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User: aaaaaaargh!

aaaaaaargh!'s activity in the archive.

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Comments · 1,601

  1. Re:Not a chance on Why CurrentC Will Beat Out Apple Pay · · Score: 1

    Why do companies want people to pay by phone? Phones are larger than debit cards, harder to handle for payments and much less secure. It doesn't any sense whatsover and will be an eternal security nightmare for all parties involved.

  2. Re:100 year old survival knowledge in PDF files??? on A Library For Survival Knowledge · · Score: 2

    Would a 100 year old iPad work if it were stored safely?

    No.

  3. Re:She's.. on Ex-CBS Reporter Claims Government Agency Bugged Her Computer · · Score: 1

    The incredibility of such actions are one of the reasons why they are done, so I wouldn't discount her story so easily. The Stasi did similar things (well, of course, not on laptops but in the same spirit). It's very sad and hard to believe for halway decent folks but some people are extremely evil.

  4. Re:No thanks. on Rite Aid and CVS Block Apple Pay and Google Wallet · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    And I'll take none of them. Why the fuck would anyone pay with a mobile phone when you can just pay with a card?

    It's not as if a phone is smaller than a card, easier to handle or more secure, this whole "phone wallet" idea makes no sense.

  5. Re:Prison time on CHP Officers Steal, Forward Nude Pictures From Arrestee Smartphones · · Score: 2
  6. Re:Not just women on The Inevitable Death of the Internet Troll · · Score: 1

    We should protect absolutely no one from trolling. It's called freedom of speech. A troll can and should simply be ignored.

    Regarding harrassment and bullying, these include behavior like slander and libel, stalking or even death threats. Apparently within the past five months or so such acts suddenly have become instances of trolling, which is a serious misnomer. Anyway, everybody is already protected very well against those things, no matter what gender. You can report such cases to the police if they fall under the criminal law like death threats or stalking, or you can proceed with a civil law suit or at least threaten one in case of defamation or direct insults.

    I don't quite see what more protection anyone would need or desire. At least to me it is plain obvious that classical trolling (~the act of deliberately upsetting someone to get responses) should not be illegal.

  7. Re:Dear Canada.... on Shooting At Canadian Parliament · · Score: 1

    Sorry, my fault. Don't copy and paste numbers ... in fact, forget the numbers, they are not important at all. The percentage is about right, though.

  8. Re:Dear Canada.... on Shooting At Canadian Parliament · · Score: 1

    I took these directly from the Wikipedia page on world religions. Perhaps Wikipedia is wrong, wouldn't be the first time.

  9. Re:Dear Canada.... on Shooting At Canadian Parliament · · Score: 1, Insightful

    About 6 billion of the world population are muslims, that's around 23% of the world population. Outlawing the world's second largest religion in a few select countries ("western democracies") would not work in practice, would violate basic principles of democracy, for example such a law would be incompatible with all constitutions of all western democracies, and would also be immoral according to the high moral standards of western democracies, in which laws against thought crimes are generally frowned upon.

  10. Re:Using emacs to edit code on GNU Emacs 24.4 Released Today · · Score: 1

    It also needs a <stupid joke> tag.

  11. Re:Emacs OS on GNU Emacs 24.4 Released Today · · Score: 1

    It would be more fun to first implement C in Elisp and then let the C interpeter run systemd.

  12. Re:And this is why Linux will never win the deskto on Debian's Systemd Adoption Inspires Threat of Fork · · Score: 5, Funny

    The average user also has about one tit, one ball and half a penis. Just wanted to mention that.

  13. Re:Yeah, Good Luck with That (TM) on Google Changes 'To Fight Piracy' By Highlighting Legal Sites · · Score: 2

    The vast majority of piracy is a necessity for the majority of the world's population. In most parts of the world a student cannot even afford half of the textbooks he needs and certainly cannot afford to buy video games for 60 USD each. Modern economy spends billions on advertising to create artificial demands, so it is not suprising that people who cannot afford all these shiny things copy them if they have the opportunity.

    When I was a poor student many years ago (in the 90s), I pirated everything, every productivity software and every game I wanted to play for the simple reason that I could not possibly have afforded them. I had difficulties to make ends meet at the end of each month, often couldn't pay my phone bill and often had to 're-shuffle' credits to keep heating and warm water. It would have been outright crazy to buy, say, a copy of Adobe photoshop or protools for my hobbies or even for professional education, I would have literally had to starve in order to afford any such software.

