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User: mjm1231

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Comments · 535

  1. Re:Wouldn't this be a magnet for FAKE information? on Darkleaks: an Online Black Market For Selling Secrets · · Score: 2

    If the information can be compared to information somewhere else, then it wasn't a secret to begin with.

  2. Re:Autoplay video is bad, and you STILL get it wro on Advice on How to Start an IT Business (Video) · · Score: 1

    Fucking Hell. I didn't even know the video was playing until I got to this comment and scrolled up. (Headphones plugged in, but not on my head.) Evil. If you are a slashdot editor, you are now complicit in working for evil.

  3. Re:Swatting? on Swatting 19-Year-Old Arrested in Las Vegas · · Score: 1

    I thought someone got arrested for trying to kill a fly.

  4. Re:Well considering that many of us have low T on Testosterone Increasingly Being Used To Fight Aging In Men · · Score: 1

    During that same time period, lifespans and overall health have improved. So what information leads you to think this constitutes a health problem?

  5. Re:$30/mo is a terrible price on For New Yorkers, Cablevision Introduces a Wi-Fi-Centric VoiP Network · · Score: 1

    I should clarify that I do not have their mobile phone service, rather, that as a customer, I often try to access their network of wireless hotspots.

  6. Re:$30/mo is a terrible price on For New Yorkers, Cablevision Introduces a Wi-Fi-Centric VoiP Network · · Score: 2

    Since the data is wifi only, I doubt data caps are an issue. On the other hand, as someone who lives in the region (and who is a customer) I know firsthand that there are plenty of dead spots where there will be no access. Want to call home from the supermarket to see if you need milk? You're going to need to walk out to the parking lot first.

    On a side note, Cablevision offers customers free wifi routers for home use with their service. These routers also act as wifi hotspots for their network.

  7. Re:US politics are tainted with money on Fark's Drew Curtis Running For Governor of Kentucky · · Score: 1

    Notably missing from Mr. Curtis' statement is anything that would prevent him, or any other "citizen candidate", from taking campaign contributions from the same special interests, lobbyitsts, PACs, and corporate interests as the usual assortment of candidates.

  8. Re:Where Does He Stand On the Issues? on Fark's Drew Curtis Running For Governor of Kentucky · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Leave people alone" is a statement so broad that it is completely meaningless. It is impossible to live in a manner that has no impact on other people. The hard and real question is always where the lines should be drawn.

  9. Re:Prototyping security? on Researchers Moot "Teleportation" Via Destructive 3D Printing · · Score: 1

    SInce the key is presumably only useful when it is in the same location as the lock, how does this improve security?

  10. Re:Yeah! on Senator Who Calls STEM Shortage a Hoax Appointed To Head Immigration · · Score: 1

    And yet, I heard a different Republican senator being interviewed this morning, who stated that we need to tighten restrictions on immigration to low and no skill jobs, and allow more immigration of doctors and those with technical skills.

    Long ago, I decided that when you hear an opinion from a US politician, all it really tells you is who is financing their campaign. Sometimes the opinion they give is just meant to warn somebody that they haven't contributed enough.

  11. Re:Interesting to note... on NASA, NOAA: 2014 Was the Warmest Year In the Modern Record · · Score: 1

    What is your native dialect, that you have such a hard time recognizing sarcasm or irony? Obviously, the distinction was being drawn to the fact that just because it was cold in the AC's backyard (around here) doesn't mean it wasn't warmer globally (everywhere).

  12. Hope they don't walk to public school on Parents Investigated For Neglect For Letting Kids Walk Home Alone · · Score: 5, Informative

    When I was a child, you had to live at least a mile and a quarter from the school to qualify for the bus. Everyone else walked. This was considered absolutely normal. When I was in first grade, I went with some of the neighbor kids. I was six, and this was elementary school, so the oldest kid in the group was probably 10? Crime rates in the US are much lower today than they were then. Just dumb.

  13. Re:Secret Ballot? on How Bitcoin Could Be Key To Online Voting · · Score: 1

    Shooting is too easy to trace. Why not just close down traffic in select locations. This could be done to inhibit people getting to the polls or to punish local businesses after the fact. Plus, experience shows it's much harder to pin this on anyone. Shootings tend to leave a smoking gun.

