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User: DoomHaven

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Comments · 373

  1. Thank you for backing up your statement with information!

  2. Well, I guess you make an irrefutable argument.

  3. Won't this feature just be mainly used by astro-turfers to better use their sock-puppet accounts?

  4. That I don't have 160 hours of free time, because I'm a parent that works full-time, is what stops me from spending an additional 160 hours of time to work for luxuries.

  5. Re: Let's just get the makers vs takers out of the on VC, Entrepreneur Says Basic Income Would Work Even If 90% People 'Smoked Pot' and Didn't Work (techinsider.io) · · Score: 1

    A thought is, while employers have to pay more taxes for BI (hopefully), there would no longer be any need to enforce minimum wages as BI is the minimum wage. You would make BI + employed income, so employers would just have to pay you whatever minimum amount to make your time worthwhile to work for them. Want $x a month for luxuries, and have 160 hours of free time a month? Find a job that nets $x/160 per hour.

  6. Re:Oh... S*** on Archive.org Adds Close To 2,400 DOS Games · · Score: 1

    Ceci n'est pas un signet.

  7. Re:good on Netflix Rejects Canadian Regulator Jurisdiction Over Online Video · · Score: 1

    Jeez, how many times in this thread are you going to put that misinformation out?

  8. Re:Funny how this works ... on Netflix Rejects Canadian Regulator Jurisdiction Over Online Video · · Score: 1
    First off, one of the many differences between Canadians and Americans is that Canadians tend to put more trust and faith into their government and are more willing to allow governmental involvement in our lives. A great example of this is the CBC, which is wholly owned by the Canadian government; another are the crown corporations in Saskatchewan (SaskTel and SaskPower, to name a couple). It is completely Canadian of me to think that government control is not, in itself, a bad thing.

    As for what the commission determined in 1999, let's quote section 44 (emphasis mine)?

    44. In the Commission's view, there is no explicit or implicit statutory requirement that broadcasting involve scheduled or simultaneous transmissions of programs. The Commission notes that the legislator could have, but did not, expressly exclude on-demand programs from the Act. As noted by one party, the mere ability of an end-user to select content on-demand does not by itself remove such content from the definition of broadcasting. The Commission considers that programs that are transmitted to members of the public on-demand are transmitted "for reception by the public".

    To be 100% sure we aren't quibbling about what "on-demand" refers to, let's then look at section 43 that explicitly defines the term.

    43. The Commission considers it important to distinguish between the ability to obtain Internet content "on-demand" - the non-simultaneous characteristic of Internet services - and the ability of the end-user to "customize", or interact with, the content itself to suit his or her own needs and interests.

    Section 45 refers to the ability for the user to interact with the content itself, not to select the content. Therefore, Netflix falls completely within the purview of the CRTC.

  9. Re:Funny how this works ... on Netflix Rejects Canadian Regulator Jurisdiction Over Online Video · · Score: 1

    Then what Canadian -- let me help you out -- Canadian -- just in case that wasn't clear enough -- CANADIAN government body should "legislate" what gets sent across Canadian -- let me help you out -- Canadian -- just in case that wasn't clear enough -- CANADIAN networks to Canadian -- let me help you out -- Canadian -- just in case that wasn't clear enough -- CANADIAN end users? I would imagine that, since the Canadian -- let me help you out -- Canadian -- just in case that wasn't clear enough -- CANADIAN federal government is allowing the CRTC to act in this regard, they think that its the CRTC mandate; and I bet they are a better arbiter of that then some random internet tough guy like yourself.

  10. Re:Pull your head out on South Carolina Education Committee Removes Evolution From Standards · · Score: 1

    Consider Occam's Razor. If you already believe in an all-powerful sky fairy, then believing that the all-powerful sky fairy did something you don't understand is the easiest, most reasonable explanation. If you don't already believe in an all-powerful sky fairy, creating that belief as part of trying to understand something becomes infinitely more difficult.

  11. Re:Bullshit on WotC Releases Old Dungeons & Dragons Catalog As PDFs · · Score: 1

    No, it was to ensure remuneration. Just because the words of the statute don't mention it explicitly doesn't mean that it was not the driving force. If it weren't for the money, we could just skip the entire debate.

    No, it was to promote science and useful arts. Ensuring renumeration by offering a limited monopoly is the means to this end but most certainly not the end unto itself.

    Copyright protects the livelihood of the creators of works of knowledge or creativity to ensure that they may do so with the knowledge that they will receive just remuneration for their effort.

    Maybe once, originally.

    In a way, its no different than the ownership of real property - you can't pick up real property and move away with it, and anybody can walk on it.

    No, it is completely different than the ownership of real property. Copyright is a temporary monopoly on an intellectual work so a creator can temporarily receive just renumeration, but then said work is surrendered to everyone so that everyone can use it, improve upon it, refine it, for additional profit and to give society as a whole a greater wealth.

    Meanwhile, "real property" is something that is owned for as long as the owner wishes, to be used for whatever the owner wishes.

