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User: Quila

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  1. For a Slashdot comparison on Anti-Game-Violence Legislator Arrested, Faces Gun Trafficking Charges · · Score: 1

    This article vs. the recent one about a Republican doing something bad, and his party is right there early in the summary.

    http://yro.slashdot.org/story/...

  2. Re:Not alerting the terrorists on One Person Successfully Removed From US No-Fly List · · Score: 1

    Then why don't I get into the gunrunning business? Don't arrest me officer, they were going to get their hands on the weapons some other way anyway.

  3. Re:Please Please get off his nutsack. on Tesla Model S Gets Titanium Underbody Shield, Aluminum Deflector Plates · · Score: 2

    When Tesla examined the car, they found the fire had not touched the battery, the charging system, or the electrical connectors. In other words, all of the parts of a Tesla that could cause a fire weren't involved in the fire.

    Something is fishy about the owner's claim of the fire starting spontaneously in the car.

  4. Re:Check out some Volvo ads on Tesla Model S Gets Titanium Underbody Shield, Aluminum Deflector Plates · · Score: 1

    Most states have enforced seatbelt rules, called, and run campaigns like "Click it or Ticket".

    Of course this idiotic violation of the concepts of personal responsibility and liberty was sold to us as "Don't worry, it'll never be a primary offense" as in if you're pulled over for some other reason you may also get a ticket for it. Now it's a primary offense, a reason to pull you over. Just another example of the oppressive nanny-state slippery slope.

    FTR, I always wear a seatbelt, as will anybody in my car with me. I oppose this on the grounds of personal liberty, not so I can drive without a seatbelt, which I consider pretty stupid.

  5. Even better on One Person Successfully Removed From US No-Fly List · · Score: 1

    Mayors Against Illegal Guns, and most anti-gun groups, want the no-fly list to be a basis for denying gun purchases. They see this as a big loophole, calling it the "Terror Gap."

    http://www.mayorsagainstillega...

    So flying isn't the only thing that this no-fly list can potentially cause trouble with if its use expands. Next thing you know, being on the list will give free reign for searches without a warrant.

  6. The liberal gun blinders on CISPA's Author Has Another Privacy-Killing Bill To Pass Before He Retires · · Score: 0, Troll

    I noticed in the article,

    That would seem like a step in the right direction (though I am personally not opposed to the government knowing who is purchasing guns in bulk),

    There we go again, the common theme. We fight for your rights, we fight for your privacy, we fight the tiniest encroachment that could potentially dissuade you from exercising a right, or even make it inconvenient to exercise a right! Unless the subject is guns, then fuck your rights.

  7. Throw that word "transparency" in there on CISPA's Author Has Another Privacy-Killing Bill To Pass Before He Retires · · Score: 1

    Make it sound good to the people.

    Forget that we are reducing transparency, not enhancing.

  8. Re:Very amusing but... on Tesla Model S Gets Titanium Underbody Shield, Aluminum Deflector Plates · · Score: 2

    It's not a Faraday cage, but lightning does use the skin effect for most of its charge, and thus goes over the surface of the car. However, this doesn't work so well with the huge number of cars on the road with a non-metal skin.

    You are usually okay if your car's skin is metal, you don't happen to be touching anything in the interior at the time, and if nothing in the car catches fire due to the strike.

  9. Re:But seriously on Tesla Model S Gets Titanium Underbody Shield, Aluminum Deflector Plates · · Score: 1

    Our subject here is safety, so the better question is "Relative to car miles driven [to account for more gas powered cars], how many people have been injured or killed by gasoline car fires caused by hitting road debris." The answer for Tesla is zero.

    Also remember that fire due to road debris is not the only kind of injury. People are actually hurt directly by the debris. That is common for cars, and that trailer hitch the Tesla hit would have ended up in the passenger compartment of a regular car. The answer for Tesla is still zero.

  10. Re:Very amusing but... on Tesla Model S Gets Titanium Underbody Shield, Aluminum Deflector Plates · · Score: 1

    Everything is risk mitigation. Tesla could try to mitigate the risk of Zeus throwing a thunderbolt from the heavens at a Model S, but the risk is so low, and nobody cares about it, so they're not doing it.

    As we have seen, there is far less fire risk in a Tesla than in all gasoline-powered cars on the road, so mitigation of that risk shouldn't be a priority either. However, the media has played up the "Electric cars catch fire, duh!" meme so much that this is basically a forced PR move.

  11. Re:"Victims" on Gunshot Victims To Be Part of "Suspended Animation" Trials · · Score: 1

    just silencing comments that make your faith look bad. demonstrate where your faith made itself look bad.

  12. Re: It wasn't just private opinion. on Some Mozilla Employees Demand New CEO Step Down · · Score: 1

    If they were trying to repeal the 2nd amendment entirely, then yes I would support them

    Many in their group are, and they likely are too, but they aren't honest enough to admit it like Congressman Ellison.

    If they were trying to take 2nd amendment rights away from a specific class of people (other than the mentally ill and ex-cons), then yes I would support them (the employees).

    They are. The class is all law-abiding gun owners. They haven't done much that would affect criminals and the mentally ill.

    If they were just supporting background checks and/or banning ridiculous weapons and cartridges, then no.

    You mean completely ineffective background checks on person-to-person transfers that will be ignored by criminals, and the most common varminting and target shooting rifles in the most common calibers, then yes.

