Wednesday, March 09, 2005

legality of virus writing

someone at f-secure is clearly frustrated...

how many times have i seen someone say that virus writing should be illegal? i don't know, i've lost count it's been said so many times... i'm sure it probably seems entirely reasonable too... except wait, oh my goodness, it's not!...

huh? what am i talking about? i'm talking about the fact that enforcing such a law would be an unprecedented contravention of fundamental human rights...

let's face facts - abstracted from all other related activities, simply writing a virus is analogous to writing in a personal journal... it's a matter of freedom of thought and as such one of the most fundamental freedoms there is... it doesn't affect anyone until the writer tries to communicate his/her idea with others... if i write a virus and no one else ever sees it, have i contributed to the virus problem? if i utter a racial slur and no one's around to hear it, have i offended a minority group? no on both counts... what i do in the privacy of my own home or the privacy of my own computer should be of no concern to anyone else...

if you're going to outlaw something, outlaw something that actually causes a problem... outlaw spreading viruses, maybe even outlaw publishing viruses (see here for why full disclosure shouldn't be usable as a valid argument against such free speech limitations), but keep the thought police out of the picture...

that's important so i'll repeat it - outlawing virus writing would be a contravention of a person's freedom of thought, keep the thought police out of the picture...

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