My other slightly off-topic question is: why aren't there any fast food hamburger delivery chains?
A food's ability to be delivered depends a lot on how well it handles a 30 minute wait. Pizza is okay luke warm, cold, or re-heated. Chinese isn't so great cold, but you can insulate it pretty well and keep it warm enough for arrival, same with Indian food (both reheat okay). Cold sandwiches/subs deliver fine too.
A burger, on the other hand, gets soggy, cold, and disgusting by the 30 minute mark. Fries are similar. These days most fast food places have pretty fast turnover of their fries, and within about 15 minutes of them being left out they're a pale imitation of how good they taste when you first get them. Tex-Mex is similar - tacos get soggy, so much that Taco Bell tastes much worse if you get it in the drive through and drive 10 minutes home with it.
On the other hand, fried chicken products tend to do okay with the wait time. So while we don't see very many chicken-only delivery places, the major pizza chains often add chicken wings to their delivery options.
It would be a fail to think they would store anything needed on such servers, other than os. The servers are probably linked to a harddrive farm by network or fiber-channel.
Wrong. Google stores its data all over the place, including on each individual server. They designed their own networked filesystem for the purpose. If they really didn't store data locally, they'd almost certainly PXE boot and avoid drives on each server altogether. I suspect the video just used some dated footage (from a training or other internal video perhaps?), as this article clearly shows SATA drives. Every server has two drives, and since no one node is critical for anything they also wouldn't bother with RAID1 for an OS boot drive as you suggest.
I received a free subscription for the rest of the year, "sponsored by Lincoln" (the car company). No idea what exactly triggered that, but I was/am a pretty regular reader. Not sure if I'll pay or not when the time comes. It'll be interesting to see what the Washington Post ends up with for a paywall.
R makes great graphs functionally speaking, but without mucking about with the options and some post-processing they are not the most attractive. Open up your favorite financial/data intensive news source and look at the visuals and you'll find that generating that style with just code is fairly difficult.
Until about Office 2007, the defaults in Excel charts were also atrocious. Openoffice.org is still pretty bad, and Matlab is not much better than R. The good news is that you can generate PDFs from each of these and easily open them in Inkscape/Illustrator, where making vector-based edits is easy.
Anyone who regularly visualizes data needs to pick up resources on how to clearly organize and display your data, like "The Visual Display of Quantitative Information" by Edward Tufte (though some of his examples are a little dated). Books like that are full of examples that would be very tricky to replicate without any post processing, because it usually involves eliminating excessive lines and cluttering detail.
The improvements to Airplay are pretty underrated. You can now stream your entire iTunes library to your iPhone/iPad/iPod touch (if they're on the same LAN). That's kinda a big improvement, because so many people on/. whine how they can't fit their entire library on only 64GB of space. Videos too.
Unless you have a first or second gen ipod touch, or iphone 3g or original. The second gen runs 4.2.1, but not 4.3. Unless they backport security fixes to the 4.2 line, iphone 3g and ipod touch 2nd gen are now out of support.
VPS is a temporary "fix" at best, as nearly all mail providers are now starting to list VPS-land IP space in the same category as residential/dynamic IP space. Any advantage using a VPS gives you in delivery is about to go away
Agreed. My comment about trusting a cable modem connection was one of reliability. A couple of VPSes in different places set up redundantly is an inexpensive way to ensure uptime. You also know they won't block your outgoing ports, but you will still have to be concerned about getting filtered into large providers' spamboxes based on IP range. The solution is to send through a large, trusted SMTP server and receiving at your VPSes. Leave the cable modem for non-server purposes.
Even if you have a non-cable modem IP, it can be difficult to send (opt-in) business email from a small mail server. The reason is that spam filters at major email providers like Yahoo are turning to whitelisting, and you have to contact each major provider to avoid getting your email sent straight to the spam filter.
Since the implementations of spam filters at the server level seem to vary quite a bit, I tend to avoid sending particularly important single emails through my own small email server for fear they just end up in the spam folder of the recipient.
That said, in general I wouldn't trust a business-class cable modem connection to host an email server for business purposes. Virtualized servers are commonplace now and quite affordable (I pay $15/mo for mostly personal use). Set up the backup on your own connection.
