Science vs. National Security 67
capt.Hij writes "The NY Times has an article about how scientific journals are struggling with how to avoid publishing information that might help bio-terrorists. Once people start deciding that knowledge should be held by only a few then we are sanctioning ignorance. This is scary when it comes to democracy and decision making."
Maybe I'm missing something (Score:1)
Now if someone in the community wants to turn around help such enlightened states as, let's see, Iraq, Iran and North Korea for instance, well then, that might be a problem.
Most people, though, don't give a whiff. And if someone creepy starts asking, we always have the TIPS program! Woohoo!
Let's all become Amish... (Score:2, Funny)
No research == nothing to publish
Re:Let's all become Amish... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Let's all become Amish... (Score:1)
We're going to have to deal with this... (Score:2)
Cosider, a first year biology student has the capability to make resistant bacteria. Ecoli, anitbiotics bought from a fist store, time and a warm agar from a japanses market - are all thats needed.
There is no easy solution, but unfortunatly the only methods at are disposal are all ugly: survalance, forced ignorance, indoctrination and fear.
Ugh - what a nasty future. We either survive in a harsh new world, or we die.
Sombody - please, come up with a better solution. Soon.
Re:We're going to have to deal with this... (Score:1)
The only solution leading to peace [cmu.edu] is education. [bovik.org]
The argument goes like this: terrorism is bred by poverty, and the only way out of poverty is literacy.
Yes, it is that simple. Now, if I could only get a computer-assisted oral reading system to fit in 4MB on a 85 MTOPS handheld, we could actually afford to package them in with Meals Ready To Eat and such humanitarian packages. If you doubt the inevetability of this, just plot Moore's law and ask how much a Texas Instruments Speak-n-Spell would set you back on eBay these days.
Eventually, educational computer systems (which may or may not have other features like email and web browsing) will be very inexpensive and commonplace. Just like cellphones are springing up in the poorest nations that still can't afford wires. As long as speech software, computer, and communications engineers are striving for improvements, things will head generally in the direction leading up to it.
As someone who has designed software at that cutting edge, for some of the largest language learning software companies in the world, I can say with some certainty that I need more money. [bovik.org]
Re:We're going to have to deal with this... (Score:2)
The trouble with this logic it that the predicate isen't even remotely true.
Almost all acts of terrorism against civilisation has been comitted by people who are above the poverty level - they have the education and means to carry out an attack. Regardless of their angnst of the stupid and poor against civilisation, they can't perpetrate large-scale terrorism. Sure they may kill a tourest now and then with a knife, but getting a dirty bomb together is beyond their means.
Notice that the IRA, Timothy McVey (sic) and Bin Ladin are are not poor. From experience, most members of the Black Panthers, Neo-Nazi's, Rainbow Push, and Greenpeace are usuually educated and with means. Ususally they are crafty debators, and know how to stay just inside the law. Usually they can mount expensive defences when brought into court.
I do agree that education is by itself noble, but the kind of education that would strip all will for terrorism, would allso strip the will for independent thought and is unfortunalty really just indoctrination.
Even mild forms of education indoctrination, like the "politically correct" movement leaves it's followes blindly trusting and easy to manupilate.
Oh well, I'm just rambeling.
Re:We're going to have to deal with this... (Score:2)
Yes, there are a *bunch* of low-level suicide bombers. I'm not really worried about them...
The person we have to fear is the inteligent and well funded person who makes a drug-resistant bacteria, or a new virus, or a dirty bomb packed with "radioactive goodness!"
Based on body count, we should fear the smart ones. Kobar, 9-11, Oklahoma City - those are far more deadlier than the annoying rash of bus bombers.
The fun starts when one of these buggers figguers out how to read a Biology 101 textbook and combines it with uncle Bin Ladins moeny. Or some skin-head decided to play shower-time with the Ney York underground.
Ugh. I guess the only thing that would make a diference, is if we colonised other planets. Soon.
Re:We're going to have to deal with this... (Score:1)
Re:We're going to have to deal with this... (Score:2)
By who? Chomsky?
Care to cite staticstics?
I'll go you one futher -
What is known, is that *state* sponsered terrorism dwarfs the poverty-caused terrorism you mention, and the middle-class caused terrorism I mentioned.
Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot have killed over 100 million people - way more than any rag-tag group of poor, or evem people like Bin Ladin.
The higher up the food chain you go the more effective the killing.
Sure the poor are pised, but they are ineffective. That's why they're poor - they are either lazy or not in a position of power.
