I wasn't going to reply to this but after seeing the message a  couple
of times, I decided I'd chip in. Like Stefan, I am not affiliated
directly with the GNUnet project and my response and opinions do not
reflect those or the project or contributors. They are my personal
opinions alone.

> On Tue, Oct 4, 2016, at 12:26 PM, Stefan Huchler wrote:
> > You should not blaime the tools for people doing bad stuff with
> > it. Hell
> > americans even allow guns for everybody and encurage everybody
> > to have
> > 100 guns at their home, even they get used often for terrible
> > crimes.
> > And the main purpose of weapons is to kill people and animals,
> > while the
> > main purpose of GnuNet is not to do criminal stuff.

I liked your response Stefan. thank you for replying. Although I think
the above statement has a valid point to make, I think it misrepresents
America pretty significantly. Most Americans do not own guns nor are
people encouraged to stockpile them (maybe in specific circles but this
is certainly not representative of the country).

> > Jan Eichstaedt <[email protected]> writes:
> >
> > > Dear GNUnet Project:
> > >
> > > The other day I asked "why are Measures Against Abuse not a topic
> > > of the
> > > project's FAQ?" When I describe the GNUnet to ordinary people (of
> > > different nationality and background) and then that I would like
> > > to help
> > > hacking on it, very similar questions arise:
> > >
> > > 'Wouldn't this be a perfect hiding-place or tool for <fill in
> > > descriptions of very bad people>?'

I hear this question quite often (although more commonly for different
networks). The answer, in my opinion, is difficult.


> > > The Question
> > >
> > > I would like to know whether the GNUnet Project already has or is
> > > planning on any measures against using the GNUnet in inhumane
> > > ways, i.e.
> > > using it to diminish human's "... right to life, liberty and
> > > security of
> > > person." (UN General Assembly, 1948, §3). Thus, by inhumane I
> > > mean any
> > > deed that is violating any of the human rights as adopted and
> > > proclaimed
> > > by General Assembly resolution 217 A (III) of 10 December 1948.
> > >
> > > Please let me explain the wording of this question and why this is
> > > fitting to a project like the GNUnet. My usage of terms like
> > > abuse, good
> > > deeds, bad deeds and the like misled some. E.g., the word abuse
> > > led to:
> > > "... seem to all be of a commercial nature". Unfortunately, abuse
> > > does
> > > not stop there but goes way beyond. Thus, I now try to define what
> > > would
> > > be good or bad and abridge it by "humane' and 'inhumane'
> > > respectively.
> > >
> > > Because a p2p net would span multiple nations, this definition
> > > needs to
> > > be based on a broad consensus, i.e. across nations. The
> > > constitution and
> > > law of which particular nation should apply?
> > >
> > > A p2p net has so much positive potential (not defined on purpose)
> > > wouldn't it be great to diminish it's negative potential (see
> > > above for
> > > a definition)?

After attempting to answer this question, I think it is far more
personal than it initially seems. Networks and most technologies in
general are impartial. The meaning of right and wrong has no direct
translation to our software, hardware, networks and even varies by
region (local laws). You've clarified your definitions but I think most
would agree the priority and interpretation varies by region and
countries. We've seen attempts to address this long standing policy
issue that the internet brought and what we see are trade offs but no
complete solution.

I would encourage you to look at the "Great Firewall of China" as one
example of a country attempting to address this with the internet. One
could look at this solution as a way to restrict material and
communication deemed illegal or "bad" but another could look at the
censorship, issues with effectiveness and come to different
conclusions. Meanwhile, it fails to allow only the "good" while others
bypass it to do "bad".

Personally, I think people like to paint the world into firm concepts
of black/white, good/bad, humane/inhumane. The world is far more
complex with nearly everything falling somewhere between the two
extremes of the spectrum. If your requirements are something that
allows only the "good" but never the "bad", I'm afraid you'll likely be
waiting quite some time before any communications platform, that allows
easy communication at a large scale, to meet these requirements. I have
yet to see a proposal for such a solution without any significant trade-
offs or that works at scale.

Computers can be used for both "bad" and "good". The internet, the web,
email, telecom networks (wired and wireless) have varying levels of
centralization and yet even with great censorship cannot meet this
expectation of control over how it is used. End to end encrypted
messaging platforms are often also a target of this criticism but even
those who shift to a man-in-the-middle or "backdoor" approach fail to
address this entirely. Even if this control would be desired and
implemented without any abuse (from the controlling authority), what has
truly been accomplished? Have you accomplished what you desired to? You
use Silk Road as an example of what to prevent. We spent a lot of time
looking at platforms as the abuse, rather than them being just that - a
platform. When you shut down an encrypted communication platform that
was used for abuse, the abuse does not stop, it typically moves.
Elminate the internet and criminals will use cell phones (often pre-
paid/"burner" phones - already used for this purpose). Eliminate cell
phones and criminals will meet in person or use private couriers. You're
moving the "issue" but not really preventing it. Perhaps as an operator,
you did manage to get it off your network.. this may seem great but is
it actually a net benefit to mankind? Often it is not, the issue has
only migrated.

I know many people struggle with this. Some of the early contributors to
the internet have made comments that they would've done things
differently if they had today's knowledge of threats. The goal was to
make it easy to connect without much thought of security. While I've
seen comments stating they may have done things differently, after
seeing how things played out, I have not seen one who regrets their
contributions entirely. It may be unfortunate that people can use any
system for unintended, and sometimes malicious usage but that does not
alone mean that these systems should not exist or people should not
contribute to them. My automobile is great for transportation but in the
wrong hands, with ill intent, it can become a deadly weapon. While it is
not perfect, I'm certainly glad it exists, along with computers, the
internet, the telecom networks, etc.

Rather than asking "what prevents this from being used for evil?" it may
be more appropriate to ask "does the good seem to outweigh the bad?".
This will be a personal opinion and your right to decide on whatever
answer you feel is best but I do feel it is important to understand and
think about how this issue applies to virtually everything... even, as
Stefan mentioned earlier, outside of communication or technology
(although I think communication, in general, has no current solution to
this). This may not have answered your question but hopefully it
provides some insight into how some feel about this topic and inspires
some additional consideration around the question.

Best Regards, Ryan
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