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User: dan_linder

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  1. ...and another judge dismissed a simliar case. on Federal Judge Says Embedding a Tweet Can Be Copyright Infringement (eff.org) · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile, a federal judge has dismissed a case Playboy brought against Happy Mutants, the parent company of Boing Boing for doing something similar.

    The article on Ars: https://arstechnica.com/tech-p...

    From the article:
    Back in November 2017, Playboy Entertainment Group sued Boing Boing, accusing it of violating the company’s copyright when, in February 2016, the website simply linked to a separate online collection of "Every Playboy Playmate Centerfold Ever." That portfolio, which was hosted on Imgur, has since been removed. Imgur did not immediately respond to Ars’ request for comment.

    Because Boing Boing has advertising on its site, Playboy argued, it is profiting from those unauthorized images.

    However in a Wednesday order, US District Judge Fernando Olguin slammed Playboy Entertainment in polite legalese.

    "The court is skeptical that plaintiff has sufficiently alleged facts to support either its inducement or material contribution theories of copyright infringement," he wrote.

  2. Re:Last Mile Problems on To Save Net Neutrality, We Must Build Our Own Internet (vice.com) · · Score: 1

    ... Communities have monopoly agreements with ISPs (comcast/att/etc) that restrict the ability to get a new ISP to the home. ...

    So, with the new FCC ruling overriding states abilities to setup their own NN rules, will this ALSO override these state/city agreements, effectively opening up these right-of-ways and last mile runs?

    If the FCC does trump these, then the FCC/FTC will have to write a ruling on this one way or another. I assume if the "we choose to not write one" option is pursued, then a court case forcing the issue will come about.

    If the FCC ruling does NOT trump these, then setting up additional clauses in the agreements could easily have other provisions such as requiring zero-rating for all content (replace with legal wiggle words that aren't "NN" but have the same effect).

    The FCC and large ISPs can't have it both ways - we just have to be smart about using the new laws to our favor.

  3. Really? This was a design decision, not a bug? on Google Chrome To Disallow Backspace As a 'Back' Button (independent.co.uk) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For all the pain this has called me, I'm glad our national nightmare is finally over!

  4. Re:How does one detect these things on New Mayhem Malware Targets Linux and UNIX-Like Servers · · Score: 3, Informative
    From reading TFA, they mention some possible names:

    and drops a malicious shared object named 'libworker.so'

    or

    After that, the PHP dropper creates a shell script named '1.sh',

    And for each of those, they present some example contents that could be used to verify it is part of this infection.

  5. The next Clippy? on IBM Robotic Coworker Will Help Engineers Fix Broken Systems · · Score: 2

    "I see you're trying to fix a linear accelerator, would you like some help?"

    And who is responsible when the system tells the human to incorrectly repair something? If taken to the extreme companies will (attempt to) hire the least expensive human asset and expect the computer system to provide infallible information.

  6. What cant THIS be an April Fools joke... on Google, Amazon, Microsoft Go East For Network Gear · · Score: 2

    I quickly read the Wired article hoping to find a joke but didn't find the punchline...

    Dan

  7. Re:What about external hazards? on TomTom Satnavs To Set Insurance Prices · · Score: 1

    ...but all that asshole driving as a teenager does tend to sharpen up those driving skills.

    No, they tended to take themselves out of the gene pool, problem solved. (Yes, they would occasionally take others out too, but that's a much smaller number.)

    So, maybe cars today are too safe?

  8. Bandwidth of advertisments used up... on For Sinclair Fans, The ZX81 Lives On · · Score: 2

    Use the Archive.org link:
            http://web.archive.org/web/20110724142332/http://www.zx81museum.net/adverts.html

    I tried the Coral Cache link:
            http://www.zx81museum.net.nyud.net/adverts.html
    But it returns "500 Internal Server Error".

    Dan

  9. Re:No more Bandwidth ... dead on For Sinclair Fans, The ZX81 Lives On · · Score: 3, Informative
  10. Re:It would be good to have optional GUI on Windows Admins Need To Prepare For GUI-Less Server · · Score: 1

    So why not have a management client tool that is a native Windows app that you can run on your desktop?

    For the complex applications that make good use of a GUI, these can be setup this way.

    And a well written CLI tool run on the server (or possibly remotely) could do all of that too, just more complex command lines. (Or a curses-like menu system.)

  11. Re:Anyone else not surprised? on Iranian TV Shows Downed US Drone · · Score: 1

    How about this failsafe:
    Once Iran is confident that they can take control of all our drone aircraft, we put in a small yield bomb of some sort with a multi-hour delay. The delay timer is started once the lock between the drone and the US transmitter is broken. A few hours is probably enough to get the aircraft back to their base where they start dismantling it and *boom*.

    And we can have the drones refuel at a remote automated location, so only maintenance is the only time a user would have to get close to the explosive. (Aircraft crews work with potentially armed bombs all the time, so it's not that big of a problem to surmount.)

  12. Re:Holy crap! on Iranian TV Shows Downed US Drone · · Score: 1

    If you're an American tax payer as I am, the only ones laughing will be the contractors...

    "Oh, you want a secured and encrypted command and control signal too? That's another $2Billion and about 3 years for the proof of concept..."

    Dan

  13. *yawn* More impressed with Javascript PC Emulator. on Chrome 14 Beta Integrates Native Client · · Score: 1

    How's the "Native Client" a big step when we've already seen the Javascript PC Emulator:

            http://bellard.org/jslinux/

    I guess a Chrome browser pulling up that page, the Javascript PC Emulator booting X to run Chrome to run a Native Client PC emulator would be a neat hack...

