Whether or not the non-capitalization is accurate is beside the point. If one of the most laggard, lame, and clueless group of people - journalists - have decided that the internet or web is no longer new, and therefore no longer "cool", then the spirit of the media-manufactured "Strange New World of the Internet" from Time's July 25, 1994 cover is officially dead. There can be no more doubt that browsing the web has the same level of awe and sophistication as a meth-addled trailer parker watching Perry Mason reruns at two in the afternoon. This is more or less the death knell of any pretense that being on the web instead of the teevee is somehow better.
If SPE fires talented people with a long tenure of service and puts them at risk of homelessness because reasons, then yes, I would say they probably are a bad company to work for, which is why I will not purchase any of SPE's products ever again. I will also favor changes in policies to give workers who are fulfilling their duties in the private sector more (not absolute) job security through concrete actions via lobbying officials at opportune moments and contributing capital to political movements that align with this goal.
It does not matter what I post on Slashdot. It matters (to a small degree) what I do off of Slashdot.
Any productive conversation about this has been since exhausted. This thread is now officially a waste of anyone's time; please leave and salvage the rest of your day. Thank you.
America's Army was released free to the public. I would imagine this game would be as well, coming from the Ministry of Communications (which strangely does not have a website).
Cuba itself just hosted on IP conference. Here's the program, and here's a snippet of it:
Tuesday, March 19, 2013 9:05 - 10:30 Challenges of Protecting Intellectual Property on Social Networks (Software Industry) Rafael Ortín, Marquez, Henriquez, Ortin & Valedon, Slobodan Petosevic, Petosevic, Belgium
This says nothing about Cuban intellectual property law, but it indicates that they at least host conferences where foreigners talk about how software IP is a thing that needs protecting. If Cuban programming takes off as a commercial industry, will there be penalties for copyright infringement? We'll probably know when those sort of cases start coming up in Cuban courts (if they ever do). Until then, I have no idea.
FWIW, Ho died in 1969, six years before the fall of Saigon, but that might not stop some game designer from having a player assume his likeness in a similar game anyway.
Indeed. When everyone expects human greed and disregard for the public good to rule businesses, then businesses will meet that expectation. Public policy is supposed to be a check on that, but the first line of defense consists of decision-makers in business remembering back to some very basic lessons they were taught in the home and in kindergarten; the "sharing is good" and "be nice to others who aren't like you" kind.
Well then, I guess we in the States will just repeal the minimum wage, worker's comp, overtime pay, OSHA, and a whole host of policies that make it more expensive to hire people. We apparently haven't raced to the bottom quite fast enough. Why, it's a wonder we don't have 30% unemployment if what you're saying is correct.
Oh no, it's not the extreme boom-and-bust cycle unleashed by inadequately regulated finance capitalism or the concentration of wealth into too few hands that caused unemployment. No, it just happens to always be those policies that assist the average worker. Gee, what a convenient coincidence.
That's all well and good for tools, but I haven't found any manufacturers of smartphones that aren't also sweatshops. Until that changes, I'm proudly going without one and letting the hypocrites know that. Then hopefully they'll feel enough shame so that they'll do one of two things:
1) Never complain about sweatshops ever again because they're complicit in it and don't want to be hypocrites. Then they'll go on to the afterlife and have to answer to whatever diety(ies) exist on why they just HAD to have that iPhone when they knew full well why it was so cheap. Then they'll hem, haw, and stutter because they've been had, and then the diety(ies) will shake their head(s) and kick them back down to earth for a do-over because their ethics were lacking and maybe, just maybe, they'll get it right the next time. While emotionally satisfying, this is not my optimal outcome.
2) Actually stop buying smartphones and other products made in exploitative conditions and demand that manufacturers clean up their act. Then they'll buck up and pay a higher price tag, and the workers will have a better life. Oh, the consumers will complain about the prices, and they'll resent the fact that they can't buy every shiny new gadget on the shelf now, but they'll have done the right thing in the end.
I'm still waiting for an iPhone manufacturer that pays its workers a decent wage and respects meaningful safety standards. I'm willing to pay an extra $100+ for my iPhone to not have a guilty conscience. C'mon invisible hand, supply my demand already.
