UCSD Lecturer Releases Geotagging Application For "Dangerous Guns and Owners"
NF6X writes "UCSD Lecturer Brett Stallbaum has released an Android app called Gun Geo Marker to allow people to 'Geolocate Dangerous Guns and Owners.' The app description states:
'The Gun Geo Marker operates very simply, letting parents and community members mark, or geolocate, sites associated with potentially unsafe guns and gun owners. These locations are typically the homes or businesses of suspected unsafe gun owners, but might also be public lands or other locations where guns are not handled safely, or situations where proper rights to own or use any particular type of firearm may not exist.' I question how the motivation behind developing this app differs from, say, developing an app to allow others to publicly geotag homes of people believed to belong to a particular religion or political party."
This article will have mature and reasonable discussion, let me tell you.
Hail Eris, full of mischief...
E pluribus sanguinem
aren't they?
Smivs on the intertubes!
The most dangerous people in society with guns are the police and the military. The police kill far more civilians with guns than any other single group, other than the military.
So, geotag the bases and locations of known members of the biggest gangs around! The occupation is rough, let's make it rougher for them.
HELP MY ACCOUNT HAS BEEN HACKED BY AN ILLIBERAL ART STUDENT SET TO DESTROY THE INTERWEBZ!
This will obviously be 100% used for legitimate purposes.
Wouldn't users who tag someone as a dangerous gun owner run up against potential libel laws?
Start complaining... now.
Americans and their guns
I question how the motivation behind developing this app differs from, say, developing an app to allow others to publicly geotag homes of people believed to belong to a particular religion or political party.
It differs because a list of people belonging to a religion or political party doesn't help you if you need to find a gun in a hurry.
But make sure not to do this for criminals, right?
"As a crowd sourced information tool, the information about dangerous gun sites comes from users." In other words, if I have a grudge against my neighbor, or just want to mess with somebody, can I just post that they are "dangerous" and their home/location appears in the app??
"I question how the motivation behind developing this app differs from, say, developing an app to allow others to publicly geotag homes of people believed to belong to a particular religion or political party."
Should be comparing the geopositioning of dangerous guns and owners to sex offenders.
This has litigation written all over it, lible, invasion of privacy, etc. He won't begin to be able to afford the swarm of lawsuits if people start actually using the app.
How about police stations? Will they be tagged?
It's more than worth the effort to read through the reviews on Google Play for this thing. Not only is it telling that the community rating is so low it induces tears of sympathy, the reviews are funny as all hell! Nicely done.
A long time ago, some people at UT Austin put signs in front of dorms listing "potential rapists" that had the names of all male residents. Indiscriminate and unsubstantiated accusations do not serve a useful purpose.
Get ready, then, because those are coming too. If it's technically feasible in software, it will exist eventually, regardless of whether it's a good idea.
Criminals rejoice! No longer do you have to randomly break in to houses to see what there is to steal. There's now an app to tell you exactly which houses to rob.
I predict this guy will be sued out of existence shortly.
By claiming the app marks "dangerous" gun owners, he's making claims that would probably be libellous in almost all cases (but IANAL).
Not to mention the first person to get burgled, then discover their house is marked in his app will probably sue, also. And also not to mention the victims/families if the guns stolen in such a case are used in a crime.
All guns are dangerous...
aren't they?
that's point.
First Amendment > Second Amendment.
Welcome to another fun facet of living in a fully networked world (see: Snowden, Apple/Google user stalking, etc, etc, ad nauseum)
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
And I suppose this UCSD Lecturer would also support an app "to allow people to 'Geolocate Dangerous Liberal Socialists'" that threaten the Constitution?
I didn't think so.
Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
Is it open source? If it is, someone fork it and turn it into its exact opposite, listing those who don't have them, and see how people react to that.
OK, Slashdotters, who wants to help me make a geotagging app that crowdsources locations of people and businesses who are NOT gun owners so that legitimate users can use this as positive reinforcement of the anti-gun ideal?
It will allow users to personally thank those non-gun owners (and businesses) for their thoughtfulness toward others and their pacifist approach toward dealing with an increasingly dangerous and violent world.
I think Brett Stallbaum should be the first address in the database.
I question how the motivation behind developing this app differs from, say, developing an app to allow others to publicly geotag homes of people believed to belong to a particular religion or political party
Exactly, they could be just as likely to threaten lives and kill people.
Can I also geotag people with packs of dogs? (Sorry - I think every dog individually might be lovable, but I don't trust them in groups.)
On the think of the children line, how about swimming pools, trampolines, or alcoholic parents?
But in the end someone is getting attention for being controversial. So meh to all my strawmans.
Brett Stallbaum must be a closeted meta-prepper.
POST THE APK! my phone is registered 30 mins too far north :)
It seems to me this will promote more school/movie theater style shootings in no gun zones by dynamically showing a potential serial killer "no gun zones" on the fly.
Common Sense (+1)
Great. Perhaps there should just be an app for geotagging idiots. After a few years there would be a tag on everyone. Because everyone is thought to be an idiot by someone.
Proverbs 21:19
Oakland public transport seems dodgy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=IAHjhtYZpX0
28.79295N 81.32965W
Is a known dangerous spot for gun crime:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Trayvon_Martin
I think anywhere there is a black man and a racist near each other, is likely to be a gun crime area, but how you can track moving targets like that I don't know.
Disclosure: I dont own a gun.
The app seems like its going to anger quite a few people who hold the second amendment dear. I can see instances in which the app is used by police to target dissenters before an organized protest on the guise they plan to start a riot. Or perhaps the map is used by criminals to identify homes without firearms. marking an entire neighborhood is bound to lower property value. However in many cases the recourse for average citizens to do anything about a mentally unstable neighbor that owns a gun or guns is pretty limited. The viet-nam vet who pipes michael savage throughout the porch and parades around the back yard in fatigues with an assault rifle literally was my neighbor for 4 years in suburban ohio. i cringed every time i saw a girl scout or jehovas witness approach the door. The neighborhood association did nothing and the local police, despite the fact the man had been banned from a local public festival and a wal-mart, simply acknowledged him to be an interesting character.
The site asks if I know anyone who does not use a gun lock, and considering as i live in a state that leads the nation in child firearm fatalities im inclined to use the app to report people who dont use them.
Good people go to bed earlier.
I expect that there will be one huge blob .. covering the whole of Texas
nt
I suspect there will be a few more "undesirable persons/situations" apps in the near future if this one catches on. An app for singling out the LGBT community, one for locating Muslims, I'm sure we'll get one for locating people with STDs. There's a reason why this kind of "spy on your neighbor" behavior has been looked down upon from the beginnings of civilization, it gets out of control real quick.
It must make him feel good to run his own personal little blacklist. And the data is "crowdsourced" - totally in keeping with the times: "see something, say something", otherwise known as minding your neighbor's business. How much do you have to piss someone off, to get added?
Of course, he will scrupulously check all additions for correctness, keep the data up-to-date when people move, and offer recourse to people who are added in error. And I have a bridge I want to sell you.
From California, what a surprise...
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
Hadn't you heard? After a persistent astroturfing campaign, more Americans think Edward Snowden is a traitor than otherwise. They're obviously fine with a surveillance state, so this app is perfectly acceptable.
Right?
I'd like to see the results of a survey that correlates opinions of Snowden with opinions about this database. Wanna bet there's a substantial overlap of people who can simultaneously believe Snowden is a traitor while believing this database and app are wrong? While being blissfully unaware of the contradiction.
Such is the power of the modern propaganda machine.
The entire USA, but it seems to want more specific coordinates.
But seriously, a name-and-shame app for people who are afraid of firearms seems a bit futile in the USA. It would be like a Jew in early 20th century Germany making an app to tag anti-Semitic individuals, institutions, and businesses....
will never be abused.
Why is it that most of the people that I encounter seem to have been shat from the Sphincter of Mediocrity?
Add police response times as mouse-hover balloons.
This sounds like a tool to harrass people participating in constitutionally protected activities. Typical liberal tactic: embarrass people who are doing nothing wrong.
Geotagging law-abiding lindividuals in anything other than an opt-in/easy-opt-out arrangement should be considered a straight-up invasion of privacy. We do have privacy laws, and privacy standards in legal precedents and this would seem to already run afoul of them. If not, then some speedy legislation to clarify that it is should be enacted.
Even for people with criminal records though, there needs to be limits on geo-tagging. With the world's highest percentage of incarcerated people. the U.S. needs to be able to allow former criminals to reintegrate productively in society. This must be handled case-by-case of course, but former criminals have rights as well.
Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
Also, we have more than two political parties. Actual democracy.
So...
..."These locations are typically the homes or businesses of suspected unsafe gun owners"
Suspected?
I'm all for crowdsourcing; it's fine for things like OpenStreetMap, for example.
Here, though, it's clearly open to dangerous abuse.
If you just look at the example on the linked site, "new neighbour leave guns unsecured around kids", well, the bad guys will be dropping round to collect those asap, right? How about if someone labels me as such, for a "joke" or worse, and then the same bad guys come round to my place when my wife is there alone?
