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User: Hotawa+Hawk-eye

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  1. Re:what? on Senators Propose Bill Prohibiting Phone Calls On Planes · · Score: 1

    At the start of my Thanksgiving bus ride, the driver announced that passengers could use their cell phones but asked that users be courteous to other passengers and keep the calls quiet and short. It seemed to work -- the bus ride was fairly quiet, as quiet as a bus full of (I would guess) 50-60 people can be. [Coughing, rustling of papers, quiet conversation with passengers seated next to one another, etc.]

  2. Re:what? on Senators Propose Bill Prohibiting Phone Calls On Planes · · Score: 2

    ...such as being able to forcibly disembark a passenger immediately upon violating a voice-call prohibition.

    Preferably while in mid-air.

    But all life is sacred, right ???

    Now disembarking their CELL PHONE in mid-air would require a much smaller airlock to prevent the cabin from depressurizing, and would ensure that a first offense (on a particular flight by a particular passenger) likely would be the LAST offense on that flight by that passenger. [If we made it that ALL that passenger's phones were disembarked, it WOULD be the last offense.]

    On a more serious note, we don't need this type of law. All we need is for airlines to have a clearly stated policy, something like "You can talk on your phone, but keep it quiet and short. If other passengers complain, you will be asked to lower your voice or end your call. If you refuse, your phone will be confiscated and returned to you at the end of the flight. Passengers who resist the confiscation will be treated using our existing 'unruly passengers' policies, and as such may be banned from the airline or even may be arrested when we land."

  3. Re:Is a FSM Statue Next? on Satanists Propose Monument At Oklahoma State Capitol Next To Ten Commandments · · Score: 1

    So ... Gods Playing Poker as a reverse Dogs Playing Poker?

  4. Re:Pros vs Cons on RF Safe-Stop Shuts Down Car Engines With Radio Pulse · · Score: 1

    6. What impact would this have on Google's self-driving cars?

  5. Re:Just wait until... on RF Safe-Stop Shuts Down Car Engines With Radio Pulse · · Score: 1

    Maybe. If it was possible, whether that would be seen as a violation of the Outer Space Treaty or not is a different question.

    I'd be more worried about someone using one of these on a highway on cars traveling at high rates of speed. If the transmitter were stationary a vehicle may not be in range for long enough, but if you had one mounted to the rear of your vehicle facing backwards (and shielded somehow from affecting YOUR vehicle) it could cause horrible accidents as cars behind the one that was shut down plowed into it. In Massachusetts this weekend we had a 65-vehicle accident caused by black ice on the road -- this could be worse.

  6. Re:Oh Okay on Warner Bros. Admits To Issuing Bogus Takedowns · · Score: 1

    I'm not a lawyer, but reading 17 USC 512 it doesn't look like there's anything requiring service to accept DMCA takedown notices electronically. Section c, subsection 2 requires companies to make their designated agent's email address available, but specifically does NOT say that they must accept notices at that email address. If companies declared that they required physical takedown notices (due, of course, to the ease with which spammers have flooded that public address with spam and fraudulent takedown notices!) it would be much more expensive for companies like Warner Bros. to (ab)use the DMCA like a shotgun.

  7. Re:in sue happy america on Woman Facing $3,500 Fine For Posting Online Review · · Score: 1

    How about a hair dryer on a motion sensor to scare the cat away with noise and hot air? Or a shop vac with the hose set into the exhaust port?

    Kitty might not make it to the potted plant before it defecates.

  8. Re:I do this on Nearly 1 In 4 Adults Surf the Web While Driving · · Score: 1

    In Virginia, you're "driving" if the keys are in the ignition, even if the engine is off.

    So if you're responsibly sleeping off your buzz before heading home, DO NOT turn on the radio or you'll get a DUI.

    If you want to listen to the radio while falling asleep or passing out, sleep it off in the passenger seat.

  9. Re:Wow. on How Kentucky Built the Country's Best ACA Exchange · · Score: 1

    Seems to me that being certified to practice medicine by the medical organization of which you are president is a bit shaky. Of course, I doubt he'll use his medical degree again now that he's drunk the waters of political power so it's really a moot point.

  10. Re:But to put it another way.. on How Kentucky Built the Country's Best ACA Exchange · · Score: 2

    Theoretically we could represent every number like this: 1111111 instead of 7. So why do we have any numbers other than 1? Because it's much less work to write 1234 and manipulate those four digits than to write or type one thousand two hundred thirty-four 1's and count and/or manipulate them.

    Or, referring back to Randall Munroe's Up Goer Five the term "helium" is shorter and more precise than "that kind of air that makes your voice funny." When I explained this to my nephew who's in kindergarten the latter was good enough; when he gets older and more interested in rocketry, I'll clarify using the former. But if I were a rocket scientist, or speaking to someone who was, I'd use the former term even though it's "harder."

