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User: Shakrai

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Comments · 12,853

  1. Re:Android is not Chrome. on Google Throws Microsoft Under Bus, Then Won't Patch Android Flaw · · Score: 1

    Spare me; I have friends scattered all about the world. There's a reason why social networking supplanted e-mail as the medium of choice for keeping tabs on friends and family. Facebook's crappy user interface (my chief complaint) is not a reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. Nor is the attention whore that posts 50+ things a day.

  2. Way to Elevate the Debate.... on Ted Cruz To Oversee NASA and US Science Programs · · Score: 2

    "Conservative" is clearly a subset of "stupid."

    You've just put down 35% - 50% (depending on definition of 'Conservative') of your fellow countrymen. Good job.

  3. Re:What's next? on Ted Cruz To Oversee NASA and US Science Programs · · Score: 2

    She's been on the Select Committee for quite some time. No news there. She was actually the voice of moderation on a few issues regarding Pakistan back during the 2012 primary debates. No one was more surprised than I; I guess it's sobering when you get the sort of briefings that she's getting as a member of that committee.

  4. Re:What's next? on Ted Cruz To Oversee NASA and US Science Programs · · Score: 0

    Joel Osteen to head committee on Evolution?

    If you don't want politics in science don't take Government money. Government money always comes with strings attached, doesn't matter which political party happens to be calling the shots.

  5. Re:Makes sense. on Google Throws Microsoft Under Bus, Then Won't Patch Android Flaw · · Score: 1

    Every carrier has SIM cards now that Verizon and Sprint have moved to LTE. There is nothing stopping device manufacturers from selling devices directly to consumers who can then activate them without any interaction whatsoever with their carriers. Even Verizon has caved to reality on this one with devices like the Nexus 6. They don't advertise this fact of course but they don't stop you from doing it either.

  6. Re:Conflating Issues on How Bitcoin Could Be Key To Online Voting · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We don't need more low-information voters (89% agree that DHMO should be banned)

    Well yeah. If you breathe it you'll DIE! Only a Teabagger would be against Government regulation of a chemical that's so dangerous as to cause DEATH when inhaled. Why do you hate the children? How much did Big DHMO pay you for this astroturfing?

  7. Re:Android is not Chrome. on Google Throws Microsoft Under Bus, Then Won't Patch Android Flaw · · Score: 1

    I despise Facebook but it's something of a necessary evil when you have friends scattered all over the world. That's why I was rooting for G+ to displace it, or at least become big enough that I could plausibly use it as my sole social networking account, but neither of those things happened. :(

    Google was quite annoying for awhile there in trying to convince you to sign up and/or linking G+ into everything but they've backed away from that of late.

  8. Re:Uninterested people aren't worth it on How Bitcoin Could Be Key To Online Voting · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Which is why political parties love these voters. Because they'll vote straight party line ticket every single time. They make an effort to identify these people and physically drag them to the polls if necessary.

    Back in the day before New York got rid of our battleship gray lever machines it was easy as pie to identify these voters. "*click* *click* *click* *click* *click*" as they pulled the levers across their party line without even bothering to read the names of the candidates they were voting for. In and out in 5 seconds flat with 15+ offices on the ballot.

  9. No. Hell No. Bad Idea. on How Bitcoin Could Be Key To Online Voting · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no way that you can conduct online voting and ensure that the voter is not being intimidated. Offsite voting is a necessary evil for certain people (the handicapped and those who are unavoidably out of town on election day) but it does not need to be expanded to cover everyone. Here in New York we very specifically keep those most likely to intimidate you out of the voting booth, i.e., your employer and union official. The people that can hold a financial gun to your head if you don't vote the way they want. With online voting (or offsite voting on paper, i.e., absentee ballots) there is no way to actually ensure that the voter doesn't have a gun (real or proverbial) aimed at their head when they click 'submit.' For this reason alone I will always oppose it and other measures (vote by mail) that take people out of the polling place.

    The summary also makes the assumption that low voter turnout is a big problem. This is an oft-repeated claim but there's zero evidence to suggest that increased participation rates equate to better results. People choose not to vote for many reasons; apathy likely being the biggest one, followed closely by a generalized disgust with the available options. "None of the above" is a perfectly valid option in an election, whether exercised via the write-in for "Mickey Mouse" or by staying home on Election Day.

