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It's funny.  Laugh. GNU is Not Unix Software Linux

Fathers of Linux Revealed: Tooth Fairy & Santa Claus 739

An anonymous reader writes "The Alexis de Tocqueville Institute, which published the results of their very thorough investigation today, turned out to be right. Linus really isn't the father of the Linux operating system. After having been found out, Linus had no choice but to admit -- this is what he has to say: 'Ok, I admit it. I was just a front-man for the real fathers of Linux, the Tooth Fairy and Santa Claus.'"
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Fathers of Linux Revealed: Tooth Fairy & Santa Claus

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  • by Thinkit4 ( 745166 ) * on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:04PM (#9178272)
    Linus is on the Celebrity atheist list [celebatheists.com]. I had a hunch when I heard the tooth fairy and Santa Claus being mentioned together. They are often examples given of non-existent beings (that grant wishes).
  • by i_want_you_to_throw_ ( 559379 ) * on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:10PM (#9178359) Journal
    AdTI.
    They have been proven to be on the take, they put out error ridden papers and they can't even manage to put together a respectable website.

    Giving them press everytime they write some bone headed paper that M$ paid for is wasting time and giving them undue publicity.

    Ok you can now start modding me down.
  • by strredwolf ( 532 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:22PM (#9178461) Homepage Journal
    So, if I quote Linus:

    Btw, I do believe that somebody took over adti.net.

    I don't think the Alexis de Tocqueville institute ever had humor (they certainly used to take themselves very seriously), but their site today is filled with jokes.

    Maybe they forgot to pay their DNS registration fee, and some enterprising person decided to play a joke on them? Or maybe their clocks are running a month-and-a-half late?

    Or is it really unintentional?

    Linus


    WHOIS of ADTI.NET says...

    Database last updated 17-May-2004 19:14:38 EDT.

    Hmmm... Linus may be right. The story broke the same day it updated. I wonder who's serving the old DNS.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:24PM (#9178480)

    To be fair: Both Microsoft and Apple copied Xerox.

    You can read [amazon.com] the story of how Xerox invited a number of companies (including Apple) to port Smalltalk to various hardware platforms. This exercise led directly to the Apple Lisa (the "Mother of All Macs"). No, they were not based on Smalltalk, but this introduced the WIMP metaphor to Apple.

  • by benploni ( 125649 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:24PM (#9178481) Journal
    Education has the highest correlation coefficient to lack of belief in a personal god. By most surveys, more than 90% of professional scientists don't believe in a personal god. It doesn't surprise me one bit that Linus is an atheist -- I already knew he was smart and educated.
  • by sICE ( 92132 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:34PM (#9178559) Homepage
    FYI the database is updated quite often...
    sice@kadath ~ $ whois microsoft.com | grep -i update
    Database last updated on 17-May-2004 19:31:00 EDT.
    sice@kadath ~ $ whois fark.com | grep -i update
    Database last updated on 17-May-2004 19:31:46 EDT.
    sice@kadath ~ $ whois somethingawful.com | grep -i update
    Database last updated on 17-May-2004 19:32:24 EDT.
    ;-)
  • by micker ( 668555 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:36PM (#9178576) Homepage
    http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/graph/?host=adti.net 9 servers at adti.net All running freeBSD


  • Re:Horrible! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by FrostedWheat ( 172733 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:37PM (#9178582)
    but what I can't deal with is the tooth fairy being a guy

    I hope you never see the Listerine Tooth Fairy advert. I can't seem to find a picture, but imagine a 'dodgy geezer' tooth fairy from London.
  • Bad Name - as usual (Score:3, Interesting)

    by soloport ( 312487 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:39PM (#9178606) Homepage
    Many Atheists really should be called something else (e.g. right-wing-anti-god-folk or just plain Anti-theists) -- thus not giving a bad name to the rest of us Atheists.

    A truer definition of the word, "atheist", could then be, "Could care less if there is or is not a God -- so, quit arguing incessantly about it and pass the gravy!".

    And if more people subscribed to true atheism, we could talk more about the soccer game and quit killing each other over mosks, synagogues, churches and the almighty Sacred Cow!

    Oh, I'm sorry. Was I off-topic? Ok, then I want to know, where is it written Linus is an Atheist? Maybe (especially from his general down-to-earth attitude) he's really an "atheist" -- as registered Atheists are really fanatical "anti-theists".
  • by Space cowboy ( 13680 ) * on Monday May 17, 2004 @07:41PM (#9178623) Journal
    ... and we didn't try and tailor the report (3 months work for 5 people including world-wide travel) to our paymasters. Our view was that we were being paid to produce a report on what is (for a fairly major computer manufacturer) rather than what they would like things to be. They already know what they would like things to be...

    On the other hand, "hired guns" are mercenaries - they will do as you wish, when you wish, how you wish. The AdTI are hired guns. Some of us (the others :-) still have some self-respect and integrity - please consider each case on its merits...

