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Wishful thinking (Score:1)
Do you have any evidence on which to base this belief? Would the natural response not instead be to divert more money to lawyers and compliance officers?
Does this mean you would no longer be able to post code to Github, Sourceforge etc. without first performing security audits and CYA?
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
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Re: (Score:2)
There is a fundamental issue well-known to economists that when a good has negative externalities [wikipedia.org] (e.g., pollution), then the forcing those generating the externalities to internalize those costs is widely considered the fairest way to deal with them. The problem is really trying to assess what those costs actually are and which manufacturers are responsible for which portion of the costs (the devil is always in the details). Since software manufacturers clearly generate a product with negative externalit
Negative externalities (Score:1)
Of course, there are negative effects to society as a whole from the existence of botnets, but that is true for almost any product: a c
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
Re: (Score:1)
Of course there is harm to society as a whole from the existence of botnets. But some negative effect or another exists for any product from cars to telephones to books. There are many positive effects on society from the use of software, but makers don't get a special subsidy because of them. The quality of the pr
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com