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User: DarkTempes

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  1. Re:It will never happen on FCC Votes To Fight Cable's Reign Over Set-top Boxes (engadget.com) · · Score: 0

    And not just for the Presidency.

    The Tea Party's (lack of?) performance in Congress means there is a fair chance that the 2016 elections will see Republicans lose the Senate.
    Democrats only need to gain 3 to 4 seats to break the majority.

    If a Democrat is elected as President then almost certainly we'll see a swing in Congress as well.

  2. Re:At that price... on L.A. Hospital Pays Off Ransomware Thieves To Reclaim Its Network (google.com) · · Score: 1

    And given that it's ransomware it doesn't have to include a back door component. It might even be smarter not to include a back door as it gives fewer traces back to the exploiter for the authorities to follow.

    The software just has to get onto a machine, even if air-gapped, and encrypt files and then prompt the user to contact some address for the key to decrypt the files.

    So even if the patient data isn't encrypted it is quite possible that no data left the hospital network.

  3. Meh. Cox isn't that great and I've been an customer of their internet service for over 16 years and my family has been a cable TV customer off and on for over 20 years.

    While they have progressively increased speeds (and are finally supporting IPv6) they also steadily increase prices. The cost of my tier of service has nearly doubled over the last 15 years (but speeds have more than doubled.)
    They used to (they might still) advertise only the first year promotional price for services without listing anywhere what you'll actually pay.

    They're still not competitive with many of the fiber companies out there unless you don't actually care about cost. They do the same as the rest of the cable industry in that they skimp on upload to free up more bandwidth for download.

    They have grouped up with AT&T to support legislation in states to block municipal ISPs because they like their incumbent duopoly. The city I used to live in is not allowed to charge less than Cox for municipal fiber service because that would apparently be anti-competitive.

    If you actually do have downtime problems then, just like any ISP, you'll have a potentially bad time with glorified installers failing to troubleshoot the issue.
    You're certainly not going to get an EE diagnosing problems for you and probably won't get the experienced people unless you're a nag or lucky.

    They killed off their usenet service years ago which was unfortunate. They used to have a public website that informed users of maintenance and outages but they killed that and now you're just left guessing. My power company has a real-time outage street map which is amazing during hurricanes, I dream of Cox doing that one day.

    Their website historically is slow and even goes down though they recently did a redesign that seems to be better. Maybe they finally paid someone to do it right.

    I have seen Cox test a system where they inject their own custom javascript into websites. It wasn't DNS-based either but actual packet injection/manipulation. I noticed it because noscript caught the script and I then went digging into where it was coming from and what it did.

    In the cable TV arena they've jumped on the mini set-top box bandwagon where they "give" you a device for free but you have to rent it from them eventually.
    Under the guise of freeing up more bandwidth they're moving to all digital encrypted service that requires these boxes when they could just as easily have used clearQAM and not required people to rent devices to watch basic service that they already pay for.

    I honestly have a hard time saying Cox is any better than Comcast. I'm ambivalent. They could be worse and they could be a lot better.

  4. Scientific "faith" is generally "I believe this is true until further evidence suggests otherwise." I see this as a rational response.

    Religious "faith" is generally "I believe this is true despite evidence suggesting otherwise." I see this as an emotional response.

    It really has nothing to do with you, personally, being able to do studies to verify claims and the comparison doesn't hold up with regards to critical thinking.

    Critical thinking is the antithesis of most forms of organized religion because they are largely not compatible with change. If you think critically about most religions you'll find holes all over the place and they actively teach you not to do that.

    This not really true of science. Even the most well-established theories, laws, have holes that leave doubts that scientists are always trying to figure out better theories for (see: pretty much any Feynman lecture and all of history.)
    Sure, some theories might be disparaged due to lack of evidence but they're still considered and even accepted when compelling evidence does appear.

    And there are credible authorities and charlatans. Priests are obvious, if well meaning, charlatans -- much the same way that a four year old who believes there is a monster under the bed is honestly afraid but obviously delusional.

