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User: Drakonik

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Comments · 116

  1. Re:Why not Blackberry instead/also? on First Android Device Certified For DoD Personnel · · Score: 2

    Because it's not secure enough unless they can put a "DoD home grown and raised" sticker on it.

  2. Re:Hmmmm... on The Many Iterations of William Shatner · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's fat, white actors all the way down, son.

  3. Re:Hey lets let em all engage in antitrust on FTC Greenlights Google-AdMob Deal · · Score: 1

    Content is more important to you. To the companies providing the content, however, money made off your intake of the content is worth the sacrifice of screen real estate.

  4. Re:Re-encoding? on Mpeg 7 To Include Per-Frame Content Identification · · Score: 1

    >consumer protection laws
    Clearly you are not familiar with America.

  5. Re:First Post on H.264 vs. Theora — Fightin' Words About Patentability · · Score: 1

    Sooooooo...H.264 needs to be the standard because it's the standard? Your argument is kinda cyclical. IE6 used to be the ubiquitous. used to be acceptable to use. Why aren't they anymore? Because something better came along. Tech isn't good just because it's universally supported. It just makes it hard to transition away from.

  6. Re:GUI Code Only on Skype For Linux To Be Open-Sourced "In the Nearest Future" · · Score: 1

    Pretty much, as long as you could change the front-end to use some other VOIP protocol other than Skype. In fact, what I'd like to see is something like Pidgin for VOIP. Transparent support for many protocols. Then you can just have your contact list of friends and call them, regardless of what they use.

  7. Re:Shoot down at 10,000 feet is easy on High-Tech Blimps Earning Their Wings · · Score: 1

    So....you're saying that the aircraft is going to be vulnerable to anti-aircraft missiles. Stop the presses.

    Really. If the blimp can be built cheaper than an airplane/UAV, and cover loads more area, then it getting shot down would be unpleasant, but a loss less expensive than losing a plane, its fuel, its weapon payload, its pilot, and so on.

  8. Re:Outrageous! on Man Jailed After Using LimeWire For ID Theft · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Although technically what you present as an average slashdotter's mindset is true, it's an oversimplification. Music piracy is condoned or at least given more leeway because it's largely the symptom of a bigger problem, that being copyright and DRM asshattery where a user who pays for music ends up unable to use it for whatever reason.

    ID theft, though, is simply theft and exploitation of others for profit.

    At least, that's how I see it.

  9. Kinda Pointless on Encryption? What Encryption? · · Score: 1

    I was getting into the whole suggestion, but halfway through, I realized something.

    At least in America (I'm not very familiar with court systems around the world), there's the whole legal system of "innocent until proven guilty" and the fifth amendment and such. This means that even if you DO have an encryption program installed, until the prosecution can present sufficient evidence that you're storing child porn within some encrypted volume, you can't be asked to give up your password, or even charged with possession.

    The futility of this guy's talk is, if you're NOT in a court system where you're innocent until proven guilty, whether it's some backwater third world nation or some secret prison camp in the U.S., whether or not you've got a super stealthy encryption tool, if the Bad Guys think you've got state secrets hidden on your laptop, they're gonna break your bones until you tell them where the secrets are hidden. All in all, it'll be futile. You're fucked whether or not you've got the secrets.

  10. Re:Hate to say this, but... on Kindle, Zune DRM Restrictions Coming Into Focus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Amen. Nobody seems to understand that we (at least in America) live in a hugely capitalistic society, and that means that we as the consumer hold IMMENSE power. It's all well and good to buy an ipod and then write to Apple complaining about DRM, but that doesn't mean much, because they've got your money already.

    Exercise your capitalistic rights to control the market.

    tl;dr ROW ROW FIGHT THE POWAH

  11. Re:Hate to say this, but... on Kindle, Zune DRM Restrictions Coming Into Focus · · Score: 1

    I have no problem with DRM until it stops me from being able to use my media legally as I see fit. If a DRM scheme somehow prevented me from giving a file to my friends, but let me listen to the song on my ipod, Sansa, or Zune as I wished, that'd be perfectly okay. I don't mind buying products/services/licenses. The DRM that is demonized is the DRM that preemptively treats you like a criminal and unfairly restricts your usage of a PRODUCT THAT YOU PAID FOR THE USAGE OF.

    Your post makes it sound like DRM is bad. BAD DRM is bad. Whether or not it can be effectively implemented is another issue; I know you couldn't magically detect the difference between a new media player and a friend's thumb drive.

  12. Re:Linux fork on Mozilla Contemplates a Future Without Google · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm not trying to be snippy or sarcastic here...um, what about Firefox has something to do specifically with Windows? As far as my experience goes, everything in Firefox is completely cross-platform.

  13. Re:Another so called "Revolution"? Yeah ok ... on GrandCentral Reborn As Google Voice · · Score: 1

    "Back in my day, a phone was a phone and we didn't have any of you young hoodlums' fancy options. now get off my lawn!"

