• @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    the court accused him of an “ideology of maximum privacy.”

    In what twisted fucked up crazy world is that a bad thing?

    I hate this timeline…

    • _NoName_
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      1 month ago

      That logic they’re using should be burned with fire.

      With that logic, cars being highjacked for a crime should make the company liable for the crime (Revolutionary actions would also count as crimes). That gives car manufacturers alot more legal reason for adding kill switches to their vehicles’ engines, which would most likely be used by cops for whatever the fuck they want.

      How about DJI’s drones being used to kill individuals in Ukraine? Steam decks are currently also being used by Ukraine to control machine gun turrets remotely, and they’re able to be used that way explicitly because they use regular OS’s (a major boon to its users.)

      This type of regulation would only further lead to anti-consumer products, and a stronger police state.

      • @[email protected]
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        161 month ago

        I dunno. If you manufacture tools designed specifically for killing, for example, you’ve definitely played a part in somebody’s use of your tools for killing.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 month ago

              They’re not necessarily made for killing. Most people defending themself with a pistol (whose only purpose is for shooting humans) would not want to shoot for the head or chest

                • @[email protected]
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                  -81 month ago

                  Was tornado cash made for laundering money?

                  My point is that gun manufacturers will say they make their products for defense, not killing. Knife manufacturers, same. Hammer manufacturers, same.

                  There’s very few products which everyone can objectively say are designed for killing.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 month ago

                I’m downvoting you, but only because you wrote “whose only purpose is for shooting humans”, which is false statement.

                Really, you could have used better examples like brass knuckles. They can’t be used for anything else other than injuring and killing people.

  • @Vendetta9076
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    901 month ago

    By this logic DARPA should be put on trial for creating TOR

    • @[email protected]
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      471 month ago

      By this logic every locksmith should be put on trial for making locks, every manufacturer of vaults and safes, every lumber company for making wood used in fences, every costume designer for making halloween masks, every post office for renting PO boxes… etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      what about computers and the internet? those were created and used for bad too. also gps and weather satellites.

      fun fact: the first digital computer was invented for the explicit purpose of calculating artillery firing tables for the army during the war. what it actually ended up getting used for on its first program, was studying global thermonuclear war.

  • @[email protected]
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    811 month ago

    Looks like development of such things will have to start happening on the dark web. What a ridiculous conviction.

    In its judgement, the court accused him of an “ideology of maximum privacy.”

    What the fuck is this kind of reasoning? Is privacy illegal now?

    Anti Commercial-AI license

  • @[email protected]
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    451 month ago

    Due to its mode of operation, the court considered the software to be “specifically intended for criminals”

    Crime is an action a state doesn’t like, not necessarily wrong or evil, but serves interests other than the state. If the state has to authorize everything, then the state is favoring dominance over governance.

    When the state has to monitor all transactions it is tyranny.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 month ago

      The state is just the abstraction of the collective will of the governed, if the Dutch people have determined this is a crime against their society, then it is.

      The state holds a monopoly on violence, another monopoly isn’t a stretch.

      • @[email protected]
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        171 month ago

        That’s really only in theory. I don’t think there’s any country where the government does what the polis wants in every instance.

      • मुक्त
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        121 month ago

        For an entity hat already has monopoly over violence, how difficult is it to claim monopoly over the collective will?

      • @[email protected]
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        61 month ago

        Collective will is just the myth that is used to legitimize the state

        The state is also so much more than the will of the governed. To say that it is all there is to it would consider governments like those governed by the divine right of kings fo be stateless. Stalin’s Russia, or Kim Jong Un’s DPRK would then be stateless.

      • @C126
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        1 month ago

        What a fantasy world you live in. Must be nice. In truth, the state is a gang of thugs and parasites. Has nothing to do with the collective will of the people, a concept which doesn’t exist in reality.

  • Richard
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    361 month ago

    Hopefully, not all is lost. He has appealed and hopefully a greater authority will overturn this ruling.

  • Sem
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    341 month ago

    That is absolutely crazy. I wish the strength to go through that for Alexey Pertsev!

  • @[email protected]
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    201 month ago
    1. Dutch court convicts engieneer, not Dutch engieneer gets convicted.
    2. I wouldn’t be surprised if Dutch court wants to say that he should have stayed in Russia and supported Putin’s war.
    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      About the licence, how are you going to prove that your data was indeed used in training a Model ?

      • @[email protected]
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        191 month ago

        My best guess for the hopeful outcome is the ai starts tacking on the license magic words at the end of things it says… But ultimately it feels like a digital version of sovereign citizens to me.

