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User: xxxJonBoyxxx

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  1. Wikipedia...wrong? No! on Jimmy Wales To 'Holistic Healers': Prove Your Claims the Old-Fashioned Way · · Score: 3, Funny

    >> claims that much of the information on Wikipedia relating to (whatever) is "biased, misleading, out of date, or just plain wrong"

    Er...no shit? Personally, I subscribe to this view: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W...

  2. PLANNING to introduce a LEGISLATIVE PACKAGE on White House To Propose Ending NSA Phone Records Collection · · Score: 1, Insightful

    >> planning to introduce a legislative package

    Since when did Obama think a lawful path through Congress was a good option? Wasn't he the guy who said he'd work around our elected representatives to mandate the important things on his agenda?

    Oh...I see. This is just a "planning to" press release. In other words, this is a BS trial balloon designed to get people off his back about the NSA without actually changing anything.

  3. just switch moderators he's burned out on Full-Disclosure Security List Suspended Indefinitely · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As a security guy who has also been on the short end of legal threats too I feel for this guy. He's burned out and could use a year on the beach. Take a year or two at a cushy corporate security job but please keep the list alive - there are plenty of other moderators who would pick up the slack.

  4. Do you realize that most batteries are recycled? on EU Project Aims To Switch Data Centers To Second Hand Car Batteries · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The silliest thing about this press release is that it seems to ignore the fact that most car batteries (and certainly almost all large battery packs) are recycled and scrubbed so their components can be reused in new batteries.

  5. No one sticks around for the keynote anyway on TrustyCon was the 'Rebel Conference' Across the Street From RSA 2014 (Video) · · Score: 1

    I went to RSA on my company's dime for about five years, but was always asleep on a plane before Bill Clinton, Tony Blair or whoever else was there said their piece and collected their fee.

    Now that I'm more selective about which conferences I attend (I've already "seen the show" at the big ones), hitting alternative conferences like DEFCON (instead of BlackHat), and Thotcon (Chicago) and now TrustyCon will continue to be my focus.

  6. Re:I went back to corporate America because Obamac on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 1

    >> credible hulk SMASH!

    Um...yeah. I'm sure you really have been, uh..."spend(ing) the last 3 months breaking down ACA numbers and running comparative studies on current cost due to ACA"

    >> I think your stupid...Post AC becasue (authority) wouldn't be too happy

    Are you sure you're not posting this during your fourth period study hall? I kind of feel like I'm talking to my kids' friends right now.

  7. Re:I went back to corporate America because Obamac on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 1

    >> both Democrats and Republicans are seriously delusional about how much the free market can magically solve a lot of the problems with our current health care system

    One of the key requirements of any free market is free information. If you're familiar with "Medicaid oversampling" I'm guessing you're already affiliated with a health care provider. Are you currently pushing your provider to publish its prices? If not, why not?

  8. Re:I went back to corporate America because Obamac on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 4, Informative

    >> but for you it's actually a great deal

    Now there's the BS - you sound like the people who encourage everyone else to ride public transportation (without riding it themselves) right now.

    Trust me - I did the math. ACA's benefits, including access to providers, were well below what I was getting with my expensive individual insurance policy a few years ago. With a couple of kids doing sports and the occasional illness, the difference between paying out of pocket for my own health insurance vs. snuggling back up to a megacorp (and dodging the self-employment tax) made it a no-brainer.

    Before we continue, please tell me that you already signed up and paid for your ACA policy, and love what it does for you.

  9. Re:I went back to corporate America because Obamac on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 5, Insightful

    >> few hundred bucks a month for health care

    You don't have a family with kids..who occasionally get sick and broken bones, do you?

  10. I went back to corporate America because Obamacare on White House: Get ACA Insurance Coverage, Launch Start-Ups · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was on my own with a full-time consultancy, but I scaled it back to off-hours and went back to a forty-hour-a-week corporate job for the health insurance. The cost of individual health care plans was insane, and the crappy ACA plans provide worse coverage with fewer providers - and they're even more expensive!

    I really think what the feds are up to here is trying to kill off as many individual and small business operators as possible. After all, it's a lot easier to monitor and tax large corporate entities than it is to chase after a bunch of little ones.

  11. That's "bless their heart" in tech speak. on Google Chairman on WhatsApp: $19 Bn For 50 People? Good For Them! · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here's how I read that:

    >> "$19 billion for 50 people? Good for them."

    Which really means: "If Facebook wants to eliminate themselves as a threat to Google (and Google+) by peeing away mound of cash on stupid deals, I'm all for it. Meh heh heh heh ha!'

  12. I got in on the Virgin plan at the $25 level. If on WSJ: Americans' Phone Bills Are Going Up · · Score: 1

    ...I have a feeling I could sell the the number.