And beat the crap out of her since she cannot produce the guns, because there are none?
If you have reasonable suspicion that someone is behaving badly with guns, your duty is to call the cops, not update some damn stupid app.
I have an app that tells me what businesses are not gun-friendly and won't let me carry my legal firearm into them, so I either don't visit those businesses if there are other options, or make sure I leave my gun in my car and not have to walk back when I get to the door and see the sign. (Yes .. I carry all the time. Those around me don't know it. And in the last 15 years, I have shot no one. Get over your irrational fears, my ex-boss is just as deadly as I am and she doesn't need to carry a gun.)
But at least there is a measurable standard for the marking, a sign on the door that says 'no firearms allowed'. What measurable standard is the app going to use?? Someone's opinion? It's almost useless if there isn't a measurable standard.
Kind of like hotel and restaurant reviews on the internet.
I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
This is completely different from a map that marks members of a political party. For one thing guns get stolen... and then used in crimes once stolen (sometimes).. This is actually incredibly irresponsible of the creators. You might as well just hand the potential thieves a map of where to get guns.. Its ironic that those who keep pushing for gun control laws are the first to put things like this in place that makes those same laws less effective..
Am I lying when I tell you that im telling the truth? Or am I telling the truth when I say that Im lying?
Now the criminals know where to find the local neighborhood ar15. Smart.....real smart....we can hope the owners aren't afraid to use the weapons to find off said criminals...
This should answer your question.
The only school shootouts we've seen here, where inspired by US shootouts.
"And when our gun laws don't work, it's because of the US." You're a fucking riot.
On the one hand, I think gun owners would be justified in fearing real-world repercussions from being listed in this database. (Some might see it as a benefit, deterring burglary etc.) In fact, it's not only gun owners who ought to worry, since as others have pointed out, the data in the app can be based on imagination or lies.
On the other hand, it's hard to see how anyone could *stop* people writing apps like this and uploading data to them.
This is a great example of why I think privacy is a right. Maybe that was the whole point.
In case it's not obvious from the tone and content of my post, I Am Not a Lawyer.
[Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
I answer that it is unlikely that I would be killed maimed in the vacinity of a poorly managed religion or political party.
“Let me issue and control a nation’s money and I care not who writes the laws.” Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812), founder of the House of Rothschild.
If you have a central bank, you don't have democracy. You have elected officials who govern the small folk, and a cabal of central bankers who make the real decisions.
Yes, that goes for America as well.
Because I am highly dangerous to anyone trying to geotag me, and I have a LOT of guns, high power guns ....SCARY military looking guns, some are even black!!!! #OHTHEHORROR
I have guns that can shoot through an engine block. #OMGTERRORIST
And I have the unhealthy idea that my privacy is important and therefore hate anyone that tries to violate it by being a complete scumbag, like this professor.
Anyone have an app that Geotags dangerous Professors that are insane like this one?
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
If you own a gun you should be tagged and tracked period!
...dangerous as all you anti-gunners claim, then there wouldn't be any more anti-gunners.
aren't they?
You beat me to it. I guess people are smart enough to write ZOMG think of the children apps but aren't smart enough to remove redundant adjectives.
On another note, something more insidious from either this app or this article's title is the following: Dangerous Guns and Owners. What is "dangerous" being applied to here? Is just describing guns as dangerous (which is idiotically redundant) or does it stand for "dangerous guns and dangerous owners"?
More importantly, what about this:
These locations are typically the homes or businesses of suspected unsafe gun owners,
How do you determine if a home or business contains an unsafe gun (or unsafe gun owner, whatever the fuck that means)? How do they become suspect? What warrants people to be tracked over a mere suspicion? Funny how the right to privacy is shunned equally by the left and the right (and every punk in between) wherever it turns to be ideologically convenient.
I for one don't care if someone were to track me and label me unsafe.
Bolt action rifle with good enough caliber to take anything in the North American continent? Check, locked and with the bolt disassembled.
Revolver? Check, with a trigger combination lock.
Ammo? Check, plenty of it, locked and secured.
But hey, don't let that stop you (the generic you) from suspecting me of being dangerous or unsafe or whatever adjective that makes you feel safe and progressive and in charge of doing something positive for society or some shit like that. Once I add a 12ga scatter gun and a 1911 to my collection, that Android app is going to go beep-pause-beep-pause-beep-beep-beep-beeeeeeeeeeeeeeep like Ripley's tracking device back on LV-426.
So - you DO have school shootings. All the propaganda that tells us that Europe is gun-free and safe is bullshit at the end of the day then. Rationalize it how you will, spin like crazy, you do hae school shootings.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_shooting#Europe
I will note that the death tolls are lower than the US - is that due to ineptitude on the part of the shooters, or better police response, or some other element at play?
http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/Lott-guns-Connecticut-shooting/2012/12/15/id/467903
Newsmax: The media typically spins these mass shootings as an American phenomenon. They suggest we ought to be more like Europe, with strong gun control, because then we would not have these problems. Is that true?
Dr. Lott: No. Europe has a lot of multiple victim shootings. If you look at a per capita rate, the rate of multiple-victim public shootings in Europe and the United States over the last 10 years have been fairly similar to each other. A couple of years ago you had a couple of big shootings in Finland. About two-and-a-half years ago you had a big shooting in the U.K., 12 people were killed.
You had Norway last year [where 77 died]. Two years ago, you had the shooting in Austria at a Sikh Temple. There have been several multiple-victim public shootings in France over the last couple of years. Over the last decade, you’ve had a couple of big school shootings in Germany. Germany in terms of modern incidents has two of the four worst public-school shootings, and they have very strict gun-control laws. The one common feature of all of those shootings in Europe is that they all take place in gun-free zones, in places where guns are supposed to be banned.
Newsmax: So can you give us a correlation between crime rates in jurisdictions that try to ban concealed guns and the crime rate in those that do not?
If you look over past data, before everyone that was adopting [concealed carry laws], you find that for each additional state that adopted a right-to-carry law . . . you’d see about a 1.5 percent drop in murder rates, and about 2 percent drop in rape and robbery . . . Just because states are right-to-carry doesn’t mean they’ve issued the same number of fees. You have big differences in states’ training requirements.
Newsmax: Would it be a good idea to have teachers who have concealed carry permits in the schools, to better protect kids?
I’m all for that. I’ve been a teacher most of my life. I’ve been an academic. I have kids in college still, and kids below that. It’s not something that I take lightly. But it’s hard to see what the argument would be against it.
People may not realize this, but we allowed permit-concealed handguns in schools prior to the ironically named Safe School Zone Act. And no one that I know has been able to point to a single bad thing that occurred, not one.
We changed the law, and we started having these public-school shootings. So I don’t think they got the intended result that they were hoping for with that type of ban. Right now, [some jurisdictions] allow you to carry concealed-permit guns in the schools. There are not a lot of them. But there are no problems that have occurred with any of those states, either.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
I see a slander suit in his future. Someone puts me on a list of "dangerous guns or owners" and I'll sue. Neither my gun nor I are any more dangerous than any other object or person.
In fact, you are infinitely more likely to be run over by a dangerous car or driver while you geotag my residence.
A will be sued for the data about who made the geotag and he will be sued as a co-conspiritor to spread slander. This app has a very short life. All simply due to the wording chosen to describe the functionality.
Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
This sounds like a perfect opportunity for people to get sued for false report.
In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
Ehm, Europe != EMU.
The app lists 13 "Marking Categories" that the app user can select from, of those, depending on the jurisdiction, as many as 5 are items which should be reported directly to law enforcement as they are not "issues of concern" but "violations of law", these include;
“Possible unlocked/loaded/unsafe storage”
“Possible insufficient training”
“Documented/frequent unlawful discharge”
“Possible illegal weapons on premises”
“Possible prohibited persons”
So using the app to tag these locations rather than properly report them will decrease local safety not increase it. Of course how the tagger is supposed to know of some of the "possibles" without actually knowing one way or the other is another question entirely. Either you have seen guns left around the house unlocked/loaded or you haven't, or you are tagging based on not having direct information in which case you are very likely opening yourself up to a libel suit.
-jon
The police would be the people most interested in using such a database.
It will mean that if police ever have a reason to visit a tagged property they will be far more likely to use overwhelming force at the slightest provocation.
Since the gun owner will not know he or she is tagged, they will not even know they should tone it down.
This app is going to get someone hurt.
And sometimes; a mind is a terrible thing, too loose.
No brain, no pain.
Right now you have a board with a nail in it. But you won't stop there. Soon you will make bigger boards with bigger nails until you make a board with a nail in it so big it will destroy you all!
OK, Slashdotters, who wants to help me make a geotagging app that crowdsources locations of people and businesses who are NOT gun owners so that legitimate users can use this as positive reinforcement of the anti-gun ideal?
It will allow users to personally thank those non-gun owners (and businesses) for their thoughtfulness toward others and their pacifist approach toward dealing with an increasingly dangerous and violent world.
