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User: martin-boundary

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  1. Re:It's easy to fix on Apple's Diversity Numbers: 70% Male, 55% White · · Score: 1

    Just break down all the employees into the smallest groups possible. Instead of "White" or "African", break it down to German, Swiss, Dutch, South African, Tanzanian, and so on. With everything down to a few dozen members per group, you'll have a nice flat diversity line. :P

    Oh. Err, yeah, that works too, I guess. I was thinking castrate a few of the males and distribute some afro wigs to equalize the employee counts. But yeah, I guess we can do your thing.

  2. Re:here we go again... on Maryam Mirzakhani Is the First Woman Fields Medalist · · Score: 1

    She commented on the "gender inequality thing" herself.

    I'm going to guess you've never given an interview in your life? Some guy (or girl) chats with you, asks 20 questions of you about lots of different things, then excuses himself (herself). You don't hear anything more for a couple of weeks, then you get to read a writeup containing 4 or 5 of those questions, with bits and pieces of your full answers cut and pasted into a shortened "narrative".

    There's no way to know why she brought up the "gender inequality thing", if it was a short comment or a major theme for her. All we can say for sure is that journalists decide what they want to write about, and they make it look like it all came from the interviewee.

    In the end, it's about selling magazine stories, and writing what the readers will like to see so that they are willing to give away some of their hard earned cash.

  3. Re:Biometrics are great until... on DARPA Wants To Kill the Password · · Score: 1

    Please choose biometrics that aren't part of my extremities.

    Who do you think you are, a civilian? A citizen accepts personal responsibility for the safety of the body politic, defending it with his life, a civilian does not. What's a few extremities in the war against computer bugs?

  4. Re:Privacy is an illusion on John McAfee Airs His Beefs About Privacy In Def Con Surprise Talk · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A compelling illusion, but an illusion nonetheless. The metadata generated by even the most privacy conscious individual leaves a mark, and given the resources of an interested government, only the most dedicated living off the grid can escape their view.

    That's a pretty trite comment, if you don't mind me saying so. We already know that *if we don't fight for it*, then privacy is at best an illusion. Duh. If I don't enter the lottery, I can't win either. My god, are you sure, really? I actually have to enter? I never knew that!

    Privacy is a set of rights that must be demanded to be built into the system of government and society at large. It's one part of Liberty, and it's up to us to make it happen. We can make it happen through laws, we can make it happen through free software, we can make it happen through education, we can make it happen through threats and violence, etc. No single option is a silver bullet. All options can advance the cause in some small way. Figure out where your talents are then you'll start to see where you can help out (assuming you want privacy).

  5. Re:American football on NFL Players To Use Tablet Computers During Games · · Score: 1

    Let me tell you something, Mate. We Aussies don't do sportsing anymore, we do sporties. 'Cause in Oz, it's all about rooting for your favourite team.

  6. Re:This is chilling on Google Spots Explicit Images of a Child In Man's Email, Tips Off Police · · Score: 2

    While, I absolutely believe it's google's job to report illegal activity [...]

    It really shouldn't be Google's job to report illegal activity. If a company is going to do cloud computing on the scale Google does, there should be privacy laws in place, similar to doctor/patient privilege, or lawyer/client privilege, or priest/confessioner privilege. Google might be put on the spot through a warrant or whatever, but should not volunteer any information of their own.

    And before someone points out that I've somehow agreed to this through an EULA, I don't use their services but others do, and my stuff can easily end up there through no fault any people, but just because Google is too agressive about spying on everyone.

  7. Re:Wrong premice on Psychology's Replication Battle · · Score: 1

    On the contrary, increasing the sample size to big data sizes of say 2 billion subjects would definitely fix that bias problem. [of course this is unrealistic].

  8. Re:Gross misunderstanding of EU ruling on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 1

    Not that I disagree, but I think first we need a debate on what privacy means in light of modern technologies. The practical rules and assumptions of yesterday will not protect the same values and principles when faced with the technology of tomorrow. Put another way, for the spirit of the law to be preserved, the letter of the law may have to change, perhaps dramatically.

    The technologies of today have not substantially changed from the technologies we had 20 years ago when privacy rules were put in place. CS algorithms are the same. Database principles are the same. Computers still have cpus, RAM, and hard disks. Networking is based on the old TCP/IP and UDP protcols from the 70s. Granted, we now use Javascript instead of C or VisualBASIC. We use HTML web apps instead of mainframe server apps and special client software.

