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Tivo Tracks Superbowl Viewing Habits

ThePretender writes "Sprinkled in the Janet Jackson boob stories is an alarming bit of information: Tivo tracks subscribers' viewing habits. They know how many times the boob was viewed, among other good-to-have (meaning data worth $$) information. Yes, if you agreed to Tivo's privacy policy you knew they could do this, with the promise that you aren't identifiable. Put on the tin foil hats? Or just another way for them to keep your monthly fee down (snicker)." A story from 2002 has more information and makes clear that Tivo does have the capability to record every click you make on the remote control, at all times. Previously Tivo said they tracked 10,000 people for the Super Bowl, this year 20,000.

51 of 543 comments (clear)

  1. Alternate Headline by Mateito · · Score: 5, Funny

    Tivo Tracks Titillating Timberlake Tit Touching!

    1. Re:Alternate Headline by KUHurdler · · Score: 5, Funny

      This just in:

      Justin Timberlink is going to do a follow-up free concert with Outcast on CBS.
      "Sorry Ms Jackson... OOOhhh!!!"

      --
      Fix Your Own TV - RiddledTV.com Avoid the Landfill
  2. Is there a privacy issue? by glinden · · Score: 5, Interesting
    If TiVo is only passing along aggregated, anonymized data on user behavior, is there a privacy issue? From the article:
    • Privacy advocates have decried such technologies as invasive, but TiVo officials say they do not pass along information that would identify individual viewers.
    While it's true that TiVo needs to collect "every click" as the first part of compiling this aggregate data, if the final data is just summarized habits of TiVo users with no individual information, is there a privacy issue?
    1. Re:Is there a privacy issue? by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's possible that if somebody was watching illegal content, the cops could get a warrant, grab the TiVo, and then have a log of every remote click that the TiVo heard, even those for devices other than the TiVo.

      Of course, the extent they could do this is very limited. TiVo units perge this data every time they make a call-in, and once the call is completed TiVo doesn't keep the association between the log file and who sent it unless they have flagged the user's account for support reasons. Also, I know of no real court cases where cops have actually tried to get TiVo data used as evidence...

    2. Re:Is there a privacy issue? by s20451 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The trouble is that the information is being collected at all. So while most regular users might trust TiVo, it's important to know that they could, in principle, collect very complete statistics concerning your viewing habits. Either by accident or by subpoena, those records could be released.

      By contrast, if you created a TiVo equivalent from a home computer with a TV tuner card, it would be completely anonymous -- nobody would ever know what you watched unless they had access to your machine.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    3. Re:Is there a privacy issue? by cK-Gunslinger · · Score: 4, Insightful


      It's possible that if somebody was watching illegal content, the cops could get a warrant, grab the TiVo, and then have a log of every remote click

      Exactly what kind of "illegal content" is your TiVo going to be playing? Only that which is broadcasted/streamed to your unit from giant media conglomerates. I fail to see how "8:45pm - Channel 725 - 0:13 minutes - volume_down x 3" is going to help convict anyone of anything? Even if you use your TiVo to control your DVD/VCR, how can button clicks associated with your zip code be used for anything?

    4. Re:Is there a privacy issue? by theguru · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm glad Tivo logs what I watch, and presumably sells the rolled up info to marketing types. In fact, we should all be glad for this! The next time our favorite show is about to be canceled, just remember, they would have known you were watching if you had been using a Tivo.

      I watch a lot of obscure shows on cable. I'm glad the people who decide if they want to renew those shows have an additional source of information than the traditional Neilson family to know if people are watching.

      Two questions though: Couldn't my cable company do the same thing with my digital cable box?

      Are the Tivo watching habits really worth anything. Right now, as I sit here at work typing this message, my Tivo is on. It has no idea if the power to the TV is on or off though. It THINKS the digital cable box is on channel X, but I could have turned it or the TV off, or changed the digital box with a different remote. Does Tivo try to guess if I'm really watching the show on channel X right now by seeing how long it's been since I changed the channel/paused/used rewind/etc? I'm sure there are times when I spend several hours on a single channel and don't press any Tivo remote buttons.

    5. Re:Is there a privacy issue? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 5, Funny

      In theory... this should make for a better future broadcasts as they can analyze the feedback from the users

      Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo..

