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User: Ravensfire

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Comments · 161

  1. I'm shocked, shocked! on LA Police Officers Suspected of Tampering With Their Monitoring Systems · · Score: 1

    I'm shocked, shocked that the LAPD would try to hide their behavior so they could keep acting like asshats.

  2. Where's Andrew Schlafly's response on Jimmy Wales To 'Holistic Healers': Prove Your Claims the Old-Fashioned Way · · Score: 1

    All we need now is for Andrew Schlafly and his Conservapedia to welcome those scorned by Wikipedia to come to them. Should go nicely with their other crap (see evolution, global warming, anything related to Obama and just about everything else near and dear to the far-right).

  3. Re:Looks As If Every Vendor Is A Backdoor Man. on Chinese Media Calls For Boycott of Cisco · · Score: 1

    Because the NSA doesn't have backdoor access to Microsoft?

    They do, but there are too many bugs in the code for them to get any information!

  4. Cisco but not Cisco on Chinese Media Calls For Boycott of Cisco · · Score: 1

    This just means that they will use locally produced copies of Cisco equipment. Which is dramatically different from what they do now ... Yeah...

  5. Re:None of the above on Ask Slashdot: How To Teach IT To Senior Management? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This. Focus on what they need to know for this decision. The part part about proprietary vs open source? ONLY if you're considering a proprietary package and an open source package. If they think you are wasting their time, they will tune you out and you will all be wasting your time.

  6. Re:Seems like a rant w/o much research on WHSmith Putting DRM In EBooks Without Permission From the Authors · · Score: 1

    And sgroyle, this really just look like a cheap grab at publicity for your books. You seriously need to update your blog with an apology at least to Kobo and probably to WHSmith.

  7. Seems like a rant w/o much research on WHSmith Putting DRM In EBooks Without Permission From the Authors · · Score: 4, Informative

    There was a post on the Kobo boards where someone contacted Kobo about this. Apparently there was a known problem on the WHSmith website where it would show the books as having DRM. When they'd go to Kobo to actually DL the books it would be DRM free. Just looked at the books on WHSmith's website and getting a different format availability than the OP's blog - Format Availability: epub. Apparently they've fixed the bug.

  8. Truly sad on Federal Court OKs Amazon's System of Suggesting Alternative Products · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Go to a store and you'll generally see competing products next to each other and that's okay. But try to do something similar on-line? Horror! Unfair! Must file lawsuit! It's become our culture but the practice of suing for anything and everything has become utterly ridiculous in the last decade or so.

  9. Shrug - no real news here on Gubernatorial Candidate Speaks Out Against CAS · · Score: 1

    Yawn. The linked "article" is just a press-release from a fringe candidate. I'll be impressed if I see a mainstream candidate saying something like this and it's not just in a press-release.

  10. Re:Not coming to PC on Halo Developer Bungie Reveals Destiny and Its Vision of MMO Gaming · · Score: 1

    Bungie didn't make Tribes, that was Dynamix (at least for the versions that were worth a damn). Before Halo, Bungie's big games were Marathon and Myth.

  11. Drawbacks? Obviously none ... on Starting Next Year, Brazil Wants To Track All Cars Electronically · · Score: 1

    Nope! No drawbacks here. Why would the headline be written in anything other than pure, positive spin? Especially since this was probably posted from a chipped car with big brother watching quite carefully for any accidents, traffic or wrong thoughts.

    -- Ravensfire

  12. So how else do you do this? on Astronomy Portfolio Review Recommends Defunding US's Biggest Telescope · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't this the way it should be working? Allocate X dollars to group. Group really needs X + Y dollars to do everything they want so they create a group to review all the projects and allocate the dollars. If you don't have enough funding, programs WILL be cut or scaled back. Save program A and program B is cut, which costs jobs around program B. Congrats though, program A's jobs are intact.

    Prioritization sucks but if you don't have all the funding you need you have to make the call at some point. Having a (theoretically neutral) group review everything and make the call is better than having Congress make the decisions for you. And yeah, it would be much better for everyone if there was enough funding, that's the easy way out of this dilemma.

    -- Ravensfire

  13. Re:Pre-election laws on Brazilian Judge Orders 24-hour Shutdown of Google and Youtube · · Score: 1

    "1) Transparency. If an opponent is making a claim against you then be transparent about the issue and prove them wrong. Allow an independent body to investigate and verify your taxes or whatever is in question."

    Congrats - utterly ineffective. Candidate A releases a claim shortly before the election about Candidate B. Claim is false, but has JUST enough plausibility to get it through libel laws. Claim affects the election because you can't prove it false in time. Yup, happens now quite often and one of the most effective dirty tricks out there. Transparency is a great way to make someone feel better ... after the fact and rarely makes up for the damage done.

    -- Ravensfire

  14. Re:And what do "Sanctions" mean? on Appeals Court Upholds Sanction Against BitTorrent Download Attorney · · Score: 3, Informative

    The appeal court decision mentioned that the original request was for some 26k. Personally, I think the fine is intended as a "wake up" slap. The nice part of the sanction is #2. He's been bad and now potentially lots of other courts will know about it and be able to check if he's pulling the same stunt again. And usually subsequent sanctions get harsher.

