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User: D4C5CE

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  1. Re:remove phone-home crap - Then how would it work on Hacker Modifies Facebook Home To Work On All Android Devices · · Score: 1

    when he manages to remove every trace of phone-home crap in there, then it's maybe news worth mentioning

    Then how would it work?

    As a "leech-only client to Facebook" for the few who do actually care about their own privacy, but are nosy enough to want to read up on everybody else's every move (from the phones of all those to whom it couldn't matter less as they use an unpatched very verbose version).

  2. Only an 'exposée of sorts' as the Spelling Jo on Fake Academic Journals Are a Very Real Problem · · Score: 1

    ...would rather have it as an exposé (pour les initiés) after meaningful peer review. ;-)

  3. Which is why Aaron's Law is badly needed... on Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Computers, Says Manhattan DA · · Score: 2

    ...when every minor misdemeanor or even purely civil matter becomes a federal felony.
    The legal response to progress must not be "harsher punishments for every new generation" to consider computers (including cellphones these days) evil because "even" organized crime uses them, and to treat everyone else (who inevitably has to use them as part of one's daily life as well) like a mobster too - until the whole world becomes a "prison planet". Good to see a DA (possibly unintentionally) acknowledge the real issue in the midst of fearmongering.
    Cf. http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/02/aarons-law-amending-the-cfaa/

  4. Live footage: 'We don't have any oil, do we?' =;-o on Curiosity Rover Collects First Martian Bedrock Sample · · Score: 1
  5. Kitchen?Who needs kitchens these days?CloudCooking on Cooking Up the Connected Kitchen · · Score: 1

    is the order of the day. Food has to be ordered online. Kitchenware is not at home anymore, but in an Italian, Chinese or other canteen kitchen cloud," the Estate Agent says: http://www.heise.de/ct/schlagseite/2010/11/gross.jpg

  6. Collecting postage from owners of hacked accounts? on Facebook Testing $100 Fee To Mail Mark Zuckerberg · · Score: 1

    If you never give facebook your cell# or credit card#; its not a problem.

    If Zuck doesn't know enough about most of his users to get debts collected, then on this Earth who does?

  7. Collecting postage from owners of hacked accounts? on Facebook Testing $100 Fee To Mail Mark Zuckerberg · · Score: 1

    A strange bot-herder it would be not to teach his one-click ponies how to hit "Oh, yes, PLEASE pester all my friends!" a millisecond after it pops up...
    On someone else's machine, at the drone's users' expense.

  8. Collecting postage from owners of hacked accounts? on Facebook Testing $100 Fee To Mail Mark Zuckerberg · · Score: 1

    users who like to send spam [...] typically aren't willing to pay for the privilege. Impose a fee – however small – and they probably won't bother.

    But for different reasons: The spammers will find ways to avoid being billed themselves - having a habit of abusing the resources of others, they already are in people's PCs with their botnets, for crying out loud...

  9. Being seen as a 'front' for an intelligence agency on Australian Spy Agency Seeks Permission To Hack Third-Party Computers · · Score: 1
    ...may conceivably spell doom for some of the innocent (but possibly identifiable) "third parties" implicated by remote control without their consent or knowledge.

    Shouldn't our taxes at least buy us the due diligence of authorities to consider the most obvious and grave dangers before trying to get such plans implemented?

  10. Sounds like a plan on How Verizon's 'Six Strikes' Plan Works · · Score: 1

    1. Advertise top speeds and possibly (formerly?) even unlimited bandwidth
    2. Slap a presumption of guilt on those who actually use what they paid for
    3. Demand a ransom from anyone who cares to clear their names lest they be ratted out to the MAFIAA (and lose the access promised for their fees)
    4. Profit?! (At least because networks will never need to be built out again, at forced ever-declining usage...)
    Different in which way exactly from a racket scheme?

  11. Crappy or Cree, that is the question for importers on Cree Introduces 200 Lumen/Watt Production Power LEDs · · Score: 2

    flashlights ... and the LEDs that may be used in them, it's crazy what details they keep tabs on

    They have to, since these things are typically ordered from overseas, with prohibitive return postage fees, and many times some manufacturer or vendor will try to become the cheapest by changing to LEDs of a crappy (i.e. fake) rather than Cree variety. When the item arrives, one usually has just a few days to ascertain whether it is genuine or if a refund needs to be requested from the payment service.

  12. Even if U weren't paid, won't get paid in new jobs on Linus Chews Up Kernel Maintainer For Introducing Userspace Bug · · Score: 2

    Put your accepted kernel contribution on your CV and your CV will command a higher salary.

