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User: Raseri

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Comments · 161

  1. Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina on Classified Report On the CIA's Secret Prisons Is Caught In Limbo (techdirt.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're one of his constituents you should probably contact him and tell him to stop fucking up: http://www.burr.senate.gov/ Unfortunately, NC is not one of the 18 states that allow recall of a senator, so you'll have to threaten him with losing his job next election cycle.

  2. Re:WARNING: Malkin detected on New Book Sold Out Offers a Look At the H-1B Debate · · Score: 1

    Michelle Malkin hates brown people? That's a new one. https://duckduckgo.com/?q=mich...

  3. Re:It's just business on New Book Sold Out Offers a Look At the H-1B Debate · · Score: 2

    Indians do not value education. If they did, we wouldn't need to teach them how write a while loop their first day on the job (yes, I've actually had to do this and similar first-semester-level training on more than one occasion). You're thinking of China and Japan.

  4. Re:This is what... on New Book Sold Out Offers a Look At the H-1B Debate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since many of us work in IT, the widespread, unchecked abuse of the H1B program has had an overwhelming negative effect on many /.ers, so it's no surprise that it would be reported on frequently. I find it strange that you'd complain about the number of posts on the topic, but not the rampant fucking over of IT workers.

  5. Re:National level? on Bill Confirming Property Rights For Asteroid Miners Passes the Senate (examiner.com) · · Score: 1

    A better question is, Who thinks asteroid mining is economically feasible to the extent that they needed a law regarding property rights for it? This supposes that the money that can be gained from asteroid mining would exceed the cost of launching mining equipment into space, mining the asteroid, hauling the ore to Earth, landing it safely, and processing it into a usable form, all of which seems like it would be prohibitively expensive. This would only be the case if the materials which compose asteroids were substantially different from materials that can be obtained on Earth, but they don't seem to be: http://www.esa.int/Our_Activit...

  6. Re:A better idea on How Outsourcing Companies Are Gaming the H-1B Visa System (nytimes.com) · · Score: 2

    Yes, in fact, this is what most of them do. It allows them to play innocent. It is also how many manufacturers in the United States employ illegal aliens.

  7. Re:A better idea on How Outsourcing Companies Are Gaming the H-1B Visa System (nytimes.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We all know that this won't change, and the only vote that matters is the one you cast with your wallet. The actual solution is to not do business with companies that use H1-B workers at all, whether those workers are employees of the company or "contractors" who are actually employed by InfoSys, Tata, and so on. For example, Harley-Davidson got rid of its IT department and contracted InfoSys to do the work. And, of course, InfoSys brought in nothing but Indians for the jobs. Not surprisingly, someone brought a discrimination suit against them, but I don't know how that turned out; more than likely InfoSys bought the judge. H-D can then claim that they just hired InfoSys, and InfoSys is the one hiring the workers. In this way, H-D's hands are clean, legally.

    What we actually need is a comprehensive list of companies that have done this (think Disney, etc), to facilitate boycotting those companies.

  8. Re:Millennials on Dorms For Grownups: a Solution For Lonely Millennials? · · Score: 1

    And every single generation bitches about the one that immediately follows it, in much the same way that high school sophomores bitch the most about the freshmen. My generation was labelled as a bunch of shoe-gazing fuck-offs, but that stopped once we became adults. Then, of course, we turned around and called the next generation entitled garbage. Some Gen-Xers were (and are) slackers, some have a great work ethic; likewise, some Millenials are entitled shits and always will be, others are decent people with a good grip on reality. Most of the Millenials I know (nieces, nephews, and coworkers) fall solidly into the latter category.

  9. Re:Should I be concerned? on Baidu Data Research Reveals China's Ghost Cities (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    It looks like a redundant post, but that's what I get for allowing myself to get sidetracked by work while I'm posting on /.

  10. Re:Should I be concerned? on Baidu Data Research Reveals China's Ghost Cities (thestack.com) · · Score: 2, Informative

    China's so-called ghost cities are actually just very, very new. http://blogs.reuters.com/great... What actually seems to happen is that developers (the real estate kind, not the Steve Ballmer kind) buy land for cheap because it's far from any existing population center, but Chinese law requires them to build something rather than sitting on it. So all these developers build all this stuff, and after a few years people start moving in and the ghost cities become just plain cities.

  11. Re:Home for refugees? on Baidu Data Research Reveals China's Ghost Cities (thestack.com) · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Because the Syrians aren't refugees at all?

  12. You would think so, but then you would remember that there is a 100% chance that IBM has farmed out the actual work to InfoSys, Tata, or some such shit-tier company.

