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The disturbing white paper Red Hat is trying to erase from the internet

Comments

  • Sharing here for discussion purposes and also because when someone is trying to actively erase something, as someone who likes to archive things, I like to upload links to these things. (I suppose similar to the Streisand effect)

  • ObelousObelous Member
    edited April 11

    tldr: blablabla working with defense industry to kill people, gaza supporter unhappy with it

  • plumbergplumberg Veteran, Megathread Squad

    And?

    Serious question.

    Archive.org and all are already having copies of it. So why make it a deal here?

  • ObelousObelous Member
    edited April 11

    If Red Hat was "desperately trying to scrub a certain white paper from the internet" they would've at least removed the archive.org entry as that is something they can easily do.

    Archive.org will remove any entry if the website owner requests it.

    There's even a press release they haven't removed: https://www.redhat.com/en/about/press-releases/lockheed-martin-red-hat-collaborate-advance-artificial-intelligence-military-missions

  • @plumberg said:
    And?

    Serious question.

    Archive.org and all are already having copies of it. So why make it a deal here?

    Because archive.org isn't a public forum and this is interesting content? What are you bothered about?

    Thanked by 2whynotlearn forest
  • It's interesting that they target that market, but not really much of a cover up since company website urls bitrot all the time. If they had been sending DMCAs or something it might be more spicy.

    Personally, I don't have any qualms with companies aiding in war fighting efforts. It's when those companies turn against the citizenry that it gets problematic. (ex: recent drama surrounding which AI models could be used for mass surveillance)

  • @unsafetypin said:

    @plumberg said:
    And?

    Serious question.

    Archive.org and all are already having copies of it. So why make it a deal here?

    Because archive.org isn't a public forum and this is interesting content? What are you bothered about?

    He linked to it without adding any of his own commentary on it. I know there's forums that ban OPs who do that to discourage the practice. Even just one sentence to summarize their view on something or why it's important is generally acceptable.

  • @TimboJones said:

    @unsafetypin said:

    @plumberg said:
    And?

    Serious question.

    Archive.org and all are already having copies of it. So why make it a deal here?

    Because archive.org isn't a public forum and this is interesting content? What are you bothered about?

    He linked to it without adding any of his own commentary on it. I know there's forums that ban OPs who do that to discourage the practice. Even just one sentence to summarize their view on something or why it's important is generally acceptable.

    Fair enough. There should be some discourse and really a filter should catch link only posts and not allow them. I didn't consider that.

  • llamas

  • forestforest Member
    edited April 12

    Compress the kill cycle with Red Hat Device Edge

    Wow, that's repulsive.

    I wonder how much of this is Red Hat's doing and how much of it was simply ordered by IBM, because this kind of psychopathic shit is exactly what IBM loves to do. Would Red Hat pre-buyout have ever done this?

  • raindog308raindog308 Administrator, Veteran

    @unsafetypin said: Because archive.org isn't a public forum and this is interesting content? What are you bothered about?

    Because this story is nonsense?

    @forest said: because this kind of psychopathic shit is exactly what IBM loves to do.

    Oh I see you read that silly comment on Hacker News too 🙄

    Because of course the people who ran IBM's German subsidiary in the 1930s are still alive today and are relevant to the direction of the company in 2026 and "love" to do this kind of "psychopathic shit". I mean, it's just a straight line from then to the present, right? Nonstop psychopathy.

    You know, Henry Ford once distributed The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Ford must be pretty "psychopathic" today, too. Same must apply to Volkswagon, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, BASF, Siemens, Mitsubishi, Toshiba...I mean, Lloyd's of London once insured slave ships. Can you imagine what kind of psychopathic shit they love to do today? Staggers the mind.

  • forestforest Member
    edited April 12

    @raindog308 said: Because this story is nonsense?

    Is it false? Their whitepaper looks pretty real.

    Now, the whole idea about this being a coverup... Sure, that seems like hyperbole. More likely someone in marketing just made one of a hundred decisions that day, one of which was to remove a PR post that caused them to look not-so-great.

    @raindog308 said: Oh I see you read that silly comment on Hacker News too 🙄

    I didn't even read about this on HN.

    @raindog308 said: Ford must be pretty "psychopathic" today, too.

    From the looks of it, Ford changed. Did IBM?

    Yes, I admit linking to the history of IBM was a bit of a low blow since companies can and do change, but IBM does have a history of working with various governments to do things that are, frankly, evil. Oracle, too.

  • raindog308raindog308 Administrator, Veteran

    @forest said: Is it false? Their whitepaper looks pretty real.

    The whitepaper is real. The bit about "trying to erase it from the internet" is nonsense.

    Did the "journalists" involved even ask Red Hat for a comment?

    "Red Hat removes a page from their web site" should be the true title of this "story".

    @forest said: From the looks of it, Ford changed. Did IBM?

    You just said they "love" to do "psychopathic shit" and you're not even sure?

  • forestforest Member
    edited April 12

    @raindog308 said: The whitepaper is real. The bit about "trying to erase it from the internet" is nonsense.

    I agree, I just edited my comment to specify that since I just realized that might be what you're talking about.

    @raindog308 said: You just said they "love" to do "psychopathic shit" and you're not even sure?

    The question mark was rhetorical. IBM has not changed in that they still buddy up with the guy with the biggest knife. A less inflammatory version of what I wanted to say would be something along the lines of "IBM is one of those companies that will accept unethical and controversial government contracts with little to no resistance and benefits directly from funding going to the military-industrial complex".

  • TimboJonesTimboJones Member
    edited April 12

    @forest said:
    Yes, I admit linking to the history of IBM was a bit of a low blow since companies can and do change, but IBM does have a history of working with various governments to do things that are, frankly, evil. Oracle, too.

    C'mon, we all know it's Oracle spreading evil to the government customer in any equation involving Oracle.

    Thanked by 1forest
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