  10. Re:Android is not Chrome. on Google Throws Microsoft Under Bus, Then Won't Patch Android Flaw · · Score: 2

    (Hate hate hate Google+, though).

    Why? I love G+ when compared against the competition; better software, a slicker interface, higher signal to noise ratio, it's better than Facebook in every metric except for the minor little detail that hardly anybody uses it. I was hoping that they would mount a serious challenge to FB but it seems unlikely that is going to happen, barring some huge mistake on FB that alienates a critical mass of people.

  11. Re:Makes sense. on Google Throws Microsoft Under Bus, Then Won't Patch Android Flaw · · Score: 1

    Google wants Android to succeed but is unwilling to hold OEMs accountable. It should require all OEMs that use the Android logo to push all new Android updates to devices that are less than 2 years old, within 3 months for standard updates and within 1 month for critical security fixes.

    Wouldn't it be better to treat them like PCs and remove the OEMs from the equation entirely? Why should I have to rely on Motorola/Samsung/LG/Nokia (or worse, Verizon/AT&T/T-Mobile/Sprint) to get patches for my Android operating system? I don't have to wait for Dell to push out Microsoft's latest round of security patches, I download them directly from Microsoft and install them myself.

    There's no reason phones need to work any differently than PCs have worked for the last two decades except a desire by the carriers and handset manufacturers for planned obsolescence. If Google had any backbone whatsoever they would push the ecosystem in this direction, they've certainly got enough of a user base now to throw their weight around as Apple has done since the very beginning.

  12. +1

  13. Re:Either you value free speech or you don't on Several European Countries Lay Groundwork For Heavier Internet Censorhip · · Score: 1

    That's because the unwritten "Right Not To Be Offended" trumps the written "Right To Free Speech" in the United States. I particularly love the irony of seeing college kids chanting "Je suis Charlie" while they simultaneously shout down speakers that they don't agree with and do their utmost to get them banned from speaking at their universities.

  14. Re:At this point the game is so obvious; on Several European Countries Lay Groundwork For Heavier Internet Censorhip · · Score: 1

    Was this really an attack on free speech, or the predictable result of pointless provocation?

    Would you make the same statement if we were talking about Scientology and the target of the attack was Comedy Central?

    Nobody of any importance showed up at the "world leaders link arms" show of force

    Because, once again, our feckless President doesn't understand the importance of symbolism outside of political campaigns. As an American who has friends scattered all over the EU I'm extremely disappointed that he couldn't be bothered to make the trip.

  15. Free speech hasn't been taken away. There already are limitations on what constitutes free speech in the UK (and the US, and other countries, for that matter). Speech that is abusive or incites hatred is one of the things things that is limited.

    "Abusive" and "hateful" speech are not limited in the United States. You must be confusing us with Europe and/or Canada.

  16. mod parent up on Google Sees Biggest Search Traffic Drop Since 2009 As Yahoo Gains Ground · · Score: 1

    That's an awesome find. Thank you very much for sharing it. :)

  17. Re:why start after the fact? on LAPD Orders Body Cams That Will Start Recording When Police Use Tasers · · Score: 1

    Just wanted to point out that yes there are cases where unarmed folks are a real threat (Chuck Norris et al, or the severely deranged or psychotic, say due to substance abuse).

    Chuck Norris is a cute reference but in reality there are a nearly infinite number of factors that come into play. Gender, size, training, existing injuries, number of opponents, and so on. A fight might even start out as a normal fisticuffs where deadly force would not be permissible but escalate to a situation where the defending party is too injured to continue to defend themselves without resorting to deadly force. If you beat the snot out of me to the point that I'm about to pass out I'm well within my rights to shoot you, since I'll no longer be able to defend myself whilst unconscious. If you come after me with three of your friends I'm well within my rights to resort to deadly force, since even a well trained individual is not likely to prevail against 4 to 1 odds. Ditto if you've got 200 pounds on me. The relevant term is "disparity of force" and it seems to have applied in the incident in Ferguson.

    But mostly the mere fact that LEO are armed should be sufficiently threatening to subdue and solicit cooperation of unarmed individuals.

    Which is what happens the lion's share of the time. Cases where the suspect surrenders without a fight don't make the news though.

