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User: RevDisk

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  1. Re:What if the costs are too great? on 3D Printed Gun Maker Cody Wilson Defends Open Source Freedom · · Score: 1

    What other countries do or do not do should not be the basis of American law. Constutional rights have one of three levels of protection. Might as well think of them as high, medium and low.

    Strict scrutiny is the most stringent standard of judicial review, so highly protected. Example: race-based classifications.
    Intermediate scrutiny requires the government to have a very important interest in infringing upon said right, medium. Examples: free speech, equal protection
    Rational basis review is the bare minimum of Constitutional protection, and is regularly infringed upon government interest.

    IMHO, all rights should be held to strict scrutiny standards. In reality, only a few rights are held to the highest standard, and even those are subject to infringement.

  2. Re:Who Cares? on 3D Printed Gun Maker Cody Wilson Defends Open Source Freedom · · Score: 2

    Of all the women I know well, about 60% own and/or carry firearms. Believing that only men are attached to their firearms says more about your mentality than it does anything else.

  3. Re:Who Cares? on 3D Printed Gun Maker Cody Wilson Defends Open Source Freedom · · Score: 2

    Laser sintering, arguably a form of 3D printing, is used to make firearm components. Yes, likely used by hunters, soldiers, police officers or hobbyists. Firearm assemblers source out all the components (with specifications). Some firearm manufacturers do advertise their components (high end custom weapons), others do not (everything not high end or custom). Same with cars.

  4. Re:The U.S. government is EXTREMELY corrupt. on NSA Infected 50,000 Computer Networks With Malicious Software · · Score: 1

    Wow, AmiMoJo so perfectly proved the point, you'd swear it was masterful trolling.

  5. Re:The U.S. government is EXTREMELY corrupt. on NSA Infected 50,000 Computer Networks With Malicious Software · · Score: 1

    That's cute. Look up "reapportioning" or "gerrymandering". That and the costs involved to win an election. Plus, all three branches collude to violate the US Constitution. So, no, we're not responsible for our government directly anymore. If we could be, that'd probably be made illegal as well. Protests will be cordoned off into "free speech zones", far from the folks they wish to protest. Riots will be put down by thousands of police officers. Petitions will be ignored. All of these have been done, and will continue to be done. And all safely ignored by those in power.

    Most folks just keep their head down, mind their business and pay their taxes. I'm one of those. Sure, I vote and give money to good causes, but that's a negligible impact.

  6. Re:The U.S. government is EXTREMELY corrupt. on NSA Infected 50,000 Computer Networks With Malicious Software · · Score: 1

    Yep, because we can't do much else. American citizens don't have that much of a say. Our elections are not quite rigged, but highly controlled by both political parties to be expensive and lopsided (voting districts are designed to be overwhelming of one political party). Our government's structure isn't designed well to handle collusion between all three branches of government. The only way to make an impact is to get a LOT of people together that are willing to spend a lot of money. That's enough to keep what you got, maybe small advances. AARP is the king of this, NRA and AFL–CIO are a much smaller examples. I wish the EFF was a bigger example.

    So, the only way things like this could be stopped is a civil war. Which you probably wouldn't want, as it'd have global repercussions. If the federal government won, imagine our current system only twenty times as bonkers. If the federal government lost, there is no guarantee the new government won't be twenty times as bonkers as the current government. The Hunger Games is an literary example of California beating DC, there's plenty of other fiction and nonfiction examples.

  7. Re:What could possibly go wrong? on 90% of Nuclear Regulators Sent Home Due To Shutdown · · Score: 2

    I grew up within line of sight of Three Mile Island. Not one person got sick or died from the accident there.

    We SHOULD be building new nuke plants, with lessons learned from older nuke plants. I always want to strangle folks that don't want to build new plants because old plants are "dangerous" (which they're not, they're much safer than even solar power). It's downright disturbing that we're relying on such old plants for so much of our national power grid.

  8. Re: What could possibly go wrong? on 90% of Nuclear Regulators Sent Home Due To Shutdown · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's a VAT or consumption tax.

    A flat tax is just that. Same tax rate for everyone. Devil is in the details, most flat tax supporting politicians want to exclude capital gains and solely tax wages. That's essentially not going to work. Total wages were $6,009,831,055,912.11. FY2013 budget is $3.803 trillion. You'd need a 63% tax rate on all wages, with no exceptions, exemptions, EIC or deductions.

    Current tax system is partly as FUBAR as it is because folks want to gouge the rich, and the rich don't want to be gouged. So you end up with both. If you're an honest self-employed contractor making between $35k-70k, your tax rate is about 44% in my state. Half of social security taxes are paid by the business, unless you're self-employed. The rich didn't like their 12.4% + 2.9% haircut on something they'll never use, so the SS and Medicare taxes cap out at $113,700.

