Courts have acknowledged that the bulk collection and instant availability of data can lead to not just a qualitative but an actual quantitative difference in what that collection means.
More important, I don't care what the law says, I don't think it's a good thing for the state's security agencies to be that efficient or that powerful. Whether or not this falls within the current legal definition of what's legal in the current regime is irrelevant.
....these systems are probably already deployed in American train stations and airports, and they won't bother telling us about it. It'll take years just to get details about it through FOIA.
Somebody who thinks human beings have a higher purpose in life than doing a robot's job badly?
Which I agree with. Because I'm a marxist. Ownership of the means of and profits from production belong to the workers.
If you have that sort of resource (re) distribution than humans can pursue that higher purpose.
If you have the sort of exploitive capitalist oligarchy we currently have in America then automation produces an even larger class of even more contingent workers at the mercy of the predatory owners of capital. Tough to pursue your higher purpose when you're starving.
Voter registration information is a public record. It is publicly available. In some states you have to send a letter and a few bucks for the DVD it's copied on. In others you have to check a TOS like form to promise not to use the data for commercial communications. Etc.
Voter registration is public information and it should be.
Who owns guns absolutely should not be held in any government database. There are laws that restrict exactly that (on the federal level). But don't kid yourself. California explicitly records the sale of every gun in a state DOJ database. Is it legal? Probably not. And if you've got 10 years and a few million bucks to spare on a quixotic pursuit of justice, you can try and prove it.
Why does it work better for porn? That would be a brilliant market niche that would provide a great point of differentiation with a motivated audience. I can see the problem with getting the word out, though. I can imagine the ads now, and I don't think they'd work well with MSFT's overall brand strategy.
Did you forget how they treated their IT people? I found out about it here of/. The whole, replace them with H1-B workers, make them train the replacements thing.
I skipped Deadpool over it. Bummer, it looks really good, but I'll just have to wait for a copy to pop up on bittorrent. My wife and I really wanted to go. But I couldn't look at myself in the mirror if I supported them with my $.
...politicians who are able to show any sense about criminal justice issues.
This isn't because they're any better on the issue. It's because they have the freedom to actually use their heads. Democrats are, in general, too terrified of being Willie Horton-ed to do anything but try and prove their tough on crime. Give the police anything they want, whore for the district attorneys and the prison guards, appoint prosecutors to the bench, etc., etc., etc. That's why Bill Clinton signed the (terrible) 1994 crime bill, and why California Governor Gray Davis issued a blanket ban on parole for murder convictions.
The terrible thing is that means the only remotely sane criminal justice policy comes from some Republicans. They aren't actually any good on the issues. A lot of time they've just decided something like "locking up all these poor folks and black folks for years on end costs so much I can't afford to give any more tax cuts to the rich." But they're better than the terrified Dems.
As Spock once told Kirk: "Only Nixon can go to China."
Actually the weed industry is a lot smaller here than I'd expected, it's regulated a lot more tightly, and there is a LOT of police activity focused on shutting down unlicensed grow operations. I moved here from Humboldt County, California and I was shocked to find weed here is scarcer and more expensive than it is there.
The Grant Public Utility District is a public -- meaning government -- agency. Do you really want government agencies deciding some businesses should pay higher rates than others? Maybe under very specific circumstances, but I'd be very skeptical of this in general.
While the PUD talks about 'recovering costs,' there is a very good argument that what this is about is about the incumbent business interests -- in this case agriculture -- making the newcomers subsidize them by paying higher rates. These guys may be farmers in the sticks, but they aren't dumb, they've got political power and they see a group of newcomers coming to town with a bunch of money and they're figuring out how to make some money off them.
...did anyone download it while it was up? Would save me a bunch of time dealing with individual county registrars offices if someone could put this up as a torrent or something.
Getting public records anonymously is fairly common. It's not like I show ID when I pick up my records. Now days I usually don't even have to pick them up -- email or ftp is common, someday I hope to get a torrent link as response to a records request.
I can't think of a single UI change Firefox has made in years that I liked. Some I've hated; some I'm indiferent to.
I don't like that FF still has performance issues compared to Chrome. Doesn't crash like it used to, though.
But the occasional ad on the new tab page didn't really bother me.
IMHO it's actually an example of the right way to do advertising. It was non-intrusive, it was differentiated enough from other content that you could tell it was an ad without being distracting. It usually contained something at least vaugely relevant and not boner pills and hot milfs. And it helped pay for something useful without costing me cash. If the internet obeyed simliar principles I wouldn't need an ad blocker.
Apparently I'm the minority.
Of course, I really only use it nowdays for firebug and a couple of other things when I'm doing dev or troubleshooting or whatever.
That might be the bigger problem for Mozilla: make me care enough about your browser to hate it sometimes.
