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User: ExecutorElassus

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  1. Read the Followups on Members of Parliament Demand Explanation For Detention of David Miranda · · Score: 1, Informative

    Namely, from the follow-up article:
    "Mr. Miranda was in Berlin to deliver documents related to Mr. Greenwald’s investigation into government surveillance to Ms. Poitras, Mr. Greenwald said. Ms. Poitras, in turn, gave Mr. Miranda different documents to pass to Mr. Greenwald. Those documents, which were stored on encrypted thumb drives, were confiscated by airport security, Mr. Greenwald said. All of the documents came from the trove of materials provided to the two journalists by Mr. Snowden."

    In the helpful clarification from Wonkette, "he was actively participating in transporting secret documents that were stolen, and which it is illegal for him to possess." On a trip paid for by The Guardian.

    So, maybe not quite as innocent a bystander as he initally makes it seem. But that was probably the point, and now British politicians are getting hammered for the abuse of power he baited them into. Well played!

  2. Mothmen on Why We'll Never Meet Aliens · · Score: 1

    For all of its flaws, that odd artifact of Richard Gere's film career, The Mothman Prophecies had a couple insightful things to say about how a truly alien species would react to us. Both of them were in the form of a dialogue with the author of the book on which the film was based. They went:

    Richard Gere: But they're more advanced than we are: why don't they just explain themselves?
    Author: You're more advanced than a cockroach; you ever try to explain yourself to one of them?

    Richard Gere: but what do they want?
    Author: [something something] and their motives are not human.

    I think that's going to be the truest indicator of alien intelligences: we won't even understand them on a basic psychological level, let alone be able to have debates and conversations and cheesy expositional dialogue with them.

  3. Re:Space Tourists on Why We'll Never Meet Aliens · · Score: 1

    I call dibs on the weird artifact that grants wishes. You get +1 for super-obscure soviet sci-fi literary references.

  4. Hope the Auth Servers are Running! on StarCraft 2: Heart of the Swarm Released · · Score: 1, Troll

    So, does this one, like the previous, require an always-on Internet connection to Blizzard's authentication servers, the ones that are tied to all their games? Because I really don't like the idea of not being able to play a single-player game just because some recent update to WoW is overloading their servers.

  5. Re:"The Big Game"* on How the Super Bowl Will Reach US Submarines · · Score: 0

    Well, I'll concede confusing "trademark" and "copyright," but it's not as easy as you imply: businesses may not refer to the game unless they have rights to do so (so, for example, a bar cannot say "come watch the [big game] on our flatscreens!" even though doing so in no way implies endorsement. So, the US military saying "we're broadcasting the [big game] down to our submarines, so our submariners can watch it" might indeed cause problems.

    I'll also concede: I mostly just want to see the NFL file a lawsuit against the US military for trademark infringement.

  6. "The Big Game"* on How the Super Bowl Will Reach US Submarines · · Score: 1

    FTFY. The combination of the words "The," "Super," and "Bowl" is copyrighted by the NFL: anyone not paying royalties is commiting copyright violation by using it (which is why everybody refers ambiguously to "the big game").

    /OT-rant

  7. Re:Even the summary is backwards on A Humanoid Robot Named "Baxter" Could Revive US Manufacturing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're going to increase the profitability of manufacturing in the US by eliminating most of the costs of labor, thereby allowing more of the means of production to remain under the control -- and work to the benefit -- of capital.

    I really can't imagine a move like this being unpopular and/or economically suicidal in any way whatsoever. Nope.

  8. Re:Great potential on Auto-threading Compiler Could Restore Moore's Law Gains · · Score: 1

    Every computing/programming abstraction is improved by reference to a bunny metaphor. This is true facts.

  9. Re:Suicide Pacts on US Scientific R&D Could Face Fiscal Cliff Doom · · Score: 1

    Well, in the sense that the Republican party - or, more to the point, the supply-siders and teabaggers - have the dismantling or the New Deal, and the managed decline of the federal government as an explicit platform of their domestic policy. Since, in their argument, goverment is inherently dysfunctional and harmful, it really doesn't matter *how* they burn it down, so long as the objective is achieved.

    However, I'd agree with you to the extent that the only substantial discussion going on right now in Washington is how fast and drastically social spending is to be slashed, since the Democrats have completely abandoned their core principles (namely, that government plays a positive role in the well-being of a society) in favor of the Republican position.

  10. Suicide Pacts on US Scientific R&D Could Face Fiscal Cliff Doom · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem with the sequestration deal is that it was essentially a suicide pact: if Congress can't agree to a more-balanced budget, then savage austerity measures take effect, crippling government functioning across the board.

    That's great as a motivator, except that one party is motivated by an ideology that actually wants that kind of austerity. In short: it's not a very good suicide pact if one side already has a death wish.

    Also, don't worry about it being a mutual self-immolation: the Republicans will demand that only social spending (and not military) gets cut, and the Democrats will cave at the last minute in the name of compromise.

