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User: Frosty+Piss

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Comments · 5,696

  1. Re:Don't trust any app these days on The Guardian Reveals That Whisper App Tracks "Anonymous" Users · · Score: 0

    I just have to ask: How old are you? Seriously, your opinions come off as very juvenile. Which is not to say you are a juvenile, you could very well be an adult with juvenile opinions. Which would be sad.

  2. Re:No, they didn't on Worcester Mass. City Council Votes To Keep Comcast From Entering the Area · · Score: 0

    Well, I was about to post this to the Firehose submission in the hopes that it wouldn't be posted because this is basically a non-story. It means nothing.

    The city most certainly can define who has access to city owned utility poles. Siply a fact...

  3. Re: Voting for the right people on ISPs Violating Net Neutrality To Block Encryption · · Score: 0

    You're an idiot, right? A complete moron? Seriously, are you a homosexual or something? Did your mother drop you into a fine man's ass? Seriously, dude, get a grip.

  4. Re:I thought they loved it! on Flight Attendants Want Stricter Gadget Rules Reinstated · · Score: 0

    What old world do you live in? Everybody text messages now

    Go fuck yourself as you GET OFF MY LAWN.

  5. Re:I thought they loved it! on Flight Attendants Want Stricter Gadget Rules Reinstated · · Score: 2

    My main issue is if they allow cell phone use in flight - an entire plane full of people yakking on their phones, it'll be like going to the movies.

  6. Re:Because they don't want to. on Ask Slashdot: Why Can't Google Block Spam In Gmail? · · Score: 0

    Irony: I do have an unbreakable encryption scheme. And no, I won't post it here on /.
    {It's flaw is that it has to be used with significant sentences. Short messages won't work}

    And now you are officially full of shit.

  7. Re:For everything there is a season on Pentagon Unveils Plan For Military's Response To Climate Change · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Lie about it, get caught, and go to prison for 3-5 years.

    That's not the way things work in the real world. Move along and let the adults discuss the issue.

  8. Re:For everything there is a season on Pentagon Unveils Plan For Military's Response To Climate Change · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ebola is easy to stop. We have oceans to protect us. All we need to do is stop allowing the 25,000 VISAS from affected countries from being used to gain entry.

    1. Person from Ebola Land travels to Europe or some other non-US country, and exposes a person who is not from Ebola Land, who then travels home to the US.

    2. US citizen travels to and from Ebola Land.

    There are many different ways that Ebola can reach out and touch people who are not from Ebola Land, shutting down foreign visas is not the solution.

  9. Re:For everything there is a season on Pentagon Unveils Plan For Military's Response To Climate Change · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can we get through Ebola, first, and then worry about...

    The government should be able to multi-task more than one problem at a time, yes?

  10. Re:Reasonable on Google Rejects 58% of "Right To Be Forgotten" Requests · · Score: 1

    Riiight. Because US sex offenders lists contain people who made the mistake of drunkenly pissing against a wall in public...

    Bullshit. Cite a reliable news source on that one.

    Not to mention that US laws actually allows the prosecution of minors when their nude shot of themselves gets into the public internet.

    We're talking about Google's response to the European "right to be forgotten", not US laws.

    Can you stay on-topic? Or are you one of these one-topic fanatics that tie every subject into your obsession?

  11. Re:Reasonable on Google Rejects 58% of "Right To Be Forgotten" Requests · · Score: 1

    Granted, my son is 11.

    Your anecdotal argument is irrelevant, your son is a young juvenile, which as you well know, are held to different standards that young adults and adults. For young adults and adults who do bad things, there are different consequences than a young juvenile would expect, and those consequences are generally proportional to the bad thing the young adult or adult has done.

    But the real issue here is indexing publicly available data. These people that want to be forgotten need to talk to the people that are making this data public, not the people who are accessing in in a completely legal way and indexing it.

  12. Re:Reasonable on Google Rejects 58% of "Right To Be Forgotten" Requests · · Score: 1

    The people affected by this don't seem to be objecting to the past (and historical record existing), but only it's impact on the present.

