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User: coyo

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Comments · 36

  1. Re:ignoring the law on Court to FBI - Full Public Review Of Carnivore · · Score: 1
    You have yet to convince me that the internet is threat enough to bend the Constitution. How many people have been hurt by the internet in a way that the FBI could have previously prevented? Invalid questions I am sure, but call me curious.

    No, I don't use Napster and have no intention of doing so. Yes, I love my family but I think daily traffic poses a larger risk than anything here. No, I do not think we should stop traffic just to make people safer.

    -coyo

  2. Essential: In the constitution? on Court to FBI - Full Public Review Of Carnivore · · Score: 1
    I think that would cover it for me. This is a constitutional issue and I don't think I'm being wild and wacky by claiming the freedoms in that document can be considered the essnetial ones.

    -coyo

  3. ignoring the law on Court to FBI - Full Public Review Of Carnivore · · Score: 1
    Some laws you like, some you don't. It is generally accepted that you change the laws you don't like, rather than break them.

    It sounds like you would like to change the Bill of Rights to get around this little problem or just have the FBI break the law.

    If you want safety, just criogenically freeze your family. The universe is a dangerous place. Being safe is pretty nice, but it isn't everyone's goal, nor should it be.

    -coyo

  4. not people but AI tools. on Emergency Hearing About Carnivore - Updated · · Score: 1
    They won't need people if the promise of categorizing aritificial intelligence takes hold. You know the power of regulators. They make rules that are separate from the normal legislative process. Suppose AIs are given even tiny amount of power to do things. What would we be surrendering to them?

    -coyo da silly.

  5. however on Distributed Operating Systems? · · Score: 1
    Most living systems obtain parasites from time to time. They can be dealt with and it is not a disaster.

    -coyo

  6. building the real 'net' on Distributed Operating Systems? · · Score: 1
    Right now, we can surf around, gathering information over the net, and communicating over it. We even have drive storage sites. Something like a distributed Operating System would be really really cool. It would provide processing ticks as resources just like information and storage is now a resource.

    I forsee intelligent programs wandering the net, finding out watering holes such as processing power and memory resources. I see people setting aside a percent of their computer for a distributed community effort.

    Eventually, the use of the new net's processing power would be transparent to the user. People will barter processing power for processing power, give away to friends, sell to others, etc.

    - coyo

  7. translation on Ars Reviews Honda Insight · · Score: 1
    Come on.
    SUVs are FUN to drive
    I like to tailgate the puny cars and scare the crud out of the teeny leetle drivers.

    -coyo

  8. Lame New Poll on Ars Reviews Honda Insight · · Score: 1

    I drive a
    SUV
    car
    pickup truck
    spoorts car
    motorcycle
    bicycle
    tank
    I don't drive

    -coyo

  9. soup is good. on Ars Reviews Honda Insight · · Score: 1
    I drive a gas guzzler (26 mpg) that is a lot of fun to drive. I have a 1994 Camaro SS and I love the beast.

    Having said that, I can't complain about high gas prices. I contribute horribly to the problem of pollution and energy use.

    Why are gas prices going up? We're using gas like crazy. Period. SUV drivers and I have no right to complain about high gas prices.

    -coyo

  10. yjr noh hs,r on Forbes Reporter Refuses To Testify Against Crackers · · Score: 1

    erll, rbrm og yjru str esyvjomh upi. ejst fprd yjsy dsu snpiy ytiyj smf vpmbovtopm/
    o fpm
    t esny yo hry omyp s htrsy frnsyr snpiy oy. niy yjr tsvr od s;trsfu ;pdy/

  11. forgetting the artists, especially the side men. on MP3: On Artist Protection And Copy Protection · · Score: 1
    It is the artists that hold the copyrights to their work, not the record industry. The record industry holds the rights to distribution and production of the works due to the contract agreements.

    Invalidating the copyrights on the music will screw the artists more than the industry. A percentage of sales goes to the American Federation of Muscians and is used to promote free live concerts (to schools and such) and to compensate the sidemen on the records.

    It's small, but many muscians depend on that little check. Don't forget the side men! -coyo

  12. sentient multinationals. on Happy Independence Day, Jose · · Score: 1
    maybe the multinationals are sentient all ready. They are organisms consisting of millions of cells (workers) and have behaviors that can be measured and predicted. There is no human face on them to interact with. They protect their turf and interact with each other.

    Sounds like meta-animal behavior to me

    - coyo

  13. forgetting the artists, especially the side men. on Boies: Music Industry Could Lose Copyright · · Score: 1
    It is the artists that hold the copyrights to their work, not the record industry. The record industry holds the rights to distribution and production of the works due to the contract agreements.

    Invalidating the copyrights on the music will screw the artists more than the industry. A percentage of sales goes to the American Federation of Muscians and is used to promote free live concerts (to schools and such) and to compensate the sidemen on the records.

    It's small, but many muscians depend on that little check. Don't forget the side men!

    -coyo

  14. Syntactic Sugar and pointers on Microsoft Releases C# Language Reference · · Score: 1

    So is C# a pointered java with some Visual Basic syntatic sugar? -coyo

  15. Antibodies? on New, More Destructive Love Bug Variant · · Score: 1
    Would these be called antibodies? Is this the way to generate an immune system in the world's computer networks?

    -coyo

    --------------------------------------------------

    This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.

