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User: adimarco

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Comments · 106

  1. What? on Do We Really Need a Security Industry? · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...and if the human body was immune to germs, we'd never get sick. If food didn't go bad, we wouldn't need refrigerators. If we all had unicorns, we wouldn't need cars. If glass didn't break, we could all throw stones.

    Seriously, what?

  2. Russian Evolution Joke Toolkit on First Russian Anti-Evolution Suit Enters Court Room · · Score: 4, Funny

    Here, start with this simple formula - "In Soviet Russia, [direct object] [transitive verb]s YOU!"

    Insert words relevant to evolution or intelligent design. Bam! Instant humor. Be the envy of your friends and coworkers.

  3. my nipples explode with delight on Beta Ogg Vorbis Firmware For The Neuros [updated] · · Score: 1

    want to come back to my place, bouncy bouncy?

  4. Re:I've said it before on Red Hat CTO Responds To Allchin's Comments · · Score: 1

    So pr0n is the result of creative impetus? Heh.

    Yes! Although for a slightly different definition of 'creative' :)

    heh

    a

  5. Re:I've said it before on Red Hat CTO Responds To Allchin's Comments · · Score: 5

    Why? Because the top programmers will no longer program, if they don't get paid.

    riiiiiiight. just like how writers will stop writing books when people can read them at the library for free. just look at how cd sales have dropped since people can download mp3s. what a shame it was when the whole porn industry died with the creation of jpegs!

    obviously, nobody ever does anything without being paid! creative impetus, p'shaw! all the great creative works in the history of the human race were done for a salary, right?

    oh my people, what have i done unto thee?

    a

  6. Correlation/Causation on Are Computers Stealing Your Memory? · · Score: 3


    Um, basics of logic? Correlation is not causation? Aren't scientists of all people supposed to know these things?

    Maybe it is?

    a

  7. Re:If i can play it, i can rip it on The Madison Project: Inconvenience Vs. MP3s · · Score: 2

    They could make it very tough though. Just because my ear can successfully hear the music does not mean that it can be digitised as easy. Our ears work difeerently.

    The thing is, in order to play a sound file on a computer, it must be decoded to a form the sound card can output, namely .wav data. Even if they can manage to prevent me getting my hands on the unencrypted bitstream until it gets to the sound card, I can just write a cute little piece of code that masquerades as a sound card, and dumps all the data sent to it to disk. Watermarked or not, weird data or not, I can then take whatever data the sound card will output and compress to .mp3, and it will come out the same regardless of where it's decoded...

  8. Nope on Annoy.com Gag Order Lifted · · Score: 1

    Oh say does that star spangled banner still wave
    O'er the land of the free
    and the home of the brave?

    shaking in my boots.

    Anthony

  9. Re:How odd that a judge would uphold the law on DVD/DeCSS: MPAA Wins In New York · · Score: 2

    The DMCA is a law. Anyone posting DeCSS is in direct violation of that law. It's really really simple.

    Allow me to provide a grounding in a 3 branch government, and the concept of checks and balances.

    The 3 branches exist so that if one of them gets out of hand, say...does something blatantly unconstitutional (the DMCA for example), one of the others can put a stop to it.

    In this case, the Legislative branch (read: the people who make the laws) took it up the ass from the corporate scumfucks who run the motion picture industry, and conveniently whited-out some bits of the constitution that weren't in their financial interest.

    Now, it's up for the Judicial branch to notice that the Legislative branch was huffing rock up on capital hill, and declare this unconstitutional.

    This is how the legal system works. It's "really that simple" as you say.

    Very simple...

    anthony

  10. Let us consult the Constitution.... on DVD/DeCSS: MPAA Wins In New York · · Score: 5

    I know it's going out of style these days, but let's see what the consitution has to say on the matter of intellectual property.

    This clause is varyingly known as the "copyright clause" or the "patent clause" depending on what kind of a lawyer you are. Either way, this is the exact wording in the Constitution (section 8) that provides for the creation of Intellectual Property.

    It says:

    The Congress shall have Power...
    To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;


    It seems that the authors of the consitution had not intended in any way for Intellectual Property to be a financial protection in the way that it is currently interpreted. Seemingly in direct contradiction, the judge says:

    Plaintiffs have invested huge sums over the years in producing motion pictures in reliance upon a legal framework that, through the law of copyright, has ensured that they will have the exclusive right to copy and distribute those motion pictures for economic gain.

