Friday, May 4, 2012

My life with Coherent, part 2

In the first post of these series I've shown you it's possible to make Coherent 4.2.10 run under the newest version of QEMU. Now it's time to take it one step further.

I've had permission from Robert Swartz himself to distribute the first perfectly legal Coherent 4.2.10 QEMU image as long as you comply with the following conditions:
You may use the software on this image free of charge for personal, non-commercial use. You may NOT redistribute this image or the software it contains without written permission from the copyright holder. The software is provided on an "as is" basis without warranty of any kind.

Getting started
Download and unpack the archive. Included are two images, coherent.public.img and fat16.dd. The first one contains the Coherent image, the second one an empty floppy. If you want to, you can start them right away:
qemu-system-i386 -hda coherent.public.img -fda fat16.dd -m 16
First, don't try to crank up the amount of memory, Coherent won't use it - at least not this kernel. Second, you just have to be patient to attempt this, because it may take up to 10 minutes before Coherent is up and running. The good news is that you can monitor how far it is by pressing [CTRL]-[ALT]-2 in QEMU and typing:
info blockstats
If rd_bytes reaches 600,000 you can probably login. There are two login entries, the obvious root with password rootroot and a normal user named habe with password habehabe. Pick any one.

When you've logged in you might want to try the usual stuff like ls -l or ps -eaf, maybe you're even so bold to start up vi or cc. In any case, you will find that everything is painfully slow. If you want to get out, you can do so, but you'll have to be root in order to do it properly. Just issue:
cd; /etc/shutdown halt 0
Note it doesn't shutdown immediately! You'll have to wait until Coherent tells you it's safe to power down. Be patient! You can also exit QEMU without shutting down, but in that case you may have corrupted your image. And believe me, at these speeds you do not want to run fsck..

So that's it? Coherent runs, but it is completely unusable? No, not quite. Coherent does some disk caching, so after a while it becomes responsive. That is: until you reboot. But how can you avoid a reboot? Well, it's quite simple. QEMU allows you to make snapshots, so if you need Coherent you don't boot it, but simply load the snapshot.

QEMU only allows snapshots when you're using the so called "qcow2" image type, so we have to convert the files you just downloaded. That's not too hard, since QEMU comes with a handy utility for that. Just issue:
qemu-img convert -c -O qcow2 coherent.public.img Coherent.dsk
qemu-img convert -c -O qcow2 fat16.dd fat16.dsk
The latter may give you a warning, but don't worry, we'll only use it as a placeholder. Ok, we're done, let's start it up again:
qemu-system-i386 -hda Coherent.dsk -fda fat16.dsk -m 16
Agreed, you're in for the same wait. Sorry for that. But I promise you next time it'll be much faster. Just stay with me for a little while longer. When Coherent comes up, log in as usual. Then press [CTRL]-[ALT]-2 to enter the monitor. Now type:
savevm test0
This will save the current state of Coherent in a QEMU snapshot, so you'll end up here next time you start it. Return to the emulation by pressing [CTRL]-[ALT]-1 fiddle around a little bit, start up your favorite commands a few times and then save a new snapshot:
savevm test1
Shutdown Coherent properly and start it again, but this time with the command:
qemu-system-i386 -hda Coherent.dsk -fda fat16.dsk -m 16 -loadvm test1
Ok, that's more like it, isn't it? Ok, shut it down again. This time you'll be able to start it up much faster. Let's try something fancy now and invoke QEMU with:
qemu-system-i386 -hda Coherent.dsk -fda fat16.dsk -m 16 -serial telnet:localhost:4444,server,nowait -loadvm test1
Log in as root and type:
enable /dev/com1l
Now start up a terminal session on your host and type:
telnet localhost 4444
Yes, you can login to Coherent from your host Operating System. But that's about everything you can do as far as networking under Coherent is concerned.

