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User: reemul

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  1. Violating contracts is a dangerous idea on Maryland Legislator Wants To Keep State University Patents Away From Trolls (eff.org) · · Score: 2

    I strongly oppose patent trolls, but retroactively breaking valid contracts and nullifying sales of patents because you don't like who the patent was sold to is a truly horrible idea. If you don't want patent trolls to have university patents, don't sell them to them. And fire everyone at the university involved if they do sell them. Letting the university enter into a contract and then back out with no consequence because the purchaser is engaged in a vile but legal practice does damage to our legal system that far outweighs any possible benefit. This is just a bad idea generally. The EFF should spend their time trying to get patent trolling itself banned, not damaging the sanctity of contracts generally with cheap stunts because they like some of the short term outcomes.

  2. I don't honestly care if the software is open source, use what works best regardless of whether RMS approves or not. What I really want to see instead is publicly accessible document management for the laws and regulations. I want to be able to determine exactly who entered in every single word, made every single edit, and when they were committed to the document. No more "I don't recall who added that" or "I have no idea who made that change". And make sharing a login a felony, so a member of Congress can't give out their login credentials to their entire staff and then disavow personal responsibility. If someone pastes in 5 pages from a lobbyist late at night hours before the vote, I want to know precisely who did it and under what circumstances. Full transparency, right down to the single word or punctuation mark. The technology is cheaply available right off the shelf, they could implement GitLaw across the entire government by year's end for less than they spend on lawyers to defend FOIA lawsuits in a single quarter.

  3. Handy for my future airship on Researchers Find Game-Changing Helium Reserve In Tanzania (cnn.com) · · Score: 1

    That's going to be really useful once I finally win the lottery and buy an airship.

  4. Ought to be good on privacy issues on Atari Is Going To Build IoT Devices (pcmag.com) · · Score: 4, Funny

    Atari ought to be good on customer privacy issues - the last time they brought out a product designed to "phone home", it took the whole company down. Doubt they'll want to go through that again. ;)

  5. going for the record on UAE To Build Artificial Mountain To Improve Rainfall (engadget.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sounds more like the UAE is jealous of Qatar's single project death-toll record for the World Cup and is determined to take the crown. The ads are probably already going out in Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines for the sorts of disposable slave labor the region favors for large civil projects.

  6. Proof of the many worlds theory! on Greece's Former Finance Minister Explains Why A Universal Basic Income Could Save Us (fastcoexist.com) · · Score: 0, Troll

    In which alternative universe is taking economic advice from Greek government officials a good idea? And how do we visit it?

  7. Some people just read fast on Slashdot Asks: What's Your View On Speed Reading? · · Score: 1

    Reading fast is not the same as speed reading. I have a naturally high read speed. If undisturbed, I can read a typical paperback novel in 1.5 - 2 hours, often while eating lunch. I can skim much faster, that's my normal speed for pleasure reading. I honestly wish that books took longer for me to consume, my book habit is fairly expensive. The limiting factor for me is mechanical, not cognitive - my speed is more affected by page and font size (how far do my eyes need to travel, time spent turning pages) than the density of the material. Don't lump in everyone who reads faster than you as somehow cheating or just showing off but not actually understanding the work.

  8. Stop using "moonshot" on Facebook Hires Google 'Moonshot' Exec For R&D (usatoday.com) · · Score: 2

    I really wish folks would stop using "moonshot" or anything related as a metaphor for an open-ended research project leading to an unknown answer. Getting to the moon wasn't *easy* - which is why the world can still be broken down into nations that use metric, and nations that have walked on the moon - but ultimately it was a straightforward ballistics problem.

  9. Be nice with some device support on Microsoft Extends Its Windows Hello Login Security Features To Apps and the Web (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm still waiting for someone to sell me a webcam that will work with Hello. There are a tiny number of laptops and tablets with one built in, but despite the technology being announced more than two years ago, there isn't a single stand alone camera that supports it. Supposedly Razer will be offering one in Q2, but no firm date. It doesn't really matter what apps the feature will unlock if no-one has the hardware to ever use it.