    So basically what we've established is that you are not a proponent of constitutional rights. Just the rights that you like. This is exactly what Eich does.

  13. Re: It wasn't just private opinion. on Some Mozilla Employees Demand New CEO Step Down · · Score: 1

    But would you have supported them in their call, as the OP does the Mozilla employees in theirs?

  14. Re:It wasn't just private opinion. on Some Mozilla Employees Demand New CEO Step Down · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So when Michael Bloomberg was CEO of Bloomberg LP, or Steve Case head of AOL, they should have been forced to step down because they "actively and publicly contributed to and campaigned for" taking away gun rights from the people. Right?

  15. Re:The parent gave permission on Minnesota Teen Wins Settlement After School Takes Facebook Password · · Score: 1

    That would be nice, but I'd be more interested in the prosecutor going after these people with criminal charges under the CFAA.

  16. Re:What party was that again... on Anti-Game-Violence Legislator Arrested, Faces Gun Trafficking Charges · · Score: 1

    Fox New said Mark Sanford was a D

    Everybody refers to one mistake made long ago, a mistake Fox apologized for. Is that any worse than MSNBC identifying the notoriously racist Alabama governor George Wallace as a Republican? Nice history rewrite there.

    OTOH, Fox apologized to the wrong people. The should have apologized to Sanford for the slander of putting (D) next to his name.

    as they fought to the Supreme Court to assert their right to lie on the air

    Sadly, that means MSNBC is a beneficiary of this precedent.

  17. Re:The parent gave permission on Minnesota Teen Wins Settlement After School Takes Facebook Password · · Score: 2

    No, fraud involved and not a "protected computer"

    Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. If it's involved in interstate commerce, it is a "protected computer" under the CFAA. Facebook, and by extension any computer connecting to Facebook, is a protected computer under the act since it is in the business of interstate commerce.

    Now about the fraud. Actual fraud isn't needed, CFAA makes it a crime for anyone who "(2) intentionally accesses a computer without authorization or exceeds authorized access, and thereby obtains ... (C) information from any protected computer"

    They used duress (cop and admin there forcing her) to exceed their authorization to obtain information from Facebook (a protected computer). CFAA charges should be filed. And since more than one person was involved, a conspiracy charge should be added.

    Did the school employees ever agree to the Facebook TOS? No evidence of that.

    If they were using Facebook, then they agreed. Otherwise, they were accessing the sytem without agreement, which could be unauthorized access. Facebook TOS:

    3. Safety
      5.You will not solicit login information or access an account belonging to someone else.
      6.You will not bully, intimidate, or harass any user.

  18. Re:ACLU on Minnesota Teen Wins Settlement After School Takes Facebook Password · · Score: 1
  19. Re:I've rewritten your policy for you. on Minnesota Teen Wins Settlement After School Takes Facebook Password · · Score: 1

    On site? Can't we at least remove them from the school premises first?

  20. Re:Without her permission? on Minnesota Teen Wins Settlement After School Takes Facebook Password · · Score: 1

    I would have taken the $70K, but on the condition that the officials involved are fired and barred from future employment with the district.

  21. Re:What party was that again... on Anti-Game-Violence Legislator Arrested, Faces Gun Trafficking Charges · · Score: 1

    I'll do an experiment. I'll pick a Republican state senatorwho was in trouble. Jason Priest of Montana is a good one. I'll Google for "Jason Priest arrested" and pick the first four mainstream news links.

    • Billings Gazette: The headline, "Republican Senator Jason Priest arrested"
    • Huffington Post: Article begins with "Montana state Sen. Jason Priest (R) was arrested "
    • Missoulian: Second sentence begins with "The Yellowstone County Detention Facility's website listed the 45-year-old Republican lawmaker "
    • Local KRTV station: Article begins with "Montana State Senator Jason Sheller Priest (R-Red Lodge) now faces four charges"

    Let's do the same for "Leland Yee arrested"

    • LA Times: Subtitle, "The prominent Bay Area Democrat and "
    • Fox News: Doesn't show up until paragraph 12, "Yee is the third Democratic senator to face charges this year"
    • CBS News does not mention his party
    • SF Gate: Second paragraph, "Yee, a Democrat who represents half of San Francisco"

    The Republican has one in the headline while the Democrat has a whole article not mentioning his party. Even Fox put his party way down. Verdict: Likely biased for Democrats, but a much larger dataset is needed for verification.

  22. Re: Heinlein? on Scientists Develop Solar Cell That Can Also Emit Light · · Score: 1

    Must be one of Heinlein's recurring themes.

  23. Re: Heinlein? on Scientists Develop Solar Cell That Can Also Emit Light · · Score: 1

    The book was Friday.

  24. Re:True to their genesis on Microsoft Posts Source Code For MS-DOS and Word For Windows · · Score: 2

    Yep, they were good at one point. That Model 100 was the last Microsoft product that Gates' own code went into. Maybe that's it, maybe Gates was a great coder, but a poor manager of coders where quality is concerned.

  25. Re:True to their genesis on Microsoft Posts Source Code For MS-DOS and Word For Windows · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This short history summary shows that Microsoft's roots are in marketing, not programming

    No, their roots were in programming. This was their foray into marketing. Anybody who used a Radio Shack Model 100 (or its brethren) knows that Microsoft was capable of developing an excellent product at one point.