According to "The Boy Kings of Facebook" by Katherine Losse, a service like Facebook is popular because "people and stories". Same reason for Slashdot. We're all here for the people and the stories. It certainly not for the deep technical discussions that almost never happens around here. You have to go to Reddit for that.
I'm not sure what's worse- your constant attention whoring and self-promotional shilling for your own website full of tedious anecdotes, the fact that you whine about trolls yet gloat about the apparent fact they drive traffic to your website (earning you an extra $1.33 a month in advertising clicks) or the fact you put on the facade that this is something to be proud of (when in fact it shows you to be pathetically desparate for attention and money).
1) I don't need attention. 2) I don't need money. 3) You're low balling the money I do get from Slashdot traffic.
Or whether it's the fact that every second thing you post- like the one above- seems little more than an excuse to spam affiliate links to Amazon.
You can blame your fellow ACs. If only they have left me alone six months ago, I would have moved on. But, no, they had to convince me that Slashdot was still relevant to the world at large. So I'm here to stay.
Personally, I couldn't give a toss whether you're allegedly fat or not, only the fact that you're a tedious combination of troll, attention whore and spammer.
Again, blame your fellow ACs. Prior to 2017, I've posted ~7,000 comments over ten years. This year I've posted ~4,000 comments.
They can't blackmail you if everyone already knows everything about you
Small-minded people think they're the only ones who have information that no one else knows about. I'm always happy to throw out a link and tell them to rethink their position. Most of the time they just go away.
Jesus Christ, you poor victim. The world awaits the story of the The First Victim Of The Internet with bated breath! Oh please don't keep us waiting, askance!
I'm not a victim. I just have an interesting life that people are willing to pay money to read about.
Except that I was falsely accused of threatening to shoot people, fake accounts got deleted for mocking me, and dick pics with my contact info got posted on Russian websites. The douche bags on Slashdot found me important enough to waste their time. Some of this I've documented on my blog, the rest I'm saving for an essay that I'll publish next year.
After my parents filed for bankruptcy in the 1970's, they didn't have a credit card for 40 years. When the dealerships were practically giving away cars after the Great Recession in 2010, my father when down to the dealership and inquired about financing to buy a truck. He told the clerk that he didn't have a credit record. She laughed. It took her 20 minutes to confirm that he didn't have a credit record. He paid for half the truck in cash. When he got his first bill the following month, his boss paid the other half. After that, he had a credit record.
And if you're that open, why did you get so upset a month ago because people found out "personal" information you ejaculate everywhere given any provocation?
I was unaware that third-party websites had republished my personal information from public documents. I was under the impression that douche bags were going out of their way to find public documents at government websites.
So you won't mind if I post your phone number here?
When a small-minded person attempts to blackmail me, I just tell them to go search my blogs from the last 20+ years. If I haven't written about it, I'll do so immediately. It's very difficult to blackmail someone who is willing to turn whatever the blackmailer thinks is a big deal into a public discussion.
According to "Chaos Monkeys: Obscene Fortune and Random Failure in Silicon Valley" by Antonio Garcia Martinez, who combined Facebook data with third-party demographic data to determine the identity of a user either logged in or browsing anonymously, there's no such thing as online privacy. And the author ain't sorry for compromising online privacy in this podcast.
You're pre-supposing that there exists a contact page on the website.
Worse case scenario is you could check the WHOIS contact info that is supposed to be kept up-to-date for maintaining the domain. When a Slashdot troll posted dick pics with my contact info on Russian websites, I used the WHOIS contact info for the few websites that didn't have an email address or contact form. Most of the time I got a response that the dick pic was removed. The non-responses included bounced emails because mailbox is full or no response at all.
No replay email addresses are for automated notifications. If you really, really, really want to contact someone, check out the contact page on the website. You might find an email address, a contact form or maybe phone number.
Yesterday it was JavaScripting eating the Internet, today it's software eating the auto industry. That's just the software. The hardware must be starving.
According to "Chaos Monkeys: Obscene Fortune and Random Failure in Silicon Valley" by Antonio Garcia Martinez, who combined Facebook data with third-party demographic data to determine the identity of a user either logged in or browsing anonymously, quite a bit. And he ain't sorry for compromising user privacy in this podcast.
Who gives a fuck?
According to "The Boy Kings of Facebook" by Katherine Losse, a service like Facebook is popular because "people and stories". Same reason for Slashdot. We're all here for the people and the stories. It certainly not for the deep technical discussions that almost never happens around here. You have to go to Reddit for that.
I'm not sure what's worse- your constant attention whoring and self-promotional shilling for your own website full of tedious anecdotes, the fact that you whine about trolls yet gloat about the apparent fact they drive traffic to your website (earning you an extra $1.33 a month in advertising clicks) or the fact you put on the facade that this is something to be proud of (when in fact it shows you to be pathetically desparate for attention and money).
1) I don't need attention. 2) I don't need money. 3) You're low balling the money I do get from Slashdot traffic.
