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  1. Re:In Business for the Wrong Reasons on Downtown Project Suicides Shock High Tech Community · · Score: 1

    This just seems to be written around the culture of tech startups, there are plenty of small family businesses that are not there to become huge megacorps but to run a shop or make things on a small scale.

  2. Re:So Intel pulled out on Intel Drops Gamasutra Sponsorship Over Controversial Editorials · · Score: 1

    This is the actual article that caused Intel to pull out of advertising at Gamasutra.

  3. Re:gtfo on Intel Drops Gamasutra Sponsorship Over Controversial Editorials · · Score: 1

    This Slashdot writeup is incredibly shit, because it's not linking to the actual article that caused Intel to pull out.

    Ask yourself why Intel would continue advertising in a site whose chief editor wrote that.

    I don't even think it had to do with gamergaters "pressure", other than that they brought attention to it.

  4. Re:Why Male? on Male Scent Molecules May Be Compromising Biomedical Research · · Score: 1

    But why male scientists?

  5. Re:Not the first RPG in Japan on How Role-Playing Games Arrived In Japan With Black Onyx · · Score: 4, Informative

    This, pretty much. The Black Onyx was a 1984 game, but it's well known that 1981's Wizardry had a much bigger impact in Japan.

    They even made DS games on the Wizardry franchise because it's so famous over there

  6. Re:Not professional on NSA Has No Clue As To Scope of Snowden's Data Trove · · Score: 1
  7. Re:Old Joke on 1.21 PetaFLOPS (RPeak) Supercomputer Created With EC2 · · Score: 1

    You want old jokes?

    Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these....

  8. Re:What does AT&T get in return? on CIA Pays AT&T Millions To Voluntarily Provide Call Data · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Their executive's stocks don't get scrutinized for insider trading, as happened to a certain Qwest executive...

  9. Re:You what? on Critics Reassess Starship Troopers As a Misunderstood Masterpiece · · Score: 1

    Look, I was in my teens when I saw it in the theater, and I was not a fan or defender of Heinlein's (still have not read any of his books).

    I still thought the movie sucked.

    I got that it was satire, in fact I thought it was trying too hard to be satire. There was no subtlety and none of it was clever or funny. Nor did it lampoon the military in ways that actually challenged militarism or war on an intellectual level, it just made fun of the surface aspects of it (hurrr grunts are dumb, look at this parody of propaganda, etc). It felt like the director was just trying to bash his views onto the viewer without any introspection or intellect. Basically my reaction.

    You know your movie sucks when a teenage boy thinks it lacks subtlety and intellect.

  10. Re:It was a myth on Joining Lavabit Et Al, Groklaw Shuts Down Because of NSA Dragnet · · Score: 1

    What? No, this is objectively not true: The US still doesn't have the equivalent to the UK's Official Secrets Act, for example. The UK law can compel people who are not part of the military or contracted civillians to destroy data or be jailed for revealing state secrets, whereas US law can only punish those who were directly contractually obligatged to keep state secrets, like Manning and Snowden.

    Notably, the Guardian itself has said would not be able to report on equivalent disclosures about the UK under their official secrets act, but they are protected by the First Amendment in the US.

    As for the past, the US was definitely far freer than most of western Europe through WWII, not having a permanent secret intelligence service for example. But since the end of the Cold War, the human rights situation in Euroope has probably caught up with the US, and exceeded it in some ways.

  11. Re:And on Joining Lavabit Et Al, Groklaw Shuts Down Because of NSA Dragnet · · Score: 1

    I'll get the grits, you can pour it down your pants to quell your sadness.

  12. Re:Where will this end? on Joining Lavabit Et Al, Groklaw Shuts Down Because of NSA Dragnet · · Score: 1

    Agreed, but I feel that the American public will not care until an actual "old media" site or physical newspaper/TV/radio station goes off the air.

    Which is not inconcievable, nowadays.

  13. Re:It wont do much, but at least register interest on USA Calling For the Extradition of Snowden · · Score: 1

    Just remember, you can't pardon someone who hasn't been convicted. Maybe you can give immunity from prosecution, but I'm not sure the President can do that. Knowing Obama, he'll have him prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

  14. Obligatory on Facebook Suffers Actual Cloud In Oregon Datacenter · · Score: 5, Funny

    Welcome to Oregon, it rains a lot.

  15. Re:it just occurred to me on Inside PRISM: Why the Government Hates Encryption · · Score: 1

    Not to mention internal human rights or freedom of speech, freedom of thought...

