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User: Freetardo+Jones

Freetardo+Jones's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 256

  1. CmdrTaco spends $9000 on penis pills on Microsoft Spends $9 Billion On Research, Focuses On Cloud · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    CmdrTaco spends $9000 on penis pills but he still has a baby penis.

  2. Re:dialing wand on Control Your Apps Without Your Finger · · Score: 1

    I wash myself with a rag on a stick!

  3. Re:I thought Slashdot was filled with geeks on Inside the AP's Plan To Security-Wrap Its News Content · · Score: 1

    I did read the story which is how I know it's just making shit up. There is no DRM here or enforcement and as such the summary is a complete load of crap.

  4. Re:Has DRM in any form ever actually worked? on Inside the AP's Plan To Security-Wrap Its News Content · · Score: 1

    This isn't DRM. It's some html tags that do all of jack and shit.

  5. Re:ban the man on P2P Network Exposes Obama's Safehouse Location · · Score: 1

    It applies to contractor's computers too.

    And? Any use of government property or information falls under whatever rules the government wants to set for its use.

  6. Re:I thought Slashdot was filled with geeks on Inside the AP's Plan To Security-Wrap Its News Content · · Score: 1

    Did you even bother to read the Ars Technica article to see what the GP was talking about?

  7. Re:I thought Slashdot was filled with geeks on Inside the AP's Plan To Security-Wrap Its News Content · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You actually expect either the submitter or the editor to read the article instead of just mischaracterizing the story by just making shit up?

  8. Re:Encryption? on P2P Network Exposes Obama's Safehouse Location · · Score: 1

    Even so, information is leaked by people, not P2P software.

    But if they weren't able to run the P2P software in the first place it would have had a 0% chance of being leaked to Limewire.

  9. Re:ban the man on P2P Network Exposes Obama's Safehouse Location · · Score: 1

    Yes. It is their property and they can set whatever rules they want on its use.

  10. Re:Linus on Alan Cox Quits As Linux TTY Maintainer — "I've Had Enough" · · Score: 1

    Then you never saw the flamefests that happened on lklm

  11. Re:Before the arguments start? on Fair Use Defense Dismissed In SONY V. Tenenbaum · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Copying (downloading) music for personal purposes is considered fair use in many if not all European countries.

    That's great. Care to explain when Boston, Massachusetts became part of Europe?

  12. Re:Resolution on Wearable Computer With Lightweight HUD · · Score: 1

    Until one of these things can give me a full 1024x768 or better display

    Only XGA? What is this? 1990?

  13. Re:Smartphones aren't wearable computers? on Wearable Computer With Lightweight HUD · · Score: 1

    Because I don't wear my phone?

  14. Re:Ironic? on Manager's Schedule vs. Maker's Schedule · · Score: 1

    No. That would be coincidental not ironic.

  15. Re:Idealism blows when the rubber meets the road on How To Help With a University ICT Strategy? · · Score: -1, Troll

    Nope, they're just not used to seeing dirty, uncut cocks.

  16. Re:Test This Claim: on English DJ Claims Wi-Fi Allergy · · Score: 4, Informative

    This submission was posted by sampenzus which means it's just more idle crap polluting the front page.

  17. Re:that's not why the US patent system is broken on US PTO Gives Microsoft Credit For Lotus's Homework · · Score: 1

    So you'd rather have companies never disclose this information at all by hiding them indefinitely as trade secrets? There are many things wrong with the patent system, but to block them entirely would lead to less propagation of information into the public domain.

  18. Re:The patent system is broken by design on US PTO Gives Microsoft Credit For Lotus's Homework · · Score: 1

    Exactly, as the bigger corporation would just file a counter-suit to invalidate your patent.

  19. Re:Actually its a great cure on US PTO Gives Microsoft Credit For Lotus's Homework · · Score: 1

    No, it would only end patents for small inventors because they wouldn't have the money to do the exhaustive searches to find any and all prior art or to pay the fines. On the other hand, huge behemoths like IBM or Microsoft would have little issues as they have huge groups of devoted staff to be used for this purpose. And if they did happen to misfile a patent, the fine would be peanuts to them.

  20. Re:Criminal charges on US PTO Gives Microsoft Credit For Lotus's Homework · · Score: 1

    Of course if you really were unable to find the prior art and did the required level of due diligence in looking for it then they won't be able to prove you knew about it, so you won't get convicted and hence won't get fined.

    You mean like how if you are innocent of a crime that you are never wrongfully accused and convicted? Yeah, that never happens.

  21. Re:The patent system is broken by design on US PTO Gives Microsoft Credit For Lotus's Homework · · Score: 1

    Sure in an ideal world that is the purpose that patents would serve, but in the real world patents are used by bigger corporations to bully around any smaller competitors.

  22. Re:Clearly Slashdot is better than Google on US PTO Gives Microsoft Credit For Lotus's Homework · · Score: 1

    Counting on Ray Ozzie to come to Lotus' defense is a fool's errand, though. Like all the once-luminary personalities that got bought by Microsoft, he belongs to them and will serve their interests instead of our own. :-)

    Because Ray Ozzie never served his own interests until he got to Microsoft? Yeah right.

  23. Re:Human reaction bottleneck on Stock Market Manipulation By Millisecond Trading · · Score: 1

    Yes, if you screw up you will have bad consequences happen. This is why programmers at these companies are constantly tweaking their algorithms. It's not as if they just start these computers up and forget about them.

  24. Re:Free Market working A-OK on Stock Market Manipulation By Millisecond Trading · · Score: 1

    No I don't lack any reading ability at all. He was trying to claim that because there are high costs of entry that somehow it's not a free market which is false. Certain types of activities have more expensive infrastructure costs. That's just the way it is. That doesn't make it any less of a "free market". The notion of a "free market" has to do with being able to freely exchange goods without government intervention not that anyone and everyone can necessarily start a business in any field they want.

  25. Re:This needs to be fought on Researchers Outline Targeted Content Poisoning For P2P Data · · Score: 1

    Did you even read the part that I quoted from the GGP? He was saying that they were complaining that they got 3 boats INSTEAD OF 2 boats.