What in the world would giving out free movie tickets to a 12-year-old at my house prove, other than I like giving out movie tickets? You need more details in your example to make a guilty verdict likely; say, "You have to come inside my bedroom to get them, while I'm in my underwear, and be sure to wear something low-cut and revealing." Then we can start talking about establishing intent to facilitate commission of an offense without actually uttering the magic words, "Let's have sex!"
Thank you for informing us of your views on the relationship of natural selection to social organization. Now kindly answer the poster's question on why laws regarding children have changed so drastically in the last 10 years. Otherwise your comment is irrelevant.
So can you guarantee that I'm not going to go to jail if I cross into Canada because I talked with a Canadian 13-year-old about the anime One Piece online with no intent to have sex with them whatsoever? Because I'm thinking of emigrating to Canada, and they're supposed to be the nice and sensible country compared to the States.
Actually, most states have an age of consent of 16, no matter how old the other party is. Moreover, nude photos of anyone of any age are not illegal - they have to be sexually explicit as a precondition for a charge of the photos being child pornography.
Don't bring that up too often, or else the morality police will get legislatures to raise the age of consent to resolve this contradiction. And you think the court dockets are clogged now...
Yes, you've said that. What I am asking is, have they not thought of the increasing odds of violent retribution as the number of people they sue increases? Do they not care that eventually they will sue someone who might kill them, that's what my concern is.
So ahh, you think they'll let up when they finally get around to suing the crazy guy who would love nothing better than to make a point by bursting in their office Columbine-style and ending his rampage with a suicide? Because that has to happen eventually, given the sheer odds. Or they might just hire armed guards and secure the building afterwards. Point being, they can't do this forever without some sort of repercussions, and they have to have thought of this.
Whether or not the non-capitalization is accurate is beside the point. If one of the most laggard, lame, and clueless group of people - journalists - have decided that the internet or web is no longer new, and therefore no longer "cool", then the spirit of the media-manufactured "Strange New World of the Internet" from Time's July 25, 1994 cover is officially dead. There can be no more doubt that browsing the web has the same level of awe and sophistication as a meth-addled trailer parker watching Perry Mason reruns at two in the afternoon. This is more or less the death knell of any pretense that being on the web instead of the teevee is somehow better.
If SPE fires talented people with a long tenure of service and puts them at risk of homelessness because reasons, then yes, I would say they probably are a bad company to work for, which is why I will not purchase any of SPE's products ever again. I will also favor changes in policies to give workers who are fulfilling their duties in the private sector more (not absolute) job security through concrete actions via lobbying officials at opportune moments and contributing capital to political movements that align with this goal.
It does not matter what I post on Slashdot. It matters (to a small degree) what I do off of Slashdot.
Thanks for the links.
Any productive conversation about this has been since exhausted. This thread is now officially a waste of anyone's time; please leave and salvage the rest of your day. Thank you.
America's Army was released free to the public. I would imagine this game would be as well, coming from the Ministry of Communications (which strangely does not have a website).
Cuba itself just hosted on IP conference. Here's the program, and here's a snippet of it:
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
9:05 - 10:30
Challenges of Protecting Intellectual Property on Social Networks (Software Industry)
Rafael Ortín, Marquez, Henriquez, Ortin & Valedon,
Slobodan Petosevic, Petosevic, Belgium
This says nothing about Cuban intellectual property law, but it indicates that they at least host conferences where foreigners talk about how software IP is a thing that needs protecting. If Cuban programming takes off as a commercial industry, will there be penalties for copyright infringement? We'll probably know when those sort of cases start coming up in Cuban courts (if they ever do). Until then, I have no idea.
FWIW, Ho died in 1969, six years before the fall of Saigon, but that might not stop some game designer from having a player assume his likeness in a similar game anyway.
Indeed. When everyone expects human greed and disregard for the public good to rule businesses, then businesses will meet that expectation. Public policy is supposed to be a check on that, but the first line of defense consists of decision-makers in business remembering back to some very basic lessons they were taught in the home and in kindergarten; the "sharing is good" and "be nice to others who aren't like you" kind.
Well then, I guess we in the States will just repeal the minimum wage, worker's comp, overtime pay, OSHA, and a whole host of policies that make it more expensive to hire people. We apparently haven't raced to the bottom quite fast enough. Why, it's a wonder we don't have 30% unemployment if what you're saying is correct.
