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User: Kohlrabi82

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  1. Phishing on Facebook 'Unintentionally Uploaded' Email Contacts From 1.5M Users (cnet.com) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So Facebook was basically running that script like a phishing site to obtain users' passwords. Aren't there laws which apply to that? Or did the lawyers tell them to say "unintentionally" to save themselves from any penalties? Fuck lawyers (and broken legislation).

  2. Finally the first commenter who knows what dy/dx really is. It is the limit of an expression containing a fraction, so not a "real" fraction in algebraic sense.

  3. Digital audio has been solved since the 80s on Why High-Fidelity Streaming is the Audio Revolution Your Ears Have Been Waiting For (forbes.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Perfect digital audio has been available since the ubiquitous availability of CDs. The problem is that nearly no recording studio or producer seems to be able to use that technology properly to its full extent.

    Encoding the garbage most producers put out today will simply put out garbage again. As long as the input to the encoders is not hifi, it does not matter how many bits you waste on it.

  4. I was pretty happily playing Return of the Obra Dinn lately and didn't have to touch any of these awful titles you mentioned. Into the Breach was great as well.

  5. Who would have thunk? on Battlefield 5's Poor Sales Numbers Have Become a Disaster For Electronic Arts (seekingalpha.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Catering to the perpetually offended instead of your loyal gamer fanbase did not work out for you, EA? How surprising.

  6. Because they are using Chrome, which to any tech- or usability minded person is a laughable piece of garbage?

  7. Re: If you "experiment" with invading my privacy on Mozilla Says Ad on Firefox's New Tab Page Was Just Another Experiment (venturebeat.com) · · Score: 2

    And to which browser to you switch?

  8. Slowly we are catching up to the year 2013 on Google Working on Blocking Back Button Hijacking in Chrome (zdnet.com) · · Score: 2

    Presto Opera (e.g. =12.x) had this feature years ago. Glad that we are slowly catching up to Opera's feature set...

  9. Move central Europe to the wrong TZ? on Daylight Saving Time is Super Unpopular. Here Are the Countries Trying To Ditch It. (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    So, the suggestion to use "summertime" all the time basically moves (Central) Europe into the East European timezone (UTC+2). Why? Why not leave it in its proper timezone (UTC+1)? Because the proles think "eternal summertime" means "eternal summer"?

  10. Re:Bad things come in threes on IBM To Buy Red Hat, the Top Linux Distributor, For $34 Billion (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1, Redundant

    If GNOME and systemd disappear with them, all the better for the Linux eco system.

  11. How about we limit reproduction so that the world population can shrink to a sustainable 3-4 billion, instead of banning habits? Everything human climate change related scales with population, and currently population grows exponentially. Changing behavior in population stagnating western countries will not counteract the effects of the immense growth of population in the rest of the world.

  12. Re:Not a fan of the death penalty but... on States Turn To an Unproven Method of Execution: Nitrogen Gas (nytimes.com) · · Score: 1

    It's probably a sign of our times that people care more about the name of something than the meaning or act itself. Who cares how it is called, you are executing a person.

  13. Re:Nice Analogy on Did Harvard Scientists Predict The End of the Universe? (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    It's more than , so what? It would have been more interesting to find something that this number is less than.

  14. What about the boys? on Barbie Will Be Used To Teach Kids To Code (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    Next up, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles teach boys how to knit.

  15. We need AI for Slashdot headlines on Google Worked With Intel on a custom AI Chip For Its Pixel Phones (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1
  16. Go one step back on Smartwatches For Kids Are a Total Privacy Nightmare (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Smartwatches are a "total privacy nightmare" because they enable parents to spy on their kids.

  17. Re:It's because of social justice activism on Google Hit With Gender Pay Discrimination Lawsuit (axios.com) · · Score: 1

    The problem was the foot-in-the-door tactics by early SJWs. People gave them a bit of leeway by adopting some small parts of their agenda. Then they started demanding more and more, because they thought that others have finally "seen the light". Similar to kids they need to be shown that there are limits to what they can get by crying wolf all the time, if they want to live in a world of grown-ups and social peace and cooperation. Then again maybe they don't want peace in the first place.

    We should have stopped those people right from the start, instead of giving them any sort of "safe space" to maneuver.

    OPPRESSION IS JUSTICE

  18. Re:Have they added DRM yet? on Vinyl Record Production Gets a Much-Needed Tech Upgrade (engadget.com) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That.

