Bruce Schneier, uma das mentes mais brilhantes em termos de tecnologia da informação (e por consequencia, persona non grata em qualquer lugar em que Azeredo, Malta e semelhantes comandam), escreve um texto em favor do anonimato na rede. Trecho do artigo:
The whole attribution problem is very similar to the copy-protection/digital-rights-management problem. Just as it's impossible to make specific bits not copyable, it's impossible to know where specific bits came from. Bits are bits. They don't naturally come with restrictions on their use attached to them, and they don't naturally come with author information attached to them. Any attempts to circumvent this limitation will fail, and will increasingly need to be backed up by the sort of real-world police-state measures that the entertainment industry is demanding in order to make copy-protection work. That's how China does it: police, informants, and fear.
Just as the music industry needs to learn that the world of bits requires a different business model, law enforcement and others need to understand that the old ideas of identification don't work on the Internet. For good or for bad, whether you like it or not, there's always going to be anonymity on the Internet.
Dica do Danilo Doneda.
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