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User: 0111+1110

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  1. Re:Nothing to see here. on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    I actually think you are the one who is sick. This is a witch hunt. Whatever photos might be on this guy's encrypted drive is no one's business but his. Who or what he happens to find sexually attractive or just attractive is no one's business but his own. It makes no difference to me.

      At one time finding a member of the same sex sexually attractive was viewed in much the same way as finding females under the age of 18 attractive is today. They were regarded as crazy, sick fucks who should be locked up. The more things change the more they remain the same. As long as there is someone left to crucify sick people like you will still have something to wank to. From my perspective having certain photos on an encrypted hard drive should not be a crime no matter what is in the photos. But if some photos must be illegal I'd rather have photos of murders and suicides and grisly deaths or realistic depictions of same be made illegal.

  2. Re:Without being observed? WTF? on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    No. It's more like the court ordering you to give the prosecution some additional evidence to help them ruin your life and/or kill you. There is no way for the court to know or to prove that the suspect has any idea what those passphrases actually are. Suspect says he doesn't know them. Court tells him that if that is true then he is fucked because the court doesn't believe him. He then gets life in prison without a trial for contempt because the judge doesn't believe him.

  3. Re:You can be forced to give up EVIDENCE, not test on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    Before any drive was decrypted, it hadn't been proven that the he COULD decrypt the drives.

    That still hasn't been proven. Maybe he forgot the passphrases years ago. Also, he has already handed over the evidence. It's not his fault if the FBI is too stupid to crack all of the encryption. What he is being compelled to do now is help the prosecution make their case against him more compelling, at least to a jury, by giving them the rest of the passphrases. That's a pretty clear 5th amendment issue. Yet another judge who wipes his ass with the constitution. Anything in the name of child porn. Every right will eventually be lost to a combination of child porn and terrorism. The two greatest weapons of pro police state fascists.

  4. Re:Here's his best defense.. on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 4, Insightful

    especially when they think they are doing the right thing.

    Most real LEOs don't understand the whole concept of right or wrong. At best they might understand the difference between legal and illegal.The idea that LEOs care about right and wrong is a myth based on Hollywood screen writers who've probably never actually met a real cop.

  5. Re:What kind of encryption did the FBI break? on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    True. If the crime is comitted by viewing the images then some government employees are guilty as well and should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

  6. Re:What kind of encryption did the FBI break? on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 3, Insightful

    but they would also lose the intelligence windfall of any data that might be on the other drives.

    I wouldn't call porn of any kind an "intelligence windfall". They would find more porn to wank to. That doesn't seem like a sufficiently good reason to shit all over the 5th amendment. They already have enough evidence to convict. There is no reason whatsover to decrypt the other drives. Drives which they clearly have the capacity to decrypt themselves anyway. No. The only purpose here is to increase the power of the FBI in future cases by setting a precedent that the 5th amendment can be safely ignored. Well as long as the crime someone is being accused of is an unpopular one.

  7. Re:Here's his best defense.. on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    I take it you've never used truecrypt. The longer and more complex and random the alphanumeric passphrase is the more secure it is. Do you get it now? I've lost plenty of data due to forgetting on overly intricate passphrase. And you can't write it down anywhere in case you forget. That would ruin the whole point.

  8. Re:What kind of encryption did the FBI break? on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    New stuff is produced daily

    So you are a fan then. Whatever floats your boat I guess. Better lengthen that passphrase though or add some key files. Good thing you posted anonymously since you just incriminated yourself.

  9. Re:What kind of encryption did the FBI break? on Judge Orders Child Porn Suspect To Decrypt His Hard Drives · · Score: 1

    You never know, the stuff on the other disks may show that he's a producer and not just a consumer, and under your orders they'd be cutting him a deal that is very lenient.

    If they suspect this then presumably they would have evidence, some sort of probable cause. I doubt they suspect it. They've already won their case by decrypting his truecrypt partition. Don't kid yourself. This is all about killing the 5th amendment or pounding a stake through what is left of it, which based on this decision is not much. It serves no other purpose. That horse is already dead.

  10. Re:Oh shut up you elitist prick on Arduino Branches Out, With a Plug-and-Program Robot · · Score: 0

    So basically this slashvertisement is for a childrens toy of absolutely no interest to geeks. I'm still waiting for an affordable, programmable, personal robot to replace the Sony AIBO.

