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User: gryf

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Comments · 95

  1. Idiocy, not betrayal on Broadband ISP Betrayal Forces Homeowner To Sell New House · · Score: 1

    As I noted in the OP Comcast's Incompetence, Lack of Broadband May Force Developer To Sell Home The guy failed to do due diligence in checking the physical ( is there a cable box anywhere nearby?), talking to neighbors or any other neutral observer. He put his faith in two organizations no one trusts. He got what we all expect: lousy service. I looked at moving out that way myself, but bandwidth limitations have kept me on this side of the Sound. This is a story of how not to buy a house. If bandwidth is THIS important, don't leave it to sales, or tech sales, staff to tell you there's bandwidth. He wanted to be convinced, he became convinced, he felt betrayed when he should have felt stupid for not acknowledging the obvious: there's no bandwidth in the countryside.

  2. No Moral Standing Here on US Executions Threaten Supply of Anaesthetic Used For Surgical Procedures · · Score: 1, Informative
    So Germany will stop selling medicines to the the US because of our nation's democratic choice to continue capital punishment. Meanwhile, they happily sell medicines to Iran which has a oligarchically imposed practice of capital punishment for such crimes as being raped and being homosexual.

    If the EU position were a principled one, they would not be sending the same drugs to Iran. In fact, the policy remains popular among citizens in Europe.

  3. missing the point on School Sends Child's Lunch Home After Determining it Unhealthy · · Score: 1
    What I don't understand is why so many ppl on /. think there's no justification for ever listening in on a overseas phone calls to known terrorists, or shutting down websites distributing copyrighted material, but are just hunky dorey with having the government rummage through our children's lunches and judging how we raise our kids. What ever you think of the family of the next kid over, there's no need, no justification for the government to interfere this way.

    Moreover, the smoke screen about 'low income program' and 'opt-in' is irrelevant. The mother was obviously able to send the kid in with a decent lunch ( better than I usually took to school ), and at no time was she asked to 'opt-in' on this program, the school had to. The mother repeatedly asked the school not to intervene. Why was it necessary to overrule her?

    It's a DAY CARE program. All of the rest is state meddling. Sure it's subsidized, the mom would be paying for it with her tax dollars even if her kids wasn't enrolled. She was lucky enough to get access to cheap day care, that doesn't mean she should expect the government to rummage through the lunch and materials prepared. Hell, if the school said they were looking for drugs /. would immediately detect the Fourth Amendment violation this 'program' courts.

    The fundamental line from the Carolina Journal story: "There are no clear restrictions about what additional items - like potato chips - can be included in preschoolers' lunch boxes." Where the hell does the government come off 'prohibiting' what a parent sends in. If Mom thinks a 'coke and a twinkie' is okay, that's her damned business. I would disagree, but it's supposed to be a free country not a nanny state.

  4. Re:Perfectly sound legal arguments on Slate: Amazon's Tax Stance Unfair and Unethical · · Score: 1

    Yes it is. And surely Amazon pays for whatever business fees and taxes ( in Seattle we have a Busines and Occupancy tax levied against businesses regardless of whether they do any business or even exist within Seattle's city limits ) that are levied against it. The 'need for revenue' should never be the operative reason to levy a tax. Taxes should be levied against people who use the services offered by the state. Business taxes, B&O, etc all pay to provide the environment needed to exist. Why should Amazon subsidize the sidewalk maintenance in Sacramento when their customers never need to step outside?

  5. Netgear who? on Netgear CEO Says Jobs's Ego Will Bite Apple · · Score: 1

    I had to ditch my netgear wlan router after a year because it all but melted down. The interface when it worked was a study in how not to write a UI. I found quickly that Netgear was not my friend as a user, so I find it more than mildly amusing that the founder is complaining about Apple. Apple's wlan router interface has issues, but for plane jane uses, it's superb by comparison. Apple's focus on 'closed' began as a focus on 'easy to use' which it was and always has been. The fact that it's also /lucrative/ is due to the failure of Apple's competitors to offer an acceptably simple 'open' alternative.

  6. Re:/. has many Corporate Propagandist.... on Senators Bash ISP and Push Extensive Net Neutrality · · Score: 1

    Government control over how people can sell services or manage their property is clearly less a product of constitutional law than private control of private property. Being a corporate propagandist is a clearly protected realm of free speech, so is being a government propagandist.

    I'm against net neutrality not because I like paying more for less, but because I'm against it. Net neutrality is more likely, in my opinion, to raise the bar for entry into the telecom market, not lower it. As a result we would see fewer services, at a higher cost, than we would if we left the market alone.