    Second, the Grand Jury system as I understand it is a bit of a quirky thing, discarded in most places except the U.S. It was meant as a protection of the public from excessive use of executive power, but arguably used in cases such as Ferguson to the opposite effect. Why not simply a regularly prosecuted case?

    Grand Jury is part of the prosecution in the United States. Before you can be prosecuted for a felony offense the Government needs to secure an indictment against you. This is the job of the Grand Jury. The standard they must meet is significantly lower than a Petit Jury at trial, which must find beyond a reasonable doubt with a unanimous ruling that you committed the crime in question. The Grand Jury need only find that there's probable cause you committed the crime in question. They do not need a unanimous ruling to do this, simply a majority of the empaneled Grand Jurors must vote for indictment. The State is allowed to introduce evidence at Grand Jury that it would not be allowed to use at trial, like hearsay or illegally obtained evidence, and the deck is further stacked against the defendant in that if he chooses to testify he waives his right to be represented by counsel and his right to refuse to answer questions that might incriminate him.

    If the State can't meet this simplified burden of proof under rules that greatly favor it then what is the point of preceding to trial? More than 90% of cases presented before the Grand Jury result in indictment. The remaining cases are so exceedingly weak that there's less than zero chance they would result in conviction at trial were the Grand Jury system to be abolished. Additionally, it's mandated by our Constitution, so the process of abolishing it is not a simple one.

  18. Re:why start after the fact? on LAPD Orders Body Cams That Will Start Recording When Police Use Tasers · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Tasering is a routine activity now?

    If you read the summary you'll note that concern was with regards to when these cameras should be on vs. when they should be off. Should they be on while the officer is sitting in his patrol car doing paperwork, bitching to his partner about the litany of mundane things (both work related and personal) that co-workers across all professions bitch to one another about? I have friends and family in law enforcement and I'm generally supportive of body cams, but they're going to fundamentally change the nature of policing and not always for the better. Do you think you're going to get the polite "Please slow down." admonishment when you get pulled over by an officer wearing a body cam? Think your pot smoking kid gets the joint taken from him, ground into the dirt, and an admonishment to shape up his act? Not likely. It's going to be letter of the law by the book policing, with all the pros and cons that go along with that. On balance it's for the best but let's not pretend there won't be drawbacks to it or that there aren't legitimate concerns about the best way to implement such technology.

    although it is better than discharging live rounds at unarmed kids of course.

    Unarmed has nothing to do with whether or not someone is a threat that warrants the use of deadly force. There are a litany of informative articles that you can read on the subject if you're so inclined. Start by Googling "disparity of force" and "ability, opportunity, and jeopardy." Those are the standards taught to law enforcement (and armed civilians, incidentally) in all 50 States. If you're alluding to what happened in Missouri, I read the Grand Jury transcripts in their entirety, and if the Officer's testimony is to be believed his actions were completely justified. The Grand Jury apparently thought they were and the Feds haven't bothered to bring charges against him.

    I wonder what will happen to the "Hands up, don't shoot!" movement when we see another such incident happen with a body cam wearing officer who turns out to be completely justified in his actions? Will we still see the parade of childhood pictures of some 280 pound thug? Attention seeking asshats (*cough* Sharpton *cough*) jumping in for their share of the headline? Riots in the streets? I'm guessing that all of those things will happen, because these things have never been about justice, but are rather precipitated by a handful of assholes taking advantage of legitimate longstanding grievances in disadvantaged communities. It fits a narrative so let's run with it, never mind what the actual facts are on the ground.

  19. Re:Thank the Mozilla Foundation on Google Sees Biggest Search Traffic Drop Since 2009 As Yahoo Gains Ground · · Score: 1

    It was a minor annoyance; I certainly understand it even though it annoyed the piss out of me for about two weeks. Probably wouldn't have cared but for my Rube Goldberg setup of different profiles for different sites that I only launch every few days, so I kept running into it again and again. :)

    I wish them luck, they're up against some powerful players. I use their mobile browser too FWIW; I find that it's better than Chrome on my Kitkat device, though of course Chrome is my fallback for the handful of sites that don't like Firefox mobile for whatever reason. On my desktop they get 95+% of my browsing, Chrome there is confined to G+ and a handful of other Google sites I access regularly.