So we've got several big contenders or those who want to be in the "smart phone" space (an increasingly meaningless term, as even my dumb Symbian phone can do a fair bit). Android and iOS are the biggest, then you've got Blackberry, Win Mobile 7, WebOS, MeeGo, and in the "dumber" category Symbian.
Three of these are Linux-based to one extent or another: Android, WebOS, and MeeGo. WIth the way apps get developed and sold, it's not clear to me that all three can survive on top of their more-closed counterparts (Blackerry and iOS, primarily). I've heard that various platforms are seeking compatibility with Android apps, but I doubt it'll be perfect.
Given that Nokia seems to be giving up on it, MeeGo seems like the obvious candidate to be the one dropped (its technical merits aside). There's plenty of fragmentation within Android alone now. Personally, I think the biggest potential loss is either the dropping or downplaying of Qt by Nokia. It'd be awesome to see Qt become a cross-mobile-platform toolkit to aid developers (on everything but iOS, of course). While I switched away from KDE during the 4.X debacle, it's clear that Qt was superior in many ways. Its commercial underpinnings seemed to really bolster its quality.
The worldwide death toll from the flu and its complications is in the hundreds of thousands. This is potentially more than just preventing an occasional annoying illness. It's more on the order of preventing all fatalities from traffic accidents.
The movie seemed to have a remarkable attention to technical detail in that scene. I don't know if Zuckerberg uses Linux, but in the movie he is depicted as using KDE. Not only that, but it looked to me like they got the version of KDE about right for the time.
If you have to buffer on Netflix with any frequency, it's you, not them. They have by far the fastest and most reliable streaming I've seen. Much better than Youtube (HD), Hulu, or ABC's own website. Keep in mind you really need at least a 3 Mbps connection, but I had 3Mbit DSL from ATT for years with great streaming.
The assumption, as best I can tell, is the same that drives carriers to charge $20/mo tethering fees for using smartphone data plans with a laptop. Basically, they don't expect you to use very much of your monthly plan.
The ipad+mifi deal from Verizon is another good example. If you want just a mifi (for, say, a laptop or an existing ipad), you pay $260 + $40/mo (contract) for 250MB or $60/mo for 5GB. If you buy it with an ipad, you pay only $130 for the mifi device and get the option to buy month-to-month $20 for 1GB, $30 for 3 GB or $50 for 5 GB. With the right usage pattern it wouldn't take long for the ipad to pay for itself.
Frankly, dedicated computer links (via USB or wireless) tend to have pretty lousy rates. Why? Because the carriers know these tend to be business customers (who have their companies pay for it) and they also tend to use more of their service than many smartphone users.
That said, provided they have the coverage you want, there are good alternatives to the standard ATT/Verizon choices. Virgin Mobile sells a mifi for $200 from Walmart with a $20/mo prepaid 1GB plan (if you buy direct from VM, it's cheaper but you only have the choice between $10/100MB or $40/unlimited). It uses Sprint's network (actually, Sprint bought Virgin Mobile USA last year).
Correction: it is not trivial for unmaintained, closed source software. Upgrading maintained, open source software is a breeze, as any Debian user can attest.
Having had a single Debian install for 8 years, I can attest that it works remarkably well, but it is not always a breeze. And over the course of 5+ years, there are major revisions to software like Apache which require new configuration. The backported security fixes in RHEL allow users to keep a very consistent system for a very long time.
Rotating out hardware is essential, virtualization makes this far less of a chore.
It's certainly not always the administrator's choice about whether hardware gets replaced. Besides, there's a long history of UNIX hardware being around forever (well over a decade, sometimes two).
On a personal note, I just retired my 12 year old P166 desktop which was functioning as a router/firewall. It had been running the same install of Debian, suitably upgraded, for 8 years. The only components I had to replace in those dozen years were the CPU and PS fans.
Still the gold standard of long-supported releases
on
Red Hat Releases RHEL 6
·
· Score: 4, Interesting
RHEL provides a 7 year lifecycle, which is unmatched by the other major distributions I know about (even Debian). This is crucial for the enterprise; I know of a number of systems which are still running RHEL3 after 6-7 years. Upgrading production computers is not a trivial process, and 2-3 year lifecycles just don't cut it in some situations.
My impression was that Baen books is primarily science fiction. I've drifted from that genre over the years, but I'm a fan of many of the "classics" (Dune, Foundation series, the Ender series, etc).