They're using Blox CMS from an outfit called TownNews, which is a division of Lee newspapers. Blox is a CMS/PAAS that focuses on newspapers. It is closed source, but is built with PHP and uses MYSQL (or MariaDB maybe). It employs a proprietary templating language called UTL that uses syntax that reminds me a bit of Django templating.
Blox is a very good news CMS. I've used a bunch of them. I don't love any of them, but Blox is the best.
You can modify Blox pretty much any part of Blox, there's no real lock in.
The issue is that there's likely no one in the nesroom who can actually do it.
Major metro newspapers will often have a handful of news focused developers. A newspaper the size of the one in this story is lucky to have a minimally competent IT guy keeping the paper's network up and all the desktops running.
The paper as a whole is probably struggling to keep the lights on. It's not going to contract custom software development.
...isn't the severance package or the B.S. clause about availability. The problem is that they laid off their U.S. staffers and replaced them with outsourced IT from India. The severance clause was just the peanut chunks atop the turd sandwich, and the bank isn't doing anything about that.
Facebook is already make or break for news sites. Operations I've worked with get anywhere from 40-60+ percent of their traffic from Facebook. Facebook already has too much market power in this sector. News operations that go along with this idea are slitting their own throats.
GW lost all my love when they went all patent troll (copyright troll?) over the phrase 'Space Marine.' Not Adeptus Astares, mind you, but Space Marine.
Federal government's Bureau of Labor Statistics maintains really good numbers on relative number of deaths in various occupations. You can find the latest numbers here: http://www.bls.gov/iif/oshcfoi...
The FBI also releases a detailed report of pigs killed every year. You can find it listed as "Law Enforcment Officers Killed and Assaulted" as part of the annual Uniform Crime Reports program. It's on the FBI website.
I wish this app would increase the death rate, but I don't think it will help. The death rate for pigs is lower than that for garbage men, and an order of magnitude below truly dangerous jobs like loggers and commercial fishermen. Every time a pig dies I feel a little safer, and I only wish something as simple as an app could help in that regard.
Around 100 pigs are killed every year. About half of those die in accidents, mostly car wrecks. We really need to improve on that number. With a little effort we could be killing at least two or three hundred every year.
Courts have acknowledged that the bulk collection and instant availability of data can lead to not just a qualitative but an actual quantitative difference in what that collection means. More important, I don't care what the law says, I don't think it's a good thing for the state's security agencies to be that efficient or that powerful. Whether or not this falls within the current legal definition of what's legal in the current regime is irrelevant.
....these systems are probably already deployed in American train stations and airports, and they won't bother telling us about it. It'll take years just to get details about it through FOIA.
Who the *$%* does this moron think he is?
Somebody who thinks human beings have a higher purpose in life than doing a robot's job badly?
Which I agree with. Because I'm a marxist. Ownership of the means of and profits from production belong to the workers.
If you have that sort of resource (re) distribution than humans can pursue that higher purpose.
If you have the sort of exploitive capitalist oligarchy we currently have in America then automation produces an even larger class of even more contingent workers at the mercy of the predatory owners of capital. Tough to pursue your higher purpose when you're starving.
...exposed because they're public record.
Voter registration information is a public record. It is publicly available. In some states you have to send a letter and a few bucks for the DVD it's copied on. In others you have to check a TOS like form to promise not to use the data for commercial communications. Etc.
Voter registration is public information and it should be.
Who owns guns absolutely should not be held in any government database. There are laws that restrict exactly that (on the federal level). But don't kid yourself. California explicitly records the sale of every gun in a state DOJ database. Is it legal? Probably not. And if you've got 10 years and a few million bucks to spare on a quixotic pursuit of justice, you can try and prove it.
...could run on 100% renewable water. Then they could stop stealing it from NorCal and the Colorado River.
Why does it work better for porn? That would be a brilliant market niche that would provide a great point of differentiation with a motivated audience. I can see the problem with getting the word out, though. I can imagine the ads now, and I don't think they'd work well with MSFT's overall brand strategy.
If all kinds of things going wrong on 2006 F-150s is anything except an extreme outlier, then recent F-150s suck. I've kinda suspected as much.
....the scandal is what's legal.
...of 'Duh' magazine.
Was this news to anyone? My tech illiterate wife knows this.
Yeah, but is Marvel (Disney) getting a royalty off it?
...then you're a bad person.
Did you forget how they treated their IT people? I found out about it here of /. The whole, replace them with H1-B workers, make them train the replacements thing.
I skipped Deadpool over it. Bummer, it looks really good, but I'll just have to wait for a copy to pop up on bittorrent. My wife and I really wanted to go. But I couldn't look at myself in the mirror if I supported them with my $.
...politicians who are able to show any sense about criminal justice issues.
