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-   -   Insufficient Authority - Do not open this thread (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=11900)

richlevy 09-30-2006 01:42 PM

Insufficient Authority - Do not open this thread
 
Insufficient Authority - You are not authorized to view this thread. Do not open this thread.

richlevy 09-30-2006 01:49 PM

If you made it here, then you certainly fit into the spirit of the Cellar.

I posted this thread to open up a discussion on rule-breaking and the 'right' to information. Breaking rules obviously has a long history in the world and in this country.

In general, with information there are three basic arguments for breaking rules on viewing restricted material.

The “me” argument is basically that the person feels that he or she is above the law in regards to that rule. This is more of a 1980's argument which promotes selfish behavior as beneficial to society.

The anti-establishment argument is based on Watergate and the Pentagon papers and makes the case that many secrets deserve to be revealed based on known secrets that were kept secret as an abuse of power and not for the public good. The is more of a 1960's argument in response to the more compliant attitudes of the earlier decades.

The 'information wants to be free' is one half of 1980's argument based on the assumption that information is so liquid that keeping it locked away will be difficult, so why try.
Quote:


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Information wants to be free" is an expression first recorded as pronounced by Stewart Brand at the first Hackers' Conference in 1984, in the following context:

"On the one hand information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable. The right information in the right place just changes your life. On the other hand, information wants to be free, because the cost of getting it out is getting lower and lower all the time. So you have these two fighting against each other."[1]
In general, is there any knowledge that is so destructive to the human soul that an argument could be made that it should be forbidden?

So far, most arguments for restricting or forbidding data have to do with effects on others. Child pornography laws are intended to protect children from being coerced (no child can give consent) into sexual situations and most other secrets are to protect national interests, corporate interests, or the privacy of the subject.

There are obscenity laws which operate against specific types of information, but it's not clear if they exist to protect the viewer.

Putting aside all of these issues and just focusing on the reader/viewer/listener, is there any kind of information which is so damaging that it should ethically be banned from being shown to a competent adult?

Ibby 09-30-2006 02:09 PM

The only things that deserve to be banned/censored are Nirvana, Green Day, Mallpunk, and Emo.

marichiko 09-30-2006 02:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by richlevy


Putting aside all of these issues and just focusing on the reader/viewer/listener, is there any kind of information which is so damaging that it should ethically be banned from being shown to a competent adult?

No. In fact, I would say any adult has the right to all information within the framework of the exceptions you noted above. I have a problem with the word "competent" because that means someone else may get to determine my "competency." The individual should decide on their own if they are competent or not. I remember being 8 years old and a very advanced reader for my age. The school librarian didn't want to let me check out certain books because she claimed I couldn't possibly understand them. I had to read aloud to her from one of the books to prove that I could read at that level.

Freedom of information is the backbone of a democracy, IMO. An informed people can make better decisions. Lately, too many Americans have been making decisions on the basis of misinformation and outright lies.

Information is power. I loved being a librarian because I felt that I was helping to empower people. When someone came up and asked me how to find information on some topic, not only would I find it for them, I'd show them how to use the resources for themselves next time around. We kept a complete collection of all the State and Federal Statutes in the reference area, and explained to people the basics on how to use them.

Secrecy is the tool of people who want to take your power away and empower themselves over you. Period.

9th Engineer 09-30-2006 02:54 PM

There is a place for classification in certain areas, I wouldn't say we should have as much of it as we do and certainly the less the government does the better, but not everyone has a right to all information. It is possible to 'own' information and it has the same laws concerning property use. Classification and censorship is akin to people installing locks to protect their property.

Flint 09-30-2006 02:54 PM

Other: I've seen plenty of reverse-psychology "don't post here" threads, but the phrase "Insufficient Authority" intrigued me.

Beestie 09-30-2006 04:25 PM

The absence of consequences.

richlevy 09-30-2006 04:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 9th Engineer
Classification and censorship is akin to people installing locks to protect their property.

Censorship has nothing to do with protecting property. The goverment is probably the only "owner" that would censor information they produced unless forced to do so.

Do you believe in censorship to 'protect' the person examining content? Is there anything too disturbing for the avergage adult to handle?

marichiko 09-30-2006 06:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by richlevy
Censorship has nothing to do with protecting property. The goverment is probably the only "owner" that would censor information they produced unless forced to do so.

Do you believe in censorship to 'protect' the person examining content? Is there anything too disturbing for the avergage adult to handle?