Perhaps the best recommendation would be a great book by an author with many other books available. That way if I like the first I know where to go next for similar fare. The real issue is that I really hate starting a book and not liking it; I want to finish it and it just nags at me when I don't. Fortunately that is very rare and tends to happen with poorly written non-fiction.
Baen Books has been posting e-books, several formats available, for several years now.
As someone completely unfamiliar with their authors and catalog, can readers of Baen books provide some recommendations? Anything available as an ebook (free or otherwise) would be of interest to me.
This is one advantage of the larger stores - it is usually straightforward to find the bestsellers within any given genre. For those of us new to a genre (or new to the modern works in a genre), this can be a helpful starting point. So many books, so little time.
My income tax is almost triple what my federal income tax is.
Huh? The maximum income tax bracket in WI is 7.75%, with most income falling in the 6-7% range. Federal tax brackets are much higher (15-20% easily).
It's true that some states allow fewer deductions than federal taxes, but if you truly pay 3x income taxes to state as federal you have some very odd tax returns (with very low federal taxes, I imagine).
And what do you get for your taxes? As a former resident of WI, I would say that on average the public school systems are much better (especially those areas where property taxes are high), the state university system is excellent with far lower in-state tuition than its peers, and the roads are MUCH better than Michigan (though that's not saying a whole lot).
A very simple, offline wiki is well-suited to recording all sorts of information.
Since all I need is text with tags and the occasional equation in LaTeX, I found that Tiddlywiki works great. It's an amazing self contained wiki using only HTML and Javascript. The main idea is to be able to very quickly develop lists, outlines, etc. in a browser I have open anyway.
This sort of crap has the potential to make photographer's lives really annoying. And this comes just as more and more people are active amateur photographers.
The lighting on the Eiffel Tower is copyrighted? Museums claim rights over photographic reproductions of century-old paintings? Where do we draw the line?
On the one hand, we have the physical equivalent of contracts: agreements made as a requirement for entrance; this allows zoos, museums, etc. to restrict the use of commercial photography. But photos taken from public streets? From the air?
The fact that these institutions go after commercial users isn't much comfort; the line between non-commercial amateur and commercial-but-still-amateur photography. Have ads up on a blog? Submit your photo to a local art show? Sell your photo to a stock photo site? It's easy for an amateur to make a little cash from the best of their photos.
Although there may not be enough 64 bit linux users who have jumped through all the hoops needed to get flash working, since its 64 bit support is so lame. Every cloud a silver lining.
I think a lot of us use the 32 bit plugin either with the wrapper or with a 32 bit browser. I certainly switched away from the 64 bit plugin after that last vulnerability. I also use NoScript to enable it only on demand, but I'm not 100% sure it blocks it before anything is sent to the plugin.
That said, most of the new Linux users I know use it on their netbooks, running Atom processors which don't support 64 bit instructions anyway.
First, unless you're using ksplice, you have to reboot. So it may download and install the new kernel, but unless the user reboots they're still vulnerable.
Yes, but the latest version(s) of Ubuntu ask if you want to reboot after installing kernel updates. So the user at least knows they're supposed to reboot as soon as they can.
many hackers sit on exploits to these kinds of programs so they can use them when a big flaw like this one is exposed,
Except that flaws like this one are discovered quite regularly. Just look through security updates for stable distributions like Debian.
Running 64-bit Linux? Haven't updated yet? You're probably being rooted as I type this.
C'mon now. As others have pointed out, and has been mentioned earlier on/., this is a local root exploit. It's bad, it affects a lot of users (in theory), but to write this is to simply spread fear for most of those using Linux.
Why? Because the systems that inexperienced users run also happen to be those with a few, generally trusted users. Think netbooks. Sure, all local root exploits are bad and should be patched asap. But that doesn't mean "you're probably being rooted as I type this". It means that a remote attacker needs user-level privileges (say, with a browser or plugin vulnerability) first. Since Ubuntu and probably other major distros have already patched this, and the default settings for updates on these systems is to check fairly frequently, most end users will have the patched kernel quickly.
That leaves multi-user systems. The admins of these servers certainly benefit from finding out about the vulnerability asap, and they did (including through previous stories here). By now, though, most admins should have something in place if they don't have full trust in their users. If they don't, they should definitely be looking at whether this was exploited.