  11. Re:Cryptographically signed elections? on Azerbaijan Election Results Released Before Voting Had Even Started · · Score: 1

    Yes, it leads to blackmail and intimidation. Suppose I want Kang to win the election instead of Kodos. I can threaten to harm your family or release a secret I know about you unless you vote for Kang. With the current system, unless I look at your ballot before you put it in the ballot box (and that would be difficult to do covertly in the polling place where I usually vote; it may be easier in other places) I don't know for certain how you voted. But if YOU can check how you voted, so can I. If you voted for Kodos or anyone but Kang, I'll harm your family or broadcast your secret.

    In addition, you expect everyone to memorize their key pair and enter it perfectly in the voting system? People have enough trouble remembering eight character passwords (so they choose "password" or write it on a sticky note.) Asking them to remember a longer key made up of (what appears to them to be random) letters and numbers would result in them bringing a copy of their key to the voting booth ... and likely tossing it in the trash on the way out. Pose as a substitute janitor and grab those pieces of paper/sticky note then change those votes -- how likely is it that those people are going to check their votes?

  12. Re:Let me be 1 of the 1st here on Utility Sets IT Department On Path To Self-destruction · · Score: 3, Insightful

    On occasion, if the power company fucks up badly enough, there are consequences . Frankly, regardless of whether or not it was a good idea to give the IT staff advanced notice (it wasn't) offshoring your IT in New England will likely come back to bite them in the ass in the winter. It's not like there are snow and ice storms that would interrupt power and communications and the ability to remotely connect to IT systems, after all ...

  13. Re:Their definition of "Moral" is the problem. on Just Thinking About Science Triggers Moral Behavior · · Score: 1

    Asimov's Trantor had, if I remember correctly, 40 billion at its peak and that was basically one planet-wide city. Or you could go up an order of magnitude or two and use Coruscant at a trillion people. Of course if you do that, you run into a problem or two or three. If you're wondering if a webcomic author is a good authority on the physics of a fictional city, he's not just a webcomic author.

    Of course, we COULD use that science to send some of those billions of people to planets or celestial bodies other than Earth. Keep a few billion folks on Earth, send a couple million to orbiting habitats, and put the rest on Mars and its moons as well as Earth's moon.

  14. Re:I get to bust this one out again. on San Francisco Fire Chief Bans Helmet-Mounted Cameras For Firefighters · · Score: 1

    It's a good thing the footage from these helmet-mounted cameras is posted to YouTube in real-time. That means there's no time for the chief and the appropriate members of the city's legal department to review the footage and choose what to release to the public and/or the news media, what to hold onto in case of legal action against the city and/or the fire department or to use as training footage, and what to erase.

  15. Re:I just say on Ask Slashdot: Should More Math and Equations Be Used In the Popular Press? · · Score: 2

    Equations are one piece of the puzzle. Words are another piece. Pictures or examples are a third. Using one of the pieces alone may not be enough; using two or all three, if done well, could be better.

    For instance, in explaining E = mc^2 you could explain it in words: the amount of energy that would be released if a small piece of matter, say 1 gram, is enormous. Or you could give the exact amount of energy produced. Or you could show a collection of Olympic size swimming pools and indicate by how much it would heat the water they contain using a graphic of a thermometer. E = mc^2 on its own doesn't really paint a picture in readers' minds of how much energy that actually is. Even the number, without some sort of context, doesn't really do it justice. But most people have some idea about how big an Olympic sized swimming pool is, and can tell that it would take a lot of energy to heat it. If you say "turning one gram of matter completely into energy would take 100 Olympic swimming pools from just above freezing to just below boiling" (pulling that figure mostly out of thin air) that's something a lot of people can picture.

  16. Re:Mutually Assured Destruction on How Joel Spolsky Shot Down a Microsoft Patent In 15 Minutes · · Score: 1

    Increase the patent filing fee by some flat amount plus some amount that's based on how many patents the filer has had accepted and has has rejected in the past year or two (this curve should be fairly steep.) Put a portion or all of that increase in escrow. Once patents are published for public review, if someone reports to the patent office prior art that causes the patent to be rejected, the first person to report that prior art receive the bounty. [In the case of multiple pieces of prior art causing the rejection, split the bounty between the first submitters either equally or based on "how compelling" the art was to the rejection.] If it's rejected for other reasons (the filer's fault for trying to patent something obvious, for instance) the patent office keeps the bounty.

    If the patent is accepted, either: 1) return the increased amount to the filer, 2) give that extra amount to the patent office [I don't really support this since it could lead to greatly increased pressure to approve a patent for the kitchen sink, not that that's not a problem now], or 3) keep it in escrow (and making interest for the patent office) for a period of time in case someone successfully challenges with prior art in the near future, at which point they receive the bounty.