Or whether it's the fact that every second thing you post- like the one above- seems little more than an excuse to spam affiliate links to Amazon.
You can blame your fellow ACs. If only they have left me alone six months ago, I would have moved on. But, no, they had to convince me that Slashdot was still relevant to the world at large. So I'm here to stay.
Personally, I couldn't give a toss whether you're allegedly fat or not, only the fact that you're a tedious combination of troll, attention whore and spammer.
Again, blame your fellow ACs. Prior to 2017, I've posted ~7,000 comments over ten years. This year I've posted ~4,000 comments.
you smell sour, creimer
That my trolls have trolls is too funny.
So how does that apply, Moby Trick?
Different formats. The blog is free. The ebooks are not.
Why would they pay when you said "If I haven't written about it, I'll do so immediately" on his shitty blog?
The same reason why people buy a book instead of downloading a bootleg PDF of the book.
They can't blackmail you if everyone already knows everything about you
Small-minded people think they're the only ones who have information that no one else knows about. I'm always happy to throw out a link and tell them to rethink their position. Most of the time they just go away.
If the government decides to open your data container, it not going to be fun and games.
You mean the Chinese? They already got my background file for my security clearance.
Jesus Christ, you poor victim. The world awaits the story of the The First Victim Of The Internet with bated breath! Oh please don't keep us waiting, askance!
I'm not a victim. I just have an interesting life that people are willing to pay money to read about.
You're really not important enough for that.
Except that I was falsely accused of threatening to shoot people, fake accounts got deleted for mocking me, and dick pics with my contact info got posted on Russian websites. The douche bags on Slashdot found me important enough to waste their time. Some of this I've documented on my blog, the rest I'm saving for an essay that I'll publish next year.
After my parents filed for bankruptcy in the 1970's, they didn't have a credit card for 40 years. When the dealerships were practically giving away cars after the Great Recession in 2010, my father when down to the dealership and inquired about financing to buy a truck. He told the clerk that he didn't have a credit record. She laughed. It took her 20 minutes to confirm that he didn't have a credit record. He paid for half the truck in cash. When he got his first bill the following month, his boss paid the other half. After that, he had a credit record.
Why would anyone blackmail a nobody? Why do you make it sound like happens often?
Check out my blog post, The Blackmail of David Letterman.
And if you're that open, why did you get so upset a month ago because people found out "personal" information you ejaculate everywhere given any provocation?
I was unaware that third-party websites had republished my personal information from public documents. I was under the impression that douche bags were going out of their way to find public documents at government websites.
So you won't mind if I post your phone number here?
If you want to be a douche bag, be my guest.
When a small-minded person attempts to blackmail me, I just tell them to go search my blogs from the last 20+ years. If I haven't written about it, I'll do so immediately. It's very difficult to blackmail someone who is willing to turn whatever the blackmailer thinks is a big deal into a public discussion.
Apple Newton.
According to "Chaos Monkeys: Obscene Fortune and Random Failure in Silicon Valley" by Antonio Garcia Martinez, who combined Facebook data with third-party demographic data to determine the identity of a user either logged in or browsing anonymously, there's no such thing as online privacy. And the author ain't sorry for compromising online privacy in this podcast.
Amazon has the Xbox One in stock. Or is that something else?
You're pre-supposing that there exists a contact page on the website.
Worse case scenario is you could check the WHOIS contact info that is supposed to be kept up-to-date for maintaining the domain. When a Slashdot troll posted dick pics with my contact info on Russian websites, I used the WHOIS contact info for the few websites that didn't have an email address or contact form. Most of the time I got a response that the dick pic was removed. The non-responses included bounced emails because mailbox is full or no response at all.
Hungry hungry creimer is eating out slashdot trolls.
I try to avoid eating empty calories whenever possible.
No replay email addresses are for automated notifications. If you really, really, really want to contact someone, check out the contact page on the website. You might find an email address, a contact form or maybe phone number.
Yesterday it was JavaScripting eating the Internet, today it's software eating the auto industry. That's just the software. The hardware must be starving.
And wears his pants around his stomach, and not his waist.
That's how "old men" wear their pants with a small stomach and skinny ass. Also more comfortable.
When Apple does something, they do it better than the competition and brought it out to the market first.
Where would you get 50000$ from, and what could you buy for 1M$ in S.V.?
Savings. Condo.
You can't afford a house, creimer.
Not without drawing a salary from my side business in addition to my regular job.
10 pounds on a 360 pound frame is less than a 3% change and given all the fat padding you have, why do you need new pants?
Ten pounds came off the stomach. Old pants fit loose, new pants fit right.
According to "Chaos Monkeys: Obscene Fortune and Random Failure in Silicon Valley" by Antonio Garcia Martinez, who combined Facebook data with third-party demographic data to determine the identity of a user either logged in or browsing anonymously, quite a bit. And he ain't sorry for compromising user privacy in this podcast.
Does it occur to decent people to trick other people out of a few dollars?
The art of separating money from people's wallet is called marketing. Not my fault if you let yourself be tricked.