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User: msobkow

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  1. Re:CloudFlare *threatened* to disconnect the proxy on Pirate Bay Blockade Censors CloudFlare Customers · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. When you do business in a country, you are bound by their laws.

    Open your fucking eyes -- every nation on this fucking planet is insisting on that except the god damned united jackboots of 'murika.

  2. Re:The same as ever: Android on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Most Stable Smartphones These Days? · · Score: 0

    Sad to say, but my Ubuntu 14.04.2 box crashes on X-Server issues at least once a week, while my Windows 7 laptop only gets rebooted for the monthly Tuesday updates. That didn't used to be the case, but times, they have changed.

  3. Re:The same as ever: Android on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Most Stable Smartphones These Days? · · Score: 1

    Gee, I didn't know you had to own something in order to test drive it in order to decide whether you like it, or to hear from friends and relatives about their experience with their devices.

    Shame on me. Not spending thousands upon thousands of dollars buying each and every device so I can test it out personally.

    :P :P :P

  4. Re:The same as ever: Android on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Most Stable Smartphones These Days? · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Heh. Actually, I hate all smart phones equally. I have absolutely no desire for a digital leash and tracking system. If I'm not home, leave a message. Rather than looking up restaurants on a phone, I decide where I'm going to eat before I leave the house and (shock of shocks!) look up directions on how to get there before I start travelling.

    For someone who has no computer at home, I can understand the appeal of combining phone/internet/music player/camera rather than buying separate devices, but if you've already got those devices, there isn't much benefit to a "smart" phone.

  5. Re:The same as ever: Android on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Most Stable Smartphones These Days? · · Score: -1, Troll

    Gee, even if you pay a complement to Apple about their marketing campaign you get modded down by the fanbois... :P :P :P *LMAO*

  6. The same as ever: Android on Ask Slashdot: What Are the Most Stable Smartphones These Days? · · Score: 0, Troll

    Android has always been the superior technology. Why else do you think it has more global market share than Apple could ever dream about?

    Apple's products are fanboi toys that put style over substance, brand recognition over quality, and which rely on artificially inflated prices to maintain the illusion of being "better quality."

    There is nothing about any Apple product I have ever seen that justifies the price. It's just one big, grand fleecing of a gullible public by the best marketing campaign known to mankind.

  7. Re:Inept, or the plan? on Pirate Bay Blockade Censors CloudFlare Customers · · Score: 1

    As a citizen of the world and not the US, it disturbs me greatly that US companies insist on providing services that are illegal to other countries without performing the due-diligence of geo-blocking nations that have deemed those services illegal, forcing them to sweep up multiple domains through crude IP blocking approaches.

    If you wouldn't be allowed to run a business/service from within a nation, why should you be allowed to do so by simply hosting it somewhere else? Your "service" is an illegal immigrant working without proper paperwork or meeting visa requirements, or even the basic tenets of legality in the customer nation.

    But, hey, why should I expect an American to understand that they DO NOT RULE THE WORLD!?!?!?!

  8. Re:CloudFlare *threatened* to disconnect the proxy on Pirate Bay Blockade Censors CloudFlare Customers · · Score: 1

    WTF are you on about?

    CloudFlare should be blocking access to the services based on the querying IP range, the same way that other sites perform GeoBlocking. It is the responsiblity of ANY company to comply with the law where they are servicing a customer base. Just because CloudFlare isn't a UK company doesn't mean it isn't to subject to UK law when servicing clients from that part of the world.

    And if the service in question is deemed illegal, they have to be dropped or blocked. Seeing as CloudFlare appears too god damned lazy to bother with geo-blocking, they should be dropping the customer providing the service.

    Period.

    Only the fucking Americans think their law applies to the whole world.

  9. Re:aka "A stock pumper" on Oculus Rift: 2015 Launch Unlikely, But Not Impossible · · Score: 1

    Oh, I know Facebook bought them out. Which leaves me wondering *why* someone would try to "pump" the stock.

    I mean, seriously, what's the point of crying out "it could still happen!" when everyone is saying it's unlikely at best?

    *shrug* Maybe the analyst is a hard-core gamer with a bad case of wishful thinking.

    Kind of like the "Duke Nuke'em Forever" fans were. :P

  10. Re:CloudFlare *threatened* to disconnect the proxy on Pirate Bay Blockade Censors CloudFlare Customers · · Score: 1

    They could always provide server-side blocking so that the ISPs in the restricting country (UK in this case) couldn't access the blocked service.

    The only reason broad and far-reaching service blocks are happening is that CloudFlare refuses to co-operate with the UK on the issue, forcing them to do the blocking at the ISP level.

    Or are you saying that one should be free to provide illegal services to a nation over their own objections purely for one's own profit and convenience?

    Cloud providers are not at the sole behest of the hosting nation's laws -- they have to consider where the customers of those services are as well. ONLY AMERICANS THINK OTHERWISE.