  11. lead lining on Cell Phones As a Dirty Bomb Detection Network · · Score: 2

    So if this were both widely deployed and effective it would just force these hypothetical dirty bomb enthusiasts to line the bomb container with lead. Lead which would become toxic shrapnel on detonation. The potential for many false positives has already been mentioned, but this system could be easily defeated by a thin lead lining. Lead lining has the further benefit of shielding a non-suicidal bomber from his own radiation.

  12. Re:It's started... on DHS Shuts Down Dwolla Payments To and From Mt. Gox · · Score: 1

    Gold has the third best conductivity of any known element. Only copper and silver are better. It's a better conductor than aluminum and far less reactive. So, yes, I'd call it a pretty good conductor. When you need a conductor that doesn't corrode there is nothing better.

  13. Re:Risk vs. Reward? on Drones: Coming Soon To the New Jersey Turnpike? · · Score: 1

    Americans are well known as some of the slowest and most terrified drivers in the world. Fast is subjective. What is fast to one person is slow to another. It's almost funny, but more pathetic, to watch all the cowardly slow drivers putting around deathly afraid of an accident.

  14. Re:slashdotted, cloudflare fail, here's a copy-pas on Cracked Game Released To Get Back At Pirates · · Score: 1

    If they wanted that simulation to be realistic, the introduction of in-game DRM would just delay the fully cracked version by a random number of hours between 4 and 48 and in the end they would still go out of business with the only difference being that they lost more money because they had to pay the DRM vendor as well.

    The only truly effective DRM is to release a game that no one cares about or wants to play. I think that is the most clever aspect of this publicity stunt faux-game. The best way to avoid free riders is to create something that no one wants to ride.

  15. Re:maybe EVERYBODY should be wearing cams & mi on The Coming War Against Personal Photography and Video · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A jury might give a shit about it. Video evidence is some of the most convincing evidence there is. Ubiquitous cameras won't stop an angry cop from stomping your face in, but a hidden camera that he doesn't know about might help you sue the city for hundreds of thousands afterword and prevent you from rotting in prison for years on trumped up "cover charges" afterward.

    I wouldn't have an "assault and battery against a police officer" on my record now if I had had a recording of the event that showed how the cop just made everything up in his story. It's hard to prove that you didn't do something while the camera was turned off but a video that shows an entirely different sequence of events from those in the official police report is simply gold and will tend to sway a jury away from their natural where-there-is-smoke-there-is-fire prejudice against you and in favor of the cop.

    I think requiring the police to have video evidence of their probable cause/reasonable suspicion or of the alleged crime itself before they can even legally make an arrest would do a great deal to control police violence against the public. Basically it should be assumed that anything a cop says is a lie until/unless proven otherwise on video. Currently we have the reverse situation where police are assumed to be 100% perfect law-abiding angels until/unless a video demonstrates otherwise. This is why most cops hate video.

  16. Re:Lots of good reasons. on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Good Reasons For DRM? · · Score: 1

    If they already have a reputation or some material that might impress people then the simple answer is Kickstarter, Indiegogo, or one of the many crowdfunding sites that will pop up in their wake. Prepayment doesn't stop free riders. It just makes them irrelevant.

    In my view the biggest problem that artists have in making a living from their art in this era of crowdfunding is not piracy, but getting known in the first place. That's still a nontrivial problem.

  17. Re:Art doesn't need remuneration on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Good Reasons For DRM? · · Score: 1

    The artists who want it only want it because they are not technically oriented people and don't realize that they are being scammed and that their DRM will be broken in less than a week.

    He can learn this the hard way, after he has already lost the goodwill of his fans, or he can learn the truth beforehand and not be scammed out of his hard earned money by some con artist selling him the impossible dream of unbreakable DRM.

  18. Re:Copyright. on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Good Reasons For DRM? · · Score: 1

    I can't figure out if your pro-DRM arguments are based on some sort of future, hypothetical form of unbreakable DRM or today's typical broken-on-the-day-of-release DRM. If it is the former then you may have a point. There would be a subset of pirates who would purchase the content if they could afford to do so and if they had no other option.

    Just as with products that are not digitally reproducable there will also be a set of people who either genuinely cannot afford to buy it or who do not value the product highly enough to justify the price. I believe that only a tiny fraction of the thousands or in some cases millions of torrenters would become legitimate customers in the event of such perfect DRM.

    Nevertheless the existence of this hypothetical unbreakable DRM would benefit the few large corporations that could afford it, which may in turn increase the income of artists who have sold their souls to such megacrops by a few percent or something similar. It wouldn't convert an artist with a day job to one who could create full time except maybe for a few rare edge cases.

