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User: Legal.Troll

Legal.Troll's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 250

  1. Re:Hard to comprehend on Jeff Bezos Surpasses Bill Gates as World's Richest Person (bloomberg.com) · · Score: -1

    roughly .0002 trillion dollars

  2. Our tax evasion is OUT OF THIS WORLD! on Scientists Unveil Plans For First Space Nation 'Asgardia,' Open Citizenship Applications (theguardian.com) · · Score: -1

    Let's not kid ourselves; escaping the confines of nations and laws is the only purpose here.

  3. Re:Reaching the limits of the unlimited on Verizon To Disconnect Unlimited Data Customers Who Use Over 100GB/Month · · Score: -1

    Your math is fine, but your logic is rancid and awful, though quite typical for Slashdot anarcho-nerds. The fact that you felt the need to express the figure in kB instead of kb, while also trying to make a rather fanciful comparison to "modems"â"which of course could not pull anywhere near the same amount of dataâ"and the even sillier fact that you contemplate literal 24/7 throughput for a *mobile* device whose usage by an ordinary device-addicted person would arguably max out at *8* hours a day of non-stop usage, should have been a sign that you were trying to understate the quantity by orders of magnitude. Back on Planet Earth, 100GB/month is a lot to be pulling over a FIBER connection to a desktop PC, and, by way if example, reflects far more HD Netflix bingeing than any sane and gainfully employed person could muster in a single month. Pushing further into the realm of thinking like an adult, it's simply not "false advertising" to presuppose ordinary human norms of product use or resource consumption when describing a product or service offering to the public. The advertisement is quite reasonably geared to the public in general, not to some pushy jerk playing semantic games. To repeat, 100 GB a month is a massive shitpile of data that is utterly unreasonable to expect from a flat-rate subscription that is priced for normal adult humans with jobs. You *should* feel like a freeloading dick if you even come close to that on a regular basisâ"but Verizon isn't even kicking out people who simply happen to break that number on occasion. As the article makes clear, they're talking about people who use "far in excess" of that amount, on an ongoing basis. The price tag for a plan that is actually keyed to the data throughput in question, $450, should give you an idea of the relative costs to the network infrastructure of letting a single person pull that many bits. TL;DR, after promptly shutting your whiney face hole, go to any restaurant advertising "all you can eat" and try to eat 100 pounds of lobster. Or chicken breasts. Or, hell, even *potatoes*. And then come back here to make another post about how The Man keeps beating you down, and you're going to file a lawsuit for unfair commercial practices, and so on and so forth.

  4. aha!

  5. first mover penalty

  6. China, most trustedest name in data security on Comodo Attempting to Register 'Let's Encrypt' Trademarks, And That's Not Right (letsencrypt.org) · · Score: -1

    hush if you think otherwise!

  7. Information wants to be free... on Hacker Who Stole Half-Life 2's Source Code Interviewed For New Book (arstechnica.com) · · Score: -1

    You can't "steal information"!!!!!!!!! omg gov't oppresshun.

  8. Upgrade to something that crashes on Department of Homeland Security Still Uses COBOL (softpedia.com) · · Score: -1

    Like, YESTERDAY, amirite?

  9. Re:Comodo is amateur security on Comodo Antivirus Tech Support Feature Lets Anyone Connect To Your PC (softpedia.com) · · Score: -1

    My paranoid instinct whispered to me that their real business model involved casing targets for cybercrime gangs and perhaps even selling backdoor access. Probably far-fetched nonsense but there are plenty of antivirus vendors that don't send up this many creepy red flags and thus I steer clear (and am paranoid).

  10. "forced them to watch it" ? suuuuuure..... on Filmmaker Forces Censors To Watch 10-Hour Movie of Paint Drying (ibtimes.co.uk) · · Score: -1

    Since the BBFC is in control of the determination as to whether the required watching was actually performed by anybody, I'm gonna guess that (1) at best, somebody put it in the machine and pressed play, checked the check box on the form and moved on to other things, or (2) at worst they just checked the box on the form and moved on to other things.