Agree that censorship cannot be compared to protecting property. Keeping certain information classified to protect a nation from its enemies is about as close as it gets.

I think its up to the "average adult" to decide for themselves what is too disturbing. For example, if I am reading a book, and the author starts to describe in graphic details one of the characters being tortured and goes on for page after gory page, I skip that part of the book or stop reading it completely. Others may have stronger stomachs than I, and read through such descriptions unperturbed. I don't have the right to tell anyone else that they can't read that book because it upset ME. And you don't have the right to prohibit my access to information that may be upsetting to YOU.

9th Engineer 09-30-2006 07:40 PM

This isn't about whether or not you have the stomach for the information, it's about whether or not you have a right to know whatever you want to. With the government, you pretty well do exept for reasonable cases of national interest. Within the private sector, you don't unless there's good evidence there's a crime involved.

marichiko 10-01-2006 12:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 9th Engineer
This isn't about whether or not you have the stomach for the information, it's about whether or not you have a right to know whatever you want to. With the government, you pretty well do exept for reasonable cases of national interest. Within the private sector, you don't unless there's good evidence there's a crime involved.

Well, Rich specifically asked "Is there anything too disturbing for the average adult to handle?"

Yes, there is such a thing as proprietary information, and companies do have the right to that. I guess Rich will have to clarify further just what exactly it is he's asking.

richlevy 10-01-2006 04:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marichiko
Well, Rich specifically asked "Is there anything too disturbing for the average adult to handle?"

Yes, there is such a thing as proprietary information, and companies do have the right to that. I guess Rich will have to clarify further just what exactly it is he's asking.

I meant that outside of the damage that the information would do to others, (the nation, children, owners), is there anything that should be kept from someone to protect them from being too disturbed or disillusioned by it? Should we censor to protect the relative innocence of adults by not allowing them to see graphic sex or mutilation which goes beyond some extreme point? Should we censor to protect them from information which would dissuade them from being good citizens? Is there any information which could harm the average person just by viewing or hearing it and should they always have the choice to see it?

There was some SF story on one of the shows like Outer Limits or Twilight Zone about someone who comes back from (Tibet?) with a phrase that drives people insane upon hearing it. It begins to spread like a virus being passed from person to person.

Is there anything that really exists that could seriously damage the average persons psyche, and should anyone have the right to censor it?

We see horrible pictures on the Internet all of the time dealing with war, starvation, and disease. Is there anything too graphic for adult viewing?

marichiko 10-01-2006 06:18 PM

Well, we can't make the evils in this world go away by turning our backs to disturbing things and chanting, "That is not really happening." I agree that some pictures/information are extremely disturbing. Some movies or TV programs will warn you beforehand, "Viewer discretion advised." The thing is, how can you make positive steps toward righting these wrongs if you don't know about them? Perhaps, the MORE upsetting they are, the more you should know. As far as citizens becoming demoralized by news about what the government is up to, I think everybody should have the right to that information, too. Sure, it will turn some people apathetic, but other people will become determined to try to make things better.

From time to time you hear of people being inspired to commit crimes after watching some violent film, but I can't help but suspect that someone that unstable in the first place would have eventually committed the crime, anyway.

I could probably make the argument that the networks shouldn't have been showing those scenes from 9/11 when it happened. I cried watching the news coverage, and everyone in the US was pretty shocked and upset. If 9/11 had been reported in less detail, would Americans stil have supported Bush in his stupid war? Would lying by omission have been a good thing? I think not. The American people get lied to enough as it is.

DucksNuts 10-01-2006 11:01 PM

I never do what I'm told, couldnt see the point of starting now :)

lumberjim 10-01-2006 11:40 PM

goatse, and tub girl

mrnoodle 10-02-2006 08:19 AM

I saw both of those again last week when someone at another forum thought they would be funny. They didn't have the same effect as the first time I saw them, but they were still revolting. Especially t--girl. That was just wrong. The g--tse guy looked cartoonish somehow.

I think they should turn off the internet. We saw everything there was to see about 2 years ago, and it's just porn and religious cults now. I want to subscribe to magazines again.

wolf 10-05-2006 05:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by richlevy
In general, is there any knowledge that is so destructive to the human soul that an argument could be made that it should be forbidden?

Personally, I feel that way about my social security number, but darn little else. Okay, the launch codes for the US nukes. That's probably about it. And that thing from back in high school. No one needs to know about that.