The bottom line is that there are many local root exploits which come out every year. This is the latest one, with a patch already available. Responsible admins of multi-user systems are used to dealing with this, and home users are almost certainly going to be patched before it causes any issues. For them, the latest Flash vulnerability is more worrisome. Even the extremely rare remote exploit of a service isn't usually an issue, since most modern distros don't start much of anything by default (including ssh, IIRC).
When you upload the video, if it finds a content match it tells you and explains what that means for you. I did a music video for "Crazy" by Gnarls Barkley and it identified the audio track, told me that it identified the audio track, and placed a link to buy the song under the video. I assume had it been from an artist/label/etc who doesn't want any unauthorized use of their content, it would have blocked the audio (or entire video) and notified me in the same way that it had done so.
Okay, so the uploading person knows, but what about the viewer? If nothing else, I'd be really curious to know which artists/labels/studios/etc like their content on Youtube and which still send takedown notices. It's certainly possible to figure it out on a case-by-case basis, but a little note on the video would make things easier.
A food's ability to be delivered depends a lot on how well it handles a 30 minute wait. Pizza is okay luke warm, cold, or re-heated. Chinese isn't so great cold, but you can insulate it pretty well and keep it warm enough for arrival, same with Indian food (both reheat okay). Cold sandwiches/subs deliver fine too.
A burger, on the other hand, gets soggy, cold, and disgusting by the 30 minute mark. Fries are similar. These days most fast food places have pretty fast turnover of their fries, and within about 15 minutes of them being left out they're a pale imitation of how good they taste when you first get them. Tex-Mex is similar - tacos get soggy, so much that Taco Bell tastes much worse if you get it in the drive through and drive 10 minutes home with it.
On the other hand, fried chicken products tend to do okay with the wait time. So while we don't see very many chicken-only delivery places, the major pizza chains often add chicken wings to their delivery options.
Wrong. Google stores its data all over the place, including on each individual server. They designed their own networked filesystem for the purpose. If they really didn't store data locally, they'd almost certainly PXE boot and avoid drives on each server altogether. I suspect the video just used some dated footage (from a training or other internal video perhaps?), as this article clearly shows SATA drives. Every server has two drives, and since no one node is critical for anything they also wouldn't bother with RAID1 for an OS boot drive as you suggest.
I received a free subscription for the rest of the year, "sponsored by Lincoln" (the car company). No idea what exactly triggered that, but I was/am a pretty regular reader. Not sure if I'll pay or not when the time comes. It'll be interesting to see what the Washington Post ends up with for a paywall.
R makes great graphs functionally speaking, but without mucking about with the options and some post-processing they are not the most attractive. Open up your favorite financial/data intensive news source and look at the visuals and you'll find that generating that style with just code is fairly difficult.
Until about Office 2007, the defaults in Excel charts were also atrocious. Openoffice.org is still pretty bad, and Matlab is not much better than R. The good news is that you can generate PDFs from each of these and easily open them in Inkscape/Illustrator, where making vector-based edits is easy.
Anyone who regularly visualizes data needs to pick up resources on how to clearly organize and display your data, like "The Visual Display of Quantitative Information" by Edward Tufte (though some of his examples are a little dated). Books like that are full of examples that would be very tricky to replicate without any post processing, because it usually involves eliminating excessive lines and cluttering detail.
Unless you have a first or second gen ipod touch, or iphone 3g or original. The second gen runs 4.2.1, but not 4.3. Unless they backport security fixes to the 4.2 line, iphone 3g and ipod touch 2nd gen are now out of support.
Agreed. My comment about trusting a cable modem connection was one of reliability. A couple of VPSes in different places set up redundantly is an inexpensive way to ensure uptime. You also know they won't block your outgoing ports, but you will still have to be concerned about getting filtered into large providers' spamboxes based on IP range. The solution is to send through a large, trusted SMTP server and receiving at your VPSes. Leave the cable modem for non-server purposes.
Even if you have a non-cable modem IP, it can be difficult to send (opt-in) business email from a small mail server. The reason is that spam filters at major email providers like Yahoo are turning to whitelisting, and you have to contact each major provider to avoid getting your email sent straight to the spam filter.
Since the implementations of spam filters at the server level seem to vary quite a bit, I tend to avoid sending particularly important single emails through my own small email server for fear they just end up in the spam folder of the recipient.
