Welcome to P2PNET.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
Register | Login
RIAA News
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
TV
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Product News
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Search: 
Search
 
Web P2PNET   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
TekSavvy
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code

Jobs and Gates: Messiahs?

p2p news view / p2pnet:- “I must say I was bothered only slightly by the fact that our treatment of the Apple announcement – like dozens of other newspapers across the continent – looked like an outright ad for the company,” writes Paul Berton, editor-in-chief of Canada’s London Free Press, just down the road from the University of Waterloo.

Super-star monopolist Bill Gates had honoured the UoW by dropping in during his school recruitment tour. After all, Canada is a part of the US of A.

But back to Apple, “I knew our readers would be interested,” states Berton who earlier says Apple boss Steve Jobs and Gates are “modern Messiahs”.

“In Judaism, the Messiah (מָשִׁיחַ “anointed one”, Standard Hebrew Mašíaḥ, Tiberian Hebrew Māšîªḥ) initially meant any person who was anointed by God.” Says the Wikipedia. “In English today, it is used in two major contexts: the anticipated savior of the Jews, and one who is anticipated as, regarded as, or professes to be a savior or liberator.”

Jobs and Gates as liberators, eh? But read on.

Berton wasn’t bothered that a report looked like an ad because, “We must sell news-papers to survive and that means staying relevant to what people are talking about,” he says. “And these days, at least, people always seem to be talking about the latest technological gadgets. And when people talk about technology, they’re really talking about the future. And because the future is catching us all more rapidly each day, it is an increasingly hot topic.”

Hard-core thieves
However, Berton should be bothered, and seriously so, as should the “dozens of other newspapers across the continent”.

Major print and electronic media now routinely report by press release. This allows shareholder-controlled international enterprises, with no real credibility and no interest whatsoever in a balanced point of view, to release highly distorted ‘reports’ and to see them virtually re-published by such as the Globe and Mail and the Canadian Press (CP).

Gates wants to recruit Canadian students but, How about a little piracy before that computer class? asks the headline to a recent Globe and Mail story which goes on to parrot an assertion that half of Canada’s university and college students are hard-core thieves bent on “stealing” music, movies and computer programs.

And, a ’study’, from CAAST [Canadian Alliance Against Software Theft, a clone of America’s Business Software Alliance, owned by Microsoft, et al] found, “almost two-thirds of computer science students, who are preparing for careers in programming and software development, pirate software, compared with 46 per cent of students in other fields of study,” says the Globe and Mail.

Nowhere in the story is there any attempt to balance these outrageous claims with input from students, universities or indeed from anyone else. The self-serving CAAST ’survey’ is allowed to stand alone and uncontested.

Cheating on exams and stealing clothing
In another story, “Canadians between 12 and 24 years of age are responsible for 78 per cent of illegal music downloading, even though they make up just 21 per cent of the population,” the Canadian Press reports, quoting a CRIA (Canadian Recording Industry Association) survey as though it had emanated from a reliable source. “Canadians between the ages of 18 and 29 are much more willing than other age groups to make illegal copies of software programs, cheat on exams or even shoplift,” said different poll.

“Nearly 27 per cent of younger people surveyed said they would consider cheating on a test or exam, compared with 10 per cent of the general population” and, “Of those asked, six per cent of younger Canadians said they would leave a store without paying for a piece of clothing, compared with two per cent of the population at large”.

In other words, people who don’t buy ‘product’ from the CRIA’s owners, EMI, Vivendi Universal, Warner and Sony BMG, none of whom have a significant presence in Canada, are also likely to be shop-lifters who cheat on exams and steal clothing.

A true nightmare
Technology is indeed the future and Jobs and Gates are, “doing more than just talking about the future; they’re controlling it,” says the London Free Press’ Berton, going on, “I discovered only this week that much of the writing I created in the 1990s and dutifully saved to my hard drive is now unreadable on modern computers because the software that created it on my antique machine at home is obsolete.

“And there’s the rub: Bill Gates’s message about the future this week might have been exciting for the technologically savvy among us, but for others, it is a true nightmare.”

It is a true nightmare. But for them, not us, because p2p means de-centralized and that, in turn, means for the first time in history, you and I, not the lamescream media, control the flow of news and information.

Offline, ‘local’ newspapers and radio and tv stations are taking over from the corporate-controlled media and online, thanks to peer-to-peer technologies, for the first time in history, information is free to anyone who wants to find it.

It’s called progress.

