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User: king+neckbeard

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  1. Re:Citing Wikipedia on An Accidental Wikipedia Hoax · · Score: 1

    keep that in mind, but don't forget that this is nothing new. We've had hoaxes pick up steam for a long time.

  2. Re:The definition of copyright on Ford, GM Sued Over Vehicles' Ability To Rip CD Music To Hard Drive · · Score: 1

    No, from the letter of the law, this is bunk. The relevant tests make the claims an absolute joke. They are just hoping to cash in, and if they get anything close to their claims, it would probably be more money than the AHRA has brought in in it's entire lifetime.

  3. Re:Beating aroud the bush on When Spies and Crime-Fighters Squabble Over How They Spy On You · · Score: 1

    Because parallel construction would arguably make the information fall under the 'fruit of the poisonous tree' because the anonymous tip is coming form the government or someone effectively in their employ. If we allowed that, it would effectively be a complete end-around to the fourth amendment.

  4. Re: The DEA and CIA are both rogue agencies. on When Spies and Crime-Fighters Squabble Over How They Spy On You · · Score: 1

    I'm not aware of any group within the Americas that typically identifies themselves as American other than residents of the USA. It's also worth remembering that Mexico is technically the United States of Mexico (Estado Unidos Mexicanos), so USians could also apply to Mexicans.

  5. Re: The DEA and CIA are both rogue agencies. on When Spies and Crime-Fighters Squabble Over How They Spy On You · · Score: 1

    You act as if there is no relationship between the two, when it's quite clear that both sides are complicit with each other. The militarization of local police is due to all of this war on terror crap, and much of the gear they get is from military surplus. And the lying about evidence is at least partially because the NSA is feeding them tips or something similar (like the business the NSA undoubtedly throws towards stingray manufacturers to local PDs)

    Plus, the DEA has no legitimate function, and the NSA doesn't appear to actually perform any of theirs.

  6. Re:Who would hire a ketamine user? on Researchers Design Bot To Conduct National Security Clearance Interviews · · Score: 1

    The threat of losing their job is moot if the employer won't fire them for it, and admitting that you used drugs bears no legal consequences outside of the statute of limitations, nevermind that there probably isn't enough evidence even if it wasn't,and you'd have to get a DA to prosecute someone with a security clearance.

    Furthermore, that line of reasoning only works on people that could be blackmailed, which would suggest the best candidates are those that are openly deviants.

  7. Re:Who would hire a ketamine user? on Researchers Design Bot To Conduct National Security Clearance Interviews · · Score: 1

    Someone who has used ketamine is not necessarily a drug addict, and it's the teetotalers you need to be wary of.

  8. Re:Robo-Polygraph? on Researchers Design Bot To Conduct National Security Clearance Interviews · · Score: 1

    Yes, polygraphs aren't baseless pseudoscience, but basically all of their practical usage is baseless pseudoscience.

  9. Re:Brought to you by the same people on Researchers Design Bot To Conduct National Security Clearance Interviews · · Score: 1

    They are better than chance if the individual is untrained at countermeasures and has no other conditions that might affect the test. Countermeasures are pretty easy to learn and widely available, with killing the placebo effect being a pretty good way to tip the scales by itself. Since a security clearance exists to prevent exactly that kind of person from having access to state secrets, they are useless to the point that giving them any kind of trust is a bigger threat to national security than most of the people we drone strike, not to mention the reality of excluding possible skilled candidates.

  10. Re:AIDS is good on Researchers Successfully Cut HIV DNA Out of Human Cells · · Score: 2

    You also left out people who were raped, and a fair number of hospital staff. Not to mention, that if you forcibly relocate people, they are going to be even less honest about having HIV, which means more people will catch it and possibly spread it before they find out they have it.

  11. Re:This guy is going to be so rich on 'Hidden From Google' Remembers the Sites Google Is Forced To Forget · · Score: 1

    I do know that TVshack was legal in the UK, which was why US extradition was sought. I'm not sure exactly under which legal umbrella they put TPB, but it probably boils down to being pressured so much by the BPI that they ignore what the law actually says.

  12. Re:This guy is going to be so rich on 'Hidden From Google' Remembers the Sites Google Is Forced To Forget · · Score: 1
    Looking at the site itself, it appears to be a term, a link, and a source on the removal. It's incredibly sparse.