It's the rich, or the nation states, or the corportation - somthing large, that has the means to kill us all.
a human is an animal (Score:1)
On the contrary, the poor are effective at spreading virulent diseases when they become too poor, whether they want to or not. This is why the Republican party is proposing an expanded medicare drug benefit for seniors. Are they supporting socialization of medical care [pnhp.org]? Of course they are, and if you care about the quality of life measures that most people say they care about, then you can count your lucky library finds and use them to promote sustainable technologies.
I support the use of economic incentives to encourage the development of educational technologies appropriate for the prevailing circumstances.
Re:a human is an animal (Score:2)
I don't disagree with you one bit, on the need for education, but just on the concusion that an educatied population is free from terrortst thoughts.
A good example is Iran - smart and beautifull people, and yet a den of terrorism. Germans are considered smart and yet have been capable of great crimes.
It will be interesting to see if computing holds its promise for education - unfortunatly I'm a bit jaded and have seen how technology initially helps education but then turnd into edu-taiment in the long run. In the 50' - audio tape was the panacea (Hear wonderfull foreing peoples!), then TV in the 70's (Learn from the best educators), then in the 80's VCR/TV madd it's presence felt (and kids stated getting doses of comercials in school).
When computers first came on the education scene - they were wonderfull: kid were learning LOGO or BASIC. Now all I see them used for is browsing for porn, and instant messaging. Oh, and somtimes they get used as giant typewriters. If a kid brings a C compiler to school - he's likely to be branded as a hacker/terrorist.
Computers have gone form a complex tool to be experimented with, to a mostly passive form of media. Hopefully, with cheaper computing this will change again.
Re: a human is an animal (Score:1)
No, but they are poor. The spectrum of animal life includes humans, but not all humans have enough literacy to enable them to provide for the running water, nutrition, and other essential elements of hygine and quality of life. Those elements directly impact the quality of life of the rich. The most direct link is that the illiterate are ineffectively employable (not simply ineffective.) That makes a big difference to the World Bank, for example.
The value of tools depends on what the tools are being used for. If a kid brings a powerful speech recognition software development system to school that just happens to include language tools, it is very unlikely that will result in a negative stigma.
Bandwidths have been going up in both directions, and computers have allowed outbound bandwidths to more closely match inbound bandwidths. Again, it's what they're used for that really matters.
Other peeks into the future (Score:1)
Stanford's TIQIT (Linux/Wintel) [tiqit.com]
the UK's SOLO (ARM RISC, but comes with solar panels) [explan.co.uk]
or improved living conditions... (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, it's lack of knowledge that causes the worst economic damage. Just look at the damage from fire ants, africanized bees, starlings, zebra mussels, elm beetles and so on. Or if you don't like those examples, then look at the TCO at the national and international level for chlorinated hydrocarbons, dioxins, and PCBs or for BSE-friendly agricultural practices. Someone was sloppy, ignorant or decided that rules are for other people and that plus time is all that was needed. Since you cannot remove the technical possibility to cause damage, you can remove the incentive.
Naively, improving living standards would help. If people are literate, capable of analytical thought, educated, employed, kept healthy, and well fed like an average Finn, then they're less likely to cause trouble and more likely to contribute. I think you can probably find an inverse correlation between quality of life and crime.
Legal system (Score:3, Insightful)
IT'S A LITTLE LATE FOR THAT!
as I've said on this site before (Score:5, Funny)
you can't stop information.
Maybe we should try to build a world
where people aren't trying to kill us.
Re:as I've said on this site before (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:as I've said on this site before (Score:1)
Science will lead to the solution of this problem, as of all others.
Eventually, we should be able to develop techniques in genetic engineering, pharmacology, and cybernetics that will allow us to eliminate tendencies toward homicidal behavior.
While we're at it, let's excise other antisocial behavior traits as well.
Resistance is futile.
Re:as I've said on this site before (Score:1)
Hear [cmu.edu], hear! [bovik.org]
more information above in this thread (Score:1)
for detail on the present state of such progress, click here [slashdot.org]
Re:as I've said on this site before (Score:2)
Yes you can; it's been done before. In many cases, keeping a secret is much easier than the problems the information's misuse can cause. Some things should be kept secret, and world is a better place for it. By keeping the way to create VX a secret (for example), there is a greatly reduced chance of it being used. I don't have to worry about keeping chemical warfare gear and toxin antidotes on my person at all times.