    If everyone paid their share without trying to gouge anyone else, it wouldn't be a nasty mess. But good luck trying to teach economics and tax codes to Occupy Wall Street crowd, and surprisingly some of the dumber or more short term focused rich folks.

  9. Re: What could possibly go wrong? on 90% of Nuclear Regulators Sent Home Due To Shutdown · · Score: 1

    Except most fair tax or flat tax proposals try to slip in no capital gain taxes. They'd find a lot more traction if it was on all income. Even if a flat tax rate existed, you'd still need an IRS.

  10. Re: What could possibly go wrong? on 90% of Nuclear Regulators Sent Home Due To Shutdown · · Score: 2


    NPS (National Park Service) is the agency in charge of US federal parks and monuments. Usually. They have intentionally blockaded monuments normally left "open" (it's a pile of metal or stone, in the open). That wasn't enough, so NPS Rangers blockaded private businesses that were located on public but federal land. Say, an inn that leases land along a highway on federal land. They can't turn off the federal highways (don't ask, long story), so they try to annoy citizens by blocking the sides of the road or chasing you off if you stop to take a picture. NPS officially acknowledged they got their orders from OMB, which is part of the White House.

    Doesn't really stop anyone. 80-90 year old WWII vets basically dared NPS Rangers to try and arrest them. NPS backed down. It's meant to annoy Americans as a political gesture. That shutdowns are very bad, and it's all the fault of the other party.

    One bad point is federal law enforcement and US military personnel are also experiencing pay issues. For instance, death benefits of US military personnel are not being paid. This is extremely unwise for anything other than extremely short. Shorting the pay of the Praetorian Guard tends to be a dangerous endeavor.

  11. All it takes is one zero day exploit... on All Your Child's Data Are Belong To InBloom · · Score: 2

    And all of that collected data can end up on a torrent. I wouldn't want to be on the receiving end of all those lawsuits.

  12. Re:How about on California Outlaws 'Revenge Porn' · · Score: 1

    Actually, it does. Or should, rather. It doesn't mean freedom from consequences. Label or slander, for instance.

  13. Re:Sounds like.. on NSA Abandoned Project To Track Cell Phone Locations · · Score: 1

    Even cheaper to just mine photos posted by the protesters themselves, and run photo analysis combined with time stamps on the photos themselves.

  14. That's incredibly creepy on Arrest Made In Webcam Highjacking Extortion Case · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, here's hoping that Abrahams gets a fairly long sentence. Coercion and blackmail is coercion and blackmail, regardless of the circumstances.

  15. Re:Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea. on Without Plutonium, Deep-Space Probe Missions May Sputter Out · · Score: 5, Informative

    Tapping undersea cables.

  16. Re:Googlers? Really? on Those Magnificent Googlers and Their Flying Machines · · Score: 1

    Powered glider, sure, you could make solar powered. Conventional aircraft for moving people or cargo don't have the surface area to be solar powered, even with 99.999% efficient cells. Too much power requirements for too small of a space.

  17. Re: What do you mean by "can"? on How To Foil NSA Sabotage: Use a Dead Man's Switch · · Score: 1

    My dad was a mid level political player in state politics. Even he joked that if voting could change anything, it'd be illegal. He grew up with the Philly Democrat machine. Every election was basically fixed. Republicans have their own parts of the country that they "own" as well.

    Funny part is, even the people within the political machines with near certain victories tend to feel like they can't radically fix things because the system won't allow it. I'm not kidding, I've had politicians basically tell me so while intoxicated. "Your district is 99.99% (insert Repub or Dem), short of being caught with a live boy or dead girl, you're getting re elected. What's stopping you from going Ron Paul*? - You don't understand. You can't fight the system. You only have so much leeway to work within." * Not specifically endorsing Ron Paul, he's just well known for bucking the party line when it came to votes. I meant "Do whatever you want regardless of your party's desires."

  18. Re:What do you mean by "can"? on How To Foil NSA Sabotage: Use a Dead Man's Switch · · Score: 2

    Meh. Most people don't care because they're generally too busy trying to pay the bills, raise their kids, keep the car running, etc. More than 70% of Americans don't want to get involved in Syria. A lot of the more neutral polls show much much softer support for indefinite detention, pervasive surveillance state and the rest. Without rigged polls, the majority wants basically the status quo. They're fine with some degree of horrific government authority, for edge cases. They're not exactly drooling for the NSA to become the next Stasi.

