Slashdot Mirror


User: Arker

Arker's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
5,173
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 5,173

  1. Re:this woman is an attorney? on Copyright Infringer Tries To Shut Down Reporting On Her Infringement · · Score: 1

    That's what people used to say about Bush and Gore. On paper they may have seemed about the same, but in practice Bush was a lot worse than most people imagined he could be.

    True enough. But we dont know how bad Gore would have been either.

    GW talked a pretty good campaign actually - I can see how someone might have been taken in and thought they were voting for a more humble foreign policy.

  2. Re:Suing herself? How you say .... on Copyright Infringer Tries To Shut Down Reporting On Her Infringement · · Score: 1

    Under her maiden name no less...

  3. Re:Suing herself? How you say .... on Copyright Infringer Tries To Shut Down Reporting On Her Infringement · · Score: 3

    It appears from other comments that she was already disbarred some time ago. So that may not be as great an idea as it sounds.

  4. Re:It's like raaaaain, on your wedding daaaaay on Copyright Infringer Tries To Shut Down Reporting On Her Infringement · · Score: 2

    Nope, didnt notice that at all.

    One of the beautiful parts of enjoying the web properly, without allowing random servers to execute scripts on my machine.

  5. Re:Uhm, so we're at war now with Iran? on Obama Order Sped Up Wave of Cyberattacks Against Iran · · Score: 2

    They dont deny facilities exist, and were attacked, and were damaged.

    Only that the facilities in question have anything to do with *weapons* - the claim is that they are pursuing only civilian nuclear power/radioactive medicines and the like, which the NPT says they have a right to do.

  6. Re:Decimated on Judge Rules API's Can Not Be Copyrighted · · Score: 1

    Trying to limit it to literally 1/10 is pedantry, but at the same time the common usage simply as a synonym for destroy isn't justifiable either. There are plenty of better words if that is what one is trying to say. Decimation implies systematic, but partial, destruction, a culling intended to inspire fear.

  7. Re:Definitions on IEEE Spectrum Digs Into the Future of Money · · Score: 1

    And just how does one know which is which? Even poor quality counterfeits often make it in circulation in large numbers before being detected. High quality counterfeits are pretty much impossible to detect.

  8. Definitions on IEEE Spectrum Digs Into the Future of Money · · Score: 1

    You have apparently defined counterfeit as 'make currency without authorisation.' That is one current usage of the word, but the older and more stable definition is 'create debased money' - that is make a coin which uses less gold or silver than it should. Since all 'currency' is in effect fully debased money, that is with 0% actual monetary content, then you can see it doesnt really matter whether you have been officially licensed to counterfeit or not. Which makes quite a bit of sense. Contemplate two dollar bills, printed on the same paper, with the same ink, on plates that are identical twins to each other. What is the difference between them, that makes one worth more than the other? Some mystical essence uttered over one of them by the priests at the fed?

  9. Re:Limits who can counterfeit - Fixed that for ya. on IEEE Spectrum Digs Into the Future of Money · · Score: 1

    Because your food will eventually rot away. The shiny gold metal wont. And anytime there is enough production to have surplus to trade, gold is an ideal medium of trade. If there is a true catastrophe, there may be no surplus, sure enough, but if people survive that situation will be temporary.

  10. Re:Why this suit has legs to stand on... on Fox Sues Dish Over "Auto Hop" Ad-Skipping Feature · · Score: 2

    It may be fashionable to forget this, but the purpose of the law is not to maximise the profits of these big corporations. It's to serve justice.

    If Fox wants to pile on even more ads that's ok. Hopefully their viewers will rebel. And that goes for all the other channels as well. None of em are worth half the money they make to begin with. If they are allowed to simply appeal to the courts to *roll back the clocks* and roll back modern technology, for the sole purpose of propping up an obsolete business model, what does that say of justice?

  11. Re:Not only the blind on The State of Linux Accessibility · · Score: 1

    This is a matter of horrible website design, aided and abetted by all the major browser makers. Unfortunately it is indeed very common, and unfortunately the solution you suggest is not simple, and definitely not good. It's trying to patch over a huge gaping wound with a million little individual scabs, each of which would have to come from a different source and be implemented independently.

    Instead of offering multiple 'themes' per page, the logical way to do this is simply to use proper HTML, which means you use semantic tagging and leave layout and rendering decisions to the end-user equipment without assuming what capabilities it will or will not have.

  12. Re:The Most Ridiculous Correction Ever on U.S. Imposes Tariffs On Chinese Solar Cells · · Score: 1

    Under what laws?

    Under the ancient common law principles of tort, which are valid law in any common law jurisdiction until and unless superceded by statute.