May I propose a name for your app? How does iHomeInvasionster sound? I think it has a ring to it.
I think it really should have social features, so that people could leave ratings and feedback:
"Home was exactly as described: pacifistic and unarmed occupants offered zero resistance, even to brutal violence! A++++, would invade again!"
There's one obvious difference: This kind of paranoia and bigotry is popular among left-leaning types, so it's all good.
Liberty in your lifetime
I think the bigger danger is that hoplophobes really have no idea what is safe and what is not. A few days ago a friend came over while I had my Barrett stripped down on the kitchen table for cleaning. For people who aren't knowledgeable about guns, it's over 4 feet long and has a picatinny rail, as well as a muzzle brake the size of my fist. This gives it a "scary killing machine" look, from a Feinsteinian perspective.
So I'm running swabs through the barrel while talking, and at one point look directly down the barrel to see how dry it is. My buddy freaks and yells: "You should NEVER look down the barrel of a gun! You'll get killed!" Back the horses up there, skipper. That thing lying over there on the kitchen table is called a "bolt". The other big chunk of metal is the trigger assembly. Chances of a discharge right now are quite slim, especially since I'm see daylight though the barrel.
But of course his story will be about how reckless people are with guns. I think the rule should be that you don't get to have an opinion about guns unless you know how they work. It's sad that I have to post this as AC just because I don't want people to know I have guns. And forget registration. Idiots like this professor are exactly the reason us "gun nuts" vehemently oppose any ideas you in the general public come up with, no matter how reasonable.
"Similarly, you should not be concerned merely because your neighbors are a member of any national gun advocacy organization. The actual threat â" just to cite the best known org â" that the National Rifle Association (NRA) and its kin present to you and your children is political."
Imbecile, that is all.
just geotag liberal civil rights infringers with this app,
" I question how the motivation behind developing this app differs from, say, developing an app to allow others to publicly geotag homes of people believed to belong to a particular religion or political party."
Public danger of a deadly nature, perhaps? I fail to see where being republican/democrat or hindu/sikh/muslim/jew is a direct threat to anyone else. A dangerous gun owner very well may be. One thing gun fanatics fail to account for is that their fetish is for objects that are intended fundamentally to kill vertebrate organisms.
Funny thing is.... your gun death rates just are not that impressive compared to ours though. Oh yes, what is it 1/2 or 1/3rd? Somewhere around there? 2 in 100 000 to like 6 in 100 000? You do realize that .000002 vs .000006....doesn't seem so big anymore.
Gun violence here, and especially school shootings, is way overblown and sensationalized. Realize that we have 100,000 schools, and that children in school are, by my own back of the envelope calculation from the numbers I looked up, much safer in school in terms of gun deaths than the entire rest of the population.
But hey.... lets compare those directly and individually to smaller countries with working social welfare that don't have a massive gang problem caused by the combination of black markets, poverty, and selective enforcement that has decimated many lower income neighborhoods....total apples to apples.
"I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
A space cowboy once told me "you got the right same as anyone to... live and try to kill people." Words to live by.
I don't own a gun - and I still think this is not wise.
If this app catches fire (which I doubt it will), the easiest solution is to download it, and tag every location you visit during the day.
If enough businesses find themselves tagged as dangerous locations, I am certain the app will get pulled.
We all know that the motivation is, actually, to tag the homes of people espousing a particular political ideology - conservative / libertarian types who exercise their right to own a gun. That way we can ostracize them, and threaten them until they leave our "safe" neighborhoods.
But you better not geotag the areas where *actual* gun crime happens constantly - the inner city! Those areas are heavily populated by minorities, and any attempt to point out that the areas where they live are rampant with drug-related (and other) gun crimes is racism.
Also, enjoy your law of unintended consequences: if I'm a criminal, I'm going to grab this, and target the homes & neighborhoods where there aren't any guns - the worst that happens is I get arrested for burglary in those neighborhoods... don't have to worry about being shot!
...be sure to tag Brett Stallbaum's home and office as sites with an unsafe gun owner!
1,043 shooting victims in 2013 already... and it's supposed to be a "gun free" zone
Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
In order for this app to get anywhere, or have any usefullness, it will need a lot of people adding people and places to the list. I just don't see a lot of people motivated enough to bother. Anti-gun (this isn't necessarily an anti-gun thing..) people have a tiny % of the passion over the issue that gun rights people do.
After Sandy Hook, I remember some states were attempting to create a public listing of gun owners showing who they are and where they live. Some former burglars pointed out that this list could be used to help them target houses that do not own guns. In an ironic twist, this listing would have incentivized people who don't own guns to purchase one and make sure the listing shows that they own it, for their own safety.
The opposite of police is not "civilian". The actual definition of the term civilian is "any person who is not a member of the armed forces." Thus police are civilians also, as they are not military. Don't fall into helping with militarization of the police, it is already problem enough. Some may be veterans, but being longer in the service, they too are civilians.
Want to steal firearms, for use in your criminal endeavours? - here's a handy app to show you where to find them...
Except for that guy who shot up those kids at a summer camp a few years back, and was only sorry it wasn't worse, or that guy with the moustache who put millions into death camps. Europeans have their own, unique brand of mass murderers, don't get too satisfied with yourself.
This has nothing to do with recent history. Peasants have had no rights pretty much forever in Europe. That is why people have fled to the other side of the pond. They wanted to get away from being owned by a King or a local robber baron.
Being systematically disarmed is just part of that.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
Can the mods please bury this. It's full of unapproved opinion and inconvenient facts.
"Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
--- Jerry Garcia
because that's the address from which orders for drones to be used to
kill people, without judicial review.
Any system of prior restraint, pre-crime intervention is just going to cue up the "In Soviet Russia..." comments. As it should.
Have gnu, will travel.
I never get why people want to concealed carry instead of open carry. If you conceal your weapon a criminal might think you're unarmed and mug you. If you open carry they'll think twice about it (they still might do it. Studies have shown criminals don't think about bad outcomes only getting what they want).
And there are meaningful purposes beside "harassing gun owners." There are some places, especially in the west like Colorado and Utah, where people go shoot in remote public places. Problem is, there might be hikers or ATVers or bikers in the area. My father-in-law has a house in rural Colorado. All the homes around him are on 30+ acre plots. Hunters (illegally) come on his property to hunt and others in the area shoot on their property. An app like this can tell people that the area they go to sometimes has shooters on it. You may not care, but I know that if I were hiking I'd like to know if someone was going to start up a shooting range near my route. Not that they are trying to hit people; however, there is little more embarrassing for a shooter than pulling the trigger and the gun goes off just a half second later than you thought. You flinch and the bullet hits the edge of the paper or the target hanger. You then remember sometimes you miss. Badly.
I agree with you for the most part, though. I just can see a little valid reason for it. But the danger is using the app just to harass people. I'm a cop. Off duty I will either carry concealed or open. I can see someone tagging me as "unsafe" because I have one. I can't imagine it would cause me professional harm, but you never know.
Or maybe the head isn't screwed on all the way... :-)
> download app
> thugs, criminals stay away from your house
10/10
Definitely need an app that locates all abortion providers, then some facial recognition software that IDs everyone going in to have an abortion, then pushes that out to their social network....
Way back when, /. talked about schools that had something where students could anonymously turn in other students (has a gun/drugs/bully/etc). Result was students turning in anyone they had a grudge against.
ROFLMAO - I read your post as sarcasm, but obviously the mods took your request seriously. "Unapproved opinion and inconvenient facts". That's doublegood newspeak!
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
The man with a gun in a world of rock-throwers is King.
I noticed on their Facebook page that UCSD provided the resources: "Company Overview The walkingtools laboratory is a small Android shop at UCSD" https://www.facebook.com/GunGeoMarker/info I bet they have deeper pockets than this guy.
Eventually, a criminal will use the information provided by the app to profile a victim, or an innocent party will get slandered by the app. I hope the good professor is ready to lawyer up.
I don't care what the EULA says or the disclaimers - you can't make a contract to break the law or likewise hide behind a EULA to innoculate yourself against recklessly produced products.
Great idea, so next we need to list all adult males, as they potentially could be a pedophile. Anyone that purchases alcohol, as they might be a drunk that is going to get in their car.. Or a woman that buys Midol, well, just because..
What idiots. What an invasion of privacy.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Where the largest minority rules
I don't subscribe, but a lot of scholars of our laws draw parallels of the Bill of Rights and the Ten Commandments, and they seem to think that the order denotes hierarchy, the first five having mystical powers, et cetera.
Look it up.
...speaking "dangerously" next? If I make a remark that is misunderstood as racist or bigoted by someone who only catches half the conversation, should I get tagged for advocating hate speech?
...adhering to a "dangerous" religion next? If I'm a Muslim, does that mean I should get tagged because some ignorant alarmist sees me praying and assumes it must mean I'm about to blow something up?
...joining "dangerous" groups next? If I join a political group that promotes the disassembling of much of the military structure, should I be tagged because we're endangering national defense?