    (emphasis in both cases rather obviously mine)

    Something smells fishy here...

    Anthony

  11. Re:Real Impartial on DVD/DeCSS: MPAA Wins In New York · · Score: 2

    It is also interesting to say that the current framework is one that protects and harbors a monopoly.

    <sarcasm>

    So, wait a second. Are you daring to suggest that the court system, or politicians for that matter, would base their decisions on who's got the money rather than rational, legal, or common-sensical reasons?

    The audiacity! Here? In the land of the free? The home of the brave? How could you suggest such a thing? :)

    </sarcasm>

    Anthony

  12. quoted verbatim on States Sue Record Companies For Price Fixing · · Score: 5

    This comment is quoted verbatim from an RIAA website. The original page can be found here.

    Frankly, this is a big load of shit, and doesn't deserve a +2 insightful ;)

    Anthony

  13. Re:RIAA Bad. Napster Bad. MPAA Bad. DeCSS Good. on RIAA Responds to Napster - Raises Serious Questions · · Score: 2

    Regardless, Napster could just filter and stop transmission of copyrighted works via their system (unless they have permission to distribute the works).

    er, and just exactly how would they go about doing such a thing? nothing differentiates a copyrighted string of bytes from a non-copyrighted string of bytes.

    you couldn't even use the file name, because i can still misname them, or give them names like "m3t4ll1c4 - f4d3 t0 bl4ck.mp3"

    not that easy.

    anthony

  14. in loco parentis on Criminal Libel, Free Speech And The Net · · Score: 2

    IANAL, but unless the law is very different than where I come from, I seriously doubt that the school has the legal authority to act "in loco parentis" (literally "in place of the parents").

    "in loco parentis" is typically only granted to boarding schools, esp. when those are state-funded (i.e. math/science magnet-type schools that have an admissions process but are still paid for with public funds).

    The whole reason for granting "in loco parentis" is to provide legal rights to a body that will be literally that, "in place of the parents," and needs the authority of a parent/guardian.

    Either way, regular school districts can not arbitrarily decide to act "in loco parentis", it must be specifically granted to a particular body for a specific reason, and most schools do not have this advantage...

    Anthony

  15. Re:Oh please! on Napster Hurts Album Sales? · · Score: 2

    Listening to you people drone on about how Napster does not affect cd sales is sickening!

    I said it before, I meant it, and I'll now say it again: Napster does not affect CD Sales, nor will it destroy the music industry. This is the same piracy FUD they spread with the advent of casette tapes, and VHS, and both ended up being a benefit for their respective industries rather than the bane they attempted to paint them as.

    One need only look at the fact that CD sales have skyrocketed over the last few years. The article itself says CD sales are up 20%. Are you aware of how significant a chunk of change that 20% constitutes? Hell, if we want to be as statistically and scientifically shoddy as the people who conducted the study, we can correlate those two facts and discern that Napster is responsible for a 20% rise in CD sales...

    Anthony

  16. Re:Overreaction on Napster Hurts Album Sales? · · Score: 2

    You've missed the point.

    I did it kinda deliberately because I had another one to make ;) Nothing personal.

    because these same students will eventually make money and are potentil lifelong fans.

    I couldn't agree with you more. The RIAA is really shooting itself in the foot here, they've forgotten the age-old rule that there is no such thing as bad press (here come the replies...).

    "Rampant Music Piracy Bankrupts US Economy" is the spectre they're trying to raise here, and if you look at what they're trying to say in such simple terms, it becomes obvious how ridiculous these studies are...

    Anthony

  17. Re:Suuuuuuuuuuuuuure. on Napster Hurts Album Sales? · · Score: 2

    The article mentions that album sales had been on a downturn since 1998 - *a full year before Napster's release*.

    One has to wonder how up-to-date the data used in the study was. Napster has only (really) become a big enough thing to show up on their radar or make any kind of an impact in the last 6 months or so.

    Knowing how far behind the business world runs in terms of bookkeeping, how recent do you think the data used in this study was? In all probability, they're analyzing data from before their supposed cause became a relevant factor...

    Anthony

  18. Carnage4Live get over it... on Napster Hurts Album Sales? · · Score: 2

    Napster hurts album sales especially among poor college students.

    10 years ago the RIAA claimed that CDRs would destroy record sales, they didn't. 10 years before that they claimed that audio casettes would destroy record sales. They didn't. Around the same time, the movie industry claimed that VHS bootlegging would destroy the movie industry, it didn't.