Quote:

There are obscenity laws which operate against specific types of information, but it's not clear if they exist to protect the viewer.
If that sort of content is available only on demand, rather than accidentally, I don't have a problem with that, just so long as no other laws are broken ... toiletcam and other voyeuristic sites where the person being filmed isn't aware of it, or porn shots involving minors who cannot consent ... that's content that shouldn't be available under any circumstances.

Quote:

Putting aside all of these issues and just focusing on the reader/viewer/listener, is there any kind of information which is so damaging that it should ethically be banned from being shown to a competent adult?
As in my statement above, it's not just about the recipient of the information ... the source itself may be illegal in some way.

wolf 10-05-2006 05:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mrnoodle
I want to subscribe to magazines again.

Don't bother. You won't have the time to read them ...

(I remember loving getting the Publisher's Clearinghouse Giveaway packet, not because I had any real expectation of winning $10 Million on SuperBowl Sunday, but because of the cheap magazine prices ... I had piles of Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, and one of the Mystery Magazines (Ellery Queen or Alfred Hitchcock) that had to be shifted with a forklift.)

Happy Monkey 10-05-2006 06:48 PM

When I was a kid, I went through all the rigmarole to enter the sweepstakes without purchasing anything. I actually won!

Two checks for less than a dollar each, which didn't cover the stamp cost, and which I never cashed.

But I'm pretty sure they removed my parents' address from their mailing list.

fargon 10-05-2006 07:18 PM

It is not the information that may or may not be bad, but what one does with that information...
fargon 10/05/2006

glatt 10-06-2006 08:02 AM

I read online somewhere the instructions for hacking a soda vending machine by pressing the buttons in a certain sequence. Think of the button layout as a keypad. If you enter different sequences, you can do all sorts of things like change the pricing of the cans, including changing the price to zero. Changing (or maybe just checking) the temperature of the machine. Accessing sales statisitics in the small LED screen. Etc. Etc.

I tried it out on a machine at work, and it actually works. I didn't steal any soda, and I reset the machine to how I found it, but I thought it was interesting.

Flint 10-06-2006 03:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by glatt
...online somewhere...

:::ahem::: online somewhere ??? c'mon!

glatt 10-06-2006 04:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flint
:::ahem::: online somewhere ??? c'mon!

Maybe this was it?
http://www.boingboing.net/2004/12/20...ine_hacks.html

Urbane Guerrilla 10-10-2006 07:48 PM

It's cool that so far every choice has garnered at least two votes. This means the choices are relevant, at least to the Cellar's readership. Well done, Rich.

I voted with that large minority that prides itself on its BS detection.

NoBoxes 10-11-2006 04:14 AM

I thought that you were identifying yourself ("Insufficient Authority") and then giving a command ("Do not open this thread"). It was as though someone said "Police - Dont move"; but, your chosen identity just didn't lend any weight to the order! So, :p .

xoxoxoBruce 10-13-2006 07:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by glatt

The original piece was using a keypad inside the machine and you'd have to distract the person with access to the inside long enough to reprogram the machine functions. Then you could have your way with it after they closed up and left. :cool:

Cicero 10-19-2006 02:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by richlevy
If you made it here, then you certainly fit into the spirit of the Cellar.

I posted this thread to open up a discussion on rule-breaking and the 'right' to information. Breaking rules obviously has a long history in the world and in this country.

In general, with information there are three basic arguments for breaking rules on viewing restricted material.

The “me” argument is basically that the person feels that he or she is above the law in regards to that rule. This is more of a 1980's argument which promotes selfish behavior as beneficial to society.

Putting aside all of these issues and just focusing on the reader/viewer/listener, is there any kind of information which is so damaging that it should ethically be banned from being shown to a competent adult?

Hi- New here-
I'm not a fan of Rand (Ayn)- but she points out in "The Virtue of Selfishness" that the definition of selfish changed after the 50's. Selfishness did not used to be at the exclusion of others. With the modern psychotherapy and the self-help generations to thank for demonization of this concept, selfish has morphed into a term of evil- when it used to be proactive. Do for your self so you may do for others. I do think selfish behavior is beneficial to society as long as it is balanced with the ability to do for others. Selfishness is not black and white. Without out a me- I cannot do for you.


