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User: drinkydoh

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Comments · 21

  1. Google hates privacy on Google, Apple Lead Massive List of Companies Supporting CISPA · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm not surprised to see Google as the main supporter of CISPA. They have a long track record of privacy violations and lessening privacy of internet users. They are, like we all know, worlds largest advertising house.

    Google has also been heavily pushing it's real-name policy. They are trying to convert YouTube users to using their real names instead of nicknames. They want to (but don't succeed) have people use their social network Google+, and they want to link everyones searches directly to the real names. Hell, have you noticed how Google's advertisements on other sites like Slashdot change based on what you've been recently searching on Google.

    The Internet as we know it is coming to an end. Everyone sees this but doesn't act. They just let Google steal all of their privacy. Google and CISPA must be stopped and it's your only time to act!

  2. Re:Motorola? on Judge Slams Apple-Motorola Suit As 'Business Strategy' · · Score: 1

    The blame must lay with the originator, in this case Apple.

    It's actually Motorola that sued.

  3. Good on Judge Slams Apple-Motorola Suit As 'Business Strategy' · · Score: 5, Funny

    Fighting is stupid. You should just concentrate on making a great product, just like Apple does. Note that, Motorola/Google, and stop fighting.

  4. Google never went away on RapLeaf Is Back and Bad As Ever · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Back in the time ad companies like DoubleClick existed on a broad swath of Web sites, so they were in a unique position to get a 30,000 foot view of your Web surfing habits. All they had to do was drop a cookie file on your hard drive. Whenever you visited a site containing a DoubleClick ad, it checked your hard drive for that cookie, and added that web site and any information associated with it to its profile of you.

    But Doubleclick couldn’t actually identify you personally; it identified your browser, which could be used by anyone in your household. And (after a lot of pressure from privacy wonks who were also not your mother) it and other ad companies like it offered you the opportunity to opt out of being tracked, though it never really worked all that well.

    Fast forward ten years. Doubleclick is now owned by Google. So-called “behavioral marketing” is all the rage in Net advertising. People are now sharing information about themselves on social networks like it’s going out of style. And companies like Rapleaf and Google are there vacuuming it all up and spitting it out to advertisers – supposedly anonymously, though now we know better.

  5. US vs. Russia & China on US Gov't Blocks Sales To Russian Supercomputer Maker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    These artificial limitations on what and with who US companies can work with are just creating a wall between US and other countries. The nations that mainly benefit from this are Russia and China and they can do a lot of business and even military research together. Not only that but Russia and China have always been good friends, even after soviet russia fell down.

    Therefore, both Russia and China wins and US loses.

  6. Surveillance on Bin Laden Raid Member To Be WikiLeaks Witness · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The mass surveillance and mass interception that is occurring to all of us now who use the internet is also a mass transfer of power from individuals into extremely sophisticated state and private intelligence organizations and their cronies like Google. The Pentagon is maintaining a line that WikiLeaks inherently, as an institution that tells military and government whistleblowers to step forward with information, is a crime. They allege we are criminal, moving forward. Now, the new interpretation of the Espionage Act that the Pentagon is trying to hammer in to the legal system, and which the Department of Justice is complicit in, would mean the end of national security journalism in the United States.

  7. Re:iTunes is great on Google To Start Punishing Pirate Sites In Search Results · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    iTunes has quite impressive catalog. I listen to a lots of kpop and they are all there. What I would like to have is TV show rentals.

  8. iTunes is great on Google To Start Punishing Pirate Sites In Search Results · · Score: -1, Troll

    I've recently started using iTunes for music and movie rentals and it works flawlessly. So there's no justification of "no good legal alternatives" anymore, as both Spotify and iTunes are actually easier and nicer to use than pirate sites. The same goes for Steam.

  9. Questions to Rob Malda (anyone can answer) on A Conversation with Rob Malda - Part One of Three (Video) · · Score: 1

    Why you proposed your wife via Slashdot?

    Read all about how governments use brain pattern matching abusively.

  10. Re:Interesting on Paid Media Must Be Disclosed In Oracle v. Google · · Score: 0

    Not really. Everyone has a certain self-interest in things that, well, interest them. That Mueller was acting as consultant for Oracle should not come as a big surprise - he's good with tech and therefore has certain opinions too.

    I don't really understand why Slashdot has got the hate towards him.

  11. Does this include Microsoft? on Bill Would Force Patent Trolls To Pay Defendants' Legal Bills · · Score: 0, Troll

    Microsoft has mostly used their patents defensively so I don't think they've included in this, nor Apple. Google, on the other hand, will be on hot waters especially with the recent purchase of Motorola Mobility.

  12. Re:Is that a man or a woman? on The Tricky Science of Olympic Gender Testing · · Score: 1

    Heh, that happens every time with OS X's spellchecker. Wonder why it doesn't know the word transgenders.

  13. Re:Is that a man or a woman? on The Tricky Science of Olympic Gender Testing · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's true. Theravada Buddhism agrees that there are more than two genders. SEA is area with prominently open approach to ladyboys (transponders) and people who do not want to be the gender they were born with.

    However, you must also understand that some (most? I'm not that clear on the subject) don't believe to be women. They don't believe to be men either. They believe they're 'third' gender.

    And they should have the right to be.

  14. Successful ad campaign is successful on Critics Blast Apple's Cheesy New Ad Campaign · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They even got their ad campaign freely detailed on Slashdot and by all those different critics. Can't be more successful than that.

  15. Re:Microsoft is suddenly scared? on Microsoft, IBM Want to Seal Patents Agreements With Samsung · · Score: 1

    So why doesn't Linux Foundation do the same for Microsoft and Windows? Or doesn't Linux use any advanced technology?

  16. Re:No on Ask Slashdot: Are The Days of Homebrew Gaming Over? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Homebrew isn't over, it's just been replaced by indie games. It's somewhat similar to shareware games from the 90's and early 2000's.

  17. Re:threatened? on Judge In Kim Dotcom Extradition Case Steps Down · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, he made the right decision right? I don't get why so many people on slashdot is saying it's the wrong decision. If this was judge who commented against dotcom in similar way Slashdot would be outraged if he didn't step down.

  18. Re:Partisan content? on NBC Purchases MSNBC Rights From Microsoft · · Score: 0

    Both Microsoft and Facebook will, however, profit from this greatly. NBC is now letting Facebook stream olympics for free. Microsoft is a major shareholder on Facebook. Magically shares turn back to their owner.

  19. Re:Partisan content? on NBC Purchases MSNBC Rights From Microsoft · · Score: 1

    You're being overly paranoid. Newspaper and websites want eyeballs so they can sell advertising and make money. Now, individual authors and writers might have their own point of view, but so does everyone.

  20. Re:Africa on Ask Slashdot: Building a Personal FOSS Cloud? · · Score: 1

    You save their music by providing food and shelter. You know, in some places people still listen to live music.

  21. Re:The big difference here is on History Will Revere Bill Gates and Forget Steve Jobs, Says Author · · Score: -1, Troll

    "what were they thinking when they dared to include an 'embrace and extend,' proprietary network platform in their OS so that people might actually be locked into their ecosystem (despite the pre-existence of browsers based on open standards). "

    Fixed that.

    Based on this comment you weren't around then. Netscape (now Firefox) was the one breaking all the standards and IE and Opera tried to play nice and according to standards.