Is The Promise Of The $100 Laptop A New Generation Of Gold Farmers, Spammers And Scammers?
from the just-what-we-need dept
Earlier this year, we brushed off the worries of one computer security firm that suggested the always popular idea of the $100 computer for poor people all over the world would lead to a new generation of malware writers. However, it seems that others are picking up on similar recognizing the similar unintended consequences of super widespread computer adoption among the world's poor. Over at the Guardian, someone is afraid that widely distributed computers will make it all too tempting for poor kids to get involved in spam or 419-style scams, since the amount of money they can make, even if just modestly successful would represent a huge windfall for some of these people. This does seem a bit more reasonable than the malware fear, but, again, this really is about economic empowerment -- and certainly some of that empowerment will be used for nefarious purposes. It's important to recognize that early on, and watch out for it, but it seems rather early on (and a bit elitist) to assume that the first thing people will do is use these machines to trick dumb, rich westerners out of their money.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
Techdirt is one of the few remaining truly independent media outlets. We do not have a giant corporation behind us, and we rely heavily on our community to support us, in an age when advertisers are increasingly uninterested in sponsoring small, independent sites — especially a site like ours that is unwilling to pull punches in its reporting and analysis.
While other websites have resorted to paywalls, registration requirements, and increasingly annoying/intrusive advertising, we have always kept Techdirt open and available to anyone. But in order to continue doing so, we need your support. We offer a variety of ways for our readers to support us, from direct donations to special subscriptions and cool merchandise — and every little bit helps. Thank you.
–The Techdirt Team
Reader Comments
Subscribe: RSS
View by: Time | Thread
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
dumb westerners
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
$100 PC
On the other other hand, is the best thing to give impverished people really a PC? Don't they need education, food, clothing, water, shelter, medicine, training to help them be truely productive?
SECOND!
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: $100 PC
>On the other other hand, is the best thing to give imp[o]verished
> people really a PC? Don't they need education, food,
>clothing, water, shelter, medicine, training to help them be [truly] productive?
Yes, we do have to decide, on their behalf, what these poopr people might or might not need, don't we? After all, it's For Their Own Good.
Or we could give them the tools and the choices, and let them make up their own mind.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: $100 PC
Think of it as a Parent and Child position. We might not have any specific right to their future, but having been around (or economically powerful in this situation) longer, we have the benefit of experience and wisdom they certainly don't - no matter how may issues our system may have.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: $100 PC
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Verging on racism....
Mass computing brought all kinds of opportunities to those of us fortunate enough to live in the West.
Some of us wrote games, some wrote emails, some wrote viruses. Some set up innovative companies, others created new services and some started spamming.
The point is - whether you're in a poor country or a rich one, the technology is an enabler for good and ill. Being a low wage technology user certainly makes some forms of scam more viable; but it will also make many forms of legitimate commerce more viable too, and create new forms of earning possibilities, as well as entertainment and education. And whether used to annoy those of us in rich countries by sending spam, or to provide us with great new services (I will be your long distance PA for $10 a day; buy my hand carvings direct from me for $5...) it will be an engine for economic growth - and that can only be a good thing.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Verging on racism....
I don't see it as racism. It's somewhat classism, with a large dose of realism, with a convenient exclusion of the benefits available. But I consider it more like a "Well, we're giving the [insert less-technologically-advanced culture here] cheap guns... will they use them to shoot us, or to hunt for food?" line of thought.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Verging on racism....
Things do tend to get better if smart people are given the opportunity too express there ingenuity. And by the way if you are afraid of the future you have nothing to look forward too.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
keep them weak and uneducated
Having accepted that, and disarmed ourselves of the arrogance of assumed control the next breakthrough for us "westerners" is to think how to best encourage the employment of these tools for good, rather than cheap scamming uses.
Truth is, writing a decent application or web service for your own countrymen is probably a better "get rich quick" scheme than scamming naive American and European users, after all, in that market you are competeing with the rest of the world in an area of diminishing opportunities since Physics-Guy has already been at it since the 1990's helping to wise up these mugs with a cluebat.
If you accept that, you must logically proceed to realising the real reason behind this FUD against their empowerment. Do you really think companies like Microsoft want to see smaller nations breaking free of their shackles and devloping their own IT infrastructure? Of course not. That's the real fear, nothing to do with "scammers" and suchlike.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Verging on racism...
NIce.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
$100 PC
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: $100 PC
Yep, they'll be "cranking out" spam, viruses and low-rez PR0N as soon as they can figure out linux.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
The Rise of Slavery
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
20k is way too high.
The irony is that as an American you are the greatest slave the world has ever seen, and the real trick, the real cherry on the poison cake, is that you believe you are aren't. They got you so good that you will even defend the system that enslaves you.
I do the trolling around here, now get off my bridge! :)
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: 20k is way too high.
Dorpus, for Gods sake man, why go to the trouble of importing potentialy diseased little black kids from abroad at 20k a pop when you can get them for a fraction of the price from a ghetto trailer park in your own neighborhood?
