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User: mudshark

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Comments · 226

  1. Re:Majority Rules on New Zealand Spy Agency To Vet Network Builds, Provider Staff · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You don't know much about NZ government, then. So much for those assumptions of yours.

    The TICS legislation was introduced as an exercise in ass-covering along with another bill which made illegal electronic surveillance performed by the GCSB "lawful" ex post facto. Both bills were overwhelmingly unpopular and submissions from the public and interest groups were practically unanimous against.

    Several opinion polls have indicated that the majority of the NZ population disagree (many vehemently) with their government on these laws, and when they passed it was only with a one-vote majority in the Parliament courtesy of an MP who is the sole representative of his minor party (who himself only got into office because of a pre-election backroom deal with the National party). The best part of all this is that this deciding MP was himself under suspicion of leaking internal documents about illegal conduct by the GCSB, and that his email and that of the journalist he was corresponding with were snooped on in the process.

    For a tiny little island nation we sure do have more than our fair share of idiot politicians and inept law enforcement. Not to mention a system of government whose relationship with democracy grows more tenuous by the year and which resembles a bunch of nice ideas thrown together without any guarantees, such as an immutable and entrenched Bill of Rights. The GCSB and TICS legislation have done considerable harm to the notion of privacy as a basic human right in this country with dragnet surveillance and full feed-through to the NSA of whatever gets picked up.

  2. Re:Duh on Study Finds US Is an Oligarchy, Not a Democracy · · Score: 1

    We're on the verge of totalitarianism in NZ, and have been for a few years. Call back when we get the current bunch of neoliberal rent-seeking thugs out on their behinds. Hopefully we won't just replace them with a kinder, gentler bunch of neoliberals who love the Deep State as much as the present crew.

  3. Those who refuse to learn on Turkey Heightens Twitter Censorship with Mandated IP Blocking · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cue the reverse proxy mirror sites in 3...2...1

  4. Boundary effect on Study Suggests Generating Capacity of Wind Farms At Large Scales Overestimated · · Score: 2

    Given the fact that power generating wind turbines only poke up 30-50m from the surface, I fail to see how the effects are going to be as significant as Keith suggests. Surface winds are already moderated by friction and topographically generated turbulence, while the vast bulk of wind energy exists above the boundary layer. We're unlikely to deploy large wind farms in a linear sequence anyway, so atmospheric coupling means surface winds will only be affected for a finite distance downstream of a given facility.

  5. Re:I have an idea on Dotcom Drags NZ Spook Agency Into Court · · Score: 1

    Bang on. And our Prime Minister, who by law oversees the GCSB, has evaded, dissembled, obfuscated, changed stories and had "memory lapses" in his various explanations of what he knew and when regarding this case. The government is going to great lengths to avoid showing what a precarious position it's in and how easily its hold on power could vanish if some embarrassing revelations come to light.

  6. Re:However... on WD Builds High-Capacity, Helium-Filled HDDs · · Score: 2

    Argon was just showing how noble he was.

  7. Re:Not so quickly... on Organism Closest To Original "Tree of Life" Discovered · · Score: 1

    Mary?? As in "Virgin Mary?" You had that god all right!

  8. Re:yeah, just use monster cables. on Why Distributing Music As 24-bit/192kHz Downloads Is Pointless · · Score: 2

    Warm. Sparkling. Punchy. Silken. Pristine. Thumping. Brilliant. Dynamic. Crystalline.

    And the best modifier of them all: Audiophile-quality.

    How's that?

  9. Re:Legal Weight? on 1st Strikes Issued Under New Zealand Anti-Piracy Laws · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's hardly reasonable. I'm also a Kiwi, and I'll tell you what's wrong with the law:

    1) Infringement notices are deemed valid on their face and not subject to review of their methodology.

    2) Presumption of guilt on the part of the alleged infringer, which runs counter to the established notion of common law which heretofore held sway in NZ.

    3) The tribunal does not have the same procedures as a normal court of law, in spite of its ability to hand down punishment. Rules of evidence and testimony are cut down, and the accused does not have any right to counsel.

    4) If and when the tribunal gains the power to order service termination, a wrongly accused individual could lose internet connectivity with no recourse available.

    5) The manner in which it was passed (under urgency) was a flagrant abuse of parliamentary procedure, and only a handful of MPs voted against it. Wikileaks has published diplomatic cables which document the meddling input of the US Embassy in crafting and shepherding the legislation, making New Zealand look ever more like a sad little banana republic eager to turn a trick for the rich foreigners.

    The law reeks, almost as much as the government which imposed it. God save WB.

  10. If only... on UN Bigwig: The Web Should Have Been Patented and Licensed · · Score: 4, Funny

    This certainly might have prolonged Gopher's viability.

  11. Re:Tarsnap on Ask Slashdot: Network Backup Solution Out of the Box? · · Score: 1

    Yes, tarsnap is brilliant from a technical perspective as well as the pricing model.

  12. Re:Yea, I take his advice like I take Gores on Bill Clinton Says 'Paint Your Roofs White' · · Score: 1

    Your kneejerk response hits you in the cognitive centers.

    If you "life" up north and have sufficient ceiling insulation, then if you have a dark roof you will have a warmer attic on sunny days. All the rest of the time you will notice little effect on the amount of heat leaving your dwelling no matter what color your roof is. If your ceiling is not sufficiently insulated, then you have bigger problems to deal with.

    If all roofs in urban areas were painted white, it would have a significant effect on the heat island effect. This would have positive implications for residents of multistory buildings at all levels...including when they are not even in their apartments. You could do a little exercise in thinking up other effects: e.g. businesses spending less on air conditioning.