        • Bilb!
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          1 month ago

          I see it as a social signifier more than anything else.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        It’s not enforceable in any way, it’s just virtue signaling. Lemmy itself is a privacy dumpsterfire. GDPR compliance is literally impossible.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        How would I prove it? I don’t know. Do I think it will work? Probably not. But if I have the license someone might find it when a LLM accidentally reveals that it was trained with data that is under that license, and maybe the EU does something about it. Maybe the Pirate party will make the EU do something about it? Who knows? But they are the only ones I see that are actively trying to protect all of us an our right to privacy, and for that they have my vote! 🏴‍☠️🇪🇺

        Anti Commercial AI thingy

        CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        This is a good question but I would just like to point out that 15 years ago nobody would have predicted that the questions we were asking and answering on stackoverflow would be used to train models (and that open source would have it’s license violated so brazenly) and that if you tried to delete your contributions because you didn’t want them to be used to train models you would get banned from the site, so even though adding a license to your comments might be meaningless, it might also be a powerful tool down the line. You never know how it’ll go.

        • MHLoppy
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          1 month ago

          SO comments are already CC-BY licensed (granted not -NC licensed, but still), but it doesn’t seem to have helped much.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 month ago

    This happens with cash too. If you take in a bunch of cash, you have a duty to know what it’s from so that you’re not facilitating terrorism or crime or subverting sanctions. In fact, of you handle cash or finance, you generally have to take training on these laws every year.

    This thing is the definition of money laundering and was known for exactly those problems.

    • @grandmaOP
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      341 month ago

      There are reasons to use this service that are completely legal. They should sentence the people laundering money, not the people providing privacy tools that happen to be misused.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 month ago

      There’s no reason people using tornado wouldn’t have to disclose their sources to the authorities, same as cash.

      But it does protect them from malicious actors.

      • @[email protected]
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        -21 month ago

        I don’t think you understand. Banks (or anyone who accepts large amounts of money) has a duty to have some idea of where that money comes from. There are anti money laundering laws.

        Go open a bank account right now and try to deposit a briefcase full of $50,000 in cash and see what happens. You might, maybe be able to do it, but there will absolutely be questions.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 month ago

            I think it will go to my quotes collection. “We know what the rules are, we are saying they’re wrong”.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 month ago

          That doesn’t apply to small amounts below $10k

          But, again, the same applies. I deposit btc or cash into a bank, even $50k, then I disclose its source to the authorities, with the paperwork. But by using a privacy service, I can comply with the law and protect myself from malicious actors

          Go open a bank account right now and try to deposit a briefcase full of $50,000

          I’ve done this. They ask you for the paperwork documenting the source of the funds. Just follow the process. It doesn’t matter if its fiat or crypto.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 month ago

      But in essence, they are punishing this guy for writing code. And at least in the United States, code is considered speech. And this is a very bad precedent. I know that this is a Dutch court, but still that is not a good thing.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        He can write the code. He can release the source. Nothing is illegal until he takes currency.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 month ago

          And see, there’s where the problem comes in. He never actually took the currency from the smart contract itself. In fact, it is still online and being used as of this day. And he is getting none of the currency just like he got none of the currency before. What they are going after him for is creating a front-end user interface to access the contract. I believe they did take a fee from that user interface since it made it simpler than interacting with the contract directly. The problem is that they are saying that by taking fees from that user interface, he is money laundering, but not everybody who used that user interface was using it for money laundering. A famous example is the creator of Ethereum used it to donate to Ukraine.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 month ago

              Even had the front end website not been running, that money would have still been laundered. I heard an explanation of it earlier that was saying something to the effect of, imagine a door at the edge of a field. There is no walls, there is no nothing else, just a door at the edge of a field. Anybody can come into that field and use it whenever they wish. Putting a lock on the door will not keep people out of the field. They can just walk in wherever the door isn’t.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 month ago

                I feel like this would be better if the field was surrounded by a 1 foot moat, and there was a bridge.

                It would take some amount of effort to step over the moat and not trip, vs just walking over the bridge.

                The bridge has a small toll to help maintain it.

                But bridge or no bridge you’re getting into the field.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        It’s continental system. Precedents don’t have as much power as in English system. And Netherlands are in ECHR jurisdiction, so it’s likely to be overturned found contradicting European Convention on Human Rights.

  • @Scolding0513
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    71 month ago

    money laundering is a big bad no-no word that THEY have stigmatized (conditional brainwashing) in order to get every day people to SUPPORT their regime of THEFT and CONTROL.

    “You are trying to keep your money to yourself and stop us from seeing it so that we can’t steal some of it and punish you for using it how you like??? You’re a MONEY LAUNDERER. Money laundering Money laundering Money laundering”

    When you control money, you control minds, livelihoods, and monopolize fear itself.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    Wasn’t the arrest over a year ago? How much time is left on the sentence?

    This is terrible, but 5 years is pretty tolerable. Assange is in locked up for being a journalist and faces life in tortuous conditions.

    Also, write your MEP and vote pirate party.

    • Alphane Moon
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      -141 month ago

      Assange isn’t merely a journalist. He collobarated with russian security services and was on their payroll during his work on their “RT” initiative.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 month ago

        Please stop with the C.I.A. talking points. Have some self awareness. All of this McCarthy red scare shit is embarrassing.