...engaging in "dangerous" actions next? If I refuse to allow my house to be searched without a warrant, should I be tagged because it's obvious that I must be hiding something dangerous?
Apps like this are designed to publicly shame people for using their rights. If someone is abusing their right, whether that be yelling "FIRE!" in a theater or using a gun in a manner that is clearly dangerous, the proper response is not to geotag them, but to get the authorities involved. Simple as that. The rest is just fearmongering.
Because UCSD would be a great target. Friends who went there claim - repeatedly and independently - that virtually every department is a political hackfest where grades and grading curves are set to target individuals they either like or don't like.
Where profs steal ideas from their students as if the students were their employees.
Where profs practice a "sage on the stage" style of lecturing left over from the 18th century and generally conduct themselves as though they're prima-donnas.
Where TAs do all the real course work, and reset it. And act like they resent it. And see their students as a waste of their time time that could have been spent on their own ascension into the priesthood, er I mean professorship.
Where administrators use huge sums of public money to refurbish their offices and buildings *so their daughters can get married in the palace which results.*
Where the school requires all incoming students to sign a pledge that anything they create while they're at UCSD using any resources of UCSD is UCSD's private intellectual property.
Where access to *real* resources are guarded by virtue of their being controlled by "private guest institutes and organizations" who are "partnering" with UCSD but not actually "a part" of UCSD so students have no natural right to access those resources and never see them, despite UCSD claiming authorship and credit for activities involving those resources.
If I were to count the number of people hurt by some schlocky guy with a gun and compare that to the number of people who enroll at UCSD year over year and wish to god they hadn't, I'll bet UCSD would pretty much top any honest accounting of damaged lives
I used to live in socal and knew people who went to San Diego for their undergraduate. When they returned to L.A. in the summer they'd bitch up a storm about what was going on there for undergrads (they had , you know, ambition beyond getting drunk ) and what a fucking shithole ofb skullduggery the place was .
I admit don't actually remember the entire litany of complaints, and the fleshy details are not worth reciting but these general things stuck out in my mind. Basically the impression they gave was that it was a fucking mill and the best thing to do was to keep your head down, don't try to do anything beyond coursework and just STFU about anything you didn't like.
So really. Perhaps what we need is an asshole professor detector and a scam school locator. I mean , if you're going to spend the next 30 years choking on 80k + interest in debt, you ought to get something for your money.
At UCLA I have to say it was NOT like that, the profs were engage and accessible the grading was fair and overall the people were fairly friendly, so the experience of my *ambitious* friends who went south for college strongly contrasted with mine.
The harder schools to get into aren't always better for the student's learning ESPECIALLY for undergrads, who are likely to get nothing but a pinch of reflected glory for all their hard work.
stalking
Somehow I accidentally moderated you down. I hope this post fixes that.
Hell last year we had some dipshit who was a sheriff's deputy leave his loaded and unlocked gun sitting around, and a kid picked it up and killed a woman with it. Would anyone have tagged him as a dangerous owner before?
Let's start a geolocation for assistant associate adjunct professors with nannyist political agendas. Knowing where they are might allow public meetings in your community to be held at times and places that will not attract their pestilential presence. My town is still recovering from the time it let anti-radiowave conspiracy theorists into a City Council meeting on those newfangled remote-reading electric meters.
Does the app also tell you the nearest places to buy pitchforks and torches? I'm a big fan of (sensible) gun control legislation and even I think this app is a bad idea. Who is going to be determining what constitutes "dangerous"? Is that concealed carry permit holder dangerous because he has tattoos and piercings? (Never mind that he teaches gun safety classes at night.) Is the old bitter guy up the block who is constantly cleaning his shotgun on the porch dangerous? (Never mind that it's never loaded or that he always treats it as if it was.) Or is the normal looking guy the dangerous one? The guy who doesn't stand out at all. The guy who - unbeknownst to everyone else - likes to frequent websites of groups with extremist views.
Something tells me the first two people would get entered in the app and Mr. Normal would be left out. People would push for the guns to be taken away from the former and the latter would be the most likely to shoot up a crowd of people.
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
And next, I'll make a geotagged database of houses where NO guns are owned. Then you will know where all your like-minded, safe friends are.
Sure, criminals might also like a nice list of defenseless houses, but hey, if it's good for the goose...
Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
Also, when comparing apples to apples, Americans should understand one very basic fact:
Europe. Is. Not. A. Country.
If you DO wish to make a comparison, then leave out the countries where gun ownership is heavily restricted.
Before you know it people will retaliate and tag anyone and everyone they can think of as a gun owner.Even if they don't own a gun. Before long the app will be pretty useless as no one will ever know which tags are genuine vs fabricated. People will tag annoying neighbors, bosses, ex's, teachers etc.
Reading the google play page reveals a comment which read:
Some idiot went and marked my granny's grave. I mean, how in the world did they know that I had ol' granny cremated so I could use the grave to hide all my weapons? That was a total secret.
(sarcasm) So yea, totally accurate. No One could ever abuse this. (/sarcasm)
Watch the gun nuts cry because "oh no that person knows I have a gun now, THEY ARE GOING TO BREAK IN TO MY HOUSE AND STEAL IT FROM ME"
Hey, fucknut, USE YOUR GUN.
I question how the motivation behind developing this app differs from, say, developing an app to allow others to publicly geotag homes of people believed to belong to a particular religion or political party.
How is it different? The public is legitimately concerned with its safety when firearms are involved. While someone wielding a Bible or campaign pin could technically kill you, it's VASTLY easier for someone wielding a gun to kill you.
It looks like people are already putting garbage into his database so as to render it useless. At the top of the page is "know something about the project before you comment". In the FAQ and Guidelines, it seems that the author might know what he's talking about. I'm still not clear if he's a hoplophobic crank or playing a joke on hoplophobes. If he's the former, then he made a tremendous blunder by not realizing that lots of people would put garbage into the database.
Naive question perhaps, but: what are the alternatives to a central bank? Past, fiction, theoretical, etc. example apprecitiated!
You need not worry any longer. In honor of George Zimmerman we are forming a new neighborhood patrol that we will call the waltzing Zimmermans.
We will simply waltz with an invisible partner all about the community in the evenings.
Identifying gun owners not only screws those gun owners, it screws the non-gun owners as well (if the list is comprehensive.)
By identifying gun owners, you give criminals who want illegal guns a definite target. Maybe they know that the risk would be great by breaking into the house when someone is home, but it gives them the information they need to have a better chance at a payoff if they wait around and watch the house until everyone is gone before breaking in. This by itself puts everyone at risk by making it easier for criminals to know where to steal guns.
The other problem is that if a comprehensive list is available, they would also know who doesn't have a gun. This could make non-armed households greater targets for criminals who don't want to waste their time staking out a house first and would rather just break in steal when they can carry, and assault whoever gets in their way.
Look your stats up again or clarify your statement. Most shootings are self-inflicted in the US. If you are some white, clueless, middle class spooner you should probably not own a gun as the likelyhood you'll use it to kill yourself is much higher than the likelyhood you'll ever get shot by someone else.
I did find that most gun deaths in the US are suicides.
Lets remove the guns. Swords are a much cooler and far more honorable weapon. Honor begins and ends with two men facing each other on a level field with equal arms in a fight to the death. Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something.
as americans, it is our civic duty to go out and add as much noise to this useless illegal app as possible. most states (NY included) it is illegal to maintain a list of lawful gun owners. we all need to download this and tag as many places as possible, churches, schools, police stations, whole streets. the more noise the better.
The greatest right given is the right to be wrong...
Can also be used to put in addresses of dangerous Leftist in the Professorial community. Can then be used by the dangerous gun owners.....heh
It's called the phone book.
I vote for Brett Stallbaum being listed as a "dangerous gun owner". He may not actually list a gun, but he certainly is a dangerous fool, and he can get a gun any time he pleases.
This is absolutely fucking terrible. The author is a god damn fascist.
I said mass shootings.
Anti-gun nuts are always throwing suicides in as part of the statistics of gun deaths. While the death did come via a firearm it is no more a gun death as is commonly discussed, as someone running their car into a wall intentially is a traffic accident.
And if 5 is all you can come up with, I'd say the gun range is a pretty safe place to be.
When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
But the reason people take plea deals all the time is they are guilty. In general, law enforcement does a pretty good job of not bringing innocent people to trial. Not saying it doesn't happen, but it is fairly rare. It isn't the "all the time" sort of thing some on Slashdot seem to assume.
I'm friends with a number of defense attorneys, private and public, and they'll tell you that almost all their clients are guilty. They did what they are accused of doing. When they can get them off, it is generally because of a mistake made by law enforcement, not because there was never a case in the first place.
So what happens most of the time is a person has been brought up on charges for something they did. The evidence against them is good. Their lawyer looks at it and says "They've got you, you aren't going to get off. You should take the plea."