That said, in general I wouldn't trust a business-class cable modem connection to host an email server for business purposes. Virtualized servers are commonplace now and quite affordable (I pay $15/mo for mostly personal use). Set up the backup on your own connection.
So we've got several big contenders or those who want to be in the "smart phone" space (an increasingly meaningless term, as even my dumb Symbian phone can do a fair bit). Android and iOS are the biggest, then you've got Blackberry, Win Mobile 7, WebOS, MeeGo, and in the "dumber" category Symbian.
Three of these are Linux-based to one extent or another: Android, WebOS, and MeeGo. WIth the way apps get developed and sold, it's not clear to me that all three can survive on top of their more-closed counterparts (Blackerry and iOS, primarily). I've heard that various platforms are seeking compatibility with Android apps, but I doubt it'll be perfect.
Given that Nokia seems to be giving up on it, MeeGo seems like the obvious candidate to be the one dropped (its technical merits aside). There's plenty of fragmentation within Android alone now. Personally, I think the biggest potential loss is either the dropping or downplaying of Qt by Nokia. It'd be awesome to see Qt become a cross-mobile-platform toolkit to aid developers (on everything but iOS, of course). While I switched away from KDE during the 4.X debacle, it's clear that Qt was superior in many ways. Its commercial underpinnings seemed to really bolster its quality.
The worldwide death toll from the flu and its complications is in the hundreds of thousands. This is potentially more than just preventing an occasional annoying illness. It's more on the order of preventing all fatalities from traffic accidents.
The movie seemed to have a remarkable attention to technical detail in that scene. I don't know if Zuckerberg uses Linux, but in the movie he is depicted as using KDE. Not only that, but it looked to me like they got the version of KDE about right for the time.
If you have to buffer on Netflix with any frequency, it's you, not them. They have by far the fastest and most reliable streaming I've seen. Much better than Youtube (HD), Hulu, or ABC's own website. Keep in mind you really need at least a 3 Mbps connection, but I had 3Mbit DSL from ATT for years with great streaming.
The assumption, as best I can tell, is the same that drives carriers to charge $20/mo tethering fees for using smartphone data plans with a laptop. Basically, they don't expect you to use very much of your monthly plan.
The ipad+mifi deal from Verizon is another good example. If you want just a mifi (for, say, a laptop or an existing ipad), you pay $260 + $40/mo (contract) for 250MB or $60/mo for 5GB. If you buy it with an ipad, you pay only $130 for the mifi device and get the option to buy month-to-month $20 for 1GB, $30 for 3 GB or $50 for 5 GB. With the right usage pattern it wouldn't take long for the ipad to pay for itself.
Frankly, dedicated computer links (via USB or wireless) tend to have pretty lousy rates. Why? Because the carriers know these tend to be business customers (who have their companies pay for it) and they also tend to use more of their service than many smartphone users.
That said, provided they have the coverage you want, there are good alternatives to the standard ATT/Verizon choices. Virgin Mobile sells a mifi for $200 from Walmart with a $20/mo prepaid 1GB plan (if you buy direct from VM, it's cheaper but you only have the choice between $10/100MB or $40/unlimited). It uses Sprint's network (actually, Sprint bought Virgin Mobile USA last year).
I think you mean patent, not copyright.
Having had a single Debian install for 8 years, I can attest that it works remarkably well, but it is not always a breeze. And over the course of 5+ years, there are major revisions to software like Apache which require new configuration. The backported security fixes in RHEL allow users to keep a very consistent system for a very long time.
It's certainly not always the administrator's choice about whether hardware gets replaced. Besides, there's a long history of UNIX hardware being around forever (well over a decade, sometimes two).
On a personal note, I just retired my 12 year old P166 desktop which was functioning as a router/firewall. It had been running the same install of Debian, suitably upgraded, for 8 years. The only components I had to replace in those dozen years were the CPU and PS fans.
RHEL provides a 7 year lifecycle, which is unmatched by the other major distributions I know about (even Debian). This is crucial for the enterprise; I know of a number of systems which are still running RHEL3 after 6-7 years. Upgrading production computers is not a trivial process, and 2-3 year lifecycles just don't cut it in some situations.
My impression was that Baen books is primarily science fiction. I've drifted from that genre over the years, but I'm a fan of many of the "classics" (Dune, Foundation series, the Ender series, etc).