    To group all authorities into the same untrustworthy group would be a meaningless comparison and madness (or clinical paranoia.)

    I really don't see how anyone can, in good faith, compare the authenticity of scientific theories to obvious collections of made up stories and cultural taboos from ancient man.

  5. Re:Decentralized source control on GitHub Service Outage (github.com) · · Score: 1

    Isn't that why the enterprise version of GitHub exists for locally hosting the service? Isn't that how GitHub makes money and subsidizes the free services?
    And you're putting up some pretty big barriers by saying neither user's box allows network shares or an sshd...

    Now one big issue with github going down isn't it stopping programmers from writing code but preventing some people from deploying code.

    Node.js npm and Rust crates package managers sometimes point to github repos for packages...

  6. Re:U.S. could lower carbon emissions 100% on US Could Lower Carbon Emissions 78% With New National Transmission Network (smithsonianmag.com) · · Score: 3

    A man-made natural disaster is something like the BP oil spill in the gulf.

    Fukushima was a straight up natural disaster. They could have done more to prevent the tsunami damaging the plant due to cut corners but in the end it was still the tsunami's fault. Nearly 16,000 people died from the tsunami. I seriously doubt the Fukushima leak will kill that many (though it will likely kill some.)

    And Flint isn't a man-made natural disaster either as it's not even a natural disaster. Nature is probably just fine in Flint (unless leaking pipes have significantly contaminated the ground water.)
    Flint's pipe system has old lead pipes and they pumped acidic water through it without properly treating it. That's it.
    The river they were getting water from isn't the best but it doesn't, afaik, have lead in it. If they could magically replace all of their lead pipes then there wouldn't even be a problem.

    I live ~20 miles downwind from a nuclear power plant and I have no issue with that. I'd definitely rather live 1 mile from a nuclear power plant than live 1 mile from a coal plant.
    And I'd definitely rather live near a power plant than not have power.

    You're right, everything has risk, but history seems to say that nuclear power isn't actually that risky as long as you do it right. I'm not sure I'd put all of our eggs into the nuclear basket but I do think that coal and gas power need to go.

  7. Re:No Context on Wikipedia Editors Revolt, Vote "No Confidence" In Newest Board Member (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think the issue is more about trust. He has been shown to be complicit in immoral decision making when put into a position of power.

    As a member of a Board of Trustees he'd be in a position of power involving potential moral decisions and the vote shows that he has yet to regain that trust.

    It's not like the guy will be out of a day job and I'm sure there are plenty of other people that the Wikipedia editors would support.
    It doesn't hurt that it's just deserts without any lives actually being harmed. From what I have read, he has disrupted other lives far more significantly than this will impact his own.

  8. Re:Does space belong to us or the the US? on NASA's Deep Space Habitat Could Support the Journey To Mars and a Lunar Return (spaceflightinsider.com) · · Score: 1

    I agree that sending people to mars is mostly pointless and definitely an inefficient way to go about exploring the solar system.
    However, developing technologies to improve survival in space should provide insight and technology to help increase efficiency in a terrestrial environment.

    The very nature of space is such a harsh environment that it demands innovation while sitting around and playing in the dirt doesn't.

    Well, until we hit a resource crisis and then it does.

  9. Re:Homebrew used to be about doing better. on Benefits of a Homebrew Router (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    How was this modded up? I actually thought it was a troll.
    A router != a wireless router or even a wireless access point and wireless support is not "critical functionality" for the device.

    Anyway, he mentions that he used the much hyped Ubiquiti WAPs to cover the wireless functionality that he lost from the Nighthawk.
    Assuming those live up to the hype then he gave himself a) better routing functionality than the previous solution b) better wireless functionality than the previous solution.
    I call that homebrew success.

    And then you go into a rant about the quality drop of Linux on the desktop which is kind of bullshit to be honest. I don't know if you remember how bad things were 10-15 years ago but it was definitely much worse than it is now.

