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User: StillAnonymous

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  1. Re:A quick question on hate speech on Twitter Isn't Removing Enough Hate Speech, Complains The EU (cnn.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The "right" doesn't care, for the most part. By and large, they really are about free speech.

    They just don't like the hypocrisy that the "left" espouses. If the left is going to say that hate speech should be regulated, then the left has to be held to their own standard. That they aren't is the problem the right sees and exposes.

    "Make the enemy live up to its own book of rules." Wasn't that an Alinsky directive? Ironic that it can be used against his disciples, isn't it?

  2. Re:DRM: Snakeoil peddlers? on 'Rime' Developer Keeps Promise, Removes Denuvo DRM After Game Gets Cracked (cinemablend.com) · · Score: 2

    Nobody expects a system to provide protection forever. Most of a game's sales occur within a window that starts at the release date. I'm not sure what that window is these days, maybe a month? So if you can protect the game from being copied for at least a month, the idea is that you'll sell more during that critical window.

    And to this end, some protections have been successful. FIFA 17 was released 7 months ago and hasn't been cracked yet, although with Denuvo being cracked now, it probably won't be long before this one falls. Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory went uncracked just over a year.

    What bothers me is publishers who don't remove the protection after a time. I'm still pissed that they didn't remove the online activation from Bioshock like they promised they would, instead they diluted that promise into removing the activation limit instead. Not removing the protections causes problems down the road when you want to run the game on newer operating systems (Chaos Theory's Starforce implementation was never updated for 64-bit OS, so you were SOL without a crack) or on alternatives like Wine on Linux.

  3. Re:By far not the first time on 'Rime' Developer Keeps Promise, Removes Denuvo DRM After Game Gets Cracked (cinemablend.com) · · Score: 1

    The laser-hole wasn't designed to tear your drive head off. When you stick a disk in the drive, you don't necessarily know where the head will be, so a deliberate damage setup like this would have a good chance of destroying legitimate user's drive as well.

    The burn was there to prevent a successful write attempt to that sector. The protection would write something there, and then read it back. If it read back what it wrote, the damage wasn't there and it's a copy. Of course it would check to make sure you didn't just write-protect the disk, it wasn't that simple.

    This type of protection was just hacked out of the code, but there was a device (Central Point Software's Enhanced Option Board) that would simulate the damage by intercepting the drive requests and returning what the program expected.

  4. Re:By far not the first time on 'Rime' Developer Keeps Promise, Removes Denuvo DRM After Game Gets Cracked (cinemablend.com) · · Score: 1

    VM/interpreter/pseudo-code protections have been around for a long time.

    Denuvo
    SecurROM 7+
    Solidshield
    StarForce ...
    All the way back to Electronic Arts' fat-track scheme on the Commodore 64, which used a VM to obscure the upload of the drive code and check the return value. This was 1983.

  5. Re:Daycare for adults on 'U Can't Talk to Ur Professor Like This' (nytimes.com) · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If you wanted to destroy a foreign nation without wasting money or your own people's lives on war, and were patient, this would be the way to go about it.

    - Infiltrate and infect their education system, media, and a few key political appointments
    - Reduce the standards in the education system so that "graduates" are incapable of competing with your country's people or realizing they are being manipulated
    - Convince their people they don't need to work and that they should expect everything as a handout
    - Make them dependent on authority figures for everything and convince them that they should never do things for themselves or handle their own problems. Lobby for laws that punish those that do
    - Tell one half of the people that all of their problems is caused by the other half
    - Lobby for laws that grant some groups of people more rights than others. Vilify the others if they complain
    - Convince people to believe that their culture is worthless and that being proud of your heritage or country is abhorrent
    - Encourage behavior that breaks apart the family unit, which is the cornerstone of society. Degenerate role models, infidelity, easy/beneficial divorces
    - Divide, divide, divide

    In short, weaken their society and watch it destroy itself from within.

  6. Re:Free speech on British PM Candidate Promises Social Media Crackdown (politico.eu) · · Score: 1

    "The people cannot be legislated into morality."

    See: The Sordid Origin of Hate Speech Laws

  7. Re:Watch all the Freedom-loving Brexiters dance! on British PM Candidate Promises Social Media Crackdown (politico.eu) · · Score: 0

    The difference is that it is easier to deal with or vote-out a local, elected figurehead who has to live in the jurisdiction they govern, as compared to dealing with an un-elected (by the people of your country) foreign entity who is detached from what is going on in your country.

    These days, the difference may be small, but it is still there. If you might recall, the USA had a revolution over being ruled by a foreign power. The UK managed to do it much more peacefully. All assuming, of course, that May isn't just another puppet of global, behind-the-scenes puppet masters.

  8. Re:Alternative title: on British PM Candidate Promises Social Media Crackdown (politico.eu) · · Score: 1

    I see that approach as an equivalent to the "road closed" sign. Most people will abide by it, but the determined will simply move the sign or drive around it.

    But perhaps, in their view, that's sufficient.

  9. Re: Freedom, States and Irish passports on British PM Candidate Promises Social Media Crackdown (politico.eu) · · Score: 2

    That's becoming less and less relevant as power is gradually removed from the states and given to the federal government. Not being enough for those in power, they seek to expand beyond the borders of their country and control other countries as well, currently through treaties, political meddling, and outright assassination of uncooperative foreign leaders.

    The end goal is the "one world government", where they no longer need to balance control with freedom.

  10. Re:Steve Bannon from GOLDMAN SACHS on Steve Bannon Suggests Having Too Many Asian Tech CEOs Undermines 'Civic Society' (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    Finally, a legit criticism of Bannon.