    -- Ravensfire

  15. Re:And what do "Sanctions" mean? on Appeals Court Upholds Sanction Against BitTorrent Download Attorney · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the ruling,
    "the court imposed $10,000 in sanctions on Stone and also required the following:
    1) Stone shall serve a copy of this Order on each ISP implicated and
    to every person or entity with whom he communicated for any purpose
    in these proceedings.
    2) Stone shall file a copy of this Order in every currently-ongoing
    proceeding in which he represents a party, pending in any court in
    the United States, federal or state.
    3) Stone shall disclose to the Court whether he received funds,
    either personally or on behalf of Mick Haig, and whether Mick Haig
    received funds for any reason from any person or entity associated
    with these proceedings, regardless of that person’s status as a Doe
    Defendant or not, (excepting any fees or expenses paid by Mick Haig
    to Stone).
    4) Stone shall pay the Ad Litems’ attorneys’ fees and expenses reasonably
    incurred in bringing the motion for sanctions. The Ad
    Litems shall file an affidavit or other proof of such fees and expenses
    with the Court within thirty (30) days of the date of this Order.
    Stone may contest such proof within seven (7) days of its filing.
    Stone shall comply with these directives and supply the Court with
    written confirmation of his compliance no later than forty-five (45)
    days after the date of this Order."

    -- Ravensfire

  16. This is news because CUBAN says it? on High-Frequency Traders Are the Ultimate Hackers, Says Mark Cuban · · Score: 1

    MANY people have complained about program trading before with far better credentials than Mark, yet it's suddenly news because he whines about it? It took him 10+ years to figure this out, or did he take some serious losses and it just whining about losing (something else)?

  17. Prioritize on Ask Slashdot: How To Evacuate a Network · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Pack what's critical first. Servers. Critical networking gear. Workstations. Ignore the phones, printers and wireless gear unless you've got extra time. And good luck.

  18. Central banks on 'Inexact' Chips Save Power By Fudging the Math · · Score: 2

    Hmm, seems this has been used by The Fed and European Central Bank for quite a while now.

  19. Re:BSOD on British Royal Navy Submarines Now Run Windows · · Score: 1

    Since you linked to the article with the announcement from Germany, you really should have actually read the article.

    If you had, you'd have known that the German announcement was just a general warning, posted on the shipping page. Contrary to the ominous warning about the Lusitania you make it sound like, it was anything but.

    Of course, I shouldn't expect any less from someone that links to Conservipedia.

    -- Ravensfire

  20. Re:Not copyright infringement... on Arizona Judge Shoots Down RIAA Theories · · Score: 2, Informative

    While IANAL, if you read the EFF brief & the judgement in depth, an interesting defense is being promulgated... Even if the defendants specifically allowed MediaSentry to download these files, as authorized agents of the copyright holders, no copyright infringement actually took place!!! There's case law that says that a copyright holder (or their agent) cannot infringe on their own copyright... Hence the new, stupid, "making available" claim...

    What does that mean? Assuming this argument is valid (which I can't see how it couldn't be), the plaintiffs would have to go back to square one and find someone else on Kazaa who downloaded specific files from the defendants--specifically infringing on copyright law. And for anyone who has used P2P before, how often do you know (or remember) who you're downloading from? Personally, I think that borders on impossible to prove--unless Kazaa keeps some sort of detailed log data file that MediaSentry would have to gain access to...


    The judge threw that argument out the window.

    From the ruling "Amicus curiae, Electronic Frontier Foundation ("EFF"), responds that a copyright owner cannot infringe its own copyright, so its agent also cannot infringe the copyright owner's rights when acting on the owner's behalf. But the recording companies obviously did not intend to license MediaSentry to authorize distribution or to reproduce copies of their works. Rather, "the investigator's assignment was part of [the recording companies'] attempt to stop [Howell's] infringement," and therefore the 12 copies obtained by MediaSentry are unauthorized. "

    -- Ravensfire

  21. Still not as good as this ruling ... on SCO's "Least Supported Idea Yet" · · Score: 4, Funny

    http://www.nationalreview.com/document/document073001.shtml

    Anytime a Judge uses the words "most amateurish pleadings", "bumbling", or "a pig is still a pig" to describe the efforts of the attorneys, it's going to be a bad day for someone. Or in this case, both someones.

    "Now, alas, the Court must return to grownup land." - priceless! We need more people as judges with a biting sense of humor (and the nerve to use it liberally!) like this!

    -- Ravensfire

  22. Re:RTFM(emo) -- Overhyped, Misleading on JP Morgan's Insider Trading How-To On Wikileaks · · Score: 1

    Thanks for a nice summary - appreciated! Now, if only people would read it before spewing forth their usual garbage ...

    -- Ravensfire

  23. Re:Not that I agree with the MPAA on Judge Rules TorrentSpy Destroyed Evidence · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They were also ordered to preserve the ram of their servers in real time.

    That alone should invalidate everything else the judge had to say.


    Bullshit - read it, will you? The Judge said that the IP's were available to TorrentSpy as the information was present in the RAM at some point. They required that TorrentSpy log that information. That's quite a bit different from "preserve the ram".

    TorrentSpy fucked up big time on this, and got caught. Courts don't like people that destroy evidence and smack them around. They especially don't like people that destroy evidence after the case is filed, or lie what about what they can/cannot do.

    I have zero sympathy for TorrentSpy. Without their actions, they would have had a chance to beat this case.

    -- Ravensfire

  24. Re:Yodeling on Did SCO Get Linux-mob Justice? · · Score: 1

    It looks as if this guy believes the judge plainly shouldn't have ruled on the issues he did. I think he should put his money where his mouth is and, pro-bono, file an appeal on SCO's behalf reverting Kimball's decision and repeating the entire 5-year process.

    In the article, he addresses the appeal point. Kimball denied SCO's request to immediately appeal the decision. They can still appeal it, but only after the jury trial concludes and they'll be able to appeal everything. If the author's notes on cash and burn rate are accurate, SCO doesn't have the time for that. -- Ravensfire

  25. Re:TrueCrypt is the best for Windows and Linux. on First Use of RIPA to Demand Encryption Keys · · Score: 1

    Hmm, so you're willing to lie under oath.

    Surely, then, you don't complain when the government lies. Why - that would make you a hypocrit.

    -- Ravensfire