  11. Yes on Do the Risks of BYOD Outweigh the Benefits? (Video) · · Score: -1

    they do

  12. "First, they were unwilling to pay for video games on Explaining the Lack of Quality Journalism In the Internet Age (gawker.com) · · Score: -1

    ...and I said nothing because I had no financial stake in the commercial sale of video games..."

  13. "No free games in the world" on Pirates Finding It Harder To Crack New PC Games (engadget.com) · · Score: -1

    typical leftist BS; there are endless free games to play, just not the brand-new ones that people just finished spending money to make. This is the same old "I want it therefore I deserve it" logic.

  14. was the first thing I thought. Sadly doesn't sound like that :(

  15. Re:War on Privacy on US Budget Bill Passes With CISA Surveillance Intact (npr.org) · · Score: -1

    Not in the way you think, friend. Anyhoo, good luck with your future efforts at reasoning.

  16. Re:War on Privacy on US Budget Bill Passes With CISA Surveillance Intact (npr.org) · · Score: -1, Troll

    I don't believe there are any "whistleblower" protection for people who shop secret national security information around to hostile foreign governments for fame and other forms of personal gain (such as getting laid via hot FSB girls). I believe you have to do it in a way that is not calculated to be as destructive as possible. There are countless avenues within U.S. gov't that he could have followed (cue uninformed OMG NO THEN HE'D WIND UP IN A BLACK PRISON hysteria).

  17. Re:wah wah wah clickbait on Writer: Why Watching the Original Star Wars Again Was a Bad Idea (cnet.com) · · Score: 0

    On turkey day we watched a VHS version to avoid this.

  18. Re:A typo my ass... on A Typo Almost Derailed Paris Climate Deal (nytimes.com) · · Score: 0

    Same reason people clapped like trained seals when Obama moronically proclaimed in 2008 that we would look back upon that day as the moment "our planet began to heal" Self-congratulation is the object of the exercise. OMG AREN'T WE SO WONDERFUL

  19. Congratulations and on MIT Creates Tor Alternative That Floods Networks With Fake Data (softpedia.com) · · Score: -1, Troll

    carry on with those completely not-evil activities that can't be entrusted to any communications method accessible by law enforcement Because we all know the dastardly American NSA wants to snoop on your conversations with Aunt Sally and steal your pumpkin pie recipe, you are displaying true moral courage by striving constantly to ensure that total stealth is possible on the global information network. PAT SELF ON BACK POSTHASTE

  20. Re:worst terrorist attack since when? on DHS Deployed Plane Above San Bernardino To Scoop Up All Phone Calls After Attack (dailymail.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    Also, not to sound like a troll, but "kill the baby killers" is a little more principled and focused than "f*** Americans, kill them all indiscriminately". So long as we've got the Vice President of the United States rationalizing Charlie Hebdo as more *reasonable* than Bataclan, let's dish out that same sympathy for white boys, k?

  21. Your User ID is very impressive, but personally I think that my scenario is more likely and that the full details of this usage, if presented to a federal judge, would pass muster. From the description, it sounds like a goodly chunk of the thing's OS is devoted to ceasing surveillance of unlikely targets as quickly as possible. Of course, it could all be a smokescreen, but it's also quite possible for a reasonable surveillance algorithm to implemented. Not a constitutional scholar but as I recall, all that would be required is that the activity be reasonable and proportionate to the threat presented.

  22. Re:Yet they missed her violent rants on social med on DHS Deployed Plane Above San Bernardino To Scoop Up All Phone Calls After Attack (dailymail.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    Can't collect any data till after people are already dead. Strong privacy for the win.

  23. Without looking too far into it, I suspect the thing's stock operational parameters are carefully designed to withstand constitutional scrutiny.

  24. Instead of performing mildly intrusive surveillance sweeps all the timeâ"unthinkable!â"just stick with extremely intrusive sweeps every single time something bad happens or is expected to happen!

  25. Re:The REAL question waiting to be answered: on Iran's Military Nuclear Program Lasted Longer Than We Thought (thebulletin.org) · · Score: 1

    You are dumb. Just shut up.