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User: Man+On+Pink+Corner

Man+On+Pink+Corner's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 2,220

  1. Re: Sure you will. on Nerves Rattled By Highly Suspicious Windows Update Delivered Worldwide · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Bullshit. No OS is "well made" enough that it will never need security updates. Not Windows, not MacOS, not Linux, not *BSD.

    This is why it's really, really important for OS providers to maintain a trustworthy update service. If they use it for advertising purposes, or sell it out to various government agencies, or allow incompetent personnel to push "test" updates to the entire planet, it's no longer trustworthy. That means their OS itself is no longer trustworthy, if in fact it ever was.

    Nobody at Microsoft seems to have the first clue how important Windows Update actually is, and how important it is not to screw with it. Windows Update is Windows, not just in a de-facto sense but as a vital corporate strategy. It's time they started acting like it.

  2. Re:Nonsense. on Spy Industry Leaders Befuddled Over 'Deep Cynicism' of American Public · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of J. Edgar Hoover?

    What assurances can you give me that there will never be another one like him?

  3. Re:I Love NetFlix on Netflix Is Becoming Just Another TV Channel · · Score: 2

    As the article states, Netflix sees this as a bug, and is trying very hard to "fix" it.

  4. Re: Simple solution on Cheap Thermal Imagers Can Steal User PINs · · Score: 1

    Photons do not work that way.

  5. Re:Simple solution on Cheap Thermal Imagers Can Steal User PINs · · Score: 1

    Interesting assertion. How do radio antennas work, then?

  6. Re:Trolls? on Trolls No Longer Welcome In New Zealand · · Score: 2

    And when this comes to America, I'll be heading out

    To where? Mars?

    This idiocy seems to spread like a virus. It will cover the Earth, faster than sane people can stop it.

  7. Re:Not a surprise on UK Government Illegally Spied On Amnesty International · · Score: 2

    It's precisely that kind of distorted talk that makes it clear that you and groups like Amnesty aren't really interested in anything but tearing down the West.And THAT sort of tactic IS exactly like that which was promoted by the Soviet Union (i.e. those evil communists).

    And it happened there precisely because nobody spoke up against it when they still could have.

  8. Re:that's right on Google Apologises For Photos App's Racist Blunder · · Score: 1

    That's probably what the algorithm should return, just to avoid the possibility of offending anyone. Just label any photos of intelligent hirsute bipedal mammals as "Hominids" and call it a day.

    Who knows, maybe the term will even catch on in the larger culture. "Machine learning" doesn't mean we can't learn from our machines.

  9. Re:alogrithms aren't racist on Google Apologises For Photos App's Racist Blunder · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Not only that, we are apes. The algorithm in question is already smarter than a large percentage of churchgoing Americans.

  10. Re:One more in a crowded field on Swift: Apple's Biggest Achievement For Coders · · Score: 1

    Looks sharp. They need to hire a Marketing Dork to come up with a name that either means something to someone besides Mrs. Kotlin, or is otherwise snappy and memorable. Otherwise, it's going to be hard to gather any mindshare.

  11. Re:What Is Being Done on Fake Mobile Phone Towers Found To Be "Actively Listening In" On Calls In UK · · Score: 2

    The Brits should treat those bogus cell towers the same way they treat speed cameras.

  12. Re:WoW? on First Games Inducted Into the World Video Game Hall of Fame · · Score: 0

    Be that as it may, WOW would either not have existed if it hadn't been for UO, or would have been different to the extent of being unrecognizable. UO is the one that belongs in the hall of fame.

    There is little or no room for debate, to those familiar with both.

  13. Overqualified on Cuba Forms a CS Professional Society -- It's No ACM · · Score: 0, Troll

    For example, one must apply to the Ministry of Communication to be accepted into the UIC and the application form asks about membership in political organizations like the Communist Party or Young Communists League along with technical qualifications

    From the article: "... Stallman submitted his application without citing any formal association with the Communist Party, but instead described his pioneering work with the FSF and authorship of the GPL. Unexpectedly, however, his application was declined. When asked to comment on Stallman's rejection, a UIC official responded, 'What kind of organization does he think this is? We're Communists, not a bunch of (expletive deleted) radical ideologues!'"

  14. Patents are basically intellectual land mines. Sure, they're 'defensive' in nature... until one day the war ends, the land changes hands, the maps are lost, and somebody builds a preschool next door.

  15. Re:Well there's the problem... on Court Orders UberPop Use To Be Banned In All of Italy · · Score: 1

    Hey, shape up with that attitude or we'll put Amanda Knox on trial again!

  16. Re:Controversial because? on Bill Gates Still Trying To Buy Some Common Core Testing Love · · Score: 2

    Not only that, but an excerpt for discussion purposes would certainly qualify as fair use. This whole "copyrighted test" complaint sounds like a giant smokescreen.

  17. Re:Controversial because? on Bill Gates Still Trying To Buy Some Common Core Testing Love · · Score: 1

    What would be an example of college-level material on a 6th-grade test?

  18. Re:Don't go out on a limb, Paul on Swift Vs. Objective-C: Why the Future Favors Swift · · Score: 1

    Of course it does. If you're productive, and people are actually using your code, then you're effective.

    VB6 has enabled a lot of people to get a lot of useful stuff done. This is widely considered (on Slashdot at least) to be a Bad Thing.

  19. Re:This again? on New Test Supports NASA's Controversial EM Drive · · Score: 1

    Area man still remembers a couple of guys named Pons and Fleischmann.

  20. If the USPTO actually applied the required standards of nonobviousness and nontriviality, these stupid patents would never have been granted.

    Unfortunately, their incentives are diametrically opposed to common sense. There is literally no downside for a USPTO examiner to rubber-stamp everything on his or her desk. They get to go home early to beat the traffic, while productive society is left to deal with the legal fallout. The net effect is to devalue legitimate IP while rewarding the trolls.

    This, I think, is what really needs to change. Somehow, the feedback loop has to be closed in a way that incentivizes the examiners to throw out vague, egregious patents on abstract concepts.

  21. Re:imagine...world without religin on Woman Behind Pakistan's First Hackathon, Sabeen Mahmud, Shot Dead · · Score: 1

    No, Christians aren't to blame for the acts of personality cults. It's just a different exploit for the same mental bug. Fix it, and both problems -- religion and totalitarianism --- will go away.

  22. Re:imagine...world without religin on Woman Behind Pakistan's First Hackathon, Sabeen Mahmud, Shot Dead · · Score: 1

    Communist personality cults aren't atheistic. The leader is an explicit God-substitute.

    Try peddling atheism in North Korea, see how that goes for you.

  23. Re:This is wrong. on Wikileaks Publishes Hacked Sony Emails, Documents · · Score: 2

    Wikileaks like to market this as shining light on the truth but in reality they are just revictimizing a company that was the victim of hacking and theft.

    Karma is a bitch on wheels, ain't she?

    I see this as no different than someone wiretapping publishing a family's private conversations.

    Yeah, the Gambino family.

  24. Re:Never on Autonomous Cars and the Centralization of Driving · · Score: 1

    A matter of opinion, but if you think driving is "fun", you're probably one of the people making roads dangerous

    You're the second person in this thread to post this rather odd and specific assertion, more or less verbatim. Who's paying you guys to lay down all of this astroturf, and how can I get in on some of that action?

  25. Re:So... on SCOTUS: GPS Trackers Are a Form of Search and Seizure · · Score: 1

    It's not unreasonable if you can convince a judge to sign a warrant.

    Otherwise, yes, it's unreasonable. Consider how much trouble you'd be in if you attached a GPS tracker of your own to a police car.