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User: tacokill

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  1. Lets call it what it is..... on Adaptation From Flash Boys Offers Inside Look at High-Frequency Trading · · Score: 1

    The word we are looking for is: front-running.

    When HFT firms get a look at the order book prior to the orders being executed and then go out and buy the order book only to turn around and sell it to the original buyer for a penny more......that's front-running. The technology and algorithms are incidental. It's been going on as long as there have been brokers and people buying/selling stock on behalf of other people. The difference this time is that this shit is being encouraged instead of discouraged. It hides behind opaque language and scary computers to dazzle and wow you into not noticing.

  2. Re: hmm, people out to make a quick buck on Cryptocurrency Exchange Vircurex To Freeze Customer Accounts · · Score: 1

    The strength and credibility of the dollar is unquestioned
    A slow, predictable decline does count as the best game in town

    Strength and credibility through slow and predictable decline.....that's rich!

  3. Re:Opposite Result on Turkish Finance Minister Defends Twitter Ban · · Score: 1

    Right. Kinda like giving people democracy and then being upset with how the results turned out. Hello, Hamas!

  4. Hunting on Drone-Assisted Hunting To Be Illegal In Alaska · · Score: 1

    Hunting has been around for longer than any government has existed. It will be with us long after the last one crumbles. What are we debating again?

  5. You sound dishonest on Silicon Valley Billionaire Takes Out $201 Million Life Insurance Policy · · Score: 0

    Only the dishonest call it the estate tax. Just like every other attempt the government uses to obfuscate, the name "estate tax" does not imply it's effect. Instead, it makes it sound benign.....which it is most definitely not. It's really rather simple: since all of the money and assets in one's estate has been taxed during one's lifetime, it is immoral to tax it again upon their death.

    That is why it should be called the Death Tax. It is triggered upon one's death and for no other criteria. The death tax is unlike every other kind of tax we have which normally tax transactions (income, capital gain realization, use tax, etc). Literally, the only way it comes into play is if you die -- which everyone does.

  6. Re:Or Preexisting conditions. on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 1

    What could possibly go wrong?
    As opposed to what is wrong with the system we have now?

    Good try at diversion. Who cares what we used to have. We all know it was broken. Go ahead and pretend the government has your best interests in mind while it determines what healthcare you receive. I am sure nothing will go wrong with that arrangement and conflict of interest.

    You are right they are banning soft drinks. However that was at the city government level (NYC). Riddle me this: what do you think would have happened if that was at the Federal Government level? Are you seriously arguing that the government is going to take a hands off approach and let you live your life the way you want to? Not when they are paying the tab. As long as they pay the tab, they have a vested interest in making you act more healthy and I assure you they will abuse that power just as they have abused every other power we've ever given them.

  7. Re:Or Preexisting conditions. on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 1

    Not yet so rest easy young comrade. Your time will come too....

  8. Re:you have no idea what you are talking about.... on Stanford Researchers Spot Medical Conditions, Guns, and More In Phone Metadata · · Score: 1

    Ok, I stand corrected. I had the terminology exactly backwards. Thank you for the corrections.

  9. wrong, but close.... on Stanford Researchers Spot Medical Conditions, Guns, and More In Phone Metadata · · Score: 1

    Ok, so the OP should have stated Class 3 firearms instead of "assault weapons". Had he said that I would not have replied. Vocabulary matters. Class 3 is not the same thing as an "assault weapon/rifle".

    Instead, he said we had to have an FFL and pay annual fee to own an assault rifle. That simply isn't true.....unless the assault rifle is a Class 3 weapon. However, most assault rifles are not Class 3 weapons so OPs statement is demonstrably false.

  10. Re:Or Preexisting conditions. on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 1

    Single payer would suck. I hope we never get there. Sadly, there are people who don't understand why it's a "bad idea" to depend on the government for your healthcare.

    If you "give" healthcare to the government to mange, the government absolutely will abuse it's power. Since medical care is so critical, the government will use that to force you to behave a certain way. Today we ban softdrinks. Tomorrow, you get fined for being fat (or doing whatever unhealthy habit "they" don't want you to do).

    What could possibly go wrong? Am I the only person in the world who sees this naked power grab? Jesus.....once they get control of your medicine, "they" can make you do whatever "they" want. Seems rather obvious to anyone who thinks about it for more than 5 seconds.