    Now that I have a reasonable income I almost never pirate and buy the stuff, if that's possible. (There are surprisingly many things you cannot buy in smaller countries, affordable streaming of TV series being on top of the list.) Sure there are also some people who copy content even though they could buy it, but I'm pretty sure these are a minority. Many companies deliberately do not make the correct calculations, though, they don't ask "How much does all the software this guy puts on his computer cost in total, including all upgrades?", they instead whine that "this guy could have bought our product X but instead pirated it" ignoring the fact that if you'd add up all the stuff people want because of their ads or really need, you'd end up with an astronomical bill in comparison to which hardware costs would be neglectable. Thank good we have gratis open source software now, so it is indeed possible to go without pirating nowadays unless you're in a specific field like graphics or audio engineering where it still hard to do everything with gratis software in a competitive way that you can also put on your CV.

  14. Re:google is a search engine on Google Changes 'To Fight Piracy' By Highlighting Legal Sites · · Score: 0

    You seem to be contradicting yourself, so may I ask what's your point? That you personally want something from Google that (in your opinion) is bad for society?

  15. There are limits to freedom of speach on In UK, Internet Trolls Could Face Two Years In Jail · · Score: 2

    Yet, if done over the internet, you can threaten to kill them, rape them, burn their house down, etc... and that should be legal

    1. That's already illegal in every European country.

    2. Threatening to kill someone is not trolling, and any politician who conflates trolling with death threats should be kicked out of his or her office ASAP.

  16. Re:Overly broad? on Soda Pop Damages Your Cells' Telomeres · · Score: 1

    Not as poisonous as coke, though ...

  17. Re:Apple's take on Windows 8 on Apple Doesn't Design For Yesterday · · Score: 1

    So switching from Lucida to Helvetica counts as innovation now?

    What's next, windows with round corners again?

  18. Re:Yawn on Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More · · Score: 2

    faster doing ... what?

    I have a theory why people buy tablets ... or better to say, why men buy tablets: Porn. I believe they buy them so they can watch porn while sitting on the toilet. That's why tablet sales are so high. The remaining alleged 'purposes' are just excuses. It's just a theory, of course.

    Now regarding women who buy tablets, I have no idea why they would do that. Do they buy tablets? If so, that's perhaps because they are sleek and handy and you can watch Sushi advertisements on them. Or whatever.

  19. Re:Ebola vs HIV on How Nigeria Stopped Ebola · · Score: 3, Informative

    The difference is that you can live with an HIV infection nowadays provided you are treated early and continuously, whereas there is a 50-90% chance of dying from Ebola.

  20. Insecure on Anonabox Accused of Lying About Its Product Being Open-Source On Kickstarter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Even if everything on it is properly implemented, which is doubtful, the device will be completely insecure for ordinary, non-expert users. To use Tor securely, the endpoint communication software must be properly anonymized, Java and Javascript disabled, etc. Use Tails or Tor browser bundle on an encrypted home partition of a well-patched system instead.

  21. Re:I don't get the rage on How Women Became Gamers Through D&D · · Score: 2

    Are you sure that your bad experiences do not just come from the fact that you're a racist sexist nazi? I'm not saying you are, just want to point out that I know from personal experience that there are a lot of racist sexist nazis out there who have no idea that they are one.

    Also, what about this constant rightist/leftist bullshit, is this alleged dichotomy really still relevant where you live? Because where I live it sure isn't, except perhaps for the extreme left and right totalitarians who tend to agree on almost everything anyway and sometimes switch their allegiances several times during their lifetime.

  22. Re:Germany had the last laugh... on How English Beat German As the Language of Science · · Score: 2

    I always thought this rule was invented to make it easier for typesetters to distinguish the end of a sentence from abbreviations. Were the two spaces ever actually typeset?

  23. Re:What's the point of ChromeOS? on ChromeOS Will No Longer Support Ext2/3/4 On External Drives/SD Cards · · Score: 2

    It's very reasonable to use Firefox, because it allows you to install the most essential privacy extensions.

    Honestly, you can only browse the net nowadays with strong ad blockers, cache cleaners, automated cookie deletion and a whole bunch of web-tracker killer add-ons. Or, pay for a good VPN service.

  24. Re:Ebola obviously spreads more easily... on Texas Health Worker Tests Positive For Ebola · · Score: 1

    It would be easily spread by coins and monetary notes, though, wouldn't it?

  25. Re:Everybody Panic! on Texas Health Worker Tests Positive For Ebola · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What I don't understand: Wouldn't it be possible to put the wearer through a disinfectant decontamination shower before he or she takes off the suit?