It IS YouTube's job.... the second the added the 'Kids' label. That gives them a level of responsibility much greater than just a 13 & older general video service.
Google's new changes for YouTube are barely lip-service to the problem. It's a PR move, on what is a disturbing & scary problem.
While I won't let my sons (2, 4 & 6) anywhere near YouTube... I have many parent friends who let their children browse YouTube Kids basically unattended. While this is clearly not a good idea, the fact remains that overworked, exhausted parents are going to do this. That videos of Peppa Pig eating her father & drinking bleach, and other horrid 'cartoons' are slipping past automated filters, the service needs to remove the 'kids' label and only re-open when human reviewed videos replace them. A-la Netflix Kids, etc.
That Google won't even prevent the 'related videos' bar from sending kids down the rabbit hole, is also infuriating.
I have friends who, upon reading this news, scanned their child's history only to find videos of cartoon favourites sexually assaulting eachother. Wth Google - shut it down!
And to say parents should be previewing each & every video - I agree... but they don't. Parents in today's dual-income, cash-strapped economy are at an exhausted extreme.
I work for an Ontario software company. We have very talented people here. The Toronto area will cost you, but companies outside the big metropolitian cities won't cost a ton. Minimum wage here is $10/h. $15/h is decent. Experienced devs are happy to make about $20hr in some towns.
I've been dual booting Ubuntu on a laptop alongside Windows for quite a few years now. I'm using an LTS version and haven't been exposed to Unity yet. I just checked out the online tour on the Ubuntu website and I'm just.... well, depressed.
Linux won't expand drastically into the home PC market unless it can accomplish the following:
- Make navigating my files and applications easy and intuitive. Finding installed applications should not be difficult. - Make installing any new application easy. - Let me configure the OS, my preferences and my hardware and drivers easily. - NO COMMAND LINE REQUIRED. - Extensive help within the application. - Extensive hardware and driver support. The current state is not good enough.
Sadly even though Ubuntu has been the nicest one I've used, it seems to be dumbing down some things while others are still difficult. If a normal user who is not doing anything unusual has to open the command line, this is a fail.
I know this will cause a big flame war to say this, but as a long time Windows and Linux user... I have to say.... just make it work like Windows! Windows may be popular due to a monopoly on the industry, but they are now the standard and despite the MS hatred, they have over time developed a clear and non-complicated way of doing most things you need to do on your computer. I haven't opened the command line on Windows for years... not even sure if it still exists. I can find all my settings under Control Panel, and my applications are nicely organized and I can add shortcuts and organize files however I like. For all it's flaws, Windows is the standard in the industry. If Linux deviates too far away from this, it will forever remain a fringe option for technical or very determined users.
I say all this as someone who has no love for Microsoft and very, very much wants to see Linux grow in popularity. I've been dual booting Ubuntu to see if I could ditch Windows and use it exclusively. So far my answer is no way, and will be sadly getting Windows 7 on my next machine, and probably dual booting some distro of Linux. I might try Mint next.
You can't I've looked. What's also bad is when FB tells you someone told them your hometown/highschool/relationship/etc is ABC you don't have an option to deny or delete that factoid. The best you can do is not show it on your profile. But FB still assumes it's true and saves it.
I got in a long drawn out debate with friends about this recently. I politely asked people not to tell FB info about me. I was shocked how many friends argued with me... even after I gave links to articles about what FB does with the info. Like hello... I don't care what you tell FB about yourself... but you're upset that I want you to refrain from telling it about ME? Geez.
I'm a Canadian and had to go to a clinic in Florida when on vacation. I saw the doctor for about 10mins to explain my sore throat. Came out of there with a $235 bill for the visit and a written prescription note, and $50 for the strep-throat test. The antibiotics were a deal at $25 at the drug store across the street. Luckily my travel insurance back home reimbursed me for all of it.
So yeah, $45 is a bargain...
Us Canadians need to take out travel insurance mainly to cover us in case we have to use the US healthcare system.
In my area (southern Ontario) we were able to vote federally by mail-in ballot. Not sure if this is available across the country. Many people did it just for the convenience. I think that is a better idea than online. I'm a web developer and even I have doubts to how this could be done online properly.