If the state's case isn't solid? Then they generally take it to trial. My friend is doing that right now with a DUI case. The state screwed up badly, their evidence is basically invalid. However they won't drop the case. So my friend is taking it to trial. He's very likely to win too (he has good instincts and is a good trial lawyer). He recommends trial if he thinks he can win. However, often as not, there's no chance. They have the person dead to rights, so a plea is the smart thing.
if you think any grownup believes that. there have been a few studies that show that gun nuts tend to elevate things vocally, since they think their mechanical enhancement makes them more important than they really are, and then when the shit hits the fan, the cowardice that causes them to carry the gun comes out and we have more dead people as the result.
the truth is that you are much more likely to kill yourself or a family member than actually defend yourself against any bogyman., despite your Dunning-Kruger incompetent delusions of adequacy.
I did the same calculations after Sandy Hook, because I would see so many people screaming ridiculous things like "ban all guns!" or "arm school teachers!" And I looked up the stats from the department of education, and you're right, there are 100,000 schools. With an average of 180 days in a school year, and an average of two acts of gun violence at American K-12 schools per year since 2000, that basically means that 17,999,998 out of 18,000,000 school days each year, nothing bad happens.
Americans have a control fetish, where they think they can FIX AND CONTROL ALL PROBLEMS without incurring any other ill effects. If you "ban all guns," you will never find them all, and there will be law abiding citizens who would have used a weapon in self defense, who will instead be dead. So maybe you stopped a school shooting, but some shopkeeper died because he couldn't defend himself against a robber with a baseball bat. If you arm the teachers, fine, maybe those schoolmarms will instantly morph into SEAL Team 6 when some nut shows up at the school with a gun and take him out. But there will be another 1 in a million day when a teacher flies off the handle and shoots somebody, or fails to lock up the weapon safely and a kid gets a hold of it and kills himself or some kid on the playground.
The law of intended consequences always bites you in the ass. When the statistic is down to 2 in 18,000,000, you can't really do anything to fix those last two without causing something else awful to happen, instead. The answer isn't to turn schools into fortresses or to snatch every gun in America. The correct response to a school shooting is to weep, hugs your kids tighter, ask everyone to keep an eye out for friends or family who might be having mental problems and try to help them, mourn the dead, never forget them, and move on with life.
We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
You should have turned up as a witness, then.
Oh, you weren't there? So how do you know that?
Oh, he's a nigger, got it.
No it is not a legitimate purpose for carrying a gun.
You only need it in the target range. NOWHERE ELSE is justified by your "I enjoy target shooting".
Two can play at this game.
Someone needs to immediately release an app that allows us to begin geotagging "radicalized fearmongering enemies of freedom". First on the list to be tagged: Brett Stallbaum.
Watch how loudly the ideologues squeal about invasion of privacy, reckless endangerment and defamation of character when the shoe is on the other foot.
The UK has a different definition of violent crime than the US.
Ignorant fuckwit.
If that's where the gun can only be, on the floor, NEVER touched by ANYONE, then WHY THE FUCK DO YOU HAVE A GUN?????
Seriously, here's a gedanken experiment: what circumstance is your scenario likely to be the case in the USA at any moment in one day?
They want a violent reaction.Its their fuel. Just sue the living shit out of him.
If you "ban all guns," you will never find them all, and there will be law abiding citizens who would have used a weapon in self defense, who will instead be dead.
I don't see how this is different than the "think of the children" argument posed by anti-gun nuts. Instead of thinking children who might be killed, you're appealing to shop owners and other law abiding citizens who might be killed.
The truth is, in BOTH schools and shops, the overall crime and murder rates are declining. If only 2 out of 18 million days have something bad happen at schools, then it's probably the same outside of schools, maybe even higher since there are a lot more shops than there are schools.
It's one thing to show how silly it is to appeal to deaths that statistically rarely happen. It's another to then present one of your own.
This is a horribly stupid idea. How will it be governed? Who will look into the claims to see if they have merit or if it is being abused by people? Why does anyone have the right to decide that a person is an unsafe gun owner? How is it helpful? I don't understand what good this will do. It will, no matter what anyone says, have a large number of completely false info (I think I might go list a few dozen people for the hell of it, even though I don't know if they have guns), and it will have a large number of people that are listed as "unsafe" that will never have any sort of accident or even that is worth mentioning, so why make the list?
Why limit it to guns? How about we make a list and geotagged map of all the people that we think my become a sexual predator? A list of all the people we think might become drunk drivers? Abusive spouses/significant others? School bullies? Never too early to start labeling people as "potentially" dangerous you know.
AlphaA
If you're being serious, then you're admitting you are yourself a "self-absorbed $DISPARAGING_REMARK who show a blatant disregard for civil liberties and the safety of American citizens".
What do you think gun nuts will do with that info? That's right: fantasize about shooting this "librul perfesser" in the head while buttfucking his goldfish.
He's an American citizen too.
You're ALSO saying that his actions are entirely acceptable: you're doing it too. Making your "outrage" fallacious. I.e. "it's wrong when HE does it!".
If you're NOT being serious, then your statement is a fallacy by your own intent.
The Fed was created by democrats, btw. Some republicans were okay with it and had ideas, but they were shot down.
UCSD Lecturer Releases Geotagging Application for "Places to Steal Guns"
Seriously, if this is using any kind of legitimate records, it's not going to register many people who might actually pose a threat. It's going to be the people who may or may not have their house secured, but are known to have guns. And probably a lot of false positives, just like sex offender registries and other items of this nature.
Completely ridiculous.
Libel? Look, you already let the idiots free when you allowed the legislature and SCOTUS to create retroactive public "registries" of "sex offenders", of untried "terrorists", when you allowed no-fly, no-buy and no travel lists to be created, maintained and inflicted with zero oversight and zero recourse; and that WITH the notable feature that such lists can be copied, referenced, and used for decision-making by any private or commercial entity out there.
The objections - quite legit - have been run up the flagpole and shot back down: Such lists, sayeth the judges and legislature, are "not punishment", and so you're going to have a very difficult time saying that a list of gun owners, or republicans, or jews, or hunters, or atheists, is somehow a problem. In this case, there's certainly no libel involved; it's a list of people who own guns; and to say that a gun is dangerous (or that a person wielding one is) -- well, duh.
I get it that you don't like it when it comes home to roost on your own shoulders; all I have to say to that is you should have paid considerably more attention to Pastor Niemöller when he said this. Assuming your education even included it (if it didn't, perhaps you could start a list of incompetent and dangerous teachers, eh?)
Hence why I said
> lets compare those directly and individually to smaller countries with working social welfare....
Where I acknowledge directly that this is often what is done.
"I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
Uh, no, because "think of the children" arguments are in favor of some action (generally expensive, invasive, and of dubious enforceability and effectiveness). You would be correct if I were advocating the mandatory arming of all shopkeepers...but I'm not.
"Ban all guns! Think of the children!" -> The messy, expensive, impossible, action of rounding up the hundreds of millions of guns in America to stop 2 school shootings a year will still not stop school shootings (or violence) because bad people will find a way, and you'll have new deaths that would have otherwise not occurred, like the shopkeeper. And that's not a hysterical claim. In a nation of 300 million people, over the span of a year lethal violence will definitely occur against someone who otherwise would have been able to defend themselves with a gun. Just like it's not a hysterical claim that there will be another school shooting, because it's impossible to control the actions of crazy people at this scale.
"Arm all teachers! Think of the children!" -> The messy, expensive, impossible action of establishing a rule and requirement system for armed teachers and training all the kindergarten teachers to pack heat will not stop school violence, because bad people will find a way, and you'll have new deaths that otherwise would not have occurred, because some teacher will get fired and shoot up the teacher's lounge or a kid will get his hands on the teacher's gun at some point. And that's not a hysterical claim, because with 18,000,000 school days a year, and 100 teachers at each with a gun each, it's bound to happen. At these kinds of numbers, the improbable becomes inevitable.
People want to take drastic and expensive measures to prevent things that have a miniscule chance of happening. I'm just pointing out that even if they succeed in preventing those ultra low probability occurrences, there will be new ultra low probability occurrences to take their place, that otherwise wouldn't have. You cannot escape the law of unintended consequences.
We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
Well, considering modern banking didn't exist until the Rothschild family, I'd say there's about 14,000 years of examples you can choose from, and at least another 18k before that which is poorly documented.
Or maybe the head isn't screwed on all the way... :-)
That would be the trolls
Hydraulic pizza oven!! Guided missile! Herring sandwich! Styrofoam! Jayne Mansfield! Aluminum siding! Borax!
