Figuratively, yes. The DNA analysis matched semen found in the vagina of a woman the guy had raped several years earlier. I can only assume that the victim and her family were pleased, or at least relieved, to know that the rapist had been caught.
IAAL. Although the Supreme Court doesn't mention this, every case is explained by asking whether there is an intrusion into the body. The original case was Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165 (1952). The police had a warrant and broke into Rochin's apartment. He quickly swallowed illegal drugs, and the police used a stomach pump to retrieve them. Although it was not a case involving a warrant, the Supreme Court held that stomach pumping "shocks the conscience," and the drug evidence should be suppressed.
The court later upheld fingerprinting without a warrant, but last month, in Missouri v. McNeely, it struck down a warrantless blood test for blood alcohol. The test involved piercing the skin and a vein. The court said that this violation of bodily integrity required a warrant. Note that it was not an emergency. The police could have gotten a warrant and run the test before the defendant's blood alcohol level declined too far to be meaningful.
Then just yesterday, in Maryland v. King, the court upheld a non-emergency warrantless swab inside the defendant's cheek where a DNA test revealed that the defendant had committed another crime. There was no piercing of the defendant's skin, and the cheek swab was painless.
Plain-text leaking of personal details calls for application of Hanlon’s Razor (attr. Richard Feynman): Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
Of my 1000 channel choices, I have, 24/7, 10 devoted to Dog the Bounty Hunter, 20 to new-age religion, 20 to old-age religion, 20 to new-age vampires, 20 to clairvoyant detectives, 200 to shopping and infomercials, 50 to soft- and medium-core porn (when I can get the hard stuff free on the net), 20 to fishing competitions, 20 to trash food (cooked on top of your car engine while you drive), 99 to trash sports, 300 to foreign language programming in languages I don't speak, 2 to high-school girls' volleyball, 5 to News for Voles (no, wait, that's Monty Python) et cetera ad infinitum. I would in fact pay extra to DELETE these channels, leaving the 100 or so choices I might actually watch.
The most annoying JSTOR policy is that their site is available only to institutions or scholars associated with institutions. They will not sell a subscription to an ordinary individual. Most libraries have subscriptions, but they don't permit remote access. The only exception I know of is the New York Society Library, which costs $200 per year. http://www.nysoclib.org/index.html
Break the 4.9 Tb into convenient size files (say, 500 Mb) and de-dup them one at a time. I'd dedicate a spare computer to do this, so you can leave it running over nights, weekends, etc. Then merge the now-smaller files into 500 Mb chunks and work through iteratively.
Whose ass did they pull the $235 figure out of? The software is free, the installation takes a few minutes and it's transparent thereafter.
The big but (pun intended) is how to deal with a major crash or a forgotten password. If your backup is also encrypted, you're SOL. I'd keep an unencrypted backup on a hard drive in an eSATA external dock, back up daily and put the drive in a safe every night. This was the standard procedure years ago when the backup medium was tape. You had three tape cassettes and rotated them.
On the Gibson Haystack checker, "My hovercraft is full of eels" will take 2.89 hundred million trillion trillion centuries even for a Massive Cracking Array. In the unlikely case that the complete Python scripts are part of the initial check, I'll probably change it to "My hovercraft is full of Slashdotters"
Alas, 99.9999999999999999999999999% of health advice on the internet is quackery. I quickly learned to skip the rest and go to the Mayo Clinic for real rather than imaginary information. Not to mention that it's free.
U.S. Constitution, Article 3, Section 3, says: "Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort."
The constitutional definition of treason was deliberately made very narrow, to prevent prosecutions for anything less than significantly aiding actual attacks by a foreign power. So:
-- With no declaration of war on either side, does planning and aiding terrorist acts constitute "levying War"?
-- Given the informal, non-national structure of al Qaeda, can it be designated an "Enemy"?
These are not trivial questions, but I think it's possible to answer both of them "Yes."
A traitor must be an American citizen -- otherwise he's just a foreign enemy.
The final question is, once we determine that Anwar al-Awlaki is a traitor, may we put out the equivalent of a "Wanted, Dead or Alive" poster?
I think that if we could try to capture a traitor, we can also attack and kill him, just as we could a foreign enemy.