    If it's just the link he's providing he'll probably be okay (though has libel even been tested in the face of wilfully linking without regard for the truth? - the piracy argument was lost on this one, but what about libel?), but if he's including the descriptions he's fucked if it goes to court

    Was it actually lost? I'm not aware of anything actually holding up in court. ICE has seized domain names, but all of those are just cowboy operations where they shoot from the hip and don't let questions be asked because of national security. I know in Spain and the UK, linking sites have been explicitly declared legal, and I believe the US government is trying to avoid any precedent on this matter.

  13. Re:This guy is going to be so rich on 'Hidden From Google' Remembers the Sites Google Is Forced To Forget · · Score: 1

    It doesn't appear that the site is making any claims about accuracy or anything, so there's not really a risk of libel The site just links to the stricken results, nothing else.

  14. Re:Awesome! on 'Hidden From Google' Remembers the Sites Google Is Forced To Forget · · Score: 1

    Using a search engine specifically for dirty little secrets seems to make things EASIER for the casual. Now they'll find them on the first page. If they are so casual that they are not doing a background check beyond a Google search, they probably aren't going to care so long as you aren't an axe murderer.

  15. Re:I'm shocked! on William Binney: NSA Records and Stores 80% of All US Audio Calls · · Score: 1

    I think the title is actually a bit inaccurate. It seems that it's not 80% of calls in the US are stored, it's 80% of all calls globally are stored in the US. The remainder is likely because there are some pipes they don't have reliable enough taps for.

  16. Re:And good luck asking for APAP-free medicine! on Hair-Raising Technique Detects Drugs, Explosives On Human Body · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While true (although it's quite likely the effects are exaggerated to some degree), there's no compelling reason to have them in the same pill. People build up very high tolerances to opiates, and there isn't a whole lot by way of extra side effects in doing so, but our ability to take acetaminophen without liver damage stays about the same.

  17. Re:"Emergency" laws. on UK Gov't Plans To Push "Emergency" Surveillance Laws · · Score: 3

    They must be getting desperate if they are using "Think of the Children" and "TERRORISM DURR HURR" at the same time.

  18. Re:Lots of false positives ... on Police Using Dogs To Sniff Out Computer Memory · · Score: 1

    OK, what do you think is more effective?

    Just having humans searching everything. They would probably be doing that anyway since dogs are not very reliable (not because of inability to use their sense of smell to detect it, but because they are dogs.).

    Police don't need to get dogs 'accepted.' They're already accepted. I don't even know what you're thinking here.

    Dogs sniffing for hidden electronics is not a commonly accepted practice, and I suspect that this is probably part of a campaign to make it one.

  19. Re:This is hardly new... on TSA Prohibits Taking Discharged Electronic Devices Onto Planes · · Score: 1

    Yes, free electronics recycling with the purchase of a ticket for international flight.

  20. Re: Actually makes good sense on TSA Prohibits Taking Discharged Electronic Devices Onto Planes · · Score: 1

    Would it? Most scans would be 2D scanning, so if you replaced the top or bottom 90% of the battery, it probably wouldn't show up as an anomaly.. If we were being even more thorough, we could have the bomb on the inside with battery on the outside, or use material that would show up the same under a scan.

  21. Re:Actually makes good sense on TSA Prohibits Taking Discharged Electronic Devices Onto Planes · · Score: 1

    That's not really the difficulty part. We know pretty well what words in the Constitution meant at the time, The difficulty is in applying them in the context of new technology and social changes, as well as dealing with precedent drifting.

  22. Re:Lots of false positives ... on Police Using Dogs To Sniff Out Computer Memory · · Score: 1

    I would question the likelihood of this being anywhere near the most effective means of finding this material, and combined with the recent news that being interested in TAILS sends up a red flag with the NSA and the honored tradition of child porn and terrorism being the two most popular methods of getting a government practice to be accepted.

  23. Re:Amazoing on Police Using Dogs To Sniff Out Computer Memory · · Score: 1

    A dog's sense of smell really is amazing, and it's amazing how much they could potentially detect. Unfortunately, it is currently only accessible by a dog, and dogs have poor communication skills relative to most humans, especially regarding explicit statements.

  24. Re:Amazoing on Police Using Dogs To Sniff Out Computer Memory · · Score: 2

    Lying to a court about evidence is controversial? You don't say?

  25. Re:Any Memory?? what judge will go on just that? on Police Using Dogs To Sniff Out Computer Memory · · Score: 1

    And this would be a case that comes up often enough to justify training a dog to sniff for instead of spending 5 minutes searching instead of the dog spending 3 minutes and then searching for another 4 minutes after probable cause has already been established.