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User: rahvin112

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  1. Re:So they walk up to the fence and talk on Swedish Investigators Attempt Assange Interview; Wikileaks Makes Major Release · · Score: 1

    Paperwork? What fucking paperwork? Are the Ecuadorans Volgons?

    Jesus christ, it's pretty simple. Your ambassador asks their ambassador for permission. Do you honestly think Ecuador has a form for "Interview a someone hiding in our embassy"? You people will believe anything. "they didn't fill out the right paperwork" as if that's a real excuse.

  2. Re:Apples to Jupiter comparison on Swedish Investigators Attempt Assange Interview; Wikileaks Makes Major Release · · Score: 1

    He fucked a child, barely a teenager. I could forgive it if she's been 16, but not a 13 year old. The victim in this case just wants everyone to leave her alone about it. But Polanski should be in jail. The plea agreement was a get out of jail card for a connected, well respected film maker. The plea was not justice. Drugging and raping a 13 year old will get anyone else sent to jail for 20 years and put on the sex offender list for the rest of their life. He should be in jail.

  3. Re:Nothing says open source like stylish pants on Docker and CoreOS Join Together For Open Container Project At Linux Foundation · · Score: 1

    That would only be true if you wear your pants around your nipples. Either that your have such a small penis that you can't get it out without your pants around your ankles.

  4. Re:Actually it doesn't matter on IMAX Tries To Censor Ars Technica Over SteamVR Comparison · · Score: 1

    They have no legal right to defend it's use when that use is as it has been done by Ars. This is textbook fair use.

    I personally would have replied with a big FU, and then proceeded to Streisand them into submission.

  5. Re:Amen brother! on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Search Engines Left That Don't Try To Think For Me? · · Score: 4, Informative

    I bet google spends millions every single year just combating the SEO and other crap that goes on with Search. They can't direct term search or the results would immediately be polluted beyond use by SEO. Google has had to adapt to these changes.

  6. Re:Who the fuck would use something like that? on LastPass Reporting a Security Breach, Including Authentication Hashes and Salts · · Score: 2, Informative

    By centralizing all the passwords they are a prime target for infiltration. The hackers knew that by taking this one business they would potentially gain access to millions of websites. In a normal attack they have no idea if they will get good data, with LastPass they couldn't miss. That then makes them one of the most high profile targets on the internet and they'd need NSA level security to keep people out. I little internet company with world class security? I don't think so, even Google got hacked with a spear fishing attack.

    I agree with the other posters, you'd have to be nuts to use LastPass for anything that was tied to financial transactions. And just even the secondary effects could be tremendous now that they have login information (depending on the number of websites the last pass information could give them all kinds of information out accounts and names/emails used making the hacking significantly easier).

  7. Re:Which Woman Did They Check? on CDC: Americans Getting Heavier, Average Woman Weighs As Much As 1960s Man · · Score: 1

    Not likely, the 1960's guy was completely in the closet. He did his dick sucking private and when he put his wife's clothes on he made sure she wasn't around.

  8. Re:Comparing apples to miniature oranges on CDC: Americans Getting Heavier, Average Woman Weighs As Much As 1960s Man · · Score: 1

    I know you didn't read the fucking post you were replying to but the OP pointed out that people have actually increased in height 2 inches, not one as claimed in the summary.

  9. Waranteed Life of 25 years. on Solar Power Capacity Installs Surpass Wind and Coal For Second Year · · Score: 1

    Warranteed Life of 25 years. Panels have no known life span, manufacturers warantee that voltage levels will remain above a certain percent of their rated value within a 25 year period. Recent panels have been tested with a drop of less than 0.5watts per year resulting in panels that are still outputting 90+% of their rated wattage at the 25 year life.

    The solar panels that Carter put on the whitehouse that Bush took down were still generating power when they were taken down, about 40 years later.

  10. Re:faulty premise on Xilinx and AMD: an Inevitable Match? · · Score: 1

    You seem to forget that the $1Billion dollar settlement wasn't 10% of what it Intel's shenanigans cost AMD.

