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- private citizen. The home computerist is motivated
- by a desire for profits. The Education Department
- might build a relational database of private schools
- which do not accept federal funds. The bureaucrat
- can cluck his tongue at the uncontrolled schools and
- promise to "do something" about it. The owners of
- the schools will always be one step ahead because
- their desktop machines match the bureaucrats byte
- for byte.
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- In the room where I work for one of America's
- largest corporations, there are two computers. Each
- uses a 16 bit processor. Each has I megaDyte of
- RAM. Each has about 500 megabytes of disk
- capacity. One covers 16 square feet and cost
- $500,000. The other covers 1 square foot and cost
- I% as mucht
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- The Soviet 13nion cannot permit the introduction
- of this kind of power to its people. The same Party
- members who scrimp and save for a car will acquire
- computers and will be able to meet the State on its
- own terms.
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- When the KGB inputs data on Comrade
- Smithsky's black market vodka business, the good
- Comrade can also, with some effort, replace that file
- with a letter of merit for patriotism.
-
- These principles apply to any totalitarian state:
- Chile, Nicaragua, North Korea, South Korea...
-
- The analogies between the computer and the
- automobile break down when you consider that the
- auto made it possible to travel 60 miles in one hour
- while the computer makes it possible to"travel"
- without leaving your seat and to do so at almost the
- speed of light.
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- Analogies between the computer and the gun also
- feil when you consider that guns kill and computers
- expand the- mind. For a nation which contemplates
- War, the thought of an arsenaI full of guns is
- comforting. It is not so easy to see the State issuing
- its people computers to repel an increase in
- productivity by the Other Side.
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- In point of fact, just as the Pen is Mightier tban
- the Sword, the Computer is Mightier than the Gun.
- No commando team can mobilize quicker than a
- local area network. No shock troops can
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- outmaneuver a bulletin board service.
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- This was proven by the events of the summer of
- 1983. Hackers were pursued by the FBI for breaking
- into a computer system at Sandia Labs. The Feds
- made fewer than 20 arrests and called it a"ma.}or
- bust." The [irst victim wasn't in jail before word was
- out via Compu-Serve that the Feds were on the
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- The American Republic was, for 200 years,
- protected from a fascist coup by the fact that~ the
- People held more guns than the Army. Now, our
- freedom is guarded by the home computer which
- can access, correlate,-and store data as well as
- identify, copy and p4rge data. America today is a
- nice place to raise kids because, in the words of Jim
- Morrison, "They got the Guns, but we got the
- Numberst"
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- The rulers of the USSR aren't the only ones who
- live in fear of the personal computer. ln the Fall of
- 1984, 60 M,nutes ran a feature called.'Homework.~'
- The piece dealt with women who manufacture
- garments in their hames for wholesalers. They
- interviewed a person who owns one of the wholesale
- companies. This guy said that the International
- Women's Garment Union wants to stop the home
- worker as a prelude to controlling the many home
- computer businesses. When 60 Minutes took that
- comment to a Union spokesman, he agreedthat yes,
- indeed, the home computer industry is their next
- target!
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- Your home computer is a tool for your freedom.
- Like the printing press of old, it is the peoples'friend
- and the ~yrant's foe.
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