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User: drkstr1

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  1. Re:Java used to be secure and sandboxed on Security Expert Says Java Vulnerability Could Take Years To Fix, Despite Patch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's just a widely deployed target (much like Flash, PDF, and Windows), which means the baddies get a better ROI on their efforts. It's nearly impossible to fully lock down a platform like that while still providing functionality above and beyond HTML/JS. Even less so because it's a valuable target with lots of attention.

  2. Re:fix it later on Ask Slashdot: What Practices Impede Developers' Productivity? · · Score: 1

    I was exaggerating on the over-engineering part course, but I do need to set deadlines for myself or my perfectionism causes my priorities to get out of whack. Of course as a perfectionist, over engineering would be completly unacceptable, so I better give that Hello World a few more iterations until I hit the sweet spot. Get the picture now?

  3. Re:Java and Flash on Oracle Ships Java 7 Update 11 With Vulnerability Fixes · · Score: 1

    Don't forget makepkg! It helps if you want to uninstall later. :)

  4. Re:is cnet seen publically on CNET Parent CBS Blocks Review and Award To Dish Over Legal Dispute · · Score: 1

    Both of which are owned by Viacom. http://www.corporations.org/media/

  5. Re:1st amendment is for the government on CNET Parent CBS Blocks Review and Award To Dish Over Legal Dispute · · Score: 1

    Do not be fooled by neo-cons in libertarian clothing. Rights shouldn't be purchasable at all, and the fact that they are is exactly the problem we are trying to solve. The ideal is that everyone will be better off if they are empowered with the tools to better their situation, regardless of their current socio-economic status. To do this, we must be able to make informed decisions in a market place with many participants. Concentration of wealth, and thus the ability to purchase rights) is a side effect of government enforcement, mostly related to Intellectual Property IMHO. Our goal is actually very similar to that of socialism, a high standard of living for everyone, without a huge gap between the bottom and top percentiles. The difference is that the Libertarian method to achieve such ends recognizes human nature.

  6. Re:1st amendment is for the government on CNET Parent CBS Blocks Review and Award To Dish Over Legal Dispute · · Score: 1

    You see, the problem with that is the government is not the one in charge. They get their marching orders from the interest groups with the loudest voice, and big media conglomerates has made it so that it requires a whole hell of a lot of money to have any voice at all. Compounded onto that a trend where fewer and fewer people are owning a larger chunk of the available wealth, and we are on the fast tract willful enslavement. There is a reason why all major media is owned by 5 conglomerates. It is very profitable to control public opinion. No, CBS and their ilk are EXACTLY the ones we should be worried about.

  7. Martial Arts on Ask Slashdot: How To Stay Fit In the Office? · · Score: 2

    Martial Arts has been the greatest thing I've done for myself (other than learning to program of course). Being a typical nerd, I have never been interested in sports or exercise. It's not that I am lazy, I just get board really easy unless my mind is engaged. What I like about martial arts is that it is challenging in a way that is engaging for me, as it requires focus, concentration, and knowledge. I end up approaching martial arts in the same way I approach any technical challenge, I grind away at the problem until I can do whatever it is I am trying to do (EG. practice). Not only is it fun, it also has the added bennifits of being extremely beneficial to your body (especially the joints). While I am at work, I will get up every hour or two (about the frequency of someone's smoke break) and go find a nice quite place outside to practice for about 10 minutes. After work I go to the dojo for about an hour. Despite being at the age where my "best years" are behind me, I have never felt better or been more productive as I am now. I strongly recommend it.

  8. Re:fix it later on Ask Slashdot: What Practices Impede Developers' Productivity? · · Score: 1

    If I don't have a deadline, I will make one for myself. Else wise I will spend years over-engineering a Hello World.

  9. Re:cluelessness of slashdot on Java Zero-Day Vulnerability Rolled Into Exploit Packs · · Score: 1

    Eclipse is not just for Java developers, you insensitive clod! For example, I use it for c#/.NET, Flash, Python, any kind of web development, etc.

  10. Re:Another idiot on Online Gambling Site Bets On Bitcoin To Avoid U.S. Laws · · Score: 1

    I'm guessing you didn't think that one through all the way. Taxes do not controll the money supply at all. All taxes do is move money around (presumably in a less efficient way than how the free market would move it around, depending on your definition of efficient, but that is a topic for another conversation). In keynesian economics, the money supply is controlled by a central bank, which creates and destroys money by lending it to other banks (more or less).

  11. Re:Boo hoo on Pakistan Lifts YouTube Ban For 3 Minutes, Finds More Blasphemy · · Score: 1

    I don't know about that. I think having faith in someone you love is a virtuous thing. Even showing trust in a complete stranger is an admirable trait in my opinion. I am not a wealthy man by any means, but I think karma has been good to me. Life is a cold and ugly place for the cynical.

  12. Did anyone notice? on The Most Unique Viruses of 2012 · · Score: 1

    Did anyone else notice the stealthy advertisement in the list?

  13. Re:Novice programmers overwhelmed on How Experienced And Novice Programmers See Code · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately if you give them the most advanced tools possible then they never actually *leave* the novice state since they're too used to their tools doing all the work for them.

    Oh please. I learned to type when I was 6, and I don't write code to practice my typing. Your tools should do as much work for you as possible! Bonus points if you make some of your own (automation? Code snippets? How about a single debug console for both your client-side and server-side stacks? anyone?).

  14. Re:Comments on How Experienced And Novice Programmers See Code · · Score: 1

    Not to speak for the GP, but I don't think he changed his tune at all. The very best code IS self documenting, through the use of naming, structure, and semantics. Even the very best programmers can't be perfect 100% of the time (who has time for that?), so a well placed comment describing the intent of a code block is at least better than nothing, and would be a valid use of a comment. A comment is simply an apology for not writing the very best code.