    Firefox has its ups and downs but it generally increases in performance. The only glaring issue I see with Firefox is not one of it getting worse but that it still doesn't compare favorably to Chrome in terms of multi-tab performance. Hopefully one day e10s will fix that.
    And no one is forcing you to use gnome, systemd, or pulseaudio.

    You want to restore the "glory" of homebrew projects but you don't even care enough to customize your systems to fit you?

  10. Re:New auto drive car = no more updates after 1 ye on Before I Can Fix This Tractor, We Have To Fix Copyright Law (slate.com) · · Score: 1

    Your make-believe scenario is unlikely given that there is safety regulation via the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and liability for bugs that kill people (see: lawsuits in the news related to normal car software bugs that cause issues with braking/accelerating/etc.)

    Even in terms of hardware cars have recalls for faulty parts (see: airbags) over a decade after the car was designed/built/sold.

    Cars aren't video game software.

  11. Re:At $26/gallon on Biofuels Will Power Navy's Next Deployment (sandiegouniontribune.com) · · Score: 1

    s/middle east oil/middle east oil bust/

  12. Re:didn't they ban biofuels in 2012? on Biofuels Will Power Navy's Next Deployment (sandiegouniontribune.com) · · Score: 1

    The Senate amended that bill to remove the ban.
    Though I'm guessing this law and any more recent laws are what really mattered in the end.

    As an aside, I really wish the government used something more like git (or at least actual patch files) and showed commits/diffs/tags github style.

    It's really hard to grok what changes with their current methodology. First you look at a change (ex. "beginning on page 590, strike line 11 and all that follows through page 595, line 7, and insert the following") and so you have to find a pdf with page numbers.
    Then you hunt down what some bill is editing and it's editing the text of what's effectively another patch file on some version of U.S. code and figuring out what the file law would be for just that change is near impossible.

    Maybe some day we'll get to have gitlaw

  13. Re:At $26/gallon on Biofuels Will Power Navy's Next Deployment (sandiegouniontribune.com) · · Score: 2

    Except the military has to think beyond what the price is today to what availability will be tomorrow.
    The biofuel concept didn't happen overnight. In January 2007, President Bush called for a sharp increase in the use of biofuels during his State of the Union address.
    I wouldn't be surprised if the military planning went back even farther.

    It wasn't that long ago that oil was ~$100/barrel and I saw some articles that said the DOD was having to move things around in the budget to cover billions in fuel costs. It also doesn't help that one big hurricane in the gulf can shut down a large percentage of US oil refining capability (see: Katrina).

    Sure, biofuels are probably more expensive but if the market is less volatile and production is better covered by allies then it makes sense for the military to explore that option to protect itself from a middle east oil and as a buffer until we can develop something better.

    We're obviously not going to be able to use oil from the ground forever...

  14. Re: Quiet leaf removal option without fuel or batt on Help Is On the Way In the War Against Noisy Leaf Blowers · · Score: 1

    What's this train thing you speak of?

    Many (most?) places in the U.S. don't have public transportation and there are a multitude of reasons why people require cars to live in the U.S unless they live somewhere like San Francisco or New York City.

  15. Re:Well deserved. on Kid Racks Up $5,900 Bill Playing Jurassic World On Dad's iPad (pcmag.com) · · Score: 1

    To be fair, mobile operating systems should have different default behavior.

    The fine print and settings adjustments should be to turn on the ease of use "1-Click" saved-payment-info-without-confirmation options. Not to turn them off.

    I don't actually know what Apple's default settings are like but Amazon tablets really want to make it easy for you to spend money.

  16. Re:Dat's racist on Debian Founder Ian Murdock Has Died (docker.com) · · Score: 1

    In the case of Murdock we really just don't know enough to make any sort of judgment about his twitter posts.
    We know he was arrested, treated by EMTs, and bailed out of jail.
    We have reports that he was drunk but there is no verification of that.
    We know he died and that's about it. We need more facts to really understand why he died.

