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User: Adrian+Lopez

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  1. Re:It makes sense. on Bill Gates Says Tablets Aren't Much Help In Education · · Score: 1

    "It stands to reason the he wouldn't be able to understand that computing is possible without a keyboard."

    Browsing, reading, playing? Yes. Computing? Not so much.

  2. Re:Horrible use of laws on Quiet Victories Won In the Loudness Wars · · Score: 2

    The public's airwaves, the public's rules. Don't like it? Don't use public resources to distribute your speech.

    This exact same line of reasoning has been used to support the notion that there are certain words you can never say on television.

  3. Oops. Replied to wrong post. on Jimmy Wales Calls UK Government To Halt O'Dwyer Extradition · · Score: 1

    This was meant as a reply to LordLimecat. Sorry.

  4. Re:john perry barlow quote on Jimmy Wales Calls UK Government To Halt O'Dwyer Extradition · · Score: 1

    Freedom of speech et al were never absolutes (or at least not for a very long time). See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clear_and_present_danger

    "Everyone knows the fatuous verdict of the greatly over-praised Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, who, when asked for an actual example of when it would be proper to limit speech or define it as an action, gave that of shouting 'fire' in a crowded theatre." -- Christopher Hitchens.

  5. Re:john perry barlow quote on Jimmy Wales Calls UK Government To Halt O'Dwyer Extradition · · Score: 1

    "Everyone knows the fatuous verdict of the greatly over-praised Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, who, when asked for an actual example of when it would be proper to limit speech or define it as an action, gave that of shouting 'fire' in a crowded theatre." -- Christopher Hitchens.

  6. Might I interest you in my elephant detector? on Testing for Many Designer Drugs At Once · · Score: 2

    "The researchers tested their technique on 32 herbal products ... They found that every product contained one or more synthetic cannabinoid; ..."

    Sounds like a pretty good reason to doubt the reliability of the test in question.

  7. The Cost of Silence on Google Reveals "Terrorism Video" Removals · · Score: 1

    "It’s not just the right of the person who speaks to be heard; it is the right of everyone in the audience to listen, and to hear. And every time you silence someone you make yourself a prisoner of your own action because you deny yourself the right to hear something." -- Christopher Hitchens

  8. Re:Let the terrorists speak on Google Reveals "Terrorism Video" Removals · · Score: 1

    No free speech issues here at all.

    Of course there are free speech issues involved. It's just that this kind of censorship is perfectly legal.

  9. Re:It's not a "demand" -- it's a request on US Gov't Demands For Google Data Up 37% Over the Last Year · · Score: 1

    Google may CHOOSE to comply with a request because there is nothing inappropriate about a business deciding to comply with a lawful request from a government agency.

    Why, then, the "need" for CISPA?

  10. Re:Buggars! on Assange Loses Latest Round In Extradition Fight · · Score: 2

    It is Swedish law. Not American not british but Swedish law.

    I was responding to the claim that the alleged crime would be illegal under UK law.

    Is just as clueless as you are regarding Swedish law.

    Evidently not as clueless as you are concerning the context of this discussion.

  11. Re:Buggars! on Assange Loses Latest Round In Extradition Fight · · Score: 1

    Even after the fact? Please cite the law.

  12. Re:Buggars! on Assange Loses Latest Round In Extradition Fight · · Score: 2

    Would the alleged crime be illegal in the UK? Yes.

    Please cite the law in question and show how it applies to Assange's specific behavior of not wearing a condom after promising he would.

  13. Today's Lesson on Microsoft Certificate Was Used To Sign Flame Malware · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So... what did we learn today?

    1. Signed code is not safe code.
    2. An insecure operating system that only runs signed code is still an insecure operating system.

  14. Re:How's this for an idea? on Privacy Advocates Protest FBI Warning of 'Going Dark' In Online Era · · Score: 2

    ... go to the company, literally add code on a case-by-case basis to log a particular set of user's actions.

    If I were running an online service I wouldn't want the FBI coming in and adding their own code to mine. If the FBI wants any of the data on my system then let them either get a subpoena that I can execute with a certain degree of deliberation (see here for one example), or a search warrant that allows them access to all of the data named therein. No need for the FBI to install special code that is potentially just as dangerous as a backdoor.

  15. Transient vs Persistent Data on Privacy Advocates Protest FBI Warning of 'Going Dark' In Online Era · · Score: 2

    The purpose of wiretaps is to capture information that is transient in nature and therefore lost after transmission. Online services are a different beast altogether, the data being more permanent in nature and therefore better suited to the traditional subpoena / search warrant model. Building surveillance capabilities into online services is like building surveillance capabilities into people's homes: invasive and unnecessary.