      Imagine what the majority of users watch. It ain't the good stuff you know. It's whether Daisy is sleeping with Brad behind Eric's back whilst Jake is having difficulty running his business and Karen is deciding whether to give up her job and become an alternative therapist.

      in other words .. complete shite!! Hack those TiVos.. make sure Firefly is the most watched programme (even if its not broadcast. they'll never twig)

    6. Re:Is there a privacy issue? by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If channel 725 is HBO and you don't subscribe to HBO, it's a pretty big "gotcha!"

    7. Re:Is there a privacy issue? by theguru · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I see more an more of these specialty shows with direct, in show sponsors and I think it's great. Doesn't seem to have reduced the number of ad spots though.

      I don't mind banner ads on web sites. I occasionaly click through one and have made a purchase. In fact, it I know I'm going to order something from, say, ThinkGeek, I'll hit my favorite site that usually has ThinkGeek banner ads first and try to make the purchase via a click through. The company still got my money and I hopefully helped out the site. I never make purchases from unsoliceted e-mail though, and outright avoid those companies.

      If I go to a web site, I expect to see some on topic, non intrusive banner ads, just like I expect commercials on TV. They're more useful for me and the advertiser (and in the long run, the site/show being sponsored) if they're ads I actually need.

      I've written a few custome applications for companies that do marketing tracking, customer care card, coupon redemtion sorts of data collection. These people aren't evil. They're just trying to be more effective in their advertising. Most don't want to waste time or money advertising to people who don't/won't purchase. They aren't collecting the fact that I bought shoe polish and a frozen TV dinner at 2am to sell it to big brother, because that's just some wierd ass purchase and I must be a bad person that should be put on a watch list... they do it becuase if they can find out that people who buy X usually buy Y, or that any time Z is on sale for $.75 off, I buy 10 of them, they can better plan their ad campaigns. If they waste less money on marketing, but are just as succesful, in a perfect world, I'm better off as a consumer. In the real world, I remain employed because I sometimes write these applications that companies see a return on, and my 401K does better because these companies turned a proffit.

  3. I'm calling DUPE!... sorta... by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    TiVo Watches the Super Bowl... oh, wait, that was about TiVo and the Super Bowl of Two years ago...

    See, TiVo's had their semi-permeable privacy policy since they started, as documented on /. by...
    TiVo Data Collection Ramifications
    TiVo To Sell Customer Data
    Nielsen to measure TiVo usage

    So, if this is shocking news to you that TiVo was able to quickly crunch the data and figure out the most rewound moment of the Super Bowl broadcast, you haven't been paying attention. They had this capability for any massively watched program since day one. It was part of the design of the system.

    TiVo offers a detailed data service to broadcasters which lets them see by timestamp within an episode what moments people watched, rewound, and skipped. Rumoredly, TechTV's The Screen Savers bought that service once for just one episode, and it ended up proving that their managers where right about what people wanted to see a little more than the actual content-making staff wanted to hear.

    The Super Bowl most rewound moment is something TiVo's been doing for years, just for the sake of putting out a press release to get the TiVo name into conversations about what we were gonna be talking about anyway the week after the event... and from Slashdot's coverage over the years, it appears to have worked.

    1. Re:I'm calling DUPE!... sorta... by fetta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Agreed - the posting was way over the top for something that is old news. If you own a Tivo and didn't know this was taking place, then you haven't been paying attention.

      Now, if a story comes out that they are making my specific viewing habits to anyone, then that would be news.

      --
      ** The opinions expressed here are my own, and do not reflect those of my employers - past, present, or future**
    2. Re:I'm calling DUPE!... sorta... by badasscat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      greed - the posting was way over the top for something that is old news. If you own a Tivo and didn't know this was taking place, then you haven't been paying attention.

      Wouldn't surprise me if that's the problem - the original poster not owning a TiVo, and commenting on something he therefore knows little about. Everybody I know that owns a TiVo, as well as TiVo owners I've talked to on various message boards (such as at tivocommunity.com, seems to know and be perfectly fine with this practice.

