George Church's "Personal Genome Project" has, from it's very beginning, acknowledged the possibility of this kind of exposure. In fact, you can't participate in the project without signing a consent form that makes this explicit. From their website:
"Since its founding, the Personal Genome Project has only accepted participants who understand and acknowledge re-identification as a potential risk. This “open consent” approach arose from our argument that privacy may be over-promised and that re-identification is increasingly possible as technology advances."
Actually, *Moses* released the first Christian tablet. . . a pair of them if I recall. At five commandments per tablet, though, pretty limited storage.
Sounds like a reworking of Jacobson's 2009 cover article in Scientific American, which was *savaged* for it's bizarre economic assumptions, as well as it's jury-rigged opposition to nuclear power. Old (and discredited) news.
Some night, drive around your neighborhood at 9:00 to see if there's any kind of law enforcement speed trap in the area. The radar gun could play havoc with nearby wireless.
Perhaps Michael Mann hasn't convinced them that the hockey stick actually exists?
George Church's "Personal Genome Project" has, from it's very beginning, acknowledged the possibility of this kind of exposure. In fact, you can't participate in the project without signing a consent form that makes this explicit. From their website:
http://blog.personalgenomes.org/2013/01/17/genome-re-identification-in-the-news/
"Since its founding, the Personal Genome Project has only accepted participants who understand and acknowledge re-identification as a potential risk. This “open consent” approach arose from our argument that privacy may be over-promised and that re-identification is increasingly possible as technology advances."
(nt)
. . . once you understand the question.
Actually, *Moses* released the first Christian tablet. . . a pair of them if I recall. At five commandments per tablet, though, pretty limited storage.
I call bullshit. Cite your sources.
His sister is hot.
His sister is SMOKIN' hot.
Fixed that for you.
I'd be more freaked out if they raised the price 30 minutes *before* she died.
These cars are so small, every Basque in the country could fit on the same offramp.
Of course, then you'd be putting all your Basques in one exit.
nt
. . . the Singularity will stop it.
"My hippocampus hurts!"
nt
nt
Bada boom!
Sounds like a reworking of Jacobson's 2009 cover article in Scientific American, which was *savaged* for it's bizarre economic assumptions, as well as it's jury-rigged opposition to nuclear power. Old (and discredited) news.
Or not, you dimwit.
I've known this since the '68 campaign.
Did you click on the ohm page and read the actual paper? Shocking!
Inflation
Some night, drive around your neighborhood at 9:00 to see if there's any kind of law enforcement speed trap in the area. The radar gun could play havoc with nearby wireless.
Just don't drive around too fast!
. . . microkernel is the way to go!
I think that many, if not all, right-thinking people would agree that the best form of government is a benevolent dictatorship.
The problem is that there seems to be a shortage of benevolent dictators.
"... computing the diagonal of inverse covariance matrices..."
Oh, gotcha. Why didn't you say so in the first place?
No.