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TPA everywhere?

TPA everywhere?

Posted Mar 25, 2007 2:49 UTC (Sun) by kevinbsmith (guest, #4778)
In reply to: The Torvalds Transcript (InformationWeek) by zlynx
Parent article: The Torvalds Transcript (InformationWeek)

With the proper political climate, it could become illegal (in some/many countries) to sell a non-TPA computer. Or to build one. Or even to own one that was built pre-TPA. Hopefully that won't happen, but I can't see any reason right now that it absolutely positively could not happen in the next ten years.

If we have to live in that world, I would still want a thriving FLOSS ecosystem.


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TPA everywhere?

Posted Mar 25, 2007 4:44 UTC (Sun) by dlang (guest, #313) [Link]

sure, and it could become illegal to own a car, illegal to drink, illegal to smoke, illegal to be unemployeed, illegal to have a job if you are a Jew, etc

stupid things happen. if they happen in one country, that country will suffer and fix itself or go down the drain.

and the probability of non TPA computers being illegal is infintesimal (just like everything else I listed above, there are people who want it)

if you think about the cost of implementing a full TPA environment, and consider adding that to everything that's run by computer (down to your toaster, coffie maker, vending machines, cars, etc) the cost of forcing all new products to implemtn TPA would scuttle it, and if you look at how it's basicly been impossible for the HD-TV to replace all the TV receivers around the world in anything resembling a reasonable timeframe, what makes you thing that there would be any more sucess in replacing all these other devices?

easily programmable computers are too much a part of the worlds economy for any country to sucessfully outlaw them, even if you ignore people's home PC's


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