    When every search engine on Earth returns allegations of incompetence by some Überhacker Himself as the first few hundred hits on your name, you can save the time for writing that CV in the first place as HR would often just send it to /dev/null (if they thought in these terms ;-)) unseen anyway.

  13. Irreconcilable off-by-1 item index differences? ;) on GNU Grep and Sed Maintainer Quits: RMS and FSF Harming GNU Project · · Score: 1

    This boils down to these three points:
    1) To put it somewhat bluntly,

    ...to RMS, these absolutely had to be points 0 thru 2? ;-)

  14. 1st they ignore GNU, then they laugh at RMS/GNU,.. on Ubuntu Community Manager: RMS's Post Seems a Bit Childish To Me · · Score: 1

    then FLOSS forks Ubun-too, then GNU wins.

    (With a nod to Ghandi...)

  15. Control-C ?! (Infamous last words of TFA on Slate) on How Does a Single Line of BASIC Make an Intricate Maze? · · Score: 1
    RUN/STOP - it's a C64, you insensitive clod. ;-)

    And since when's an infinite loop not a loop?

  16. Purpose is to save the cheerleader, save the world on Humans Evolving Faster Than Ever · · Score: 1
  17. It's like an artist who does a painting,then hides on Highway To Sell: AC/DC iTunes Snub Finally Over · · Score: 1

    it from view?

  18. An prototype test environment in Prototype English on Mozilla Makes Prototype of Firefox OS Available · · Score: 1

    Firefox OS Simulator is an prototype test environment

    They even made an untested new language called "Prototype English" for it. ;-)

  19. In related news, renames itself to Proprietaryburg on German City Says OpenOffice Shortcomings Are Forcing It Back To Microsoft · · Score: 1

    (alternative spelling with an i avoided for fear of a fruit company lawsuit ;-))

    Oh the irony, having had free(dom) in its (former) name...

  20. The other 'nagging detail': how to get there, ever on NASA: Mission Accomplished, Kepler – Now Look Harder Still · · Score: 1

    There's one nagging detail, though: we are yet to find a truly Earth-like planet.

    As Rod Stewart would put it: ;-) It'll be a long road, getting just there from here... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3-nI1fA_fI

    Zefram Cochrane to the rescue? (Scheduled 2063...)

  21. Voice of caution against (eternal) war on anything on NRC Report Links Climate Change To National Security · · Score: 0
    ...e.g.when TEOTWAWKI, water wars and Mad Max style Peak Oil scenarios are conjured up (yet again) to "hack the Constitution"...

    If the effect of unaddressed climate change is the functional equivalent of terrorist attacks ... does the Executive Branch ... act unilaterally ... irrespective of ... Congress?

    comes from Friedrich August von Hayek, The Road to Serfdom (1944), Definitive Edition (2007), introduction by Bruce Caldwell, p. 31-32:

    [V]ery much a part of his underlying motivation in writing the book, is Hayek's warning concerning the dangers that times of war pose for established civil societies—for it is during such times when hard-won civil liberties are most likely to be all-too-easily given up. Even more troubling, politicians instinctively recognize the seductive power of war. Times of national emergency permit the invocation of a common cause and a common purpose. War enables leaders to ask for sacrifices. This is true for real war, but because of its ability to unify disparate groups, savvy politicians from all parties find it effective to invoke war metaphors in a host of contexts. The war on drugs, the war on poverty, and the war on terror are but three examples from recent times. What makes these examples even more worrisome than true wars is that none has a logical endpoint; each may be invoked forever.

  22. In corporate America ... the chair throws you! ;-) on Bungled Mobile Bet Will Be Ballmer's Swan Song · · Score: 1

    No Soviet Russia to see here, please move along.

  23. As seen on /.2005:Excursions at the Speed of Light on MIT Slows Down Speed of Light In New Game · · Score: 1

    Previously in this frame of reference: ;-) http://science.slashdot.org/story/05/05/16/0036207/excursions-at-the-speed-of-light
    A relativistic first-person bike ride simulator.

  24. Need to train teachers to spot giftedness? They do on How Do You Spot a Genius? · · Score: 1

    We need to train teachers to spot giftedness

    ...and many then play whack-a-mole on the gifted, to hammer any outstanding heads back into a "standard", "average" lower-level line.
    Some will even encourage/solicit/welcome the bullies' help to this "noble egalitarian end"...

  25. Yellowstone - with that name, does it run Caldera? on Climate Change Research Gets Petascale Supercomputer · · Score: 1