An important lesson I learned after college is that not every "requirement" is an actual requirement. Requirements like classes are often hurdles that are placed to either weed out people who don't want to do the hard work. Sometimes they are there to seem accredited to other organizations, allowing the school to justify their degrees.
I couldn't get a CompSci degree for the same reason. I couldn't handle calc. I got As in all my programming classes, but couldn't do the math.
I would say CS requires more creative thinking than logical thinking, but both are needed. However, in my every day life, I use maybe an Algebra 2 level type math?
Unless you're going to be writing video games or the like, you probably don't need it. But unfortunately, nothing you can do about it if the school is requiring you to.
You can do what I'm doing: get an English degree, show off your computer skills, and tell employers that with my geekiness and my English skills, I make great presentations and write very well.
Then the problem isn't the company; the problem is the legislator.
If legislators had the backbone of not caring about re-election, we might be in better shape. Then again, we re-elect over 95% of the legislators, so maybe the problem is the electorate.
Remember: most American's take advantage of the "legal loophole" called the itemized deduction.
You are under no legal obligation to itemize your deductions. And, unless I'm mistaken, you do not have to claim all your allowances.
Yes, I realize there is a huge difference between corporations skipping on millions in taxes, but they are taking advantage of the various tax laws that allow them to lower their tax liability, like any one of us do on April 15th.
The problem is not the corporations but the laws. I'd like to see a more simple tax system so that I don't have to spend an entire weekend figuring out how much I need to pay the government. Then again, I'm sure flying cars are more of a realistic possibility than our tax system being fixed.
The Bill of Rights is a document that restricts (in theory) what the government can do to you. Corporations can quarter troops in your house, limit your speech, etc. You, of course, also have the right to shoot them right in their face.:-)
It doesn't matter how ingenious, how wonderful, or how awesome a product is. If people don't want it, they won't buy it.
The US suffers from the "ew, bugs are gross" factor. Until this changes, the US won't adopt eating bugs en mass. This will be a fringe thing until we're basically forced to because meat becomes prohibitively expensive.
The problem of ruling by the majority is that minority interests get overlooked (see gay marriage).
The system we have in place currently is *SUPPOSED* to balance the will of the people (via election) and the morality of the elected (via legislature).
But you are still right that we have moved passed this. The sad thing is we deserve the government we vote for. Congress has a 95% re-election rate while having a 10% approval rating. Everyone hates what Congress has become, but everyone also things it's not their reps fault.
The only way to fix this is if EVERYONE votes out their representative, regardless of their party affiliation. We need fresh blood in there. Some of those reps won't leave until they either resign or die in office.
I'm glad to hear I'm not the only person to do this. I block the entire country of China. Their hacking attempts outnumbered legit requests by a factor of 50 to 1.
Why doesn't the great firewall of China work the other way around?
It's a single-point of failure. If your Google account gets compromised (either due to Google's incompetence or yours), you're pretty hosed. Of course, this assumes that your attacker is aware of which sides you used Google authentication (or any other authentication for that matter).
There is always a trade-off between convenience and security: If you don't want to carry keys, you can leave the door unlocked, etc...
My typical workflow is "Does this site have a bugmenot login?" If not, am I okay with this site having my personal information, regardless of how much Facebook/Google/Twitter/etc guarantees it won't share it because this can change at any time? If not, either create an individual account or do not interact with the site.
Depending on the service, having to use Facebook, Google, Apple, Twitter, etc. is much more preferable than having to create a brand new account that you will most likely only use once.
Granted, from a security perspective, it isn't that great. But you can't beat the convenience.
My FiOS ISP does not have an IPv6 address. I support it internally on my router. I imagine that the hold up is that the big guys aren't there yet. This makes sense since they have the most equipment to replace/reprogram.
I'd actually be interested in where these guys are at. I'm sure they figured it out for businesses but I'd like an IPv6 address for my house.
"We the People" is probably the stupidest and most successful placebo button any politician has ever created. While I didn't vote for Obama the first time around, I would have voted for him the second time around IF instead of creating an "official response" they actually got some lemming on congress to run with it, regardless of whether he agreed with the petition or not. (He can always veto the bill if it ever got to him.)
That would have been a step in the right direction. But no, being the political coward he is, made it so that us little people could complain and nag and he would not have to do squat about it.
I would not be surprised if his official response is a very simple "No."
Verizon, et al (with the possible exception of Sprint) have a large enough market share that the small percentage of hackers (classical definition) won't make a dent in their bottom line. This is assisted by the high cost to enter the market. Unfortunately, unless there is some sort of apocalypse or some other technical catastrophic, this will require legislative solution.