    Simon.
  • by Stephen Samuel ( 106962 ) <samuel@bcgre e n . com> on Monday May 17, 2004 @08:17PM (#9178910) Homepage Journal
    PJ' post about this on groklaw [groklaw.net] notes that the best translation for tocqueville would be city of the crazy falsness -- or, as I would put it: fudville.
  • by s20451 ( 410424 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @08:27PM (#9178978) Journal
    OK, I'm sorry I don't have a lot of time to debate this. But I will say the following. What Dawkins writes is typical of the intellectually lazy attacks that science has for religion, because he is dismissing the discipline out of hand. He may as well say that we should ask the gardener or the chef about questions of sociology rather than a faculty member of the sociology department.

    For example, let's start with the following axioms: God exists, God created the universe, God loves all humans. I should point out that none of these contradict anything that science knows. From these three simple axioms you can use logic to basically "derive" much of western philosophical thought. In much the same way, only three axioms lead us to the entirety of Euclidean geometry.

  • Re:Í like it (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 17, 2004 @09:30PM (#9179362)
    What the hell does ADTI have to do with "the right"? I consider myself part of "the right" politically and I think they're smoking crack.
  • by 10am-bedtime ( 11106 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @10:11PM (#9179573)

    to call what must be proved an axiom is a super efficient shortcut, i.e., a demonstration of being intellectually lazy. (but whatever, the shiny word has its place in another conversation...)

    i think it is not outside the scope of science to find compassion and equilibrium in human relationships. the scientific method is a means to reach beyond one's personal biases and prejudices (compassion is not too far out of reach if you can do this). and the results of scientific inquiry often must harmonize w/ past results to be accepted (equilibrium in human relationships is not too far out of reach if you can do this, as well).

    you characterize scientists as sorely lacking the desire to address these goals, but maybe if you got to know more scientists you would understand their mindset and behaviors as not so lacking, after all.

  • by lysium ( 644252 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @11:44PM (#9180086)
    It has been my experience, from my limited discourse with Jesuits, Christian brothers, and Jewish scholars, that it is indeed possible for highly intelligent people to be highly religious. Or perhaps the proper word for such people is spiritual?

    When questioned about their beliefs, the scholars I mentioned describe ideas and concepts that are distinctly unorothodox. I suspect these people may have reached a personal understanding of the divine that would not be accepted by their respective communities. The ignorance of the lay community is a good thing, in this case, because the exact nature of their belief is not relevant to anything. The fact is they believe, and it provides a framework in which they can act in and upon the world.

    I also suspect that the higher levels of theological scholars, pantheistically speaking, are far more tolerant of objective truth than most believe they are...

    ===---===

  • by CaptainFrito ( 599630 ) on Monday May 17, 2004 @11:57PM (#9180177)
    I always found this to be an extreme irony. Or is it arrogance... People famous for "creating" sophisticated works of intellect maintining it is impossible for themselves to have been created. But, what is more sophisticated: a computer operating system; or, a living organism capable of creating that same computer operating system?

    If Linux gets better through a guided, conscious stepwise refinement (evolution) effort, how does it happen in nature without such a guided, conscious effort? Who plays the part of the coders in the real-life version of evolution? If there is a requirement for sentient guidance for one case, there is a requirement for the case other also. Anything else is simply illogical (yes, that's right, it is an act of "faith" to believe in evolution, at least because it is obviously a contadiction to everything that we know and experience in our own acts of creating). Moreover, despite popular opinion, evolution is still an unproven theory according to the tenets of the scientific method. Consider the debate that rages between "panspermia" and "abiogenesis" -- it is not even agreed which theory is correct, never mind having proven one or the other.

    After reading Linus' comments on 'Celebrity atheist list', I sense his problem with more with 'organized religion' and its socio-economic impact (and the unliklihood of said same of being backed by the superintelligence that created all things), rather than with the idea that there is a supreme God and Creator. And he is correct, at least according the the Christian Bible (despite what they clergy says as it defends its own eco-political survival). God does not back the overwhelming majority of religions we see today. Revelation 18 speaks of "Babylon the Great" as the representation of false religion, and that it will be urtterly destroyed prior to the battle of Armageddon, which is called 'God's war against the ungodly.'

    Great. There goes my "Excellent Karma" :\

  • Actually (Score:2, Interesting)

    by KalvinB ( 205500 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2004 @12:38AM (#9180397) Homepage
    as a theist, the existance of the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus is irrelavent.

    Satan exists. You don't see Christians running around worshipping and trusting in him do you?

    So what makes the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus any different? If they actually exist they're just another two of the many false gods that are to be avoided.

    Atheists keep bringing them up because they don't understand theology and what actually matters. Unfortunatly, it's not just atheists that don't get it.