There is a full TCP/IP stack available for Coherent, but you'll need a special kernel in order to make it work - which doesn't seem to be available. So I haven't succeeded to do much more in this area. If you have, please leave a comment.



Installing Coherent
Maybe you'll think this small system is so much fun that you want to give it a permanent place on your desktop. That is where the coherent.sh script comes in. It works with both KDE (KDialog) and Gnome (Zenity) and it makes it easier to launch the QEMU/Coherent combination. The only thing you have to do is to state where your disks are located:
COHAT0A=/opt/qemu/coherent.dsk
COHFD0=/opt/qemu/null.dsk
If you want to exchange files between Coherent and your host, you'll have to change /etc/fstab as well:
/opt/qemu/fat16.dd /mnt/coherent msdos rw,user,noauto,loop 0 0
Note this is the uncompressed, original file! You can mount the uncompressed Coherent image as well (as sysv), but you won't be able to write to it. I don't think I'll have to tell you how to mount a floppy image, do I? Once the VM is up and running you can exchange the virtual, empty floppy for the raw version by switching to the QEMU monitor and issuing:
change floppy0 fat16.dd
However, while the raw floppy is online you can't make a snapshot. When you want to take a snapshot you simply return to the dummy floppy by issuing:
change floppy0 fat16.dsk
Ok, now we've cleared that one we can concentrate on the real issue here: how do we get any files from the floppy? That's not as difficult as you think. You'll only need to edit one file, /etc/default/msdos. Make sure the appropriate section reads:
# This is for a system with a 3.5 inch A drive and a 5.25 inch B drive
a=/dev/fva0
a9=/dev/fqa0
b=/dev/fha1
b9=/dev/f9a1
And you're ready to rock 'n roll. There is a whole slew of MS-DOS related commands at your disposal like:
  • dosls
  • doscp
  • dosrm
  • dosrmdir
E.g. copying the /etc/default/msdos file to the floppy is simply:
doscp /etc/default/msdos a:
And copying it back is done by:
doscp a:/msdos /etc/default
Well, that ain't rocket science, is it? We can use it right away to fix some Y2K issues. Yes, this version of Coherent won't go past the 31st of December 1999, but it is easily fixed by ATclock and date. Copy them to the /bin directory and reboot. That'll fix it.

You may also be tempted to try another kernel. Several ones are available here. Just copy it to the root and hard-link it to autoboot, e.g.:
ln cohat0 autoboot
Note you can also select a kernel when starting up - just press [SPACE] immediately. Coherent will answer:
If installing COHERENT, please type "begin".
But it is actually a prompt for the kernel name. Obviously, if you type autoboot it will boot the default kernel - just in case you don't know how to get out of there ;-)

Final notes
  • Although Coherent comes with a full fledged C compiler, it won't compile your ANSI-C sources, since it is strictly K&R C. However, GCC - and all the GNU stuff that comes along with it - is available. Still, I like the little beast, since it makes small and fast compilants.
  • Coherent does have virtual consoles. Press [CTRL]-[NUM0], [CTRL]-[NUM1], etc.
  • The archives of comp.os.coherent are compelling reading, featuring Linus Torvalds on who's got the best OS.
  • Additional notes and links on the subject are appreciated. Just leave them in the comments.

Useful links
Good sources for additional software are:
Additional information can be obtained:

Update
There have been consistent reports on Coherent being considerably faster on QEMU 1.7 and up. Well, I tested it and even if there may be some truth to it, it's not very significant nor consistent. If you can deal with it, convert your QCOW2 image to a raw one, because that will give you the required speedup.

But the biggest drawback is that your C compiler will go haywire, spitting out errors on perfectly fine include files. This behavior was still present on the QEMU 2.0.2 version, although slightly less prominent.

The last QEMU version known to work flawlessly is 1.4.

Update
Coherent is Open Source now (thank you, Jason Stevens)!