It's kind of ironic that the iPhone was successful for AT&T. Apple was the first company (at least I'm aware of) that told the carriers, "No, we're going to make the phone. You have no say. You will buy it as-is or we go to someone else." Verizon said no because they wanted to lock down the phone. AT&T, knowing the number of acolytes willing to switch over to get an Apple device, said, "Sure!" Granted, this changed down the road, with AT&T getting more and more features. But, for the first time, a cell phone manufacturer dictated to a carrier the terms of how a phone would work.
Unlike Apple, Canonical doesn't have the name brand. And their fans are too small in number to take this much of a risk. I imagine that people who will use the Ubuntu interface will be people like you and me, who load the ROM directly on the phone.
I just hope that the source will be released so we can all benefit.
Non-lethal is only useful when there isn't an immediate threat to someone's life.
When you absolutely need to be sure someone won't kill someone, there's only one way to do that. That's why police don't wield tasers when confronting an armed criminal. They wield them when confronting someone who is acting wildly, but is not an immediate threat. (A Youtube video comes to mind where someone is going bat crazy at a police officer for writing her a ticket. She starts slapping him so he tases her.)
Using a taser against someone carrying a shovel is one thing. Using one against someone carrying a full-auto M14 is another.
To your point though, I'm not sure if keeping any gun/taser in a classroom is a good idea (unless it was on the teacher's person, in a holster). Too much can happen and a student can gain possession before the teacher can do anything.
Let's take the analogy away from the hot button issue (guns) and apply it to something else: stoves.
I prefer my stove to be simple. I absolutely hate electric stoves and convection. Yes, other people like them but if something breaks, it's usually far more complicated to fix and requires much more maintenance.
My gas stove has one switch that regulates the flow of gas. That's really all I need. Timers are nice, but are not necessary.
I think the point your making is that there must be a trade off. And while I agree with the premise, you are missing a huge part of the argument which is simplicity. When I cook, I don't want to have to figure out which buttons do what when I just want to cook my food and be done with it. Temperature meters, sensors, etc...these are all things that make it better for some, annoying for others.
If people want to buy them, I won't stop them. The moment you or the government tells me I MUST give up my simple stove for a bloatware ridden electric one that costs five times as much is the same moment that I resist.
I don't care if my simple stove has caused more carbon monoxide deaths than electric ones. There are ways I can monitor that. The trade-off is not enough for me to make that switch.
To bring the discussion back to guns, the only way I'd be willing to have added "security" to guns is to make the police liable. Too many anti-gun people say, "well, if there were more police, these things wouldn't happen." When seconds count, the police are often minutes away. If you can guarantee that the police can be at my house within seconds of a break in, I'll gladly turn in my gun.
I don't know anyone who is willing give up their personal privacy within their home and give the police carte blanche access. If you are, good for you. But don't make that decision for me.
This may seem like a really stupid question but it has always bugged me: why do both me and the content provider pay for data?
Back in the bad old days of Long Distance Calling, whomever initiated the phone call (assuming you're not calling collect or on a 800 number) paid for the call. It made sense: why pay for something that you didn't start?
However, in data, both sides pay. Am I the only one confused by this? I understand that I should have to pay for a connection (like the phone company) but why do I get a bandwidth meter along with the other side?
The only reason I can think of is because the data is "asynchronous" (e.g. the same amount of data isn't being exchanged). But this reason only goes so far since once side is uploading and the other side is downloading.
The USPTO generates the most income for the government, outside of the IRS. There is absolutely no incentive to Congress to get rid of a patent that requires absolutely no materiel, don't exist, but worth a lot of money. For congress, software patents and the like are cash cows.
The only way this will change is we have a revolution and write a new constitution. Technically, we need to get the right people into office; but in this case, we need to get 51% of people into office. And once they are in office, there is no guarantee that they will write the bill.
While I will hope that this changes without the watering the tree of liberty with blood, I'm not going to hold my breath.
Having a single master copy might be difficult do in part of the "redistribute" part of copyright. It's one thing if John Q. Public records a show in his private home for later watching. It's another for John Q. Public then makes copies of that recording to distribute to friends/family/etc.
Also, local affiliates get ad money for local businesses so I'm sure that there would be a lot of push back on this.
What the Boxee probably does is store the recording on a small drive (40GB maybe) and then uploads it as bandwidth allows.