    Poor college students are going to bootleg music no matter what. They're poor college students, that's what they do, that's what they've always done, it's nothing new. If napster wasn't there, they'd be dubbing casettes or CDs.

    Anthony

  19. Logical fallacies and the wonders of statistics on Napster Hurts Album Sales? · · Score: 4

    Coincident with the arrival of MP3 and Napster, these sales take a pretty severe dip downwards.

    The majority of people are so easily mislead by statements like this because they lack a simple understanding of the basic rules of logic. In this case, for example, correlation is not causation. There is a direct, frighteningly statistically accurate, correlation between the number of priests in a given town, and the number of alcoholics. Both are functions of population...

    I suggest consulting this page for a brief summary of common logical fallacies.

    This study is so vague it's almost silly. While they determine that CD stores with physical proximity to universities have slightly declining CD sales, they make no attempt whatsoever to determine the actual cause of said decline, and simply *decide* that it is the result of .mp3 and the RIAA's boogeyman, Napster. One has to wonder who commissioned the study...

    FUD. This is the real-world equivalent of trolling :) Shoddy science passed off as fact to an ignorant audience (for the most part).

    Anthony

  20. Re:The damage has been done on Metallica Remains Silent · · Score: 3

    Metallica are well within their right

    Technically, I have to concede this point. I do not, however, agree with them. Their efforts in this regard indicate such a lack of understanding of the current state of technology that i wonder if they're still using 4-tracks to record their work.

    i like their music too, but if i intentionally illegally copy their work then i must suffer the consequences.

    i don't like their music any more. your masochistic overtones indicate that you are a troll, whether you know it or not. fuck it, i'll bite.

    if i intentionally copy their work it will be solely as an act of civil disobedience to demonstrate the sheer stupidity of attempting to treat information as physicaly property given the ease of duplication. people argue over whether or not "information wants to be free." information already is free. there is no room for argument on this point. anyone trying to treat it any other way is living in the past, denying reality, and will be appropriately left behind as the revolution moves forward.

    </rant>

    Anthony

  21. meta-discussion on A Primer On DNA Computing And Software Breeding · · Score: 1


    that's odd, i think my cookie expired while that was submitting or something, i didn't check the 'post anonymously box'. either way, that's me, not meaning to be an ac ;)

    anthony

  22. Re:Quantum DNA Computing on A Primer On DNA Computing And Software Breeding · · Score: 2

    go on, click the link, click it, you know you want to :)

    the article (go ahead, click on it) agrees with you largely, to quote it:

    Physicists generally concede that the task is so formidable that a practical quantum computer won't exist for decades.

    The forces of evolution, he claims, may have solved the problem of quantum computing several billion years ago. It's a startling idea--but if true, it could explain a puzzle at the core of biology.

    Essentially they're trying to figure out why information in DNA is encoded using 4 base pairs, when binary is way more efficient, and therefore should have won out in an evolutionary context. Apparently, if quantum computing is used at a couple points in DNA replication, 4 becomes more efficient than two, which isn't to say that it *does* it, but only that it might...

    Anthony

  23. Re:Quantum DNA Computing on A Primer On DNA Computing And Software Breeding · · Score: 1


    What a pity you didn't even read the article.

    and we simply don't have star trek level technology to support them

    Had you actually read the article, you would have discovered that some biologists suspect that mother nature may have already solved half these problems for us, as cells (esp in DNA replication) appear to use some pretty advanced quantum computing techniques already, and they do it at body temperature.

    Read it :) Interesting stuff, not the usual "well, if we somehow figure out how to break every existant law of physics, i can search databases in nlogn/x tries" quantum computing jibberish.

    Anthony

  24. Quantum DNA Computing on A Primer On DNA Computing And Software Breeding · · Score: 2

    Odd timing for this one, I just finished reading this article over at New Scientist on how DNA may use quantum computing techniques...

    Anthony

  25. on SecurityFocus Responds To ESR Column On OSS Security · · Score: 2

    I don't see why they didn't release a fixed dll

    I do :) You seen their source? Neither have I. You seen how amazingly shoddy, unreliable, and *fundamentally* unstable (unstable in that "there's a still a couple serious pointer errors in the pre-1990 code" way) their software is? What do you imagine their code looks like? How easy do you think it is for a bunch of people motivated only by salary to fix something obscure in a couple million lines of badly maintained code? How long you think that takes?

    I see why they don't just release a fixed .dll

    Anthony