    I agree that if he was facing potential jail over the tickets and arrest and killed himself because of that then it's truly an irrational tragedy. I suspect there was a lot more going on.

    With regards to suicide, as someone who has personally experienced severe depression and most of the range of suicide ideation, I can tell you that you are very mistaken. Suicide and suicidal thoughts can be both rational and irrational. Hardship, short or long-term, is not even necessary.

    Thoughts of self-harm can be sporadic irrational desires that sneak up on you unwanted, and unacted on, sort of like a craving for junk food that you ignore.
    These sorts of thoughts, at least in my experience, don't have to be in response to short-term hardship and certainly not because one doesn't want to deal with something. Many medications even warn about giving them to teenagers because they are correlated with an increase in such thoughts.

    My understanding is that they're also the least serious form of suicidal ideation. I'd guess that they're simply a chemistry fuck-up. It's pretty amazing that we're theoretically conscious self-determining beings in a (mostly?) deterministic universe so a few glitches are ok with me.
    Ending your life because of such urges doesn't make any sense and it is truly tragic if anyone dies from that.

    Thoughts of ending your life can also be well-thought out and quite rational. You can end up playing in your head what you think your future will be like, even if you persevere, and seeing only more suffering. Your judgment on the issue might be sound or it might not be

    I haven't personally experienced severe, incurable, chronic pain or a terminal illness so I can't pretend to understand that mental state. I know that most non-religious people would agree that there is nothing wrong with ending your life with dignity in the face of terminal illness.
    I suspect that the U.S. hospice system has a lot of "dirty" little practical secrets where overdoses are given to ease suffering and speed up dying -- which would not be politically acceptable by the religious masses.

    I can say that I have dealt with illness and lifestyle changes that ended up with me taking both a very irrational/emotional and rational look at the new path of my life and if taking it was acceptable to me.

    First, rationally, life has no meaning and is pointless (unless you irrationally believe in religion.) The obvious purpose of the state of life might be existence but almost certainly nothing you do will matter and in a few billion years humanity won't exist anymore. As the saying goes: life's a bitch and then you die.

    That said, one sometimes has to find or give their own meaning to life. I personally think the meaning of life is to enjoy yourself (and before you think that's selfish -- I find joy in others finding joy.)

    In the absence of ability to do that either due to environment or emotional state then suicide can certainly seem like the rational choice.

    I think the strongest rational argument against suicide is that, statistically, one probably enjoyed life at some point and thus continued existence holds the chance of enjoying life again. Hell, even people with terminal illnesses sometimes survive.

    Lastly, it's really hard to talk about suicide in our society because of how it's reacted to by authorities. People get angry at those who commit suicide, frequently calling the deceased selfish, and asking why the person didn't just talk to them.
    Well, if you talk to someone and then they go behind your back to the authorities because they don't agree with you, you can end up losing (at least in the short term) your right to self-

  17. Re:Only do the fun part on Open Source Roles: Starters vs. Maintainers (jlongster.com) · · Score: 1

    define: hobby
    an activity done regularly in one's leisure time for pleasure.

    I'm pretty sure that if you're a hobbyist programmer and you're not doing it for pleasure then you're doing it wrong. Or a masochist.

    And they're right to angrily reject the idea that they should be forced to finish it. Because it's a hobby.

    If anyone disagrees then they can have fun and fork it themselves and finish it. And maybe leave a note in thanks for the 90% that was written for them.
    Github makes this so easy that it amazes me that we managed to get anything done without it.

    In my experience most such projects are where the programmer is writing the code for themselves and "finished" is when it works well enough for their purposes.
    Moving on to the next project to make their life easier isn't just novelty but also practical.