As a female gamer who plays the so called 'hard core' games.... I don't see a huge gap in how games appeal to men and women. Other than the turd of the new Duke Nukem game there is a really great selection out there (and I was a fan of DN3d. Used to create levels for it). A few companies are really getting it right like BioWare. Mass Effect and Dragon Age both let you play a female character with a fleshed out story and applicable love interests. I wish more games were like that. For example, Rockstar could do more to let me play a female character like in Red Dead Redemption and the game I'm currently playing - LA Noire.
Secondly, I want to be able to save any time I freaking want. And don't make me re-play a big section just because I had to exit to do something more important. Having to reach a 'save point' is nonsense and kills my fun really quickly.
Also, don't know if this is a girl thing or not... but I like more social interaction with NPCs in the game. Like in Dragon Age for example it's very good. In Oblivion however... I get kind of lonely pretty quickly. The lone wolf adventurer gets old after 40+ hours.
That reminds me, I want to finish Oblivion before Skyrim comes out. But I have yet another repetitive oblivion gate to close. Gaaah. There's such a thing as a game being too long.
This is actually pretty true. Part of catering to my needs as a female gamer, is - let me save any freaking time I want and don't make me replay a huge section when I reload. Because the darn oven buzzer is going off and I'm 30 mins from a save point.
I always wondered what if a not so scrupulous person set up a url shortening service that operated legitimately for a while getting itself spread all over the web. Then one day they change it so that all the urls now point to a frame with the target site surrounded by ads. It would be mostly too late to stop it, and the terms could be along the lines of "we reserve the right to do anything we want with shortened urls".
It drives me mad when I see URL shorteners used in places that do not have a space limitation. Like on a regular website. I get the point of using it on twitter or txt messages, but on a blog or website? Ug. It's killing the web.
At what point did building stuff on your own become something so rare?
Really, you haven't noticed the throw it away don't fix it trend? Finding people who can actually fix or make mechanical and electronic things is becoming very hard indeed.
I can see this coming. Pictures of my Friends will appear on websites pushing products or even the services of that website. Welcome to Best Buy Sherri, your Friend Jane was just here and bought Harry Potter on BluRay! [like].
Ug.
Log out immediately after doing anything on any site.
Am I missing something? I thought it was some other guy, not related to Wikileaks who stole the documents? Shouldn't that guy/security hole be the target of an investigation? What's there to investigate with Wikileaks? They publish leaked documents. There, end of mystery. *sigh*
My finance and I live together and both love video games. We've also found it a challenge to find good local co-op games for Xbox360. After Borderlands, Castle Crashers and a few others, there really isn't much out there. It's too bad, because it's something we really enjoy and since we try to spend a good chunk of our free time together, it means we'll be playing fewer games, not more.
This was my family's very first game! Our shareware version was unable to re-map the keys so we had to have one person doing the moving and jumping and one person pushing Insert (for some reason) to shoot. Guess that makes it a 2 player game!!! *laughs*
One of the first games my siblings and I ever played on our first family computer. Jump started my love of gaming.
Remember in the first one (I think), you could stand in certain spots to make the wolves fall off the end of the world near the exits? *sigh* good times.
$400 is the price of name recognition. I use GoDaddy certs and they are 1/10 the cost. All you need for any purpose.
For some of my stuff I use the shared cert that my host provides. Still secure but throws that bloody warning. At least firefox let's me permantely store the certificate exception.
Am I the only one who thinks this is BAD? It better be opt in... because I really don't want an MS eyeball in my living room sending data back to whoever. Kinect data better stay in my local machine unless I give them permission...
I don't know too much about that... but the farmers I know aren't exactly rolling in money. Of course that's here in Canada. Many are broke and working second jobs on top of running their family farms. I'm betting that the corporate farms are another story though.
And why did the farmer hire the H1Bs/illegals? Because the price he can get for his produce has been pretty steady or even dropping in the last decade or more. When we all demand things to be cheaper and cheaper, when we all shop at WalMart* b/c apples are cheaper, and they are cheaper b/c WalMart* strong-arm's discounts from it's suppliers... it all trickles down. But we all shop at WalMart* b/c we can't get good paying jobs. It's a reinforced loop.
* WalMart and/or discount stores, dollar stores, chain and department stores. (ie not local).
I'd prefer to see a prominent notice on my actual invoice. This way they are not mucking with my connection or data, and I'll know it's from them and won't be so easily ignored as an email might be.
It IS YouTube's job.... the second the added the 'Kids' label. That gives them a level of responsibility much greater than just a 13 & older general video service.
Google's new changes for YouTube are barely lip-service to the problem. It's a PR move, on what is a disturbing & scary problem.