    Who makes these laws?

    Common law torts originate so far back in time that it's difficult or impossible to precisely specify their origin. In this case we are talking about the tort of Nuisance which has been a recognised cause of action for a millenium or more.

    Who determines the damages?

    A judge or jury, after hearing testimony from both sides.

    Who passes legislation that adjusts these laws when new forms of pollution come into existence?

    That is one of the beautiful things about common law. No one needs to do that. The same principles apply to any instance of the tort, and the court simply applies them to the case at hand.

  13. Re:Taxing the Environment on U.S. Imposes Tariffs On Chinese Solar Cells · · Score: 1

    The very weak argument of how a free market is supposed to protect the environment goes something like this: people know pollution is bad and therefore they pay top dollar for the companies that pollute the least. If people don't think pollution is bad, then they buy the cheapest stuff and deal with it. And somehow the free market is supposed to work like this.

    Uh no. That isnt even in the ballpark.

    The way this is supposed to work in the free market is that if someone is polluting your water, your soil, or your air, you are supposed to be able to sue them, prove the damage, enjoin them from continuing, and collect damages for what was already done. This would prevent companies from externalising their costs in this way. When unable to externalise their costs, the real cost of production has to be paid, and included in the price of the product, and companies have a strong incentive NOT to pollute because they will be liable for the damge.

    This free market method was not business-friendly enough, and so it has been superceded by statutory law and the EPA you are so fond of. The purpose of the EPA is NOT to protect the environment, as anyone who has paid much attention to it should realise. The purpose is to immunize polluters and allow them to externalise costs. The way it works is the EPA says a certain amount of pollution is acceptable, and as long as the company follows their rules, no one can sue them for the damage they do!

    If the chinese are doing as you say (and it doesnt sound that far off to me, though I doubt either of us really know first-hand) that policy is self-defeating on its own. The best thing to do is avoid the temptation to respond in kind, and focus on keeping a proper free market here. In the long run they will only make themselves poorer, and us richer, and a few years down the road they will have no choice but to deal with the problems they are creating for themselves. It's sad for the common citizen in china, yes, but it isnt our governments job, or competency, to protect them.

  14. Re:Yes, it will raise prices on U.S. Imposes Tariffs On Chinese Solar Cells · · Score: 1

    So manipulating your currency and selling products at a loss is out competing?

    People sell at a loss all the time, every grocery store has loss leaders. And the USA is in no position to complain about others manipulating their currency.

    That said, it sounds like the Chinese are subsidizing this heavily. Hrmm, the US does the same thing dont they?

    It's a self-defeating policy on both sides. If they want to sell at a loss, the best response is simply to let them. Let them waste their money, dont be stupid and waste ours as well.

  15. Re:Yes, it will raise prices on U.S. Imposes Tariffs On Chinese Solar Cells · · Score: 1

    That's not true. A free market doesnt mean no regulation, that's absurd.

    What it means is only regulation in the meaning of the word current in 1776. Since then the word has been stretched and distorted until people think regulation = dictatorship by bureaucracy with a million little rules covering all aspects of the business. In 1776, regulation was still understood as 'make regular.' A well-regulated market is one where the minimal necessary rules are enforced and barriers to entry are not artificially raised. Traditional rules concerning force and fraud must be enforced in order for a free market to exist.

    Unfortunately we have developed in the opposite direction, with rules against fraud effectively gutted, and a million little (and some not so little) regulations to raise barriers to entry and protect the market incumbents against competition. That isnt a free market at all.

  16. Re:Well I do understand it on US Justice Dept Defends Right To Record Police · · Score: 1

    Everything I do at work is recorded. And the worst I could do is cheat someone for a few dollars. Not kill them, or beat them within an inch of their life and send them to prison for something they didnt do.

    I have a lot of sympathy for cops in general, several people close to me are or were cops. But then again they all want(ed) more cameras on them during their shift - to protect them from false charges.

  17. Re:About time on US Justice Dept Defends Right To Record Police · · Score: 1

    Sorry, if he wont step up at all then he isnt a good cop.

    That said, I also know a lot of good cops, and there are good reasons they wont step up nearly as often as we would like. Like everyone else, they are trying to work inside the system and do their job without losing it. And just like anyone else in such a situation, they have to pick their fights very carefully. What may look like a slam dunk case to us (and, in a perfect world, it would look the same to them) may still look very shaky to them, with a better understanding of the systemic obstacles they will face if they move.

    If you want the good cops on your side, you have to make sure the case is clear cut, you have to have the evidence to prove that, and you need to avoid making inflammatory statements that disparage the entire profession as well. It's not impossible. It is much harder than it should be, however.