When I try to explain this thought experiment to non-techies (or laymen in general), I use the following:
Imagine a box where you throw in a coin. Close the box and rattle it around. Schrodinger's theory is that the coin is both face up and face down (as seen from the top of the box).
Is this an accurate analogy? Schrodinger's cat had too many pieces and explaining it tended to be too complicated.
Regardless of how one feels about the iPhone, it did revolutionize the mobile phone industry in one BIG way: took manufacturing power AWAY from the phone companies. And while phone companies are still doing this to Android phones, Apple has remained relatively unscathed.
I believe the only hurdle left for the iPhone is to make it a completely data-only phone, relying on SIP instead of traditional phone numbers. I realize that this would be a HUGE negative for phone companies, who profit handsomely from unused minutes and struggle to profit from data hogs like iPhones.
Where do you see the iPhone going next? Are there any more new big advances similar to when the iPhone first debuted?
Unlike other physical and tangle forms of evidence, digital evidence is both nothing and something at the same time. It's too easy to both plant evidence (by either the defendant or the prosecution) and sometimes impossible to deny the evidence.
Furthermore, digital evidence doesn't necessary mean that I am the author. I don't have my phone on me at all times. I let friends use it.
This being said, I'm not discounting the importance of forensics. I just think more needs to happen before we can say something is evidence. Mind you, the large majority of crimes are committed by idiots who post pictures of their crime on Facebook. But for the small percentage of us who are either nefarious and trying to take advantage of the legal system or an innocent victim to circumstance, it's too ambiguous to say all the data on my phone is my own. (Wasn't Carrier ID a few years ago?)
Granted every piece of evidence has some sort of flaw of authentication. But I fear the day that I get arrested for posting "I just robbed this place!" about getting free coffee next to a bank that was getting robbed. (Yes, I would have an alibi, but let's not let this flaw ruin a good analogy.)
As MUCH as I agree with you, this simply isn't the case for the majority of the voting populous. Even very smart and educated people care more about whether you have a "D" or a "R" attached to your name than they care to admit. Our voting system is better than most other nations, but has major faults that it relies on the lowest common denominator and the system REWARDS candidates that can pander the best.
I have personally often thought about running a purely honest campaign where everything would be cited. The cold hard truth is the average voter doesn't care. They either like their party or they hate the opposing party. Independent voters often vote with their gut. A small percentage exists where voters like you and me actually check credentials of candidates. But for that few votes, candidates would rather pander to the masses.
My biggest problem is campaign promises. The vast majority of campaign promises made by presidential candidates cannot be fulfilled simply because they are president. For many of the reforms both Obama and Romney are proposing, they are better off running for congress. But the average American doesn't know this. The only thing the president has direct control over is foreign policy. (Yes, yes, they have a bully pulpit; but they cannot directly introduce bills, as Obama has shown with his online petition initiative.)
In short, the problem isn't our candidates; it's our populous. And since our candidates love a dumb populous, this won't be changing anytime soon.
I highly doubt that they didn't know the details of the bill. The bill was available via Thomas and it's broad strokes were known for quite some time.
GoDaddy wanted to placate the MPAA/RIAA/etc because it was a business decision. Once they realized that they had a massive exodus of customers, they made the business decision to reverse their stance.
Their decision had little to do with knowing the bill. Their decision was made because it was the fiscally responsible thing to do. They probably didn't predict that the fallout would be as drastic as it was.
So far, only a minority of customers finds these new types of models appealing, but it's a growing minority
As far as I know, Sprint is the only carrier that does this. If every carrier was forced to allow this type of competition, I'm sure it would become the majority.
I hate having to carry a contract with AT&T for two years. Phones are only discounted because you sign the contract. It would seem logical, then, that your monthly fee would decrease afterword but this is simply not the case.
Citing the Constitution is not enough. Yes, those words are written, but you have 200+ years of case law that show that the Constitution has been beaten up more times than is worth counting.
Without going into the nitty gritty legal details, the meaning of this sentence is often up for debate. Yes, Congress shall make no law, but the Constitution doesn't explain exactly what is speech. Is speech spoken words? Is it a napkin that has a logo on it? What about soldiers? Do they have the same rights?
The point is we don't live in the same world as the framers did. Many of them thought this was common sense, that no further explanation was necessary. Just look at any bill written today. Almost everything is hyper-defined. There are entire sections of contracts dedicated to "definitions" because words are so ambiguous.
While you and I may wish to live in a world where the Constitution isn't treated like toilet paper, unfortunately, we have to make do with what we have, less you want to start a revolution.