  9. Re:Wrong premice on Psychology's Replication Battle · · Score: 2
    The other problem is sample size. Psychology sample sizes are *way* too small. In a world of 8 billion people today, anything you find out in a psychological experiment that involves at most a few hundred subjects, often less, cannot have anything universal to say. The samples are just too small.

    Here's an analogy. You plant a dozen tulips in your garden, and observe how well they grow when you do X. Now you claim all plants will grow like that when you do X. The claim is way too broad. Even if you had a dozen identical tulips, and you grew them on the himalaya while doing X, you'd have different results.

  10. Re:Try to make me forget. on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 1

    No, in small villages, YOU don't exist. You are just the most recent cog and are defined by the unforgettable history of your family, which you can make up as you please (with consequences)

    FTFY. I completely agree that connections are important, but you're assuming that anyone is truthful about their identity and their past, which is not the case, especially if they move to start afresh somewhere else. One added advantage in Europe was the plethora of small states and local dialects/languages, you could move 50km away and be literally in a different country.

  11. Re:Supress the Press! on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 1

    Saying things will be forgotten if it can't be Googled/Binged is like saying you won't get robbed so long as you don't post a sign that your door isn't locked.

    Or, it's like saying you won't be robbed in a functional decent community, with security patrolling the streets regularly and enforcing laws. It's not a 100% guarantee, but if you deliberately let the neighbourhood decay with gangs and drug dealers ruling the streets, well you're an idiot.

  12. Re:Try to make me forget. on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 1
    You're being disingenous. Obviously in modern times communication and internet allows information to travel freely, but that was not the case even 100 years ago, when most people didn't have a telephone, and travelling a few towns away would take the whole day.

    The point of the small town analogy is that for most of human history, the ability to be forgotten was rather easy to accomplish - although not without cost. The benefit of being unknown in a new town had to be weighed against the pervasive distrust of strangers. You started with a clean slate, but that meant a real clean slate - you might be an outlaw or anything, really, and had to prove yourself.

  13. Re:Who didn't see this coming? on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 1

    You might argue that it is really the website's duty to begin with to comply with rights to be forgotten, and they are the only ones responsible for any possible contempt, but since no one contacted them to begin with asking to be forgotten I think that they are legally in the clear.

    It is the duty of every company which collects information about people to comply with the rights to be forgotten. Google is one of those companies, which collects data about people, and therefore they must legally comply.

    You are totally right that the source website has the same duty, and should be held responsible as well (at least if they are a company. The law doesn't apply to private individuals).

  14. Re:Try to make me forget. on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 2

    Hmm... in small-town communities, you really "can't be forgotten" for stupid shit you do in your life.

    That's not actually true either. Small towns historically have been limited to local knowledge about residents, which actually helps enormously the right "to be forgotten". All anyone who ever wanted to be forgotten had to do was move about two towns down the road.

  15. Re:Try to make me forget. on How Google Handles 'Right To Be Forgotten' Requests · · Score: 1

    Thanks, you beat me to it. It's ironic that those who depend on Google to "remember" the past are also the most susceptible to Google's astroturfing games about the present.

  16. Re:It's better to hear people you might disagree w on The CIA Does Las Vegas · · Score: 1

    Closing one's ears to people one might disagree with is a sure way to rot as a community.

    [Citation needed]

    There is a time for listening, and a time for no longer listening. All great communities have systems for penalizing trolls and idiotic opinions which have been debunked many times before. Slashdot is a good example of such a community: lots of "comments" end up at -1, which is an excellent form of censorship.

    The point of the article is that, once some members of the community have been shown to be untrustworthy and plain liars, they should not be listened to anymore. Or at least, they should not be invited to high profile venues where they can spread their "side". The slashdot equivalent would be that such people should not be getting +5, but rather -1.

  17. Re:Neither on Which Is Better, Adblock Or Adblock Plus? · · Score: 1
    I see you don't understand how the network works. I pay for all the bandwidth I use (and some I don't use), through an agreement with my ISP. There are peering arrangements in place, but the bandwith that some website uses to serve me content is their own problem. If they're smart, they do like Google does and compress the hell out of what they serve, and work out deals with their providers etc. Moreover, the ads often originate from another network location, so the website I visit doesn't technically serve them to me. When that happens, we are talking about a menage a trois, disguised as an ordinary one on one relationship between me, the web surfer, and the website operator. You're right that I request content from the website. You're wrong about not making a distinction which content I request. I in fact request the parts I value, and do not request the ads.