  19. Re:Art doesn't need remuneration on Ask Slashdot: Are There Any Good Reasons For DRM? · · Score: 1

    The arguments about why DRM is an inherently flawed system, is nearly always doomed to failure, technical failure, have been made many times here. Presumably we can agree that no attempt at controlling digital content after it has been released to the world has succeeded so far and many millions of dollars and hundreds of man-years of effort have been spent on the problem. I think it would be fair to say that it is not an effective solution to the problem of creating artificial scarcity for an infinitely reproducable digital/virtual good.

    So what we are really discussing is whether a probably impossible version of DRM, a hypothetical perfectly effective DRM, perhaps using alien technology which would seem like magic to us, might be a useful thing for society as a whole to have.

    If aliens landed and offered this advanced technology to the copyright cartels would we consider them benefactors or attackers? I suppose there is no simple answer to that. One group of people, those who create art works in digital form, would probably be better off.

    They would gain one set of customers and lose others. Some of us would simply buy less content because we cannot sample it first. One might argue that content creators would be more likely to offer free samples if unbreakable DRM were around but I'm skeptical of that.

    One set of people who would be hurt by this hypothetical perfect DRM are the poor who would never be able to afford to pay for it. One can argue back and forth about the justice of this but the fact remains that only the wealthy would be able to afford certain digital content.

    Personally I think it would be nice if such perfect DRM were available. If someone invented such technology I would imagine that they would charge a great deal for it. Onlly the richest of corporations would likely be able to afford it. Small artists would still be left with only the sort of cracked-upon-release DRM that we have now.

    I can think of one form of DRM that might be highly effective. Simply kill/maim/rape/imprison everyone who does not buy your product within a certain time period. Make buying your product a form of protection money. Again, in this system, it can be seen that one group, the content creators, are better off, while another, everyone else, is worse off.

  20. Re:Um... "suspect" on Police Capture Second Marathon Bombing Suspect in Watertown, Mass. · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A "comfortable" jail? An affordable lawyer? Innocent until proven guilty? Are you sure you are talking about Massachusetts? That's not how things work around here or really anywhere in the US. He might get a free lawyer, but only if his income is low enough to qualify for food stamps. Your income hast to be very low indeed in order to qualify. Otherwise you have to pay.

    I don't think he will get a fair trial. The jury is going to want someone to pay for this act of random violence/murder and this guy, whoever he is, is in their crosshairs. The only chance he has of a not guilty verdict is if someone like me is on the jury, someone who truly believes that the burden of proof is on the prosecutor and that the burden should be pretty high and that is pretty damn unlikely.

  21. Re:But that's a false reason on Ask Slashdot: Encrypted Digital Camera/Recording Devices? · · Score: 1

    If the SD card is fully encrypted a cop looking at it wouldn't even know that it has anything on it . In that case he may not dispose of it. Why bother? So it has some chance of helping in the corrupt cop scenario.

    There's nothing wrong with breaking our idiotic traffic laws. Is there anyone who doesn't break them? Even slow drivers exceed the speed limit. I see it all the time. They drive at the speed they feel comfortable at. When they hit a 15mph zone they rarely slow down to 15mph. They nearly always continue going at the same 25mph speed that they were traveling at in the 50mph zone with 20 cars trailing them like a train.

  22. Re:First! (State) on US Senate Passes National Internet Sales Tax Mandate · · Score: 1

    In the past it was less of an issue because it would take weeks to get things via mail order, but these days, people do so regularly.

    It still often takes weeks. I haven't noticed any giant step forward when it comes to ground shipping. Is it somehow now faster for a UPS truck to get from California to Maine for instance?

    This sort of law is going to hurt internet businesses. Now not only are consumers expected to pay shipping which is already quite expensive for small orders, but they have to pay tax as well. This is nothing more than a money grab for state governments and local businesses at the expense of internet retailers. I just hope I'll be gone from the US before this sort of law is passed for real. Cheap internet purchases were one of the best things about living in the US.

  23. Re:sorry for partyin' on 9th Circuit Affirms IsoHunt Decision; No DMCA Safe Harbor · · Score: 1

    As far as intellectual property, that is certainly codified in the Constitution.

    Citation needed.

  24. Re:The law is an ass on 9th Circuit Affirms IsoHunt Decision; No DMCA Safe Harbor · · Score: 1

    I just heard the alarm on your BMW go off. I'm serious. You better go check.

  25. Re:somebody refresh my memory... on 9th Circuit Affirms IsoHunt Decision; No DMCA Safe Harbor · · Score: 0

    Have you ever been to the Congo?