And yet here we have photo evidence of his wife firing a rifle in a negligent manner. Notice how she is not wearing any ear or eye protection and is shooting in what appears to be an unsafe direction (doesn't appear to be a backstop in that direction). I brought this hypocrisy to his attention on his Facebook page, and being as open to discussion as his is he simply deleted the post and banned my account from accessing his page.
https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/319298_2200582567925_8214836_n.jpg
Let's see - collect un-curated, anonymous accusations that someone is a "danger to society" and stick that on a map (of their house, for example). That could NEVER go wrong. It worked very well for decades - I believe the Stasi accepted anonymous tips about people presenting a "societal risk" in the GDR. It made that society SOO much safer. Even better, instead of informing the local constabulary who may be unfortunately constrained in their actions (pesky constitutional protections and all that), we're going to publicize it to the general public who happen to be the neighbors, friends, associates, and COMPLETE strangers. Much better for corrective action to be taken. I'm sure NO ONE with radical ideas would be incited to act based on these unsubstantiated, unverified labels. No one would tell their child to not sell cookies to the man down the street because someone randomly clicked a button on the phone, NO ONE would break into a house to acquire "unsafely stored" weapons (that may not even exist) because someone thought that a person with a ducks unlimited bumper sticker must harbor unsafe guns... Na, that could never happen. Guns-done, what's next, "Strange" parties, suspected "deviant" sexual practices, I know - suspected witches - excellent, we haven't burned, hung and drowned anonymously accused individuals in this country for centuries, oh wait, we have, lynch mobs. Many states have laws regarding how weapons should be stored, including this crackpot's state (California). If you have a REAL, substantiated concern, go to your local police, or, shudder the thought, the individual you are concerned about. However, you may actually have to make a case for your complaint and justify your statement. If that's too high a bar for you to bother with to enhance your "safety", then either you really aren't that concerned, or you don't really value your safety. If you feel strongly about something, stand up and take ownership, don't go off an anonymously start a whispering campaign. What's the REAL purpose of this app? It looks, to me like a public shaming, a public shaming for something that is unproven, and possibly/probably completely unjustified.
Or died on the Titanic, which marked the end of any serious resistance to the Fed
I do not see how the marking and publishing of a law abiding person as being "dangerous" can be anything other than a defamation.
I do hope that all persons so marked will sue. Also I hope that any person living in a neighborhood with any marked person or business sue for reducing their property values. I am sure that there are others as well.
I would like to see all associated with the creation, distribution or promotion of this application are sued literally millions of times. I would like to see hundreds of judgments against them coming in every day and even if they live to be 200 that they are still facing hundreds of thousands of suits.
It would be nice if they are even given so much as "spare change" that someone would pop out around a corner and show a judgment and take it from them.
A gun can only kill you. The legal system can make your life so miserable that even the Christians' view of hell looks good by comparison.
One can only dream...
his home address is: 12741 Laurel St #80
Lakeside, CA 92040
It appears they also own a rental at:
1016 Stage Coach Trl
Julian, CA 92036
First of all it is just not right. But mainly unless the information is confirmed innocent people can be accused. This is more likely to incite violence and other harm. It's an ad hoc Megan's List. I don't like my neighbor so I claim he has an arsenal. Think 'Frankenstein'.
http://androidadvices.com/report-suspicious-bad-android-apps-google/
There's no "honor" in "a level field with equal arms" if one of the fighters is a professional and the other is a 50-something accountant (or a small woman).
Colonel Colt, on the other hand, did a lot to fix that type of inequality....
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
Lets think about this, "victumize a person who is hostile and has a gun, buy a group of people that do not have guns."
You only surmising that the European gun shootings were US copycats. Maybe some of the US shootings were just copycats of European shootings? I followed some of these shootings because they occured in places I personally knew and were very close to friends. And what I saw were essentially disgruntled and disaffected students with access to guns. I see nothing that indicates this sort of mass shooting is less rare in Europe. I agree that the random gang vs gang style shootings are much more rare in Europe and gun control can help with that, but that's a different issue than school shootings.
Alright Michael there is something going on here. I know, not 15 minutes ago that this post was under your other username Arcangel Michael (or whatever the fuck it is) cause it had my relationship with you (foe of a friend) highlighted. Somehow though you managed to get the username changed to ArhcAngel which I don't have a relationship with, and still keep the mod points. When did Slashdot start allowing you to edit posts? You're one of the editors aren't you!
Hoplophobe? Really? You have been sitting here on slashdot for weeks trying to find a good time to use that term haven't you?
Clearly, the next app should be tagging the location of all Jews with a yellow Star of David badge, starting with one Brett Stallbaum.
Seastead this.
As for Gun Safety, if you check out the recent rhetoric on the background checks legislation you'll find a lot of people very skeptical of anything labeled "gun safety."
Let's be honest: "gun safety" is the new politically correct term for gun control. It followed the same hackneyed PC marketing formula, "Uh oh! People finally figured out that we really meant $X when we said $Y, so let's refer to $X as $Z from now on!"
The attempted marketing of gun control as "gun safety" really took off after Sandy Hook. Before that, gun safety *solely* referred to securing firearms and training individuals in safe handling of firearms. Now it means "gun control", and that's why you're getting an allergic reaction from people interested in preserving their rights.
Pre-Sandy Hook if you asked any firearm owner if they were in favor of gun safety, they probably would have looked at you strangely and then said "of course I am in favor of proper firearm training and safe handling/operating procedures for firearms". If you had asked the same person, at the same time, if they were in favor of universal background checks, bans on standard capacity magazines, and bans on scary looking guns, then they would have very likely vehemently demurred. Nothing changed except the misappropriation of the term "gun safety".
Terms have meaning, and it's disingenuous to hijack a term to twist its meaning and then act like people are batshit crazy if they reject an innocent sounding term that is now infested with your revised semantics.
Just imagine if the anti-abortion advocates decided to try to refer to their push for abortion bans as "protection for the disabled". How could anyone be against protecting the disabled, you maniacal monster!
By marking the homes of gun owners, you will have them targeted for home invasions and theft. Criminals now know were to look for guns to steal. Criminals don't submit themselves to background checks, rather they steal their guns. And what is to become of the woman who has a gun to protect against an abusive ex-husband? Or someone trying to protect themselves from a staker? Or the retired police officer who put away a lot of criminals, who are now looking for revenge? Or someone who was a court witness to a crime? Or the small businessman be shaken-down by organized crime?
The gun geotagging app is going to get someone killed. Please folks, try to think of the outcome of this situation.
http://www.gungeomarker.com/
So - you DO have school shootings. All the propaganda that tells us that Europe is gun-free and safe is bullshit at the end of the day then. Rationalize it how you will, spin like crazy, you do hae school shootings.
When was the last US mass shooting?
How many do you have per year?
The US needs it's own list of school shootings because it's too long to include with the rest of the world.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_school_shootings_in_the_United_States
The last school shooting in Europe was in 2012, the US has had 13 this year. The last one was 2 days ago FFS, killing three more people than the shooting in Toulouse.
Your examples of mass shootings in Europe have to go back years to be statistically significant.
So you were saying.
Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
Remember, not all Jews are automatically in violation of any specific ordinances that deal with Jewry.
For instance, you should not report on the location of Jews living in the same building as Aryans because you suspect there may be some sexual relations between individuals in those 2 groups.
Also, Jews who are decorated veterans of WW1 should not be location-tagged as they are exempt from nearly all Jewish ordinances (once we get rid of this protection in the future, tag away).
Etc., ...
No, this isn't political at all. I see no possible way to abuse this app. It certainly won't lead to guns being stolen and falling into the wrong hands.
Privacy is a really big deal and should be defended at all costs...unless you have non-PC opinions, exist in the wrong/improper areas of the political spectrum, etc.
Either you don't believe Dr. Lott, or you're illiterate. He answered that already.
" If you look at a per capita rate, the rate of multiple-victim public shootings in Europe and the United States over the last 10 years have been fairly similar to each other."
I know it's not cool to RTFA, or even to RTFS, but you could RTFP.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
I laughed out loud reading that...what a crazy world we live in! Why not use the same system for owners of large dogs, or owners of knives, or cars, or baseball-bats? All of these can and do kill every single day! How about we use it to identify the locations of people who purchase unhealthy foods, or books you don't approve of? The rights and privacy of people in this country have become a joke due to the creators of garbage like this. We will never ghet rid of guns in this country, ever! Our right to bear arms is not given to us by the 2nd Amendment, it is inalienable, assured and insured by the 2nd Amendment, period. This liberal, gun-fearing (hating?) administration and all who support restrictions and confiscation should turn attention to criminals. How about we round up and deport 11 million illegal aliens (criminals by the very act of being here) instead of trying get rid of 11 million legally-purchased guns? How about we acknowledge that the parts of the US with the very worst crime statistics are the same parts with the most restrictive gun ownership laws? How about we admit a lot of things like this? Why don't we? Because these facts don't fit the progressive-liberal mindset or agenda. Please, mark my location on a web-based map. I hope it makes you feel better. Just make sure you do it legally, and hope that doing so doesn't make me a target. If your actions harm me or my family or property in anyway, you may come to wish that you had never stirred this pot.
Achtung,,,,,Juden!!!!
Who needs the NSA to spy on you, when your neighbors can do it? Why not just trash the 2nd and 4th amendments and be done with it?
Since my arsenal was acquired from private parties, I guess I won't show up on that app until some poor fool tries to break into my house...
