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User: Hurricane78

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Comments · 8,497

  1. Re:Freedom of Information Act on Secret ACTA Treaty May Sport "Internet Enforcement" Procedures After All · · Score: 1

    No. National security fits perfectly. But as a reason why you demand the document!
    What else if not national security and the freedom of all people is it that ACTA is an attack on?

  2. Re:have you seen my representative government late on Secret ACTA Treaty May Sport "Internet Enforcement" Procedures After All · · Score: 1
  3. Re:Senate likely to pass treaty on Secret ACTA Treaty May Sport "Internet Enforcement" Procedures After All · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You mean it's hard for 307 *million* people to ignore the few LEO amongst them? Even with the 1,473,900 active personel in the millitary, they still vastly outnumber the cops/soldiers.

    And you should never forget, that even a soldier with a tank is likely to join a giant group of so many protesters, that he does not see any chance other than dying inside that completely locked down tank.

    The real problem is the retards out there, who are acting like passive, easily influencable cattle.

  4. What if it's a monad?

  5. Re:I agree! on Kaspersky CEO Wants End To Online Anonymity · · Score: 1

    Law abiding? You mean like the 9/11 guys, the corrupt politicans, and the company people (eg at Monsanto or Microsoft) who all have completely legal passports.

    I think you mean "law abiding until now, and moving out of the country before the packet arrives at its destination" ^^

  6. Re:Official answer from Anonymous: on Kaspersky CEO Wants End To Online Anonymity · · Score: 1

    I couldn't hold back, and have just forwarded this as-is, with a link to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWEjvCRPrCo to the Kaspersky CEO (address guessed) and their press center heads at http://www.kaspersky.com/mediacontact . ^^

    Because someone has to fight for our freedom too, right? If you have the balls, go on and tell them your opinion too. As long as speech, press and humor are still free. :)

  7. Official answer from Anonymous: on Kaspersky CEO Wants End To Online Anonymity · · Score: 4, Funny

    Anonymous Wants End to Online Kaspersky CEO.

    Anonymous Coward writes "Anonymous, from the well-known Internets, is calling for an end to the Kaspersky CEO on the Internet, and for the creation of mandatory 'Brains and common sense' for any CEO who wishes to browse the Web. Says Anonymous, 'Every CEO should and must have a brain, or common sense ... the internet was designed not for retard Nazis, but for porn and free thought. Then it was introduced to the commerce, and it was wrong ... to introduce it in the same way.' He calls the Kaspersky CEO 'the Internet's biggest freedom vulnerability' and thinks any community that wants to limit this freedom should be 'cut off.' The PMF (Political Marionettes Foundation) objects, and it's likely that they won't be the only ones."

  8. Meanwhile, on planet *reality*... on HTC Dragging Feet On GPL Source Release For "Hero" Phone · · Score: 1

    Geeks will buy the Nokia N900 with a full scale Linux, QT, and root access with no need to circumvent or break anything.

    And the rest will not care about that stuff anyway.

  9. Re:How about.. The MSN Network ! on Lockheed Snags $31 Million To Reinvent the Internet, Microsoft To Help · · Score: 1

    Win 95 didn't have a TCP/IP stack to

    [citation needed]

    No wait, that't worthless, exept for retards that can't think further than around the next corner. Make that:

    [agreeable fact, derived from commonly accepted paradigms with flawless logic, needed]

  10. Re:Is this FUCKING JOKE? on Lockheed Snags $31 Million To Reinvent the Internet, Microsoft To Help · · Score: 1

    Soon Microsoft is a pretty cool guy. eh kills aleins and doesn't afraid of anything...

  11. Re:Bottom line on Lockheed Snags $31 Million To Reinvent the Internet, Microsoft To Help · · Score: 1

    And yet, mass murder through the use of automated systems seems to be much more important than basic human reproductive needs. What a "great" world to live in. :((

    Everyone should die from their own weapons. There. Problem solved. (Not really. :/)

  12. Re:Wow, sounds like ipv6 on Lockheed Snags $31 Million To Reinvent the Internet, Microsoft To Help · · Score: 1

    Naah. Knowing Microsoft, they will add some minor incompatibilities, and throw SMB in there. That way, your system will be useless on normal IPv6 networks, and they will *camera zooms out* TAKE OVER *huge echo is added* THE WORLD!!!

  13. Re:Skynet on Lockheed Snags $31 Million To Reinvent the Internet, Microsoft To Help · · Score: 1

    ALL GLORY TO THE HYPNOCORPS!

  14. Re:Create More Hobs ??? on California Moving Forward With Big-Screen TV Power Restrictions · · Score: 1

    And all those newly surviving people have to eat and live too. So they will buy their stuff at Best Buy and Walmart.

    And the circle, as every working system in nature, closes. ^^

  15. Re:spectacular idea on Open Source Effort To Codify America's "Operating System" Online · · Score: 1

    Exactly. One word: Wikinazis.

