politics

ORB survey finds that more than 1,000,000 Iraqis murdered

Not news, just a chilling read.

In the week in which General Patraeus reports back to US Congress on the impact the recent ‘surge’ is having in Iraq, a new poll reveals that more than 1,000,000 Iraqi citizens have been murdered since the invasion took place in 2003.
[......]
As well as a murder rate that now exceeds the Rwanda genocide from 1994 (800,000 murdered), not only have more than one million been injured but our poll calculates that of the millions of Iraqis that have fled their neighbourhoods, 52% have moved within Iraq but 48% have crossed its borders, with Syria taking the bulk of refugees.
More than 1,000,000 Iraqis murdered

No comment really needed. It's interesting that the highest rates of violent deaths are around the areas with allied troops. It doesn't prove anything more than the presence of troops seems to encourage violence.

Genocide seems to be a strong word, but if one follows the UN definition
"...any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life, calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; [and] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group" it seems like the violence in Iraq is of genocidal proportions, that is endangering to destroy (at least in part) the Iraqi populous. It doesn't mean that the allied troops are causing it directly with their military presence, but surely a big chunk of the responsibility through aggression, mismanagement, etc... lies in the White House and Downing Street.

What a sobering read. Not genocide, since the intent is probably missing, but who is going to actually answer for so many deaths? The road to hell and good intentions?

Open-it-projects - epetition reply

"Publicly funded R&D projects which aim to produce software outputs shall specify a proposed software exploitation route at the start of the project. At the completion of the project, the software shall be exploited either commercially or within an academic community or as OSS."[ Open Source Software Policy ]

Furthermore, it is recognised that there is a need to maximise returns on, and benefits from, public investment in publicly funded R&D software. Government policy helps achieve this by making clear that the 'exploitation route' for such publicly funded R&D software should be chosen with this objective in mind.

The policy on exploiting R&D software does not apply to software developed in areas of defence, national security or law enforcement or software developed by trading funds for reasons of national security and to protect government commercial interests.
Open-it-projects - epetition reply

This response essentially confirms the status quo. Yes, there is a government open source software policy , but that policy allows, as cited above, the option of using a free license, as opposed to requires. The two are not equal. Even accepting that defence concerns should be taken into account, which is a debatable issue on its own right knowledge is knowledge after all, the reply is unsatisfactory. Not that one would expect otherwise...

So why do I think the response is unsatisfactory? Simple. I believe that any product , including the knowledge to reproduce that product, funded by the public purse, must be available to the public at no cost, with no restrictions. Ideally it should enter the public domain, to protect the intellectual investment free licenses can be considered as fair and just. I believe the system must be fair for the tax payer, not any other body. That is why commercial or any other interests should not be taken into account. Keeping it simple and fair means that the rules will be understood and followed.

So point by point.

Heiligendamm being fenced out in preparation for the G8 Summit this summer

Aren't they ever pragmatists them Germans. Apparently, the German authorities are putting a 12km concrete and metal fence around Heiligendamm, the town of this year's G8 summit. Well done - this will keep the peace in the town and at the Kempinski hotel.

I wonder why does "Resistance is futile" echoes in my head in German accent :)

software patents, or my personal insights

Up until now I was avoiding putting my thoughts on 'paper', but here we are. My instincts simply say Restricting knowledge distribution and use is wrong. Some might say this makes me a communist devil, anarchist or whatever other epithet is currently cool in their circles. Let's avoid that for the time being. These scribbles are probably not 100% correct. But the ideas are what matters anyway. And will you find a difference from a bird's eye view?

Obviously this is a strong social issue, as in it reflects a growing concern of the society as a whole. The society as the human beings represented by a state, like UK, USA, France, Bulgaria, or groups of states like EU, UN, ... Some long time ago patents were introduced by the British Crown in order to give a temporary monopoly to inventors, so that they can protect and exploit their knowhow, while making the knowledge (their knowhow) public. This was a significant social issue. This way knowledge was immediately becoming exploitable by the society. People could benefit from the abstract knowledge or the principles behind the patentable invention. These principles were not patentable at the time, only some of their defined applications - the invention, machines, products etc... The monopoly lasted for a relatively short period of time. Longer than it would take at the time to reverse engineer an invetion and set up production of a competitive product, but not by too much. This is important, since timescales, im my opinion, are important when trying to rationalise the costs of patents to a society.

Call to give homeless broadband

The homeless should be given broadband internet access, John Prescott's office has said in a new report.
from: Call to give homeless broadband

The story highlights the support for the ideas in the report from Crisis - a charity dedicated to helping homeless people.

What this brings to mind is the fact that the digiatl boom of the nineties, which is going even faster now, creates a new, wider gap between different social groups, regardless if it is in one country or worldwide. One one side we have people exploiting the new frontier, trying to parcel out knowledge, so they have a big stake in the 'IP real estate' goldrush.

Powered by Drupal, an open source content management system