    Note that I'm not saying there's anything wrong with having fun polishing and maintaining a project. All of our lives are much easier because of that mentality.
    But there's also nothing wrong with unfinished hobby projects.
    And, yes, my opinion is that anyone who feels entitled to anything from a hobby project is a weirdo.

  18. Re:Wh3r3f0r3 @r7 7h0u R0m30! on US Dept. of Ed: English, History, and Civics Teachers Good Enough For CS Class · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It seems really odd to me that a culture which considers college degrees as superfluous and promotes experience and self-teaching would deride someone teaching pre-college programming because of their non-STEM background.

    A good educator knows how to educate themselves as well as students. You can have a brilliant computer programmer and they can be the shittiest teacher in the world.

    The best programming instructor I ever had pre-college was, I believe, originally a band teacher. He ended up teaching AP CS for at least a couple of decades and when I had him we had a lot of fun going to college hosted programming competitions and doing USACO challenges online.

    One of my first programming "teachers" in middle school didn't know anything about programming (this was Pascal.) It was her first year and she had no experience but she had the coursework and managed to use the brightest students to teach the rest of the class.
    Yes, she was terrible.
    Yes, we didn't build good habits.
    But it was still better than nothing as it exposed a lot of students to programming concepts and enabled them to start doing things themselves.

    A summer class I took in middle school at a local university was taught by a hobbyist programmer who, I believe, mostly taught arts and crafts classes.
    She was great and proficient. We had a ton of fun learning QBasic and the final project was to create a tiny video game.
    I ended up staying after class to finish a simple space invaders clone because the class was so fun.
    (As an aside: one could hate on Basic and GOTO here and yet I found it interesting that the guy who always won programming competitions used Basic while the rest of us mostly used C/C++)

    So, anyone motivated can learn basic concepts and data structures like loops and arrays and recursion and teach them to others.

    From what I read in the article they were basically saying you can use federal funds to educate non-traditional STEM teachers in CS so that they can teach students.

    In that context I think a civics teacher can be fit for teaching CS, as long the civics teacher is motivated and uses the funds to become certified in CS in some form.
    It's not like the AP CS curriculum is rocket science. The math requirement for students is fairly low iirc.

    And DICE just wants us angry at the headline so that we'll give them more eyeballs on ads that we don't actually see. Or something.

  19. Re:Government should enforce more standards on Switzerland Moves Toward a Universal Phone Charger Standard (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    It's pretty clear that when he's referring to "the cunt" that he means a Democrat because he follows it with "the other side is a mess" before he begins talking about Republicans.
    And when talking about Trump he always uses Trump's name.

    He'd like Bernie but Bernie is a socialist.
    He doesn't like the Republican party.
    He'd like Bernie/Trump/Carson/etc over Bush.
    He'd like Bush over "the cunt."

    I think he pretty much dislikes everyone but he really hates women.

    Guys, we just found Donald Trump's Slashdot account.

  20. Re:Government should enforce more standards on Switzerland Moves Toward a Universal Phone Charger Standard (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    Did you really only refer to Hillary by her sexual organs with a straight face? I'm not a Hillary fan but that's fucked up.
    You might as well refer to all of the male candidates as "the pricks."

    Honestly, if I wanted the executive to stay the same as it generally has been for the last 20 years then I'd vote for Hillary. She's the logical conservative/business-as-usual choice. That's really not worth deriding her as "the cunt."

    And the biggest parasite on the golden goose is probably income and wealth disparity. Using taxes, at least temporarily, to counter that while injecting cash in needed areas like infrastructure makes sense. If you need money to run the government then you have to take it from where money actually is. And that's not not the middle class anymore.

    And even a communist president wouldn't mean anything because the executive branch isn't the legislative branch. Sure, executive orders have quite a bit of power but they don't bypass the budget process. Presidents aren't dictators.

    Well, they aren't yet. When we end up getting a charismatic enough president who ignores the law in order to grab more power, and there isn't a large enough opposition to counter it, then we'll be in the shit. Germany found that out the hard way.