    I'm with you on that. It's been said that "once a Goldman Sachs man, always a Goldman Sachs man". Not sure if it's true with Bannon, but keep an eye on things he says or does that might benefit them.

  11. Re: "Civic Society" not a very impressive euphemis on Steve Bannon Suggests Having Too Many Asian Tech CEOs Undermines 'Civic Society' (theverge.com) · · Score: 0

    Conservative America has the kid gloves on right now and has given the Left far more tolerance and respect than they have shown to deserve. If you really want to throw down with them, you're not nearly as intelligent as you think.

  12. By "accepts what actual scientists say" you mean "accepts what scientists who we agree with say".

  13. Have Clinton and Obama come out and told these hooligans that are rioting to knock it off? Last I heard, there was nothing but silence from them, which seems to imply consent. That the media isn't demanding this out of them is just more evidence that the collusion between the current admin and the press demonstrated by wikileaks continues.

    Has George Soros started one of his pathetic color revolutions in the US now? I hear he's picked purple for this year's fashion. In an honest government, he'd be arrested for sedition and terrorism. Goes to show you the morals of Obama and crew. Maybe the next administration will man up and arrest that treasonous piece of filth. Perhaps even extradite him to Russia.

  14. Re:Funny how that works on Will Trump's Presidency Bring More Surveillance To The US? (scmagazine.com) · · Score: 1

    You mean this briefing?

  15. Re:Can't go by the pictures that's for sure on IMDb Sues California To Overturn Law Forcing Them To Remove Actors' Ages (theguardian.com) · · Score: 2

    I prefer the term "used house salesman".

  16. Incredible. I had no idea this happened. Sadly, it's not particularly surprising.

    Hassan al-Turabi, the firebrand preacher and speaker of parliament at the time – now he is a fierce critic of the government – told the Monitor after the attack that "Islam is now entrenched" in Sudan.

    "The [US] president wanted a target, and on his list Sudan was there," Mr. Turabi said in 1998. "This is a terrorist act against Sudan, a terrorist act."

    The effort to neutralize Mr. bin Laden with missiles would instead "create 10,000 bin Ladens," Turabi predicted.

    I simply cannot comprehend why people will defend these warmongers, these murderers, who are responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of people. Not only defend them, but elect them for the position of president.

    Hillary's war was Libya. She championed that one. Approx 40,000 dead, the country in shambles, unstable, increased terrorism. People should be marching her into the Hague courts, not to the White House. Witnessing the stupidity of today's voters now completely explains to me why people wound up with murderous dictators throughout history. They're gullible, lazy, emotional, and simply don't care to look any deeper into the issues than what they're told by those who are propped up in front of them and labelled "experts".

  17. Re: Still a justice failure on Journalist Cleared of Riot Charges in South Dakota (nbcnews.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, the settlement money came out of the taxpayer's pocket in the end. Great. Just great.

    Can't the assholes responsible be sued personally?

  18. Re:Resonating with Americans on AI Platform Assesses Trump's and Clinton's Emotional Intelligence (fastcompany.com) · · Score: 1

    Hypothetical situation: You are forced to play Russian roulette.

    You can pick the pistol with all of the chambers loaded (Clinton).
    Or you pick the one with only half of the chambers loaded (Trump).

    Which one makes more sense to pick? Hint: One of those situations has a very predictable outcome, if you're into predictability.

  19. Re:So much hypocrisy from the DNC... on Top Democrats Request FBI Investigation of Trump Campaign Ties To Russia Over Hacking (politico.com) · · Score: 1

    So they've proven they can't be trusted and will manipulate the public. Pretty solid evidence they will screw the public over again in the future and a clear sign not to vote for any candidate they've selected.

  20. The only reason they can predict it, is because they're causing it through acts like paying people to attend protests and start riots, pushing laws that favor small minority groups over the majority, pushing laws that remove power from the people and transfer it to the government, vindictively prosecuting regular people while ignoring crimes by their own, and so on.

    They've been pulling this social upheaval crap in foreign countries for decades, now they're doing it here. A public divided won't stand up to the government. The government views the public as an enemy now. The only thing we're good for is paying taxes, believing/pushing their agendas, and dying in their for-profit wars.

  21. Re:Stick a fork in.... on Computer Specialist Who Deleted Clinton Emails May Have Asked Reddit For Tips (usnews.com) · · Score: 1

    Aw man, I liked this guy too. Until I saw that video.. What a fucking idiot.

    "How's that supposed to work? Are they supposed to be dragged from their homes..?"

    Uh, yes. That's how it would work for me or anyone else if we were wanted for a crime and refused to cooperate. We'd be dragged from our homes. Now why are a specific group of people supposed to be treated differently?

    This clown either drank the PC kool-aid, or he's owned, just like the majority of them.

    Thanks for the link, btw.

  22. Re:Hardly news.. on New Ransomware Poses As A Windows Update (hothardware.com) · · Score: 1

    "New Microsoft Malware Poses as Operating System"

  23. Re:Seems logical on Canada Wants To Keep Federal Data Within National Borders (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    If TTP passes, you can rest assured that some foreign company will be crying foul and suing in private court because they weren't given a chance at the business due to unfair "protectionist" laws.

  24. Re:Curious to see how they enforce this. on All Windows 10 Kernel Mode Drivers Must Be Digitally Signed By Microsoft (i-programmer.info) · · Score: 1

    Along with other lightweight information like credit card information, banking details, political affiliation, religion, sexual preferences, and criminal offences. You know, the usual.

  25. Was it? Show me the vulnerabilities, then. Prove to me that it wasn't a scare tactic to drive people away from a solid, secure system that the government spooks couldn't break.