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User: Bam_Thwok

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  1. Re:Not gonna happen on Promising Vaccine Candidate Could Lead To a Definitive Cure For HIV · · Score: 1

    That's not the fallacy. The fallacy would be "We've already spent 500 million on research and development for this drug, but shit, only the incredibly impoverished really need it so we must charge them an arm and a leg, even if that means no one can buy it". It is not "There is no viable market for this drug, therefore we should not spend any money on R&D for it, because it could bankrupt us". That's just a rational economic decision.

  2. Re:No co-op on Valve Announces Family Sharing On Steam, Can Include Friends · · Score: 1

    Split screen

  3. Re:Already or in the process of being repaired on Google Admits Bitcoin Thieves Exploited Android Crypto PRNG Flaw · · Score: 1

    I'll give you that it's interesting. I wouldn't call it awesome, except to say that I'm often awestruck at how relentlessly unscrupulous the bitcoin community remains at every turn. What market is it, exactly, that bitcoin is first to? It's not the first currency to be exchanged nor stored anonymously. It's not the first solution for online person to person or e-commerce payments. It's not the first virtual currency to be exchangeable for real money. Etc. What has bitcoin done besides assert its own value on the premise that it will somehow be the future of worldwide finance?

  4. Re:Already or in the process of being repaired on Google Admits Bitcoin Thieves Exploited Android Crypto PRNG Flaw · · Score: 1, Informative

    I assure you, he was casting aspersions on all digital wallet type things, not just bitcoin. Bitcoin advocates love to tout how awesomely anonymous and secure and perfect and futuristic it is. Then scams and simple robberies like this happen all the time, and normal people say "caveat emptor, you fool" while the mouthbreathers insist that "It's not a problem with BITCOIN per se! Bitcoin is still great! Bittcoin 4eva!"

  5. Re:Retro-active on The Dark Side of Amazon's New Pilots · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't buy this argument. People bought their $5 digital copies in lieu of the $20 blu-rays under pretty explicit terms. That $15.00 difference is not just savings from absent physical production passed onto the consumer; it's the forfeiture of your right to physical ownership, substituted instead for Amazon's right to shut the service down or reorganize the service as they please. This might be a terrible way to treat customers, but it's certainly not as though those customers have been robbed of their property.

  6. Re:In other news... on Researchers Report Super-Powered Battery Breakthrough · · Score: 2

    If you think you have deeper insights into the preferences of the market that have been missed by all the major phone manufacturers, by all means write a position paper and sell your consulting services. You'll make a pretty penny.

  7. Re:service centralization = bad idea on Google Pushing Back On Law Enforcement Requests For Access To Gmail Accounts · · Score: 1

    Because GMail is more convenient to use and feature rich than running your own server, which you are still perfectly free to do.

  8. Re:The argument is a stretch. on Why You'll Pay For Netflix — Even If You Don't Subscribe To Netflix · · Score: 2

    This is mostly correct. One of the major fear of a market without net neutrality is not that ISPs wukk charge customers high fees for the bandwidth needed to access and use services like Netflix. Like you said, that's fine. There's nothing wrong with usage-based billing for bandwidth. The fear is that an ISP could impose a pricing structure like that, but ALSO exempt its own services or favored partner's services from that requirement. E.x. if Comcast decides to offer, say, a Basic and Premium tier - with the premium tier having bandwidth and latency sufficient for Netflix HD, but the Basic not - and package its own Xfinity HD or Amazon HD streaming video service along with the basic package without bandwidth restrictions, that would violate net neutrality principles. As far as Comcast is concerned, the data is indistinguishable, but it's able to use its control over the network in anti-competitive ways.

  9. Re:DHS covering an awful lot these days ... on DHS Steps In As Regulator for Medical Device Security · · Score: 1

    That might be the case, but that has nothing to do with what you posted. What you posted is actually the opposite of what you're implying - which is that the DHS is some cutthroat super-agency that disregards its narrowly defined mandates. This is an example of the DHS having to comply with the same mundane protocols that every other government agency does.

  10. Re:DHS covering an awful lot these days ... on DHS Steps In As Regulator for Medical Device Security · · Score: 3, Informative

    What exactly do you think this means? Did you actually read any of the reports? The DHS joined almost all other federal agencies in making it policy not to fuck over the health or environment of low-income populations as part of their operations. E.g. if the coast guard wants to test the effects of a new chemical dispersant for oil spills, this policy directs them to do it somewhere other than a lower-income fishing village in Louisiana. Or if the nuclear regulatory commission wants to build a site to dispose of spent nuclear fuel, they should do it somewhere other than near the aquifer of an Indian reservation.

  11. Actually a good idea on DRM Could Come To 3D Printers · · Score: 1

    A patent for a DRM system for 3D printers is not the same as a mandate that all 3D printers must implement it. That will be a legislative battle fought a long time from now. I imagine a much more realistic application of this will have nothing to do with home users, since it will be trivial for those tech-savvy enough to own a home 3D printer to circumvent the system, or buy one without it. No, this will be targeted at industrious types who look to make a business out of piracy-based manufacturing. Just like it shouldn't be legal for Kinkos to accept payment for copyright-infringing requests (e.g. someone wants to print five hundred bound copies of 50 Shades of Grey for their "personal use"), it shouldn't be legal for a 3D print shop to take a fee for you to print out a bootleg of a hot new Christmas toy for your kid you found on The Pirate Bay because your local Toys R Us ran out of them before you could grab one off the shelf.