    Just because you have some insane, media-driven obsession with the dude who was turfed by a corrupt justice in the 2000 US presidential election doesn't mean you should ignore things like albedo.

  13. Re:Is it even possible to roll back a bitcoin trad on Bitcoin Price Crashes · · Score: 2

    We asked the monkey for his response to events of the day. "Shocked!" he said.

  14. Re:the Greens support the bill in principle... on NZL Govt Rushes Thru Controversial Anti-Piracy Law · · Score: 1

    Have you read the text of the bill and its amendments? See the part where an allegation of infringement is treated as a presumption of guilt? Did you notice that the burden of proof is carefully placed on the accused? And how the tribunal process specifically bars lawyers from attending the proceedings? It's all in there, sections 122A-R.

    Retrograde, totalitarian and undemocratic. It's a shakedown ploy for the media giants and a bad law in multiple ways. Are you shilling for Hollywood or just misinformed?

  15. Re:the Greens support the bill in principle... on NZL Govt Rushes Thru Controversial Anti-Piracy Law · · Score: 2

    Something dangerous, indeed. It's an extremist, ACT-inspired corporate agenda cloaked in friendly-sounding centre-right soundbites. We got the affable investment banker at the helm, and he and his minions are gleefully carving up what's left of the public domain after the twin debacles of Rogernomics and Ruthanasia a generation ago. By the time the punters wake up, the trans-Pacific handover will be a done deal and we'll be serving either Chinese or USian overlords, on alternating days of the week.

  16. Just emailed Simon Power on NZL Govt Rushes Thru Controversial Anti-Piracy Law · · Score: 1

    He happens to be the MP for my electorate, too...never been too happy with the bloke but this takes the cake.

    To the Hon. Simon Power -

    I am appalled at the decision to pass the Copyright Amendment Act under urgency this week, and even more so at the retention of the account termination provision which has been left in the bill. Your championing of this measure shows a callous disregard for due process at the individual level and for democratic process at the parliamentary level. The errors committed in passing this legislation, which amounts to a 20th-century solution for a 19th-century business model faced with a 21st-century problem, are grave and will be difficult to undo.

    Points which need to be understood in this matter are as follows:

    1) Copyright infringement is a civil matter. By placing ordinary citizens under threat of onerous and disproportionate consequences for alleged offences, this legislation criminalises an action which should rather be resolved in civil proceedings and places ISPs and Crown authority in the position of acting as enforcers for large media and publishing interests. I need not remind you that these interests are nearly all overseas, so in essence you are ceding another piece of New Zealand sovereignty at the behest of international lobbyists.

    2) Internet access is ubiquitous enough to be considered a utility. Most households rely on their internet connectivity for at least some portion of their daily communications, including email, voice and access to work, school, commercial and public services. If you would have us believe that there is logical justification for termination of internet connectivity as a consequence of infringement, then you need to be able to make a similar case for cutting off someone's water, phone, power and post, as any of these could further someone's ability to break the law.

    3) The move to pass the bill under urgency is cynical and undemocratic. The far-reaching implications of a law which could quite conceivably deprive New Zealanders of their ability to communicate via commonplace and ordinary means in the face of allegations by foreign content providers require a full public airing and transparency. Sneaking it in amongst the firewood signals your unwillingness to have an honest debate about what is actually at stake here and shows once again how this Government uses parliamentary process to act in a unitary fashion. The cover provided by the ongoing Canterbury putsch is only too convenient.

    I reside in the Rangitikei electorate and have never felt so inadequately represented (or so ably misrepresented). Please, Mr Power, leave the Government now before you do any further damage to our country.

  17. Re:DEC in the family on Computer Industry Mourns DEC Founder Ken Olsen · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, it was worth squinting to read that. Condolences to you both for your mother and for Ken.

  18. Re: How does on Obama Wants Allies To Go After WikiLeaks · · Score: 1

    Sweden's got no oil. Sweden does have a sizable number of expat Americans. You appear to have rather loose grasp of facts.

  19. Re:International will still suck on NZ Plan For Fiber To the Home · · Score: 1

    Fair enough...the **cable** is pretty nice. The ownership and the resulting price structure is the part that's not so flash. Telecom has used the doctrine of artificial scarcity to squeeze ISPs for international transit costs and put the equivalent of a banana in NZ's internet tailpipe. Here's hoping that the competition envisioned by Drury, Morgan and Co comes to fruition sooner and not later....

  20. Re:I smell male bovine feces! on Cows On Treadmills Produce Clean Power For Farms · · Score: 1

    No, it's factually correct. Ruminant animals emit methane through belching, not farting. The methane is generated by bacteria which live in the rumen (the forward part of the stomach) and metabolize the cellulose in plant material consumed by the animal. Check the Wikipedia entry for methanogenesis.

  21. May I be the first one to say on California Legislature Declares "Cuss-Free" Week · · Score: 3, Funny

    Fuck that.

  22. Re:And? on Triumph of the Cyborg Composer · · Score: 1

    Copland (Aaron).

  23. Disproportionate punishment on ACTA Internet Chapter Leaked — Bad For Everyone · · Score: 5, Interesting

    People have been using the postal service to commit fraud for decades, but even repeat offenders are not banned from sending or receiving mail. And when was the last time you heard of someone getting kicked off the telephone network? Just because the medium has evolved, the right of people to have access to common means of communication does not change.

  24. Re:So Iran's standards then? on Appeals Court Rules On Internet Obscenity Standards · · Score: 1

    Right on. I would add one more stipulation: 3) no government grants them tax-exempt status.

  25. Re:Sorry, I ate some of it. on Program To Detect Smuggled Nuclear Bombs Stalls · · Score: 1

    Nope, alpha. Cheers.