    If we want to bring bandwidth to the masses, stop treating the internet as a funky telegraph system, stop treating consumers as children, and let people sort out for themselves the optimal arrangement of services and financial arrangements.

  7. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1
    Speaking of delusional, can you imagine or recall how well web video worked "when [the internet] was almost entirely a government-funded project"? It's the commercial internet that provides with WiFi hot spots, multi-megabit internet, cloud computing, World of Warcraft and internet video. If you'd prefer to go back to text mode MUDs, fine, don't ask the rest of us to go back.

    Any time you don't want AT&T or Comcast involved in your life, drop them. You don't have that choice at all when it comes to federal regulation.

  8. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1

    Bingo! In practice regulating markets limits competition by making the barrier for entry higher. Look at car manufacturing, by constantly raising standards for safety and efficiency they make it impossible for new companies to break in. When Toyota first entered the US market, they're product was drek, but soon customers began looking for the one thing that Toyota was better at: efficiency. Then came consumer interest in safety and Volvos became popular.
    With ever increasing mandates, new manufacturers must be incredibly good at all things to get in. It's not a matter of having cheap cars kill people, even Toyota has problems, but by allowing the market to choose the winner consumers get a larger voice in who is allowed to make a car.

  9. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1

    It's hardly impossible. When my parents left Comcast for Verizon they simply let Verizon run fiber up to the house. Ta Da! Choice in the market right up to the last mile.

  10. Re:Actually... on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1
    You have a very broken idea of what 'free market' means.

    A free market allows private entities enter into any consensual agreement between parties to accomplish their goals. If they need to run cable across someone's property, they arrange, or lease, access. If they don't have the infrastructure, they lease resources from another party. ( See 'roaming cell service' )

    What prevents a free market for broadband in the fullest sense is government regulation preventing carriers from running cable the last mile or under the sidewalk, etc. If a carrier can lease access from the city to put cables under the sidewalk, that's still the free market at work.

  11. Re:Why do they need to do traffic shaping? on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1
    I'm sorry you live out in the boonies, but don't ask me to subsidize your youtube.

    I've never known anyone who lived within ten miles of a POP unable to choose their internet provider. Since most of the country lives in cities or their suburbs rather than out in the country, I doubt your situation is common. My mom lives in a very rural area of Oregon, she has at least three choices for broadband.

  12. Re:False choice on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1

    One detail you left out is that government regulation mandates monopolies on utilities. It's not a natural condition.

  13. Re:Still too vague and too poorly defined on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1
    That's like saying it's okay for the government to regulate the highways but not the cars. Because, you know, THAT way the government can't control where the on-ramps and off-ramps are. This is not a realistic description of how the internet works.

    Once the government can tell service providers how to operate their private property, the pipes, and how to manage traffic flows in order to protect consumers, we will have accepted the premise that allows the government to restrict or block traffic to destinations that the government considers 'dangerous' to consumers.

    Imagine a federal black list of websites and domains. Imagine the No Labels crowd have the power to block web traffic to MSNBC and FNC. Imagine the government requiring all service providers to block traffic to known wikileaks sites. The government doesn't need to regulate the content anymore if it can block the destination. It won't happen today, but invariably regulation grows increasingly restrictive once in place.

    The FCC has just arrogated itself the authority to create a Great Firewall of America, and THAT is what concerns net neutrality opponents.

  14. Re:No competition or no cheap competition? on Is Net Neutrality Really Needed? · · Score: 1
    Regulation invariable helps big business, more than consumers. They can afford to sustain the costs of handling the overhead costs incurred by regulation while smaller outfits cannot.

    I have only one cable provider in my area, and Verizon gave up expanding FIOS in my state, but I have two sat companies who are aggressively asking for my business, both partnering with the telco.

    It's not that competition has gone away, it just doesn't look like it did fifteen years ago. That's normal.

    I'm surprised that people trust the government "a series of tubes" to regulate something as complicated as the internet after they make obvious, repeatedly, they don't know what they're doing. The latest example? The FCC said they would have imposed stricter regulations, but they recognized Android was 'open'...

  15. Re:Wait... on Democrats Pan Google-Verizon Net Neutrality Proposal · · Score: 0, Troll

    You have the freedom to pick any damn internet service you like. China implemented government mandated neutrality onto the internet, but we call it the Great Firewall of China.

  16. To Avoid This Mess on Apple Blocks Cartoonist From App Store · · Score: 1

    We should have elected John McCain, then Apple would have fully supported work that satirizes public officials.