    Hooray, you like simplicity. FUCKING GREAT FOR YOU. Buy a simple phone plan and a simple phone for yourself, and let those who DO want fancy options and features have them.

  14. Re:Paradox on GrandCentral Reborn As Google Voice · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That reminds me of a quote from Sid Meier's Aplha Centauri by entrepreneur Nwabudike Morgan: "We are not a monopoly. Our product is simply so good that no one chooses to compete with us."

    I'm not terribly concerned about Google, to be honest. I know they have a lot of my personal data. But they provide high quality products/services and don't treat me like shit. They're reliable and friendly and trustworthy. Microsoft, on the other hand, has always been shifty in one way or another, and their products have always seemed only partially baked and ready.

    Benevolent dictators are okay when they're actually benevolent. So far, Google hasn't done anything to wrong me.

  15. Re:It's fairer than suing people left and right. on South Korea Joins the "Three Strikes" Ranks · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Meh. People are gonna pirate regardless, and no matter what DRM is invented, it will be cracked. There will always be content pirates. The best you can do is treat your LEGITIMATE customers well enough that they buy from you again and again and compensate for whatever losses you might take from pirates.

  16. Re:They are cut off on Twitter Leads Social Networks In Downtime · · Score: 1

    That's the thing. You can't force anybody to follow your twitter feed. Only people who WANT to know what you're doing in minor increments will follow your feed.

    Who says that 'social' has to equal face-to-face time? Face-to-face time is not terribly easy to get, what with having to actually travel to your friend's location. Twitter is the same as calling a friend and telling them what's going on every once in a while, except it's opt-in. Only people who WANT to know what's going on in between face-to-face meetings will follow your twitter feed. Everyone else can just wait to sit down with you to find out.

  17. Re:Seriously? on Could Fake Phishing Emails Help Fight Spam? · · Score: 1

    You seem to think that the 'spam problem' is technological. It's not. You remember getting junk mail in your snail-mail box, right? Same concept. There is a medium through which many potential customers can be reached, and is cheaper than the alternative (for paper mail, it's cheaper than going door-to-door, for e-mail, it's cheaper than paper mail).

    Even if sender and receiver are authenticated properly, so what? A spammer will still be able to 1)forge his own authentication or 2)compromise an authentic box and use that as a zombie spam machine.

    The only even faintly possible way to stop all spam would be to have all email pass through a single point, where spam could be stopped. However, that is nearly impossible considering the already widespread and deeply entrenched SMTP, and the fact that getting net users to agree to let a single company read every single email they ever send to anyone ever will be nigh impossible.

    The spam problem is human. There is money to be made in spam, and in email spam, the profit margin is fucking massive. To kill spam, you must remove the monetary benefit, but the profit margin is so large, you don't really have much hope trying to cut that down to where spam doesn't pay.

  18. Re:Article? on A Hacker's Audacious Plan To Rule the Underground · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points. The people that pull the decimate line piss me off so incredibly much.

  19. Re:Q: Will tweets become like email...spam...? on Do Twitter Phishing Scams Herald the End of Microblogs? · · Score: 1

    If there are eyes looking at it, someone somewhere will find a way to turn it into a money-machine. Newspapers, radio (figurative eyes, of course), TV, email, blogs, and now twitter/pownce/jaiku/whatever. Why are we so fucking surprised?

  20. Re:That would imply that non spam tweets were usef on Do Twitter Phishing Scams Herald the End of Microblogs? · · Score: 1

    I think that's kinda the point. I can post to twitter "My boy turns 2 today" and everyone who's listening can know, without having to explicitly ask me how old my kid is.

  21. Re:I want to tag this story "sowhat". on Crackpot Scandal In Mathematics · · Score: 0

    It is with great sorrow that I admit I read that as "sow hat" and was very confused. Today is not my day.

  22. Re:AKA on EA Is Now Officially On Steam, Spore Loses SecuROM · · Score: 1

    Yes, but Steam has assured us that in the eventuality of their auth servers going down, they'd give us ways to continue playing.

    Also, any computer than can run the Steam client can install and play any game you've purchased via Steam. An unlimited number of installs, without the need to authenticate, then deauthenticate as you install on a new system.

    Yes, it's DRM, in a technical sense, but in a practical sense, it's almost a liberating as owning a 100% un-DRMed game CD that does not do disk checking.

    I would LOVE to have all my games on the Steam machine, because then I wouldn't have to dick around with saving CDs or installers.

  23. Re:Internet crimes, like rape? on MySpace Verdict a Danger To Depressed Kids · · Score: 1

    Seriously. It didn't involve a car at all. Are you new here?

  24. Re:Elimitate upselling on Time To Discuss Drug Prohibition? · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think that the worst that's ever happened to my pot-smoking friends is that they got very baked one day, and ran down to the 7-11 to buy taquitos. That's stimulating the economy. How can you possibly think that's bad?

  25. Re:I wouldn't hold my breath on Time To Discuss Drug Prohibition? · · Score: 4, Funny

    Exactly. No better way to punish criminals than forcing them to deal with the bureaucracy. :3