Oklahoma City and Sept. 11 were extremely localized in scope. A small geographic area was affected. I doubt that the synthesis of VX is much more complicated if you know the secret than these acts. Thank God Iraq couldn't find the way to make VX (they abandoned the program in '1989).
If they did, we would have a far greater problem on our hands; a few well-placed aerosol cans could depopulate a city. And how do you protect from that? Nuke Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and every other country with ties to al-queda? How many innocents would that claim? Would it solve anything?
Sorry-- but the way to solve the problem is to prevent it from happening. Don't spread the information by publishing it. Destroy all records of the existence of the information, and of the information itself. Inform and 'convert' all who know and can reproduce the information of the real (and dire) dangers that can arise should the secret get out. And, barring that-- and for all of the coldness involved, kill or otherwise silence the people involved who can reproduce or easily re-research even parts of the information from their memory.
One thing is a guaranteed fact: If 'sensitive' information is easily available, it will eventually be misused. And many bits of information, when misused, end catastrophically. And it'll always be easier to destroy than create; entropy doesn't help to order/organize anything.
There is no acceptable choice-- either:
murder a few brilliant scientists who is guilty only of finding (even unintentionally) a dangerous bit of information.
or
watch thousands or millions of other perfectly innocent people murdered because of the information's misuse.
It's a hard choice, but a good government tries to serve the greatest number of people; not its most talented people.
Maybe we should try to build a world where people aren't trying to kill us.
If you want to go that route, Stalin and Mao had the right idea. Just kill all of your ideological and social opponents.
So did George Orwell-- the "Thought Police" is a work of sheer brilliance.
So how many people have to die or be 'conditioned' before that becomes a real possibility? Our focus is not the problem; we've had the same kind of societal problems (if not the exact same problems) for all of recorded history.
Most of us prefer to have our own thoughts, ideals, and moralities. And, unsurprisingly, we often disagree. There are always a few people who believe so strongly that they will die for their belief-- they'll lie to themselves, kill, mangle, and destroy for that belief.
Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:4, Insightful)
The fact is that some information, maybe not now but in the forseeable future, will be dangerous enough for one fanatic or lunatic to kill a very large number of people.
We're going to have to have a long, reasoned conversation about how to deal with this fact, and cries of "we're sanctioning ignorance" are just as unhelpful as cries of "think of the children!"
This doesn't mean that I'm happy with the way this administration is likely to approach this issue - I think it would be very good for the academic community to come up with a unified approach on this topic before a purely political solution is imposed.
Bottom line: yes, I'd like people to be ignorant of how to (for instance) engineer aerosol Ebola in their basements.
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:2)
The question is, though, how difficult do you want to make it? Do you want every loon who wants this information to be able to get it, or do you want people to have to work a bit to get it?
The thing is, the harder it is to get, the fewer people will actually expend the effort to get it. Some information should take a lot of work to get, and for some of that information, the cost-benefit analysis says that it's worth expending a lot of effort to raise that difficulty as far as possible.
I am, by the way, a card carrying member of the ACLU. I'm just not a blind follower of absolutes.
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you're thinking from the point of view of the average couch-potato anarchist who gets a stiffy from downloading factually incorrect information then it doesn't need to be very high. If you're an extremist, with an agenda, and part of that agenda involves murder then I don't think that you can raise the bar high enough to both protect us from threats and allow scientific research to carry on.
There's also the problem of the way scientific minds work, or at least good ones. You can withhold a piece of information, B, but from the other pieces of information A, C and D, an expert in the field can work out B.
Perhaps you could buy yourself time before an enemy knows B, but you won't prevent its eventual discovery. There are great minds outside of the U.S., and there are great minds in the U.S. that for various reasons might disclose the information regardless of prohibitions against it.
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:2)
So, to be honest, a fair amount of the time, the exact same technology is researched at the same time, completely independant of each other; the discovery is literally made twice before anything is published. It's also paid for twice. That doesn't mean that there was waste involved.
Frankly, I can deal with slower development of some technologies if its censorship increases my personal safety. This is espescially true in the case of leathal chemical agents, or deadly (but uncommon) bioagents such as ebola or anthrax.
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:2)
An additional factor to consider is that delaying the development of these technologies may delay cures and counter-measures against such agents.
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:1)
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:2)
What good is a countermeasure / vacciene / cure to a deadly virus, if because of that little tidbit being published openly, terrorists were able to infect and kill a few hundred thousand?
