Bleker (@HenkBleker) is the Dutch underminister for economics. De Volkskrant writes:
"Geheel terloops gaf Bleker aan dat hij een nieuw machtsmiddel denkt te hebben om publicatie tegen te houden. Publicatie staat voor hem gelijk aan export van gevoelige kennis en daarvoor is een vergunning nodig."
which translates to:
"Bleker indicates he believes he can use a means of power to stop the publication: publication is to him equal to export of knowledge for which a permit is required."
Very much like you need to export military weapons. For him it makes no difference for this reasoning if the publication itself is with a foreign (Nature, Science) or a Dutch (Elsevier, local newspaper) publisher.
The virus image is in the public domain and available from Wikipedia.
Oops... I forgot to get an export permit!
"Geheel terloops gaf Bleker aan dat hij een nieuw machtsmiddel denkt te hebben om publicatie tegen te houden. Publicatie staat voor hem gelijk aan export van gevoelige kennis en daarvoor is een vergunning nodig."
which translates to:
"Bleker indicates he believes he can use a means of power to stop the publication: publication is to him equal to export of knowledge for which a permit is required."
Very much like you need to export military weapons. For him it makes no difference for this reasoning if the publication itself is with a foreign (Nature, Science) or a Dutch (Elsevier, local newspaper) publisher.
The virus image is in the public domain and available from Wikipedia.
Oops... I forgot to get an export permit!
This... Can't possibly be sustained, surely?
ReplyDeleteI mean, this would mean that you would have to have an export permit to talk to people, or just to move, since moving could be used to encode knowledge exportation.
Ian, I doubt he can. But the mere suggestion that he may want to use economic law to censor scholarly research and that he wants to overrule international, academic consensus is outrageous.
ReplyDeleteIn old USSR time we did have the same. Some kind of agreement still needed for publication even now, but now it's more then formality.
ReplyDelete