PowerPC yes. Still ran OSX with the BSD(ish) Darwin layer underneath. That was what they were using. As for Macbooks, my bad, of course I meant Powerbooks.
I did the same about 10 years ago for the same reasons. Oddly enough it was the people at the local LUG with their iBooks & MacBooks that made me realize something was amiss.
There is a difference between people and networks, between people and packets. "Online" activities, initiated by people, are in no way assured of only traversing the networks of one nation state. This is a feature. As I sit here in Japan typing a message destined for a server in the US, it is most likely the packets will go by the shortest route trans pacific cables from Japan to the US but that is not assured, they could just as easily go through several other nation states. Each nation state may have its own rules about permitted and restricted speech or other activities which would govern the packets but not the person who does not happen to be within their jurisdiction.
The US legal code stems from a constitution which describes inalienable rights. The Japanese legal code, some of which stems from a far newer constitution, some predates it, explicitly defines rights and they are considered to come from the law itself. There are many other ways that rights can be defined or explicitly restricted. My comment wasnt about philosophy or the relative merits of one legal system or another but the simple reality described by this article that there is no such place as "online" and that laws or rights are attached to place.
Some very smart people got lauded here on/. for saying there is no "cyber crime" there is only crime everyone was happy. It seemed that people understood that the "cyber" part (or shall we say "online") is clearly just a question of the medium for plain old crime which we know happens in a place. Criminal is here and victim is there. If here and there are different nation states, we have a question of "was the action a defined crime in both places?". How are rights any different?
For the same reasons, the Slashdot category of "your rights online" is equally stupid. Last I checked, "online" is not a nation or city state with its own legal code defining any actual rights.
I sure wish people would quit pretending that there was any issue of "rights" here. Even in the EU they have not defined a right to entertainment or to not paying for entertainment.
I've published several pseudononymous and anonymous works in various media which I dont want associated with my or my family's name for various reasons. Someday they may become "orphaned works" but I'm curious how the greed of others to access these trumps my right to anonymity and privacy.
Bad headline. Sansai Books dont do or claim to do journalism. http://www.sansaibooks.co.jp/ publishes magazines and "mooks" which are basically extended advertorial. The name sansai by the way means "three years old".
>IPSEC is still the way to go
As long as you really know who you are communicating with. And as long as the whole network supports all the weird NAT out there. And as long as you really have it configured right. Oh never mind.
>A good indication that something is secure is that laws are passed against its use.
Thats some mighty secure methamphetamine you got there...
If I get on a plane and travel about 4 hours, I'd find myself with far fewer rights than I enjoy where I am now. Online, offline has nothing to do with it at all.
Slashdot needs a category for No Honor Amongst Thieves/Scumbags
Here's something from 2011 http://greensengage.wordpress.com/2011/03/27/anti-israel-campaigning-losers/ and then things got a bit weird http://antonyloewenstein.com/2011/09/30/those-anti-semitic-greens-may-well-launch-a-pogrom-next/ and have not actually gotten less weird according to my friends down in Sydney.
For those who dont follow Australian politics, the Greens are also in on the whole "yay white people, boo everyone else" thing.
Just dont tell him that.
If ever there was a perfect chance to use the "I'm shocked, SHOCKED" meme, it would be here.
Its very obvious you are repeating a Christian understanding of Hebrew and thus disinformation.
Silly Coward. So-Net has been around since 1995 and remains just as neutral as any other ISP.
PowerPC yes. Still ran OSX with the BSD(ish) Darwin layer underneath. That was what they were using. As for Macbooks, my bad, of course I meant Powerbooks.
I did the same about 10 years ago for the same reasons. Oddly enough it was the people at the local LUG with their iBooks & MacBooks that made me realize something was amiss.
>what's illegal in one place is illegal everywhere, so they all apply everywhere.
Nonsense.
The US legal code stems from a constitution which describes inalienable rights. The Japanese legal code, some of which stems from a far newer constitution, some predates it, explicitly defines rights and they are considered to come from the law itself. There are many other ways that rights can be defined or explicitly restricted. My comment wasnt about philosophy or the relative merits of one legal system or another but the simple reality described by this article that there is no such place as "online" and that laws or rights are attached to place.
Some very smart people got lauded here on /. for saying there is no "cyber crime" there is only crime everyone was happy. It seemed that people understood that the "cyber" part (or shall we say "online") is clearly just a question of the medium for plain old crime which we know happens in a place. Criminal is here and victim is there. If here and there are different nation states, we have a question of "was the action a defined crime in both places?". How are rights any different?
The YRO tag is applied equally to US and non US submission.
For the same reasons, the Slashdot category of "your rights online" is equally stupid. Last I checked, "online" is not a nation or city state with its own legal code defining any actual rights.
I sure wish people would quit pretending that there was any issue of "rights" here. Even in the EU they have not defined a right to entertainment or to not paying for entertainment.
Why is anyone still listening to this nasty old troll? Let him enjoy the benefits of his NAMBLA membership instead.
I've published several pseudononymous and anonymous works in various media which I dont want associated with my or my family's name for various reasons. Someday they may become "orphaned works" but I'm curious how the greed of others to access these trumps my right to anonymity and privacy.
There maybe 1,000 abstract reasons to keep throwing humans into nowhere but its difficult to come up with one reason people can understand.
Economy class on Braniff Air back in the 70s beat business class of today.
Bad headline. Sansai Books dont do or claim to do journalism. http://www.sansaibooks.co.jp/ publishes magazines and "mooks" which are basically extended advertorial. The name sansai by the way means "three years old".
Is this saying that by studying history you can get an understanding of future events? HOW COME NO ONE EVER TOLD ME THIS BEFORE? (sorry)
Square Enix will just just keep milking that cash cow till blood comes from the udders.
Or am I missing something here?
>IPSEC is still the way to go
As long as you really know who you are communicating with. And as long as the whole network supports all the weird NAT out there. And as long as you really have it configured right. Oh never mind.
>A good indication that something is secure is that laws are passed against its use.
Thats some mighty secure methamphetamine you got there...
For me as a small label owner, they and their like are a problem.
If I get on a plane and travel about 4 hours, I'd find myself with far fewer rights than I enjoy where I am now. Online, offline has nothing to do with it at all.