  11. Re:CloudFlare *threatened* to disconnect the proxy on Pirate Bay Blockade Censors CloudFlare Customers · · Score: 1

    Do you really believe that if North Korea were to lose access to the internet CloudFlare would be wringing their hands about "all" the customers that couldn't access other services they host?

  12. aka "A stock pumper" on Oculus Rift: 2015 Launch Unlikely, But Not Impossible · · Score: 2

    Whenever some "analyst" says something like a release "isn't impossible", the only reason I can think of for saying such a think is a "pump and dump" stock scheme. :(

  13. CloudFlare *threatened* to disconnect the proxy on Pirate Bay Blockade Censors CloudFlare Customers · · Score: 0

    If CloudFlare is so concerned about it's other customers, it would have just disconnected the proxy's services and applied to have the blockade removed, not "threatened" to disconnect the proxy.

    Any reputable cloud provider would disconnect any of their customers deemed to be hosting illegal content.

    But no, they're going to strand their other customers rather than strike down the one customer that is actually causing the problem in order to score "political points" about ISP responsibility.

    Feh. Whether you feel that "piracy" is wrong or not, it's clear that if the legal system is mandating the blockade of one of your customer's services, you should be getting rid of that customer, not whinging about how the blockade is affecting your other users.

  14. Re:Define 'Terrorists' on UK Police Chief: Some Tech Companies Are 'Friendly To Terrorists' · · Score: 1, Troll

    Even Israel never claimed there were rockets being fired from the UN schools. They alleged that the property was being used to store munitions, but that's a far cry from being used to launch attacks.

  15. Re:Define 'Terrorists' on UK Police Chief: Some Tech Companies Are 'Friendly To Terrorists' · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Like UN schools being used as refugee camps, eh?

  16. Re:The true burden on Can High Intelligence Be a Burden Rather Than a Boon? · · Score: 1

    And again, an invalid metric. Having more money than someone else does not make you "better" than them.

  17. It's not surprising on YouTube Going Dark On Older Devices · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's what happens when you rely on a vendor instead of a ratified standard. Can you imagine the uproar if older HDTV tuners suddenly stopped working with new broadcasts? People were upset enough that the old analogue signals were obsolesced!

  18. I blame upper management on How Security Companies Peddle Snake Oil · · Score: 2

    Upper management at most companies view IT as a set of tasks or items you can check off as "done", requiring no further investment or maintenance. I blame them for the sorry state of affairs that allows these "security" companies to advertise and sell "in a box" products that are supposed to "take care of your security."

    If upper management would realize that things like security and infrastructure are things that need constant maintenance, enhancement, and upgrades, we wouldn't be in this pickle. Nor would we be stuck with applications that are running on three-major-revision-old vendor products, subject to a whole raft of security issues that could be addressed by upgrading them.

  19. Congress and Parliament on Update: No Personhood for Chimps Yet · · Score: 1

    If the politicians in Congress and Parliament qualify as "legal persons", I guess chimps are over-qualified. :P

  20. The local neighbourhood watch on George Lucas Building Low-Income Housing Next Door To Millionaires · · Score: 1

    Is the local neighbourhood watch required to dress in stormtrooper outfits? :P

  21. The true burden on Can High Intelligence Be a Burden Rather Than a Boon? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The true burden lies in thinking a "high IQ" means you're better than other people. There are many valuable skills and talents which are not measured by an IQ test, including art, music, empathy, and so on.

    The burden is the arrogance of presuming IQ means intelligence. It does not. It is simply one metric for measuring skillsets.

  22. Re:Sadly, I don't see an "out" for AMD on AMD Withdraws From High-Density Server Business · · Score: 1

    Cite an article, not YouTube videos.

    And I'm concerned about single-threaded compute performance, not embedded graphics. I never use the embedded graphics on a processor except on a notebook that has no slot for a video card.

  23. Re:0.6? Are you serious? on GNU Hurd 0.6 Released · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but they were the ones griping about Linux and claiming that they were going to replace Linux.

  24. Sadly, I don't see an "out" for AMD on AMD Withdraws From High-Density Server Business · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sadly, I don't see an "out" for AMD. Their x86/amd64 chips don't perform as well as Intel's. The ARM market is saturated. They don't have their own foundry.

    What does modern day AMD bring to the table that anyone wants? Even at cut-rate pricing, they've saturated their channels with chips and can't even manufacture and ship new inventory until the backlog clears.

    It's a shame, but I think they're on their last legs. :(

  25. Re:there's a strange bias on slashdot on Microsoft's Role As Accuser In the Antitrust Suit Against Google · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Meh. With any large organization, there will always be those who bleat and whine about the "potential" for abuse, and cry that they're not getting their "fair" share of the market because their product(s) just flat out aren't good enough to earn it.

    Don't get me wrong: I don't buy the "don't be evil" mantra, but I don't see Google actually doing anything wrong.

    And it's kind of laughable that Microsoft is resorting to whinging about the situation given how shitty the results Bing produces are. I've tried it. Many times. They rarely, if ever, produce results that are even vaguely related to what I'm searching for. They don't have market share because THEY SUCK.