out."

Comment Re:Kids don't need mesh networks to ineract! (Score 1) 187

The laptops themselves will form this mesh. Each laptop has wireless connectivity. Each laptop will connect to other similar laptops in range. Sort of like how P2P filesharing works. A mesh network is decentralized and composed of the client computers.

A harder question is how connectivity to the 'regular' internet will achieved.

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