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Hollywood still doesn't get it

The Dutch Anti-Piracy organization "Brein" has decided to sue ISP's UPC, KPN, T-Mobile and Tele2 after their recent victory in court. I really don't understand why. First of all, blocking a handful of IP addresses hasn't had any effect at all.

But most of all, if you really want to fight piracy you got to have support from the public. And that support is crumbling with each and every effort to enforce compliance to that 10 minutes of pesky messages you get when you insert a "legal" DVD. Yeah, you name them all: SOPA, PIPA, ACTA or whatever they may be called. Crowds are cheering on the streets and can't wait to have them ratified.

Metallica, once one of the most fierce fighters of piracy, has seen the sign on the wall and radically changed its position. These guys are not stupid. They know their stand on piracy affected their popularity, so they took the only decision they could take.

I've never been a downloader. I simply don't like the hassle that comes with it. But I have friends who are. One of them is a gray haired hippie, who also happens to be a record collector. Consequently, a burned CD has little value to him. But he is also a great fan of vintage science fiction movies. You hardly find those movies in the local stores and when you do the prices are outrageous. So every now and then he ordered one at Amazon. When you add all the additional costs they're not quite cheap either.

So when he wanted "to go on the Internet" in the early 2000's I told him to buy a Mac and get XS4ALL. A whole new world opened up to him. One night when we were having an beer and he told me how hard it was to get a decent copy of "Jason and the Argonauts" for a reasonable price. So I introduced him to the world of torrents, clearly stating that although downloading wasn't illegal in the Netherlands, it wasn't quite legal as well.

"Unlawful" isn't black and white down here, but has quite a few shades of gray. E.g. contrary to popular belief marijuana isn't legal here, it's just not.. completely illegal. It's - as we Dutch say - "condoned", which means you aren't prosecuted.

We quickly found a viable torrent and started downloading. It trickled down at about 10 kB/s, but he wasn't in a hurry. And a day or so later it was there. The weeks that followed he went into a kind of download frenzy, but then it settled down. I mean, they don't make movies like that anymore and the more recent ones you can get in the shop.

We met on the street a few weeks ago and we quickly landed on the subject of the recent Ziggo/XS4ALL verdict. He was furious. "Who are they to tell me where I can or cannot surf?!" he said. I told him he still could. I told him to take a look at my blog and simply follow the links.

That evening he phoned me to say everything worked fine and he was currently downloading "Captain America, the first avenger". "I'm gonna boycott them!" he said "I spend about 20 Euros a week on DVD's and if this is how they're treating me, they're gonna lose a customer! That thing is in the store for about 15 Euros - that's too expensive for my taste, but I'm gonna watch it tonight! You won't believe the download speed I'm getting, about 500 kB/s!! It's even got Dutch subtitles!"

I wasn't surprised. Everyone knows that the more popular a title is, the more seeders and leechers are offering it, which really helps to speed up the download. He had already downloaded "The Thing 2", "The Green Lantern" and I'm sure more were coming. So that is in effect what Mr. Kuik, spokesman of "BREIN", achieved. And he's making himself more popular by the minute.

The point is that the entertainment industry seems to be unable to listen to their best customers. They want the world to play by their rules, but every enterpreneur knows that's a very bad business model. Studies prove that the entertainment industry can survive and even make money, but they simply have to start to use their brains ("BREIN" means "BRAIN" in Dutch).

One of these pioneers is "Iron Sky", that partly uses "crowd funding" to raise money. And they will offer the movie for download once it has been in the theatres. Now that's creative thinking. I won't say it will work, but at least they're trying. Most importantly, they have the support of the community.

In contrast, the music industry have tried to tie down their customers with DRM. Needless to say they failed miserably - as I predicted - and nowadays it is very hard to find a CD or download with DRM. It simply doesn't work that way, despite state-of-the-art technology and elaborate schemes to "hide" the disadvantages from DRM to the public.

Now they're relying again on technology to fight piracy, but this time the technology is not in their hands, so it is even easier to find a way around it. Technology has always been a double edged sword for Hollywood. The introduction of the TV almost brought it to its knees, CGI on the other hand, produced some of its most famous blockbusters.