Jon Newton – p2pnet

Something you think we should know? tips[at]p2pnet.net

First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win
- Mohandas Gandhi

Tired of being treated like a criminal? They depend on you, not the other way around. Don’t buy their ‘product’. Do bug your local political representatives. Use emails, snail-mail, phone calls, faxes, IM, stop them in the street, blog. And if you’re into organizing, organize petitions, organize demonstrations and then turn up on your local political rep’s doorstep, making sure you’ve contacted your local tv/radio station/newspaper in advance.

See:-
London Free PressThe ‘future’ is always news, October 15, 2005
dropping inBill Gates – Microsoft recruiter, October 13, 2005
Globe and MailThieving Canadian students, August 9, 2005
Canadian PressCanadians are thieves: CRIA, September 29, 2005

==============

HOME

3 Responses to “Jobs and Gates: Messiahs?”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    What keeps me up at night is not the change that progress brings, but the very real possibility that Gates and Jobs may be able to convince parliament to stop progress (or at least slow it down).

    That individuals and companies found guilty multiple times of illegal activities are thought of as “Messiahs” shows just how little depth some people put into their thinking about their heros.

    I was at a gathering of people last night that included policy people and technical people. As seems to be common, some of the technical people believe that progress towards a decentralized individual-empowered technological future is inevitable and that I’m generally wasting my time worrying about what parliament is doing. To suggest that I disagree with them is an understatement.

    Progress will only happen if we can articulate the positive aspects of these changes to parliament, and they in turn protect them from those who are trying to stop progress. While many here consider the recording and motion picture industries to be the ones stopping progress, when it comes to technology law these groups are just the duped “tools” of specific technology companies like Apple and Microsoft who intend to control the future. It is unlikely the recording and motion picture industries will survive things such as fully deployed DRM, but an enemy of an enemy is not a friend — and between the technology monopolies and the content monopolies I consider the content monopolies to be the lesser of the evils.

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    I don’t know why I should have to live with either of the two evils, considering I truly don’t like evil in any form. And before we get off on a tangent about what everyone considers evil, I wlll just say that anything that harms people that is intentionally done by someone or some organization of someones, I would consider those acts of evil. Whether they are sticking their hand in my pocket for something I really don’t want in the first place is just one of those things. And we all know who pays for DRM and all the other associated crap that comes with it, don’t we. The poor schmucks like us that quite often don’t have a tinkers’ chance to make our voices heard. Every last time I hear Bill Gates say something like “The future is Microsoft… Blah, blah,blah” ad infinitum, I get infinite ad nauseam. The fact that Microsoft has been the next best thing to moribund the last four years just screams that the company should just close its’ doors and sell off the assets. Bill and the Boyz have just plain run out of ways to hook us in with more bloatware. They couldn’t come up with an original idea if their lives depended on it. Every direction the market blows, there goes Microsoft. I keep hearing little kids chanting ‘Copy Cat, Copy Cat!!’ every time I hear another Microsoft commercial. The only original thought Bill Gates ever had got lost on the way to his brain, and it hasn’t been found yet. The only good thing Billy does is donate to charity, and even there he only does high profile stuff that nets him free advertising. Just read the EULA in a boxed Microsoft product, and you’ll know what I mean. The worst part of it is that if you break the shrink wrapper to read the EULA, you’ve already indicated that you agree with it. Talk about a Faustian bargain! You have to wonder how warped and twisted the lawyers at M$ are, and how they sleep at night!

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    I have to admit that I am a customer of the cartels. I am not a customer that they like, because I buy their technology and modify it to suit MY needs not theirs. For example, do you know that you can buy a camcorder that stores up to 20 minutes of video for about $30? You buy them (”disposable” video cameras) at CVS and get on the Net to find instructions on how to add a USB port to the camera. You can then take all the video you want and not have to turn in the camera for them to develope the video. This is a nice opportunity for someone to make a bit of money on Ebay or some other electronic auction.

    I also deal with Linksys. Their router is being used for FreeWan Cells. As far as software is concerned. I use mostly Linux because it does what I want better than Billy Gate’s product. I do have Winblows 98 on one partition on a hardive. I am forced to use this product to transmit billing information. However, I will not “upgrade” this Winblows OS unless forced to do so. When I am FORCED to do so, it will be with a hacked version. I hack when I am forced to consume a product by law, and so should everyone else.

Leave a Reply

Please no Spam, flaming (attacking others), trolling, and posting off-topic. Thanks.

    Advertisements
MP3Rocket


Remove Spyware with AntiSpyware for Windows®