      And speaking as a TiVo owner myself, I have absolutely no problem with it. In fact, I tried to sign up to have my data collected non-anonymously - a service TiVo allows their customers to provide optionally (their web site wouldn't accept my TiVo model # when I tried to sign up). People complain constantly about the poor state of television in this country - this is how you go about changing that. If a show sucks, you don't watch it, and TiVo knows it and will tell the networks. I want TiVo to know that my viewing consists primarily of Antiques Roadshow, Once and Again reruns, The Office, Survivor and Mystery Science Theater 3000. And I want the added leverage (however small) of having an actual name attached to that data when it reaches the networks. I am not concerned in the slightest with how the networks plan to use this information, but if you're that embarrassed about your TV viewing habits that you can't bear the thought of anybody else knowing about them, then either just stay anonymous or don't buy TiVo. But they're not trying to hide anything - they post their privacy policy all over the place when you sign up.

  4. my 13 yr old cousin.... by skedastik · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... accounts for the majority of replays tracked.

  5. Easy to read between the lines by RobertB-DC · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From the article, with emphasis added:
    Privacy advocates have decried such technologies as invasive, but TiVo officials say they do not pass along information that would identify individual viewers.

    When gathering customer marketing research, TiVo says it does not link viewer data to their name, gender or age -- only into one big database that can identify users by ZIP code.


    What's interesting is how the article points out what TiVo does not do. They don't "pass along" information "when gathering customer marketing research".

    It's not stated outright, but that sounds like they do record all that information... but it's ok, 'cause they don't use it for marketing purposes.

    Which, of course, puts TiVo right up there with the so-called loyalty cards "privacy" policies. They promise not to resell personal information, but they do gather it, and it's available to anyone who knows a friendly judge.

    The bottom line, as usual, is simple. Don't buy anything at Kroger, or watch anything on TiVo, that you wouldn't want [John Ashcroft | your wife's divorce lawyer] to find out about.

    By the way, does anyone know if Dish Network's PVR phones home about my rewinding habits?

    --
    Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
  6. Me by savagedome · · Score: 5, Funny

    I am not sure if that statistic includes me 'coz I haven't un-paused my Tivo yet :)

    1. Re:Me by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 3, Funny

      I am not sure if that statistic includes me 'coz I haven't un-paused my Tivo yet :)

      In the case of the SuperBowl booby, they won't even need to track people online. They just have to measure the incoming rash of remotes coming back under warranty for repair of the replay button.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  7. It's not a big deal... by the_skywise · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They did it last year, they did it the year before that. They stated in their initial company releases that this is what they intended to do.

    And you know what?

    -DirectTV pay-per-view tracks what I watch...
    -My ISP knows what web sites I've requested...
    -My credit card company knows what I spend my money on.
    -My hospital shares its information with my insurance company, which in turn shares its information with my company. (Because they have to pay their share of the bills)

    It's my TV viewing info... I don't care. If anything, if they sell my viewing habits and realize that Firefly and Farscape are more watched than My Big Sweaty Boyfriend... That's a GOOD THING!

  8. Well that's it now! by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 3, Funny

    alarming bit of information: Tivo tracks subscribers' viewing habits.

    This is unacceptable. From now on, I'll keep my Tivo box disconnected from the phone socket.

    Just try to track my boob viewing habbits *now* mssrs Tivo! Ah! That's turned you white hasn't it, hey, hey?

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  9. There haven't been more people staring at a boob.. by mikeophile · · Score: 5, Funny

    Since Bush's State of the Union address.

  10. Fortunately... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Funny


    > A story from 2002 has more information and makes clear that Tivo does have the capability to record every click you make on the remote control, at all times.

    Fortunately, they still don't have the ability to track what your other hand is doing, at any time.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  11. I LIKE It by Crispin+Cowan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I like it that Tivo can track my viewing habits. That way, when I don't watch yet another trite and lame episode of "Friends" and instead choose to watch something interesting, perhaps the morons in network programming will get a fucking clue.

    Crispin, always wanted to be in the Neilson ratings
    ----
    Crispin Cowan, Ph.D.
    CTO, Immunix Inc.

  12. much more reliable by Savatte · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Personally, I'd much rather have Tivo tracking users than networks relying on nielson ratings. This can only hurt shows like Malcolm In The Middle and Everybody Loves Raymond, two shows people "love" but nobody watches. With accurate ratings, these shows would have ratings lower than enrollment in daycare at neverland ranch.