    Just because you exist doesn't make you the President of the United States and obligate me to care about what you say.

    Ben
  • Re:Dishonest list? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by fucksl4shd0t ( 630000 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2004 @02:48AM (#9180853) Homepage Journal

    You know, I'm all for classification and so forth, but I tend to think that attaching labels to an absence of religion only prolongs the problem of religion, assuming, of course, that religion is a problem.

    The way I figure it, once upon a time people started putting God on the shelf with all the other myths and were persecuted for it. In an effort to answer the question "Well, what are you, then?" with something more than "Nothing!" and simultaneously attempt to gain credulity for an absence of religion, some folks decided that the word "Atheist" would do nicely. It's a word that can be torn apart and understood quite easily, in fact. And it just manages to put a classification on the absence of religion that fits it into the larger scheme of religions, thus gaining some modicum of credulity.

    The reason I have a problem with this is that by classifying yourself in the larger order of religions you also implicitly lend credence to all religions. Maybe not a lot, but at least a little. By providing an answer to the question "Well, what are you, then?" you also provide meaning to the question. I think the correct answer to that question should be something like "Homo sapiens", "Mechanic", "Male", or something like that, and by sucking away the meaning of the question when asked about religion you also suck away some of the credulity that religion currently enjoys. (And no, if the answer is "African American", "Caucasian", or "Anything-American", you would be contributing to other problems not related to religion. It's an all-encompassing question, unfortunately)

    No surprise, but it's the same reason I ultimately turned away from LaVey's particular style of Satanism, regardless of my philosophical alignment with the group. You see, by allowing myself to be classified not just in the order of religions, but also directly in relation to Christianity, I was only putting more fuel on the fire of religion, a fire I would really like to extinguish.

    Coincidentally, in the authorized biography of Anton LaVey, he says something very similar, and also indicates that he ultimately grew out of his own creation of Satanism. It's an interesting exercise, I think.

  • Who is adti.net? (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 18, 2004 @03:25AM (#9180931)
    After looking at the wayback machine [archive.org] (As the actual website was hacked and is now down) it appears this is a political think tank.

    Ok will someone tell me why a political think tank is trying to tell the world open source software is evil?

    And
    here [archive.org] is the archive mirror of the articals blasting open source.

    I don't think there is any doupt this is nothing more than a politcal think tank who exists purely to premote a certen political thought.

    Hay everybody.. It's the unoffical Ministry Of Truth [orwelltoday.com].

    Thies guys are so anti-Linux it's discusting.

    The clames they make about Linus not being the father of Linux have got to be based entirely on the clames made by SCO who in a cort of law was never actually able to provide anything remotely close to proof.

    In short it's slanderous hearsay.

    Hay if this is valid... how many times has Microsoft been in cort?

    I guess now we have our paralel of the psycopath who stalked Bill Gates a number of years back.
    (I'm refering to the lady who actually believes Mr Gates is the antiChrist. We all know the real antichrist is Bharny the purple pulsh toy)
  • by Decaff ( 42676 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2004 @04:55AM (#9181188)
    The majority of people with a higher education believe in some God. Those with an education in science may follow the tendancy to not believe that there is a higher being, but they are definitely not the majority.

    The majority of people, even those who are educated, have virtually no understanding of physics or biology. These sciences encompass the areas of human understanding that were, until very recently, assumed to require divine intervention.

    All your statement indicates is that people trained to understand the world tend to have a lot less belief in a supreme being who intervenes in that world.
  • by Oligonicella ( 659917 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2004 @08:45AM (#9182099)
    "Logic is the invention of man"

    Hogwash. Logic is no more the invention of man than math is. Logic was "discovered" by man. It pre-existed, as did math.
  • by Viking Coder ( 102287 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2004 @11:39AM (#9184084)
    Science and logic are just another religion that someone can subscribe to...

    Except that science and logic have predictive power, and religion does not.

    If religion had predictive power, it would be a part of science and logic.

    If God had writ all of science and logic for mankind to read in his writings (which was pretty much the case, in people's beliefs, back hundreds of years ago), then science and logic would be a part of religion.

    It does matter "how" or "why," the ends do not justify the means. If your God tells you to kill infidels, what logic can you use to get out of that trap?
  • by hesiod ( 111176 ) on Tuesday May 18, 2004 @02:58PM (#9187027)
    > It seems sad, however, to imagine looking out at our beautiful world and see it as nothing more than the result of quamtum fluctuations, all sound and fury signifying nothing

    So, if there is no God, you cannot feel awe for the amazing complexity and (perceived) efficiency? I'm atheist, but am still amazed by things, even though they are perfectly natural. Even when I understand the theory behind why a lightbulb works, I am still amazed that it does (when I choose to be mindful of such things). Perhaps I misunderstand your meaning.

So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of money? -- Ayn Rand

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