However, it has to realize that the Internet is nothing more than the 21st century equivalent of the TV. It can't be controlled and you can't legislate it away. Hollywood will have to change its game. Mikhail Gorbachev once said "Those who come too late will be punished by life itself".

Hollywood may not realize it, but the Internet is not the last challenge it has to face. In 15, 20 years, may be sooner, every kid with a computer will be able to create his own Hollywood grade movies. There will be digitilized Marilyn Monroes, James Deans, Humphrey Bogarts, landscapes from all over the world, cars from every era. Of course, most of these movies will be very, very bad. But some of them will be great. Most important of all: they will be free. And when they're not ready for the Internet, they aren't prepared for that.

With the turn of the millennium I expected "20th Century Fox" to change its name. It didn't. Now I understand why.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

My life with Coherent, part 1

In the early 1990ies my company switched from an S/36 system to a Unix system. No one had any knowledge of that "alien" platform, so I became the expert to be. It was not entirely voluntary: I either made it work or I was fired.

Needless to say I spend lots of time behind the terminal, but it just wasn't enough. Working behind a $100,000 machine on a root account while barely knowing what you were doing was kind of intimidating. I was simply too reluctant to perform the necessary experiments.

In order to get more time and a less intimidating environment I started looking for alternatives, but I quickly found out there were few options. There were some MS-DOS based products that allowed me to write shell scripts, but that just wasn't the real deal. Xenix and SCO were too expensive. And then I found out about Coherent.

Coherent is a full fledged Unix that runs on a simple 386 with a few megabytes of memory - incredible, but true. The kernel is just a few hundred KB, so it boots in an instant. It lived happy together with MS-DOS in its own 40 MB partition. But the best thing was its price: only $100. Needless to say I spend a lot of hours with that little beast, porting my C programs and UUCPing with that "monster" machine back at work.

But every machine comes to a grinding halt at some moment in time. Getting a new PC wasn't a problem, but when I tried to reinstall Coherent I found that it didn't support my new IDE drive. Too bad, but since I had become a proficient Unix system admin I really didn't need it anymore.

Still, with every new release of QEMU or VMware I tried to reinstall it - with little result. That is, until QEMU 0.14 was released. After the arduous task of installing Coherent it bombed out just before the final reboot. But the Dutch don't throw away things that easily. I didn't delete the image, instead I simply waited for the next iteration of QEMU.

When I started it, it seemed it hang right away, but the QEMU monitor told another story. It was still alive. It was reading the disk, but very, very slowly.

Hours later the login prompt appeared and I logged in. The whole thing worked, but it was very sluggish. After having worked with it for a little while it became a bit more responsive. It didn't take me too long to figure out it was the IDE emulation that was slowing it down, reading about 1K a second. But once a file was in cache there were hardly any performance issues.

However, when starting up Coherent performed an 'fsck', which made booting a bit tiresome - I assure you that reading 7 megs at 1 KB/s is no fun. The easiest thing was to remove the 'fsck' check, which was easy enough. A quick edit of 'brc' was sufficient. Now I could login after Coherent had read only 150 KB, which was a significant improvement.

But I still wasn't happy. Every time I rebooted I had an empty cache. There had to be another way. Yes, there was, but for that I had to turn to QEMU. QEMU allows you to make a snapshot of the whole virtual machine - memory, CPU, the whole shebang. That not only allowed me to "boot" instantly, but also with the disk cache intact. Ok, now we're talking!



Since the standard Coherent C compiler only supports K&R C, almost all my C programs have a "-DARCHAIC" switch, which enables K&R prototypes. Even after 15 years I still maintain them, so porting my 4tH compiler shouldn't be very difficult. It wasn't. In these 15 years after more than doubling the code base I had only made about 10 syntax errors, which were quickly fixed.