Erkeklerin güzel kadnlarla beraber olma istei genlerinde var olan bir durum olduu için erkekler her daim güzel bayanlarla iliki kurmak ister. Güzel kadnlarla iliki kuran erkein yaamnda da mutlu ve baarl olacan psikologlar ifade etmektedir. Kadn ve erkek ayrlmaz bir ikili olduklarndan bu iletiim sürekli yaanmaya devam edecektir. Önemli olan bir ikiliyi bir araya getirmek olacaktr. Erkek çok youn i temposundan ötürü bayanlarla birlikte olma frsatn yakalayamaz. Bu onun asosyal olmasndan kaynaklanmayp zaman ayramama gibi nedenlerle ilikilendirilir. Bu yüzden de erkek araylarn baka yöne kaydrr.istanbul escort kzlarbu arayn tam adresi olur. stanbul escort kzlar güzelliklerin kadar çekicilikleri ile de erkeklerin ban döndürür. Escort kzlar bu kadar güzel olunca erkek baka araylarn peine de dümez. Bir kadnda arad her eyi stanbul escort kzlarla bulacak olan erkek yaamn keyfini yeniden tatm ve yakalam olur. stanbul escort kzlar bu kadar meziyetinin yannda son derece eitimli ve kültürleri ile de sizi artacaktr. Son derece kültürlü olmas onunla sosyal etkinliklere katlmanz da salar. Oturmas ve kalkmasnn yannda hitap yetenei de arkadalarnzn armasna neden olacaktr. Katldnz etkinliin yldz olacak ve tüm erkeklerin imrenerek bakt biri haline geleceksiniz. Kadnlarn bile kskand bir güzel ile beraber olmak statünüzü de artracaktr.
escort kzlar ile gecenin sonuna kadar beraber mutluluu yakalayacanz gibi ksa zaman dilimi içinde bunu yaayabilirsiniz. stanbul escort kzlar sizin ihtiyacnz olan zaman içinde beraber olacak ve dolays ile tercih size braklacaktr. stanbul escort kzlar ksa soluklu birlikteliin yannda daha uzun soluklu da sizin yannz da yer alacaktr. stanbul escort kzlar bu nedenle sizin yaamnzn mutluluu olacaktr. Dünyada ki erkeklerin nerede ise tamam bir güzel bayanla tatil yapmann hayalini kurar. Bunu gerçekletirmek ise güzel bir kz bulamamaktan ötürü mümkün olmaz. teistanbul escort kzlarsize bunu yaatacak ve hayaliniz gerçee dönüecektir. Bu kadar güzel bir kzla tatil yapmak ise bir rüyann yaama geçmesi olacaktr. Bu nedenle hemen stanbul escort kzlar ile iletiim kurunuz
I can just see it now: "That looks like a rich place....One second while I look it up. .......Oh shit that ()*^(&*^ shoots at anything, lets go next door. No guns there....."
I'm putting me on that as soon as possible.
When you're hammered everything looks like it needs nailed....
For those who are interested in the other side of the debate, there is an Android app that runs "True Stories of Self-Defense" where "Good Guys with Guns" were able to stop a crime or save a life through the lawful use of a firearm. All the stories are properly cited so you can research their authenticity.
It's called "Good Guys with Guns", give it a look.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.joelevi.site.sittingduckpolicy.goodguyswithguns
Yeah like the pro gun controllers aren't going to just tag everyone they suspect has a gun... Because by their very nature all gun owners are unsafe *nauseating severe eye roll*... Give me a break, this is a troll app!
Can we have an app enabling us to easily tag dangerous and hysterical lecturers?
Now this app is really a step ahead for U.S.A. ! - who seriously wants on his/her own volition to hit his head with bullets of a Bushmaster or else ... ? - and there
are enough people, who might use a weapon without to think deeper about the danger of that it mostly can kill or injure innocent people !?
I suppose the next step will be building an app to help locate Anti-Gun fanatics so that responsible gun owners will be able to protect themselves and their children?
This app is a clear violation of privacy. There is no national gun registry, you have no right to out people for having guns, and the developer personally holds liability for break ins of homes that apparently do not have weapons. It is an irresponsible application at best. I await the class action lawsuit that follows the release of this.
Sincerely,
A legally anonymous responsible gun owner.
And when some criminal breaks into my home looking for my guns while I'm away, I'll sue the app maker for putting the virtual "steal guns here" sign on my lawn.
This is nothing but a way for those who don't like guns to be able to label their neighbors ANONYMOUSLY. Just because two neighbors don't like each other and one knows the other has guns, they can get on an app and label them as a "dangerous gun owner!" There is no good reason for an app like this. Those who live in neighborhoods already know who is dangerous and who isn't! Let's get petty and make an app that has no one overseeing who gets added to the list! BRILLIANT! I applaud the stupidity!
The lower death tolls could be due to less crowded classrooms, or smaller schools in general?
On the count of three, can we all use the app to tag the local police department? All I been seeing on my fb newsfeed lately is unsafe gun handling on the part of their membership. It's like they're asking us to do it!
Sadly, a Libertarian cannot force his views on another, and freedom cannot spread as does the cancer known as religion.
I love this app. I just went in and marked all the places I know of in Somalia, in Syria, and in Iraq where I know there are irresponsible gun owners. I hope it saves your kids.
Conversely, would you rather have a sign in your front yard which says, "Attention Criminals - The people in this house have guns." or a sign which says, "Attention Criminals - Nobody in this house has a gun." ?
I gt the point of the app, what bugs me is we are assuming for all intensive purposes that somehow identifying these individuals is going to affect some degree of control on it , which isn't the case. Doyou NEED to know? No. Do you WANT to know? Yes. Does that want trump the need? Not really IMO. Just one more thing to make yourself scared of.
What does having a gun actually tell you about someone?
If someone has a concealed handgun license, that person is probably not a criminal, is probably of good character, and is probably not mentally ill. Those are not bad characteristics for a neighbor or co-worker.
Conversely, if you don't have a concealed handgun license, should I be concerned as to why? Do you know that you can't pass a background check? Do you have a criminal past?. Perhaps you have a problem with your temper or mental state.
But what really happens when someone knows you own a gun? Here's an example: Federal law requires owners of Title 2 firearms to undergo an FBI background check, get the signature of the local sheriff or police chief, and pay $200 to register each one. In addition, the State of Virginia requires its own license and registration. And Arlington County requires that you allow the Sheriff to visit your home to inspect the safe where you will store it. So someone who has jumped through all those hoops is probably a pretty good character. Nonetheless, when my friend's wife went into premature labor, the paramedics refused to approach the house until the police arrived and swept the house. Apparently their house address was flagged in the 911 dispatcher's computer because the Sheriff, the State, and the Federal Government had vetted and approved him to own a gun.
> training all the kindergarten teachers to pack heat will not stop school violence, because bad people
> will find a way, and you'll have new deaths that otherwise would not have occurred, because some
> teacher will get fired and shoot up the teacher's lounge or a kid will get his hands on the teacher's
> gun at some point.
actually, I want to preface this comment with the fact that I am more playing Devil's Advocate than proposing a serious solution. I agree entirely that this is a rare event with a minuscule chance of happening (a definite chance of happening somewhere at some time with a long enough time horizon, but, that is besides the point)
So, I don't think arming teachers HAS to mean giving them guns. Guns are great for self defence - #1 choice if you have to choose. However, they are not the be all and end all of every situation.
Imagine this, which would be cheaper and require less training: Shields and Batons, placed in emergency access enclosures that alarm the central office when opened. Place several of them in various classrooms throughout the school.
Would I want to face off against a gun toting assailent with a shield and baton? Hell No! Would I want to do it if I had other people assisting? Nope. However, if the choice is between that and being totally unarmed.... I will take the shield and baton every single time. I would rather not face off against an armed assailant at all, even with a gun, but, if he is going to take that choice away....
Training? Not really needed. The point is not making the school a hard point, the point is giving people a chance and giving them the ability to take away the shooters control of the situation; which, listening to criminal profilers talk about Sandy Hook makes me think may be helpful, as control of the situation seems to be a strong part of these shooters motivation. This was pointed out in response to how the shooter saw police, ran into a room, and shot himself rather than lose control of the situation.
In fact, I think a lot of the situation (and others) could be helped if Physical education was replaced wholesale with Martial arts training. In addition to all of the benefits (I haven't studied in years but I still appreciate the benefits I gained in terms of balance and general physical body awareness and control) it would lead to a less vulnerable society. Most of why these attacks are so successful is that people's first response is to run from danger and cower....which feeds right into the mentality of a portion of the people who do this sort of thing.
"I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
I did the same calculations after Sandy Hook, because I would see so many people screaming ridiculous things like "ban all guns!" or "arm school teachers!" And I looked up the stats from the department of education, and you're right, there are 100,000 schools. With an average of 180 days in a school year, and an average of two acts of gun violence at American K-12 schools per year since 2000, that basically means that 17,999,998 out of 18,000,000 school days each year, nothing bad happens.