This isn't because they're any better on the issue. It's because they have the freedom to actually use their heads. Democrats are, in general, too terrified of being Willie Horton-ed to do anything but try and prove their tough on crime. Give the police anything they want, whore for the district attorneys and the prison guards, appoint prosecutors to the bench, etc., etc., etc. That's why Bill Clinton signed the (terrible) 1994 crime bill, and why California Governor Gray Davis issued a blanket ban on parole for murder convictions.
The terrible thing is that means the only remotely sane criminal justice policy comes from some Republicans. They aren't actually any good on the issues. A lot of time they've just decided something like "locking up all these poor folks and black folks for years on end costs so much I can't afford to give any more tax cuts to the rich." But they're better than the terrified Dems.
As Spock once told Kirk: "Only Nixon can go to China."
Actually the weed industry is a lot smaller here than I'd expected, it's regulated a lot more tightly, and there is a LOT of police activity focused on shutting down unlicensed grow operations. I moved here from Humboldt County, California and I was shocked to find weed here is scarcer and more expensive than it is there.
The Grant Public Utility District is a public -- meaning government -- agency. Do you really want government agencies deciding some businesses should pay higher rates than others? Maybe under very specific circumstances, but I'd be very skeptical of this in general.
While the PUD talks about 'recovering costs,' there is a very good argument that what this is about is about the incumbent business interests -- in this case agriculture -- making the newcomers subsidize them by paying higher rates. These guys may be farmers in the sticks, but they aren't dumb, they've got political power and they see a group of newcomers coming to town with a bunch of money and they're figuring out how to make some money off them.
...did anyone download it while it was up? Would save me a bunch of time dealing with individual county registrars offices if someone could put this up as a torrent or something.
Getting public records anonymously is fairly common. It's not like I show ID when I pick up my records. Now days I usually don't even have to pick them up -- email or ftp is common, someday I hope to get a torrent link as response to a records request.
I can't think of a single UI change Firefox has made in years that I liked. Some I've hated; some I'm indiferent to.
I don't like that FF still has performance issues compared to Chrome. Doesn't crash like it used to, though.
But the occasional ad on the new tab page didn't really bother me.
IMHO it's actually an example of the right way to do advertising. It was non-intrusive, it was differentiated enough from other content that you could tell it was an ad without being distracting. It usually contained something at least vaugely relevant and not boner pills and hot milfs. And it helped pay for something useful without costing me cash. If the internet obeyed simliar principles I wouldn't need an ad blocker.
Apparently I'm the minority.
Of course, I really only use it nowdays for firebug and a couple of other things when I'm doing dev or troubleshooting or whatever.
That might be the bigger problem for Mozilla: make me care enough about your browser to hate it sometimes.
...are the two problems this paper is facing.
They're using Blox CMS from an outfit called TownNews, which is a division of Lee newspapers. Blox is a CMS/PAAS that focuses on newspapers. It is closed source, but is built with PHP and uses MYSQL (or MariaDB maybe). It employs a proprietary templating language called UTL that uses syntax that reminds me a bit of Django templating.
Blox is a very good news CMS. I've used a bunch of them. I don't love any of them, but Blox is the best.
You can modify Blox pretty much any part of Blox, there's no real lock in.
The issue is that there's likely no one in the nesroom who can actually do it.
Major metro newspapers will often have a handful of news focused developers. A newspaper the size of the one in this story is lucky to have a minimally competent IT guy keeping the paper's network up and all the desktops running.
The paper as a whole is probably struggling to keep the lights on. It's not going to contract custom software development.
...isn't the severance package or the B.S. clause about availability. The problem is that they laid off their U.S. staffers and replaced them with outsourced IT from India. The severance clause was just the peanut chunks atop the turd sandwich, and the bank isn't doing anything about that.
Facebook is already make or break for news sites. Operations I've worked with get anywhere from 40-60+ percent of their traffic from Facebook. Facebook already has too much market power in this sector. News operations that go along with this idea are slitting their own throats.
GW lost all my love when they went all patent troll (copyright troll?) over the phrase 'Space Marine.' Not Adeptus Astares, mind you, but Space Marine.
Federal government's Bureau of Labor Statistics maintains really good numbers on relative number of deaths in various occupations. You can find the latest numbers here: http://www.bls.gov/iif/oshcfoi...
The FBI also releases a detailed report of pigs killed every year. You can find it listed as "Law Enforcment Officers Killed and Assaulted" as part of the annual Uniform Crime Reports program. It's on the FBI website.
And the malice comes from experience.
I wish this app would increase the death rate, but I don't think it will help. The death rate for pigs is lower than that for garbage men, and an order of magnitude below truly dangerous jobs like loggers and commercial fishermen. Every time a pig dies I feel a little safer, and I only wish something as simple as an app could help in that regard.
Around 100 pigs are killed every year. About half of those die in accidents, mostly car wrecks. We really need to improve on that number. With a little effort we could be killing at least two or three hundred every year.