But still there was a problem. Sure, I could use a raw floppy image to exchange files between the host and the VM, but since you can't make a snaphot of a raw floppy I had to reboot the VM after each and every transfer, which kind of defeated the sense of making snapshots.

The solution was to startup the VM with a QCOW2 floppy, which served no other purpose than to define a floppy device in the VM. You can not easily mount a QCOW2 image and so it is consequently not very well suited for file transfer.

Once the VM is up and running you can exchange this virtual floppy for a raw version by switching to the QEMU monitor and issuing:
change floppy0 fat16.img
When you want to take a snapshot you simply return to the dummy floppy by issuing:
change floppy0 dummy.dsk
And subsequently save the snapshot by issuing:
savevm test0
After that I was ready to rock 'n roll. It took me about an hour or so to port my compiler and transfer the executables back to the host. Furthermore, I installed another more modern kernel, applied some Y2K patches and customized my Coherent 4.2 installation.

In the next part of this series I will describe this in more detail and - even better - give you the opportunity to try it for yourself. All perfectly legal, that is..!

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Venn diagrams: the intersection of morons and judges

Few people know it, but the Internet as we know it, has its roots in military technology. It's predecessor was called ARPANET, which was funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency of the United States Department of Defense. Some of its design objectives were:
  • Providing for host-to-host "pipelining" so that multiple packets could be rerouted from source to destination at the discretion of the participating hosts, if the intermediate networks allowed it.
  • Gateway functions to allow it to forward packets appropriately. This included interpreting IP headers for routing, handling interfaces, breaking packets into smaller pieces if necessary, etc.
  • Each distinct network would have to stand on its own and no internal changes could be required to any such network to connect it to the Internet.
  • Communications would be on a best effort basis. If a packet didn't make it to the final destination, it would shortly be retransmitted from the source.
  • There would be no global control at the operations level.
During the Gulf war the US army wondered why it was so difficult to take out the Iraqi network. What were these guys using? Later they found it were just off the shelf hardware and software components, stuff any ordinary consumer could get his hands on.

A few years later politicians thought it was a good idea to unleash this military grade technology onto the world, just like they thought it was a good idea to introduce the Euro. In both cases, without thinking about the consequences. The impact of a decentralized, open architecture has become clear now - and they don't like it. And worse, they are unable to keep up.

Yes, Pandora's box is wide open and they are struggling to contain the monster. But they try and manage to make themselves ridiculous and less credible with every step of the way. You can't complain about states censoring the Internet - for different reasons, agreed - and proposing similar legislation at the same time. In the US you have SOPA, PIPA and ACTA and in the Netherlands we have judges like mr. P.H. Blok, mr. R. Kalden and mr. M.P.M. Loos.

They decided not only that IP addresses 194.71.107.15, 194.71.107.18 and 194.71.107.19 had be blocked by ISP's, but also gave BREIN (the Dutch equivalent of the MPAA) the authority to add any IP address they want to that list, which means that in principle they can take out any website at will without ever having to go to court again. Needless to say that these judges not only proved they are completely clueless about the nature of the Internet, but they also violated every rule in the book.

Imagine there was a bookstore selling counterfeit books, would those same judges give a plaintiff the authority to simply close up any bookstore he wants? Of course not! As a matter of fact, they gave BREIN the possibility to change the verdict of the court. Which - by the way - is in conflict with European jurisdiction. Speaking of Europe, Neelie Kroes, the grand lady who got Microsoft on its knees, commented: "Speeding is illegal too: but you don't put speedbumps on the motorway".

That the court came to this decision was no big surprise. One of the judges, P.H. Blok, is also employed (for a fee) by Wolters Kluwer, one of the largest publishing companies in the world. Why he was wasn't substituted by another judge is anybodies guess. If this isn't a conflict of interest, what is?

But we cloggies don't take such violation of our rights laying down. In the days that followed, tutorials popped up on how to install TOR and VPN networks or use proxies and anonymizers. Mirrors were created, proxies installed, by the time the "offical" site went on black there had never been so many ways to reach the Pirate Bay.

