[net.followup] Breaking the law with technology

gnu@sun.uucp (John Gilmore) (06/07/84)

One more and then I'll go away.

There seems to be an undercurrent of thought running through this
discussion of BBS confiscation.  The thought is that it's especially
bad to use new technology to break the law, worse than the simple
breaking of the law.

This kind of parallels the idea that it's worse to conspire with people
to commit a crime than it is to just do it by yourself.  They're both
ways to keep people separated and disorganized.

In some states it's illegal to advocate homosexuality, especially if
you're a teacher (a CS professor?).  I'm sure that a BBS regularly used
for gay organizing there, if found by the local blue-law brigade, would
be shut down or confiscated (as "evidence" or whatever excuse they can
come up with).  They claim to seize it because it was used to commit a
crime, but it's really that it was a tool that made you more effective
in circumventing their obsolete law.  I can fight them in court,
but their being able to take the BBS puts one more power on their side.

I want to see Americans retain the freedom to use technology for
whatever purpose, whether or not the government still thinks it's
illegal.  I'm not happy that the government is trying to use new (eg
surveillance and data collection) technology as fast as possible, while
making it harder for those it opposes to use technology.  It's not even
that I agree with the opponents, it's just that I deplore the shift of
power.

	"Love your country, but never trust its government."