An important lesson I learned after college is that not every "requirement" is an actual requirement. Requirements like classes are often hurdles that are placed to either weed out people who don't want to do the hard work. Sometimes they are there to seem accredited to other organizations, allowing the school to justify their degrees.
I couldn't get a CompSci degree for the same reason. I couldn't handle calc. I got As in all my programming classes, but couldn't do the math.
I would say CS requires more creative thinking than logical thinking, but both are needed. However, in my every day life, I use maybe an Algebra 2 level type math?
Unless you're going to be writing video games or the like, you probably don't need it. But unfortunately, nothing you can do about it if the school is requiring you to.
You can do what I'm doing: get an English degree, show off your computer skills, and tell employers that with my geekiness and my English skills, I make great presentations and write very well.
Then the problem isn't the company; the problem is the legislator.
If legislators had the backbone of not caring about re-election, we might be in better shape. Then again, we re-elect over 95% of the legislators, so maybe the problem is the electorate.
Remember: most American's take advantage of the "legal loophole" called the itemized deduction.
You are under no legal obligation to itemize your deductions. And, unless I'm mistaken, you do not have to claim all your allowances.
Yes, I realize there is a huge difference between corporations skipping on millions in taxes, but they are taking advantage of the various tax laws that allow them to lower their tax liability, like any one of us do on April 15th.
The problem is not the corporations but the laws. I'd like to see a more simple tax system so that I don't have to spend an entire weekend figuring out how much I need to pay the government. Then again, I'm sure flying cars are more of a realistic possibility than our tax system being fixed.
Illegal for the government.
The Bill of Rights is a document that restricts (in theory) what the government can do to you. Corporations can quarter troops in your house, limit your speech, etc. You, of course, also have the right to shoot them right in their face. :-)
It doesn't matter how ingenious, how wonderful, or how awesome a product is. If people don't want it, they won't buy it.
The US suffers from the "ew, bugs are gross" factor. Until this changes, the US won't adopt eating bugs en mass. This will be a fringe thing until we're basically forced to because meat becomes prohibitively expensive.
The problem of ruling by the majority is that minority interests get overlooked (see gay marriage).
The system we have in place currently is *SUPPOSED* to balance the will of the people (via election) and the morality of the elected (via legislature).
But you are still right that we have moved passed this. The sad thing is we deserve the government we vote for. Congress has a 95% re-election rate while having a 10% approval rating. Everyone hates what Congress has become, but everyone also things it's not their reps fault.
The only way to fix this is if EVERYONE votes out their representative, regardless of their party affiliation. We need fresh blood in there. Some of those reps won't leave until they either resign or die in office.
I'm glad to hear I'm not the only person to do this. I block the entire country of China. Their hacking attempts outnumbered legit requests by a factor of 50 to 1.
Why doesn't the great firewall of China work the other way around?
It's a single-point of failure. If your Google account gets compromised (either due to Google's incompetence or yours), you're pretty hosed. Of course, this assumes that your attacker is aware of which sides you used Google authentication (or any other authentication for that matter).
There is always a trade-off between convenience and security: If you don't want to carry keys, you can leave the door unlocked, etc...
My typical workflow is "Does this site have a bugmenot login?" If not, am I okay with this site having my personal information, regardless of how much Facebook/Google/Twitter/etc guarantees it won't share it because this can change at any time? If not, either create an individual account or do not interact with the site.
More often than not, I choose the last option.
Depending on the service, having to use Facebook, Google, Apple, Twitter, etc. is much more preferable than having to create a brand new account that you will most likely only use once.
Granted, from a security perspective, it isn't that great. But you can't beat the convenience.
My FiOS ISP does not have an IPv6 address. I support it internally on my router. I imagine that the hold up is that the big guys aren't there yet. This makes sense since they have the most equipment to replace/reprogram.
I'd actually be interested in where these guys are at. I'm sure they figured it out for businesses but I'd like an IPv6 address for my house.
"We the People" is probably the stupidest and most successful placebo button any politician has ever created. While I didn't vote for Obama the first time around, I would have voted for him the second time around IF instead of creating an "official response" they actually got some lemming on congress to run with it, regardless of whether he agreed with the petition or not. (He can always veto the bill if it ever got to him.)
That would have been a step in the right direction. But no, being the political coward he is, made it so that us little people could complain and nag and he would not have to do squat about it.
I would not be surprised if his official response is a very simple "No."