    That's how it always has been, that's how it always will be. The majority don't want to rock the boat because they're too busy trying to live. It's only a relatively handful of ideological extremists on either end of the spectrum that tend towards radical change, usually for the worse.

  19. Re:Public opinion doesn't matter on New Zealand Parliament Votes To Extend Spying Powers · · Score: 1

    You must not be familiar with the democratic process or history.

  20. Re:What could possibly go wrong? on Nitrogen Fixing Bacteria That Can Colonize Most Plants Discovered · · Score: 1

    Except sustainable practices alone won't feed everyone on the planet.

    Unless you want to repurpose a substantial amount of the workforce back into agriculture, dramatically increase land for farming (terraforming, bulldozing houses or chopping down forests are your only choices), dramatically raise the price of food,etc. Most farmers do use crop rotation and other sustainable tricks, but also use chemical fertilizers and other "nonsustainable" choices. You do realize that the majority of chemical fertilizers are made from atmospheric nitrogen, right?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haber_process

    Hopefully farming practices continue to advance. But the organic only, "sustainable" only, no GMO, etc crowd tends not to want to advance farming, but take it back to yeoman level tech. Which is not sustainable unless you dramatically decrease the number of humans on the planet.

  21. Re:Too little, too late. on Judge Rules In Favor of Volkswagen and Silences Scientist · · Score: 1

    Tis why I had my mechanic rig the auto start to shut off the engine if the brake is used without a key physically being in the ignition. You could still get into the car, sure. If a thief could hotwire a car, he can open a door anyways. Just don't keep anything exceedingly valuable in the car.

    Also, properly positioned flood lights are your friend. The difference between my testimony convicting a a car thief and the guy not even being suspected in the first place was spending a couple extra bucks on good motion lighting and proper positioning.

  22. Re:Solution timetable on Judge Rules In Favor of Volkswagen and Silences Scientist · · Score: 1

    Having seen civil wars overseas, I'm quite glad that folks think very long and hard before resorting to violence. Especially when you have no guarantee that the successor government will be better than the one you have now.

    I very much prefer the current situation to any utopia envisioned by the far left and far right wings of our political environment.

  23. Re:This is why we have a first amendment. on Judge Rules In Favor of Volkswagen and Silences Scientist · · Score: 1

    And we're very glad for our stupid anachronistic and downright dangerous Bill of Rights. There is a mechanism for removing or changing the Constitution. It is intentionally not trivial and not subject to a 50% plus one person vote. If a large enough majority wanted to remove any part of the Bill of Rights, they could do so.

    I'm quite happy that it is very difficult to remove Constitutional protections from its citizenry. Otherwise "stupid anachronistic and downright dangerous" provisions such as needing warrants, due process, etc would be stripped before they'd strip the First or Second Amendments. Don't get me wrong, judges rule against the Bill of Rights all day long. But there's still enough honest judges to ensure that our government doesn't get its way every time.

  24. Re:This is why we have a first amendment. on Judge Rules In Favor of Volkswagen and Silences Scientist · · Score: 2

    Temporary Restraining Order is not a permanent restraining order. It's usually meant to give a chance for the legal system to hear arguments before a permanent solution is implemented. Similar to say, the difference between arrests and convictions. It's a routine thing, it was solely the timing that was a scumbag tactic.

    http://www.revdisk.net/gal/Defcon16/MTA01.jpg

    I was in the audience at the time of that presentation. The presentation WITH ALL THE TECHNICAL INFORMATION was on the disk that was handed out to all of the audience. Instead of the presentation, the EFF did a presentation. Hackers raised funds for the students, gave EFF lawyers secure internet access, found expert witnesses, etc. The judge agreed with the EFF and the students, and refused to extend the restraining order. Yes, the timing sucked, but they did actually win on First Amendment grounds.

    So, yes, judges do on occasion (IMHO often unlawfully) infringe on the First Amendment, it's still better than the alternative of not having it. Also, someone else independently gave a similar presentation with largely the same info. It was very very well attended. Good times. See y'all at Defcon this weekend.

  25. Re:You are kidding right? on Ask Slashdot: Secure DropBox Alternative For a Small Business? · · Score: 1

    No, legally it does help. The original poster committed a crime if he posted unencrypted ITAR data to DropBox. If it was encrypted (and did not share the key with any foreign national), he did not commit a crime.

    The government sees encryption as they see walls, safes, locks or other access control mechanisms. You can legally have foreign nationals at a facility with ITAR material. RFID controlled doors are pretty common for that. There just has to be comprehensive access controls, which should be in the Export Control Plan and Technology Control Plan.