  10. Re:Good luck with the barnacles and weed etc. on Stealthy Drone Can Hide Underwater For Months, Then Float To Surface To Take-Off (digitaltrends.com) · · Score: 2

    If they've come up with an economically viable, environmentally friendly way to keep barnacles off for extended periods of time, that's a much bigger discovery than their little drone. Boat manufacturers would be pounding on their door and waving bags full of cash. So I'm guessing they're just hoping it won't be a problem and moving on rather than something they've seriously considered and have miraculously overcome.

  11. How long did it take them to come up with the acronym? Some fan of "Clash of the Titans" pretty clearly wanted to yell "Unleash the CRACUNS!"

  12. excess strain on CA grid on Musk, Others Want Volkswagen To Go Electric Instead of Fixing Diesels (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 2, Informative

    Can California's electric grid hold up if VW really did replace all those vehicles with electric cars? Electric cars aren't actually zero emissions - they just don't emit anything at the point of use. There's still plenty of emissions (or other environmental concerns) from the site where the power for them is generated, which is why CA has tried very hard to push most of their generating capacity out of state. Even hydro capacity has decreased, as more dams are broken than built because they apparently bother the fishies. So a massive surge in electrical demand from plug-in vehicles may genuinely hammer the local grid, a grid that is already prone to widespread brownouts. It's great to suggest that everyone go electric with their vehicles, but someone somewhere must actually generate the electricity first. It's like pushing the benefits of dairy products while banning anyone in the state from raising stinky cows.

  13. Where is he getting the government funding? on Elon Musk, Others Fund $1B Non-Profit To Advance AI Research, Ethics (openai.com) · · Score: 2

    Elon Musk is a brilliant man, but he won't hand you a hanky without finding some way to get a government grant or subsidy out of it. Every one of his businesses gets at least some money shaken out of the taxpayers somewhere in the process. So where is he getting the federal or state money for this venture? I can't believe that he has broken with his long practice of finding a way for the government to pay him to do what he was going to do anyway, that would be a bigger story than the AI thing.

  14. A nice step on Ted Cruz Wants Minimum H-1B Wage of $110,000 (computerworld.com) · · Score: 2

    I just want a company officer to sign off, under penalty of perjury, on the supposed prevailing pay for the position they are seeking to fill. Right now the company gets to essentially make up a number, which no one checks and carries no penalty if anyone were to find out that they massively lowballed it. Put a company officer on the hook for it and suddenly those wages are going to jump up to a competitive level. Putting an artificial floor on the pay for visa holders is a nicely simple step that is hard to evade, but I'd really rather we just force the companies to pay the real wage for the job or have someone high ranking head to jail. There might genuinely be a job at a lower pay level that we simply can't get enough qualified Americans to fill. I don't know what it might be, but I don't want to close the door, I just want to cut back on the abuses.

  15. I'd be a lot more open to this creep's plan to censor everyone else if Google-owned YouTube wasn't the host of most every jihadi recruiting video ever made, many posted by specially designated terrorist entities which Google is forbidden by law to work with, under penalty of an ugly fine which is apparently never applied to the well connected. If a music company doesn't like the background song in a baby's first birthday video, it gets pulled so fast there is a whooshing noise as electrons rush in to fill the digital gap, but if someone complains that YouTube is in violation of the actual damn law against doing business with a specially designated terrorist entity, some YouTube employee will tell you that they have received your complaint, then do nothing.

    So I have zero interest in this hypocrite being allowed to limit what I do or type onine while he sucks in ad dollars from scumbags watching innocent people get their heads hacked off.

