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User: jythie

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  1. Re:Pretty sure this won't work on Tor Project Sued Over a Revenge Porn Business That Used Its Service · · Score: -1

    Which is a pity. I am seeing a lot of terrible comments lobbed at this woman and people giving a free pass to whoever obtained her images and the site for hosting them. Yeah it was stupid of her to name Tor as a defendant, but that can be explained by her simply not being part of the tech culture and thus not really aware of how things go together. Keep in mind she is only a student.

    But people seem to be focusing on just that, which is pretty much just victim blaming. It is the same crap people pull on rape victims all the time, finding some way to socially punish them for trying to bring consequences for their attacker's actions.

  2. Re:Guam is in the Maldives now? on US Arrests Son of Russian MP In Maldives For Hacking · · Score: 1

    Another piece said he was arrested at the airport, and laws regarding jurisdiction get even stranger there.

  3. Re:And in other news on Uber Is Now Cheaper Than a New York City Taxi · · Score: 1

    For most people in NYC, the alternative to a taxi is walking or public transportation, not taking their own car.

  4. Re:And in other news on Uber Is Now Cheaper Than a New York City Taxi · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, those rules reduced the number of taxis and congestion in NYC. There is a real game theory problem here in that any one company wants as many of its own cars in the field as possible, but if every company is doing that the roads get worse then they are. Uber is not feeling this too much since they are still pretty small, but the original problem is still there. Too dense a population, not enough road, and too much individual profit to be made.

  5. Re:Guam is in the Maldives now? on US Arrests Son of Russian MP In Maldives For Hacking · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think if nothing else this raises questions about where the arrest actually happened. Russian media, esp when high ranking party members are involved, is not exactly known for being accurate in its reporting.

    Setting that aside, this does cut into the larger modern question of how to deal with cyber criminals who are based out of countries hostile to the US. There has always been the question about what to do with people who commit crimes in a country then flee to one without an extradition treaty, but increasingly we are having to deal with cases where the individual is actively committing crimes against the citizens of one country while being physically located in another.

    Though that gets into some interesting and sticky territory when it comes to transnational companies and the horrors they have committed around the world... or at least it SHOULD be sticky.

  6. Re:And in other news on Uber Is Now Cheaper Than a New York City Taxi · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it is easy to offer lower prices when you get to skip over the costs other people pay. It is the same reason child and slave labor are still popular.

  7. Re:Mars Direct - Unanswered? on Interview: Edward Stone Talks About JPL and Space Exploration · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but a good number of people have this idea that if the private sector gets involved (as if it somehow has not been involved all these years already) the cost will magically come down to something plucky captains of industry can afford with private funds. Thus they assume that huge price tag is a NASA problem as opposed to rooted in actual expenses.

  8. Re:Mars Direct - Unanswered? on Interview: Edward Stone Talks About JPL and Space Exploration · · Score: 2

    "adrift" is not actually a bad thing in this case. NASA was originally hyper-focused on a coherent goal and while that was ok for a while it ends up putting ALL the focus on a single expensive project that serves mostly a status symbol or propaganda/marketing tool. A Mars mission has a lot of marquee value, it is a romantic project, but for the price a lot of real science off in many directions can be done.

    NASA's lack of focus is a good thing since it is in all those little projects that we actually learn things.

  9. Re:My question was not answered on Interview: Edward Stone Talks About JPL and Space Exploration · · Score: 1

    Ahm, currently there are no good candidates for such research. There would be no where for the 'investment' to go and I suspect if someone did come up with something that had even a good possibly of demonstrating FTL in a lab it would get a great deal of attention and resources.

  10. Re: How about on Study: Global Warming Solvable If Fossil Fuel Subsidies Given To Clean Energy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Strong government is how you counter strong corporations. It is not a case of either being noble, but of needing balance between two types of institutions.

  11. Re:Okay, so this has what to do with fracking then on Oklahoma's Earthquakes Linked To Fracking · · Score: 5, Informative

    *nod* one of the issues is that buildings on the east coast are not built with earthquakes in mind like west coast ones, so it takes much smaller quakes to do economic damage. And once you start to see damage (and the economic impact of repairs) you get into the classic sore point of 3rd parties paying a price for industry profits, which pisses people off.

  12. Re:Buddhist meditation... on Study: People Would Rather Be Shocked Than Be Alone With Their Thoughts · · Score: 1

    Well yes, of course they are going to change over time. Even if we are just going to look at historical Buddhism there are many branches and philosophies within the practice with a variety of mechanics and goals. Some forms focused on purely looking inward and ignoring stimuli, others focused on awareness of stimuli without additional thought.