  11. Re:Why? on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 1

    What the fuck difference does it make what kind of fraud it is? Fraud is fraud. Either way the taxpayers get screwed.

    And it's not just dirty "private corporations" ripping off Medicare. It's all kinds of people and entities but good try at making it about "evil corporations".

  12. Re:We're with the government on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 0

    Ohhh, can't wait. If this last round is any indication, we'll be in for an even bigger letdown for single payer.

    Seriously, the apologists are unbelievable. "We'll get it right next time. Promise!". How about you guys get one right before we trust you with more stuff?

  13. you have no idea what you are talking about.... on Stanford Researchers Spot Medical Conditions, Guns, and More In Phone Metadata · · Score: 1

    No, "assault rifles" are not perfectly legal, unless you have an FFL and pay the annual fee. .
    Bzzzzzt. Wrong. They are perfectly legal and you have no idea what you are talking about. I have many and I don't pay a fee or have an FFL.

    The only rifles that are restricted to own are automatic rifles. ie: machine guns. But those have been restricted for a long time. Outside of that, there are no other restrictions to buy, own, posses, shoot, or sell an "assault" rifle/weapon (no difference). That law expired and good riddance.

    The reason is was a stupid law is simple: the only thing that makes a rifle an "assault" rifle instead of a regular rifle is aesthetic characteristics like a bayonet holder, hand carrier, short barrel, etc. Basically: all the shit that doesn't matter for a gun. Outside of that criteria, they all work the same. The have long barrels. They fire bullets of many calibers. They are semi-automatic. They have scopes. Etc, etc, etc.

  14. What the hell does that even mean? on Stanford Researchers Spot Medical Conditions, Guns, and More In Phone Metadata · · Score: 1

    What the hell does "outed an assault rifle owner" mean? Last I checked, assault rifles are perfectly legal so what would be the point of outing an owner?

    Oh that's right....I forgot: sensationalism.

  15. Re:Why? on Bitcoin Inventor Satoshi Nakamoto Outed By Newsweek · · Score: 1

    Ding ding ding. We have a winner.

    Unfortunately, the balance of power is completely in the hands of the reporter. You don't know anything about the reporter's ethics until it's too late.

    Which brings to mind one of my favorite cliches: Don't ever get into an argument with a man who buys ink by the barrel.

  16. Re:Hubris and Pride on Government Secrecy Spurs $4 Million Lawsuit Over Simple 'No Fly' List Error · · Score: 1

    We don't have a culture that encourages that behavior. Imagine.....what would have happened if the FBI admitted it fucked up and checked the wrong box?

    I'll tell you what would happen if they said that: all hell would break loose. We'd have claims of racism, we'd have claims of misogyny, we'd have everyone and their cousin claiming to be a similar victim regardless of the merits of the claims.

    The reason people don't say "sorry, I fucked up" is because "sorry" is not an acceptable answer in our society. All it seems to do is admit guilt which is inevitably followed by lawsuits. Why bother with an apology when the end result will be the same? Better to just ignore it until it becomes unignorable and only then will they respond.

    Whether it's govt or "big business" the result is the same. They don't say "sorry, we fucked up" because they damn well know that won't be the last word. They also know, legally, that giving an apology is the equivalent of admitting guilt.

    If society accepted apologies, we'd see a lot more of them. Unfortunately, that's not how our over-litigious world works.

  17. Irony on Ohio Attempting To Stop Tesla From Selling Cars, Again · · Score: 1

    I suspect many who rail against this kind of graft and corruption are fine with giving the government and it's agencies more power to regulate and 'insure a fair marketplace'. However, the more rules and laws that are passed, the more they can be (ab)used to advantage or disadvantage someone else or some other company. I am constantly surprised at how many people here on /. do not make this connection.

    We beg and beg for more regulation about X. Once it's in place, you complain because companies try to influence the process? Well, surprise surprise.....when you regulate people or companies, they usually want to participate in the process. If, during that process, they can disadvantage the other guy......why not do that? That's common sense, completely expected, and has been going on as long as the world has been going around.

    That Slashdot finds this surprising says more about slashdot than it does the companies.

