000526.html
Bertrand Meyer at Software Development Online - The Ethics of Free Software: I only started this, but read enough to agree with Angus Glashier that it is a must read. I'll read the rest over the long weekend, in sha' allah. [latte]
Gary North at LewRockwell.com - Two Teensy-Weensy Legal Reforms: A recommendation to G.W. to propose two small changes to the way America collects taxes. "Are these proposals too radical for Mr. Bush? Probably." [lew]
Kevin Tuma - PNTR: Kevin comments on China's new trading status.
From this week's The Federalist digest:
"The fundamental difference between a free society and an unfree society is an armed citizenry. " --Charley Reese
Johnny Chung at World Net Daily - Jiang's legacy: A united China: Reminds us that the Chinese now have Mr. Clinton in their pocket. They can bring him down any time by letting out the truth on their huge campaign donations. And Slick Willy knows it, hence he'll do anything they ask. Mr. Chung predicts that mainland China will invade Taiwan in the two month "window of opportunity" between the presidential election in November and the swearing in in January. [wnd]
Craig Bicknell at Wired - Amex Nixes X-Rated Exchanges: Amex will no longer accept credit card transaction from porn sites due to a high rate of disputes. [cafe]
"At Suzee's Smut Shop Dot Com, you can see enough naked booty to make your libido boil over -- but bring your Visa, because Suzee'll take off all her clothes before your eyes, but she won't take American Express. In fact, no online smut site will take American Express."
IBM alphaWorks - SOAP for Java: "IBM-SOAP is a Java reference implementation of the SOAP v1.1 specification." [cafe]
Barry Fox at New Scientist - Licence to thrill: A revolutionary home-cinema system has movie moguls sweating: The DVD folks don't want you to be able to get to the digital signal, but as we learned with DeCSS, they can't stop smart people. [/.]
Lars Ulrich at SlashDot - At Last And At Length: Lars Speaks: Lars talks about Metallica's decision to go after Napster. Very long. I only read a little of it. [/.]