    Dan

  14. Re:And the CAs do ... what again? on Phony Web Certs Issued For Google, Yahoo, Skype · · Score: 1

    Eh, I kinda just realized that I'm coming off like a jerk. Sorry for my comments.

    Wow, I'm impressed. The first sign of self-monitoring I've seen on Slashdot in a long time!

    I sincerely wish more people would actually apologize like Sancho when they have an inkling they might have gone over the line.

    You've restored my faith in the Slashdot community a bit.

    Dan

  15. Re:DEC scared IBM in the 80's on Computer Industry Mourns DEC Founder Ken Olsen · · Score: 2

    You have forgotten the DEC Rainbow. But that's ok, everyone else has also forgoten the Rainbow.

    Which is sad really. It was a dual-processor system - a Zilog Z80 and an Intel 8080 CPU. When it ran CP/M the Z80 did everything, but when it ran MS-DOS the 8080 was the primary CPU and the Z80 handled the IO.

    The architecture was even better thought through and didn't break up the RAM like the IBM PC did (hence the 640K "limit"). I remember booting my Rainbow 100B and getting 720KB of usable RAM without trying very hard.

    Sadly, the only real games that got ported to it were the Zork line of Infocom games, and a few DEC written graphical games. (Anyone remember "SCRAM"? Probably not the most marketable game since the objective was to descend to the lowest level of a failing nuclear reactor and "scram it" to keep it from going critical...)

    Ken, you have no idea how much your "little company" got me started in computers. Thank you!

    Dan

  16. Re:GPU = supercomputer? on IBM Discovery May Lead To Exascale Supercomputers · · Score: 1

    Since we're talking about discoveries that may lead to faster computers, these are the solutions it may use:
      * Texas A&M Research Brings Racetrack Memory a Bit Closer -> http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/12/01/0552254/Texas-AampM-Research-Brings-Racetrack-Memory-a-Bit-Closer
      * SanDisk, Nikon and Sony Develop 500MB/sec 2TB Flash CardSanDisk, Nikon and Sony Develop 500MB/sec 2TB Flash Card -> http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/12/01/1322255/SanDisk-Nikon-and-Sony-Develop-500MBsec-2TB-Flash-Card

    My great-grandchildren will have screaming fast cell phones!

    Dan

  17. Just set me back another three steps... on Rubik's Cube Now Solvable in 20 Moves · · Score: 1

    Great, now I know I'm even WORSE at solving it than ever...

    Dan

  18. Re:Hiders Keepers? on More Gas Station Credit-Card Skimmers · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...and with the price of flash memory so low, it would be pretty easy to hide a little digital camera to snap photos of the person as they put the card in and/or stood in front of the machine. It would be easy to download those too and if they saw a few with the manager and a customer standing and pointing at the machine they would know that the gig was up and to just walk away.

    I'm really thinking the cash idea is the way to go from now on. :-(

    Dan

  19. Re:Doesnt sound overly hard to on More Gas Station Credit-Card Skimmers · · Score: 1

    At most gas stations the price setting is done remotely from inside the building (probably along with the big digital sign price too).

    Dan

  20. Re:Laptop pains too on HDTV Has Ruined the LCD Market · · Score: 1

    Seconded. Just a year ago I upgraded from my 4+ year old laptop with a 17" 1920x1200 resolution screen (LOVED IT!) to a new 18" laptop with 1920x1080. I thought I wouldn't notice those missing 120 lines...boy was I wrong.

    My only options at the time (taking other requirements into consideration) were to drop down to a 16" screen (and missing some other features), or go up to this laptop that's trying to be a portable home-theatre system...and that's the crux of this problem.

    The display industry is so facinated on the HDTV aspect that they think EVERYTHING needs to max out at 1920x1080, or the cinema spec of 16:9. My wifes new desktop came with a 1600x900 screen and it really sucks. With all the menubars that IE and Firefox insist on putting at the top, and then the big taskbar at the bottom you end up having a narrow band to read in. Add in the fact that most sites put adds down the left and right sides, and the effective usable resolution of the screen is about 640x480.

    And don't get me started on the "glossy" screens that are standard today...yech.

    Dan

  21. Tell Twitter.com! on NASA Tests Heaviest Chute Drop Ever · · Score: 1

    Now they can give those birds a rest!

    Dan

  22. Re:Blame Iran on US State Dept. Loses Anti-Terrorist Program Laptops · · Score: 1

    Bogus -- no computer is capable of calculating THAT irrationally..... If you stuff it with enough buggy old Pentium CPUs it might...and it would have the overall speed of the "real thing" too...hmmm.

    Dan
  23. Re:The Law on Administration Claimed Immunity To 4th Amendment · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Who rated this "Funny"? I think "Informative" is closer to the truth...

    (and the truth hurts.)

    Dan
    --
    "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?" (Who can watch the watchmen?) -- from the Satires of Juvenal
    "I do not fear computers, I fear the lack of them." -- Isaac Asimov (Author)

  24. Re:Bush is relieved... on Iran Builds Supercomputer From Banned AMD Parts · · Score: 1

    Must be using one of those late 90's Pentium CPUs...
    (Afterall, this is Slashdot and you wouldn't be using Windows Calculator or Excel, would you?)

    Dan

  25. Re:couldn't resist... on Hektor: the Graffiti Robot · · Score: 1

    Maybe NASA could get some cash by selling "Martian Graffiti" by the letter. The person/company with the highest bid gets to have their name/logo written in the dust by the wheels of the Rovers as they go about their business... :)

    Dan