    You also seem to forget that the agreement was made public and is available on the internet. Not only that but it's quoted elsewhere in this very post including linked to the source.

  11. Re:faulty premise on Xilinx and AMD: an Inevitable Match? · · Score: 1

    The agreement was made public, or at least a copy of it. It's linked to an quoted at other places in this post and it is exactly as I've said. AMD is purchased and AMD looses it's copyright license to x86 while Intel will only lose their copyright license to x64 if they are acquired.

    The government won't do anything about a contractual dispute between Intel and AMD. Nothing at all. Intel has sufficient evidence in their possession to make the case to any jury that they are facing broad competition from the ARM ecosystem and would spank the Government if they were stupid enough to bring an anti-trust action against Intel. This isn't Europe, the government can't do squat without taking Intel to court.

  12. Re:faulty premise on Xilinx and AMD: an Inevitable Match? · · Score: 1

    X64 is an extension of the x86 instruction set which is copyrighted by Intel. In other words it's a derivative that Intel has control over through their copyright on the x86 instruction set. The value of x64 is entirely dependent on the x86 copyright that Intel holds so it's worthless to anyone else without a license for x86 from Intel. I have no doubt that the contract that allows AMD to use the x86 instruction set copyright includes clauses that will protect Intel and their use of the derivative x64 in the event AMD breaches the agreement by being acquired.

    I like AMD but the fact is they can't be purchased because if they are their primary product is lost. You people are living in a fantasy world if you think they could be. The contract that allows AMD to use the x86 copyright is explicit that those rights are lost when the company is acquired. Hell the only other real consumer x86 license is held by VIA which had acquired Centuar and Intel sued them claiming they breached the no purchase agreement. The only reason they weren't terminated is that VIA held a couple key patents that Intel needed so they gave them a 10 year contract extension. But now that Intel is focused on power use VIA's entire market segment has been lost and they haven't developed a new processor since 2011.

    There is a chance Intel will loan AMD money to keep them limping along so they avoid anti-trust review but I doubt it highly these days. Intel has a legitimate argument these days that ARM and other processors now provide adequate competition even though Intel still mostly controls the PC segment they are non-existent in the portable tablet/phone category which ships far more CPU's. In fact ARM has begun to harm Intel's margins which is a key sign of competition. The wintel monopoly was crushed by Linux.

    If AMD runs out of money and can't get an influx of cash they will likely see much of their business lost and simply go out of business.

  13. Re:faulty premise on Xilinx and AMD: an Inevitable Match? · · Score: 3, Informative

    Intel's legal agreement with AMD when the original license expired was that AMD could continue using x86 and certain systems (excluded all chipset work and any newly developed tech) but was under the condition that if AMD is ever sold the x86 license goes bye bye. This is a contractual agreement and only the US could stop it and they won't. AMD can't be sold with the x86 license in-tact. Intel would be ecstatic about such a turn of events because they could kill the AMD x86 competition without an iota of government intervention.

    The OP you replied to is exactly right, AMD can't be bought. Any speculation that AMD could be purchased by anyone is just garbage. AMD will either survive or it will die, no one outside can buy them without the loss of their primary product (which would make them worthless to buy).

  14. Re:Charges? on Stormtrooper Arrested · · Score: 1

    Hah. The prosecutor threatens to prosecute for prison time then offers a plea deal for a misdemeanor charge.

    You obviously don't know how prosecutors work.

  15. Re: Gun Rights on Stormtrooper Arrested · · Score: 1

    Gun safety isn't that hard. You don't point the gun at anything you don't want to kill, regardless of whether you think it's loaded or not. Guns are designed to kill things, that purpose so you don't point them at things you don't intend to kill.

    I still have a reaction of moving the gun if someone walks in front of the barrel when I'm cleaning it (ie no firing pin and a cleaning stick halfway down the barrel). Needless to say this rule was pretty effectively ingrained into my consciousness when I was learning to shoot at 12 years old.