  16. True. It's a simple algorithm, and guessing the next in sequence is entirely trivial. I used to be able to do it in my head, no super-secret gizmo required, but I'm out of practice. Usually they increment the next-to-last digit and then change the final number to whatever is then required for the Mod10 algorithm, a function that is easily found online for use in form validation. (Ever wonder how they can tell you mistyped your number before submitting it to the bank? They're doing a Mod10 check. Most typos will fail, the accidental entry won't be a valid credit card number.) Everyone should be aware of it and reject out of hand a replacement card that has the next number in the sequence because it is exactly as broken as the one that came before. Call your bank and demand that they send you a card not in the immediate order. Yes, that means they'll run out of numbers faster, but the failure is theirs, not yours, so you shouldn't have to deal with a card that is insecure while still in the mail.

  17. Regulation for thee, not for me on The Decline of 'Big Soda': Is Drinking Soda the New Smoking? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The nannystate regulators who ban soda because of the high calories are curiously prone to carve out exceptions for drinks containing dairy. They're very concerned about the health of those other people drinking cokes from large cups, but not about to start interfering with their own consumption of ridiculously high calorie Starbucks coffee-based concoctions. It's a class based prejudice, the wrong sorts of people can't be trusted to organize their own affairs while us enlightened folks need no restrictions whatever. As always with the leftists, it's about control, not about health.

  18. No issues with iOS 9 and OpenVPN on Apple's iOS 9 Breaks VPNs · · Score: 1

    It hasn't caused any problems with my OpenVPN based service. So sad that the corporate guys' software isn't working as well.

  19. I remember when the SS check came in on Interviews: Ask Steve Jackson About Designing Games · · Score: 2

    Wow, out of sheer mad coincidence I happened to be chatting with Steve in the old Metaverse MOO when the check was delivered. (Don't in any way recall why, he wouldn't know me from Adam despite having a friend in common.) Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy.

    My only question is why there has never been a good computer version of Car Wars.

  20. Nice attempt to look like they care on UK Authorities Launching Massive Child Abuse Database · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're worried about DUPLICATION of effort?!? How about putting in some damn effort first. More than a decade and over 1000 girls in just one damn city. All the software tools in the world won't help if you turn them away at the station or refuse to do any of the work for fear of hurting feelings. Spend less on computers and more on prosecutions for those cops who let those girls suffer.

  21. Any relation to Barney Fife? He shows the same keen understanding of the law and uncanny insight into what police work is all about. He simply will not tolerate online anarchy; he intends to nip it, nip it in the bud.

  22. Another one they need to catch on Fugitive Child Sex Abuser Caught By Face-Recognition Technology · · Score: 1

    Now if we can just catch fugitive child rapist Roman Polanski, who was convicted of his heinous crimes but fled the country before sentencing.

  23. Finally! on Scientists Have Developed a Material So Dark That You Can't See It · · Score: 1

    How long before Neil Gaiman has a t-shirt made of it?

  24. Re:Repeat after me... on Massachusetts SWAT Teams Claim They're Private Corporations, Immune To Oversight · · Score: 1

    I'm just guessing here, but wouldn't a private corporation be exempt from the qualified immunity law enforcement has in carrying out their duties? That's going to hurt.

  25. Re:This is new? on Sorm: Russia Intends To Monitor "All Communications" At Sochi Olympics · · Score: 1

    Hey chuckle head - I'm not an anti-Semite. I was strongly implying that members of the *IOC*, not me, were OK with killing Jews. Picking on Israel is pretty much a competitive activity for most of the member countries. Athletes in international competition can refuse to face Israelis and aren't crushed for it the way a Russian athlete would be if he refused a match with a gay athlete. And the IOC for 40 years has steadfastly refused to allow any commemoration of the murders in Munich whatsoever.

    And Russia, no matter their intent and access to tech, does not currently have the cash to pay for the massive numbers of internal informants that China has. Maybe back in the peak Soviet years, but not now, even with current income from supplying energy. And where the f*ck did you get "tin foil hat" and any examination whatsoever about Russian motive in the three sentences I posted?