    I chuckle when people tell me they're paying $50 or more a month for a fricken' phone.

  13. Are you sure this wasn't the intent of the law? on BP Finds Way To Bypass US Crude Export Ban · · Score: 5, Interesting

    >>...new $360 million mini-refinery...demand for simple, one-step plants capable of transforming raw crude into exportable products such as propane is feeding a construction boom along the Gulf Coast.

    Call me cynical, but it seems that most legislation aims to protect the existing jobs of stalwart political supporters in sponsors' districts. (e.g., Obama's first term "stimulus," which was mostly used to shore up the existing salaries and pensions of his political base.) Perhaps the intent of this bill was to continue a Gulf Coast construction boom, leading to more voter, er, labor-intensive refinery jobs?

  14. Environmentalists vs. Keurig on The Next Keurig Will Make Your Coffee With a Dash of "DRM" · · Score: 2

    It always makes me chuckle when one of my self-anointed "green" friends whips up a cup of Keurig and then chucks the plastic container in the trash.

    Pot meet...

  15. Re:Mick Jagger of physics on The Higgs Boson Re-Explained By the Mick Jagger of Physics · · Score: 1

    His best years are about 50 years behind him?

  16. Who needs advertising when you can sell the comp.. on WhatsApp: 2nd Biggest Tech Acquisition of All Time · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Who needs advertising when you can sell the company for $16B? They'll just punt the founders and add in-stream/in-text ads related to the content of the text streams the user recently engaged in. Done.

  17. Re:Yeah, that was about 75 years ago on Star Trek Economics · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >> The difference with capitalism is that there is no big investor owning the company, doing what he wants and (the most important part) living from your work.

    And in the Soviet Union...the party bosses did what? :) Time to re-read "Animal Farm," I think.

    >> A cooperative is the best example of people working in those conditions.

    As are churches, many charities and other groups where the membership is small and motivated to achieve a common purpose (as typically demonstrated by a large body of volunteers). The model falls apart once applied to government of any size, however...

  18. Re:Yeah, that was about 75 years ago on Star Trek Economics · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >> and technology hasn't changed at all since, has it.

    That's my point: France and Venezuela and other countries have money and access to the latest technology, but have still been unable to summon their slacker's utopia.

    If you want a counter example, look how much the lives of Chinese citizens have improved since they began to emphasize reward-for-effort models (capitalism) over exist-get-paid models (socialism).

  19. Based on what? on Star Trek Economics · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >> we're in the nascent stages of...a post-scarcity economy...'no longer constrained by scarcity of materials—food, energy, shelter, etc.

    Tell that to:
    - The homeless in our streets
    - People blowing their savings on heating costs this winter
    - Middle-eastern residents getting blown up because there's oil under nearby ground
    - African children still dying of starvation

    >> European socialist capitalism vastly expanded to the point where no one has to work unless they want to

    Yeah...ask the Soviets or Cuba how that worked. (Or Venezuela if you need a more recent example.) Hell,. just ask Europe how that's going. (Looking at you, France.)

  20. Re:A standard multi-layer attack on Hackers Sweep Up FTP Credentials For the New York Times, UNICEF and 7,000 Others · · Score: 3, Informative

    As a "pen tester"... Since FTP servers aren't often monitored as closely as higher-profile web applications, but are still often tied into a company's AD or other common credential store, they're often a great resource to use if you want to harvest some high-value credentials before you go on site. (I like to use this:
    http://www.filetransferconsult... for that.)

  21. Loading ad interstatial... on Massive Storm Buries US East Coast In Snow and Ice · · Score: 1

    Looks like Slashdot's newest experiment is to pop an ad before you get to the article. Looks like I'll have that disabled in 5...4...3..

  22. Crappy economy = more reliance on faith? on Majority of Young American Adults Think Astrology Is a Science · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    >> what's behind this data?

    I think the grind of the crappy economy over the past five years is driving more people back into the arms of faith, including astrology because it has such an easy on-ramp. (Published horoscopes...) Anyone know any surveys that might confirm/deny?

  23. Video + Beta = Mindblown on Five Easy Pieces: Short Product Presentations from CES 2014 (Video) · · Score: 2

    So...the SlashDot community asks for "no more lame videos, ever" and the editors give us FIVE videos? What's next...keeping beta?

  24. Toughest job in politics? on Para Bellum Labs Will Attempt To Make the RNC a Political-Analytics Player · · Score: 0, Troll

    >> Para Bellum Labs might face the toughest job in politics.

    Nah...I think that belongs to the folks in charge of presenting Hillary as candidate of change and reform so Obama's coattails don't kill her campaign before it starts.

  25. There...are...four...lights!!! on Sophisticated Spy Tool 'The Mask' Rages Undetected For 7 Years · · Score: 1

    There...are...four...lights!!!