  16. Re:Morons on Inside PRISM: Why the Government Hates Encryption · · Score: 1

    I think he meant it more in the sense of The Onion's Drugs Win Drugs War.... When you go to war against something, you can lose to it even if the thing doesn't care about winning.

    In this case, we went to war with "terror" and we have succeeded in terrorizing ourselves, thus it has won.

  17. Re:Just how much storage capacity would one requir on Former FBI Agent: All Digital Communications Stored By US Gov't · · Score: 1

    No, re-read his comments. He only mentions that they are recording all voice traffic, not all data. He goes on to say that all digital communications is insecure, but not that they're actively recording all data traffic.

    Voice comms is very low in bitrate, and it hasn't scaled up exponentially like general internet traffic, so I have no doubt that the technical capability to do what he says exists. Whether they are actually doing it is a separate question.

  18. Re:Well the ultimate value of Bitcoin is on BitCoin Value Collapses, Possibly Due To DDoS · · Score: 2

    I am not a economist, but I am related to one...

    While it's technically true to say that "Currency is only worth what people think it's worth" and that it's a socailly-constructed value, you are ignoring the underlying economic reasons why people assign greater value to one than the other.

    The value of a US dollar is based on the power and stability of the US economy and Federal Government. No matter how bad things may seem right now for the US economy, it is much better than trusting a random internet craze, and no one doubts that it will be around in 100 years, hence people buy 100 year bonds. Even the currency of a small country like Sweden is a better bet than bitcoin.

    I've looked into bitcoin, and while I think the idea is cryptographically sound, there is one problem with the concept: While there are built-in limits to inflation within bitcoin, there is nothing preventing someone else from building "Bitcoin 2" or "Crypto-coins" with the same concept but different keys. If merchants are willing to take bitcoin, what is to prevent them from also accepting any other crypto currency, thus devaluing the whole pool?

    The value of currency as an investment is dependent on how much it will be worth in the long run, and while I am sure "bitcoins" will be around in 10 years, what will its value be? Will be around in 100 years?

    And this is ignoring the issue this article bring up, that with a newly-consructed pool of currency with much fewer users, it is much more prone to currency manipulation than dollars or euros.

  19. Re:"it isn't real, you are a flake" on Leaked: Obama's Rules For Assassinating American Citizens · · Score: 1

    The counter-argument to that would be that when John Brown attempted an insurrection against the country, they tried him in a court and executed him. When a individual or some conspirators attempt to fight the country, that is well within the bounds of the regular law enforcement.

    It's when you have entire governments and literally tens of thousands of men forming an insurrection that you bring out the canons.

  20. Re:Brogramming??? on Is 'Brogramming' Killing Requirements Engineering? · · Score: 1

    Bro, do you ecen code?

  21. Re:Still.... on Linus Chews Up Kernel Maintainer For Introducing Userspace Bug · · Score: 2

    Not a military member, but from what I understand, the military doles out ass-chewings like that behind closed doors, not in front of the public. Dressing down people in front of the men/women they command or the public is frowned upon because it leads to undermining the chain of command.

    Punishments that are viewed by the public, like court-martials have a much more professional air to them. I don't see why Linus couldn't do that, or do his ranting and raving in a personal email to the man instead of a public forum.

  22. Finally.... on FreeBSD Project Falls Short of Year End Funding Target By Nearly 50% · · Score: 2, Funny

    After many long years on Slashdot, can I be the first one to actually confirm that FreeBSD is dead?

  23. Re:"some"? on Why Iron Dome Might Only Work For Israel · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Does your mom count? Because that's the one that said it to me.

  24. Oh god no on Will It Take a 'Cyber Pearl Harbor' To Break Congressional Deadlock? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I guess we didn't learn anything from when 9-11 happened and we created the TSA, a group of intrusive busybodies at best and molestors at worst.

    Or organized all federal law enforcement under the DHS without actually thinking about how it would coordinate things so we have another layer of government that is busy trying to justify their existence by going after random stuff. I hear they do copyright enforcement now?

    I suppose we are set to see a Cybersecurity Agency with powers to monitor everything and permaban people from the internet based on anonymous accusations like the no-flight lists? What's the worst that could happen?

  25. Always wondered about Russia... on Kaspersky's Exploit-Proof OS Leaves Security Experts Skeptical · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I often hear of "Russian hackers" and the hacker scene is supposedly pretty big, and I've always wondered to what extent the government there had a hand in that. Anyone here have any experience with the Russian scene?

    And why is the hacker scene so big there?