  13. Re:How is this different from sensory deprivation? on Study: People Would Rather Be Shocked Than Be Alone With Their Thoughts · · Score: 1

    One does not have to be doing something external in order to be 'doing something'. I have known plenty of people who sit and design stuff in their head for instance, or work on storylines, or rehearse talks they are planning to give, etc.

  14. Re:Sad, sad times... on Study: People Would Rather Be Shocked Than Be Alone With Their Thoughts · · Score: 1

    If they found it to be consistent between 18 and 77, that is not really 'today's society'.

  15. Re:How fitting on Study: People Would Rather Be Shocked Than Be Alone With Their Thoughts · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Extroverts are 'people', introverts are abnormal. When studies discover behavior closely tied to extroverted personalty types it is considered something about 'people' in general, while studies discovering behaviors related to introverts tend to be labeled as being about introverts.

    It is the classic normal/default/otherness problem, in the same basic category as when you draw a simple stick figure people think it is male unless you add something gender marking, male unless otherwise specified. In this case, extrovert unless otherwise specified.

  16. Irony... on Comcast Executives Appear To Share Cozy Relationships With Regulators · · Score: 1

    In their training material that new employees go through, they make a big hairy deal out of not doing exactly these types of things.

  17. Re:It'll come down to an opinion on Austrian Tor Exit Node Operator Found Guilty As an Accomplice · · Score: 2

    Or, conversely, if it was routinely and publicly being used for neutral activities it would be a lot safer. At the moment it tends to be filled with a combination of people using it generally for ideological reasons and people using it specifically for nefarious ones. Kinda like torrents, the use of them for piracy is greater then the use of them for other activities, but if the other activities made up a larger part then it would be treated differntly.

  18. Re:It's accomplices all the way down! on Austrian Tor Exit Node Operator Found Guilty As an Accomplice · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That makes me a bit concerned and curious as to why no ISPs or similar companies got involved in the case. While a judge and jury might not understand the technical details, people working in tech (and their lawyers) probably would and companies should be concerned about how this might come back to them.

  19. Re:Parents are all guilty on Austrian Tor Exit Node Operator Found Guilty As an Accomplice · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, that is where many 'honor' systems are rooted, that the parents are responsible for the child and thus anything the child does wrong becomes the shame of the family or clan.

  20. Re:Or Maybe Self-Driving Vehicles on Unintended Consequences For Traffic Safety Feature · · Score: 1

    oh it is completely impractical and would be a terrible idea, but it still gives me warm fuzzies.

  21. Re:I take it on Judge Frees "Cannibal Cop" Who Shared His Fantasies Online · · Score: 2

    One of the core problems is that many people believe that having paraphilia means the person will act on it. Males who deviate from normal are assumed to also be incapable of controlling themselves, thus unlike 'normal' males, these deviates will take what they want no matter what.

    Personally, it kinda reminds me of all the heterosexuals I have seen claim that what they were doing was not child abuse because 'they are not gay'.... every time I hear people talking about how people with fetishes will go to non-concentual extremes to satisfy their desires I wonder if they have a nugget of rape in their past they are trying to convince themselves could not have actually been rape since THEY are not a deviant.

  22. Re:Should probably be locked up on Judge Frees "Cannibal Cop" Who Shared His Fantasies Online · · Score: 1

    It matters quite a bit. While this is an extreme case, it is closely related to the debate (and arrests) involving things like trash talking in video games or, well, the core player base of EvE Online.

  23. NumPy, SciPy, and MatplotLib are a good reason right there.

    They are why I tend to recommend python for analysis and modeling, a good set of libraries (and the community that goes with them) plus a relatively low barrier to entry in terms of installing and learning the language.

  24. Re:Or Maybe Self-Driving Vehicles on Unintended Consequences For Traffic Safety Feature · · Score: 2

    It all depends on just how much impact shittyness has. In this case, jerks are resulting in the deaths of other people. So the lives of some have to be weighed against the fun of others. It is a balance that is looked at in many areas of life (since pretty much any activity has accidents), so the question of what should or should not be done when it comes to cars is far from simple.

  25. Re:Or Maybe Self-Driving Vehicles on Unintended Consequences For Traffic Safety Feature · · Score: 1

    well, long term that would likely solve the problem....

    People in this thread are really focusing on changing the behavior and timing of the people walking, but it is the cars that are the big danger. Maybe what we need are automatic tire spikes that rise when the light turns red.. that would provide a powerful (and more direct then redlight cameras) personal incentive to respect the intersection.