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User: A+beautiful+mind

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  1. Re:No, you gave it away on Have We Lost Our Privacy To the Internet? · · Score: 1

    I would love to subscribe to Google, if they would promise not to track me or mandate UI constraints for me in return.

    Google makes a fairly low amount of revenue per user, almost everyone on the internet would have no trouble paying it, if the micropayment and subscriber infrastructure were in place for that to happen.

  2. We need to stop being the product on Have We Lost Our Privacy To the Internet? · · Score: 1

    It's not only a problem from the privacy standpoint, but also in terms of what kind of behaviour it encourages, from online services to journalism.

    The paywalled model is utterly ridiculous for the internet and the ad/privacy supported model is utterly destructive. What we need is a honors system like paying for deadtree newspapers (except with user selectable amounts). It does not eliminate ads, but generates enough revenue to act as a counterweight, that makes it easier for the business owner to care about the readers / users of it's product.

    The honors system needs to consist of fine grained enough micropayments so that different aspects of a service / product can be rewarded, I want to click a button on the page of a Guardian / Economist article if I thought it was any good, to create an incentive to write further good articles.

    There are some micropayment providers that accomplish something similar already, but not nearly in a wide enough scope yet. One that I'm using (and won't name apart from this link) allows micropayments to almost any url, github projects, twitter users, individual tweets and other stuff, that is a good first step. It is still in infancy, but I'm using it because I want to vote with my wallet.

    "If you're not paying for something, you're the product" is the mantra, but the often forgotten corollary to this statement is that whoever pays has the influence. I want to actively push the worldview of an open, honors system based internet so that we can have good content and freedom at the same time.

  3. The real problem on Facebook Denies Accessing Users' Text Messages · · Score: 2

    The real problem is that common applications request almost all of the permissions from the phone when the user installs them, to provide full functionality (importing contacts, etc.). The user's choice is between not installing the app and giving it those permissions.

    What should be happening instead is: make the permissions user selectable, to be able to install the facebook app, but to prevent it from accessing anything I don't want. The app store / market rules should mandate that applications cope with the degradation of priviledges gracefully. The OS/app should display a popup when the user tries to do something that requires priviledges the app doesn't have, along the lines of "do you want to grant permission x to this application? [just this once] / [yes] / [no] / [don't ask again]"

  4. Judges from the 20th century have to go on UK Student Jailed For Facebook Hack Despite 'Ethical Hacking' Defense · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It is inexcusable to let people pass judgement in matters they don't comprehend.

  5. Re:Another politician with half a brain? on EU ACTA Chief Resigns · · Score: 1

    Not true. Appointment to the EP uses a system of degressive proportionality, under which seats are roughly proportional to the number of voters, but less so the smaller the country is. However, even in the extreme case of Luxembourg, the weight of the voter compared to the european average is 10.86x (last election), not over a thousand votes as you state. This is due to the fact that there is a minimum of 6 seats per country, probably a good idea to fairly represent the political differences in parties of a specific country.

  6. Not that much new here... on Inside the Great Firewall of China's Tor Blocking · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Tor exit node based blocking has been used on various IRC servers to combat abuse for years and years now, The chinese might be doing something more fancy, but that only shows that they didn't go for the fairly easy and quick solution.

  7. Re:Consistent? on Germans Increase Office Efficiency With "Cloud Ceiling" · · Score: 1

    I have psychological research showing that lcd screens showing live feed images of waterfalls and other such fake things don't work. Source.

  8. Re:Galaxy S i9000 Got Two Full OS updates on Galaxy S and Galaxy Tab Won't Get Android 4.0 · · Score: 1
    Where did I hear that before?

    Roslin: It tells people things like where the restroom is, and-

    Adama: It's an integrated computer network, and I will not have it aboard this ship.

    Roslin: I heard you're one of those people. You're actually afraid of computers.

    Adama: No, there are many computers on this ship. But they're not networked.

