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User: Lord+Bitman

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Comments · 2,800

  1. Re:Scare quotes? on School Lunch Program Scans Student Thumbprints For 'Tracking Purposes' · · Score: 1

    clearly, tracking students based on their thumbprint, rather than by their student ID, which is exactly as linked to them, personally, is a bad thing.

  2. Re:Is it on the main download page? on Trojanized, Info-Stealing PuTTY Version Lurking Online · · Score: 1

    The main download page? you mean "some guy's personal web page on a site that looks like it hasn't been updated since 1982, served over plain HTTP"?

    chiark.grenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/download.html ? looks like a legit, right?

  3. one of those parties is the customer, though

  4. Re:Maintainable... on Study: Refactoring Doesn't Improve Code Quality · · Score: 2

    and creating code which can be easily refactored is, itself, the key to maintainable code.

  5. Puppet on Ask Slashdot: Is There a Web Development Linux Distro? · · Score: 2

    I use puppet for this sort of thing. I have a set of manifests which describe the basics of a VM I use for development, and I make changes based on whatever project I'm working on. These manifests usually get added to a repository either for developers; or (when possible) production

  6. Monitoring the legal on DEA Planned To Monitor Cars Parked At Gun Shows Using License Plate Readers · · Score: 1

    "Why are you monitoring perfectly legal activities?"

    "To help stop criminals"

  7. To take the opposite approach from most... on Police Organization Wants Cop-Spotting Dropped From Waze App · · Score: 2

    I agree that this is free speech, and that police should not only be okay with people reporting on their location, but should be *required* to report their location publicly, constantly.

    But that's not what this post is about. Others are saying "maybe if police didn't abuse their power, people wouldn't want to circumvent police and speed traps"

    To take the opposite approach: maybe if speed limits were not only sane, but actually *enforced*, people wouldn't care so much about speed traps.

    Speeds traps being a thing is really a sign that something is fundamentally wrong. Speeding should not be a thing which everyone does, unless there's a speed trap. Speeding should be a thing which, when it happens, everyone on the road reports the speeder, because they are creating a dangerous situation (just as you might call the police to report a chemical truck on fire).

    If we live in a world where a law exists that *only police care about*, that's a problem.

  8. Makes sense on Google Proposes To Warn People About Non-SSL Web Sites · · Score: 1

    Or at least, makes more sense than throwing up a giant red "WARNING: THIS SITE IS INSECURE!" page for HTTPS self-signed, but *not* for every other HTTP-only site.

  9. "Ends justify the means" is usually meant to imply on 2014 Hour of Code: Do Ends Justify Disney Product Placement Means? · · Score: 1

    "Ends justify the means" is usually meant to imply that the means are bad, but potentially excusable.

    What exactly is wrong with the "means" here? I hate Disney's copyright practices, but other than that, I can't fault them. They have a dedication to quality which I wish were seen elsewhere.

  10. SEO on Obama, Romney Data Scientists Strike Out On Their Own · · Score: 1

    Search Engine Optimisation all boils down to, in the end, "make websites that humans want to find, and search engines will tend over time to detect sites like yours". The SEO best-practices change all the time, but the ones which stick around tend also to be general usability best-practices.

    There doesn't seem to be a similar rule for elections, ie "make candidates that humans want to govern them, and people will tend over time to elect candidates like yours".

    Perhaps this is because nobody has actually tried such a strategy, but I expect it has more to do with the ideas that:
      1. having lots of choices and few choosers (the choosers being chosen by the masses) tends to work-out better than having lots of choosers (the masses) and few choices
      2. letting people benefit from more than one "winner" tends to work-out better than picking the top choice and throwing out everything else.

  11. My purchasing has certainly peaked on Have eBooks Peaked? · · Score: 1

    The last five books which I attempted to buy were not available for purchase in eBook format. (two of them previously were, but no longer are!)

    Can someone please explain to me why it is that "publishers" don't want free money?

  12. Re:Solution: Use standard charger on After a User Dies, Apple Warns Against Counterfeit Chargers · · Score: 1

    I came here to say exactly this. Apple is the one who ensured that the only manufacturers selling chargers for their products were those with no accountability.
    If they did not use absurd proprietary designs, then most consumers would buy chargers from companies which have such qualifications as "an address" and "a name".

  13. Really surprised on Google Launches Cloud Printer Service For Windows · · Score: 2

    As someone who's been trying to use Cloud Print since it launched, I had assumed that the project was abandoned long ago. It has always been extremely flakey, it never "just works", etc. When it works, it's great. When it doesn't, you are left staring at a screen identical to when it does, with no diagnostics, and no sign of potential progress.

    There are also some rather insane missing features, like the inability to rename printers (eg: if two of your friends have an HP DeskJet 1050a, and they both left it with the default name, have fun trying to decide which one to print on. Or if they both renamed their printers, but gave them sensible names like "HP (Upstairs)")

    CloudPrint was a nice idea which Google has given zero attention. I do not expect things to suddenly work now that Windows is in the mix.

