http://www.boingboing.net/2005/08/07/terrorism_and_the_we.html


Sunday, August 7, 2005
Terrorism and the web: free speech vs. "bad" speech 

Jon Lebkowsky says, 

Not long ago, CNN's Miles O'Brien tossed off a comment implying that 
where Al Qaeda is concerned, the Internet may be the problem. Today 
the Washington post is running a longer piece (requires free 
registration) that says: 

"al Qaeda has become the first guerrilla movement in history to 
migrate from physical space to cyberspace. With laptops and DVDs, in 
secret hideouts and at neighborhood Internet cafes, young code-
writing jihadists have sought to replicate the training, 
communication, planning and preaching facilities they lost in 
Afghanistan with countless new locations on the Internet." 
According to the article, "the Web's shapeless disregard for 
national boundaries and ethnic markers fits exactly with bin Laden's 
original vision for al Qaeda," and that the Internet is increasingly 
used tactically, "especially for training new adherents," quoting 
Rita Katz, director of the SITE Institute, a group that monitors and 
tracks the jihadist Internet sites. 

We should be attentive to the story between the lines here: if 
people use the Internet to do terrible things, what should we do? 
That question's come up more than once since access to the Internet 
started spreading in the early '90s, often from people and 
organizations who, on the scale balancing openness and freedom with 
social control, put their thumb heavily on the social control side, 
The world would be so much simpler and safer if we had more 
restrictions, they think, though there's never been much evidence to 
suggest that this is the case. 

Consider a substitution: if people use free speech to do terrible 
things, what should we do? 

Link to Jon's post, and here's the WaPo article: Terrorists Move 
Operations to Cyberspace. Here's the opening graf: 
In the snow-draped mountains near Jalalabad in November 2001, as the 
Taliban collapsed and al Qaeda lost its Afghan sanctuary, Osama bin 
Laden biographer Hamid Mir watched "every second al Qaeda member 
carrying a laptop computer along with a Kalashnikov" as they 
prepared to scatter into hiding and exile. On the screens were 
photographs of Sept. 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta.
 
This is a bit beside the point, but -- I wonder what OS they're 
running? I'm not trying to insert a gag here, it's an open question. 
posted by Xeni Jardin at 09:14:15 AM









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