IAAL. Most current car models already have a black box that keeps a rolling record of accident analysis information -- acceleration, braking, steering -- that holds the most recent 30 seconds or so of events. Lawyers who handle car crash litigation now automatically ask for the box. Even though the information belongs to the car owner, that information is "put in dispute" when the owner asserts lack of fault and so can be obtained by the opponent. This is revolutionizing accident litigation. I suspect that there are already illegal services that change the black box records to show lack of fault.
So the Beezer won't collect taxes, eh? So how come I get charged taxes on everything I buy from them, even if it's shipped from outside my state (NY)?
In terms of fairness, if you support sales taxes, you should support, say, collecting them on cigarette sales to non-Indians on Indian reservations. Find me a coffin nail puffer who supports THAT.
One of the first case reports you read in law school is Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. A rubber ball with a tube sticking out of it was filled with carbolic acid, and the user/victim put the tube up his/her nose and breathed the fumes. This produced a strong flow of mucus, which was advertised to wash out flu germs. (This was during the 1889-90 flu pandemic.) For more than even a lawyer would be interested in, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlill_v_Carbolic_Smoke_Ball_Company.
I tried that. When I looked away from the central dot and concentrated on the objects in the ring, I could see one or a few of them changing, but still couldn't get the overall effect of all of them changing, as I did when the ring was stationary.
Since archaea (the oldest life forms) were absent in the layer where these life forms were found, it suggests that there was a "second creation" of life. If so, they should have a separate form of DNA (or the equivalent). . . .
I use Citibank, which collects all your accounts on one page. Going back about a year is very easy, and you get PDFs of the front and back of all checks. However, you get only payee and amounts of credit card transactions.
Getting older transactions requires repeatedly clicking "show more" links, and anything more than a couple of years old requires an email request, which takes between one and two days.
Their tech service is very good, particularly at the first escalation level.
IAAL.
Under the Constitution, Congress passed statutes to give authors copyrights for a limited term. This statutory copyright protects authors against unauthorized duplication of their PUBLISHED works -- that is, physical copies that humans could read.
When the player piano was invented and popular tunes appeared on piano rolls, composers sued under the copyright statute. They lost because you couldn't put a piano roll on the music stand and read off the tune. Therefore, the music had never been "published." Instead, composers had to use the common law (non-statutory) right to prevent copying of their unpublished works. The common law copyright was more difficult to sue on, but it was perpetual.
When cylinder and then disk recordings appeared, the courts applied the player piano rule, since you couldn't listen to a record by looking at the grooves. Common law copyrights continue to exist under American law (though this is abolished and covered by statutes in England, where the recording was made).
A further complication is that each state can determine the length of copyrights of unpublished materials. New York courts hold that it is perpetual.
Congress overrode state common law copyrights and brought new music copyrights into the statutory system as of 1972. However, pre-1972 common law copyrights were brought into the federal statutory system only as of February 15, 2047.
Thus when Naxos reissued Yehudi Menuhin's famous 1932 recording of the Elgar Violin Concerto, this was held to violate the common law copyright of the original issuer (Columbia Records).
For more than you ever want to know, read Columbia Records v. Naxos, http://www.law.cornell.edu/nyctap/I05_0027.htm
IAAL. The Fifth Amendment requires compensation for private property taken for public use. Internet bandwidth is not private property. It belongs to the government and is licensed out. The government is free to limit that license by, for example, requiring large licensees to carry traffic for smaller entities that can't afford to bid on the bandwidth. Further, the Fifth Amendment position has been rejected by the courts, which have routinely upheld severe zoning restrictions that decrease the value of private property.
My latest computer came with Win7 64 preinstalled. That way the maker (HP) could tout 6 Gb of RAM. This is undoubtedly the reason for the 50% figure, particularly since people who think about using the 64 bit version will read the tech publications, which warn of problems with 64 bit software.
With a barrel of salt, or better an oceanful. In a year or so, it'll reappear as one of those inventions "they" don't want you to know about.
Figuratively, yes. The DNA analysis matched semen found in the vagina of a woman the guy had raped several years earlier. I can only assume that the victim and her family were pleased, or at least relieved, to know that the rapist had been caught.