  16. Re:And 4) on NOAA: Global Warming 'Pause' Never Happened · · Score: 1

    I never said where the ideal zone moved would be a good place to grow things. In fact I've said exactly the opposite in the past. Ideal crop zones are determined by soil quality and moisture levels but moisture levels is determined by location and climate, in the past these zones have been directly above/below the tropic equatorial lines. Global climate change will change that relationship and likely move them further north while the desert zones currently on the tropics migrate north as well. As you note the soils in the north are poor and likely will not lead to good crop production.

    But I strongly disagree humanity will go extinct or turn to a mad max type world. The climate will change and humanity will adapt, after some debilitating wars have appropriately thinned the population to the new levels the planet can support. The chances these wars will be nuclear is very small, more likely the poorer nations with large populations surpluses will be destroyed by famine and civil war along with a few nation-state wars mostly between the poorer nations fighting over limited food and supplies. Most of the nuclear armed states are far enough north that the change in crop zones more than likely won't move them out of the country.

    This of course assumes we can contain the warming to a few degree's C. If we allow the warming to reach double digits than there will be catastrophic changes. The fact is that wind and solar power are now the cheapest power with small subsidies. In no time at all they will be significantly cheaper than even the cheapest dirtiest coal without any subsidy whatsover. This is remaking the power industry right now. US carbon emissions are falling even with increased power consumption because of this. Within 50 years I expect that the bulk of all power generated in the developed world will be by renewables. And with the power generated so cheap the developed world will be able to completely skip the dirty industrialization phase.

  17. Re:And 4) on NOAA: Global Warming 'Pause' Never Happened · · Score: 1

    While humans have lived on this earth the planet through all of our history including an ice age or two the human species has seen a planet with between 240-260ppm of CO2. The industrial revolution and the subsequent mass burning of fossil fuels has seen that level rise to 400ppm. Humanity up until this point has never experienced a planet with this much CO2 in the atmosphere. That's reason enough to be scared.

    IMO, the concern about climate change is what it will lead to, rising sea levels will displace millions. Entire nations are going to disappear. What do we do with all the people? Let them live with you? It's also going to result in dramatic changes in rainfall, potentially moving fertile crop zones hundreds of miles. The food crops we have created have also never seen a planet with this much C02. Some may go extinct due to insects or others threats that will thrive in the warmer planet. But that's ok right, you are ready to forgo food right?

  18. Re:Labour laws on Mandriva CEO: Employee Lawsuits Put Us Out of Business · · Score: 1

    Secured creditors are actually pretty rarely the majority or even a large portion of corporate debt. That's a debt that's secured against a specific asset. Most corporate debt, particularly for a company like Mandriva is against future earnings which is unsecured. Now the company might have a debt or two that's secured against some asset, say a debt for the copiers that's secured by the copiers themselves or some such but the amount of secured debt is generally going to be very low for a services company like Mandriva. And the only people in front of employees are the secured creditors who basically seize the asset they had secured, the employees stand in front of everyone else.

    Unless something hokey is going on the employees that sued will get paid.

  19. Re:Labour laws on Mandriva CEO: Employee Lawsuits Put Us Out of Business · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Mandriva marketed their "Frenchness" pretty heavily. For the CEO to get up and lambast the same political system he was using as marketing to win business just means he's a dick and I hope some of the money those employee's got comes out of his own pocket.

  20. Re:His letter on Silk Road Founder Ross Ulbricht Sentenced To Life In Prison · · Score: 1

    You aren't seeing how a harsh sentence helps the political career of the prosecutor and judge. It's called tough on crime. There are a lot of people, particularly black men, in jail for very long times so someone could be seen as tough on crime while a woman that did the same thing never even went to jail.

  21. Re:outrageous on Silk Road Founder Ross Ulbricht Sentenced To Life In Prison · · Score: 1

    What a lovely post. Depicts everything that is wrong with the war on drugs.

