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User: phorm

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  1. Re:If you can't beat 'em, join 'em on WSJ Reports Boeing To Beat SpaceX For Manned Taxi To ISS · · Score: 1

    I'm voting for a moon-base! I wonder what they'd get for funding if they opened a Kickstarter :-)

  2. Any administration on WSJ Reports Boeing To Beat SpaceX For Manned Taxi To ISS · · Score: 1

    Big Corps make campaign contributions. Long-standing Big Corps also have embedded connections to people who can help push decisions in their favor. It doesn't matter if it's a D or an R.

  3. Outrage VS the future on Say Goodbye To That Unwanted U2 Album · · Score: 1

    I'm really of two opinions on this. In terms of "hey, an album appeared that I didn't wanted", meh just get rid of it. In terms of "hey, a company whom I am a customer of basically dropped a package on my device for free", well that's not as cool.

    So in terms of the current negative publicity, I'd hope that the current backlash makes them and others think twice about doing so in the future. It's like companies that - after I buy a product from them using paypal - have decided to bomb my paypal email address with ads for other shit I don't really want. It's a new form of SPAM, and certainly not something we need. What if it wasn't a big-name artist?
    How would people feel if Apple decided that maybe you want "Best of American Gospel Music"? How about if there wasn't a huge backlash, so they signed a deal with a few dozen other bands and decided "hey, let's drop a bunch more stuff in people's accounts, it's *free* so that's OK right?"

    Companies like Netflix make "suggestions" based on your history. If Apple wants people to hit a "Suggested for You" section and a "Free/Promotional Music" section where people can browse, that's cool. Jamming it into somebody's library for a marketing promotion is spammy and breaks the lines between "your service" and "my account".

  4. Free books on Say Goodbye To That Unwanted U2 Album · · Score: 1

    If you installed Google Books when it first came out, then you would have automatically have "bought" (for free) copies of various classic literature items that automatically dropped into your library. The main difference is that these were presumably out-of-copyright books and not being pushed as a marketing stunt, but the end result was rather similar. I wasn't overly offended by it but it seems a result of similar thinking on the behalf of the "store" manager ("oh, we'll just mark these as purchased and free so anyone can get them" without thinking about whether people *wanted* them).

  5. Re:Like traffic tickets on Navy Guilty of Illegally Broad Online Searches: Child Porn Conviction Overturned · · Score: 1

    Sounds like the creepers that get nailed in "to catch a predator."
    The thing is, there *are* aggressive 13-yr-olds out there. Often that aggression stems from an already messed-up upbringing, but you've suddenly jumped from "do we want to nail people for having pictures" to "do we want to nail people who knowing meet with young minors for illicit relationships".

    I don't have any problem with cops posing as 13-yr-olds, and being a social misfit certainly isn't a reason for engaging in such contact.
    I *DON'T* see many issues with an older individual befriending a younger person on a truly platonic level. In many ways, lack of adult guidance is probably one of the reason we're seeing many messed-up youth. But when you're meeting people with expectations beyond that (regardless of whether said person is real or fake), then it's bad news.

  6. Re:What about Kindles on Apple Outrages Users By Automatically Installing U2's Album On Their Devices · · Score: 1

    I remember when I first added "Google Books" to an Android device, it added a bunch of free "classics" (Alice in Wonderland, Huck Finn, etc) to my purchased library.

  7. Re:First world problems. on Apple Outrages Users By Automatically Installing U2's Album On Their Devices · · Score: 1

    I raise you Nickelback and give you Brian Adams or Celine Dion (apologies on behalf of Canada for those, BTW).

    Imagine the embarrassment if you put your iDevice on speakers and it starts pumping out Celine Dion....

  8. If they're using it for internal use, then no. GPL comes into play with distribution.

  9. What if it's a search that any civilian can do. As an individual, I can report things on the internet that are obviously illegal. Is there anything stopping him from reporting to the police/etc - as Navy personnel - material that any regular citizen would just as easily been able to find?

    One question becomes who to report to (because frankly, some cops may be just as likely to investigate the person making the report). In the case of child abuse, I'd prefer www.missingkids.com for child abuse, but is there any truly effective and anonymous reporting agency?

  10. Wow. Spelling fail. s/one/won/

  11. I wonder how much the perp actually one. Being named for having said material but getting off on a technicality may keep you out of jail, but it isn't going to do much for your social life or career (assuming he had either).

  12. Like traffic tickets on Navy Guilty of Illegally Broad Online Searches: Child Porn Conviction Overturned · · Score: 1

    like traffic tickets. It's a lot easier for a cop to sit on his ass eating donuts in front of a computer monitor than it is to go out and prosecute actual sex crimes

    I know somebody who does this job. If you think it's easy then how about YOU try it. Firstly, it isn't just "randomly searching the internet for bad stuff", but quite often investigating the computers of people who have an outstanding accusation of abuse (e.g. Timmy said uncle Frank has been doing something fairly heinous) for further evidence. At that point, they'll often find images of the person committing the abusive acts in question, as well as a trove of some fairly sick shit. We're not talking bathtub and beach pictures here, we're talking pain, degradation, and suffering.

    Perhaps you think you can get away with looking at pictures of children being abused for days on end and not end up being not being affected, but it's certainly not a job that *I* would want to do.

    Now, your initial argument is that 18 years is too long for just "traders." That may be a bit more reasonable, especially since these days it's pretty easy to pick up some weird/borderline crap on your computer just by visiting some hack/torrent sites (nasty banners). I'm not sure what the threshold for content is between "collecting" and "has nasty crap on computer", but that would be much more of a concern than your so-called "lazy" cops who have to look at sludge all day long.