  21. Re:The regulations have destryed Dishwashers on Ask Slashdot: Any Dishwasher Hackers Out There? · · Score: 1

    The electrical appliances that companies make should definitely be the government's business for the obvious reasons.

    And when there's a drought or an oil crisis or a general resource shortage then regulation, and thus efficient devices, will be a godsend.
    Instead of rationing you might just have business as usual. Or, you know, maybe the resource shortage won't even happen because we're being forced to be more efficient.

    I'm sorry your new Whirlpool washer sucks but I'd blame that on Whirlpool, not Department of Energy minimum standards.
    You could maybe blame California's large market and local California regulation for driving policy.

    My dead grandmother, who lived through the Great Depression and World War 2, would be shaking her head at us for being spoiled.

  22. Re:The regulations have destryed Dishwashers on Ask Slashdot: Any Dishwasher Hackers Out There? · · Score: 1

    I really like my High Efficiency washing machine.
    Most of the settings take longer to wash clothes but some are comparable to my previous 80's Maytag and it gives way more control over water temperature and RPM.

    Now the dryer that's paired with it? Absolutely terrible compared to my previous dryer.
    I have to run clothes through it twice (and each run is longer than the previous dryer.)
    It's a little bit quieter and that's about the only plus.

    And there were definitely a lot of junk appliances back in the day. Just look at any old apartment. Ugh.
    I think regulations are less important than the typical some-are-good and some-are-cheap-shit.

    Like shower heads -- a lot have always been terrible and some are good. You can always take the flow regulator out if you want to.

  23. Re:They should fight it out in court befor going b on Software Error Releases Up To 3,200 Inmates Early (seattletimes.com) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With what money are they going to hire a lawyer to do that?

  24. Not to mention U.S border guards will steal^H^H^H^H^Hconfiscate your stuff.

    "Team Sp00ky", a streamer of fighting video game tournaments (you know, Street Fighter and such) once went from the US to Canada to stream a tournament and when he came back they seized his laptops, cameras, and even cell phone.
    I honestly don't know if he ever got his stuff back.

    This year the TSA stripped and/or cut up his SDI cables. I'm sure the cables were a threat to national security.

  25. Re:Wouldn't the point of this stuff on JavaScript User Prohibitions Are Like Content DRM, But Even Less Effective (teleread.com) · · Score: 1

    I think you're right that it doesn't count but not because it's "trivial to bypass" but because the javascript copy-block is not necessary to access the work and doesn't "[require] the application of information, or a process or a treatment" to access the work.

    If you did a simple ROT13 encryption of the text and had javascript decrypt it on load and included copy/paste blocking then I think it'd probably count even though it wouldn't be very effective.

    Or if the javascript only "allowed" you to copy/paste 1 word at a time then I think it'd count but wouldn't be very effective.

    My layperson interpretation:

    (a)(1)(A) No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.
    (a)(3)(A) to “circumvent a technological measure” means to descramble a scrambled work, to decrypt an encrypted work, or otherwise to avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair a technological measure, without the authority of the copyright owner; and

    Definitely bypassing a technological measure here but does it "effectively control access"? ...

    (a)(3)(B) a technological measure “effectively controls access to a work” if the measure, in the ordinary course of its operation, requires the application of information, or a process or a treatment, with the authority of the copyright owner, to gain access to the work.

    ... I don't think our javascript copy-block technological measure here qualifies as effectively controlling access to the work.

    (b)(2)(B) a technological measure “effectively protects a right of a copyright owner under this title” if the measure, in the ordinary course of its operation, prevents, restricts, or otherwise limits the exercise of a right of a copyright owner under this title.

    Sounds like the simple javascript copy-blocking would count as a technological measure protecting the right of a copyright owner. But (b)(2)(B) shouldn't apply to (a)(1)(A) as they're different subsections dealing with different issues.

    The DMCA: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/...
    The US Code is modifies: https://www.law.cornell.edu/us...