  16. Re:except Windows 7 on Sneaky Microsoft Add-On Put Firefox Users At Risk · · Score: 1

    Uum, you said:

    In either case, wouldn't simply disabling the add-on also work? (this is what I did, and it left me alone after that).

    But the article says:

    The usual 'Disable' and 'Uninstall' buttons in Firefox's add-on list were grayed out on all versions of Windows except Windows 7

    So in case you did not mean Win7 (which would make no sense, because that's the point), one of you is lying here. ^^

  17. Re:Obligatory on Scientists Write Memories Directly Into Fly Brains · · Score: 1

    More like

    EWWW, I know Yuck-Poo!

  18. The "explanation" is tricking the uninformed! on Scientists Write Memories Directly Into Fly Brains · · Score: 1

    When they shined a laser on the fly brains, the ATP was released, and the 'associative learning' cells were activated. The laser flash was paired with an odor, effectively giving the fly a memory of a bad experience with the odor that it never actually had, such that it then avoided the odor in later experiments.

    People who don't know how brains learn, might believe the "that it never actually had" part.

    But if you know anything about that, you will know that what they did, was the same thing as what we call "learning": Associating something with something else.
    In this case they just provided the "bad feeling" part of the association, while the odor was in place. Causing the fly to learn that the odor causes that bad feeling.
    The same thing as if someone would always kick you in the balls when you see a pretty lady. (Just that the kicker would be invisible.)

    And actually, a large laser on your brain *is* something pretty bad, that is unknown to a fly.
    So this is nothing very special at all! They just found another way to "kick the fly in the balls". ^^
    With an indirect way, using ATP and laser, but still just that.

  19. Re:Great on Scientists Discover How DNA Is Folded Within the Nucleus · · Score: 1

    Get yourself some real earphones then. They sound like crap anyway.

  20. Re:Fascinating on Scientists Discover How DNA Is Folded Within the Nucleus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The idea of "junk DNA" is waaayyy outdated. At least by a decade! It was the old error of arrogance, that led some scientists to believe, that when they could not find a use for it, it must be "junk". Until someone found it to be in heavy use, defining the details of what you become. (There was a very interesting article in the German version of the Scientific American [called "Spektrum der Wissenschaft"] about it, some years ago.)

    It's what also caused people to believe that the spleen (the standing army headquarters of the immune system, among other things) or the tonsils (many functions, also much of the immune system) would not be needed, despite them otherwise being long be gone, and not using resources anymore.

    Just as, if your doctor has never seen what you have, has no idea how to heal or just treat it, etc, he will never admit that, but instead say, that there is no cure and there never will be, or even that you aren't sick at all. Even if you go and prove him wrong. Him being wrong is not in his vocabulary of things he can even think about.

    And just as, right now, "scientists" state, that because they are unable to get their calculations to match real measured values, that the universe must be wrong. (Nooo, never them!) And that it hides things from us in the form of "teh ebil dark matterzorz n dark enegiez"! ^^

  21. Re:Read the damn EULA on Toyota Claims Woman "Opted In" To Faux Email Stalking · · Score: 1

    So you agree with the recent moves of the government to take away all and every freedom from the people, under the disguise of "protecting your freedom"? ^^

    Or how many people do you know who "care enough to understand what having and protecting that right means"?

  22. Re:I'm pissed! on 12M Digit Prime Number Sets Record, Nets $100,000 · · Score: 1

    May I recommend: One... two... three... four... ...FIVE!?

  23. Re:White trash Re:And things like this are why... on Computer-Based System To Crack Down On Casino Card Counters · · Score: 1

    I have been to Monte Carlo. And it's the same. Just more compact, more expensive, and wayyy more arrogant!

    Like the central for the trash and crooks of the rich people. Those for inherited it, instead of working for it, for example. All decorated with expensive and partially old design. But that's just the facade.

    P.S.: He must have had a hard time saying his name to others, or in school, with a name like "blkkitty mzmadmike". ^^

  24. Re:Openess on How Nokia Learned To Love Openness · · Score: 1

    Ahh... repression and denial! How nice that you can just moderate my comments into oblivion, instead of actually facing the facts, isn't it?

    Typical jerk and loser behavior. I laugh in your general direction!

  25. Re:And things like this are why... on Computer-Based System To Crack Down On Casino Card Counters · · Score: 1

    Or even "How dare you trying to scam you while we are scamming you?!?"

    But you must never forget, that the idea is to take money from the dumb people. It's one of the last methods of natural selection that we got, in this world of supporting the worst parts of our society.

    Let's be happy that by it not being us who fall for things like these, we will have an advantage in evolution.
    Now the only problem is, that those people who own the casinos or work there, will have an advantage over us.
    But that is easily changeable: Work in the "natural selection" business too! ^^

    Because even if you're a Boll "casino owner "Gotes, you still will be a better human, than the original casino owners and Bill Gates'.