Verizon, et al (with the possible exception of Sprint) have a large enough market share that the small percentage of hackers (classical definition) won't make a dent in their bottom line. This is assisted by the high cost to enter the market. Unfortunately, unless there is some sort of apocalypse or some other technical catastrophic, this will require legislative solution.
It's kind of ironic that the iPhone was successful for AT&T. Apple was the first company (at least I'm aware of) that told the carriers, "No, we're going to make the phone. You have no say. You will buy it as-is or we go to someone else." Verizon said no because they wanted to lock down the phone. AT&T, knowing the number of acolytes willing to switch over to get an Apple device, said, "Sure!" Granted, this changed down the road, with AT&T getting more and more features. But, for the first time, a cell phone manufacturer dictated to a carrier the terms of how a phone would work.
Unlike Apple, Canonical doesn't have the name brand. And their fans are too small in number to take this much of a risk. I imagine that people who will use the Ubuntu interface will be people like you and me, who load the ROM directly on the phone.
I just hope that the source will be released so we can all benefit.
Non-lethal is only useful when there isn't an immediate threat to someone's life.
When you absolutely need to be sure someone won't kill someone, there's only one way to do that. That's why police don't wield tasers when confronting an armed criminal. They wield them when confronting someone who is acting wildly, but is not an immediate threat. (A Youtube video comes to mind where someone is going bat crazy at a police officer for writing her a ticket. She starts slapping him so he tases her.)
Using a taser against someone carrying a shovel is one thing. Using one against someone carrying a full-auto M14 is another.
To your point though, I'm not sure if keeping any gun/taser in a classroom is a good idea (unless it was on the teacher's person, in a holster). Too much can happen and a student can gain possession before the teacher can do anything.
Let's take the analogy away from the hot button issue (guns) and apply it to something else: stoves.
I prefer my stove to be simple. I absolutely hate electric stoves and convection. Yes, other people like them but if something breaks, it's usually far more complicated to fix and requires much more maintenance.
My gas stove has one switch that regulates the flow of gas. That's really all I need. Timers are nice, but are not necessary.
I think the point your making is that there must be a trade off. And while I agree with the premise, you are missing a huge part of the argument which is simplicity. When I cook, I don't want to have to figure out which buttons do what when I just want to cook my food and be done with it. Temperature meters, sensors, etc...these are all things that make it better for some, annoying for others.
If people want to buy them, I won't stop them. The moment you or the government tells me I MUST give up my simple stove for a bloatware ridden electric one that costs five times as much is the same moment that I resist.
I don't care if my simple stove has caused more carbon monoxide deaths than electric ones. There are ways I can monitor that. The trade-off is not enough for me to make that switch.
To bring the discussion back to guns, the only way I'd be willing to have added "security" to guns is to make the police liable. Too many anti-gun people say, "well, if there were more police, these things wouldn't happen." When seconds count, the police are often minutes away. If you can guarantee that the police can be at my house within seconds of a break in, I'll gladly turn in my gun.
I don't know anyone who is willing give up their personal privacy within their home and give the police carte blanche access. If you are, good for you. But don't make that decision for me.
This may seem like a really stupid question but it has always bugged me: why do both me and the content provider pay for data?
Back in the bad old days of Long Distance Calling, whomever initiated the phone call (assuming you're not calling collect or on a 800 number) paid for the call. It made sense: why pay for something that you didn't start?
However, in data, both sides pay. Am I the only one confused by this? I understand that I should have to pay for a connection (like the phone company) but why do I get a bandwidth meter along with the other side?
The only reason I can think of is because the data is "asynchronous" (e.g. the same amount of data isn't being exchanged). But this reason only goes so far since once side is uploading and the other side is downloading.
That leads to a whole other problem: targeted advertising.
The USPTO generates the most income for the government, outside of the IRS. There is absolutely no incentive to Congress to get rid of a patent that requires absolutely no materiel, don't exist, but worth a lot of money. For congress, software patents and the like are cash cows.
The only way this will change is we have a revolution and write a new constitution. Technically, we need to get the right people into office; but in this case, we need to get 51% of people into office. And once they are in office, there is no guarantee that they will write the bill.
While I will hope that this changes without the watering the tree of liberty with blood, I'm not going to hold my breath.
Having a single master copy might be difficult do in part of the "redistribute" part of copyright. It's one thing if John Q. Public records a show in his private home for later watching. It's another for John Q. Public then makes copies of that recording to distribute to friends/family/etc.
Also, local affiliates get ad money for local businesses so I'm sure that there would be a lot of push back on this.
What the Boxee probably does is store the recording on a small drive (40GB maybe) and then uploads it as bandwidth allows.