  13. Well here is the TiVo press release. by Aaton · · Score: 5, Informative
    The offical press release from TiVo.

    Is show some more detail about what commercials were most watched also...

  14. I *want* them to know what I watch by Wee · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I'd much rather they pass along anonymous ratings data based on actual viewing statistics of a random cross-section of TiVo-owning Americans than opinion surveys of people named Nielsen (or some other small group). I know there's more to it than that, but you get the point. A statistically meaningful sample is a good thing.

    I just can't help but think that if real viewing stats were used as predictors of progamming popularity, we might have more stuff like Firefly, Mythbusters, Penn & Teller's Bullshit, etc. and less Everyone Loves Raymond, Friends, Frasier, or a million indistinct reality TV shows.

    If it keeps shows I want to watch on the air longer, then let them see what I'm watching and recording, I say.

    -B

    --

    Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

  15. as a longtime Tivo owner... by egomaniac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am utterly failing to be either surprised or alarmed.

    OH NO! THEY CAN TELL THAT LOTS OF PEOPLE WATCHED THAT SCENE! DEAR LORD, THINK OF THE CHILDREN!

    Ummmm ... so? Yes, I would be concerned if they said "Matt Hooper, 26, of Colorado Springs replayed the Janet Jackson breast scene a record 126 times. Sales statistics in the area also show an unusual spike in hand lotion and tissue purchases."

    They haven't said that, or anything remotely resembling that. They have said "Tivo users watched this particular segment of the Superbowl more than anything else." So?

    Yes, Tivo could do something horrible with my personal information. But then again, Hustler could also publish a big long list of everybody that subscribes to it, complete with home addresses, but they don't. Maybe I'm old-fashioned, but at some point we just have to have some level of trust in other people. Tivo has said that my information is kept anonymous, and has given me no reason to doubt their word, so I don't see a big problem with trusting them.

    And before you start the "oh-my-god-what-an-idiot-for-trusting-a-big-compan y" standard Slashdot response, think about what you have trusted companies with. How many companies have your name and address? Your home phone number? Your bank account information? Your credit card information? Why did you trust them with such information, if no companies can ever be trusted?

    If you have used a credit card, you must trust every single store at which you have ever swiped your credit card at least as much as I trust Tivo. If you have ever applied for a loan, you've coughed up your bank account information. And you're worried about someone knowing what television shows you're watching?

    --
    ZFS: because love is never having to say fsck
  16. To all non-TiVO people who didn't see the boobs. by IdleTime · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here are a few links to a page on Norways biggest Newspapers website that show all the picture uncensored and even have the uncensored movie of her. Oh yes, it also includes the streaker that nobody in the US saw.

    Click on "Neste Bilde" to see the next picture
    Video

    --
    If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
  17. The real problem. by Murmer · · Score: 3, Funny
    I'm not so concerned about Jackson's partly-revealed tit (she was wearing a pastie, people, there was nothing to see there that doesn't make the cover of SI once a year) but I swear to God, seeing Mike Ditka talk about how much better his wang works with his new pills is going to haunt me until the end of my days.

    I am going to be scarred for life.

    --
    Mike Hoye
  18. This could be a good thing by Str1derv7 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't know about you guys but I wouldn't mind Tivo tracking me, in fact, I think I want it to. It'd be nice to track the statistics of some of the shows I like, possibly keeping them on air longer. This could be a good thing.

  19. MoveOn.org's Boycott by limekiller4 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some of you may have heard that CBS refused to air the winning MoveOn.org's " Bush in 30 Seconds " ad. Just prior to the Superbowl, MoveOn.org asked their subscribers/readers to boycott CBS by switching from CBS during the commercials to CNN, who were airing their 30-second spot.

    Presumably, Tivo knows precisely how many people actually went through with it.

    --
    My .02,
    Limekiller
    1. Re:MoveOn.org's Boycott by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      personally, i'm very glad they didn't play the moveon ad. god knows, i wouldn't want my kids exposed to a controversial issue such as the so-called 'budget deficit' among the hours of violence, boobs and commercials for beer and hard-on pills.

      bravo, CBS, for keeping our children safe.

  20. Re:ANI makes anonymization worthless by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    whats to gain by going lower then Zip code? nothing.