Americans have a control fetish, where they think they can FIX AND CONTROL ALL PROBLEMS without incurring any other ill effects. If you "ban all guns," you will never find them all, and there will be law abiding citizens who would have used a weapon in self defense, who will instead be dead. So maybe you stopped a school shooting, but some shopkeeper died because he couldn't defend himself against a robber with a baseball bat. If you arm the teachers, fine, maybe those schoolmarms will instantly morph into SEAL Team 6 when some nut shows up at the school with a gun and take him out. But there will be another 1 in a million day when a teacher flies off the handle and shoots somebody, or fails to lock up the weapon safely and a kid gets a hold of it and kills himself or some kid on the playground.
The law of intended consequences always bites you in the ass. When the statistic is down to 2 in 18,000,000, you can't really do anything to fix those last two without causing something else awful to happen, instead. The answer isn't to turn schools into fortresses or to snatch every gun in America. The correct response to a school shooting is to weep, hugs your kids tighter, ask everyone to keep an eye out for friends or family who might be having mental problems and try to help them, mourn the dead, never forget them, and move on with life.
Arming yourself or others with concealed weapons is not going to make anyone safer. You have a trial going on with Zimmerman who was allowed to have a gun. The result, a youth is dead.
More you have guns, more depressed or crazed individuals will have an opportunity to seize and use one. Fewer guns means better protection. Only police or security guards, licensed and trained in weaponry should be allowed to have guns, and with latching holsters.
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
Arming yourself or others with concealed weapons is not going to make anyone safer. You have a trial going on with Zimmerman who was allowed to have a gun. The result, a youth is dead.
More you have guns, more depressed or crazed individuals will have an opportunity to seize and use one. Fewer guns means better protection. Only police or security guards, licensed and trained in weaponry should be allowed to have guns, and with latching holsters.
Irrelevant.
First, we do not live a magicland, where you can snap your fingers and instantly make all guns disappear. Just from a practical standpoint, it is impossible to put the genie back in the bottle.
Second, I have a fundamental human right to self-defense, and the handgun is the reasonable and highly effective tool for exercising that right. You may not take my tool of self-defense any more than you may take my printing press because you believe the world would be a better place if I shut up.
We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
I don't know. If you acknowledge that the problem is likely enough to do something about, then installing riot gear in every school seems like a halfhearted measure.
While I do not favor mandatory arming of teachers, I think that a teacher who has earned a concealed carry permit should be allowed to carry on school grounds, just like anywhere else. Obviously they should maintain control of their weapon, including a trigger lock, and be held criminally responsible for misuse. But the "declaring a school a gun-free zone" is stupid. Making such a declaration doesn't create a magic forcefield that won't let a gun inside, children are already not allowed to carry weapons, and we've simply announced to people who, like you say, desire control, that if they have a weapon they will have control here.
Additionally, when I was a kid, my high school campus also housed a police substation, so we had armed police on campus. I'm fine with that. Put a cop at each school, and let them actually serve the public by protecting their kids. That's a reasonable function of government. Adults who wish to avail themselves of their rights to self-defense may get a concealed carry permit, but children may not (and should not), and the State has an interest and an authority to protect those who cannot protect themselves.
So, to sum up:
1) Allow people who have undergone the background checks, processing, training and licensing to carry a weapon to do so, even at a school.
2) Put a cop at each school to serve and protect those who cannot protect themselves: children.
3) Realize it's not worth arguing about, because you can't control 2 in 18 million chances.
We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
I plan to spam the fuck out of this making it entirely useless for its intended purpose.
Whenever a player quits EVE to go play WoW, the Average IQ of both games increase.
Arming yourself or others with concealed weapons is not going to make anyone safer. You have a trial going on with Zimmerman who was allowed to have a gun. The result, a youth is dead.
More you have guns, more depressed or crazed individuals will have an opportunity to seize and use one. Fewer guns means better protection. Only police or security guards, licensed and trained in weaponry should be allowed to have guns, and with latching holsters.
Irrelevant.
First, we do not live a magicland, where you can snap your fingers and instantly make all guns disappear. Just from a practical standpoint, it is impossible to put the genie back in the bottle.
Second, I have a fundamental human right to self-defense, and the handgun is the reasonable and highly effective tool for exercising that right. You may not take my tool of self-defense any more than you may take my printing press because you believe the world would be a better place if I shut up.
I live in a civilized country. We are not allowed to carry guns unless we have special needs (carrying drugs, or as a courrier). The guns cannot be concealed. We need special permits to carry guns.
We have already had policewomen killed because a guy was fearing his life, and fired with a high powered handgun though is front door. All he got was a manslaughter charge, because he did not plan murder.
Because you live in a gun country, you go ahead and exercise your right to continue to arm yourself. Can you protect yourself if you are fired upon? If you were attacked, it may be your kid trying to get into the house because he forgot his key, and did not want to wake you.
I defend your right and wish you all the safety you can mentally and physically garner up.
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
I hope he provided a mechanism for people who feel or know that they have been wrongly tagged as possessing dangerous guns to remove the tag. Heaven forbid that some nefarious group like gun owners would stoop to tagging his home and office and classroom as being places where dangerous weapons and/or people can be found. But then again, a loose cannon who considers crowd sourced vigilante justice to be a good thing is far more dangerous than a gun in the possession of a law abiding citizen.
Cheers,
Dave
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
Ben
however this attempt may have rather opposite outcome, which i hope for.
anyway, i made my judjement about google. thanx.
Exactly. And that also gives the white, clueless middle-class a reason to be fearful and distrustful of the lower classes, and the lower classes reason to be contemptuous of the middle class. Whatever keeps them from joining up against the upper class, which is actually responsible for said laws and economic factors.
AND the upper class also makes money off both - all - sides: waging the "war on drugs" which keeps the drug market extremely profitable, investing in the "legal" sides of it and selling guns to all sides while ensuring that the lower class are busy killing each other. ruining other countries with those methods also keeps the flow of cheap, migrant day-laborers without any rihgts ("immigrants") steady which is used to keep labor cheap and, thus, the working class in control (of course, in the US there is no working/lower class, because they're all just millionaires with a tiny temporary deficit in funds liquidity.)
yeah, for soneone it's better they keep their fetishistic and dangerous killing-toys than they start taking what's theirs.
Looks like all those armed vigilantes are being really effective. Every thing in America is so much bigger and better than here in the dowdy outside world. (This is "sarcasm", in case you haven't heard of it.)
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
by EchoSierra
You don't need an app. You just have to be able to read the sign out front that says, "We don't call 911". Boom.
Why do you need to carry a gun? The world isn't actually that dangerous. If your town is, move your family somewhere safer. Your gun won't protect you 95% of the time.
You are all just paranoid and insecure. Maybe your bank account or your willy isn't as big as you'd like. Maybe your momma never gave you the attention you wanted. I bet you have a nice big boat too, or a big house. And if you don't, I bet you wish you did. So sad.
Here is your answer: live every day to its fullest. Cling to those you love, not to your cold steel security blanket. Be a real hero to your friends and family, not a pretend movie hero armed to the teeth.
Get out of your fantasy world and start living in the real world. You don't need a gun, it won't help you or protect your family. Chances are it will only hurt you or a member of your family, through momentary carelessness. That's what guns actually do in the real world.
Our gun loving country stopped two world wars and suppressed a communist Behemoth while facilitating democracy for half the world...We arent afraid of force
There are approximately a million concealed weapon permit holders in Florida, and one George Zimmerman. Granted the Stand Your Ground laws are applied in a depressingly biased manner and Treyvon probably had a valid Stand Your Ground case against Zimmerman, but people willing to put themselves through fingerprinting, background checks, and fairly hefty fees probably weeds out most of the obvious bad actors.
The developer of the app did not take into consideration human nature - dishonesty, revenge, and other motives for hateful behavior. This is a bad, bad thing.
Our gun loving country stopped two world wars and suppressed a communist Behemoth while facilitating democracy for half the world...We arent afraid of force
And it is killing more civilians than all the other countries combined. Even disallowing criminal to criminal killings, or including them
The USA was last to enter the 2nd world war, because it was making a fortune selling arms to the British and their allies.
The Japs attacked Perl Harbour because the USA was selling arms to the enemies of Japan. USA worships the dollar, and does not who is right or wrong. Should we talk about Korea, Irac and agent orange, and the banana plantation killings
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
How do I get geo tagged?
Right. Because in a fight between a grandmother and a professional gunman both equipped with the same firearms, it's totally 50/50 who would win. That happens all the time. That's why we send so many grandmothers off to war.
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
Tag their home. Maybe leave a note saying that they don't lock up their firearms and are often on hunting vacations. Then wait for some thieves to ransack their house.
Want to ruin your own life? Make your neighborhood the target for burglaries and see if your ass isn't hauled into civil court for instigating the whole thing.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
If no one has a problem with geo tagging individual people and removing what little privacy they have... then why not carry this farther?
Can I geo tag the man that released this software?
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
Easy enough to flood such an app with lulzy disinformation and make it useless.
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."