While I won't let my sons (2, 4 & 6) anywhere near YouTube... I have many parent friends who let their children browse YouTube Kids basically unattended. While this is clearly not a good idea, the fact remains that overworked, exhausted parents are going to do this. That videos of Peppa Pig eating her father & drinking bleach, and other horrid 'cartoons' are slipping past automated filters, the service needs to remove the 'kids' label and only re-open when human reviewed videos replace them. A-la Netflix Kids, etc.
That Google won't even prevent the 'related videos' bar from sending kids down the rabbit hole, is also infuriating.
I have friends who, upon reading this news, scanned their child's history only to find videos of cartoon favourites sexually assaulting eachother. Wth Google - shut it down!
And to say parents should be previewing each & every video - I agree... but they don't. Parents in today's dual-income, cash-strapped economy are at an exhausted extreme.
I work for an Ontario software company. We have very talented people here. The Toronto area will cost you, but companies outside the big metropolitian cities won't cost a ton. Minimum wage here is $10/h. $15/h is decent. Experienced devs are happy to make about $20hr in some towns.
I've been dual booting Ubuntu on a laptop alongside Windows for quite a few years now. I'm using an LTS version and haven't been exposed to Unity yet. I just checked out the online tour on the Ubuntu website and I'm just.... well, depressed.
Linux won't expand drastically into the home PC market unless it can accomplish the following:
- Make navigating my files and applications easy and intuitive. Finding installed applications should not be difficult.
- Make installing any new application easy.
- Let me configure the OS, my preferences and my hardware and drivers easily.
- NO COMMAND LINE REQUIRED.
- Extensive help within the application.
- Extensive hardware and driver support. The current state is not good enough.
Sadly even though Ubuntu has been the nicest one I've used, it seems to be dumbing down some things while others are still difficult. If a normal user who is not doing anything unusual has to open the command line, this is a fail.
I know this will cause a big flame war to say this, but as a long time Windows and Linux user... I have to say.... just make it work like Windows! Windows may be popular due to a monopoly on the industry, but they are now the standard and despite the MS hatred, they have over time developed a clear and non-complicated way of doing most things you need to do on your computer. I haven't opened the command line on Windows for years... not even sure if it still exists. I can find all my settings under Control Panel, and my applications are nicely organized and I can add shortcuts and organize files however I like. For all it's flaws, Windows is the standard in the industry. If Linux deviates too far away from this, it will forever remain a fringe option for technical or very determined users.
I say all this as someone who has no love for Microsoft and very, very much wants to see Linux grow in popularity. I've been dual booting Ubuntu to see if I could ditch Windows and use it exclusively. So far my answer is no way, and will be sadly getting Windows 7 on my next machine, and probably dual booting some distro of Linux. I might try Mint next.
Hopefully this extends to the fact that linking to pirated content is not piracy.
You can't I've looked. What's also bad is when FB tells you someone told them your hometown/highschool/relationship/etc is ABC you don't have an option to deny or delete that factoid. The best you can do is not show it on your profile. But FB still assumes it's true and saves it.
I got in a long drawn out debate with friends about this recently. I politely asked people not to tell FB info about me. I was shocked how many friends argued with me... even after I gave links to articles about what FB does with the info. Like hello... I don't care what you tell FB about yourself... but you're upset that I want you to refrain from telling it about ME? Geez.
I'm a Canadian and had to go to a clinic in Florida when on vacation. I saw the doctor for about 10mins to explain my sore throat. Came out of there with a $235 bill for the visit and a written prescription note, and $50 for the strep-throat test. The antibiotics were a deal at $25 at the drug store across the street. Luckily my travel insurance back home reimbursed me for all of it.
So yeah, $45 is a bargain...
Us Canadians need to take out travel insurance mainly to cover us in case we have to use the US healthcare system.
In my area (southern Ontario) we were able to vote federally by mail-in ballot. Not sure if this is available across the country. Many people did it just for the convenience. I think that is a better idea than online. I'm a web developer and even I have doubts to how this could be done online properly.
As a female gamer who plays the so called 'hard core' games.... I don't see a huge gap in how games appeal to men and women. Other than the turd of the new Duke Nukem game there is a really great selection out there (and I was a fan of DN3d. Used to create levels for it). A few companies are really getting it right like BioWare. Mass Effect and Dragon Age both let you play a female character with a fleshed out story and applicable love interests. I wish more games were like that. For example, Rockstar could do more to let me play a female character like in Red Dead Redemption and the game I'm currently playing - LA Noire.
