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User: LordLucless

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  1. Re:wars destroy wealth on The Only Thing, Historically, That's Curbed Inequality: Catastrophe (theatlantic.com) · · Score: 1

    No, I'm saying that its impossible for any government to commit theft -- at least not if they decide to call it a tax.

    Sort of like how extortion isn't extortion as long it's called protection money? Theft describes the nature of the act, not the nature of the perpetrator, and glossing over it with nicer-sounding words make it any better.

  2. Re:wars destroy wealth on The Only Thing, Historically, That's Curbed Inequality: Catastrophe (theatlantic.com) · · Score: 1

    taxation is your payment for services rendered by your government. Army, police force, road maintenance, infrastructure. Your taxes pay for all that shit. And if you really want to bitch about welfare, you can consider that the "service" of keeping beggars off the streets and out of your sight/way.

    And before you start saying its not a true transaction because you didn't choose what to "buy" well sorry but you did -- via your elected representatives. You can argue that the price is too high or whatever, or that your representatives are choosing to "buy" the wrong services or whatever, but calling it theft is rather disingenuous at best.

    I agree with the rest of your post, but this bit is ridiculous. You're essentially saying it's impossible for (democratic) governments to commit theft, because everything a government does is morally validated by the fact that it was democratically elected. Sorry, but just because a lot of people agree with something, doesn't mean it's a moral action. Historical examples abound.

  3. Re:Rose tinted glasses on The Only Thing, Historically, That's Curbed Inequality: Catastrophe (theatlantic.com) · · Score: 1

    Marx's original conception of communism wasn't a system of government, so much as it was a state of being.

    He considered socialism as a necessary evil - you had government imposing the principle of "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs", because people wouldn't do it themselves, but the idea was that as people were exposed to this, saw its benefits and became enlightened, they would start acting this way voluntarily. When the population in general had reached this state, the socialist government would become unnecessary and wither away, and the population would be living, ungoverned, as "communist man", the apex of Marx's conception of social evolution.

    Unfortunately, this breaks down, because the great benefits of socialism turn out to be mass starvation and poverty, which the people understandably get miffed about and don't embrace, which leads to their government shooting them in job lots. It's also why a lot of Marxists complain that communism has never really been implemented yet, and use that as a defence against the butchery their philosophy leads to.

  4. Re:This is why I went with indie games on DRM Company Denuvo Forgets To Secure Its Server, Leaks Two Years Of Emails (torrentfreak.com) · · Score: 1

    I recently started playing Stardew Valley, which is a single dev game. Apparently, for a while there, that dev was manually correcting individual corrupt saves for customers, because he felt bad that his game had failed them. Just try getting that sort of service from a mainstream developer.

  5. Re:Now lets see. on Donald Trump Is Sworn In As the 45th US President (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    Trump has never gone bankrupt.

    A fraction of the 500-odd companies he's invested in have gone bankrupt.

  6. Re: You need to do a bit more research. on CBS, Paramount Settle Lawsuit Over 'Star Trek' Fan Film (hollywoodreporter.com) · · Score: 1

    Not even the lawyers are sure which bits were and were not in violation of copyright law. They wouldn't have known until after decisions had been rendered at court. Are Vulcan ears copyrightable? Or are they a derivative work from older elf-ears? The world will never know.

  7. Re:Twitter as a protocol on Twitter Is 'Toast' and the Stock Is Not Even Worth $10, Says Analyst (cnbc.com) · · Score: 1

    What you say is true, but I think you have the chronology backwards. There were proprietary network and information protocols before open ones. The open came after the closed. Same with operating systems - linux and the BSDs came after. There are already some stabs at open social media (like Diaspora, although I'm not sure if that project's still viable). The point is, proprietary systems are often the vanguard, because money is good incentive, and when you've got financial backing, you can blaze trails faster. Open protocols usually follow the trails blazed by their commercial predecessors. There's no reason to imagine that, given time, open social protocols will not evolve and come to dominate.

  8. Re:Automation of the military on The UN Will Consider Banning Killer Robots (hrw.org) · · Score: 1

    I'd rather send in killer robots after ISIS rather than American (or any other) humans who'll get killed or maimed for life.

    Sure, but that's irrelevant to the issue at hand. The headline is, as usual, misleading. This is a discussion of the ban on autonomous killer robots. You can still shoot people via remote control, with your bot taking the fire instead of your human soldier. You just can't staple an algorithm to an assault rifle and set it loose.

  9. Re:Public Folders on Dropbox Kills Public Folders, Users Rebel (ndtv.com) · · Score: 1

    I was ready to join the lynch mob, up until the last sentence of the summary. It was deprecated in 2012. If it goes dark in 2017, then you've had 5 years to get yourself organised, and migrate. That's plenty of time, and more than adequate notification.

  10. Re:Not availiable in most of the world on Grand Tour 'Most Illegally Downloaded TV Show In History' (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    AFAIK Prime Video is only available in United States, United Kingdom, Germany and Austria. Leaving much of the world without a way to watch the new show. I don't consider it an excuse to pirate it

    I would. My number one copyright reform would be that any work not available for sale at a reasonable price point* in a given country is not protected by copyright in that country. You want my country to enforce your IP? Then you better be willing to sell it to my countries citizens.