It doesn't matter that the countermeasure came out sooner because of the publication. The countermeausre would not have been necessary to begin with. The disease would have remained a 'niche' disease contained to a small geographical area, and a small population. But with premature publication, the disease was easily modified into a weapon; and used before a countermeasure existed. It is still too late for the dead or dying by the time the countermeasure is developed.
If by witholding the information, lives can be saved... it's worth the extra time. Even if it saves only one life, it's worth the extra time.
It is like the close watch the nuclear countries have over non-nuclear countries (but who have fission reactors for electricity). We still have no countermeasure against a nuclear bomb in a city. But if we can keep any more bombs from being made, there is a greatly reduced chance of a bomb ever detonating in a city.
Damn that "Aersolized Ebola Reviews" journal! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:1)
Re:Isn't that a little shrill? (Score:1)
Other fields have similar organizations that they publish to, I'm just most familiar with IEEE and specifically circuit design.
Tecnology & terrorism (Score:1)
Re:Tecnology & terrorism (Score:3, Insightful)
Two possible views:
View A) Science allowed the investigation of lift, drag, jet propultion, fuel manufacture, and the building's design itself. This type of view would be the "new" view when it comes to censoring information. CAN this be used to harm us in the future. I don't agree with it.. you can kill someone with a hammer or a nailgun. My point? Pretty much anything can be dangerous in the right context. Stay Puft Marshmellow, anyone?
View B) The terrorists flew an airplane into a building. Terrorists bad, shoot on sight, yada, yada..
Re:Tecnology & terrorism (Score:1)
what's the meaning of ban science?
Pravin Lal said it best... (Score:1)
come on (Score:2, Interesting)
We've all seen the dire predictions of what happens when technology "goes too far." 2001: A Space Odyssey, Godzilla, Jaws, Minority Report, the list goes on. So the handful of scientists who are researching the potentially dangerous stuff say, oh, okay, maybe we shouldn't be doing this stuff that might fall into the wrong hands, and you're complaining? Please.
The vast majority of scientists are working on good, useful technology and research, like cures for exotic diseases and inventions that will improve life for all. The few who are meddling where God did not intend are right to have second thoughts.
Re:come on (Score:1)
On another note, I think the high cost and skill required to use such information to actually make something destructive, such as nerve gas or a biological agent, should prevent some disgruntled teenager from wiping out whole cities because his girlfriend dumped him. I can believe that a country like Iraq has the resources to do this, or possibly even a large terrorist organization, but we probably can't keep the information out of their hands no matter how hard we try. The materials they need, on the other hand, are much easier to control, and that's where I think we need to concentrate.
Now I hope you'll forgive me for going off topic, but have you seen Jaws? How did technology go too far in that movie? The shark was an implausibly large but completely natural creature.
Re:come on (Score:1)
If you weren't a troll (argument by appealing to sci-fi movies should have its own moderation category) and had bothered to read the article, you would note that the research in question is directed at *detecting* bioagents, such as those a terrorist might spread. (The concern is that this might make it easier to generate of bioagents that don't trip the sensors.) No secrets Man Was Not Meant To Know are involved.
This is my BOOMstick! (Score:1)
Man has been out to dominate man for centuries.
National Security (Score:3, Interesting)
The nation was secure enough before this crap happened. Terrorism is going to happen one way or another.. What's that quote about tightening your grip on water?
This discussion on "National/Homeland Security" scares the bejeezus out of me normally.. And now we're discussing CENSORING INFORMATION!?
McCarthyism 2.0: Attack of the Republicans.
Re:National Security (Score:1, Interesting)
So not one Democrat voted for the Patriot Act? They're just totally free of any blame whatsoever with the war on terrorism? I see. Interesting position, and totally hypocritical, as usual.
Also, read the fucking article nimrod. It's about self-censorship, not government run forced censorship. In fact, this has been an ethical issue for scientists since the beginning. Dumbass.
Re:National Security (Score:2)
Open Source (Score:4, Insightful)
If the information is free and available, then anyone can read it and think about it and make a contribution. If it is not, the weekneses are known to a small subset of society who has less motivation to do something to solve the problem (think about treatments and cures), they also become more valueble to those who would do wrong, and could be kidnapped or bribed.
So what is safer, Windows, or *nix?
I think the answer is that we NEED to have this informaition published. Anything else endangers us, and inhibits the progress of knowledge.
