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User: INT_QRK

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Comments · 486

  1. Re:Transparency in Government is good! on White House Office of Administration Not Subject to FOIA, Says White House · · Score: 1

    “All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological personalities. It is not that power corrupts but that it is magnetic to the corruptible.” -- FRANK HERBERT ("Heretics of Dune")

  2. Re: Politics aside for a moment. on Hillary Clinton Used Personal Email At State Dept., Possibly Breaking Rules · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Setting aside completely whether I agree or disagree with your main point, I have to take exception with your assertion that "if you don't deploy you aren't real military anyway." Truth is, "real military" goes when and where "real military" is ordered to go, and does whatever job "real military" is assigned to do. If one spends one's tour in CONUS exclusively at a supply depot or on some administrative staff, it's because that's where Uncle Sam orders one, and that's where one contributes to overall national security. (I say this, by the way, from the perspective of one who has deployed operationally many, many, times over a military career spanning three decades -- no offense meant, just a pet peeve).

  3. Re:Politics aside for a moment. on Hillary Clinton Used Personal Email At State Dept., Possibly Breaking Rules · · Score: 1

    Two salient quotations, purely for enjoyment: (1) “Power tends to isolate those who hold too much of it. Eventually, they lose touch with reality ... and fall.” (2) “All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological personalities. It is not that power corrupts but that it is magnetic to the corruptible.” -- FRANK HERBERT ("Dune Messiah," and "Heretics of Dune," respectively)

  4. Re:Link to the study on Americans Support Mandatory Labeling of Food That Contains DNA · · Score: 1

    Doh! Too early, damnit!

  5. Re:Link to the study on Americans Support Mandatory Labeling of Food That Contains DNA · · Score: 1

    Ummm. Don't all plants and "animals" contain DNA? Don't we humans also "contain" DNA? Whisky Tango Foxtrot, over. OMG Ponies. I hear that our local water contains di-hydrogen oxide.

  6. Re:Frank Herbert was right on Parents Investigated For Neglect For Letting Kids Walk Home Alone · · Score: 2

    Note that Montgomery County, Maryland, is a bedroom community for the U.S. Capitol. Its residents are overwhelmingly denizens of the ecosystem of national government (government officials, workers, support contractors, lobbyists, and parasitic non-profits). As such Montgomery County, and indeed the Beltway megapolis at large, fully reflects the values and mores of those who consider themselves the ruling class. Yes, this is how these people view the world. This is how they see you as subjects.

  7. Re:So... on Parents Investigated For Neglect For Letting Kids Walk Home Alone · · Score: 1

    Yes. Absolutely.

  8. Re:what state are they in? maryland? on Parents Investigated For Neglect For Letting Kids Walk Home Alone · · Score: 1

    In the Democratic Peoples' Republic of Maryland (DPRM), your judgment is subordinate to that of any and all benevolent and wise agents of State control.

  9. Re:Why is this being covered on slashdot? on Parents Investigated For Neglect For Letting Kids Walk Home Alone · · Score: 1

    How insightful. Greetings from the Democratic Peoples' Republic of Maryland (DPRM), and welcome to our highly advanced Nanny State. We are indeed programming future generations to utterly depend on the One Party for their wellbeing, cradle to grave, in joyful and obedient service to our elite maternal benefactors. statism |sttizm| noun a political system in which the state has substantial centralized control over social and economic affairs: the rise of authoritarian statism.

  10. Brilliant Social Engineering! on Amnesty International Releases Tool To Combat Government Spyware · · Score: 2

    So, how can you be sure that "click here" in TFA doesn't itself download malware disguised as malware detection? If I were a black-hat govy who wanted to root out people worried about government malware, I might use such a ruse. Think about it.

  11. We quarantine infectious diseases don't we? on US Weather System and Satellite Network Hacked · · Score: 1

    It's time to quarantine malicious actor countries. We need to study innovative means, methods, and architectures to isolate, contain or somehow filter extremely maliciously behaving countries. A "Great Firewall of China" is becoming a more and more obvious need.

  12. Make sure you get permissions... on Ask Slashdot: Capture the Flag Training · · Score: 2

    Make sure you get specific written permissions, and execute your exercise in a controlled, preferably closed, network to prevent unintended or collateral damage. Lots of laws come into play, and you don't want to risk liability for damage or criminal culpability for breaking any laws.

