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User: Xylantiel

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  1. Re:My house, my rules on Israel Airport Security Allowed To Read Tourists' Email · · Score: 1

    Seems like crossing the border with no information in your possession is the only reasonable way to go.

    I had a friend mention recently that at NASA you can't take your laptop overseas (or maybe it was just to China), they give you a blank ipad when you leave and then you give it back and they wipe it when you get back. Assuming that you wait until you are in-country to start using the ipad this means you would cross the border with no information on you subject to search. It seems like with the "consent" requirement you could get away with refusing to sign into your email from a device that isn't yours if you cite company policy.

    And to add to your list: if you work at any educational institution, the federal laws on student data privacy are such that you would be violating them with this kind of open-ended access as well.

  2. Re:I wont be a guinea pig on Boeing's 787 Dreamliner Has Taken Its Battery Certification Flight · · Score: 3, Informative

    No - the plane is safe even if the battery catches fire. My understanding of the comment is that safe failure is the result of the change in design. With the previous design, battery failure by fire could endanger the aircraft. With the new design battery failure by fire does not endanger the aircraft. This is how subsystem failure is managed in aircraft. Whether or not a failure endangers the craft has huge implications for how its safety is evaluated.

  3. Re:Don't forget the free and open source people to on Geeks On a Plane Proposed To Solve Global Tech Skills Crisis · · Score: 1

    Did you somehow miss the fact that Apple broke the status quo that you just mentioned by refusing to sign cross-licensing agreements? And if you think that one-click would have passed muster as a patent in the '80s you also slept through the transition from when method patents were not allowed to the current condition where they are. Just because it was bad before doesn't mean it can't get worse.

  4. Re:Why anyone would think this is a good thing on Bitcoin Hits New All-time High of $32 · · Score: 1

    Put your strawman away. Hoarding cash and saving are not the same thing. Currency is for providing efficiency of exchanging goods and services, not for long-term storage of capital. That's why it's called currency!

    Individuals have a choice to save via investment (keeping capital in the economy) or via hoarding currency (keeping capital out of the economy). Beyond a certain amount liquidity buffer, widespread "saving" in the form of hoarding cash is a good way to destroy an economy by breaking the assumptions that everyone uses to fairly exchange goods and services using currency. A mildly inflationary currency is a stable currency because it discourages it being used for something other than currency, i.e. long-term storage of capital. You are arguing that zero inflation is enough to maintain a stable currency. You are wrong. We tried that, it didn't work.

    Coming back to bitcoin. Bitcoin is a perfectly reasonable exchange currency for small transactions. i.e. you convert money to bitcoin then back out again. This is because its short-term value is fairly predictable and low-risk. However its long-term value is completely uncontrolled because there are so many unknown hoarders. And this problem will just get worse.

    Bitcoin will probably last another few years and then it will choke on its own deflation. i.e. bitcoins will become so valuable that none of them will be in circulation. The hilarious thing is you will probably see this as a the success of bitcoin! Look how valuable they are! But it will have been a total failure as a currency. Thankfully anyone with some good sense sees this coming a mile away and nobody is likely to die as a result. (you know people die when large economies break right? This is not a game.)

  5. Re:Reversed in America? on Is "Left" Vs. "Right" Hard-coded Into Your Brain? · · Score: 1

    But "how things were before" is very different depending on the country. For an American conservative, the desire is to return to a time of less government intrusion in people's lives.

    Of course the hilarity (i.e. stupidity) ensues when "how things were before" is just something made-up that never actually existed. Or it is something that was changed precisely because it was a provably terrible way of doing things. The problem with a lot of politics in the US, especially on the conservative side, is that it has become disconnected from reality. If a "conservative" allows someone else to define "how things were" then they are just a pawn to be manipulated. Progressives (that is the more appropriate term in this context) have reality issues too, i.e. thinking something will work better just because it is "new", but that seems a lot less of a problem right now. Progressives seem to have their hands full just keeping Bad Stuff (like invading other countries) from happening.

  6. Re:The Wrong Questions on Ask Slashdot: Can Closed Source Software Transition To the GPL Successfully? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I do a "Software as a Service" model. You pay me, you get what I write.

    Just to be clear, this is NOT "software as a service". SAAS is where they pay you to use the software (for example through a web interface) but they do not get either the compiled code or source code. You are working as a contract developer. In copyright terms it is a "work for hire."

    I agree that use of GPL completely depends on how the payment-for-work model for a given piece of software works. If one's revenue depends on artificial scarcity, GPL is not really viable as its intention is to remove artificial scarcity.

