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User: Brockmire

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Comments · 1,918

  1. Re: Not a problem on The FBI Defends Deploying Malware From A Tor Child Porn Site (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    The answer is no in each of those situations and it's not even close. These are very clear cut. Watching someone actively getting raped and you have the means to intervene is different than being behind a computer in another state. What's with these fucking non equivalents?

  2. Re: Not a problem on The FBI Defends Deploying Malware From A Tor Child Porn Site (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    That's how undercover police work has always worked. Suddenly, you have a problem when they go after paedophiles. Add him to the list.

  3. Re: Not a problem on The FBI Defends Deploying Malware From A Tor Child Porn Site (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    This guy checks out the "vast majority" of child porn. In the words of Chief Wiggins, Get'em, boys.

  4. Re: Not a problem on The FBI Defends Deploying Malware From A Tor Child Porn Site (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    "The argument that child porn hurts children during its creation is bogus. This is true because of the illegality" You're a real piece of shit. I can list many reasons that the kids are hurt and abused, but the main one is they don't consent. Fuck, you really are scum.

  5. Re: Not a problem on The FBI Defends Deploying Malware From A Tor Child Porn Site (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    No, you are a fucking moron.

  6. Re: Not a problem on The FBI Defends Deploying Malware From A Tor Child Porn Site (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 1

    The difference was the life or death circumstances.

  7. Re: Why is that not the best answer on Swarm AI Spectacularly Fails To Predict Kentucky Derby Winners A Second Time (techrepublic.com) · · Score: 1

    Found another horse fucker.

  8. Because they put in thousands and thousands of hours of R&D and could demonstrate what they did and why they did it.

  9. Your post makes no sense. You don't need Windows OS closed source code to write and distribute your own software running on Windows.

  10. Did you expect them to be born with that information?

  11. Because every woman aspires to be Monica Lewinsky, right? That's some failed fucking logic.

  12. Run them over AND then beat the shit out of them? Have a Snickers, dude.

  13. Re: Are you kidding me? on BlackBerry KeyOne Review By The Verge: Part Productivity, Part Nostalgia (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    You leave out two very important things. 1. Blackberries were locked down and iPhones were not. So of course people thought that was just how Blackberries were, and never realized it could do all the same things like playing music and watching videos. 2. This started the BYOD revolution, saving companies lots of money. They no longer had to fork out $500 phones for everyone. BlackBerry made lots of mistakes, but biggest was their shit marketing. If they had the campaigns that Apple put out, they'd still be a player.

  14. Re: Headline is off topic on How Not to Make a Movie About Tech (theringer.com) · · Score: 1

    So when new content is significantly changed from original content, should title remain the same?

  15. Re: Headline is off topic on How Not to Make a Movie About Tech (theringer.com) · · Score: 1

    Yes, only truth in fiction writing!

  16. If your definition of evil is protecting users as soon as an active exploit is discovered, then you're probably living in hell.

  17. They didn't fix the problem, they just blocked this shit from their system. This may very well still be possible with some changes, like Google Sheets instead of Docs.

  18. Re: Another reason to avoid any such generic login on Google Was Warned About This Week's Mass Phishing Email Attack Six Years Ago (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    You look for the green lock on the https certificate to verify you're really on Google or Facebook's login pages. That isn't easily faked.

  19. Re: Why the "free market" doesn't work on trade on AMD and Nvidia Silicon Manufacturing Secrets Allegedly Stolen, Sold To China (pcgamesn.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah, we keep hearing about how the NSA/CIA infiltrates Canadian tech and nuclear companies and steal their secrets. Oh wait, no, that's China.

  20. Re: Proving it will be hard on Splitting Up With Apple is a Chipmaker's Nightmare (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    How does that violate copyright? I think you might want to look up copyright.

  21. Re: Look at it this way on Qualcomm Is Seeking US Import Ban For iPhones (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    Yes, they do. A little thing called compound interest. Over years, that adds up.

  22. Re: I don't mind paying taxes on Apple Has a Record $250 Billion In Cash, 90% of It Is Banked Overseas (phonearena.com) · · Score: 1

    What sorcery is this of which you speak? How does $250 billion cash turn into a trillion?

  23. Re: I don't mind paying taxes on Apple Has a Record $250 Billion In Cash, 90% of It Is Banked Overseas (phonearena.com) · · Score: 1

    Sales taxes are paid by the buyer, not Apple. Apple gets to collect sales tax money and earn interest on it until it's paid to government. They earn money on your taxes!

  24. If you ask them right at 12:00, they could!

  25. Defender's lawyers send over 1 billion boxes of documents after prosecution requested related materials.