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User: BlueScreenO'Life

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  1. Re:Republic vs Democracy on Ask Slashdot: We've Had Online Voting; Why Not Continuous Voting? (iamnotanumber.org) · · Score: 1

    The word "democracy", when unqualified, means representative democracy, not direct (doesn't make it less "pure" or "true") democracy. Most people with a basic education in the US, and elsewhere, understand that. They also understand there's no contradiction between Democracy and Republic. Your comment reads like a prefabricated argument to explain why you vote Republican.

  2. While there is some overlap between "facebook friends" and actual friends, those groups are very different.

    The feature is convenient on FB and Google, but the problem is redundancy. They serve the same purpose, but they run different databases. Suppose a person in the disaster area who uses G+ frequently and FB rarely. They may never realize FB has the person finder feature, so they mark themselves as safe on G+ but not on FB, or vice-versa.

    That sort of confusion is avoided if only one website provides the feature.

  3. Red cross has a family links database. I wish Google and Facebook just linked to Red Cross, instead of launching each their own redundant person finder features.

  4. Re:Remember, kids.. on HSBC Banking Leak Shows Tax Avoidance, Dealings With Criminals · · Score: 2

    These files were stolen by a disgruntled employee and sold to various governments.

    That's not an undisputed fact. It is the version of the story supported by Swiss authorities and banks. In his own version, mostly supported by some French officials, he claims that he never asked for any money and that he first contacted the authorities of Switzerland and of other countries, and decided to leak the data when they ignored him.

  5. Some alternative thoughts on In Paris, Terrorists Kill 2 More, Take At Least 7 Hostages · · Score: 1
    Well worth checking out.

    Also, the root cause of it all is geopolitics, religion being a good excuse for brainwashing.

  6. Cool. What kind of fat did they eat, though? on Low-Carb Diet Trumps Low-Fat Diet In Major New Study · · Score: 1

    Not very useful unless we know where the high-fat subjects got the fat from. Did they get it from McDonald's or from walnuts and baked fish?

  7. Re:Should be interesting RE- Nato on Would Scottish Independence Mean the End of UK's Nuclear Arsenal? · · Score: 1

    it will mean England finally gets their own parliament as well, kinda stupid that Scotland has power over England but not vice versa.

    Regardless of Scottish independence, England can create their own parliament, and keep Westminster's power restricted to union-wide matters. Why didn't that happen yet? Correct me if I am wrong but I believe Scotland has never opposed an England parliament.

  8. Re:Should be interesting RE- Nato on Would Scottish Independence Mean the End of UK's Nuclear Arsenal? · · Score: 1

    Not really - what all of those sources say is that Scotland's accession won't be automatic like Salmond suggests. Spain's government says they will have to go through the long, due process which current EU candidates are undergoing, which is only fair and obvious, and the current Spain's foreign minister can't comment on what they will do or refrain from doing at certain, hypothetical, point in the future, which is common sense. Any other comment could the be seen as interfering with Scotland's vote, and Spain's government may be completely different from the current one when and if Scotland applies to join the EU. As much as I despise the current Spanish government, those comments (which are more like a "no comment" answer) are the only acceptable comments.

    And it's not like Spain has the political weight to cause a shitstorm in the EU. If any state were to veto Scotland, that would be other, more influential state, such as France, which also has secessionist movements. But I really doubt it. They're not really comparable cases.

  9. Re: What about... on Smoking Mothers May Alter the DNA of Their Children · · Score: 1

    Happy, contented people don't buy a lot of useless crap (like cigarettes for example).

    That's right. But by "living longer and better-quality lives" I don't mean "Happy, contented" - I mean non-smoking. Non-smokers can still be materialistic, impulse buyers, and, because their life span and life quality are, in average, superior, they can buy more useless crap.

  10. Re: What about... on Smoking Mothers May Alter the DNA of Their Children · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I'm sure people living longer and better-quality lives will devastate the economy.

  11. Re:Flash panic on OKCupid Experiments on Users Too · · Score: 1

    even purely observational academic studies need ethical approval and informed consent.

    In what jurisdiction?

    That's interesting, because a lot of "purely observational academic studies" have been done with no informed consent at all.

    Examples: - Robert Levine's experiments linking a city population's average walking speed with their degree of helpfulness and their health (actually, this is not merely observational - parts of those experiments involved getting people to pick up dropped pens, return lost letters, etc). That was done in many parts of the world including the USA.

    - In a car, sitting at a red light. Wait for it to go green, and deliberately fail to move off. Measure how long it takes for drivers behind to honk. Then do the same thing on a car with a foreign plate and compare results. They did that one in Western Europe, if I remember correctly. Unfortunately I can't find a link to that one, but I think I also read about that one on Quirkology.