Secondly, I want to be able to save any time I freaking want. And don't make me re-play a big section just because I had to exit to do something more important. Having to reach a 'save point' is nonsense and kills my fun really quickly.
Also, don't know if this is a girl thing or not... but I like more social interaction with NPCs in the game. Like in Dragon Age for example it's very good. In Oblivion however... I get kind of lonely pretty quickly. The lone wolf adventurer gets old after 40+ hours.
That reminds me, I want to finish Oblivion before Skyrim comes out. But I have yet another repetitive oblivion gate to close. Gaaah. There's such a thing as a game being too long.
This is actually pretty true. Part of catering to my needs as a female gamer, is - let me save any freaking time I want and don't make me replay a huge section when I reload. Because the darn oven buzzer is going off and I'm 30 mins from a save point.
I always wondered what if a not so scrupulous person set up a url shortening service that operated legitimately for a while getting itself spread all over the web. Then one day they change it so that all the urls now point to a frame with the target site surrounded by ads. It would be mostly too late to stop it, and the terms could be along the lines of "we reserve the right to do anything we want with shortened urls".
It drives me mad when I see URL shorteners used in places that do not have a space limitation. Like on a regular website. I get the point of using it on twitter or txt messages, but on a blog or website? Ug. It's killing the web.
I'm waiting for the day that all mobile computers are cellphone size and then the screen rolls out - via the things seen in the movie Red Planet.
http://www.flashfilmworks.com/MovieGuide/RedPlanet/red06.jpg
At what point did building stuff on your own become something so rare?
Really, you haven't noticed the throw it away don't fix it trend? Finding people who can actually fix or make mechanical and electronic things is becoming very hard indeed.
I can see this coming. Pictures of my Friends will appear on websites pushing products or even the services of that website. Welcome to Best Buy Sherri, your Friend Jane was just here and bought Harry Potter on BluRay! [like].
Ug.
Log out immediately after doing anything on any site.
I found their Canadian affiliate:
http://onlinerights.ca/
Does the EFF only work within US law, or would they help someone in courts in other countries, like say Canada?
Am I missing something? I thought it was some other guy, not related to Wikileaks who stole the documents? Shouldn't that guy/security hole be the target of an investigation? What's there to investigate with Wikileaks? They publish leaked documents. There, end of mystery. *sigh*
My finance and I live together and both love video games. We've also found it a challenge to find good local co-op games for Xbox360. After Borderlands, Castle Crashers and a few others, there really isn't much out there. It's too bad, because it's something we really enjoy and since we try to spend a good chunk of our free time together, it means we'll be playing fewer games, not more.
This was my family's very first game! Our shareware version was unable to re-map the keys so we had to have one person doing the moving and jumping and one person pushing Insert (for some reason) to shoot. Guess that makes it a 2 player game!!! *laughs*
One of the first games my siblings and I ever played on our first family computer. Jump started my love of gaming.
Remember in the first one (I think), you could stand in certain spots to make the wolves fall off the end of the world near the exits? *sigh* good times.
$400 is the price of name recognition. I use GoDaddy certs and they are 1/10 the cost. All you need for any purpose.
For some of my stuff I use the shared cert that my host provides. Still secure but throws that bloody warning. At least firefox let's me permantely store the certificate exception.
Am I the only one who thinks this is BAD? It better be opt in... because I really don't want an MS eyeball in my living room sending data back to whoever. Kinect data better stay in my local machine unless I give them permission...
I don't know too much about that... but the farmers I know aren't exactly rolling in money. Of course that's here in Canada. Many are broke and working second jobs on top of running their family farms. I'm betting that the corporate farms are another story though.
And why did the farmer hire the H1Bs/illegals? Because the price he can get for his produce has been pretty steady or even dropping in the last decade or more. When we all demand things to be cheaper and cheaper, when we all shop at WalMart* b/c apples are cheaper, and they are cheaper b/c WalMart* strong-arm's discounts from it's suppliers... it all trickles down. But we all shop at WalMart* b/c we can't get good paying
jobs. It's a reinforced loop.
* WalMart and/or discount stores, dollar stores, chain and department stores. (ie not local).
I'd prefer to see a prominent notice on my actual invoice. This way they are not mucking with my connection or data, and I'll know it's from them and won't be so easily ignored as an email might be.