    *No offering copies for sale at a million dollars a pop, and claiming that satisfies the requirement.

  11. Re: Regional Presidents on President Obama Orders Review of Cyber Attacks On 2016 Election (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    They get more representation, but it's not proportional, because every state gets two electors, in addition to the number they get based on population. This gives underpopulated states more oompf - per capita - than overpopulated states. That's why Delaware has six times the population of Arizona, but only twice as many delegates.

  12. Re:Regional Presidents on President Obama Orders Review of Cyber Attacks On 2016 Election (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but our elections are not necessarily meant to be fair to sparsely populated states.

    That's exactly what they were meant to be, since otherwise, sparsely-populated states would never have agreed to join the union.

  13. Re:We knew this going in on Weather Channel To Breitbart: Stop Citing Us To Spread Climate Skepticism (weather.com) · · Score: 1

    No, appointing a qualified person just means they have been determined to have the skills required to do the job. It doesn't mean they'll actually be good at it. For example, Fiorina was qualified to run HP (education, experience, etc) but ran it into the ground.

  14. Re:dogs did this on Cesarean Births Could Be Affecting Human Evolution, Study Says (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's English bulldogs. But the reason is pretty much the opposite of what this "study" claims - it's not a case of caesareans allowing genes for narrow pelvises to stay in the population, it's a case of selective breeding changing the shape of the dogs. Deliberate breeding, not a side-effect of too many caesareans.

  15. Re:We knew this going in on Weather Channel To Breitbart: Stop Citing Us To Spread Climate Skepticism (weather.com) · · Score: 1

    For example: appointing an unqualified person to a position of power because that person's actions are likely to benefit you, even though those actions may not be best for the country.

    But that would be just as corrupt if the person was qualified - it's not their qualification or lack thereof that makes it corruption, its the fact that they're being appointed to benefit you, rather than the country.

  16. Re:We knew this going in on Weather Channel To Breitbart: Stop Citing Us To Spread Climate Skepticism (weather.com) · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Isn't giving people who are unqualified positions of power the textbook definition of corruption?

    Uh, no? Giving people positions of power in exchange for favours, or due to pre-existing relationships (e.g. nepotism) are textbook definitions of corruption. Their qualification or lack their of is irrelevant to whether the appointment is corrupt or not.

  17. Re:Amateur Sys-admin deserves the time on Sysadmin Gets Two Years In Prison For Sabotaging ISP (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 1

    Based on what? Based on an employee leaving? Or based on taking legal action against someone who (may have actually) destroyed your business?

    Because deleting a couple of log files shut them down, and they'd fired their sysadmin while apparently not having anyone with the capacity to diagnose and fix such a problem.

  18. Re:What danger ? on BMW Traps A Car Thief By Remotely Locking His Doors (cnet.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    You'd probably cut your hands up pretty bad if you succeeded. I'd lie on my back and try and kick the windows out. Your legs have far more power than your arms, and you're generally wearing shoes.

  19. Re:Sounds like ARN.NET in Amarillo, TX on Sysadmin Gets Two Years In Prison For Sabotaging ISP (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 1

    The article names it as Pa Online.

  20. Why would this concern Trump? on Destructive Hacks Strike Saudi Arabia, Posing Challenge to Trump (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He campaigned on a platform of isolationism. Why would he care if two countries on the other side of the world are hacking each other?

  21. All I know about this particular incident is from the link the parent provided, but that doesn't seem to be the case - nothing indicates he had a weapon, or acted physically aggressive. The description most often used in the article is "tirade".

    The man can be heard in the video shouting a wide range of racist insults, and at one point, he even raises his fist in a salute and shouts: "White power!" At another moment in the video, the man pulls out his phone and stands directly in front of Duhra.

    It really does seem like he was charged with assault for a "racist tirade", which isn't entirely unbelievable, given it happened in Canada.

  22. You are free to be as racist as you want, and to shout it to the world. One person did, and while hate charges were considered, they did not apply [ctvnews.ca]. He was just charged with simple assault.

    Seriously? That's even worse. He was charged with "assault" - a word which, everywhere else in the world, implies physical violence - for *saying* something. That's the stupidest thing I've heard in...well, in the last 45 minutes, but most of those things were said by moronic teenagers on the internet, not the legislated code of laws of a purportedly civilized country.

  23. Honestly, even if Trump wasn't elected, this is still a very good idea.

    It is, and I suspect they were probably planning to do this anyway. The anti-Trump spin is just a way to get liberals to throw money at them during their fundraiser.

  24. Re:bah humbug global warming on Great Barrier Reef Has Worst Coral Die-Off Ever, Report Finds (usatoday.com) · · Score: 2

    Bleaching intensity decreased along a southerly gradient. While most reefs exhibited some degree of bleaching, this bleaching varied in intensity (from less than 10% to over 90% community bleaching) and was patchy throughout most of the management area.

    Did that bleaching gradient correlate with a similar temperature gradient? Sea temperatures have risen less than a degree centigrade since the 1800s; if coral reefs are *that* sensitive to temperature changes, they're probably screwed either way - humanity might be speeding it up, but the world's still on a warming trend absent human impact too. It's sad, but organisms that cannot adapt to changing environments die.

  25. That's cool - I have no problem with conceding that Republicans do it too. It's the notion that they do it exclusively which is laughable.