  7. Re:Brilliant idea on Google Declares War On the Password · · Score: 1

    Honest questions here:

    Does this mean it stores the secrets on the SIM card because it is hardened? or it uses the existing keys/etc in the sim card? (I don't even know if the former is possible.) Is there no other hardened storage on a smartphone?

    One of the problems is that if I have two banks (or others) I'd prefer to use different authentication tokens for each. But if both of them authenticate from the same sim card....

  8. Re:Can we speak in clear terms? on US Educational Scores Not So Abysmal · · Score: 1

    I think that you are wrong. Given the nature of the study, I am inclined to believe that when they say "we know that disadvantaged students perform more poorly..." that they know this for real i.e they have the statistics to back it up. The point is that the simple fractions of disadvantaged students doesn't quite work the way you might expect.

  9. Re:What have we become..... on Texas State Rep. Files 2 Bills To Ban RFID In Schools · · Score: 1

    School should never be about attendance, but about learning. The pupils/students need to learn stuff and there needs to be some test or oral exam to certify their progress.

    Um. That's what happens now -- you can homeschool, which just has various curriculum and testing requirements. But those requirements have to be implemented in some way. If nobody is managing your homeschooling, you are required to at least *be* somewhere that will manage your schooling. You simply have this mistaken belief that testing for competency is "easy" and would work fine. We have trouble even doing this properly in schools.

    And what's with this "schools are paid by the class hour" crap. That kind of metric is commonly used for discussing school budgets, but it is by no means uniform enough to be even a useful standard let alone some kind of implied universal requirement.

  10. Re:Can someone remind me why this is sinister? on Texas State Rep. Files 2 Bills To Ban RFID In Schools · · Score: 1

    You're not allowed to make napalm as a hobby because it's too dangerous to your neighbor, maybe you shouldn't be allowed to have unsecured assault rifles with high-capacity magazines in your house because it is too dangerous to your neighbor.

    One role of law is to set accepted practice. Ownership and storage of military-grade weapons should be subject to licensing, required standard practice, and inspection for purposes of public safety. Otherwise its not the "militia" that's "well-regulated" it's the kids and the crazies.

  11. Re:Hahaha - Unity even fails mobile on Ubuntu Focusing on Tablets and the Cloud in 2013 · · Score: 1

    My question is -- why not target touchscreen desktops? There's already a feature-restricted linux variant for tablets - it's called Android. It would be more efficient in terms of resources to build an open-only non-spyware Android variant than to build something open from scratch.

    I think we should target 3 user experiences -- fixed-screen + keyboard + mouse/trackball (current desktops/laptops) -- (handheld) touchscreen only (current tablets) -- fixed-touchscreen + keyboard.

  12. Re:This is where people misunderstand badly on WordPress To Accept Bitcoins · · Score: 1

    But as he said -- it may just be the influence that grows. Nominally someone could create a currency that works like bitcoin but has the same inflation properties as targeted by the central banks (3%/year). This may be possible to do on top of bitcoin's own proof-of-work stream. Bitcoin itself couldn't do this because the early adopter advantage (that makes it scam-like) was necessary to get it started. But now that the system has proved some of its worth, something else could build on it.

  13. Re:Hydrogen? on Felix Baumgartner's Supersonic Skydive Attempt · · Score: 5, Informative

    My impression from the previous discussion on this was that helium shortage is a fictional crisis. Medical usages don't do helium recovery, which is where most of the loss occurs. Also the main source of helium - as a by-product of natural gas extraction - just vents most of it because its not worth capturing it. So complaining about "misuse" is nonsense. If one is really worried about a helium shortage one should be pushing for recovery in its biggest usage context and stockpiling. Neither of these are being discussed, so apparently this isn't actually serious.

  14. Re:Surprisingly? on Rejected Papers Get More Citations When Eventually Published · · Score: 1

    My question is why is this not just a demonstration that citation optimization works as expected? They say that resubmission is dominated by a flow from high-impact to low-impact journals. i.e. people submit their paper to the highest impact journal they think the "might" be able to get it into, and then resubmit to lower ones until it gets accepted. This means the scientists are using resubmissions to actively attempt to increase their citation count by getting their paper into the highest impact journal possible. So of course citation rates are higher for resubmitted papers, because resubmitted papers are the ones being subject to this optimization process.

    While this is majorly labor-intensive on the reviewer side, it is a decently useful practice in a large field like biology, since it will help insure that "important" results receive a lot of visibility. High-impact journals are nominally high-impact because the community treats them that way. More people read & cite them, so people try to get their stuff in there first and then go to other journals.

