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article-chemla-confessions-thief.mw - tgtimes - The Gopher Times |
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article-chemla-confessions-thief.mw (7129B) |
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1 .SH chemla |
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2 Confessions of a thief |
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3 . |
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4 .QP |
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5 Below is the beginning of "Confessions of a Thief" from Laurent |
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6 Chemla. He founded a major French DNS registrar, but before that, |
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7 was the first to commit online piracy in France (from a Minitel), |
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8 and worked on development tools for Atari. The book is published |
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9 online in French and translated below. |
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10 . |
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11 .PP |
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12 A thief. How else to name one of the first individual in France to |
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13 procure itself an Internet access? In 1994, borrowing the clothes of |
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14 a telecommunication expert, that I was not yet, I obtained from an IT |
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15 staff employee of a parisian University that he let me an access to |
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16 Internet. In exchange, I brought him help - relatively - to the |
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17 building of a network devoted to let student work from home. |
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18 . |
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19 .PP |
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20 I then stole, I confess, this first access to a network that remained |
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21 to me a mostly unexplored land since my last visits in 1992, mediated |
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22 by obscure manoeuvres of a friend or through piracy. |
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23 . |
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24 .PP |
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25 This theft benefited to me, I could learn to use a tool long before |
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26 the majority of the IT crowd, gaining an advance that still persist |
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27 today. |
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28 . |
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29 .PP |
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30 I stole, but I plead good faith. At this epoch nobody around me did |
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31 understand what it was about. Would it bit a thief to steal something |
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32 nobody had interest in? This access was to the reach of only a few |
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33 testing university students, this access that a small IT company could |
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34 not afford, I stole it, and I am not ashamed. |
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35 . |
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36 .PP |
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37 For my relatives, I am nontheless an "IT janitor". Programmer to a |
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38 tiny IT company, I always have been passionated by telematic networks. |
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39 A passion that costed me, in 1986, to be the first to be guilty of |
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40 piracy in France, pirated from a Minitel, yes, but to each his glory. |
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41 As there was not yet any law against IT piracy, I have been |
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42 incriminated for stealing electrical power. All that ended up in an |
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43 acquittal, but still, here is a decent start for a thief career! |
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44 . |
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45 .PP |
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46 Indeed, how to name differently someone who constituted its |
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47 professional network by taking part to associations? We have the |
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48 impression to contribute unpaid for the many, but we mostly get known |
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49 and, time after time, the clients get attracted by this visibility. |
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50 Of course anyone whose professional occupation deals with voluntary |
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51 sector end-up face to its own consciousness. Not unlike, I suppose, a |
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52 lawyer who gain clients from the excluded folk that he help graciously |
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53 and daily. I ignore what its consciousness would tell him, but I know |
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54 mine is not at rest. |
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55 . |
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56 .PP |
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57 Nowadays again, my activities continue to be lucrative out of |
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58 Internet, at the time of Nasdaq's fall. How can one earn while |
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59 everyone loose, if not by cheating? |
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60 . |
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61 .PP |
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62 A thief is on that use to its profit else's good. To me, Internet is |
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63 a public good and, if serve as commercial gallery for some, it must |
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64 not limit itself to such a deviation. Internet must first and |
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65 foremost be the tool that, for the first time in mankind, permitted |
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66 the freedom of speech, defined as a fundamental human right. |
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67 . |
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68 .PP |
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69 This right, in all its guarantee from our constitutional state, has |
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70 stayed hypothetical since its proclamation. In France law protects |
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71 freedom of Speech of syndicates and journalists but no text that |
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72 permit to the simple citizen to undertake justice, to reach its |
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73 freedom. What else since, before Internet, this freedom was to the |
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74 reach of some privilegied? The lawyer protected them because only |
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75 them needed that protection. Ten years ago, noone would have been |
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76 able to benefit an as simple, fast and affordable way to expose works, |
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77 arts or ideas but by vociferating in the street or by climbing the |
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78 social scale rung by rung to the point of having media's attention. |
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79 One had to be represented by others with the expression right for |
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80 themself. Only ersatz. The only freedom that matters is the one |
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81 available to all and I dont give a damn about those reserved to the |
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82 mighty or their representatives. |
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83 . |
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84 .PP |
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85 Internet thereby permit to a growing number of citizen to apply their |
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86 fundamental right to take the parole on the public place. From this |
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87 point of view, it must be protected such as any other necessary yet |
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88 fragile resource, such as water we drink everyday. It cannot be |
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89 reserved to anyone, neither be limited in its usages if not by the |
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90 common right. No exception legislation must forbide the exercise of |
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91 freedom of speech and, as soon as possible, states must preserve the |
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92 common tool that became a public benefit. And as I use a public good |
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93 to lead my own fights, yet again, I behave as a thief. |
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94 . |
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95 .PP |
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96 I thereby knew the Internet some time before everybody else, still at |
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97 the age of the Far West, Eldorado, Utopia. At this era, the network |
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98 was backed by public money (mostly from United States), the life was |
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99 happier and the electronic sky bluer. We worked all along, among |
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100 passionated, inventing new computer objects that even Microsoft did |
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101 ignore, like Linux or the World Wide Web (you know, the three |
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102 fastidious *w* we have to type in the address of your favorite porn |
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103 website...) that did not yet exist and that today everybody mistake |
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104 for the network itself. |
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105 . |
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106 .PP |
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107 We were far from thinking that some day, we would need a plethora of |
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108 lawyers to organize the network. That some day, we would need |
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109 interdepartmental comittees to address of the question. That some |
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110 day, we would have to put black on white the manners not yet named |
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111 "netiquette" that seemd all so natural to us. Our only desire, share |
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112 that formidable invention with the most people, make its apology, |
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113 attract the most numerous of passionated who shared with us their |
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114 competency, their knowledge and intelligence. |
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115 . |
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116 .PP |
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117 I remember that at this epoch, when I was saying "Internet", my |
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118 friends looked at me as if coming from another planet. When I |
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119 transfered a file from a computer from one end of of the world to my |
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120 own machine - by cabalistic commands typed by hand under an interface |
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121 working without a mouse pointer - the seasoned IT engineers was |
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122 assisting to the demonstration as to a bad movie: finding a file was |
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123 taking hours, reading speeds was worth a sick snail and the file often |
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124 revealed to be unusable... But while a pal entered in my office, I |
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125 would show him how by typing a single command line I could share, for |
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126 a ridiculous price, my work, my knowledge, my files or my data with |
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127 pure strangers and that could live at the other side of the street as |
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128 the other side of the world. |
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129 . |
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130 .PP |
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131 Besides from other passionated people, everybody was laughing at me. |
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132 I could tell them that this thingy would be a revolution for human |
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133 knowledge, they looked at me in pity and went back to their work. |
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134 . |
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135 .PP |
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136 In the best case, I was told with lucidity "It is a pirate thing.". |
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137 Some was asking who would that fit, beyond telematic specialists. |
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138 Other claimed that volontary and free sharing of resources would not |
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139 have, by definition, any economical future. I was also asked |
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140 sometimes who would dare to provide such a terrible service. And when |
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141 I explained them that everything was entirely decentralised, with for |
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142 only coordination volunteership and good will of all, the same ones |
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143 was telling me that it could never work at a large scale. |
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144 . |
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145 .DS |
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146 https://www.confessions-voleur.net/ |
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147 .DE |
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