    The point is that I am not taking or using anyone's bandwidth but my own, that I expect websites to do the same, and that advertisers are uninvited interlopers in a private relationship. That's what peering is all about. FIgure out how to phrase your objections within that framework and maybe I'll believe some of your arguments.

  18. Re: Neither on Which Is Better, Adblock Or Adblock Plus? · · Score: 1

    That's just silly. How about I put a site behind a "paywall" that says I serve annoying ads.

    Yup, that's fine.

    Then how about I make the paywall free with no registration.

    That would be stupid, as it makes it trivial to traverse it. But you are free to do as you please.

    Then how about I make the paywall invisible and expect you to just go away if you don't like the way I've set up my paywall on my site.

    That would be wishful thinking. Whereas in your imagination, you see a paywall, in actual fact there isn't one. You are free to imagine anything you like, and I am free to only use cold hard facts in my decision processes. I see that there is no paywall, so I will step over "it" anytime I please. There, that's how the world works.

  19. Re:Neither on Which Is Better, Adblock Or Adblock Plus? · · Score: 1

    like it or not, that's what consumers want.

    If that was true, then ad blocking tools would not be very popular. They are, so this isn't true.

    wanting to get paid for a service you provide is not evil. i assume you provide a service for your day job that you already admitted you get paid for? so you are you evil? no, it's just that you decided the work you do is worth getting paid for. well, great, bully for you then huh?

    Actually, I only get paid because I signed a contract to provide my services in return for payment. The contract represents a mutually beneficial prior agreement.

    If I went to a random shop on a saturday morning, and started washing their windows, and then I went inside and demanded to be paid - because I feel that it's fair to be paid for a service I give - I'd be laughed out of the shop. The windows didn't need washing, and I was blocking the customers. And rightly so, because there really should have been a prior agreement in place. Even as simple as entering the shop, and _asking_ if I can wash the windows in return for money.

    I don't have an agreement with any website to view their ads. As such, if the operators come to me and demand I look at their ads, I will laugh in their face, and continue to use an ad blocker.

    Agreements matter, otherwise one side is deluding themselves. The world doesn't operate on wishful thinking.

  20. Re:Neither on Which Is Better, Adblock Or Adblock Plus? · · Score: 1
    Yup, even open source projects can do with donations, and I have no problem with that. But a donation is a voluntary thing. It's not an entitlement. And if an open source project is incapable of surviving periods of time solely on a purely voluntary donation system, then the project and its goals should be rethought.

    It's no different when a company finds that the market doesn't support all the things it wants to do. Companies with cashflow problems need to make hard decisions. Open source projects with cashflow problems need to choose what they provide too. The difference is that a for-profit company cannot offer _any_ services without an income, while an open source project can, through the pro-bono work by the members of the project.

  21. Re:Neither on Which Is Better, Adblock Or Adblock Plus? · · Score: 0, Troll
    Such sites SHOULD go away. Here's a hint for website operators: Either give your stuff away for free no strings attached (we do it all the time with open source software - which is way more complex to do than a website), or hide your content using a membership. Ads are pollution, and have zero value.

    I, and many other people, don't appreciate the implicit bait and switch where we are being lured into accessing a "free" website, but oh wait you now have to look at ads and we'll track what you do etc. It's dishonest.

    If you're going to make free content available to all, then make it truly free. No ads. You'll have lots of people interested in seeing it. It's also fine to have a profit motive, nobody's forcing you to give stuff away if you don't want to, but if that's what you want to do, don't pretend it's free. Except you'll have fewer page views.

    Some website operators are greedy, they want the "free" page views and they want the income at the same time. That's evil. Luckily there are plenty of people like me, who have well paying day jobs, and have no problem whatsoever to give away free software to help ordinary people deal with and filter that shit out.

  22. Re:It really works? on A Fictional Compression Metric Moves Into the Real World · · Score: 1

    Because. Everything is immediately obvious to slashdotters. QED.

  23. That's trivial. It's like saying, there are only two numbers, "zero" and "many". It simply isn't true that all languages and all platforms are full of bugs in any meaningful sense. Some platforms are more buggy than others. This is a function of how old the platform is, how serious the creators are about preventing bugs, etc. That's meaningful.

    For example, the well known OpenBSD aims to be much more secure than other OSes. The well known Windows family doesn't care about security, only as an afterthought. The difference is striking and very well known.