  20. Re:Thank the Mozilla Foundation on Google Sees Biggest Search Traffic Drop Since 2009 As Yahoo Gains Ground · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Thank them? They changed the default search provider on all my existing Firefox profiles without my permission during the last update. I have about twelve different Firefox profiles for different things (-no-remote is your friend) and I was quite annoyed to have to change it back to my preferred setting on every single one of them. I don't begrudge them for the search deal, it was bound to happen with Google pushing Chrome so heavily, but leave the existing people alone, mmm'kay?

  21. Re:Learn Something About NTPD Before You Rant..... on OpenBSD Releases a Portable Version of OpenNTPD · · Score: 1

    That's a possibility. The amplification attacks seemingly cropped up out of nowhere (even though the vulnerability was well known and discussed for years prior) in late 2013/early 2014. It was quite the topic of discussion on the NTP Pool mailing lists. Most people had sensible configurations that put 'noquery' in the default line but there were obviously enough servers out there answering monlist queries to make it profitable for attackers to target all of us. My server ends up rate-limiting anywhere from 15% to 40% of her hourly queries. but I'm guessing most of those are poorly configured clients, not DDoS attempts. It's also possible that some of them are machines behind NAT sharing the same IP, which all appear as one client from ntpd's perspective.

    There's nothing wrong with using public time servers. You can certainly pick out better ones (in terms of latency and hop count) doing it yourself than you'll ever get out of the NTP Pool DNS round robin. Or you can do the same by picking servers manually out of the round robin. The pool mainly exists as a load balancing system that's easy to include in default configurations. I've only got my other server using it because I believe in eating my own dog food. :) That server would itself be serving time in the pool if it wasn't on the same network as the box I've already got in the pool.

  22. Re:Besides the blantant bloodshed... on In Paris, Terrorists Kill 2 More, Take At Least 7 Hostages · · Score: 2

    Please, tell me what other site I can get Slashdot comments from?

    reddit

    *duck*

  23. Re:Besides the blantant bloodshed... on In Paris, Terrorists Kill 2 More, Take At Least 7 Hostages · · Score: 2

    You can't dismiss it as trolling, I've seen numerous anti-Muslim comments receive up-mods these last few days. And speaking of trolling:

    Europe maintains their civilization quite well without having to have every citizen feel they have to be armed to the teeth. Even comparing death toll to death toll, what happened in France is less than the amount of people eating lead in an hour in Chicago

    Nice anti-American slam you've got there. As if gun control/RKBA has anything at all to do with the issue at hand.

  24. Re:Learn Something About NTPD Before You Rant..... on OpenBSD Releases a Portable Version of OpenNTPD · · Score: 1

    *shrug*, YMMV. I have a leaf server in the pool that's pulling time from six pool servers and one local peer (which is itself in the pool); it shows jitter ranging from 0.043 to 1.728. Ironically enough the peer on the LAN is not the one with the lowest jitter, it clocks in at 0.657. The average of all seven servers is 0.728. Incidentally, the server I have in the pool pulls from seven public stratum one servers, which I hand selected to be close (network-wise, i.e., latency and number of hops) to me. Jitter numbers with those peers range from 0.274 to 1.496, which an average of 0.528. I guess it's 0.2 milliseconds better than the pool, for what that's worth.... :)

    When I trace routed several of the servers returned from the pool, they were getting latency and jitter spikes in their networks. Not even at the edge between the Internet backbone and their upstream provider, but between them and their provider.

    Sounds like they're running on connections that max out from time to time and start queuing packets. Not much you can do about that and it's entirely possible that the same thing can happen with public servers. One can always manually select servers from the pool if they're so inclined; doing so would allow you to pick ones that are closer to you network wise than the random DNS round-robin is going to give you.

  25. Re:Besides the blantant bloodshed... on In Paris, Terrorists Kill 2 More, Take At Least 7 Hostages · · Score: 1

    Because nerds are (generally) supportive of nonviolence and tolerance for unpopular ideas to promote intellectual and creative freedom

    Is that why every story about the on-goings in France has been filled with comments denouncing Islam the religion rather than Islamic Extremists? Not just from ACs either, there have been calls to arms from low UID posters as well, plus the usual litany of posts mocking all forms of religious belief.

    I don't buy that nerds are any different than the population at large when it comes to tolerance and non-violence.