  13. Perhaps the contract was given to the same company who built the Obamacare website?

    You mean H1B workers from India who never wrote a line of code before being assigned to a massive government project with a million moving parts? Seems likely, considering:

    the initial $500 million contract had been awarded to IBM

    and the fact that it's years overdue and billions of dollars over budget.

  14. Color Me Surprised on No Such Thing As 'Unlimited' Data (wired.com) · · Score: 2

    We have no way of evaluating their claims

    Not directly, anyway. We can still take an indirect approach, though, for example by looking at how many ISPs have been gobbled up and merged into each other over the last few years, at what point were there only a handful of real options left, when these caps started appearing, and so on. It also might help to remember that we've already been through this with the cell phone providers and their price gouging/fixing. Many of those providers are now ISPs as well, or have merged with them. Typically, once there isn't any real competition, prices start to go up. So to answer the question: Everybody should have seen this coming once all the mergers and acquisitions got going full force.

  15. Re:The general consensus amongst many Americans on Persian Gulf Temperatures May Be At the Edge of Human Tolerance In 30 Years (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    There is nothing new about people who challenge the consensus being shouted down, called crackpots, idiots, and so on. People who claimed the NSA was spying on everybody got the same treatment for years. Some people are terrified of the idea of reality being so malleable; others just always want to be right. There was a Norwegian television program called Hjernevask (Brainwash) that allows some "social scientists" to make complete fools out of themselves. Their reactions when shown evidence that contradicts their cherished beliefs is good comedy, and an even better reminder that people who call themselves scientists are not impervious to falling into dogma. There are several episodes. Here's the first one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

  16. Re:terrible article on Science's "Breakthrough" Winners Earn Over $21 Million In Prizes (reuters.com) · · Score: 1

    You need to scroll down to see the whole article. Don't worry, I'm sure you'll win a prize of some sort some day.

  17. Re:Online text does what now? on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    You are attempting to argue that because everyone who has ever read Mein Kampf hasn't gone out killing Jewish people, then it follows that no one is ever affected by words/speech to do something.

    You are attempting to put words in my mouth in a bid to bolster your argument. That is a logical fallacy (straw man, if I'm not mistaken). I said that mental instability is the problem, not words. Words will never affect a mentally stable human being to the point where they'd commit murder or suicide, no matter how desperately you want to believe otherwise. If it did, the sheer volume of shit being flung around on the Internet would have ensured 7 billion deaths by now.

    For the record, and in case you missed it, the key phrase here is "mental instability".

  18. Re:About time they manned up on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 2
    Was it also frustrating for you to see a woman and her children being threatened by extreme left-wing lunatics for being a GamerGate supporter? Or does your sympathy extend only to those who have the correct politics?

    Also, this:

    those of us who created the whole gaming industry in the first place

    is the most hilarious thing I've read on here all day. You did no such thing. Get over yourself.

  19. Re:Online text does what now? on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1
    Straw man? You either don't know what that means, or you pay no attention at all to the words that drool out of your brain onto the screen of your iPhone.

    Just watch any speeches made by genocidal megalomaniacs just prior to a genocide.

    I'm going to guess it's some combination of the two.

  20. Re:Online text does what now? on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Yes, I've noticed. In that case the mental instability is the problem, not the words. Why do you need this explained to you?

  21. Re:A sterling example of SJW outrage/harassment on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Oh, that's rich coming from that guy. Search his name, this is the fifth result:

    http://www.cbssports.com/general/writer/gregg-doyel/24628550/chris-kluwe-cant-be-moral-crusader-after-his-cruel-twitter-rant

    I can't say I'm surprised. This is like those Moral Majority idiots that always end up having 50 mistresses and a stable of Thai fuckboys.

  22. Re:Online text does what now? on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 2

    No, you're right. Everyone who ever read Mein Kampf or watched a video of Hitler giving a speech immediately went out and killed Jews. Because words have that much sway over mentally stable humans.

  23. Re:The metaphors around this are hilarious. on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 2

    A declaring of one's intention to cause harm or loss to another's person or property or to limit one's freedom to act in a lawful voluntary manner

    Strange, I'm not seeing the word "violence" anywhere in that definition. In fact, there's no specification of what type of harm can be intended or not, so one could assume that this could include financial or social harm.

    Did you actually read and understand what you posted?

  24. Re:The metaphors around this are hilarious. on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    They reinstated the panels due to several organizations saying that if the panels weren't reinstated, the organizations wouldn't show up to the event.

    That's a threat, dude.

  25. Online text does what now? on SXSW Reinstates Panels On Harassment, Adds All-Day Harassment Summit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    [text on a screen] is a menace that has often resulted in real world violence

    Oh, really? And where can we view these spooky words with magical powers?