    What really should have happened, when the loudness war started to rise in the mid 90s, was for manufacturers to replace volume knobs with loudness knobs, with some (dynamics) compressor attached to it. Keep the volume knob, but make it something special common people wouldn't need to touch. That way people could turn up the loudness, which in effect would not just increase the amplitude but also compress dynamics.

    Because altering [i]loudness[/i] is what people actually want. If they are on a train or in a loud environment they want to amplify the amplitude AND compress the signal to be able to hear the full recording. At home at a party you'd want to be able to hear all parts of the music properly and have high volume by just cranking up the knob to 11. In a quiet environment you'd want to be able to experience the full dynamics. For knowledgeable people we'd still have volume knobs to really alter the volume. In the end you could have tuned every well-recorded record to the environment you're in. There would have been zero benefit and need for the insane levels of compression we're seeing today.

  19. Re:ThePirateBay has all of them on Netflix Now Only Has 31 Movies From IMDB's Top 250 List (streamingobserver.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, it's not only that Piratebay and friends obviously offer the bigger catalogue of content. It's also that you get a DRM-free version you can play anywhere, anytime without being online.

    Do sites like Netflix really expect to be paid for worse service? I'd still be willing to pay for a service (monthly, or per-content) if it allowed the ease of use and freedom of pirating sites. Not that I really use those, I essentially stopped watching TV shows and movies, except for one or two shows hosted via Amazon Prime, Netflix wasn't at all worth it because I only was interested in one or two shows, but since I don't binge-watch, finishing one might take months, which makes this service much more expensive than a box set of Blurays.

    But sadly Blurays are shit and insulting. I have to sit through minutes of shitty menus and anti-piracy shit, even though I paid €15 for a movie. I cannot play Bluray on my PC without buying some software for playback, like the now-defunct AnyDVD, or MakeMKV. I certainly won't buy a shitty special player software, which locks me in even further.

    Streaming sites are shit. Ever changing catalogues, small amount of content and the fact that sometimes they only offer half the seasons of a TV show (Amazon, I'm looking at you). Add to that that I am forced to be online. So it is unusable on business trips on the plane or in hotels with bad WiFi, a situation where I'm more likely to just watch a movie or show than at home. On top we have DRM playback software, which forces me to use Chrome.

    Offer me a way to get the content onto my PC DRM-free, without jumping through hoops, and we might have a deal.

  20. What is the "Genius Bar"? on New York Thieves Wearing Apple Store T-Shirts Steal $16,000 In iPhones (pix11.com) · · Score: 1

    For people who are not into Apple's Newspeak, what is a "Genius Bar"? Is it the sales counter?

  21. Beware of sentient buildings!

  22. SJW double standards on Men Are Sabotaging The Online Reviews Of TV Shows Aimed At Women (fivethirtyeight.com) · · Score: 1

    Let me get this straight. Some men dislike a show which is about shallow nonsense and motivations, and downvote said show on IMDB. Instead of congratulating them, some SJWs bash them for having an enlightened viewpoint, . So even if you are in support of feminists/enlightened motives, you still get bashed by SJWs, just because you are a man. It looks like SJWism isn't really about social justice, but only about bashing the supposed oppressors.

    It still puzzles me that SJWs are unwilling or unable to realize that the current western culture, while admittedly not being social justice utopia, yet, is probably the most socially just culture in human history. People have lived and died for what some people take for granted. Gay rights are not natural rights (because, in nature, gay behaviour is, by definition, "abnormal"), but they have been fought for and defended. Medical sex reassigments have been made possible by the medical advancements in western "patriarchic" societies. Universal suffrage, that people regardless of sex or income have one vote, is a huge achievement.

    I'm not saying western culture is free of any social problems, but please don't suggest that voting down a shallow TV show on an internet platform is one of those problems.

  23. Re:Renewable energy can work. on Germany Had So Much Renewable Energy That It Had To Pay People To Use Electricity (qz.com) · · Score: 1

    Apparently you only pay more if you are a citizen. As a company you get paid to use power.

  24. Learning from mistakes? on Node.js Version 6 Released With LTS (sdtimes.com) · · Score: 1

    LTS means that node.js will ship with an implementation of left-pad?

  25. Re:RIAA shooting themselves in the foot again on Slysoft (of AnyDVD Fame) Closes After Increased International Pressure By AACS (myce.com) · · Score: 1

    I believe that the studios and AACS are actively trying to destroy BD now, because with streaming and online sales they can control your content access and consumption far better, and they can cut out the middle-men and meat-space in the process. Taking the abilty for PC users to make use of their BD drives and discs is one way to ensure that.