  12. Re:in 1975, when I was in High school on 2012 Another Record-Setter For Weather, Fits Climate Forecasts · · Score: 1

    Fair enough, but there was an expectation of a cooling trend.

  13. Re:in 1975, when I was in High school on 2012 Another Record-Setter For Weather, Fits Climate Forecasts · · Score: 2

    You need to understand the following to understand why the turnaround. From 1960-1990, 2-3% per decade less sunlight as reached the Earth's surface. In that same time period, global average temperatures maintained or increased. So... despite the fact that the Earth received less energy from the Sun for 30 years straight, it never cooled as expected.

    I'll let that sink in for a moment. Climate is driven by the Sun's energy. The Sun's energy is reduced. The climate, with less energy from the sun, should get colder. But, it didn't.

    Now, the trend of global dimming is reversing. And, the climate is warming up faster than it should purely from global brightening. Many scientists believe that the ice age we should have gotten in the 1970s and 1980s was masked by global warming happening back then. But, now, we just have global warming.

    I won't lie: there may be people who are jumping of the bandwagons to keep them in the spotlight. I don't know this James Hansen. The one thing to point out is that at least is willing to change his views to match the evidence. Unfortunately, that's a very rare thing today.

  14. Re:City overpaying? on Astroturfing For Speed Cameras · · Score: 2

    Fair enought :D

  15. Re:City overpaying? on Astroturfing For Speed Cameras · · Score: 2

    I'm going to play Devil's Advocate here: what's wrong with the "The Chicago Way" style of corruption?

    No, seriously. Hear me out.

    There are two ways to do a project: follow a proper process to determine who should do a project (advertising the project, getting tenders, proposal analysis), or corruptly award the project to a campaign contributor. Let us make one assumption: end result is of the same or similar cost, quality and delivery date between the two companies. I consider that to be a fair statement, as most "process" chosen candidates simply game the process until they win, and then inflate costs and delivery dates after the fact. If cost( proper_process ) + cost( properly_chosen_company ) > cost( corruptly_chosen_company ) + cost( corruption_incidentals ), why not go with corruption?

    After living in Chicagoland for half a decade, I have to admit that Shit Got Done in Chicago. It may have been morally bankrupt, but it worked.

  16. Re:Is this really just... on Michael Jackson Themed MMO In the Works · · Score: 1

    You, sir, are one awesome, glorious, bastard.

  17. Re:What is the definition of 'distro'? on Unusual, Obscure, and Useful Linux Distros · · Score: 1

    Bookmarked

  18. Re:Is this really surprising? on Is LGP Going the Way of Loki Software? · · Score: 1

    Have you done any configuring of Wine to make Starcraft run better? I don't know and can't find the settings to make it smoother, and I find that playing it with Wine feels lagged or delayed.

  19. Re:Facebook endangers your job on Mark Zuckerberg, In It To Change the World? · · Score: 1

    This is not a bookmark.

  20. Re:Thunderbird Public Service Announcement on Outage Knocks Gmail Offline For Many Users · · Score: 1

    I have four big problems with using Hotmail on Thunderbird:

    1) is that it doesn't support Hotmail folders
    2) it doesn't download all my e-mail, and craps with hundreds of messages left on the server
    3) it generates 100s of MB of error messages after a couple weeks of usage that I have to route out and delete
    4) it won't delete files on the server when I delete them in Thunderbird

    So, to me, I can't just as easily use Thunderbird as Outlook Express / Windows Live Mail on Linux.

  21. Ouch! on US Officials Flunk Test On Civic Knowledge · · Score: 1

    I'm not even an American (though I did live there for almost 6 years) and I got 27 out of 33 correct, which is 81.23%!

    Here is what I missed:
    Question #4 - B. Would slavery be allowed to expand to new territories?
    Question #7 - D. Gettysburg Address
    Question #12 - B. the Supreme Court struck down most legal restrictions on it in Roe v. Wade
    Question #13 - E. certain permanent moral and political truths are accessible to human reason
    Question #14 - B. stressed the sinfulness of all humanity
    Question #33 - D. tax per person equals government spending per person

  22. Re:Time to move... on Massive Martian Glaciers Found · · Score: 1

    *Unless* we actually got a WoW server *onboard* the ship. Then we would have phenomenal ping times, as well as a lack of gold sellers/spammers/scammers.

    And after killing Arthas, we'd get to land on Mars :D

    What's really sad about this thread is I haven't read any "Total Recall" references. For shame. For shame indeed.

  23. Re:It seems to be stretched out to 10. on Gaming Usability 101 · · Score: 1

    Number 10 is actually my biggest beef thus far with the Wii. I like the Wii. I *love* the Wii. But, I hate that there isn't a good way to exit from any game to the Wii menu without hitting the "Home" button and getting that "All progress made up to this point will be lost" warning. I'd like a way to leave the game, that's consistent among the games, so that I know if I do that sequence, I'm saved, I'm going to exit, and I'm good.

  24. Re:Except that on Rocket-Powered 21-Foot Long X-Wing Actually Flies · · Score: 1

    Wow, that's an awesome link!

  25. Bookmarked on Google Earth Gets Star-Gazing Add On · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the info!