    Neither of those experiments (and many more, those two are just off the top of my head) were done with informed consent. That would have rendered them completely useless, obviously, due to bias.

  12. Re:let me correct that for you. on Experiment Shows People Exposed To East German Socialism Cheat More · · Score: 4, Funny

    In cretin circumstances you could also own a house

    They should make an experiment to determine the likelihood of random Autocomplete errors making statements more insightful.

  13. Re:Disclaimer? on Goldman Sachs Demands Google Unsend One of Its E-mails · · Score: 1

    Does the email contain a logo? Then it's copyrighted.

  14. Re:Well, duh... on European Commission Spokesman: Google Removing Link Was "not a Good Judgement" · · Score: 1

    However they probably (for understandable reasons) don't want to do that kind of case-by-case decision making.

    Regardless of how understandable their reasons are, if they aren't making the decisions case-by-case, then they are blatantly refusing to honour the ruling. However, I don't think that's what they are doing. I want to think they're simply employing the wrong people to make those decisions.

    Anyway, I agree the ruling was a mess, but for another reason. The biggest problem I see is the failure to consider other search engines. They can probably force Bing to honour the ruling, because MS, like Google, has a corporate presence in the EU, but what about all the other, current and future, search engines?

    The thing with the original case was that it was about information of a kind that doesn't belong in a newspaper at all. It was not a news piece, not an analysis piece, not an opinion piece. It was part of an excerpt of a government-issued journal. Those journals are available online. At the time the notice was published (the 90s in Spain), many if not most people didn't have access to the internet or didn't even know they could find the government journals online, so it may have made sense to publish portions of them on the newspapers. Today, it doesn't make sense to keep that information on the newspapers online. If they don't delete it (no, that would NOT be censorship - the information can still be found online, on the government's site), they should at least mark it as non-searchable in robots.txt.

  15. Best RAD? on Ask Slashdot: Best Rapid Development Language To Learn Today? · · Score: 1

    Still Delphi!

  16. Re:"The White Album" on Facebook Launches App Center With Over 600 Apps · · Score: 1

    WinMo != Windows Phone

  17. Re:Nice... on Carmageddon: Reincarnation Linux Version Confirmed · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected - contrary to what some comments suggested, the project's main development target was Windows, other platforms being only "stretch goals".

  18. Re:Nice... on Carmageddon: Reincarnation Linux Version Confirmed · · Score: 1
  19. Re:Problem for Ireland on Microsoft Raises UK Prices By a Third and Can't Rule Out Future Hikes · · Score: 1

    Getting the euro in the first place was a mistake for some in the Euro-periphery, but getting out of it now and re-adopting a floating currency (otherwise, what's the point in getting out) is about the worst possible course of action: you can't do overnight, and people will try to withdraw/send overseas all of their money as soon as possible. Assuming the banks have that much money (which is debatable), massive capital flight and black market are not exactly great solutions to any economy. Governments could try to prevent that with "corralito"-like measures but we all know how well that worked in Argentina.

    Then there is debt inflation, legal nightmares and a few thousand more reasons not to quit the euro; those are just the most obvious.

  20. Re:Quote from the book: on The Math Formula That Lead To the Financial Crash · · Score: 1

    Early example of spamdexing?

  21. Re:What happened to Patty boy? on Slackware: I'm Not Dead Yet! · · Score: 0

    Or he could be current rms.

  22. Re:Baloney on Magical Thinking Is Good For You · · Score: 1

    If anything agnosticism is opposed to solipsism. My empirical experience shows no evidence of gods, but I know my empirical experience is not enough, so I waste no time or effort in believing, disbelieving or telling other people what to believe or disbelieve.

    YEC is another matter altogether. It is a falsable theory, and patently false unless we basically ignore all the knowledge we have about physics and chemistry - knowledge which we regard as valid because it can be tested and has been tested through repeatable experiments.

  23. Re:Baloney on Magical Thinking Is Good For You · · Score: 1

    Splitting hairs, but that's not the dictionary definition of atheist. That's closer to agnostic.

  24. Re:Baloney on Magical Thinking Is Good For You · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It does take a leap of faith to state "There is no God" (atheism). The sentence isn't testable or falsable.

    Agnosticism, on the other hand, is truly faithless as it avoids the question of God's existence (or at least it admits it is pointless).

  25. Re:One long phone cord.... on IT Calls of Shame · · Score: 1

    But would you get a "No dial tone" error with that?

    Just curious.
    Posting to undo accidental downmod...