Im pretty sure that neither Mauritius or the USA had nothing to do with India's success. In fact, i believe most of it was done autonomously!
ahh, the beauty of sources.
What makes you assume that i'm American? Im a half dutch, half east indian man who has lived in Canada for 4 years. It seems you are guilty of the very generalization that you are accusing me of.
What im trying to say is: Lighten up and take it back, you bastard!
Theres an error in the summary. No one claimed he was the world's biggest hacker. The quote was in fact "Mr McKinnon is charged with the biggest military computer hack of all time"
-Paul McNulty, US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia
I think what you mean is Science should never be bound by the laws of political correctness, and yes I agree with you. As mentioned earlier, I also wonder how many studies have not been published for fear of a lawsuit, or even discredit to the scientific community...
I, for one, am glad that there are enough sane people out there to actually have what it takes to put out a paper that singles out a race and shows its genetic differences when compared with the rest of us... But, if we have gathered that there are inherent differences between Ashkenazi Jews and other races, then what are we comparing against? Are some races less intelligent than others? With info like this, you could easily turn around and say that caucasians are (small percentage) less intelligent than the "rest of us" because you are including the more intelligent Ashkenazi Jews. This kind of information needs to be handled delicately, and a proper "anchor point" must be established to create a proper "litmus test" between races. In short, comparing one race or culture against an "average" of all other cultures is dangerous and inaccurate.
Theres an easy way to get around most of the problems discussed here. At a different computer (or at work, just to spite those bastards, surf over to the Auditor site and download the live CD ISO, and burn it to disk. Reset the computer with the disk in the drive and boot into auditor, thereby circumventing any email readers/IM sniffers/ whatever the hell they have installed on the godforsaken machine. From there, using the lovely built-in firefox, browse on over to https://gmail.google.com, and send your email. Alternatively, log into your favorite IM service with GAIM and shoot all those illegal/secret files to your cohorts outside company property;). When you boot back into windows, make sure to run something very ram-intensive (or a RAM clearer) to delete any traces from your RAM, and there you have the perfect score. If someone from your IT department notifies your boss that your computer was "off" for a while, just tell your boss you were fixing a problem yourself instead of waiting a couple of hours for those buggers in IT, saving a lot of time and thereby increasing your productivity. Raise is on the way!
The thing is, "foreigners" doesnt necessarily mean westerners. There are a lot of well educated, underpaid workers in places like the Gulf, the UAE, etc... Those people will probably be more likely to come over to India, if India only upped their standards slightly...
This is all very interesting, and i know you lost the one link, but until i see some sources I dont have anything except your word for me to rely on... Please find me some sources if you want these claims to be taken seriously...
On the other side of things, i do think that this will happen... how soon, who knows...
Some quick googling revealed that the speech given at the Washington DC Global Tech summit that the author cited above was in fact given a mere 3 months after the September 11 terrorist attacks. If you keep in mind how long people focussed on 9/11, you will see that it might have been more odd if the President's Cyber Security Advisor had not mentioned terrorist attacks at all... You can find the article here
Interesting, although not really the topic here. This particular law deals with the disposal of said information, not with accidental distribution. Dont get me wrong, im not invalidating your point, im simply pointing out that its not the topic of issue.
The article says that the FTC can sue people for up to $2500 under this law, but is the FTC really the department enforcing this? I would assume that the only way stuff like this would get to the FTC is if someone came across their own information, in which case, wouldnt it make more sense for that person to sue the "company" in question under this law themselves?
nowadays, as the world leans more and more to only accepting credit and debit cards, im sure that there would be a way for the government/whoever else is interested to tie your "Anony-Card" to your bank account or credit card account... Time to get your tin-foil hats out!
With Blockbuster's latest system, you can just keep your blockbuster DVD and pay them for it later...
"Yeah, who would have ever thought that technology would improve over time?" thanks dickwad.
2 MP? is it just me or are they getting better and better? sounds like a handy device!
Im pretty sure that neither Mauritius or the USA had nothing to do with India's success. In fact, i believe most of it was done autonomously! ahh, the beauty of sources.
What makes you assume that i'm American? Im a half dutch, half east indian man who has lived in Canada for 4 years. It seems you are guilty of the very generalization that you are accusing me of. What im trying to say is: Lighten up and take it back, you bastard!
Theres an error in the summary. No one claimed he was the world's biggest hacker. The quote was in fact "Mr McKinnon is charged with the biggest military computer hack of all time"
-Paul McNulty, US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia
I think what you mean is Science should never be bound by the laws of political correctness, and yes I agree with you. As mentioned earlier, I also wonder how many studies have not been published for fear of a lawsuit, or even discredit to the scientific community...
Well put, dear sir.
I, for one, am glad that there are enough sane people out there to actually have what it takes to put out a paper that singles out a race and shows its genetic differences when compared with the rest of us... But, if we have gathered that there are inherent differences between Ashkenazi Jews and other races, then what are we comparing against? Are some races less intelligent than others? With info like this, you could easily turn around and say that caucasians are (small percentage) less intelligent than the "rest of us" because you are including the more intelligent Ashkenazi Jews. This kind of information needs to be handled delicately, and a proper "anchor point" must be established to create a proper "litmus test" between races. In short, comparing one race or culture against an "average" of all other cultures is dangerous and inaccurate.
Theres an easy way to get around most of the problems discussed here. At a different computer (or at work, just to spite those bastards, surf over to the Auditor site and download the live CD ISO, and burn it to disk. Reset the computer with the disk in the drive and boot into auditor, thereby circumventing any email readers/IM sniffers/ whatever the hell they have installed on the godforsaken machine. From there, using the lovely built-in firefox, browse on over to https://gmail.google.com, and send your email. Alternatively, log into your favorite IM service with GAIM and shoot all those illegal/secret files to your cohorts outside company property ;). When you boot back into windows, make sure to run something very ram-intensive (or a RAM clearer) to delete any traces from your RAM, and there you have the perfect score. If someone from your IT department notifies your boss that your computer was "off" for a while, just tell your boss you were fixing a problem yourself instead of waiting a couple of hours for those buggers in IT, saving a lot of time and thereby increasing your productivity. Raise is on the way!
The thing is, "foreigners" doesnt necessarily mean westerners. There are a lot of well educated, underpaid workers in places like the Gulf, the UAE, etc... Those people will probably be more likely to come over to India, if India only upped their standards slightly...
This is all very interesting, and i know you lost the one link, but until i see some sources I dont have anything except your word for me to rely on... Please find me some sources if you want these claims to be taken seriously... On the other side of things, i do think that this will happen... how soon, who knows...
Some quick googling revealed that the speech given at the Washington DC Global Tech summit that the author cited above was in fact given a mere 3 months after the September 11 terrorist attacks. If you keep in mind how long people focussed on 9/11, you will see that it might have been more odd if the President's Cyber Security Advisor had not mentioned terrorist attacks at all... You can find the article here
Unfortunately, it also seems to apply to discarded digital info
Interesting, although not really the topic here. This particular law deals with the disposal of said information, not with accidental distribution. Dont get me wrong, im not invalidating your point, im simply pointing out that its not the topic of issue.
The article says that the FTC can sue people for up to $2500 under this law, but is the FTC really the department enforcing this? I would assume that the only way stuff like this would get to the FTC is if someone came across their own information, in which case, wouldnt it make more sense for that person to sue the "company" in question under this law themselves?
nowadays, as the world leans more and more to only accepting credit and debit cards, im sure that there would be a way for the government/whoever else is interested to tie your "Anony-Card" to your bank account or credit card account... Time to get your tin-foil hats out!