Plenty of people adopt ghetto kids. The high-priced slaves come from Eastern Europe or China.
The irony is that as an American you are the greatest slave the world has ever seen, and the real trick, the real cherry on the poison cake, is that you believe you are aren't. They got you so good that you will even defend the system that enslaves you.
So tell me about other countries where people aren't enslaved.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: 20k is way too high.
I knew you'd try and get me with your clever legal mumbo jumbo. Why there's Naura (pop 13,000) and Vatican City (pop 170), and last I heard Malta was doing just fine too.
So, I think here's the issue; there's two kinds of slavery. There's slavery through fear and slavery through protection. Perhaps both are special cases of the other, but both kinds inhibit independence, self determination and real security. When we had to let you guys go from the Empire you did a good job of shrugging off that "protection" slavery, but while I totally admire that "Freedom or Death" American attitude, I think it only took a golden age of a few hundred years for it to become slavery by fear again (economic, and more recently bogus terrorism) and now you're full cycle back to slavery by protection.
All the same, pointing out that other people are also enslaved is no argument. "At least we're not as bad as China" doesn't say much for
that magnificent old American ideology does it?
So, if I had a point to banter it was this: In a way those people who are under manifestly brutal regimes are in a better position psychologically than the modern American. At least they KNOW they aren't free and have hope to change it. The man who is deceived that he is free while being controlled by invisible hands has far less hope of real freedom.
Whatever your real racial views, I'll tell you I also admire your black culture. Mr T (A Team) said it best in an interview about why he wears the big gold chains. "My brothers and sisters came over here they wore chains because they were slaves. I wear the gold chains because I am still a slave, but my price is higher, that's all". That's the trouble with these unruly niggers, they see it real, and like Mohammed Ali said, the more real you get, the more unreal your opposition gets.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
I'm so sad I even bothered wading through this dri
The affluent "first world" is the producer of most of the pollution in the world, the consumers of most of the food and other natural resources, and our corporations are probably indirectly more responsible for killing people than anyone poor person could fathom. We have an epidemic of obesity, the height of sloth and overconsumption, and we sit around and talk about how giving poor people computers will lead to more criminal activity. I think the more important thing the $100.00 computer might do is give poor people a toolset to produce more food and acquire knowledge that will improve their communities. Maybe that is our biggest fear because to be at the top of the class structure, their needs to be a bottom.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: I'm so sad I even bothered wading through this
The affluent "first world" is the producer of most of the pollution in the world,
Are you sure that polluting industries haven't long since moved to developing nations? It is first world countries that are so hung up on "saving the environment".
our corporations are probably indirectly more responsible for killing people than anyone poor person could fathom.
So do dictators, thugs in third world countries kill fewer people?
We have an epidemic of obesity, the height of sloth and overconsumption
What if obesity rates are exploding in developing nations? Developing nations today suffer more from overeating than undereating.
I think the more important thing the $100.00 computer might do is give poor people a toolset to produce more food and acquire knowledge that will improve their communities.
For the few people in poor countries that don't get enough food, it's because they live in places where there isn't enough water or adequate soil. Knowledge won't improve the land.
Maybe that is our biggest fear because to be at the top of the class structure, their needs to be a bottom.
Tell it to the rich people in developing nations who squander all the aid given by rich countries.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
Actually, most third worlders are amazed by the Americans who insist on fixing their own houses, pumping their own gas, when they are capable of hiring slaves to do it. In the third world, anyone who can afford to do so will hire slaves and refuse to do handiwork. The "do-it-yourself" mentality is an American invention, and quite foreign to the sensibilities of other rich countries.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Cheap Technology
Good grief, people, it's not like it's the end of the world. Personally, I think that cheap computers are a good thing. I would like to have one myself.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Its not really like wed notice
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Its not really like wed notice
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
More cheap gold farming labor?
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Pirate hardware manufacturers better than original
What I'm getting at here is a what-if. "What if pirate manufacturers made these OLPC $100USD laptops even cheaper?" Wouldn't it be almost even funny that they would be able to sell them for less than the real thing - which is what the OLPC is attempting, correct? cheap computers for the rest of the world (well, educating people through using these computers, really, but getting the computers out there comes first)...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: MMO farming and Obesity...
and whoever mentioned the high obesity rate, we essentially have what you could consider an abundance of cheap food here in america; from an evolutionary point of view it would be those whose metabolism can process food most efficiently that would survive, therefore you would assume there would be more people alive today with a genetic disposition to process food efficiently; unfortunately all the skinny high metabolism people like myself are weak from an evolutionary standpoint; we require more food to sustain normal body functions; the obese people actually have more efficient bodies, there is just an abundance of food therefore their bodies store more fat because they require calories overall to function. frankly, the rate of obesity in america isn't surprising at all...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: MMO farming and Obesity...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
edible PC
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Dumb, Rich Westerners
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
We should give $100 laptops to spammers
[ link to this | view in chronology ]