New internet laws articles 11 & 13

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Rules for the sake of rules, bureaucracy at its most typical. It'll backfire as always. Things like ToR (the onion router) aren't particularly popular at the mo, they're often used by privacy advocates but more and more will turn to them as they find regular sites they've used for years suddenly unavailable.

Unfortunately they're also used by the least desirable elements of society to access the "dark net" and popularising them will only make that problem worse but what are folks supposed to do? If left unchecked the bureaucrats will limit the internet to "approved" sites only and give themselves a pat on the back for doing it.
 
If this works the internet is going to be a very different place, as one guy in the video says this will kill innovation, forward progress and creativity.






image.jpg


image.jpg
 
Rules for the sake of rules, bureaucracy at its most typical. It'll backfire as always. Things like ToR (the onion router) aren't particularly popular at the mo, they're often used by privacy advocates but more and more will turn to them as they find regular sites they've used for years suddenly unavailable.

Unfortunately they're also used by the least desirable elements of society to access the "dark net" and popularising them will only make that problem worse but what are folks supposed to do? If left unchecked the bureaucrats will limit the internet to "approved" sites only and give themselves a pat on the back for doing it.

clapa :hat:
 
Back
Top