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User: samantha

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  1. Why shouldn't what is "trending" be a strictly statistical and or machine learning data driven result with no humans gumming up the works?

  2. A great deal of effort has been put into destroying any real understanding of freedom and of capitalism it both their own education and the education of their parents. Our "leaders" certainly don't act in accordance with any kind of free markets or much freedom anywhere. They don't act in accordance with our supposed "western values" either. So it would be absolutely shocking if the majority had anything nice to say about capitalism in any form.

  3. They are breaking their own laws on FBI Tells Congress It Needs Hackers To Keep Up With Tech Company Encryption (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 1

    By their own laws the people they seek to "help" them are not "hackers" but "crackers" who would normally pursued and locked up by that same FBI. Don't tehy have NSA assets to use? No, because even the NSA cannot blatantly circumvent what Congress has ruled over and over regarding mandatory back doors. No, they are looking for criminals because they are engaging in crime and in circumvention of he will of the people. They must be treated as law breakers.

  4. guess what broke it? on After 150 Years, the American Productivity Miracle Is 'Over' (qz.com) · · Score: 1

    Government has succeeded in destroying so much of what was special about America. We used to often here "it's a free country" and people really meant it. We used to believe that the world was open to any who wished to apply themselves and they could expect equal treatment from a government designed to protect their right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness - a government whose sole function was to protect the freedom of the people, not to rule over us.

    Yeah it wasn't perfect. Yeah it didn't cover some people well if at all for a long time. But it was based on something radically different than almost any government before. And that difference made a huge difference in the economic realm as well when freedom extended as free trade - voluntary marketplace interactions only.

    Bit by bit the people have forgotten freedom. Bit by bit those with a very different vision whether the State rules the people and a person is subservient to the state has taken over. And it has hurt economically as well. There are over 400,000 regulations on the books. The amount of red tape on business is ridiculous. The amount of limiting of choice of what can be offered for sale or purchased is extreme and growing. The State eats 40% of wealth and more as it has us $19 trillion in debt and at least $100 trillion more in hock for unfunded liabilities.

    So don't pretend that the rich did it or some unknown malady has befallen us. Look to government and to the people forgetting freedom and what this country is supposed to be about.

  5. arrest them! on FBI Tells Local Law Enforcement It Will Help Unlock Phones (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 1

    They are in violation of DMCA anti-circumevntion and other computer crime law. Turn the instruments they use against the people back upon them. They are also violating Rico.

  6. Re:This is just some bullshit news release on Facebook's Messenger Bot Store Could Be Most Important Launch Since App Store (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 1

    How will it be any more powerful than at most an IRC bot? OK, in principle you could message an app that would send messages back and possibly to other apps. So you could have an OO message fest. Is that what they have in mind?

  7. Fools on Some Root For a Tech Comeuppance In San Francisco · · Score: 1

    The tech industry is the liveblood of the area. If they want substantial money to leave the city then they are asking for a lot of unintended consequences. Who do they think pays for most of the costs of various services and safety nets?

    No one has a right to live in any particular place if they can't afford it. When there is high demand and limited housing the price i going to go up. This is not in the least unjust.

  8. screw these Nazis on Obama: Government Can't Let Smartphones Be 'Black Boxes' (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    What do they think the 4th Amendment is about? Oh, I forgot, they could care less as withness the NSA actions and what is still allowed. Encrypt and encrypt deep regardless of what these un-American clowns say and regardless of what companies like Apple do or do not do. It is your right to be secure in your papers and effects including your digital effects.

  9. I actually like google+, especially its new look, better than FB. And the people generally seem a bit more civil and into exchanging information and opinions with less flaming.

  10. I have really powerful GPUs on my Linux desktop. Why doesn't OR support that? I think they are just making lame excuses for bloated inefficient software.

  11. Protectionist crap on Laid-Off Disney IT Workers Decry Offshoring At Trump Rally (computerworld.com) · · Score: 1

    The jobs do not belong to whomever currently fills them. They are not property. There is no reason in a global economy they must be filled with US talent. Some people seem to be confused about the employer employee relationship The employee is selling services on a time basis that the employer needs at a mutually agreed upon price. The employer is no more obligated, nor should they be, to continue an employment agreement where the received benefits are at a greater price than they can find elsewhere than they are obligated to "buy American" in computers and other things that they need to run their business regardless of whether as good or better at a better price is available. Whether you think it is "nice" or not is irrelevant.