  11. Re:Nowhere fast on FBI Asked Megaupload To Preserve Pirated Files, Then Used Them Against Dotcom · · Score: 5, Funny

    whoops. I got Dotcom mixed up with, uh, Julian Assange (who I believe is an AU citizen, yes?). I'll just go back to nursing this booze now.

  12. Nowhere fast on FBI Asked Megaupload To Preserve Pirated Files, Then Used Them Against Dotcom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's where the FBI's case is going to go. Everything I've read tells me that the FBI, their Australian exponents, and the other parties involved broke too many regs to be able to bring a real case against Megaupload. This is just one more nail in the coffin.

  13. "Politically Incorrect" on Want a Security Pro? Get Politically Incorrect and Learn Geek Culture · · Score: 2

    ... is dog-whistle for "I really wish I could get away with being open about my racism/sexism/homophobia/whatever." You should really avoid hiring those people, if that's what you really mean. If you just mean "Yo, we shouldn't knock qualified applicants off the list for a pot bust ten years ago," then maybe you're on to something.

  14. Re:If AMD Dies... on Is Qualcomm the New AMD? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, I'm not entirely sure of that. For example: I do audio work, and video work, and like gaming, and compile my own software. All of those things take a robust desktop architecture to do well. You're not really suggesting that I'd switch to a tablet running BOINC in the background 24/7 while I process high-def audio files, are you?

    So let's discuss alternatives. Say AMD goes down. What are my options as a consumer in, say, five years if I want to avoid Intel, but want all the horsepower I can get my hands on for a desktop workstation? I really don't thing it's going to be Qualcomm, if they're targeting low-wattage mobile devices. Are there any other CPU manufacturers who are positioned to step into that market?

  15. Re:Where are these caps? on The Coming Internet Video Crash · · Score: 1

    fo reals, though. Where I live (Germany) *nobody* is selling capped internet. Providers are in bidding wars to offer faster and cheaper internet than the other guy. I get a real rate of about 4.5MB down/150k up, with no monthly limits beyond that, for €20 a month. My cell phone plan is the cheapest I could get, and it doesn't cap, either (but throttles after 50MB a month), and it costs €10 a month.

    This article needs to be re-summarized to "broadband service in the US is slowly but steadily regressing."

  16. Re:official takedown notice? on YouTube Alters Copyright Algorithms, Will 'Manually' Review Some Claims · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not entirely. ContentID works by checking uploaded tracks against a database submitted by rightsholders. If the content matches, it gives the holders power to force an automatic takedown, or derive ad revenue from it. However, if the uploader disputes the claim, there was no real recourse if the claimant denied the dispute. Further, DCMA notices have to be manually filed for each uploaded file. Since Big Media is a bunch of whiny bitches, they didn't want to do that, and would much rather google does all the legwork for them.

  17. Re:official takedown notice? on YouTube Alters Copyright Algorithms, Will 'Manually' Review Some Claims · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because responding manually according to the required procedure, for the (I'm estimating here) thousands of requests they receive would eat up a huge chunk of their administrative and support budget.

  18. Re:Human Psychology on Why Are We So Rude Online? · · Score: 1
    But that is definitely not the case in the Stanford experiment. The test-subjects in the role of the guards were not given any instructions for how to discipline the "prisoners." They were not given any explicit instructions regarding their conduct. Only the authority to carry it out. Read some of the results (quoting the Wiki):

    After a relatively uneventful first day, on the second day the prisoners in Cell 1 blockaded their cell door with their beds and took off their stocking caps, refusing to come out or follow the guards' instructions. Guards from other shifts volunteered to work extra hours in order to assist in subduing the revolt, and subsequently attacked the prisoners with fire extinguishers without being supervised by the research staff. Finding that handling nine cell mates with only three guards per shift was challenging, one of the guards suggested that they use psychological tactics to control them.

    etc etc

    That's not normal people being coerced into doing bad things; that's "normal people" volunteering to act beyond the bounds of their instructions, and willingly acting in a manner that is outside the bounds of what is normally considered ethical or moral behavior.

    And for the developer of the experiment himself:

    Zimbardo aborted the experiment early when Christina Maslach, a graduate student he was then dating (and later married), objected to the conditions of the prison after she was introduced to the experiment to conduct interviews. Zimbardo noted that, of more than fifty people who had observed the experiment, Maslach was the only one who questioned its morality. After only six days of a planned two weeks' duration, the Stanford Prison experiment was discontinued

    That's the guy who designed an experiment ostensibly intended to provide some insight into whether (in the words of an above commenter) Nazi guards were personally accountable for the atrocities they committed, not having any moral qualms at all about creating conditions that lead to exactly the same sort of brutality, and only stopping because his girlfriend gave him an ultimatum. Again, what we find over and over in experiments like this, is that people will often willingly volunteer to escalate to acts of violence, if given official sanction to do so (and decidedly not, as you claim, and I wish, because they were manipulated or coerced).