    Roslin: A computerized network would simply make it faster and easier for the teachers to be able to teach-

    Adama: Let me explain something to you. Many good men and women lost their lives aboard this ship because someone wanted a faster computer to make life easier. I'm sorry that I'm inconveniencing you or the teachers, but I will not allow a networked computerized system to be placed on this ship while I'm in command. Is that clear?

  9. Re:The Telegraph on In the EU, Water Doesn't (Officially) Prevent Dehydration · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is a common theme in these stories, the "crazy eurocrats do the darnedest things" trope that british newspapers like the Telegraph like to trot out from time to time. Most of those stories do not stand up to scrutiny, but they resonate well with public sentiment.

  10. Re:indolent on Re-evaluating the Benefits of Cancer Screening · · Score: 2

    But what's the alternative? Just wait until someone's sick enough to warrant a cancer screening?

    Absolutely! If the statistics show that we're better off without early screening in terms of health outcomes, by all means! We should be doing something else with our time and money than to spend them on ineffective screening.

  11. Re:Seen this article everywhere now. on Re-evaluating the Benefits of Cancer Screening · · Score: 1

    Err, the last sentence should read: A lot of screening doesn't necessarily improve outcomes.

  12. Re:Seen this article everywhere now. on Re-evaluating the Benefits of Cancer Screening · · Score: 4, Informative
    No, this is not the case. The problem is that we're still far away from evidence based medicine.

    When evaluating what works and what doesn't, you have to tread very carefully. Sure, most people^Wgeeks know about double blind studies, but that's just the tip of the iceberg. The second edition of Testing Treatments came out recently (available as a free pdf on the website, although I bought it to support the authors) that explains the problems in an understandable language while not dumbing down the issues. The book comes with the recommendation of well known epidemiologists like Ben Goldacre, of Bad Science.net fame.

    To talk about the specifics of screening, check out Chapter 4. To recap the main points there, for screening to be worthwhile you have to look at several factors:
    • The condition to be screened for has to be important - either because of it's deadliness and/or because it affects a lot of people
    • There has to be a detectable early stage of the condition which to screen against
    • There exists an effective and acceptable treatment for the condition
    • There is a reliable screening test to detect the condition with

    The problem with lots of screening is that on the level of the population it can lead to more harm than good overall for a lot of different diseases, because of false positives, because of our psychological makeup that we'd prefer surgery for even harmless varieties of lumps in our bodies, etc. (see detailed examples in the book). In a lot of cases it happened that screening was introduced before the effectiveness of screening was established in a trial, then later trials showed that the screening was ineffective in reducing deaths or harm.

    The bottom line is that well designed trials should be conducted and based on the systemic review of those trials it should be decided whether to conduct screening or not, based on whether it's improving health outcomes or not. A lot of trials don't improve outcomes.

  13. Re:are you kidding me? on Firefox 8.0 Beta Available · · Score: 1

    Sure, without any security updates. That is a brilliant idea on today's web.

  14. Re:Lessor of two evils... on Siemens To Exit Nuclear Power Business · · Score: 1

    The Guardian isn't a very good news source for science (nor is any other mainstream newspaper that I know of). However, when even George Monbiot supports nuclear you've got to wonder about who doesn't.

  15. Re:So what? on Siemens To Exit Nuclear Power Business · · Score: 2
    Before the decision to shut down nuclear power in Germany, they were a major exporter of electricity with about 90 gigawats of domestic usage and producing 130 gigawatts. Taking away the 25 gigawatts from nuclear and they can just about meet their internal demand, if all goes to plan.

    This winter, Amprion predicts its grid will have 84,000 megawatts of electricity at its disposal, to provide 81,000 megawatts needed for consumption - an uncomfortably slim margin of safety, Mr. Vanzetta said. In prior years, electricity was readily available for purchase on the European grid if the price was right. But exported German power is what helped keep France glowing in winter.