  18. Re:Signing Statement? on Federal Court Rejects NDAA's Indefinite Detention, Issues Injunction · · Score: 1

    Don't forget that most of the gay people who are imprisoned are there for cannabis possession.

  19. Re:No worries, SCOTUS will give it the green light on Federal Court Rejects NDAA's Indefinite Detention, Issues Injunction · · Score: 1

    Actually there is much less space between the positions than you might think. We dont want the social safety nets to just go away. We do want to get the state out of it, AND remedy the fundamental problems that put so many people in need as well. Long term, end goal I think we could all agree would simply be a prosperous society where we are all able to pay for our own needs, including insurance to cover catastropic events, and the need for last-ditch assistance is practically zero. In such a situation private charity would indeed be more than capable of administering greatly improved versions of current programs such as were listed.

    In the short term, of course, things are more delicate. But look at Ron Pauls plan for Social Security to get a clearer picture of how libertarians would rule. He doesnt cut off Social Security - quite the contrary he is the only one who actually has a realistic plan to keep it funded! At the same time, he wants to let people opt out of it from the start and send their contributions directly to a private retirement account which will give them a better return. Since the individual still has the option and there is no sunset, this plan would never actually end Social Security - not as long as there is a single living worker who prefers it to the private plans available. But it would see it wither to almost nothing in a generation, with most people voluntarily choosing to opt out of it.

  20. Re:the irony is on Americans Happy To Pay More For Clean Energy, But Only a Little More · · Score: 1

    You seem quite confused. There was no mention of parties above. Someone, possibly you, said that conservatives dont talk about the welfare/warfare state and how it subsidises oil (among many other things.) And that's entirely incorrect, it's not even in the ballpark. Conservatives (from Senator Borah to Representative Paul) have been making those criticisms all along. "Neoconservatives" do not, no, but then again they were never really conservatives to begin with.

  21. Re:the irony is on Americans Happy To Pay More For Clean Energy, But Only a Little More · · Score: 1

    Yes, actually, we do. Neoconservatives, quite a different animal, are what you must have been thinking of there.

  22. Re:Too bad, really on Mac Clone Maker Saga Ends As SCOTUS Denies Appeal · · Score: 1

    Yes, it's only my twisted logic, not ancient and well-established principles of equity, which they are trampling. Got it.

  23. Re:First sale doctrine? on Mac Clone Maker Saga Ends As SCOTUS Denies Appeal · · Score: 1

    No one 'licenses' software. We go and purchase it, we put our money down and we take the product home and THEN we see this ridiculous EULA that purports to be a license agreement, but clearly is not. A real license agreement grants permission ('license' in legalese) to do something that one would otherwise be prevented by law from doing. Instead a EULA does the opposite - it purports to remove most of the rights that the law allows you, and offers nothing of any value to me in return. So why would I accept it? I dont, I never have, no one in their right mind would.

    The day a company can sell you something AND THEN turn around and tell you how you may or may not use it, and use the court systems to enforce their decrees, then property rights have gone out the window. Hmm.

  24. Re:Too bad, really on Mac Clone Maker Saga Ends As SCOTUS Denies Appeal · · Score: 1

    It has nothing to do with not accepting that there are laws. It has everything to do with seeing clearly how centuries of legal tradition and wisdom are thrown out the door simply to please the big companies that have sufficient money to corrupt the system. There is no way a EULA has any validity under the traditional construction of contract laws. Terms imposed unilaterally, AFTER purchase, bears not the slightest resemblance to a legitimite contract, and this is such a well-established and ancient principle that it is really impossible to give courts that say otherwise any benefit of the doubt. There is no doubt. They are corrupt to the core.

  25. Re:The usual anti-patent mistakes on Federal Patents Judge Thinks Software Patents Are Good · · Score: 1

    No, programs ARE math buddy. Nothing else. A computer by definition can do nothing except take mathematical output, perform mathematical operations, and then produce mathematical output. The page rank algorithm is a mathematical formula. With the input (mathematical data) and that algorithm (mathematical formulæ) a computer (a device for performing mathematical calculations) can then produce the output (also mathematical data.)

    Like any purposeful mathematical operation, this one can then be interpreted with semantic meaning attached only because the input data and the algorithm itself was loaded with semantic meaning from the start. Any other mathematical formula that I might have a real world application for will be similarly charged with semantics when applied. That doesnt make it any less mathematical. Page rank may be more complicated than the pythagorean theorum, but both are mathematical formula that possess real world usefulness once imbued with real world semantics by choosing input that derives from a real world problem.

    And, to address your analogy, patenting software isnt equivelant to patenting a new wing design. It's equivelant to patenting to the math which you used to develop the new wing design.