  13. Re:Anonymity == being a schmuck for a good number. on Why the Trolls Will Always Win · · Score: 1

    Concur. Every crime against a victim who happens to be a woman isn't a "Crime against women," any more than every crime whose victim hails from a particular race or religion isn't a crime against that race or religion. People need to stop blowing so much political smoke. It only makes the debate and all of its participants more stupid.

  14. Re:Request the government to provide it on Accessing One's Own Metadata · · Score: 2

    The problem with that approach is that information releasable under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) does not include information that has been classified. Another kicker? The category of unclassified information administratively designated "For Official Use Only" (FOUO) is also exempt release under FOIA. Even though FOUO is clearly defined, its use is increasing applied with considerable discretion, to the effect that Agencies routinely mark nearly everything FOUO these days. I am neither defending nor condemning these practices, just explaining. "Catch-22 is a beauty, all right!" - Yossarian

  15. Thank you.

  16. Re:Corporate Malfeasance on Former Infosys Recruiter Says He Was Told Not To Hire US Workers · · Score: 1

    Could not agree more. Competition is one thing. Facilitating competitors' advantages against one is quite another.

  17. Re:Well duh. on Former Infosys Recruiter Says He Was Told Not To Hire US Workers · · Score: 1

    Bingo.

  18. Re:This is huge on Irish Girls Win Google Science Fair With Astonishing Crop Yield Breakthrough · · Score: 2

    Moonshine?

  19. Re:Everything is an excuse for more security theat on Secret Service Critics Pounce After White House Breach · · Score: 1

    The bigger problem is that debate anymore devolves immediately to "choice" between false dichotomies, vacuous positions screamed between raving caricatures on the left to insane caricatures on the right.

  20. Re:Everything is an excuse for more security theat on Secret Service Critics Pounce After White House Breach · · Score: 1

    By the way, what does "GP" mean?

  21. Re:Everything is an excuse for more security theat on Secret Service Critics Pounce After White House Breach · · Score: 2

    I apologize for having carelessly left an impression that I disagreed. I actually identified with your points, and I was going off on a tangental rant. This being /., I'm so used to reading America haters on both sides of the Atlantic painting uninformed pictures of violent crime ridden America; and for the same reasons, the distortions inherent of ubiquitous press and entertainment media only capable of creating highly cartoonish caricatures of reality. The serious shame is what it's doing to our children, and thus future generations. When I was a kid, we could leave the house in the summer every morning, and not return until dinner, or even by dark, unless we got hungry and diverted home, or to a friend's home, for chow, sometime noonish. Now kids are prisoners of "play-dates" and hovering parents who are scared shitless by the sick perception that if they divert theirs eyes for a second, Johnny's going to be butt raped and murdered, no question. Why? Because in the statistically few tragic occasions when something, anything, sensational does happen anywhere in any small corner of the country or the world, it's splashed all over CNN, MSNBC or Fox every 15 minutes all day. Did shit happen in the 50's and 60's when I was growing up? Sure. But when it happened in Tallahassee, we didn't get to hear about it all day long in San Diego on 24 hour news networks for 5 freaking days running, with constant streams of "experts" reminding us constantly how we need to imprison our little darlings for their own protection. Life will suck for our grandkids.

  22. Is IOS8 a pig? on Ask Slashdot: Is iOS 8 a Pig? · · Score: 2

    Not that I can tell after only 2 days. Are you a troll?

  23. Re:Everything is an excuse for more security theat on Secret Service Critics Pounce After White House Breach · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd just recommend that when you compare, it's done intelligently and fairly. I mean, there's a huge difference between the insanely distorted America depicted in clever headlines and media soundbites and the many and varied communities across the United States. The US is not CNN, it is not the E Channel, it is not Hollywood. Really. I've lived and traveled extensively in Europe and Asia across the decades. I've found there to be at least as much variation in good and bad neighborhoods, rich and poor, genteel and tough, both Europe and Asia. There are streets, stradas, rues, calles, etc., on either continent that I avoid at night or alone.

  24. Re:Sue the bastards on In Maryland, a Soviet-Style Punishment For a Novelist · · Score: 1

    In the Democratic Peoples Republic of Maryland (DPRM) one has the duty to refrain inciting the proletariat with bourgeous state disapproved expressions.

  25. Online delivery happens now on Is Remote Instruction the Future of College? · · Score: 1

    Online deliver is but one method that nearly every University offers for some number of its classes, and that number and ratio varies by program. Some classes are full classroom delivery, some are full lecture delivery, some are hybrid. I believe that's OK. The future is in whatever combination proves most effective and economical as demonstrated by some metrics that include testing and quality of subsequent work. It is best to avoid extreme positions of all or nothing.