  16. Re:Lessor of two evils... on Siemens To Exit Nuclear Power Business · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Talking about Fukushima, let's try to be more factual: the expected death toll is less than you'd expect from a major bus accident. So far we know of no deaths related to Fukushima.

  17. German policy costs at least 25000 lives/year on Siemens To Exit Nuclear Power Business · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If instead of trying to increase renewable capacity desperately - I'm doubtful about the execution of a very large ramp-up in renewable energy generation capacity in itself - the German government would try to decrease fossil fuel use, they'd save at least 25k lives per year as compared to shutting down nuclear plants and letting fossil fuel based ones operate.

    Based on deaths per TWh(which includes Chernobyl for nuclear), it takes about 160 lives to generate one TWh by coal and 0.04 lives per TWh by nuclear fission. Germany in 2008 generated 291TWh of electricity from coal, that's about 47'000 lives lost in one year.

    Keeping all the nuclear capacity and spending the ramp-up in renewables to shut down coal plants would save tens of thousands of lives. Shutting down nuclear plants forces Germany to open about 20 new fossil fuel based plants, because even with a substantial increase in renewable capacity they cannot meet demand.

    This is nothing short of mass murder through ignorance.

  18. Re:Dumbing Down is hidden agenda? on Maine School District Gives iPad To Every Kindergartner · · Score: 1

    It's all a bit condescending isn't it? There is a reason why drug commercials shouldn't be permitted to be broadcast to the general public, but that doesn't mean people in general are dumbasses.

    Doctors while an entirely different ballgame with regards to drug related propaganda, they still fail on average pretty hard in trying to understand basic study design and statistics. Read Ben Goldacre's excellent book, Bad Science, especially the 10th chapter. If what's in there is not news to you, then maybe you're one of the more qualified doctors, however you can't say with a straight face that the average doctor doesn't fail pretty hard at reading an industry-sponsored study with a good understanding of the underhand tactics and subtle details.

    (I'm not a doctor, however I do understand fairly advanced statistics and I read methodology sections and study designs in various areas for fun.)

  19. Re:Practiced lying can defeat lie detectors... on Thermal Imaging Lie Detector In Development · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Saying religion is not some bronze age fairytale and coexisting with the scientific knowledge of the 21st century is something I find deeply offensive.

    It is time we stopped treating fairytales with undeserved respect or reservation.

  20. Re:Have they checked yesterday? on DARPA Loses Contact With Hypersonic Glider · · Score: 1

    Lies! It was the Cone Of Silence!

  21. Re:It's not really ONLY about those profits... on EVE Online Players Rage, Protest Over Microtransactions · · Score: 1

    The point you're missing is that there is no in-game seed of PLEX. All PLEX that is on the in-game market was purchased by a player for real cash and put on the in-game market by a player.

  22. Re:It's not really ONLY about those profits... on EVE Online Players Rage, Protest Over Microtransactions · · Score: 1

    Now, it should be pretty obvious as to why a company the size of CCP would be worried about "unclaimed" pre-paid subscriptions worth anything between 1 and 5 million dollars floating around inside their own game.

    Well, I might be missing the point here, but it doesn't seem obvious to me. Could you spell it out please?

    I'd think that having lots of unclaimed PLEX in game would be the best use of PLEX from CCP's point of view, since they got paid for the PLEX, but didn't have to provide a service for it (yet) and any in-game trading just moves resources around between players. The unclaimed PLEXes are probably highly decentralized and a large fraction will never be used to buy service for it.

  23. Tag suddenoutbreakofcommonsense on UK Sticks With Nuclear Power · · Score: 1

    If there is a time to use it, this is it.

  24. Re:Come on, it's PHP on 13-Year-Old Password Security Bug Fixed · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm an advanced slashdot user, I don't even read the summary anymore.

  25. Come on, it's PHP on 13-Year-Old Password Security Bug Fixed · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What the fuck did you expect, excellent design practices and high quality code?