  14. Re:What exactly do you mean by "Fraud"? on Michael Mann: Swiftboating Comes To Science · · Score: 1

    I don't know why you were modded down. The use of caveman speak to illustrate caveman logic is actually pretty funny.

  15. Re:What exactly do you mean by "Fraud"? on Michael Mann: Swiftboating Comes To Science · · Score: 1

    An example of what? In the context given, it seems to be an example of something that should not be regulated because it is not a pollutant. Why is it not a pollutant? What does the fact that it is produced by breathing have to do with it?

  16. Re:What exactly do you mean by "Fraud"? on Michael Mann: Swiftboating Comes To Science · · Score: 1

    Now, controlling pollution is good. You'll have a hard time finding even the most staunch libertarians that are against rules as far as keeping air and water quality good (Obama's big speech about them wanting dirty air and dirty water was likewise a straw man argument.) However CO2 doesn't play a role in that. I mean shit, we create it simply by breathing.

    Well, shit, we create shit by shitting it. I therefore demand that you stop treating shit as a pollutant.

    I'll continue to treat it as one, because I'm well aware that biological processes quite naturally produce all sorts of pollutants. But you go ahead and live by your rules.

  17. Re:Time for some leaps and not baby steps on Scientist Says Potential Signs of Ancient Life in Mars Rover Photos · · Score: 1

    Serious question. What would be the scientific benefit coming from discovering that there might have been life on Mars at some point?

    Presumably, this discovery would be accompanied by some facts about the nature of the organisms that lived on Mars, not just the fact that they existed. It's hard to know what uses you can put knowledge to when you don't even know what that knowledge is yet.

  18. Re:Democrats don't want this to pass on Bill Would Ban Paid Prioritization By ISPs · · Score: 2

    Yep, that's why nobody submitted anything to the FCC comment filing.

    Oh wait: http://yro.slashdot.org/story/...

  19. almost a coherent sentence... on Fluxbox 1.3.6 Released · · Score: 1

    "treating Windows with a WM_CLASS as DockApp as DockApps."

    Well, if it walks like a DockApp and talks like DockApp, it's probably a DockApp.

    P.S. - I like words better when they actually say things.

  20. Gordian Knot on Netflix Cracks Down On VPN and Proxy "Pirates" · · Score: 1

    Blah Blah Blah Blah... there is an obvious and easy solution to this. Just license everything to all Netfilx customers, instead of regionally. The value of the content that is regional probably adds up to less than the cost to police these stupid rules. In fact, there is more than a decent chance that there would be a net savings to Netfilx and their customers, and a net gain to all content providers.

  21. Re:Kind of disappointed in him. on Neil DeGrasse Tyson Explains His Christmas Tweet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I actually read Mr. Tyson's post. I found no hamstering in it. Your problem appears to be with Slashdot characterizing it as an "explanation". In fact, it didn't contain any explanation about the motives or meaning of the tweet. Perhaps it is time to stop blindly believing what the news media feeds you, including Slashdot's slapdash editors.

  22. Re:FUD? on North Korean Defector Spills Details On the Country's Elite Hacking Force · · Score: 4, Informative

    He defected in 2007, if facts matter to you.

  23. Can't even copy and paste on 2014 Geek Gift Guide · · Score: 1

    The link for the appetizer serving dish complete with toothpick holder that looks like a porcupine explicitly states that it is actually a different animal that it looks likes. Now that's some lazy reporting.

  24. Re:60 Minutes Pushing Propaganda? on Is Chernobyl Still Dangerous? Was 60 Minutes Pushing Propaganda? · · Score: 1

    * Same-sex marriage

      * Legalization of marijuana

      * needle exchange programs

      * anti-war sentiments

      * pro-choice

    I've never heard a news source support any of these (though I have seen editorials, clearly labelled as such, take either side on all of those). If reporting on a story indicates a bias regarding the story itself, then the only choice you are left with is no reporting at all. The system we have is far from perfect, but its certainly better than that sort of fascism.

  25. Re:What about the Eureka machine? on Alva Noe: Don't Worry About the Singularity, We Can't Even Copy an Amoeba · · Score: 1

    I wasn't quoting a journalist, but the actual scientists who worked on the project. The software was fed a problem for which science had no answer (specifically, a formula for cellular metabolism). It gave them one, which, worked. Biologists still don't have an explanation to go with the formula.