Tim Kuik, spokesman of BREIN, commented: "Smart hackers will always find ways to circumvent measures like this." So according to Tim Kuik, if you're able to click this link, you're an accomplished hacker.



What were these guys thinking? Either they knew that their measures were ineffective and consequently merely symbolic or they were completely ignorant of what the Internet is and how its community acts on threats. Either way, it is unworthy of a judge who considers himself to be an expert on the field of IT and law.

So what's next? Outlaw links to proxies and anonymizers? Outlaw access to proxies and anonymizers? Outlaw sites who offer proxies, anonymizers, TOR or VPN? Outlaw technologies like proxies, anonymizers, TOR and VPN? Outlaw writing about proxies, anonymizers, TOR and VPN? Maybe I should emigrate to North-Korea or China. As long as you leave politics alone, you can at least blog about technology!

Of course it doesn't stop there. The weakest link in the current torrent architecture are the centralized torrent repositories. However, other technologies will emerge that eradicate this flaw as well and become completely decentralized. All that is left then is deep packet inspection, a technology that ironically has recently been banned by that same juridical system.

End of story.

Update: One of the blocked IP addresses: a list of computers. The other one: the word "Yeah". This proves how little the verdict has to do with the actual content of a site. There is nothing illegal down there. It has just been taken down because they are in the IP range of the Pirate Bay. And yes, you XS4ALL and Ziggo subscribers can click too..



Update: This almost forces me to change the title of this post: it turns out that we're dealing here with blatant corruption. Read this and this (Dutch).

Update: I wondered several times why the lawyers of the ISP's didn't try to substitute the judges. Well, as a matter of fact, they did! But they were turned down, because "there just aren't enough judges". Go figure.. (Dutch).

Friday, January 20, 2012

Fight SOPA/PIPA, change your license

All over the free world, government laws and court decisions are limiting our access to free Internet. Not that these measures are very useful, most of us hackers are able to circumvent them within minutes. But in essence, these counter measures are simply work-arounds - they do not eliminate the root cause.

The root cause are the big media moguls who successfully lobby our governments and judges to adopt unconstitutional new laws and regulations. Consequently, they are by definition an anti-democratic force. No, it's not about the artists (as a matter of fact, most of them can be considered victims of this industry), it's not about IP (they violate IP laws themselves on a daily basis - just count the lawsuits), it's just about MONEY. Think about it: these industries are obviously willing to trade in our most fundamental civil rights just for a little extra cash. No, they're not the kind of people only a mother can love - they already sold their mothers.

Our politicians are no better. Instead of defying the pressure of a dying industry they have chosen to simply sell out their voters. Often without even having any idea which consequences their decisions may have on their citizens, their own information industry or even the very reputation of the nations they should represent. Ignorance may be a bliss, but not in this case.

So far the community has responded in a variety of ways:
  • Shutting down their own websites in protest;
  • Petitioning;
  • Attacking government and industry websites;
  • Educating users on how to circumvent blocks;
  • Developing new ways to make it even more difficult to block free Internet access.
However, there is one card we haven't played yet. The FOSS community has achieved complete independence from proprietary software. I predict the music and movie industry will follow in the next few decades. They won't disappear, but they will have to compete and one day we will win.

In the meantime we will have to ensure that we will continue to have free and unlimited access to the Internet, our information highway. It is no secret that governments and even the music and entertainment industry itself have benefited from everything the FOSS community has produced. And we can stop that.

GPLv3 was created to defeat any attempts to make free software less free. A new license may prevent governments and the industry to make the Internet less free. Simply don't allow them to use our software anymore. Change the license.

I know that it is one of the pillars of Free Software - anyone may use it, no restrictions. But as I said, I don't consider it a permanent measure. Just until every attempt to restrict the Internet has ceased permanently. Just until the right to free access to the Internet is part of every international treaty and constitution.