    You just equated drug use by consenting adults to child pornography, terrorism, slavery, mass murder and war crimes. Great job there! You forgot to scream think of the children at the end. Though I do give you bonus points for the betterment of humanity bullshit at the bottom, as if YOU get to decide what betters humanity.

  22. Re:outrageous on Silk Road Founder Ross Ulbricht Sentenced To Life In Prison · · Score: 3, Interesting

    According to the sourced wiki article the use of pot went up a small amount while all the harder drugs saw measurable drops in use. They are also probably getting much more reliable statistics now that people don't need to lie.

  23. I don't buy that Audio can't be used. on Why Detecting Drones Is a Tough Gig · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just don't buy that audio can't be used. With an array of high quality microphones spread over an area fed into a software radio and some pretty hefty computing power you should be able to look for the rhythmic audio that your typical copter type drones will generate. Because even if they change the size and shape of the rotors all that does is change the frequency not the amplitudes you will see from the rhythmic action.

    With some proper math and the right computing power you should be able to identify drones pretty rapidly with fourier analysis and the same microphone array could use Doppler effects to calculate position, and the directional vector. Combine this with some systems to double check such as heat, RF and conventional high band doppler radar and you should have a system that will get 99% of the drones and even provide targeting to a shoot down type system.

    The key here is you need some pretty dam good microphones spread over a pretty large area feeding into a pretty massive computer array. It wouldn't be cheap or easy. The easy thing is use a doppler radar system that cross-checks it against RF emissions to eliminate birds. But IMO the best system would use all three, high band doppler radar, RF emissions and audio (and maybe even heat). With three cross checks you should be able to get pretty good accuracy.

  24. Re:I hate fear mongering... on Why Detecting Drones Is a Tough Gig · · Score: 1

    The 2lbs would kill you dropped 10' if and only if the 2lbs is relatively compact dense, durable material like say a steel ball, if that 2 pounds is spread over 1 square foot and made of plastic it's probably not going to kill you or even put you in the hospital (though you may end up with a concussion).

    Size and shape matter quite a bit in such a discussion and you can't talk about that without also talking about the accuracy of dropping such an object because a 2lb steel ball isn't going to be that big and trying to land that right on someone's head with a radio controlled drone is going to be pretty fucking hard even without wind.

  25. Re:This was a 'Show Trial' at best... on Murder Accusations Hang Over Silk Road Boss Ulbricht's Sentencing · · Score: 2

    They KNEW he was DPR because he solicited advertisements for the site in various places including USENET using traceable accounts when he set it up. How they found the server is an open question but not really an issue given the other evidence they already had including the seized laptop. They probably had him under surveillance for months.

    They had a lot of evidence he was DPR and he's admitted it in filing since. Regardless of his trial arguments that he wasn't running the site anymore there was plenty of evidence he was.

    How they found the server and copied it before they got him is an open question but it's probably a very small piece of evidence for how they got him. They didn't get him by getting the server, they got him the old fashioned way. Even if the server was gotten through NSA help it wouldn't have impacted the conviction. My bet is that they did something like they did with DPR 2.0, they infiltrated or compromised the site enough to get it to install a homing beacon and reveal it's true location.

    DPR 2.0 was more careful and couldn't be tied as easily so they infiltrated the sites support and developed enough information to identify him. The problem with these sites is that to really make them function you need to use javascript and running javascript on TOR is a big no no. It's right in basic warnings they give you when you download TOR that you should under no circumstance allow javascript to run because it can do a lot of things that will identify you. All the feds had to do with Silkroad 1 and 2 was hack in enough to get a rouge script running that would identify the server and anyone that connected to it.

    Doing TOR security properly isn't trivial, it's actually quite hard. And building a secure website is even harder when it has to be secure against ever sending data out over the general internet. On top of that you can't use JS or allow any of it to run and you have to watch security like a hawk because if your security isn't PERFECT you are done. Perfect security is very very hard.