  16. Re:And your summary on Not Just Apple, How Microsoft Sidestepped Billions In State Taxes · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Publicly traded companies have a fiduciary responsibility to their share holders to save money and maximize return on their investments. Therefore it is the right thing to do.

    I would argue that avoiding taxes through legal maneuvering inconsistent with the law's intent is not an ethical means of satisfying a corporation's fiduciary responsibility to its stockholders.

    More profits flow to share holders, who pay taxes on their earnings, at a higher rate than the corporation does.

    Corporations are "persons" legally distinct from their owners. As such, the way it's supposed to work is that both the corporation and the stockholders are taxed for their particular incomes as individuals. If that seems unfair, then perhaps corporations should not be treated as persons under the law?

  17. Re:And your summary on Not Just Apple, How Microsoft Sidestepped Billions In State Taxes · · Score: 1

    "Tax avoidance ... is legally required of publicly held corporations..."

    Citation needed.

  18. Re:A red state raising taxes!!??!!!??? on Amazon To Pay Texas Sales Tax · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most states make Necessities tax free, so the poor are not hurt. They can still buy the food/clothing/rent they need to survive. It is only the well-off wasting their money on luxury, non-needed goods that pay the sales tax.

    The rich spend less in proportion to what they make than do the poor and the middle class, which is why sales tax is generally considered a regressive tax.

    As for "luxury, non-needed goods", I feel there should be more to life than mere subsistence, and people shouldn't carry a greater tax burden just from wanting to make their lives a little less miserable. Instead of burdening these people with sales taxes, let's raise taxes on those who make their money off the backs of others.

  19. Re:Clean room is irrelevant on Schmidt Testifies Android Did Not Use Sun's IP · · Score: 1

    "... as I understand it Dalvic actually implements all the java VM header profiles. You can't specify those without passing along copyrighted information."

    For those of us who are not familiar with Java's internals, what are Java's VM header profiles and how are they subject to copyright protection?

  20. Re:Like Linux? on Schmidt Testifies Android Did Not Use Sun's IP · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Linux is written to the POSIX standard. The POSIX standard is copyright IEEE and the Open Group.

    IEEE holds the copyright to the documents describing the POSIX standard. It doesn't necessarily apply to the particular items being standardized (APIs, utilities, etc.).

  21. Re:I'm afraid Oracle may be right on Oracle and Google Spar Over Whether Programming Languages Can Be Copyrighted · · Score: 1

    The very concept of a programming language that fulfills a particular need (portability, for example) is the idea. The creation of Java, and all the symbols and names of the language, is an expression of that idea.

    I think you're confusing the concepts of "product of an idea" and "expression of an idea". Java is the product of a series of underlying ideas, but that doesn't make it an expression of those ideas. For the latter to be the case it should be possible to work backwards from the language to the specific ideas being expressed. Unlike a document describing the language and the rationale behind its creation, one cannot easily arrive at the underlying ideas from knowing just the language.

    Besides... if Java were indeed an expression of an idea, its expression is so similar to a number of its predecessors that it would constitute an infringing derivative work.

  22. Re:Activist Judges on Heavyweights Clash Over Policing Repeat Copyright Infringers · · Score: 1

    Most likely, failure to challenge, protest, or send a counter-notice is deemed an admission of fault.

    Either that, or an unwillingness/inability to fight an expensive copyright case in court.

  23. Re:In Other words... on Studies Link Pesticides To Bee Colony Collapse Disorder · · Score: 1

    The logical move is to actually do a study before announcing that the pesticide is destroying bee colonies.

    They haven't announced that pesticides are destroying bee colonies, so your point is moot.

  24. Re:It's their network on Student Expelled From Indiana High School For Tweeting Profanity · · Score: 1

    Student should have used a private ISP, instead of the government-owned school network.

    A person's right to free speech does not suddenly vanish when government property becomes involved. Things might be different in the context of official school functions, but even under such restrictive circumstances a student's right to free speech does not disappear altogether.

  25. Re:Open Access and Old Business Models on Boycott of Elsevier Exceeds 8000 Researchers · · Score: 1

    ... you publish articles in prestigious journals so that others read your work.

    What makes you think a peer-reviewed, community-run journal can't gain as much respect as traditional journals, and draw just as much of an audience? Remember: it's not the medium that makes the journal, but the people who, through their diligence, lend respect to it and those who, through their valued contributions, draw an audience to it.

    You don't understand the academic journal market.

    I don't think you understand the Internet, or group behavior.