  17. Irony on Child Receives Trachea Grown From Own Stem Cells · · Score: 1

    If the kid's own embryonic stem cells had been harvested for this kind of experimental work, he would never have developed a problem with his trachea. Isn't this why we need to fully fund embryonic stem cell research with everyone's tax dollars? /irony

  18. It's the Adjective that matters on Texas Approves Conservative Curriculum · · Score: 1
    I've yet to see any proposed change that doesn't undo some unnecessary change made in the past twenty years. Was there a hue and cry when the textbook interpretation of the civil rights movement went from being a color blind society to being an ethnically obsessed and divisive movement?

    If someone can point to an article in the NY Times or Washington Post about how CA or some similar state put a liberal stamp on the nation's textbooks, then I'll begin assuming this article might be something more than an idiotic culture war volley.

  19. What a waste on California To Create Public Animal Abuser Registry · · Score: 1
    Glad to hear the state's finally running a surplus again. I'm sure this means they've got their spending priorities under control.

    Please people, regardless of the benefits a /statewide/ animal control registry provides ( on the assumption that CA govt can provide anything effectively ) you have to balance that against maintaining funding for school programs, criminal justice programs ( like State appointed attorneys ), environmental protection programs.

    The state has been in the red for eight years, how can any elected official there justify creating any new program?

  20. Nothing New Here on Toyota Black Box Data Is More Closed Than Others' · · Score: 1
    Until very recently it seems no manufacturer let the public into the 'black box' without a court order of some variety. In California, it was/is a legal requirement.

    A few states are joining the debate. A California law that went into effect in July 2004 requires manufacturers to provide customers with information on black boxes in cars and states that the data cannot be obtained without a court order or the owner's permission.

    See this old CNET story Rocky road for car 'black boxes'.

    Toyota's lack of openess about data that imperils individual privacy is no skin off of my back. If Government Motors wants to penalize Toyota for it, perhaps it should be mentioned that mandating car electronics more accessible is a bad idea. Look at how Google got hacked by China.

  21. Statistical Tools on The Limits To Skepticism · · Score: 1
    The very problem the original author Eschenbach describes, is what the Economist author ( also of unknown background, there's no evidence to assume related statistics expertise ) considers a feature. Given the supposed problems with the temperature record at Darwin, some scientist used a 'statistical tool' to 'homogenize' it. The result became the mirror image of the actual raw data. The yardstick by which the 'homogenized' data was validated was also homogenized data that we now know was 'fixed' using several 'tricks' that an anonymous contributor described as 'botch after botch after botch'.

    Further, it's surprising to describe 'cherry picking' in a contributor's work without mentioning, at least contrasting against, the recent Briffa controversy wherein the history of global climate was measured by three trees in an entire valley in Siberia. Maybe it was valid, but if so why did Briffa suppress the source data for a decade?

    Since the obvious trend in the Darwin data is a cooling trend, the question remains, what changes to the screen or siting produce /consistent/ cooling even as global temperatures are supposed to be rising? This is supposed to be the hottest October in record so the raw data should illustrate that somehow.

    The Economist author also appears to miss the controversial disclosures regarding peer review. With a collection of scientists working to change who reviews peers, who accepts papers, and even redefining what 'peer review' itself is supposed to mean, the final appeal to authority near the end of the piece undermines his thesis by grabbing for a rhetorical stanchion that has rusted through.

  22. Re:So let me get this straight.. on Attorney General Says Wiretap Lawsuit Must Be Thrown Out · · Score: 1

    The crux of the question remains, after several years, how do you define /reasonable/ not whether a search warrant was obtained. In most criminal cases a warrant must be obtained first. In international domains where national security is involved, warrants have been the exception generally, not the rule. It's generally considered /reasonable/ that people get their luggage checked when entering the country for example. No warrant necessary for customs or even TSA for domestic flights. Before you can say whether any search is illegal, unless you have settled case precedent at hand, you have to first describe why such a search is unreasonable.

  23. Where are the organic advocates? on Toyota Develops New Flower Species To Reduce Pollution · · Score: 1

    I thought it was bad form or just plain dangerous to mess with Mother Gaia's design? Isn't modified plants against some natural law or something? What if pollen from these flowers drift into someone else's garden? Where's the boatload of decent, thinking, people ready to stamp out these horrors of science?

  24. Re:That's nothing... on FOSS Sexism Claims Met With Ire and Denial · · Score: 1

    Fail. New /. system blows sometimes. Should have read:
    That's nothing, try suggesting that Linux ISN'T ready for mass adoption as a desktop OS.

  25. That's nothing... on FOSS Sexism Claims Met With Ire and Denial · · Score: 1

    Raise the subject of sexism, and you are met with illogic that I can only compare to that of the tobacco companies trying to deny the link between their products and cancer.

    That's nothing, try suggesting that Linux is ready for mass adoption as a desktop OS.