Given the pretty much proved intrusions by Chinese hackers into US and other systems, there may already be a Stuxnet team working to sabotage Tianhe.
IAAL. Although the Supreme Court doesn't mention this, every case is explained by asking whether there is an intrusion into the body. The original case was Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165 (1952). The police had a warrant and broke into Rochin's apartment. He quickly swallowed illegal drugs, and the police used a stomach pump to retrieve them. Although it was not a case involving a warrant, the Supreme Court held that stomach pumping "shocks the conscience," and the drug evidence should be suppressed. The court later upheld fingerprinting without a warrant, but last month, in Missouri v. McNeely, it struck down a warrantless blood test for blood alcohol. The test involved piercing the skin and a vein. The court said that this violation of bodily integrity required a warrant. Note that it was not an emergency. The police could have gotten a warrant and run the test before the defendant's blood alcohol level declined too far to be meaningful. Then just yesterday, in Maryland v. King, the court upheld a non-emergency warrantless swab inside the defendant's cheek where a DNA test revealed that the defendant had committed another crime. There was no piercing of the defendant's skin, and the cheek swab was painless.
Plain-text leaking of personal details calls for application of Hanlon’s Razor (attr. Richard Feynman): Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
Of my 1000 channel choices, I have, 24/7, 10 devoted to Dog the Bounty Hunter, 20 to new-age religion, 20 to old-age religion, 20 to new-age vampires, 20 to clairvoyant detectives, 200 to shopping and infomercials, 50 to soft- and medium-core porn (when I can get the hard stuff free on the net), 20 to fishing competitions, 20 to trash food (cooked on top of your car engine while you drive), 99 to trash sports, 300 to foreign language programming in languages I don't speak, 2 to high-school girls' volleyball, 5 to News for Voles (no, wait, that's Monty Python) et cetera ad infinitum. I would in fact pay extra to DELETE these channels, leaving the 100 or so choices I might actually watch.
Just make sure the Prophet Mohammed isn't mentioned.
The most annoying JSTOR policy is that their site is available only to institutions or scholars associated with institutions. They will not sell a subscription to an ordinary individual. Most libraries have subscriptions, but they don't permit remote access. The only exception I know of is the New York Society Library, which costs $200 per year. http://www.nysoclib.org/index.html
Break the 4.9 Tb into convenient size files (say, 500 Mb) and de-dup them one at a time. I'd dedicate a spare computer to do this, so you can leave it running over nights, weekends, etc. Then merge the now-smaller files into 500 Mb chunks and work through iteratively.
Whose ass did they pull the $235 figure out of? The software is free, the installation takes a few minutes and it's transparent thereafter. The big but (pun intended) is how to deal with a major crash or a forgotten password. If your backup is also encrypted, you're SOL. I'd keep an unencrypted backup on a hard drive in an eSATA external dock, back up daily and put the drive in a safe every night. This was the standard procedure years ago when the backup medium was tape. You had three tape cassettes and rotated them.
On the Gibson Haystack checker, "My hovercraft is full of eels" will take 2.89 hundred million trillion trillion centuries even for a Massive Cracking Array. In the unlikely case that the complete Python scripts are part of the initial check, I'll probably change it to "My hovercraft is full of Slashdotters"
Alas, 99.9999999999999999999999999% of health advice on the internet is quackery. I quickly learned to skip the rest and go to the Mayo Clinic for real rather than imaginary information. Not to mention that it's free.
Naturally, they don't include Lynx, the text-only browser that blows the others away and is immune to most viruses.
IAAL.,
U.S. Constitution, Article 3, Section 3, says: "Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort."
The constitutional definition of treason was deliberately made very narrow, to prevent prosecutions for anything less than significantly aiding actual attacks by a foreign power. So:
-- With no declaration of war on either side, does planning and aiding terrorist acts constitute "levying War"?
-- Given the informal, non-national structure of al Qaeda, can it be designated an "Enemy"?
These are not trivial questions, but I think it's possible to answer both of them "Yes."
A traitor must be an American citizen -- otherwise he's just a foreign enemy.
The final question is, once we determine that Anwar al-Awlaki is a traitor, may we put out the equivalent of a "Wanted, Dead or Alive" poster?