    What TiVo provides in an acurate count of what people watch, each within a small segment of an advertised area.

    Any finer data is worthless.

    TiVo:"hey this address watches Bud Commercials, call budwieser and let them know! this way budwieser can try to sell this ONE houshold beer. Of course since it is so individual, it will cost $5000 a six pack."

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  21. To put it into some perspective by johnlcallaway · · Score: 5, Funny

    When it is all said and done, all this did was prove once again why we should limit nudity, most people look much better with their clothes on, include Janet. Seeing her boob was quite a letdown, I'm not surprised that the SuperBowl ratings sagged a bit.

    Ms. Jackson needs some support, and I don't mean from her family. One would think that they could implant some convictions to prevent this sort of droopy moral character in the future. We need more pert personalities to provide better role models for our country.

    --
    I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
  22. Re:There haven't been more people staring at a boo by Mindwarp · · Score: 4, Funny

    Since Bush's State of the Union address.

    Yeah, but people were using fast-forward with that one, not rewind!

    --
    The gift of death metal does not smile on the good looking.
  23. Worried? No by Krieger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have to say in general that I don't trust corporations, however I don't feel the need to bolt on my tin foil hat after this revelation.

    I do think that disclosed practices (such as anonymously monitoring for viewing habits) isn't necessarily a bad thing. I'm certain that Tivo has found and created new features based on viewing the tracking information.

    I also think that Tivo stands a decent chance of displacing Nielsen's as a premier rating service. And as long as it is done anonymously, it is a god send. As I think that Tivo would more accurately reflect "real" viewing habits. (And of course possibly give it a geek edge, so that our favorite programing gets better ratings).

    The second Tivo transitions over to a non-anonmous tracking service, is probably the day that their company headquarters will burn down. Outraged geeks will storm the place.

    I think Tivo is continuing to walk on the correct side of a very tenuous debate over usability, tracking, and privacy invasion.

    The comparison to Microsoft has to be made... If this were Microsoft I wouldn't trust them to track it, as they have a history of repeated violations of their own policies, written and stated. Whereas Tivo does not have that same history, that I am aware of.

  24. Re:Link to video please by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Funny

    Sorry, the broadcast specifically said we would need the express written permission of the NFL to redistribute any part of it...

  25. Unplug the phone by andy@petdance.com · · Score: 3, Informative
    You could unplug the TiVo from the phone.

    Sure, I rewound the Janet thing a dozen times while my wife and I discussed if that thing was a pasty or tassel or what, but TiVo didn't include me in the 20,000 because our TiVo isn't hooked up to the phone.

  26. Re:We're not spying on you! by ePhil_One · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This bit of news comes out about every six months. Tivo tracks viewing habits, if you read up on Tivo, its not a big secret. It collects and anonomizes the info, then aggregates it to sell to help offest the cost of the service.

    Why don't I care?

    1) I want TV exec's to know what I watch, so they keep it on the air.
    2) I want Ad exec's to know what I want to buy, and how to make a commercial that captures my interest; I have free will and don't buy things just because Jamie Lee Curtis tells me too.
    3) I want Tivo to stay and business, and better yet find a way to make enough to waive my monthly fee, without resorting to being asses about me hacking my Tivo to add a bigger drive, etc.

    If it bothers you, grab a set of rabbit ears and disconnect from the grid. If you are upset that there isn't a full screen pop-up every time you push a button that the click has been recorded and may be sent to Tivo during the next phone connection, I don't want to hear it. If you own a Tivo and are just figuring this out, then I gotta feel you really aren't all that concerned about this anyway, or you would have bothered to check why your Tivo wants to call out every night.

    Personally, I'd be more concerned about why the cable companies are working hard at getting their boxes installed in your house connected to their two-way network full time. How do you know there isn't a camera inside there?

    --
    You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
  27. Marketing info sometimes helps *you*. by jemenake · · Score: 5, Funny
    They know how many times the boob was viewed...
    Good. Now that they have the viewing popularity, in all likelihood, we'll get to see *both* boobs next year.

