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User: Delphinios

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Comments · 107

  1. Re:Let me be the first to say... on Unrefined "Musician" Gains a Global Audience · · Score: 1

    By "Playing" with his "Instruments" all the time!

  2. Re:Nope, my license lapsed on Do You Still Find Amateur Radio Interesting? · · Score: 1

    Why don't you ship those old radios over to me? :D
    I'll put them to good use!

    73's.

  3. Re:95% of all problems.... on Top 10 System Administrator Truths · · Score: 1

    ... only up till the line:

    Move guy shows up while I'm at lunch. No one told him which PC, so he leaves

  4. Re:write in advance, encrypt and email it on Dissidents Seeking Anonymous Web Solutions? · · Score: 1

    It's quite a bit better then "Absolutely No Privacy"...

  5. Re:So I guess we can assume.... on Revenge of the Sith a "Blood Bath" · · Score: 1

    You just made me shed a tear, remembering the old school days of SegFault.

    *whatever happened to "Naked and Petrified"?*

  6. Re:Hmm on Offshoring to a Ship in International Waters · · Score: 1

    Knot as fishy as Yaw's.

  7. Re:no way, jose on T-Moblile Cracker Pleads Guilty · · Score: 1

    They tried that with Westley, and it didn't work. The Stupid Interdimentional Sky God let him go.

    Damn Picard's extremely high Charisma Modifier!

  8. Re:Oh no! on EA's Profits Up, Workers Get Layoffs · · Score: 1

    Heh. Tell that to Google.

  9. Re:Computers are FREE on How Cheap Can A PC Be? · · Score: 1

    I wish I could mod you up further. This made me snarf soda through my nose.

  10. Re:Mod down that troll on Google Desktop Search Under Fire · · Score: 0

    Happened in Linux??

    You mean like "find" or "locate" or the notorious "grep"???

    Sure, we'd complain alright. "Why do we need this?"

  11. Re:I agree: FUCK Bush and Ashcroft on the 2'nd on Indymedia Servers Given Back · · Score: 1

    I'll get you next time, Gadget! Next time!

    *pounds his fist on his armchair*
    *cat hiss*

  12. Re:I agree: FUCK Bush and Ashcroft on the 2'nd on Indymedia Servers Given Back · · Score: 1

    You forget...

    The first party to invoke Goodwin's Law automatically loses!

    You lose.

  13. Re:Irresponsibility on Coffee is Addictive · · Score: 1

    "Troll isn't in the DSM, unfortunately.

  14. Re:people suck. on Kryptonite U-Lock Security Flaw · · Score: 0

    No...
    Just the regular kind.

  15. Why is it... on Wind Power Falls Under $0.01/kwh · · Score: 1, Insightful

    That the Flywheel is always forgotten?

  16. Re:Why linux isn't ready..... on Exploring Linux Desktop Myths · · Score: 1

    Skype for Linux

    And no, I don't have to compile it. Oh, and have you ever heard of RPM's or packages?

    Some windows programs one has to *gasp* download additional software for it to work! (see videos, or anything that requires VBRUN DLL's)

    And finally, the parent wasn't arguing about compiling.. the post was arguing about software availability for linux flavors.

    Read before you Reply, Moron.

  17. Re:Why linux isn't ready..... on Exploring Linux Desktop Myths · · Score: 1

    How many times has a windows 2000 user not been able to run XP software?

    Just TRY to find a windows 9x copy of Skype! Or a Win95 version of X.popular.software.

    FUD indeed.

  18. Re:And since current desktops are not vector based on 140" Monitor Demonstration At Purdue · · Score: 1

    ...
    Then write it like everyone else does in the OSS community?

  19. Re:Sold out for a buck on Parody or Satire? Threat To Sue JibJab · · Score: 1

    They made a considerable amount of political Cartoons in WWII.

    "Der fuhur's Face" for an example. Look it up.

  20. Re:Security vs Liberty. on 1984 Comes To Boston · · Score: 1

    I apologise, then if that was your intention. I can agree to disagree and leave it at that. And so I shall.

  21. Re:Security vs Liberty. on 1984 Comes To Boston · · Score: 1

    ... Roughly translated to "I'm right, you're Wrong, because I say so. Nya-nya-nya".

