19 February 2015
1) Having data is powerful, but it does little good unless you can either sensor it or analyze it. Data is not sufficient for power.
2) It seems like people can accidentally wander into their own ethical dilemmas just as much as they come upon them.
3) Cliff really does transform a lot. The most drastic and interesting change for me comes in the way his passion for chasing the hacker builds and how he starts to feel connections between ethics and this kind of hacking.
24 February 2015
1) Having the Holy Ghost and the Gospel of Jesus Christ makes decisions about when to speak out over ethical issues easier because we understand many universal truths.
2) Open door communities are always small. therefore, the Internet can't be open door.
3) As far as making dangerous knowledge public, I don't know what's right, but I have no desire to know such things personally.
26 February 2015
1) Non-compete classes are a good idea, I think, because they prevent especially dishonest/unethical behavior. Stealing clients to a side business is really messed up.
2) People being dishonest and inflexible are really the root of all this IP hassle. I can't wait til the millennium when we can put aside this legal baggage. It weighs down progress so much.
3) I can't see myself ever having to worry about IP stuff. I don't have an extremely inventive mind, so patents and copyrights are out, and I'm not into marketing, so that's trademarks off the list.
03 March 2015
1) I bet it was pretty nerve racking to know a hacker's attacking but not know how to protect yourself from them. Those early net admins had a weird situation to deal with.
2) The old theft definition, depriving somebody of their property, is an unfortunate definition for the kind of theft that technology allows.
3) In terms of physical spies, you have to have a traitor for the best espionage. You don't necessarily need that for computer stuff-weak security (aka stupid people) are a better door to classified information in the cyber realm.
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