Oh no, it's not the extreme boom-and-bust cycle unleashed by inadequately regulated finance capitalism or the concentration of wealth into too few hands that caused unemployment. No, it just happens to always be those policies that assist the average worker. Gee, what a convenient coincidence.
Whatever they are, they're not what Foxconn's offering.
That's all well and good for tools, but I haven't found any manufacturers of smartphones that aren't also sweatshops. Until that changes, I'm proudly going without one and letting the hypocrites know that. Then hopefully they'll feel enough shame so that they'll do one of two things:
1) Never complain about sweatshops ever again because they're complicit in it and don't want to be hypocrites. Then they'll go on to the afterlife and have to answer to whatever diety(ies) exist on why they just HAD to have that iPhone when they knew full well why it was so cheap. Then they'll hem, haw, and stutter because they've been had, and then the diety(ies) will shake their head(s) and kick them back down to earth for a do-over because their ethics were lacking and maybe, just maybe, they'll get it right the next time. While emotionally satisfying, this is not my optimal outcome.
2) Actually stop buying smartphones and other products made in exploitative conditions and demand that manufacturers clean up their act. Then they'll buck up and pay a higher price tag, and the workers will have a better life. Oh, the consumers will complain about the prices, and they'll resent the fact that they can't buy every shiny new gadget on the shelf now, but they'll have done the right thing in the end.
Then the thousands of iPhone buyers complaining about bad working conditions need to put up or shut up. Human rights ain't cheap, people.
I'm still waiting for an iPhone manufacturer that pays its workers a decent wage and respects meaningful safety standards. I'm willing to pay an extra $100+ for my iPhone to not have a guilty conscience. C'mon invisible hand, supply my demand already.
Guys, he's from Arizona, so of course he's going to post stupid Internet tough guy comments full of self-entitled classism. Ignore him.
*psst* I think he's trying to troll us by being completely unreasonable in his replies. Common tactic, really.
What in the world would giving out free movie tickets to a 12-year-old at my house prove, other than I like giving out movie tickets? You need more details in your example to make a guilty verdict likely; say, "You have to come inside my bedroom to get them, while I'm in my underwear, and be sure to wear something low-cut and revealing." Then we can start talking about establishing intent to facilitate commission of an offense without actually uttering the magic words, "Let's have sex!"
Thank you for informing us of your views on the relationship of natural selection to social organization. Now kindly answer the poster's question on why laws regarding children have changed so drastically in the last 10 years. Otherwise your comment is irrelevant.
So can you guarantee that I'm not going to go to jail if I cross into Canada because I talked with a Canadian 13-year-old about the anime One Piece online with no intent to have sex with them whatsoever? Because I'm thinking of emigrating to Canada, and they're supposed to be the nice and sensible country compared to the States.
Actually, most states have an age of consent of 16, no matter how old the other party is. Moreover, nude photos of anyone of any age are not illegal - they have to be sexually explicit as a precondition for a charge of the photos being child pornography.
Don't bring that up too often, or else the morality police will get legislatures to raise the age of consent to resolve this contradiction. And you think the court dockets are clogged now...
If China gives us any trouble, we'll just unleash a cadre of jilted astronauts with pepper spray and mallets. Problem solved!
Already taken.
How will this affect Sailor Pluto?
Yes, you've said that. What I am asking is, have they not thought of the increasing odds of violent retribution as the number of people they sue increases? Do they not care that eventually they will sue someone who might kill them, that's what my concern is.
So ahh, you think they'll let up when they finally get around to suing the crazy guy who would love nothing better than to make a point by bursting in their office Columbine-style and ending his rampage with a suicide? Because that has to happen eventually, given the sheer odds. Or they might just hire armed guards and secure the building afterwards. Point being, they can't do this forever without some sort of repercussions, and they have to have thought of this.
Only lazy and intellectually dishonest people do things that are morally/ethically/idealistically wrong and blame it on "the real world".
This is now part of my sig on another message board; thank you, sir/ma'am.
Of course - he's a huge anime fan and co-designed Animefu.com as well. I used that link as an "in" to help me get the story published.