  13. on the Gnutella file-sharing network on Navy Guilty of Illegally Broad Online Searches: Child Porn Conviction Overturned · · Score: 1

    As with other earlier P2P networks, wouldn't it just be a matter of "look for something bad and see who has it? Personally, if you're sharing out "illegal [xxx] blah" on a public network, how is it different from hosting a webpage with the same material?

    Now if he was breaking into people's computers to find it, I can understand, but in this case it sounds like he pretty much just looked for what people were sharing publicly. If it's public, the expectation of privacy should be pretty low, so what are the search restrictions in that case?

  14. 50-60%? I don't think so on Kickstarter's Problem: You Have To Make the Game Before You Ask For Money · · Score: 1

    Thinking on these two kickstarters

    Mighty #9, basically a game similar to Mega Man, it had some basic concept art and rough drawings, but I'd hardly call that anywhere near 50%

    SpaceVenture, same deal. Concept art, some rough ideas. Mostly, from guys who are known to produce.

    If you don't have a reputation already, and no prototype that's at least semi-functional, then really you've got nothing much to offer other than a promise and a prayer.

    You have no way to show whether your idea is feasible. You have no way to know how much work is actually involved. I have no way to know that you won't be taking my money and using it to fund a Caribbean vacation or drug/drinking habit.

    Seriously, for a computer game come up with an intro video that shows you can make it look good, and a few rough gameplay concepts that show you can make it *run*. You still have: level design, art design, storyboard design, voice acting as needed, sound production, etc etc. You're not even close to 50% at that point, but at least you can show that you can make *something*.

    But, without reputation, you have to either have a great idea that's unique and desirable, *really* good marketing, or something tangible. Notwithstanding the dude that kickstarted potato salad, that's just weird...

  15. Re:definition of "customer" on German Court: Google Must Stop Ignoring Customer E-mails · · Score: 1

    Google is being paid by the companies buying ads, which get targeted advertising based on the data. In turn, they are presumably being taxed on the money made from the ads. They cannot have one without the other.

  16. Apathy on U.S. Threatened Massive Fine To Force Yahoo To Release Data · · Score: 1

    Americans seem to have a better chance at shaming the NFL into dealing with Ray Rice than they do at shaming the government to do something about the NSA.

    Pissed off customers have the potential to lead to empty seats and lost profits. Pissed off citizens... well, you might get less votes if the "other guys" seem a little better, but the "other guys" are really part of the same system and many of the entrenched interests don't actually change when a different party is voted in.

  17. Re:Drug dogs on CBC Warns Canadians of "US Law Enforcement Money Extortion Program" · · Score: 2

    I did think about that. If that's the case,then they would alert on innocent persons approximately 90% of the time, and thus are completely ineffective in determining probably cause and should not be legally allowed as reason for a search.

  18. Drug dogs on CBC Warns Canadians of "US Law Enforcement Money Extortion Program" · · Score: 2

    I love how in several of these cases, they force the person to wait, bring in a dog, and then the dog "alerts" but there are NEVER any drugs... just money. This seems to contribute well to the theory that many dogs are just acting on a signal from the trainer (whether implicit or otherwise).

  19. Re:Abuses of communism on Cuba Calculates Cost of 54yr US Embargo At $1.1 Trillion · · Score: 1

    Really? Try protesting in a non-designated area. Especially if you're non-white. Not the Gulag, but you'll likely be arrested and imprisoned.

  20. Abuses of communism on Cuba Calculates Cost of 54yr US Embargo At $1.1 Trillion · · Score: 1

    Yes, because in the U.S. you'd never have for-profit prisons, civil forfeiture, or even outright cops stealing cash under the pretence of fighting crime.

    The U.S. certainly wouldn't have issues with police beating minorities or killing them, leading to riots. They wouldn't have a growing number of cases of false imprisonment, or police militarization

  21. Plants VS humans on Information Theory Places New Limits On Origin of Life · · Score: 1

    Actually, this is very important factor of the "cycle of life" in many cases.
    Being able to eat plants is good, but having them be able to recycle humans/animals waste products (including bodies) is equally important. Otherwise, what are you going to feed the plants?

  22. Idea VS game on Report: Microsoft To Buy Minecraft Studio For $2bn+ · · Score: 1

    Minecraft as a "concept" is great. A fairly open, semi-dynamically generated world. A focus on (generally cooperative) construction and innovation rather than blowing sh** up. In later versions, some fairly serious modding capabilities.

    There's definitely some value in the player-base, but in terms of the code-base? The *idea* behind MC was new and is what makes it great, but I don't know that the code itself would be particularly difficult to reproduce or even improve upon. Other than artwork and some specific mechanics, I don't see what's copyrightable that would prevent an improved offshoot. At the moment, it's mainly "we've sunk a lot into MC and it's been good enough," but if MS starts shenanigans that might change dramatically.

  23. Tidal energy on To Really Cut Emissions, We Need Electric Buses, Not Just Electric Cars · · Score: 1

    I wonder how much tidal energy could be harvested to charge a ship while at rest/dock if the appropriate hardware were installed.

    As always, storage becomes the issue in general though.

  24. Re:Who names those ships? on Northwest Passage Exploration Ship Found · · Score: 1

    I think the names were to make the ships scary to other people, not the crew.

  25. Movie industry on Ontario Government Wants To Regulate the Internet · · Score: 1

    The industry is even worse though. It's always pissed me off that they can make the DVD's in a country where it's the cheapest possible, then slap on "region codes" to prevent you from buying it from said country so they can jack up the local price.