    I thought the idea of a hypothesys was to prove them wrong? Which, you havn't even tried to do, instead attacking the method in which I present my theory.

    I have proposed my theory and defended the logic as well as the method I used to structure my argument.

    You quip about my logic professor? Your entire debate team must have been laughing at you. Try to show evidence against my argument. Prove me wrong. At least give credible reason why my argument is unsound, other then unbacked opinions and unsourced definitions.

  22. Re:Security vs Liberty. on 1984 Comes To Boston · · Score: 1

    While you have gotten the main point of my argument, a few notes I feel I should point out.

    On steps 4, 5, and 6, these are not government-mandated. They are voluntary "benifits" to people being used to constant survailance. Hence, the Habituation part of my argument.

    Back to the current thread:

    There are more then a few definitions of a "Slippery Slope", most of which do not require inevitability, but only probability.

    A link to support my statements:

    Slippery Slope Definition and Discussion

    As far as I can tell, my definition and it's application were logical and demonstrated enough of a direct path from one event to the next, that it does not turn my slippery slope argument into a fallacy. Had I continued on and added "The law would easially be mended to require the cameras in the home", then I would have promptly lost the argument, as there is no logical reason that they would be so. Many things are legislated for businesses that are not required in the home. Hence, my logic would falter at that point.

    I will admit, freely, that (like Godwin's Law) the slippery slope is so misused that it's lost most of it's credability in rational debate. I do, however, feel that I applied it in appropriate context, backed with enough logic, to support my claims.

  23. Re:Security vs Liberty. on 1984 Comes To Boston · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but that page did nothing to prove it's point. It simply listed a few examples of taking the "Slippery Slope" concept to an extreme. A slippery slope is simply a listing of probibal outcomes of a decision. For a proper Slippery Slope hypothesis, each layer of the gradient must be a very probibal outcome of the prior layer.

    For example...
    Proper Slippery Slope: "If the government can request ID if they suspect a crime today, tomorrow they will be able to demand you carry ID on you at all times."

    Logically, it's not a large leap. It has evidence to support it (The PATRIOT act wouldn't have passed 20 years ago, and most of it was removing restrictions on powers the police and government already had). It's an effective argument against allowing police to demand ID.

    Bad Slippery Slope: "If you change the restrictions that this town has put on cutting down old-growth trees to make way for development, it will lead to widespread deforistation of our natural parks, the resuming of international whaling operations, and the removal of EPA restrictions on noxious emissions. "

    This is absurd, has no facts to stand behind it, and plays entirely on emotion and people's natural reactionary nature.

    I hope this clears up why the "slippery slope" argument is not a logical fallacy. It can become one if used improperly. Then again, most debate methods can become invalidated when taken to an extreme.

  24. Re:Who will watch the Watchmen? on 1984 Comes To Boston · · Score: 1

    Amusingly, I posted this very same comment 5 mins ago. Hooray for being on the same wavelength.

  25. Re:Security vs Liberty. on 1984 Comes To Boston · · Score: 1

    Are you familiar with the concept of a "slippery slope" or the psychological term "Habituation". You don't just go out and install Big Brother...

    You start with a camera here, and a camera there. Then you point out how much good it's done and "wasn't that worth a little bit of liberty"? then you install more, and later add the face recognition software, then you put the cameras in old people's homes "for their protection", and then sell them to parents to make sure their billy isn't going to burn down the house. Better, you sell Subscriptions for this "Service". Once it's common place, you legislate these being required for buisnesses "To Ensure children aren't buying alcohol/cigarettes/crack" or to "Allow emergency services to asses the situation before arrival" or similiar.

    It's not complete 1984, but it's close enough to make one wince, and it's less "tinfoil hat" then you'd think. Don't believe me? Try to live without a social security or a driver's license number. Live a single month without any form of government issued ID.

    A few other issues... Who owns the images caught on CCTV? What if someone happened to see Robin Williams spill his drink on a hapless store clerk? would it be illegal to disclose those images to the public? Should it be?

    I read about a novel proposition a while back. An interesting idea in which there are cameras everywhere 9save for private residences). They are monitored by the government, but not exclusivly. Any citizen can connect to those cameras and monitor any of them at any time.

    The answer to "Who Watches the Watchers" is quite simply, "The Watched".