    Of course, next year, her nipples will have little stickers that say "Drink Pepsi!" on them... but hey, life's full of compromises.
  28. Re:We're not spying on you! by ball-lightning · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'd defintely have to agree with you. Owning a Tivo myself, I also make use of the "thumb" buttons to rate each show I watch, on the [doubtful] chance that it'll effect something somewhere. When you think about it, if you aren't a Nelson family, then you really almost have no voice on what is on television. This way, at least the stations know what you like/dislike. Also, it isn't like they didn't say they didn't track anybody, just that they won't personally identify you.

  29. When the Nazi argument comes out... by HardCase · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Pretty dang close to the argument-losing Nazi comparison. And casting Tivo's opt-out-able anonymous usage surveys to the holocaust either extraordinarily overstates the Tivo issue or tragically minimalizes the holocaust - you pick. As an AC pointed out, it's comparisons like this that makes people shake their heads and decide that people like you are just paranoid - maybe you are and maybe you aren't, but I don't think that Martin Niemoller would have intended for your misquote of his testimony to the US Congress to be so trivalized.


    Incidentally, the (correct) quote, from the Congressional Record, is:


    When Hitler attacked the Jews I was not a Jew, therefore I was not concerned. And when Hitler attacked the Catholics, I was not a Catholic, and therefore, I was not concerned. And when Hitler attacked the unions and the industrialists, I was not a member of the unions and I was not concerned. Then Hitler attacked me and the Protestant church -- and there was nobody left to be concerned.


    -h-

  30. Okay, so what did all this tracking discover ...? by ReidMaynard · · Score: 4, Funny

    American men who watch football like women's breasts.

    Especially when we've^M^M^M^M they've been drinking.

    --
    -- www.globaltics.net

    Political discussion for a new world

  31. Prudish hysteria by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 3, Insightful
    From the Simpsons:

    "[Michaelangelo's David] shows part of the human body which, practical though they may be, are EVIL!"

    Sorry for sounding a bit offtopic, but the people that are upset about this to get a life. In a country where it's okay to fry mentally ill people to death, let any eejit carry a gun, consume a huge proportion of the world's resources and invade a country for dubious reasons, exposing a bit of human flesh is greeted with the sort of outrage that you'd think would be reserved for the end of the world.
    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
    1. Re:Prudish hysteria by Afrosheen · · Score: 4, Funny

      What's the big deal with a boob? Every kid sees tits from the second they are born (they depend on them basically). Seeing a boob on tv may just have made the kids hungrier, since it was dinnertime for alot of people.

      When I saw it today I went and made a glass of chocolate milk for some strange reason.

    2. Re:Prudish hysteria by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fell like I'm getting trolled here, but I have to...
      You do realize that clothes are a man-made invention as well? Fact is, being clothed is unnatural, look at every other mammal out there, how many of them wear clothes (not counting the abused cats and dogs that are dressed up by thier owners)?
      We have adapted to colder climates by wearing clothes, but somewhere along the way, someone got the bright idea that men shouldn't let thier penis show, and that women shouldn't let either thier vagina or mammaries show. What's the friggin' point? People aren't going to become raving lunatics because they see other people naked, if anything suppressing those sexual urges, the way we do in our society, is going to lead to deviant behavior (catholic priests, anyone?). The worst that is going to happen is that some guys are going to get hard-ons, and some women are going to start to lubricate, and even that will not occur as often, when everyone becomes used to the idea of seeing other naked people.
      The only reason people are so obsessed with being clothed is that they are afraid of being judged. Guys are worried that they are too small, and women are worried that they are too fat. So, they hide, and force everyone else to hide, lest they have thier inadaquicies infered by being covered. Add to that the religious idiots who want to portray sex as evil, and you get what we had Monday, people over-reacting to Janet Jackson showing off her breast.
      Lastly, assuming that your reference to God is from the Christian mythology, have you even read Genesis? Adam and Eve didn't start out clothed, or even care about it!

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    3. Re:Prudish hysteria by yngwie0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't forget that the bible is a man made invention....

  32. "accounts of the game" prohibited? by donutz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The entire "sports copyright notice" required by the league is unneeded.... current copyright law doesn't even require "Copyright 2004" to be displayed. Everything gets full copyright protection the moment it is created by default, no action is needed.

    This part I have no problem with. What I have a problem with is the fact that they not only claim copyright to the telecast, but that even "accounts of the game" are prohibited.