    I would also note that this study itself is an example of the distorting side-effects this process can have. These guys don't give the above very reasonable explanation for their results, and precisely because of their poor analysis, it is an "interesting puzzle" and gets into a high-impact journal (science in this case). Of course if they'd just done their analysis properly, it would be a completely uninteresting result, and not make it into the high-impact journal. Insane isn't it. That's scientific publication today. Science and nature tend to contain things that are speculative, inconclusive, or plain wrong because knowing the answer is boring.

    By the way science and nature are run more like magazines than journals. Most journals don't have an "interesting" cut, just "useful to others, not done before, and done properly". Both science and nature will actually relax the "done properly" part if it is "interesting" enough. This isn't necessarily bad science, it just means that both the proposal of a hypothesis and its falsification are published separately. Nominally this is good for high-profile questions. The problem is that many people don't realize this and often the the proposal of the hypothesis is much "higher-impact" than its falsification!

  15. Re:Crack on demand on In Under 10 Hours, Google Patches Chrome To Plug Hole Found At Its Pwnium Event · · Score: 2

    Sure "some" people do. The point is that if someone will do it for 60k plus props, then there are plenty of others that can do it for nefarious purposes. Also I'm not just being cynical, there is a practical component. Looking at it from the practical security standpoint this indicates a market value of a given type of crack, and therefore the approximate cost of such an attack to the hypothetical adversary in your security evaluation. Everything is vulnerable to a "motivated enough" attacker. Security is keeping the expected cost of the crack below the benefit (motivation). My cynicism comes in when I say that $60k+props seems like a pretty darn low cost for a hole (escape from sandbox) in a high-profile browser touted for its security. More cynicism comes in by the assumption that this crack is just the product. The critical issues are in the way the crack was found, which is not mentioned. I would have more confidence if this Pinkie Pie person were well-known for all the bugs they have fixed in chromium, and they just held onto one for the contest. A cause of concern is that the exploit sounds awfully similar to the previous one (using a render bug to access the IPC), indicating that there is a whole family of possible exploits of which these may just be two examples.

  16. Crack on demand on In Under 10 Hours, Google Patches Chrome To Plug Hole Found At Its Pwnium Event · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think this demonstration of crack-on-demand is not really a good thing for chrome. This means that cracks for chrome are not worth too much more than 60k on the black market. That doesn't seem like a very high price.

  17. Re:Should say 'applicants', not 'applications' on Sexism In Science · · Score: 1

    Interesting... this makes me wonder if it is possible that the evaluation given was indirectly gender-biased. i.e. there was something in the evaluation that could be interpreted differently based on the gender of the candidate. For example if the applicant is mid-30's and had an uncharacteristic gap in their employment a few years ago, a woman might be assumed to have a kid, but a man may not be subjected to that assumption. This is still bias, but it might get closer to a more specific understanding what factors are leading to the bias. There could be even more subtle things in an "evaluation" like traits that are seen as positive/negative for one gender but not the other.

  18. Re:Pre-election laws on Brazilian Judge Orders 24-hour Shutdown of Google and Youtube · · Score: 2

    But it is always possible to sufficiently disguise paid speech as free. The Citizen's United case was about a propaganda film disguised as a for-profit movie. The promoters just exhibited it at a loss, but it was structured as a for-profit show. So how does one go about "proving" speech is paid in these corner cases? I think paid speech is what is fundamentally wrong with the US democracy, but there is an argument to be made that it is simply not workable to restrict it. The electorate just has to figure it out. As the grandparent post points out, Fox news can just pretend to be legitimate news and get away with extremely biased and manipulative crap. To some degree Citizens United just acknowledges this as a fact of life.

    or to say it another way: Never believe what you see on TV. (i.e. what someone else paid money for you to see -- even if its not an ad, it is advertiser-supported).

  19. Re:We already know soda drinkers are fat on Is the Can Worse Than the Soda? · · Score: 1

    This is a great correlation is (possibly) not causation. They are saying that it is possible that the same metabolic differences that lead to obesity might also cause people to have more bpa in their urine. So the causality might be the other way entirely. Somehow that seems like a more reasonable explanation to me since it might even have a reasonable mechanism in terms of the individual's uptake of both sugar and an additive of sugared beverages.