  12. Re:./ed on Obama and Romney Respond To ScienceDebate.org Questionnaire · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This Q&A is more evidence that Romney is what everybody has been calling him from the start; basically moderate, smart guy who is cunning enough to play the part needed to get into office. He's a former governor, a distinguished JD MBA, and he hasn't got a deep dark secret besides being a little too capitalistic and a little too obsequious to his Church. I don't think anyone doubts that he would be an excellent director of policy and decision-maker in chief. If there were 535 Romney's in congress who only slightly disagreed with each other on center-right versus center-left policy leanings, we'd all be far better off. But that's not what we'd get with a Romney presidency. Romney is not the leader of his party; Clint Eastwood, Paul Ryan, and Grover Norquist are. What you see in Romney's platform and tempered responses (a four point plan here, a three-pillar foundation there) is not what you will get from the Congress elected along with him should he galvanize the base enough to keep the house and win back the senate. You'd get an agenda dictated by the hard-right and the tea party, with Romney stuck signing into law bills and policies that make government less effective and militate against his reasonable goals. It's actually been pretty sad to see this Faustian bargain develop; Romney got the nomination and has a serious shot at the becoming #45 in the history books, but he's had to pander to the base of the party over which he has little if any serious sway anyway, and will be utterly subservient to their agenda while in office. A fun twist on the lame-duck phenomenon. On the flip side, the GOP gets an electable candidate, but one whose core views they know in their hearts will never really align with their own. It will be hollow, Pyrrhic victories all around.

  13. Re:shocker on Mastercard Denies Plans For BitCoin Credit Card · · Score: 1

    With USD you have exquisite knowledge of the sender and recipient of funds and can physically trace the movement of bills with markings or serial numbers. They can choose not to participate in legally dubious activities. Almost the entirety of the sales pitch of BitCoin is that it's anonymous and untraceable. If MasterCard can't tell the difference between a payment processed to pay for a can of soda and a payment processed to pay for 10 kilos of cocaine, they may be inadvertently abetting or committing a crime totally outside of their control. I guess you're too stupid to realize I never said that BitCoin didn't have legitimate uses, but that a payment processor of anonymous transactions can't tell the difference between legal and illegal ones.

  14. Re:shocker on Mastercard Denies Plans For BitCoin Credit Card · · Score: 1

    Except for cash, lines of credit, checks, money orders, wire transfers, et al. Just because Visa/Mastercard payment processing is more convenient than other methods doesn't put them in charge.

  15. Re:shocker on Mastercard Denies Plans For BitCoin Credit Card · · Score: 2

    MasterCard is a payment processor that merchants and consumers CHOOSE to use for convenience, not a boa constrictor wrapped around the neck of international commerce. If WikiLeaks wanted to, they could accept donations from dollar bills stuffed in envelopes, but they wanted an online processing instead. MasterCard shut them off because they didn't want to known as one of the companies processing charitable contributions to an international espionage suspect, not because they're some megalomaniacal superpower.

  16. Re:shocker on Mastercard Denies Plans For BitCoin Credit Card · · Score: 2

    That, and I'm sure their legal team would have a seizure trying to figure out their potential liability from helping to launder monopoly drug money back into the economy.

  17. Re:shocker on Mastercard Denies Plans For BitCoin Credit Card · · Score: 2

    "Didn't approve of it" is not the same as "Never heard of it".

  18. Re:Oblig: TED Talk on Apple-Motorola Judge Questions Need For Software Patents · · Score: 1

    Yes, and they value their charitable patient assistance at the most favorable possible retail price to inflate the number. Pharma's gonna pharma, and all that. Strong-armed by the g-men or not, they give away life-saving medication to a large number of people in desperate need, which is the opposite of what JonahsDad suggested. They may be perfectly willing to let silver foxes go without their boner medication if they can't afford it, but I work in oncology research and very rarely have I heard of a patient not being able to get their chemo if they have financial hardships due to these manufacturer and other third-party programs.

  19. Re:Oblig: TED Talk on Apple-Motorola Judge Questions Need For Software Patents · · Score: 1

    I've seen papers that estimate it costs between $500 million and $2000 million to get a new drug approved in the US, and it takes 10-15 years to complete the process, after which there's not much time left to recoup before the patent expires. So yeah, they market the hell out of everything they make, particularly when a competitors have a similar drug in the pipeline.

  20. Re:Oblig: TED Talk on Apple-Motorola Judge Questions Need For Software Patents · · Score: 1

    GlaxoSmithKline gave away half a billion dollars worth of chemotherapeutics to low-income American patients who couldn't afford it in 2010. Merck, Pfizer, Roche, and Wyeth have similar programs.

  21. Re:Not their first attempt at this on Microsoft's Surface Caught Windows OEMs By Surprise · · Score: 1

    AppleTV.

  22. Re:Freedom on IEEE Spectrum Digs Into the Future of Money · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No it isn't. Every dollar of credit a bank extends creates a debit on their books as well. That's what lending is. Fractional reserve banking is a *limiter* on this activity, not a facilitator.

  23. Re:anonymous is a bunch of childish kids.... on The Pirate Bay Suffering Global Outage From Massive DDoS Attack · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You base this on what, exactly? How cool of a Tom Clancy novel it would make? Seriously. Do you have even a shred of evidence that this is the case? FOIA-obtained documents that describe an agency receiving funding for this operation? An interview with an official or member of the gov or anonymous leaking the details relationship? Anything?

  24. Fighting cancer? on Nanoparticles Heated By Radio Waves Switch On Genes In Mice · · Score: 1

    Any biochem /.ers want to chime on the potential for this technique to trigger apoptosis in cancerous tissues (or any targeted tissues)?

  25. Re:Sad for NASA on World's Largest Digital Camera Project Passes Critical Milestone · · Score: 1

    Not sure why you think they're "to" worried about those things. NASA's whole job is developing technology and processes for a long-term human presence in space, and environmental science and sustainability are crucial elements of that goal.