  15. Re:Comments on How Experienced And Novice Programmers See Code · · Score: 1

    Thank god for modern IDEs, and their ability to quickly navigate through function references. I know you old timers (not referring to parent specifically) love your VIM and eMacs, but those environments seem to be conducive to terrible code (at least in the regards of readability). With a modern IDE, you can afford the luxury of being overly verbose in your "structure", because you are not having to take a bunch of shortcuts to avoid all that extra time typing and navigating through your code.

  16. Re:Python on Ask Slashdot: How Does an IT Generalist Get Back Into Programming? · · Score: 1

    It should be hammer.pound(nail), or maybe even something like human.do(new PoundCommand(hammer, nail)). OOP is all about grouping and managing your cross-cutting concerns.

  17. Re:Offline validation on Nokia Engineer Shows How To Pirate Windows 8 Metro Apps, Bypass In-app Purchases · · Score: 1

    And why should I care what one does with their own device, while not affecting any other users? They can hack away at it all day long for all I care. The issue here (as I understood it) is that these apps are granting special multi-player features, serving out extra content, and a variety of other server-based activities, without verifying the authenticity of the request.

  18. Let that be a lesson to developers on Nokia Engineer Shows How To Pirate Windows 8 Metro Apps, Bypass In-app Purchases · · Score: 1

    This is not a failing of the ecosystem, but of the propensity of app developers to trust client side data. The client is a dirty evil little thing, and under no circumstances would it be a good idea to grant it access to precious sever side resources (such as in game purchases) without validating the request against private data (EG. an auth token).

  19. Re:Yes, yes it was. on MPAA: the Impact of Megaupload's Shutdown Was 'Massive' · · Score: 1

    Anything can be considered Art.

    Yeah, that's what's so cool about it. Endless possibilities.

  20. Re:Yes, yes it was. on MPAA: the Impact of Megaupload's Shutdown Was 'Massive' · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Now, I tend think Slashdot is generally just pro-piracy because they want to stick it corporations--they want all the music for free, all the movies for free, all the software for free, like some sort of God-given entitlement. Face it folks, you do have to pay for content.

    I think for a lot of people, piracy is less about getting something for free, and more about a refusal to continue playing by a set rules that are counterproductive to the progression of society as a whole. People are fed up with this whole concept of "Intellectual Property," and it's spreading more and more every year. The media empire is drastically attempting to sway our thinking back to the old ways, but they are fighting an uphill battle, as people are beginning to realize what is best for the media empire is not what is best for the progress of society. We no longer need IP to "force" us to create! The internet has made it quite evident that it is human nature to explore new ideas, create, and to be creative. What we need more than ever is access to free flowing (uncensored) ideas and information from all over the globe. This more than anything will bring us together as a species, and allow us to progress in a direction that is not just ideal for the privileged few, but to every human being on this planet. I strongly believe that Intellectual Property is counterproductive to this goal.

    It was a good ride, but it's time for Big Media to go. Let's start by abolishing all concepts of Intellectual Property, and simply make plagiarism illegal instead.

  21. Re:Privilege Elevation bug not much of a bug on Researcher Discloses New Batch of MySQL Vulnerabilities · · Score: 1

    Writing to tmp breaks encapsulation, and so it is considered more "dangerous" than setting up your own internal temporary storage mechanism. File name collisions are the most obvious issue to arise from this. In worse cases, you can leak sensitive information (I remember one of the GUI terminals in Gnome was dumping the buffer as plain text to tmp, even when using SSL).

  22. Re:Just wait on British Pirate Party Asked To Pull Pirate Bay Proxy · · Score: 1

    We now live in the information age. The old rationales of copyright no longer apply. It is trivial to reverse engineer this day and age. In fact, that's what all the hubub is about. We need a new way of doing things, for a new age. It's up to our generation to make that happen.

  23. Re:Just wait on British Pirate Party Asked To Pull Pirate Bay Proxy · · Score: 1

    The solution, then, is to get rid of the "publishers," not give them more power to exploit us, in the hopes it will satiate their appetite. It won't.

  24. Re:Just wait on British Pirate Party Asked To Pull Pirate Bay Proxy · · Score: 1

    I know you didn't mention big media, but you were happily going after their red herring, like it has any relevance on the actual issues at hand, so I thought it was worth bringing up.

    The fact that you seem to believe a "poorer selection" of art has a greater detriment to society than a lack of free will, really says a lot about the effectiveness of their campaign. Sad, really.

  25. Re:Just wait on British Pirate Party Asked To Pull Pirate Bay Proxy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here's the dirty little secret Big Media doesn't want you to know; Big Media does not care one bit about pirates or piracy.

    Almost every independent study shows the direct results of piracy (EG. the "lost sale") is negligible to the bottom line, and have sometimes even shown to improve revenues for lesser known artists. Big Media did not get to the position they are in by being stupid. What really scares Big Media is a free and open internet.

    What most people fail to realize is that the profitability of the media empire has nothing to do with media sales. When mainstream media is owned by 5 conglomerates, they get to decide what's popular and what's not, what issues are talked about in the news, what is and what is not "popular opinion," and they even get to decide who we may choose as our president. This is not some tin-foil-hat wearing conspiracy, you can go to school for this, and learn from the masters of marketing how to sway public opinion. Big Media is not afraid of lost media sales from piracy, they are afraid that if alternative distribution channels of media exist, they will lose their control over popular opinion, and thus the source of their power.

    To this affront on our freedoms, there can only be one response: Death to Big Media!