I think that if we could try to capture a traitor, we can also attack and kill him, just as we could a foreign enemy.
IAAL. Most current car models already have a black box that keeps a rolling record of accident analysis information -- acceleration, braking, steering -- that holds the most recent 30 seconds or so of events. Lawyers who handle car crash litigation now automatically ask for the box. Even though the information belongs to the car owner, that information is "put in dispute" when the owner asserts lack of fault and so can be obtained by the opponent. This is revolutionizing accident litigation. I suspect that there are already illegal services that change the black box records to show lack of fault.
So the Beezer won't collect taxes, eh? So how come I get charged taxes on everything I buy from them, even if it's shipped from outside my state (NY)? In terms of fairness, if you support sales taxes, you should support, say, collecting them on cigarette sales to non-Indians on Indian reservations. Find me a coffin nail puffer who supports THAT.
The Goldberg Variations is of course PD. The International Music Scores Project/Petrucci Music Library has half a dozen versions freely available at http://imslp.org/wiki/Goldberg-Variationen,_BWV_988_(Bach,_Johann_Sebastian)
One of the first case reports you read in law school is Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. A rubber ball with a tube sticking out of it was filled with carbolic acid, and the user/victim put the tube up his/her nose and breathed the fumes. This produced a strong flow of mucus, which was advertised to wash out flu germs. (This was during the 1889-90 flu pandemic.) For more than even a lawyer would be interested in, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlill_v_Carbolic_Smoke_Ball_Company.
I tried that. When I looked away from the central dot and concentrated on the objects in the ring, I could see one or a few of them changing, but still couldn't get the overall effect of all of them changing, as I did when the ring was stationary.
Oh, I hope so.
Since archaea (the oldest life forms) were absent in the layer where these life forms were found, it suggests that there was a "second creation" of life. If so, they should have a separate form of DNA (or the equivalent). . . .
I use Citibank, which collects all your accounts on one page. Going back about a year is very easy, and you get PDFs of the front and back of all checks. However, you get only payee and amounts of credit card transactions. Getting older transactions requires repeatedly clicking "show more" links, and anything more than a couple of years old requires an email request, which takes between one and two days. Their tech service is very good, particularly at the first escalation level.
IAAL. Under the Constitution, Congress passed statutes to give authors copyrights for a limited term. This statutory copyright protects authors against unauthorized duplication of their PUBLISHED works -- that is, physical copies that humans could read. When the player piano was invented and popular tunes appeared on piano rolls, composers sued under the copyright statute. They lost because you couldn't put a piano roll on the music stand and read off the tune. Therefore, the music had never been "published." Instead, composers had to use the common law (non-statutory) right to prevent copying of their unpublished works. The common law copyright was more difficult to sue on, but it was perpetual. When cylinder and then disk recordings appeared, the courts applied the player piano rule, since you couldn't listen to a record by looking at the grooves. Common law copyrights continue to exist under American law (though this is abolished and covered by statutes in England, where the recording was made). A further complication is that each state can determine the length of copyrights of unpublished materials. New York courts hold that it is perpetual. Congress overrode state common law copyrights and brought new music copyrights into the statutory system as of 1972. However, pre-1972 common law copyrights were brought into the federal statutory system only as of February 15, 2047. Thus when Naxos reissued Yehudi Menuhin's famous 1932 recording of the Elgar Violin Concerto, this was held to violate the common law copyright of the original issuer (Columbia Records). For more than you ever want to know, read Columbia Records v. Naxos, http://www.law.cornell.edu/nyctap/I05_0027.htm
IAAL. The Fifth Amendment requires compensation for private property taken for public use. Internet bandwidth is not private property. It belongs to the government and is licensed out. The government is free to limit that license by, for example, requiring large licensees to carry traffic for smaller entities that can't afford to bid on the bandwidth. Further, the Fifth Amendment position has been rejected by the courts, which have routinely upheld severe zoning restrictions that decrease the value of private property.
My latest computer came with Win7 64 preinstalled. That way the maker (HP) could tout 6 Gb of RAM. This is undoubtedly the reason for the 50% figure, particularly since people who think about using the 64 bit version will read the tech publications, which warn of problems with 64 bit software.