  16. what Clinton had to say on the DMCA on Microsoft Asks Slashdot To Remove Readers' Posts · · Score: 1
    I thought this was interesting....

    {...}

    I am advised by the Department of Justice that certain provisions of H.R. 2281 and the accompanying Conference Report regarding the Register of Copyrights raise serious constitutional concerns. Contrary to assertions in the Conference Report, the Copyright Office is, for constitutional purposes, an executive branch entity. Accordingly, the Congress may exercise its constitutionally legitimate oversight powers to require the Copyright Office to provide information relevant to the legislative process. However, to direct that Office's operations, the Congress must act in accord with the requirements of bicameralism and presentment prescribed in Article I of the Constitution.

    Further, the Congress may not require the Register to act in a manner that would impinge upon or undermine the President's discretion under Article II, section 3 of the Constitution to determine which, if any, executive branch recommendations to the Congress would be "necessary and expedient." Accordingly, I will construe sections 103(a), 104(b), 401(b), and 403(a) of H.R. 2281 to require the Register to perform duties only insofar as such requirements are consistent with these constitutional principles.

    {...}

    WILLIAM J. CLINTON

  17. weakening their own case on Microsoft Asks Slashdot To Remove Readers' Posts · · Score: 1
    Here is the letter I sent. I noticed that they were pretty much overagressive in their suggestions. I sent this polite letter.

    Dear Mr Weston,

    Regarding the proposed net censorship of slashdot: you had indicated comment #86 was to be censored. Please explain. Here is the full text of the comment:

    Posting the data is all well and good, but.... (Score:2)

    by smartin on Tuesday May 02, @04:20PM EDT (#86)

    What happens to the people that implement it (ie. the Samba guys) even if they obtain the information without intentionally breaking the license. Are they exposing themselves to expensive litigation? Are they endangering the project?

    Suggesting that an innoculous comment like this should be censored may endanger your case.

    Helping out,

    Eric Wolf

    -coyo

  18. bravo! on Employers Logging Keystrokes-What Can You Do? · · Score: 1
    really cool solution there :)

    -coyo

  19. Little Brother is taddling on you on Employers Logging Keystrokes-What Can You Do? · · Score: 1
    SSH won't help. They can monitor the keystrokes and record them. Unless you encrypt your typing..that won't work...

    coyo

  20. Re:Why the ACLU is doing the right thing here on COPA Worse Than Censorware? · · Score: 1

    Yes, it is disgusting and terrible, but does it really turn kids into slavoring monstors and cause lots of harm to them?

  21. neural nets do not model the neuron. on Jordan Pollack Answers AI And IP Questions · · Score: 1

    I've not seen one that has. They model charactures that are exteremely unlike a neuron. If they were serious about modelling a neuron, they would model the sodium/potassium pump. There are certain neurons (Pyramidal, I believe) that actually fire spontaniously without a synaptic jolt. They simply pump so many ions untill a critical voltage released and the neuron discharges. I've never seen any models that take these behaviors into account.

  22. putting on my cynic's hat on AOLization of America · · Score: 1

    The people in the middle of the bell curve of smarts are always going to outnumber the more saavy people. AOL/Time Warner knows how to connect to these people and make them feel like the company is full of people like them. AOL/Time Warner (and Microsoft) give social smarts priority over any technical smarts in the company. Yes, I know this sounds like the emotional intelligence crud, and maybe it is, but my point is that in the business world, social smarts is more important than technical smarts. We will never achieve that amount of social smarts and still be the geeks we are. coyo

  23. Re:Huh on Jordan Pollack Answers AI And IP Questions · · Score: 1
    The facial recognition stuff is very interesting, because it seems that facial recognition is the only thing that is hardwired into the human brain.

    For more info >> Facial Recognition Page.

    Not even horizontal and vertical lines are hardwired in. There have been experiments done with animals (not very ethical ones, I'd say), where they were put in environments with only horizontal lines. Their brains never developed the software for vertical line detections.

    It must be evolutionarily expensive, but very necessary to recognize faces. More important than recognizing the most basic feature of lines right away.

    coyo the coyote

  24. a problem with AI research on Jordan Pollack Answers AI And IP Questions · · Score: 2
    Is that each group seems to focus on one aspect of intelligence to try to model.

    It's more than likely that many if not all of the different aspects of intelligence are needed to form into an AI.

    One case in point are Kohonen neural networks, which are a close model to the behavior of how sound gets processed by the brain. The Situated Action camp has produced models that very well model the motor control and locomotive behavior of insects and fish. And then there is the field of emergent intelligence (related to situated cognition) that seems promising in its attempts to model large scale collective cognition such as ant colonies or beaurocrasies.

    Isn't it possible that nervous systems must utilize many different tools that act in concert? I think people should split resarch into the following separate categories:

    Decision Making

    Feature Detection

    Categorization

    Long Term Memory

    coyo the coyote

    ----------------------

    new url: http://www.twu.net/~coyo

  25. Re:oh all religions are the same on German Governmental Agency Says: Use Open Source · · Score: 1
    A bad idea right from the start? I guess I'm kinda cynical about _all_ religions. I'm not sure if judging their origins makes much of a difference, and I'm not going to charitibly assume they were not put their to controll the masses. Every one of the can have really cool people and have horrible jerks.

    -coyo