    I guess if I watched the game on TV, they could hold me liable for copyright infringement (my account is a derived work of their telecast?).

    But what if I'm at the game? Can I go home and give an account of the game without getting attacked by legions of rabid lawyers?

  33. No, boring, insulting pandering by qtp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The vast majority of the criticism has not been of the "Think of the children" hysterical condemnation school, but more a sense of outrage that this what is considered entertaining (bad dancing, crappy music, insincere patriotic posturing, crotch grabbing, fake astonishment, and showing a tit). The sheer lack of spontenaity, the absolute absense of anything remotely resembling talent, the dearth of inspired performance plus the Janet Jackson tit exposure left many feeling rather insulted, that the show was conceived by either an inexpirienced and purile mind or by a has been who is desperate to regain the spotlight.

    Think back to the rather sterile, emotionless and absolutely unerotic kisses exchanged betwteen Madonna and Britney/Christina. Same crap, nothing spontaneous, nothing titilating, nothing exciting in the least. Simply juvenalia at its absolute, unentertaining worst.

    As to why this devolution into the mindnumbingly boring realm of poor imitations of a seventh grade boy's psyche, perhaps it is evidence that the entertainment industry knows they are obsolete, they are desperate to retain the spotlight, and uncertain of when the public will realize that this dinosaur has no more new tricks to perform, and their hired talent no longer has anything with which to keep our attention. If they can't have our devotion, it seems they'll settle for dissatisfied scorn.

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    Read, L
  34. Hack Your TiVo! by lophophore · · Score: 3, Informative
    This is yet another good reason to hack your TiVo.

    Once properly hacked you can telnet to your TiVo and purge the keystroke logs! (in /var/log, where else!?) Not to mention the other nifty capabilities, like web-based control and Video Extraction...

    --
    there are 3 kinds of people:
    * those who can count
    * those who can't
  35. outraged by Karma+Sucks · · Score: 4, Funny

    Personally I'm outraged Janet had a piece of metal covering her nipple. That's complete bullshit.

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    (Please browse at -1 to read this comment.)
  36. Some Thoughts by TSage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's interesting to see how many highly moderated posts are behind Tivo 100% as long as it remains anonymous. Personally, I'm OK with a company doing this as long as they're completely upfront about it (which Tivo is), although I'd be a little wary (again, that's just me).

    However, this honestly seems to be one of those moments where Slashdot, as a community or group, becomes somewhat hypocritical. Note: individual posters agreeing with Tivo are not necessarily being hypocritical and this isn't me trying to lecture anyone who does support that company. Please allow me to explain why I think this.

    Look at other cases where companies, or even governments, can or do collect anonymous information (or information that is then only handled in an aggregate way) and Slashdot usually cries out against them with the usual tinfoil hat jokes.

    RFID tags is one such example. These are inherently benign and don't have much connection with an individual. Say you have a coat with an embedded with a chip which when read says, "CoatCo Coat, black, large" to the reading device. What if a reading device read that each time you walked into a store and that store then showed companies in an effort to get more direct marketing? It is essentially the same thing, as long as anonymity is kept.

    "Ah ha!" some might say. "But hooking it up to video-cameras and receipts with my credit card, they can identify me readily." This is all quite true, but you could say the same with Tivo; they could correlate your credit card number, address and telephone number if they wanted to. Obviously, many people would not agree to such an invasion of privacy and Tivo probably would not succeed in doing so, nor am I trying to suggest that Tivo is just waiting for the right moment.

    Now, RFID tags are not exactly the same as Tivo watching television habits. One big one is that you choose to watch Tivo, but you may not necessarily be knowingly choosing to have a RFID tag in your merchandise. But I think the comparison is still valid. Too, I find Tivo recording my information somewhat more disturbing than someplace finding out I prefer some type of jacket; in the store I'm in a public place and therefore have a lower expectation of privacy (people can see and recognize my jacket with their eyes), while at home it's somewhat unnerving.

    Just to reiterate, Tivo is not "wrong" or "right" in this case. This is a personal issue between customers and a company. I just wanted to point out that perhaps Slashdot as a whole is giving Tivo a little bit of an easy ride. Then again, perhaps they've earned it for seeming (I don't own one) to respond so well to their customers.

    TSage