  14. Re:I would love it if on Congress Demands Answers From Google Over Google Glass Privacy Concerns · · Score: 1

    I would love it if google responded by saying it infringes no more than eyeballs do.

  15. Re:Crap, the sky is falling on Last Forking Warning For Bitcoin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This isn't an issue of "two different currencies". What other time in history has a government issued a new currency, exchanged the "old currency" for the "new currency", and *let you keep* the "old currency" when handing you new currency?

    The inability to deal with prolonged netsplits sanely is a fundamental limitation of the Bitcoin protocol.

  16. Re:Last Sentence on Federal Magistrate Rules That Fifth Amendment Applies To Encryption Keys · · Score: 1

    That sounds more like the fourth amendment than the fifth, though.

  17. Re:Need DRM Labeling Law on Today Is International Day Against DRM · · Score: 1

    ... grab a random DVD off the shelf behind you. Look at the back of the box.

    So, the market has spoken?

  18. Re:Use Firefox? Get Self Destructing Cookies add-o on Even the Ad Industry Doesn't Know Who's Tracking You · · Score: 1

    Wow, a post about cookies from a privacy nut which I actually agree with!

    Expiring at the end of a browser session is indeed a good default cookie policy, and I see nothing wrong with a pop-up at the top of the browser window, similar to the "Do you want to save your password?", ActiveX warnings, etc, which states "The website at xnd.garbledgunk.adserver.goo[NOT VERIFIED] would like us to send data [view data] whenever this site is accessed, until September 1st, 2013. It gives the reason "Enhanced Browsing Experience". Do you want to allow this? [Yes] [No] [Send data, but forget it when I close my browser]"

  19. The problem with DRM: Enforcement on What's Actually Wrong With DRM In HTML5? · · Score: 1

    The only problem with DRM is the attempt to enforce the decisions made by the system.

    I would have no problem with a DRM system which indeed *managed* rights. ie: allowed you to register your right to watch movie x because you own it and would like to format-shift. I would even be okay with it all connecting to a central database to notify you that "you have license for viewing this from a single screen, but it looks like your wife is watching it at home right now. Our system does not believe that you have the right to do this". So long as it didn't also include a system for taking over your computer to ensure that your viewing habits agree with its opinion of your rights.

    I would absolutely *love* that kind of system

  20. Re:News at elleven on HTC Does What Google Wouldn't: Sell an LTE Phone That Sidesteps AT&T · · Score: 1

    That is a ridiculous lie.

    Selling someone a cheap phone by subsidising the cost via a 2-year contract at $49/mo doesn't become any less viable with an unlocked phone.

    Maybe selling someone a cheap phone by subsiding the cost via a 2-year contract of [nominal fee]+overage charges/mo would be violated by unlocking the phone, but the monthly fee on a 2-year contract doesn't change when you decide not to use the service. That's why it's called a contract.

  21. Re:not much better on Netflix Wants To Go HTML5, But Not Without DRM · · Score: 1

    To extend this to the general case, and ignoring the fact that DRM is an impossibility / runs contrary to basic laws of physics:

    DRM requires that the output device, the final end-point, be known in advance.

    This runs contrary to everything that the web is about, and so no web standards body should have anything to do with it.

    Imagine if somehow HTTP had a Copyright-control mechanism which was able to enforce the fact that certain content could not be printed. Being devised in the time when HTTP was simply intended as, as it says, a "Hyper-Text Transfer Protocol", this mechanism could have been implemented as a restriction that certain content should only be output directly to a terminal.

    This type of restriction would have made HTTP, and therefor the web, useless. It would be restricted to its original goals and intended scope. There is no point in creating a web standard which does not have the ability to have new uses applied to it.

  22. These moves are one thing and one thing only on Best Buy Follows Yahoo in Banning Remote Work · · Score: 1

    The *only* reason for these new policies is to fire people without needing to admit that these people are being fired.

    Why lay off 800 people due to financial difficulties when you can lay off 400 and say that 400 chose to leave for unrelated reasons?

  23. Re:Just imagine if copyright had reasonable limits on Warner Bros Secures Commercial Control of Superman · · Score: 1

    Imagine if Trademark Law were limited to ensuring that producers of goods and services could be easily identified and distinguished and that such laws had no bearing on the distribution of creative works so long as such distinction were honestly made.

  24. Re:It's all in a name on Third Party Debates Moderated by Larry King: Discuss · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem with "approval" voting is that it asks me which candidate I approve of.
    Looking down the list of all candidates, no matter the party, I don't see one that I approve of.

  25. Ask to see the code. on Ask Slashdot: How To Avoid Working With Awful Legacy Code? · · Score: 1

    Offer to sign an NDA, but don't ever take over someone else's codebase without making sure you see the code.

    Employers: Don't hire anybody who offers to take over someone else's codebase without having seen the code.

    This is a complete no-brainer.