Re:Open Source (Score:1, Troll)
Virtually all scientific research (including industry research, eventually) is published? Do you see everyone reading the latest Journal of Cell Biology and contibuting? Is the ability to contribute going to be diminished if 0.0001% of research is deemed too sensitive to publish?
Contribution to open source software is far less than the hype suggests. How much good is giving you the latest 3D structure data of the Marburg virus receptor going to do society? I have misgivings about this censorship policy, but realistically the people who can usefully contribute will be able to get the information. Given how many people don't know the earth goes around the sun, I can't share the submitter's concern that democracy hangs on the public's access to the latest Ebola research.
Way to post things twice, Slashdot! (Score:1)
Not that I'm complaining... I do read slashdot for free every day.
Check this out:
That's just some creepy deja vu, considering that Michael posted both stories about 20 minutes apart.
Here's a link:
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/07/
Re:Way to post things twice, Slashdot! (Score:2)
What is Michael smoking, and where can I get some?
Now I've heard of duplicate stories before... (Score:2)
Re:National Security? Terrorism? Idiots? (Score:2)
I say the terrorists have already won. We're no longer the land of the free; those brave enough to object are subject to arrest.
E-mail Dr. Atlas (Score:1)
Ridiculous (Score:1, Troll)
Do you really think that the avg. Palistinian terrorists -- who probably has a below average IQ -- is browing through the latest issue of Virulogoy to find lethal information?
Come on. That's nuts.
We should not allow scientists to with-hold data. The whole point of publishing is that the work be reproducible, verifiable.
I'm sorry, but if you publish something that is missing key details necessary for reproducibility -- due to national security or not -- that is crap. Its worthless. No one knows how you did it or how to get a similar result, so it can't be verified. Might as well not be published at all.
I have another suggestion for these journals. If some prissy scientist wants to "with-hold key information due to national security" then don't put them in your journal. Its a waste of space which could be devoted to reproducible work.
And remember the definition of security. Security means that even if you know exactly how something works, you can't penetrate it. If you know how it works and you can penetrate it, that means there is a weakness. For example, Zimmerman knows exactly how PGP works; but he cannot break it.
Re:Ridiculous (Score:2)
Four words: Timothy McVeigh, Terry Nichols.
Two more: Operation Rescue.
Do you know about the Weathermen in the 60s?
How about AUM Shinrikyo, the doomsday cultists who used Sarin gas in the Tokyo subways?
My point is that impoverished desperate people are not the only ones who do stupid, incredibly destructive things with any means at their disposal.
How about worrying about real dangers? (Score:2)
You'd think scientists would be more concerned with preventing their work being used for another Nazi hollocaust, the nuking of civillian populations in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or the repression of millions under Stalin.
Or maybe they've already given up hope and figure it would be better their work is used by the next Hitler to kill millions than by the next Bin Laden to kill thousands.
Don't restrict information. (Score:2, Interesting)
If you withhold knowledge:
If knowledge is in the public domain:
If you keep dangerous information secret, then it can be abused by a group of individuals much more readily. If everyone knows about something dangerous, then they can take precautions to prevent it (and those who are stupid enough not to will get hurt).
Nothing is secret!!! (Score:1)
There is no such thing as 'secret information', only 'deniable information'. You can hide technical specs from someone, but not concepts. Given this, it is possible for anyone with a strong enough will, and resources, to figure it out.
If you consider the number of physical possibilities of 'things' that could exsist in our four dimensional universe, there is nothing that isn't contained in our Euclidian plane of knowledge. Everything can and probably has been imagined. There is numerous 'conspiracy theories' and alleged government projects, that in reality, aren't all that surprising. Actually, all secrets are probably out there in the public domain someware. However, if you don't know it is a secret, what signifigance does the data possess.
If someone is smart enough, and knows enough about what they're doing to understand the signifigance of so called 'secret information', then it's probably not a secret to them. Unless they are publishing specific recipes and how-tos in these journals, then I doubt it has much strategic usefullness to someone whom is determined.
I think as long as they don't go publishing articles such as "Biological weapons you can make for under $50", or "Chemical warfare with garden chemicals for dummies", then we will probably be okay. You must remember, the information is out there, somewhere. It is only considered secret because it is not readily accessable to the public. I personally think an unknown, unexpected threat is much more dangerous than one that is widely known and prepared for. Look at the smallpox situation, the top officials are afraid, that something even as tightly controlled as smallpox, could leak. So do you really think information wouldn't leak?
Re: Motive? (Score:1)