Perhaps the best recommendation would be a great book by an author with many other books available. That way if I like the first I know where to go next for similar fare. The real issue is that I really hate starting a book and not liking it; I want to finish it and it just nags at me when I don't. Fortunately that is very rare and tends to happen with poorly written non-fiction.
As someone completely unfamiliar with their authors and catalog, can readers of Baen books provide some recommendations? Anything available as an ebook (free or otherwise) would be of interest to me.
This is one advantage of the larger stores - it is usually straightforward to find the bestsellers within any given genre. For those of us new to a genre (or new to the modern works in a genre), this can be a helpful starting point. So many books, so little time.
Huh? The maximum income tax bracket in WI is 7.75%, with most income falling in the 6-7% range. Federal tax brackets are much higher (15-20% easily).
It's true that some states allow fewer deductions than federal taxes, but if you truly pay 3x income taxes to state as federal you have some very odd tax returns (with very low federal taxes, I imagine).
And what do you get for your taxes? As a former resident of WI, I would say that on average the public school systems are much better (especially those areas where property taxes are high), the state university system is excellent with far lower in-state tuition than its peers, and the roads are MUCH better than Michigan (though that's not saying a whole lot).
A very simple, offline wiki is well-suited to recording all sorts of information.
Since all I need is text with tags and the occasional equation in LaTeX, I found that Tiddlywiki works great. It's an amazing self contained wiki using only HTML and Javascript. The main idea is to be able to very quickly develop lists, outlines, etc. in a browser I have open anyway.
This sort of crap has the potential to make photographer's lives really annoying. And this comes just as more and more people are active amateur photographers.
The lighting on the Eiffel Tower is copyrighted? Museums claim rights over photographic reproductions of century-old paintings? Where do we draw the line?
On the one hand, we have the physical equivalent of contracts: agreements made as a requirement for entrance; this allows zoos, museums, etc. to restrict the use of commercial photography. But photos taken from public streets? From the air?
The fact that these institutions go after commercial users isn't much comfort; the line between non-commercial amateur and commercial-but-still-amateur photography. Have ads up on a blog? Submit your photo to a local art show? Sell your photo to a stock photo site? It's easy for an amateur to make a little cash from the best of their photos.
I think a lot of us use the 32 bit plugin either with the wrapper or with a 32 bit browser. I certainly switched away from the 64 bit plugin after that last vulnerability. I also use NoScript to enable it only on demand, but I'm not 100% sure it blocks it before anything is sent to the plugin.
That said, most of the new Linux users I know use it on their netbooks, running Atom processors which don't support 64 bit instructions anyway.
Yes, but the latest version(s) of Ubuntu ask if you want to reboot after installing kernel updates. So the user at least knows they're supposed to reboot as soon as they can.
Except that flaws like this one are discovered quite regularly. Just look through security updates for stable distributions like Debian.
C'mon now. As others have pointed out, and has been mentioned earlier on /., this is a local root exploit. It's bad, it affects a lot of users (in theory), but to write this is to simply spread fear for most of those using Linux.
Why? Because the systems that inexperienced users run also happen to be those with a few, generally trusted users. Think netbooks. Sure, all local root exploits are bad and should be patched asap. But that doesn't mean "you're probably being rooted as I type this". It means that a remote attacker needs user-level privileges (say, with a browser or plugin vulnerability) first. Since Ubuntu and probably other major distros have already patched this, and the default settings for updates on these systems is to check fairly frequently, most end users will have the patched kernel quickly.
That leaves multi-user systems. The admins of these servers certainly benefit from finding out about the vulnerability asap, and they did (including through previous stories here). By now, though, most admins should have something in place if they don't have full trust in their users. If they don't, they should definitely be looking at whether this was exploited.
The bottom line is that there are many local root exploits which come out every year. This is the latest one, with a patch already available. Responsible admins of multi-user systems are used to dealing with this, and home users are almost certainly going to be patched before it causes any issues. For them, the latest Flash vulnerability is more worrisome. Even the extremely rare remote exploit of a service isn't usually an issue, since most modern distros don't start much of anything by default (including ssh, IIRC).
Okay, so the uploading person knows, but what about the viewer? If nothing else, I'd be really curious to know which artists/labels/studios/etc like their content on Youtube and which still send takedown notices. It's certainly possible to figure it out on a case-by-case basis, but a little note on the video would make things easier.