On Thu, 2013-09-12 at 14:23 +1000, Zenaan Harkness wrote: > Edward Snowden
In the first placed he joint a job for a company that is working for the USA government. This company and he are members of the black hat community. They do not join the white hat community instead. Lamenting about the evil laws doesn't make the world a better place. Idiots could bomb e.g. the L3 node in Frankfurt, sane people simply shouldn't work for such companies, shouldn't simply join the black hat community. So again, what we can do is to teach our children not to work for such companies, not to join the black hat community. Using TOR gives a little but protection, but doesn't change the world. You should take care about the real issue. People are willing to join the black had community, they are willing to work for evil companies, that work for e.g. the NSA. On one hand you are lamenting about evil laws and OTOH you refer to the good laws. Are you a teenager? Live isn't just black and white. Most computer users are not that interested in technology as you and me. Unlikely that they will join key signing parties. The Internet is new for the human race, we need to educate our children and our children need to educate their children and so on, this will change our societies and make crap, such as the NSA useless and then spying will stopp. Nowadays most people prefer it the way it is, e.g. because family members died at 9/11. Those people have also common sense, they just have fear and this make them think black and white. You are thinking black and white too, you should understand those people. Understanding each other will make this world a better place, hardened fronts have counter-productive effects. You better start being friendly to those you don't like, instead of thinking that you are a better human and everybody who does think like you. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1378974429.5755.39.camel@archlinux