james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2011-08-12 03:41 am
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David Cameron on social media
In February 2011:
August, 2011
"This movement belongs to the frustrated Tunisian fruit seller who can’t take his product to market. And to the students in Cairo who can’t get a fair start, and the millions of Egyptians who live on $2 a day. In short, it belongs to the people who want to make something of their lives, and to have a voice. It belongs to a new generation for whom technology – the internet and social media – is a powerful tool in the hands of citizens, not a means of repression. It belongs to the people who’ve had enough of corruption, of having to make do with what they’re given, of having to settle for second best."
August, 2011
The government is exploring whether to turn off social networks or stop people texting during times of social unrest.
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*goes back to plotting emergency policy motion*
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Since that worked out so well for the Egyptian government...
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And it's not a beam in his eye, it's a wooden spanking paddle - I swear to god, I thought that the 20 years in the wilderness had shaken the pedophilic spanking fetishists out of the tory party, but apparently not.
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This is in addition to the line from a few years ago, "How awful, this rioting is politically-inspired!" and the more recent "How awful, this rioting isn't politically-inspired enough!"
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But the flip side of that is that what happened in Manchester was not a protest -- it was a pre-planned operation by the local gangster, who had worked out how to use SMS to organise a large scale smash and grab raid while half the local force were down in London. (Torygraph article, but nevertheless a good explanation, with the video showing him in action on the night).
I'm not sure if Cameron actually knew that when he was performing in parliament, but the beam isn't quite as large as you're suggesting.
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Without freedom of speech, of communication, the truth is more easily hidden.
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BERNARD: It's one of those irregular verbs, isn't it? `I protect the lives and property of my citizens; you keep the public safe from an unreasonable and trouble-generating minority; he maintains a totalitarian regime of thought control.'
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They do not match your summary.
In fact they look to me like a clever method of defusing criticism from the right by appearing to promise to do something (vague and undefined) while actually promising nothing at all.
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(Anonymous) 2011-08-12 12:27 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
I think it was John Keegan who argued just post-9/11 that ISPs that allow encrypted packets to pass through them should be destroyed with cruise missiles.
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Love, C.
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Cameron's actual words, quoted above, have echoes of many non-technical managers in my memory suggesting that they could do wonderful things with text-parsing software (a Director I knew about 15 years ago wanted to be able to generate digests of legal cases automatically). I'm sure that if he's envisaging anything, it's some nice filter that blocks bad messages and lets the good ones through. This will be possible when we have Mike Holmes running the filtering system; instead we would get a filtering system which would look as though it had been written by one of the less competent bureaucrats in an Eric Frank Russell story...
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The government has no intention of doing this.
Really. No intention. Read his words.
Let me help, here's the immediate next part of the same speech:
Compare and contrast "look at whether it would be right" with "we are going to". Here's an example to help:
This may seem like semantics but it reflects the political reality for Cameron. Sounding like he's doing something is free political capital, actually doing something will require a bruising battle with his coalition partners and an unpredictable quasi-libertarian wing of his own party.
Another example for Americans. Suppose Obama were to announce his plans to impose a 90% tax rate on the top 10% of earners. This is impossible for him to achieve but it wouldn't stop Fox News going bonkers, and it would energise elements of Obama's political base. The internet chicken-littles screaming that the sky is falling and the internet kill-switch is coming do strongly remind me of Fox News at this point.
Finally, and a separate point, look again at the new quote from Cameron's speech. Read it with the same stupid paranoia as the first part. Hasn't he just announced the police can remove burqas and other Islamic headdress whenever they feel there might be criminality (i.e. whenever they like)? [Meta: No, he hasn't.] Heard anything about that from the amateur civil libertarians burning up with news of Twitter being banned?