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User: Securityemo

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  1. Re:Just keep in mind the tradeoff on Indian Gov't Uses Special Powers To Slash Cancer Drug Price By 97% · · Score: 1

    After the year-and-a-half stint on SSRIs I had a year ago I've resolved to use them only if I somehow wind up with clinical depression or get a crippling disease that ruins my life anyway. Undeath is a drastic solution and not one that should be applied lightly. But hey, at least they do work.

  2. Re:Nullify! Jury Nullification on How To Crash the US Justice System: Demand a Trial · · Score: 1

    So were the hippies, so were the punks?

  3. Re:I saw this on TV the other day on Journalist Gets Blasted By the Pentagon's Pain Ray — Twice · · Score: 1

    So fire it in short bursts then. Mob advances, blast them with a flash, wait, flash them again?

  4. Re:Final Fantasy 7 on Computer Games That Defined RPGs In the 1980s · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was the biggest FF7 fanboy you could imagine, so I might be biased, but Cloud Strife being a "sham" is a core part of the story i think, together with Aeris being the "madonna" to Tifa's... more down to earth personality. There's an underlying story about ideals and dreams and how we live up to them - and what inferiority complexes and narcissism do to people and relationships.

  5. Re:So it goes on Accused LulzSec Members Left Trail of Clues Online · · Score: 1

    Also, on a more cheerful and lively note, I think one of the songs on ohGrs most recent album is about the events leading up to this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8fFqEdQQZQ

  6. Re:Story time on Accused LulzSec Members Left Trail of Clues Online · · Score: 1

    I take your story at face value, but remember that the things they're known for doing are hacking for fun and political attention-grabbing. Presumably they could have just stopped. I guess they might have felt pressure about having a proverbial damocles sword above their heads for years to come?

  7. So it goes on Accused LulzSec Members Left Trail of Clues Online · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're all human, obviously. And perhaps the risk aversion that would have driven them to meticulously fly under the radar ultimately would have prevented them from creating such a spectacle in the first place?

  8. Re:Why NATO? on NATO Awards Largest Cyber-Security Contract To Date · · Score: 1

    Yes, that was my point.

  9. Re:Why NATO? on NATO Awards Largest Cyber-Security Contract To Date · · Score: 3, Insightful

    NATO is a military alliance between a subset of UN members - it would exist as long as the member states found it useful to exist, would it not?

  10. Re:Pass a law, carve off a piece of the GDP on Measuring China's Cyberwar Threat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Viktor Suvorov, "Inside the Soviet Army"? The laugh-or-cry gallows humour in that book is absolutely brilliant. You really feel with the author. It reminded me about Solsjenitsyns unsentimental yet gripping descriptions of the gulags.

  11. Re:Not just redheads on Redheads Feel Pain Differently Than the Rest of Us · · Score: 1

    I'm a partial redhead, but I have sucky pain tolerance. My sister and father on the other hand... dad had a bit of a stomach ache one day, that just wouldn't go away. Then it did, rather suddenly. When he went to the hospital he was ash-grey and rambling; turns out it was a ruptured appendix. A person with a more normal pain treshold would surely have gone much sooner and spared himself all of the trouble involved in having your insides surgically cleaned from pus.

    They're both dark red-brownish, dad is red-skinned and my sister wound up olive.

  12. Re:I am absolutely stunned on Ask Slashdot: Using Company Laptop For Personal Use · · Score: 1

    Nah. I've had stuff bought for me by my parents, never had to do the dishes or laundry or cooking, or even cleaning. Quoting Ministry: "I've never had to work a day in my life." Still, I feel compelled to conduct myself professionally when at work. It just seems natural.

  13. Awesome on Rob Malda (CmdrTaco) Joins the Washington Post · · Score: 1

    Good luck in your future endeavours.

  14. Why all this silliness? on Canadian Music Industry Wants Subscriber Disclosure Without Court Oversight · · Score: 1

    Whenever this comes up it seems like the music industry behaves like a frightened animal in every single instance. Why doesn't it try to play it cool? Surely they must realize how these things sound to others? Or is "I want everything and the kitchen sink and I want it now" an actual, valid legal tactic that's reasonable given their circumstances?

  15. Re:As Winston Churchill Said on Scientists Say People Aren't Smart Enough For Democracy To Flourish · · Score: 1

    Oh come on. We are just recently moving into large-scaled privately-owned healthcare here in Sweden and the only fault of the system is that it's a bit inefficient and/or understaffed. You pay for medical care up to about 300 USD per year, same for medication. There are no death panels, nor are people left to die if their treatment gets too expensive. Granted, the proposed "Obamacare" system is different in that people are apparently locked into private insurance schemes which does sound like a rather convoluted solution to the problem, but it's still taxpayer-funded social insurance right?

  16. Japanese Car Televisions on Smartphones More Dangerous Than Alcohol, When Driving · · Score: 2

    I've heard that it is or was common for Japanese domestic cars to have TVs installed. It seemed strange to me when I heard about it, because I certainly couldn't keep attention to both a TV screen and the road. On the other hand it would probably be easier to regulate attention to that versus a phone conversation where I'm actually pressured to perform two tasks at the same time.

  17. Re:Cyborgs and Zombies on New Interface Could Wire Prosthetics Directly Into Amputees' Nervous Systems · · Score: 1

    Sudden and unexpected involuntary cheerleaders for penis-pills more likely.

  18. Re:Democracy: the averagest on Scientists Say People Aren't Smart Enough For Democracy To Flourish · · Score: 1

    It could be both. A smart person might not be able to lie to himself to the extent that hubris is a problem, and a naturally humble person is per definition humble. But the smarter person would still be preferable since it's not about being humble, it's about knowing what you do or do not know and act upon that knowledge.

  19. Re:Democracy: the averagest on Scientists Say People Aren't Smart Enough For Democracy To Flourish · · Score: 2

    Not really, technocracy would imply that domain experts made decisions in their relevant fields and not a flat 1% cutoff across the board.

  20. Re:As Winston Churchill Said on Scientists Say People Aren't Smart Enough For Democracy To Flourish · · Score: 1

    I think what he meant was that at the time of the US declaration of independence no one could have foreseen how much better the new system would be.

  21. Re:Democracy: the averagest on Scientists Say People Aren't Smart Enough For Democracy To Flourish · · Score: 1

    Top 1% by IQ or by merit?

  22. As Winston Churchill Said on Scientists Say People Aren't Smart Enough For Democracy To Flourish · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Many forms of Government have been tried and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time."

  23. Re:Simplest is goodest. on Ask Slashdot: Using Company Laptop For Personal Use · · Score: 1

    I think what the parent is trying to express is that many people, me included, get a bit peeved when they're cut off from internet access for more than a day or so.

  24. Re:I am absolutely stunned on Ask Slashdot: Using Company Laptop For Personal Use · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't say it's necessarily a generational thing, probably more of a personality kind of deal. When I've used computers at work I've limited use to generically reading newspapers and the tech sites at lunchtime. No personal stuff, i.e. nothing that I'd care if anyone else saw me looking at. And this was on a linux workstation I'd personally set up.

    If I had a business laptop that belonged to my employer I'd probably treat it the same. If I had to go on business trips I'd bring an auxillary netbook or something.

  25. Re:BitCoin on North Korea's High-Tech Counterfeit $100 Bills · · Score: 1

    If I've understood this correctly it's possible to transfer very small fractions of bitcoins, thus subverting the 20 cap.