I don't know about you, but I just don't feel comfortable someone who denies me to exercise one of my most basic rights is happily using my software..

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Surf naar de Pirate Bay in 5 minuten

Voor degenen, die geen zin hebben om een VPN of TOR in te richten en na het effectief worden van de blokkade van Ziggo en XS4ALL toch naar de Pirate Bay willen surfen zijn er een paar eenvoudige oplossingen - zelfs zonder iets te installeren.

De eenvoudigste manier is om gebruik te maken van een zogenaamde "Anonymizer". Dat is een computer, die vanuit Nederland vrij te benaderen is en voor jou contact maakt met de Pirate Bay of welke andere computer dan ook. Een aardige lijst van gratis anonymizers is hier te vinden. Tegenwoordig zijn er trouwens een groot aantal gespecialiseerde proxies, zoals deze. Het gebruiken ervan is doorgaans erg eenvoudig: tik de URL in en de computer verbindt je door. Een klein voorbeeldje is hier te vinden. Voila!

Een meer permanente oplossing is beschikbaar voor gebruikers van Firefox. De "Stealthy" add-on tovert een F-117 naast de taakbalk, die bij het opstarten rood is. Klik 'm aan en hij wordt groen. Je kunt dan gewoon weer naar de Pirate Bay surfen. Lukt het eerst even niet, klik dan op het pijltje-naar-beneden naast de F-117 en klik op "Configure". Klik dan het vinkje "Something went wrong?" aan en druk op "Ok". Dat zou het een en ander op moeten lossen.

De meest briljante methode is toch wel gebruik maken van je bloedeigen /etc/hosts file (dat op Windows overigens c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts heet). Voeg daar de volgende regels aan toe:
178.73.210.219 thepiratebay.se
178.73.210.219 www.thepiratebay.se
178.73.210.219 thepiratebay.org
178.73.210.219 www.thepiratebay.org
Ook deze truuk werkt met een proxy uiteraard, maar je merkt er gewoon niks meer van. Tenslotte kun je ook gewoon http://194.71.107.80 intikken, maar waarschijnlijk is die URL alweer geblokkeerd als je dit leest.

Waarom ik dit met u deel? Omdat het zoveelste een bewijs is van de debiliteit van zowel de klagers (de media concerns) en vooral ook de Nederlandse rechterlijke macht. "Content" is allang niet meer gebonden aan het medium, waarop het opgeslagen is en ondanks het feit, dat deze ontwikkeling al twintig jaar gaande is, is de industrie er nog steeds niet in geslaagd om een business model te vinden, dat hierbij aansluit.

Nee, nog steeds klampt ze zich krampachtig vast aan een paradigma, dat de facto allang achterhaald is. Een industrie die zo dom is, verdient het gewoon ten onder te gaan. Ter vergelijking: voerden bioscopen in de jaren '50 en '60 processen tegen TV maatschappijen? Laten oliemaatschappijen electrische auto's verbieden?

Naief is dat de rechtbanken van Nederland zich voor het karretje van deze concerns laten spannen en maatregelen eisen, die technisch gezien neerkomen op het slaan van spijkers in een wegdek. Weliswaar zullen er een paar mensen met een lekke band eindigen, maar na verloop van tijd rijdt iedereen er omheen.

Nog triester is, dat dat de rechter aangeeft dat er nog meer spijkers in het wegdek geslagen mogen worden als "dat nodig is". Trekken we deze uitspraak in "extremio ad absurdum" verder dan eindigen we met een weg, die zo vol spijkers zit, dat zij niet meer de functie van weg kan vervullen.

Daarom vertel ik dit u.

Update: Het linken naar deze pagina is illegaal geworden in Nederland. Overigens ook de links naar het "Tor" netwerk en zelfs naar de Opera webbrowser.

Update: Een paar nieuwe methoden toegevoegd. We blijven scherp!