    Maybe this will work better:
    1. Establish law(s) affecting companies
    2. Act surprised when companies want to participate in the lawmaking
    3. ????
    4. Profit

  18. Re:so dont eat them on The Death Cap Mushroom Is Spreading Across the US · · Score: 1

    1/3 of the country is not on food stamps because they are hungry. Hunger has nothing to do with it. Ask yourself: how can a country have 1/3 of it's population hungry and still have an obesity epidemic within that very population?

    Something's rotten in Gotham....

  19. Re:Browser Compatibility on ShapeShifter: Beatable, But We'll Hear More About It · · Score: 1

    Point in case, the people surfing the web using telnet to port 80 are going to be very pissed.

    I bet all 8 of those people could learn a workaround.
    C'mon....are we really worried about a use case for telnet websurfing?

  20. Re:Just catering to their demographics on David Pogue and Yahoo's "Normals" Problem · · Score: 1

    It has raised the standard of living for far more people in a much shorter time than any other system ever developed in the history of humankind.

    Would you like to know more?

  21. Re:Just catering to their demographics on David Pogue and Yahoo's "Normals" Problem · · Score: 1

    You are right that the pendulum swings both ways. You're also right that a lot of people in history looked towards communism to solve society's ills, especially during the depression. But that's the point: we have a LOT of evidence on the results of communism because many countries around the world went on to implement and practice communism. After seeing how those countries turned out, America rightfully rejected that philosophy over the coming decades and our long history of success proves that we made a good choice.

    So now we want to re-litigate the merits of communistic ideals? And it gets front page play in a (fairly) major publication?

    As my original post hypothesized, lots of people who aren't usually interested in politics are being forced to get interested because of crap like this. I chose this article as one example but we all know there are thousands of these examples out there. What used to be common American values aren't so common anymore and nobody seems to be saying anything.

  22. Re:I'm both. on David Pogue and Yahoo's "Normals" Problem · · Score: 1

    I'm well below normal about how much I care about cars and TVs.

    .....but I suspect even your rudimentary understanding of cars and TVs outstrips the best of the "normals" we are talking about. Anyone on /. will be completely bored with this approach. The first thing I thought of was "great, more USA Today Tech articles with sidenotes from Kim Kommando". Sure, there is an audience for that.....but it's tech section will cater to Mary Jane Mathteacher and Tips for Excel.

  23. Re:Just catering to their demographics on David Pogue and Yahoo's "Normals" Problem · · Score: 1, Interesting

    What if I told you that the reason they talk about it so much is because they are genuinely concerned about the direction the country is going.

    As one example of many: Not so long ago, we didn't have much discussion about whether communism was better than capitalism at raising the human living standard. Anyone with intellectual honesty already knew that answer so there wasn't much to talk about after a cursory review of the evidence. People who espoused that view were rightfully challenged almost immediately. Nowadays that is not the case. Here we are again debating the "merits" of a system that collapsed entirely less than 25 years ago. (For those that don't know what I am referring to, see the recent Rolling Stone article about what every millennial should be fighting for)

    I want to be clear that we need to provide a forum for new ideas so I don't want to stifle discussion. It just gets tiring trying to explain that we already know some of these answers if you will just fucking look and read. But nope.....thoroughly discredited ideas keep rising to the top without challenge and old lesson will assuredly get relearned (at great human cost!)

    That is why so many people take every conversation to politics. People can no longer assume that common core American values are being represented in politics anymore so it is forcing them to engage and set things straight. They don't want to be political anymore than you want them to be political. It's just that they have no choice.

  24. Re:Good! on Illinois Law Grounds PETA Drones Meant To Harass Hunters · · Score: 1

    Quick clarification: The heart/lungs are always the best shot because they have the highest probability of a lethality. Shooting at the head is a bad idea because skulls are hard and tend to deflect arrows and sometimes bullets.

    The choice of where to shoot a deer has nothing to do with "bagging that awesome trophy".

  25. Re: Land of the Free! on Illinois Law Grounds PETA Drones Meant To Harass Hunters · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, all this does is prevent PETA from harassing hunters via nefarious means. I assure you, the hunters are all for this as PETA has shown itself to be consistently irrational (to put it mildly). Do you not think they will use this "monitoring" for harassment? Of course they will.

    Hunters have hunted for longer than this country has been around and now, all of a sudden, we need an adversarial group like PETA "monitoring" for compliance? Give me a break.

    If PETA were a bit more rational (not counting on it), they might be welcomed to the table for constructive solutions to the problems they see.