  12. completely irrelevant on Apple Is Not Such a Freedom Fighter In China (latimes.com) · · Score: 1

    You get no where being a "freedom fighter" in China. You either kowtow to Chinese internet laws or you don't do business in China. Period. So this is irrelevant nonsense trying to cast aspersions on the principled and important stance Apple is taking in the US. Don't try this crap again.

  13. that would be great on Why Sarcasm Is Such a Problem In Artificial Intelligence (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    I really need this. I have a very difficult time knowing what is sarcasm and what isn't online. Hell, I even have a problem with this face to face.

  14. Vs? on Code Reviews vs. Pair Programming (mavenhive.in) · · Score: 1

    Why vs? Neither of them is worth crap for actually improving code. Room and incentives to refactor and simplify plus unit tests (of functionality and not deeply dependent on exact implementation) does a lot more good.

  15. then it ain't an Open Web on Google Exec Says Isis Must Be Locked Out of the Open Web (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    You would think this would be freaking obvious. And who gets to decide what is evil enough to be banned from the Web? On what grounds is the determination made? This leads to something much worse than the actual danger ISIS poses. It leads to putting the power to stroke out sections of the global brain, to limit the connectivity of humanity and puts that power in the hands of a few. No thanks. This once again is letting terrorists win.

  16. Re:The biggest problem with backdoors on Clinton Hints At Tech Industry Compromise Over Encryption (huffingtonpost.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    Right. We will only mind rape you for your own good, rifling through your privates at will to "protect" you. Exactly what do I need protection from if I allow that?

  17. Re:No Backdoors & IF THERE ARE ... on Clinton Hints At Tech Industry Compromise Over Encryption (huffingtonpost.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    You have more chance of being harmed by a falling tree limb than by a terrorist. Using terrorism as an excuse to let government run wild is the practice of morons conditioned by a diet of FUD to be led by the nose by their real oppressors.

  18. Re:No Backdoorts on Clinton Hints At Tech Industry Compromise Over Encryption (huffingtonpost.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    So we should just give up? The point of Snowden is to end the abuses not to just say "oh well".

  19. If they want war on Clinton Hints At Tech Industry Compromise Over Encryption (huffingtonpost.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    Then they will have one. I take the Fourth Amendment seriously. It is not remotely allowed for government to go through my electronic effects at will including my communications. Forget about it. I and many others will fight this by any and all means necessary. We also not use any products of collaborators and/or consider them declared enemies.

  20. We all put in answers where we can freely with no such restrictions and this is a ridiculous idea that none of us will abide by.

  21. who cares? on Majority of Americans OK With Warrantless Internet Surveillance (ap.org) · · Score: 1

    What the majority say they are ok with says much about what they do and do not understand and especially about how well they have been conditioned. It says nothing at all about whether such things are ethical. The majority of people in the colonies if polled would certainly have said they were ok with continued English rule. So what?

  22. it deserves a bad reputation on Cold Fusion and the Reputation Trap (aeon.co) · · Score: 0

    I am no nuclear physics but what I do know about that area makes it seem exceedingly unlikely that cold fusion would ever work much less work well enough to be a viable power source. Assuming I haven't totally misconstrued what I have read on on the subject, an actual nuclear physicist saying this works would require at the least some very extraordinary proof and likely some new theory work as well.

    I doubt very much there is any silencing of scientist saying what they really think on the subject, unlike say global warming where a dissenting voice can have some very nasty consequences unfortunately.

    As a matter of fact I find it odd to find a post claiming chilling of science on something that is out on the fringe like this without mentioning the very large elephant in the room.

    But generally scientist, especially more theoretical science, make their name on stuff that is outside or a reach from the generally accepted. But they do so with due care.

  23. Re:That's ok on US Predicts Zero Job Growth For Electrical Engineers (bls.gov) · · Score: 1

    Generally only the worst of software jobs are outsourced. They tried it on a more massive scale and got hordes of very mediocre Java programmers in India which turned out to not be so much worth the hassle. I am not saying there aren't plenty of really good software people in other countries because there are. But I don't think any of our employment woes, to the extent they are real, are primarily due to outsourcing except for relatively less skilled labor and manufacturing.

  24. Only part of the story on US Predicts Zero Job Growth For Electrical Engineers (bls.gov) · · Score: 2

    A lot of boomer EEs are retiring soon. So don't think there are no jobs.

  25. We should destroy these so-called "hackers" on LizardSquad Copycats Planning DDoS Attacks On Xbox & PSN For Christmas (softpedia.com) · · Score: 1

    We hackers that deserve the name and love software and computers should search out these asshats and clean their clocks. This is very uncool.