  20. Re:Falacy of the Average on Why America's School "Lag" Has Never Mattered · · Score: 1

    What I think he is trying to say is that often these comparisons don't make sense because education is structured differently in the US. This results in a much more fair sample of the US population going into calculating the "average" for the US compared to other countries. "Developed" countries in Europe select out people for limited education very early compared to the US. The same is often true in Asia. Then only the students that are left take the tests used to make comparisons. So, in countries other than the US, often the students tested are pre-selected to be the good students, so obviously they do better. In the US we are often careful about things like graduation rates and minimum achievement levels for ALL citizens, even those who drop out for socioeconomic reasons.

    In the case of countries like China and India, which are still mostly rural populations, this is all pretty clearly a trick. The US as a whole is being compared to the relatively small fraction of China/India that is included in the test population. In the US we could similarly rig our numbers by just leaving out the least-educated 80% of our population.

  21. blog should be the primary source on When a Primary Source Isn't Good Enough: Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    It seems reasonable to me that the guy's blog should be the source, not his user account on wikipedia. otherwise Wikipedia would have to verify user identities, which is insane.

  22. Re:A simple fact remains... on Torvalds Takes Issue With De Icaza's Linux Desktop Claims · · Score: 1

    One word -- Office. A "desktop" O/S without Microsoft Office is not viable. OS X is the only unix desktop that MS has blessed with a port of Office, so it is the dominant unix desktop. Nothing else matters until Office's monopoly is diluted.

  23. Re:Foreman conflicted interests? on Apple v. Samsung Jurors Speak, Skipped Prior Art For "Bogging Us Down" · · Score: 2

    Seems like it will hinge on exactly how he answered questions during the jury selection. As you say, his bias is pretty clear in hindsight due to the nature of his patent. The problem will be if he skirted this issue in jury selection questioning in order to give himself a better chance to get on the jury. I would assume Samsung's lawyers are looking at his answers very carefully. He also pretty clearly overstepped his bounds as jury foreman, and that itself may be enough for a mistrial.

  24. Re:Flash still unlikely to go away. on Adobe Officially Kills New Flash Installations On Android · · Score: 1

    I would disagree, and that is exactly why I think this is suicide on Adobe's part. If tablet devices continue to grow as a standard web browsing venue, eventually developers will give up on developing two separate sites because Adobe's authoring tools only support one of them and just use html5. Or some company that does make html5 authoring software will come along and eat their Adobe's lunch. Either way Adobe's business in authoring tools goes down the toilet. The whole move only makes sense from the idiot bean counter MBA perspective. i.e. cut Linux and Android support (there never was iOS support) while assuming it will have no effect on the developer tool install base.

    And just to be clear I have always hated flash, and despite it's cost to Adobe this will probably be a "good" thing in the end for open standards on the web. Though the "standard" seems to more and more not be a desktop version of the site and a mobile version, but a desktop version and an app. This seems insane but does decrease the need for flash on mobile platforms, so maybe this is Adobe's rationale. (?)

  25. Re:Pluto never was a planet on Is Pluto a Binary Planet? · · Score: 1

    First -- what you have said has nothing to do with the question of why people are so stuck on Pluto. I think this comes down to people not understanding science. They think science is "right", which is good, but of course "early" science is often wrong. There is a whole hierarchy of confidence levels, and things of low confidence often turn out to be wrong -- like the long-disproven notion that Pluto is a 9th body much "like" the other 8 planets. Turns out Pluto is just the largest Kuiper belt object and had its mass overestimated by a factor of 50 for a long time. This has all been figured out for quite a while (many decades) but nobody ever went to the trouble of "fixing" the labels for things that were put in place based on the early low-confidence results that turned out to not really be right. Scientists are totally used to this, it happens all the time. Non-scientists not so much.

    The problem with using "what planets are made of" -- actually mostly this means what their mass is -- is that, in order to not include dozens of things in our solar system, the line must then be drawn arbitrarily. In a way that may be meaningless for general planetary systems. Why are bodies bigger than x size/mass planets and those smaller dwarf planets? Basing the definition on what the orbital characteristics tell us about the formation process -- particularly whether the body was able to "clear" its orbital neighborhood -- is much more meaningful than an arbitrary line in the sand.

    I agree that the labels are poorly constructed. I would have preferred some pair of terms like "major planets" and "minor planets" myself so there is a clear distinction. But really if anything "dwarf planet" is the cop-out term. There are "planets" and there are "spherical sun-orbiting bodies that aren't planets". Then one can say "Pluto is not a planet, it is a Kuiper belt object" and you wouldn't get the reply "but it's a dwarf planet right." (I won't call this an inane question, because it is actually quite a reasonable reply from someone totally unfamiliar with the baggage of the naming scheme.) Just call them what they are -- asteroids, KBOs or scattered disk objects. Their size mostly a separate issue.