As far as banning- you missed snuff films. This includes snuff porn. I knew someone with a highly illegal film called Uncle Godda**. I watched part of it to see if it was authentic. I was not happy. I should have turned the owner in. Not only for his preferences for illegal underground, violent, murderous video, but also I found he had a proclivity for hitting women. Yes, it's extreme. I don't think adults should watch murder media. This may be obvious to some....but guess what, these films are made because there is a market for it!!!!
~Cicero

xoxoxoBruce 10-19-2006 04:06 PM

Why was that film illegal? Unless it was stolen or illegally copied, what makes it illegal. :confused:

Cicero 10-19-2006 04:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce
Why was that film illegal? Unless it was stolen or illegally copied, what makes it illegal. :confused:

Ummm.....Are you familiar with what a snuff video is?

Hint *do not google that- you will be ping'd*

JerryM 10-19-2006 07:54 PM

. . New guy on board
 
I thought the title was an open invitation for a first post. Having looked around a bit, I think I will enjoy visiting with this bunch (& perhaps add a bit of weight to the Texian/Southwest faction)

I've never been terribly impressed by verbal admonitions with no apparent teeth. This is probably due to having spent over twenty years in the U.S. Coast Guard, where I always knew exactly what the consequences would be if I failed to follow orders. :eek:

While working on my civilian job after I retired from the CG, I once knew an MIS person who had the ability to message all users of our mainframe from her desk in St. Louis. She felt that was too impersonal, so when she needed to do something that could be totally screwed if anyone were on the system, she would call me in Texas and ask me to contact all 25 users in our location and tell them to stay off the system. She could have sent a single system message and then disconnected all users at one time. I never managed to convince her that a simple disconnect is much more effective than a 3rd party message (which may or may not be delivered and recognized as important or authoritative).

Jerry Murdock

Cicero 10-21-2006 09:55 AM

Hi I'm new too! But Welcome Mr. Murdock!!

xoxoxoBruce 10-22-2006 12:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cicero
Ummm.....Are you familiar with what a snuff video is?

Hint *do not google that- you will be ping'd*

I've seen snuff videos, most of which are faked, by the way. What law makes them illegal?


Hi JerryM, I second Cicero's welcome to the Cellar. :D

Cicero 10-22-2006 10:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce
I've seen snuff videos, most of which are faked, by the way. What law makes them illegal?


Hi JerryM, I second Cicero's welcome to the Cellar. :D

:D
On topic:
The conspiracy to commit law. 5 years ago it became illegal to talk about a crime you are intending/ or not intending to commit. Just talking about killing someone with others is illegal. Actually doing it of course, is also illegal. Unless they have changed the laws about premeditated murder which I don't think they have. How many are fake v. real is not an arguement or debate I want in on..........And you thought Pingu was strange?http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...comedy&pl=true Huh. Curious.....:right:
Now let me go find that law for you. I wish I had an account with Lexis Nexis, this would be so much easier. Ahhh- here we are:
http://http://www.law.cornell.edu/us...1----000-.html
I fail to see how these activities aren't illegal......really.

Buddug 10-22-2006 03:25 PM

Do not forget that laws are supposed to arise from ethics , and not vice-versa .

richlevy 10-22-2006 04:00 PM

The point about snuff films and child pornography is that laws are broken and people are harmed to create them, hence viewing them makes one an accessory. From a pure information standpoint, is there anything that people should not be allowed to watch/listen to/experience/know?

Cicero 10-22-2006 06:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buddug
Do not forget that laws are supposed to arise from ethics , and not vice-versa .

This has a clever ring- but I think I need it clarified for me. (too slow)

Buddug 10-22-2006 06:46 PM

It means what good , simple people know . The old-fashioned difference between right and wrong . Them folks don't need no laws to tell 'em that .

I do not need laws to tell me what is wrong either . I know what is wrong .

xoxoxoBruce 10-23-2006 06:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cicero
:D
Now let me go find that law for you. I wish I had an account with Lexis Nexis, this would be so much easier. Ahhh- here we are:
http://http://www.law.cornell.edu/us...1----000-.html
I fail to see how these activities aren't illegal......really.

That link gives me some server.....in German, or something.
Why is a faked murder on a grainy 8mm film any different from a fake murder in a Hollywood film? Could it be a myth to help marketing crap for big bucks?
Quote:

Originally Posted by richlevy
The point about snuff films and child pornography is that laws are broken and people are harmed to create them, hence viewing them makes one an accessory.

I'll be expecting to turn yourself in, Rich. I know you've watched the Magruder film of JFK getting his head blown off.
Oh, and Jack Ruby's performance too...I'll bet you've watched that, haven't you? :cool:

BigV 10-24-2006 10:45 AM

Zapruder

I'm just sayin.


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