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User: Coren22

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Comments · 10,163

  1. Re:Publishing? You mean DOXXING right? on Anonymous Begins Publishing Ku Klux Klan Member Details Online · · Score: 2

    How is it no malicious? They intend for these people to be mobbed, it is the whole point of releasing the names.

  2. Re:Who is to say that this "list" is legit at all? on Anonymous Begins Publishing Ku Klux Klan Member Details Online · · Score: 1

    Frankly, so does any group of people.

  3. Re:Who is to say that this "list" is legit at all? on Anonymous Begins Publishing Ku Klux Klan Member Details Online · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because they wore Guy Fawkes masks and everything! They must be the very same Anonymous...

    I'm wondering when the Black Panthers leak is coming, as they are just as much a hate group.

  4. Re: Irony on Anonymous Begins Publishing Ku Klux Klan Member Details Online · · Score: 1

    Are you trying to claim that Anonymous is sanctioned by the government? Because if not, then there is no comparison.

  5. Re:Simple counter-measure on The Rise of Political Doxing (schneier.com) · · Score: 1

    A good example of this was the Mozilla CEO that was ousted because he supported an anti-gay group when that was the norm.

  6. Re:Not saying I disagree with Torvalds on Linus Rants About C Programming Semantics (iu.edu) · · Score: 1

    Do you often forget to put "then" in your if then loops?

  7. Re:Linux is for Cows on Linus Rants About C Programming Semantics (iu.edu) · · Score: 1

    Error, no action moo

    Perhaps apt-get install moo?

  8. Re:Why should they? on US Law Can't Keep Up With Technology -- and Why That's a Good Thing (newsweek.com) · · Score: 1

    They wrote rules into the Constitution saying "right to bear arms" - never imagining that "arms" would be more than muzzle loaded guns that can be fired more than once a minute.

    Bull shit. The right to bear arms was intended to put the military technology of the day into the general population's hands, not some mythical exact level of technology. If the founding fathers were around today, they would be advocating for the ability of the average person to own tanks and fighter jets, not just muzzle loaders.

  9. Re:The right to bear arms on US Law Can't Keep Up With Technology -- and Why That's a Good Thing (newsweek.com) · · Score: 1

    In fact, the founding fathers would push for machine guns and shoulder fire rocket launchers to be owned by the general populous. They WANTED everyone to have military level firearms as it would prevent other countries from invading the US.

  10. Re:Why should they? on US Law Can't Keep Up With Technology -- and Why That's a Good Thing (newsweek.com) · · Score: 1

    If that is the case, why is it that the news site doesn't fall under the right to be forgotten, but Google's index does? Why does the BBC get to continue to have the article published while Google has to remove it?

  11. Re:anyone else completely confused by the summary? on Botnet Takes Over Twitch Install and Partially Installs Gentoo · · Score: 1

    Because people are required to provide proof that they have produced something better before they are allowed to critique something? You are nuts.

  12. Re:Carrington event is not biggest possible. on Feds Have a Plan For Catastrophic Solar Flares (digitaljournal.com) · · Score: 2

    What are you talking about?

    Cell networks don't require GPS, so why would GPS going down have anything to do with cell service going down? If one of these events happened, the power network going down would be far worse than the cell or GPS networks going down. In fact, it is more likely that the power would go out, not the cell network until the batteries/generators died.

  13. That shielded cable is called STP, it is used in noisy environments, and the shield is run straight to ground. I am not sure if it would help any in a lightning storm, but it would offer some level of protection. Personally, if I was designing this, I would add a lightning rod above the antenna on the pole/tree and leave it at that.

  14. Re:so this is how.... on Greenland Ice Sheet Not Covered In Soot · · Score: 1

    To be fair, many people who defend the climatologists don't really understand much of it either. Even the climatologists seem to not understand how science works. Repeatability is important, but yet there appears to be a major refusal to share the data so that others can run models. Also, the appeal to consensus is repugnant, a consensus means nothing in science.

  15. Re:What's up with the ' on Slashdot Asks: Notes For Next Hallowe'en? · · Score: 1

    You can buy a Machete in your local outdoor supply store. The sharpened stakes can be manufactured from 2x4 stock, or tree branches hammered into the ground.

  16. Re:Another example of bloat on Batman Demands 12GB RAM For Windows 10 (steamcommunity.com) · · Score: 1

    Frankly, if you are going for 4 TB, you are likely using a desktop, because who would need that much storage on a laptop? In that case, you can get 2 2TB Samsung drives for $2000, so that would be a way better way to go. Most of us though only need 1 TB max, and may even be able to use .5 TB to get by as games aren't really that large yet.

  17. Re:Another example of bloat on Batman Demands 12GB RAM For Windows 10 (steamcommunity.com) · · Score: 1

    Who needs 4 TB for anything but video storage? Why would you buy a 4 TB SSD?

  18. Re:It's fake on Junkyard Owner Saves Lunar Rover Prototype (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    There was never an indication that they were the exact same iterations. There were many rover prototypes, not just the one.

  19. Re:Sure. on Junkyard Owner Saves Lunar Rover Prototype (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    http://motherboard.vice.com/re...

    I don't know, it looks pretty rough. The first picture in TFA is from the junk dealer of the actual rover, I can tell from comparing pictures that they are the same design, but beyond that, I likely wouldn't know what the hell it is. This is good reason for the junk dealer to set it aside to try and figure it out though.

  20. Re: On Monday on Junkyard Owner Saves Lunar Rover Prototype (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    When you can find people in the US who are repressed, then we might have a conversation about it.

    Currently, the only repression happening is the people repressing themselves, at least in the US, I don't live in another country, so I can't speak for how it is there.

  21. Re:Another example of bloat on Batman Demands 12GB RAM For Windows 10 (steamcommunity.com) · · Score: 1

    I still run my gaming PC on a 500 series nVidia, no game stresses it. If you think you need more than that, I have to ask, WHY?

  22. Re:Another example of bloat on Batman Demands 12GB RAM For Windows 10 (steamcommunity.com) · · Score: 1

    Perhaps this is more a problem with your configuration. Disabling the swap file on a system with 4 GB of ram is begging for the system to crash instead of swapping out memory not in use.

    You should not run with no swap file at 4 GB, at 32 GB, sure, as you will never swap, but at 4 GB, the OS is swapping.

  23. Re:Another example of bloat on Batman Demands 12GB RAM For Windows 10 (steamcommunity.com) · · Score: 1

    Wow, GB? Is this a post from 1990?

    They sell Multi TB SSDs now, but they will cost as much as a top of the line video card.

  24. Re:For what? on Batman Demands 12GB RAM For Windows 10 (steamcommunity.com) · · Score: 1

    The person you are replying to has nearly no knowledge of computers, my guess is it is a troll.

  25. Re:For what? on Batman Demands 12GB RAM For Windows 10 (steamcommunity.com) · · Score: 1

    Personally, I wish that Steam made a way for you to delete games from your library so that searching for the next game wasn't a look through 10 years of game accumulation. I have over 100 games, many of them I will never touch again.