    A good way to estimate which systems are likely to have fewer bugs is to understand the motivation of the application developers and of the OS creators. For example, if your focus is advertising, then you have a natural blind spot where advertising bugs are ignored. If your focus is doing "easy to use" software, then you have a blind spot where security practices are compromised in favour of GUI issues.

  24. Re:Not a Slippery Slope on On Forgetting the Facts: Questions From the EU For Google, Other Search Engines · · Score: 2
    All great ethical questions have the quality of slippery slopes, and this is, IMHO, one of the most fundamentally important questions of the 21st century. About as important as the legal concept of personal property - can you own it, can others steal it or damage it, can you sell it, can people inherit it, etc.

    The fact is that information is, today, more valuable than money. Indeed, look around you, companies are perfectly willing to take people's information in lieu of money. They know that they can always convert information into money later down the track.

    Yet we don't have a concensus on who owns the information, for lack of a better metaphor. Is my full name and likeness my own, or some hollywood company's ? Do my weekend party antics belong to Facebook? Does Google have the right to claim and organize all the rumours about me ? If I generate information just by existing and living my life, and this information has a monetary value, isn't it mine in all its forms? Should I not have the right to control it, as well as the responsibility of it. I have such rights with my children, and such responsibilities, also with my everyday actions in conducting my life (which is exactly the information that ends up being collected).

    These are not easy questions, but they are vital, and the EU / Google skirmish is a very important one. I'm a humanist. I believe laws and ethics should always be chosen by human beings, and favour human beings, at the expense of robots and legal entities such as companies and organisations, all else being equal. Of course I oppose Google on this.

    The human species is going to have to grow up a little. First as an audience and consumer of the net, and realize that just because it's on the internet (or even wikipedia) doesn't mean it's true. It also has to realize what people said in the past doesn't always pose a true reflection of their current selves - that people change and evolve. Especially from a younger age like 13.

    It doesn't work like that, which is part of the complexity. For making everyday decisions, people must make a choice all the time on what to trust, on the internet. Why? Because people's actions occur on the internet. It's the same medium. People buy things, apply for jobs, deal with their governments, and hang out among friends. On the internet. It's a wild mix of truth and false. Have you ever been on a public place early in the morning? There are janitors who clean up the trash. Otherwise we'd be knee deep in shit everywhere, everyday. Growing up and holding your nose is not an option. The internet is starting to smell. It needs janitors.

    Second, it will have to grow up as individuals and realize, when you put it out there, you put it out there. And no nanny state can fix it.

    It's not as simple as you think. You haven't thought of the other side of the coin. When others put it out there (about you), it's out there too. And Laws must fix it. This is nothing new. Do you think the Jews put out stories in the world that they themselves are evil, are thieves, have crooked noses, and live like rats in filthy houses, shitting in their own kitchens while they eat? They did not, the Nazis did. And because the Nazis put it out there, it became true. As true as necessary to make ordinary people believe it, and do their bidding.

    Google collects all these stories about everyone indiscriminately. Some are true, some are not. Google's actions must be stopped. There must be an ethical, legal way to clean up information over time, and it must apply to all companies, Google, your local comic book store, etc. It is an important issue, and a very difficult one. Google can stay in business, but there must be some limits. And when in doubt, I favour human beings over companies, always. YMMV, but to say it's bullshit or a non-issue is putting your head in the sand.

    You suggest people should just accept the new reality, that we should l

  25. Re:Cloudy, chance of rain on Dropbox Head Responds To Snowden Claims About Privacy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    How is that insightful? You've completely missed the whole point of privacy laws. In law, your hard drive in your computer is yours, and it is not public unless you go out of your way to make it so. In particular, anyone who uses ssh to access your hard drive breaks the law, unless you've specifically authorized them to do so. Lots of people, some slashdot readers, have gone to jail for doing just that.

    Also, your hard disk, in your computer, in your house isn't searcheable by law enforcement unless they have a warrant. So keep your stuff at home, and you'll be better off than leaving it on Dropbox (*).

    (*) I can see you're unconvinced. Let me spell it out for you: if your file is on Dropbox, then a properly worded warrant needs to be served to Dropbox, and they'll allow searches and copies of anything their hard drives contain. Including your file, your neighbour's file, everybody's files. If everybody keeps their own files at home, then a warrant needs to be served to you, to see your files, but it won't work for your neighbour's files. Another warrant needs to be served to the neighbour to see his files. And it won't work for everybody else. A warrant needs to be served individually to everyone, just to get the same access that Dropbox can give with a single properly worded warrant.