    This is the consequence of bad behavior: People get to know about it, there are repercussions in society for behaving badly. You don't get to behave badly and then demand that people forget about your bad behavior because it in inconvenient for you . That's not the way things work.

  13. Re:Reasonable on Google Rejects 58% of "Right To Be Forgotten" Requests · · Score: 2

    The Europeans should not be attacking Google for indexing what is available on the Internet, they should be talking to the people that put that information on the Internet in the first place.

  14. Reasonable on Google Rejects 58% of "Right To Be Forgotten" Requests · · Score: 2, Informative

    Google's approach to this is reasonable. Criminals and public officials voluntarily give up a level of privacy due to their voluntary status as criminals and public officials.

  15. Re:I'll pass... on Interviews: Ask Florian Mueller About Software Patents and Copyrights · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft must be shelling out a bunch of dough to Dice for all these Microsoft ads.

    Which makes me wonder if a lot of these comments will be modded down into oblivian by Timothy, like what happend in the Slash Beta Wars a few months back...

  16. Re:Who can you think of that is less popular? on Interviews: Ask Florian Mueller About Software Patents and Copyrights · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is there anyone out there who you think would be even less well received by the slashdot audience than you? If so, who?

    Hell, even Steve "DEVELOPERS! DEVELOPERS! DEVELOPERS!" Ballmer would be better recieved...

  17. Re:Not me... on Ask Slashdot: Why Can't Google Block Spam In Gmail? · · Score: 1, Informative

    I don't have a Gmail account, but Google blocks all e-mail from my server to its accounts...

    Than your email server is not configured correctly.

  18. Re:What Is Your Relationship with Microsoft & on Interviews: Ask Florian Mueller About Software Patents and Copyrights · · Score: 1

    Oracle paid him (disclosed by Oracle under court order) while he was blogging in support of them. He admits to having been paid by Microsoft in the past.

    He has probably since set up a series of "shells" to provide him with "plausible deniability" on this issue.

  19. I'll pass... on Interviews: Ask Florian Mueller About Software Patents and Copyrights · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I really can't think of anything I would want to ask Florian Muller. Except maybe how much Microsoft and Oracle pay him to shill?

  20. Re:Because they don't want to. on Ask Slashdot: Why Can't Google Block Spam In Gmail? · · Score: 0, Troll

    I had a meeting with the M$ person ...

    And shortly thereafter were escorted off the campus? Did your "sage" advice come unsolicited? Perhaps your advice, which was not based on any direct knowledge of how their spam filters work, was not actually that useful to them?

    I don't have a lot of problems with Outlook / Hotmail either, slightly more spam than Gmail, but not much. But do rock on with the anti "M$" blather, the "$" just adds so much more gravitas and validity to your arguments.

  21. Not me... on Ask Slashdot: Why Can't Google Block Spam In Gmail? · · Score: 1

    I get almost zero spam in my inbox, it all goes to the spam folder, where I look occasionally for things that might have been false positive, but even that happens almost never unles I've accedentally ID'd something as spam myself.

  22. If a fourth year engineering student handed this experimental setup in as a design project, and included the low-temperature "calibration" as part of the design, I would fail them.

    Sure you would. Go back to your "help desk", the phone is ringing.

  23. This, a thousand times over. Having a "free energy" machine, if it existed, would be like owning a machine that printed money.

    A "free energy" machine and "cold fusion" are two different things.

  24. Re:Go Ross, Go! on Ross Ulbricht's Lawyer Says FBI's Hack of Silk Road Was "Criminal" · · Score: 1

    Also, do you know that it was FBI that posed undercover as the blackmailers as well as the executors. That every single hit that was ordered against a fictional entity, in response to blackmails by fictional entities, and carried out by a fictional entity as well.

    And you know this how? Oh, that's right, you made this all up...

  25. Re:Not a medical professional, but: on Prosthetic Hand Capable of Delivering Texture Sensations · · Score: 2

    Prosthetic Hand Capable of Delivering Texture Sensations

    ...to my penis.