When I try to explain this thought experiment to non-techies (or laymen in general), I use the following:
Imagine a box where you throw in a coin. Close the box and rattle it around. Schrodinger's theory is that the coin is both face up and face down (as seen from the top of the box).
Is this an accurate analogy? Schrodinger's cat had too many pieces and explaining it tended to be too complicated.
Regardless of how one feels about the iPhone, it did revolutionize the mobile phone industry in one BIG way: took manufacturing power AWAY from the phone companies. And while phone companies are still doing this to Android phones, Apple has remained relatively unscathed.
I believe the only hurdle left for the iPhone is to make it a completely data-only phone, relying on SIP instead of traditional phone numbers. I realize that this would be a HUGE negative for phone companies, who profit handsomely from unused minutes and struggle to profit from data hogs like iPhones.
Where do you see the iPhone going next? Are there any more new big advances similar to when the iPhone first debuted?
Unlike other physical and tangle forms of evidence, digital evidence is both nothing and something at the same time. It's too easy to both plant evidence (by either the defendant or the prosecution) and sometimes impossible to deny the evidence.
Furthermore, digital evidence doesn't necessary mean that I am the author. I don't have my phone on me at all times. I let friends use it.
This being said, I'm not discounting the importance of forensics. I just think more needs to happen before we can say something is evidence. Mind you, the large majority of crimes are committed by idiots who post pictures of their crime on Facebook. But for the small percentage of us who are either nefarious and trying to take advantage of the legal system or an innocent victim to circumstance, it's too ambiguous to say all the data on my phone is my own. (Wasn't Carrier ID a few years ago?)
Granted every piece of evidence has some sort of flaw of authentication. But I fear the day that I get arrested for posting "I just robbed this place!" about getting free coffee next to a bank that was getting robbed. (Yes, I would have an alibi, but let's not let this flaw ruin a good analogy.)
As MUCH as I agree with you, this simply isn't the case for the majority of the voting populous. Even very smart and educated people care more about whether you have a "D" or a "R" attached to your name than they care to admit. Our voting system is better than most other nations, but has major faults that it relies on the lowest common denominator and the system REWARDS candidates that can pander the best.
I have personally often thought about running a purely honest campaign where everything would be cited. The cold hard truth is the average voter doesn't care. They either like their party or they hate the opposing party. Independent voters often vote with their gut. A small percentage exists where voters like you and me actually check credentials of candidates. But for that few votes, candidates would rather pander to the masses.
My biggest problem is campaign promises. The vast majority of campaign promises made by presidential candidates cannot be fulfilled simply because they are president. For many of the reforms both Obama and Romney are proposing, they are better off running for congress. But the average American doesn't know this. The only thing the president has direct control over is foreign policy. (Yes, yes, they have a bully pulpit; but they cannot directly introduce bills, as Obama has shown with his online petition initiative.)
In short, the problem isn't our candidates; it's our populous. And since our candidates love a dumb populous, this won't be changing anytime soon.
I highly doubt that they didn't know the details of the bill. The bill was available via Thomas and it's broad strokes were known for quite some time.
GoDaddy wanted to placate the MPAA/RIAA/etc because it was a business decision. Once they realized that they had a massive exodus of customers, they made the business decision to reverse their stance.
Their decision had little to do with knowing the bill. Their decision was made because it was the fiscally responsible thing to do. They probably didn't predict that the fallout would be as drastic as it was.
As far as I know, Sprint is the only carrier that does this. If every carrier was forced to allow this type of competition, I'm sure it would become the majority.
I hate having to carry a contract with AT&T for two years. Phones are only discounted because you sign the contract. It would seem logical, then, that your monthly fee would decrease afterword but this is simply not the case.
Citing the Constitution is not enough. Yes, those words are written, but you have 200+ years of case law that show that the Constitution has been beaten up more times than is worth counting.
Without going into the nitty gritty legal details, the meaning of this sentence is often up for debate. Yes, Congress shall make no law, but the Constitution doesn't explain exactly what is speech. Is speech spoken words? Is it a napkin that has a logo on it? What about soldiers? Do they have the same rights?
The point is we don't live in the same world as the framers did. Many of them thought this was common sense, that no further explanation was necessary. Just look at any bill written today. Almost everything is hyper-defined. There are entire sections of contracts dedicated to "definitions" because words are so ambiguous.
While you and I may wish to live in a world where the Constitution isn't treated like toilet paper, unfortunately, we have to make do with what we have, less you want to start a revolution.