    And like I said from the beginning, read up on the experience of the dictatorial regimes of the last century if you need more evidence. You don't have to force people, or even prod them or train them, to come up with and commit acts of horrific cruelty. You just have to provide the venue for it, and the people will show up of their own accord.

  19. Re:Human Psychology on Why Are We So Rude Online? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But see, I take away a different conclusion entirely, from both studies. Morals aren't really morals if you drop them for an authority figure. To me, morals are what you as a person believe, and will not abandon just because someone in a lab coat tells you to. That's the disquieting truth of both experiments: the majority of what people regard as their own moral conduct is actually just socially-reinforced behavioral norms. That's the point of the pigeon example; or, to put it more sharply: if you could get away with committing an act of cruelty, with no negative consequences whatsoever, would you do it? Both studies suggest that most people would, and the experience of people living under Pinochet -- or any number of other horrible dictators -- verifies this.

  20. Human Psychology on Why Are We So Rude Online? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The reason is very simple, if somewhat disheartening. Take a look at some of the literature on human behavior, particularly the studies on the "banality of evil" (texbook scenarios are the Milgram Experiment and the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment).

    The sad truth pointed out by both of those studies is that approximately 60% of us -- all of us, even those of us who claim to be, and act like, normal ethical people in polite society -- will commit acts of cruelty upon another human being, even to the point of delivering potentially lethal electrical shocks to someone obviously in distress, if the social sanctions against it are removed.And those were both cases in which the victims had voices and (in the latter case) faces by which the perpetrators could witness the suffering they were causing.

    In short, the majority of people will be cruel, spiteful bullies if they believe they can get away with it. For me, a good example is (oddly) watching how people treat pigeons (??): they're harmless, no more dirty than, say, hoboes, and live around us. But they are negatively viewed as carriers of disease ("rats of the skies" is such a cliché, and what's so bad about rats, anyway?), and most people wouldn't think twice about trying to scare them and threaten to cause them harm. It seems a bit melodramatic, but I often wonder why a person would want to be mean to some random harmless animal. I think, sadly, that it's because most people like being mean, and just need a venue to get away with it.

    The Pinochet regime in Chile figured this out pretty quickly: you don't need to make people commit acts of cruelty against their will. All you have to do is provide a venue for cruelty without consequences, and the people will come out of the woodwork of their own accord. And Facebook/YouTube/your local news station's comments section are just such venues.

  21. Re:It's even worse on Booted From Airplane For Wearing Anti-TSA T-shirt · · Score: 1

    For the same reason we scorn the obese who are that way due to sloth and overindulgence, but not due to glandular or metabolic disorders: the hardware works fine, but the owner has elected to misuse it. Or rather, the possessor of a perfectly functioning brain has elected not to exercise it. It isn't true stupidity we scorn, but mental laziness.

  22. Should probably post to the support foru- oh, wait on Proprietary Nvidia Linux Driver Contains Privilege Escalation Hole · · Score: 2

    Perhaps not entirely coincidentally, "one month" is about the amount of time that nVidia's web forum - comically also the only route for reporting bugs, and found here - has been shut down due to a DDoS attack.

    Probably not the best way to follow up their snippy response to Linus Torvald bashing their Linux support.

  23. Re:for artists? on David Lowery On the Ethics of Music Piracy · · Score: 1

    You're mis-assigning value here. What is scarce in the case of intellectual property - or in the case of copyright - is the physical copy. Since that's a tangible object, which previously required considerable investment to mass-produce, that's what got restricted to a licensed monopoly. But since making and distributing copies is now trivially easy, there's no reason to restrict them.

    What has not been monetized, however, and is the only link in the chain that is not trivially easy to replace by digital means, is the original, physical act of performing the work. Artists have known this for some time: they make very little of their income from CD sales, and most of it from going on tour, and actually playing stuff live.

    That event is the only thing that cannot be infinitely replicated, because it's a live event, so that's the only thing in the chain that has any real reason to have value. Everything else was artificial scarcity that has been imposed for the last several centuries until technology caught up. This guy's open letter to unrepentant filesharers makes a huge number of bad assumptions about spending and payment habits (really? Every time I download something free, it's a lost sale that directly impacts a struggling artist?), that just serves as further evidence that most people in the industry haven't realized yet that their entire business model is on borrowed time.

  24. Re:My Password is Super Effective on How Many Seconds Would It Take To Crack Your Password? · · Score: 1

    Wish I had mod points. It cannot be stressed enough: the way we've been taught to keep passwords is about the most ineffective method, for these very reasons. Pick four random dictionary words (or even toss in meaningless words), make a story out of them, and use that. My pw would take several thousand trillion years to crack, and it's impossible for me to forget. Yay for xkcd!

  25. Uh on IEEE Spectrum Digs Into the Future of Money · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This timing of this report - how long ago was the BitCoin theft? a couple weeks? - seems a bit ill-planned.