[url="http://rt.com/news/richard-stallman-free-software-875/"]Stallman: Facebook IS Mass Surveillance[/url]: RT, 02 December, 2011
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Quote:The father of free software philosophy spoke to RT on evil developers, spying social networks, the almost-legitimacy of Anonymous hacks and the condition under which he would take a proprietary program and a million dollars. Stallman is the man behind the concept that every computer program must be free for users to study and modify as they want. This is the only way to ensure that by using the software users do not compromise their human rights, he says.
ââ¬ÅFree software literally gives you freedom in the area of computing. It means that you can control your computing. It means that the users individually and collectively have control over their computing. And in particular it means they can protect themselves from the malicious features that are likely to be in proprietary software,ââ¬Â he told RT.
ââ¬ÅThis doesnââ¬â¢t automatically give you freedom in some other area of life. To get that you have to fight for it. But human rights support each other. In an age when a lot of what we do, we do with computers, if we donââ¬â¢t have freedom in our computing, that makes it harder for us to defend or fight for freedom in other areas. You lose one set of rights ââ¬â and itââ¬â¢s harder for you to keep the others.ââ¬Â
There are many ways how people can be stripped of their freedom through the software they use. One of the latest examples is the scandal with Carrier IQââ¬â¢s software, which is being accused of logging every keystroke on devices, which run it.
ââ¬ÅThis is an example of malicious features in non-free software. Those mobile phones are being run by non-free software, so itââ¬â¢s no surprise that they have malicious features in them. The most commonly used non-free programs do,ââ¬Â Stallman sadly pointed out.
Another example is Facebookââ¬â¢s data-mining activities, which includes massive spying on people browsing the internet.
ââ¬ÅFacebook does massive surveillance. If there is a ââ¬Ëlikeââ¬â¢ button in a page, Facebook knows who visited that page. And it can get IP address of the computer visiting the page even if the person is not a Facebook user. So you visit several pages that have ââ¬Ëlikeââ¬â¢ button and Facebook knows that you visited all of those, even if it doesnââ¬â¢t really know who you are,ââ¬Â he said.
But the public awareness of the danger is rising, and they start resisting it. For instance, operations of the Anonymous hacker group are basically an online version of protest demos, Stallman says.
ââ¬ÅThe Anonymous protests for the most part work by having a lot of people send a lot of commands to a website, that it canââ¬â¢t handle so many requests. This is equivalent of a crowd of people going to the door of a building and having a protest on the street. Itââ¬â¢s basically legitimate. And when people object to this, letââ¬â¢s look at who they are and what they do. Usually they are people who are doing much worse things,ââ¬Â he believes
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