Buy Nothing Day
Today is the Buy Nothing Day in Sweden so my advise is to make a stand and do some serious shopping today.
Today is the Buy Nothing Day in Sweden so my advise is to make a stand and do some serious shopping today.
The EU is about to implement legislation that would compel phone networks and ISPs to preserve certain parts of their logs for no less than 12 months.
This was proposed jointly by Sweden, France, Ireland and the UK in April this year. I have only been able to find the proposition in Swedish; the task of finding such documents on the EU-site is daunting.
Going from the present legislation, where information of the kind considered here must be destroyed once there is no further use for it, to the new legislation where the information must instead be preserved is a huge step, a total turnaround even.
The proposition defines the information that must be preserved as:
The proposition stresses that no information about the contents of the communication should be preserved.
Reviewing this list is in itself a chilling exercise since the proposition presents a major invasion of privacy and decrease of anonymity in communications. A more in-depth analysis aggravates the problems even further. Considering the nature of much of the communication on the Internet, the condition that the contents of the communication must not be revealed is moot since it is often impossible to separate the contents from the package. I.e. Web addresses contain much information about the contents of the communication but are also necessary to provide the information required by the proposal.
Some problems:
In the light of revelations such as this one it is perhaps not very surprising that France would be in on something like this but it is frightening that Sweden is. However, it now seems that someone has caught on to the dangers of this proposal. The Swedish Committee on Justice wants to review the proposal to ensure that it’s impact on the privacy of the users is not to grave. I would want them to repeal the proposal altogether but since that isn’t going to happen I’ll settle for an exclusion of Internet traffic.
Johan Norberg has more on the Mexican situation. He shows that although there are many inhibitions to the free market in Mexico, the situation has still improved vastly since the introduction of NAFTA.
I’m still a little surprised that the USA is allowed to subsidize the corn farmers under the treaty but the facts show that in reality free trade has been a boon to the Mexicans.
In the article I referenced in my previous post, the US is critized for:
While you’re into science, check out this interesting article at Reason. I haven’t had time to view all the references yet but at least it is a change from all the doomsday prophecies that are so prevalent these days and from the look of it, it has a scientific foundation.
Well, it looks like there’ll be four more years of Bush. Even though I disagree with many of the stands the republicans take, most of these concern issues that won’t affect me as a non-US citizen. Subtracting everything that doesn’t affect me I reach the conclusion that this result was for the best. No canceling of free trade agreements and no penalties for companies moving production outside the US are good things.
The one remaining problematic issue is the “War on terror” including the war in Iraq. I hope that GWB will listen more to international opinion on these issues during this term. I believe that the US needs to rebuild some standing and credibility. This is not to say that the US should always follow the “general international opinion” or even what the UN says, only that it should listen more. We need to be able to work together to solve these problems and we need to be able to use many different tools to that end. There are other methods than war and appeasement.