    People who file one patent won't suffer more than the initial flat increase. Companies that file many patents that are all accepted won't suffer more than N times the flat increase. Companies that use a shotgun approach to patent filing will eventually see the "points" on their "patent license" increase to the point where it's not financially viable for them to file more; they have to wait until some of those failed filings age and come off their record.

  17. Doesn't this ban human beings? on Florida Law May Accidentally Ban Computers and Smartphones · · Score: 1

    According to the Florida Senate's website, section 849.16 reads:

    (1) As used in this chapter, the term "slot machine or device" means any machine or device or system or network of devices that is adapted for use in such a way that, upon activation, which may be achieved by, but is not limited to, the insertion of any piece of money, coin, account number, code, or other object or information, such device or system is directly or indirectly caused to operate or may be operated and if the user, whether by application of skill or by reason of any element of chance or any other outcome unpredictable by the user, may:

    (a) Receive or become entitled to receive any piece of money, credit, allowance, or thing of value, or any check, slug, token, or memorandum, whether of value or otherwise, which may be exchanged for any money, credit, allowance, or thing of value or which may be given in trade; or

    The human brain and auditory system is a machine or device (both mechanical, through the eardrum, and electronic, because of the signals that pass along neurons) that can be activated (through a user saying "I bet you ...") and the user may receive or become entitled to money if the condition of the bet (which may rely upon an outcome unpredictable by the user) is satisfied. So unless the State of Florida has defined "machine" and "device" to exclude things with an organic component, which I'm guessing they have not done, a human being would satisfy the definition of "slot machine or device" according to a very technical reading and interpretation.

  18. Batman and Long Now on Ask Slashdot: Permanent Preservation of Human Knowledge? · · Score: 1

    In one of the episodes of the animated series The Batman, future archaeologists unearth the Batcave and find information etched in binary on the titanium support pillars.

    Alternately, I wonder what projects the Long Now Foundation has in the works to do something like this. The Wikipedia page lists the Rosetta project but there may be something else for general knowledge.

  19. Re:Low Quality on Congress Proposes Strategy For Fighting Patent Trolls · · Score: 1

    I love how that is considered informative, when in fact quite a bit of it is complete and utter BS.

    The problem is that most of them were planning on, and did, spend money on politics.

    Of course 501(c)4 are allowed and do actually provide money in politics. From wiki:

    In my opinion, if you're not allowed to vote for a candidate you should NOT be able to provide money, goods, or services to the candidate's campaign (other than at normal prices; I'm okay with the supermarket selling a candidate's campaign steaks for an $N per plate dinner as long as he or she pays the same price the supermarket would charge me or anyone else buying the same quantity of food, for example.) I'd make an exception for people too young to vote who are doing it as some sort of citizenship/scholastic activity (for a Boy Scout merit badge or as part of a class project, for example.)

  20. Re:What a great idea! on Prosecutors Push For Anti-Phone-Theft Kill Switches · · Score: 1

    While that's true, do you think Grandma or Grandpa would be able to unbrick the phone that some script kiddie decided would be fun to lock up? No, which means either going to a different phone (luckily they still have a land line) to call the phone company to ask that it be unbricked or buying a new phone, whichever is less hassle.

  21. Re: That doesn't fix anything on Microsoft Confirms Xbox One's Phone Home Requirement, Game Resale Rules · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, the lobbyists writing copyright treaties will get around to fixing that soon enough.

  22. Re:Movies are real! on House Bill Would Mandate Smart Gun Tech By U.S. Manufacturers · · Score: 1

    Based on this /. story, from a mere three weeks ago, this seems to be a reality which will be available for purchase within a couple of months.

    Until they can demonstrate, with 100% reliability, that their smartgun will recognize my fingerprint through the cloth or leather glove on my hand, I -- and doubtless the vast majority of gun owners -- will regard this as just one more way to make your gun not work when you need it.

    Until they can demonstrate that the techniques used by the MythBusters to fool a fingerprint scanner will NOT bypass their security mechanism, I remain skeptical of their product.

  23. Re:$5k limit on Anti-Infringement Company Caught Infringing On Its Website · · Score: 1

    The limitation of liability in Canadian cases is $5k for all infringement in a court case for non-commercial copyright infringement, but the more likely "get" is just $100. When their first "successful" case goes through the court system with a judgement of $100, it will make the news headlines and their business model will be destroyed.

    A COMPANY violating the copyrights of artists by using their images without permission on their BUSINESS website doesn't sound like non-commercial copyright infringement. What's the penalty for commercial copyright infringement in Canada? According to Canada's Justice Laws website section 35.1 states:

    35. (1) Where a person infringes copyright, the person is liable to pay such damages to the owner of the copyright as the owner has suffered due to the infringement and, in addition to those damages, such part of the profits that the infringer has made from the infringement and that were not taken into account in calculating the damages as the court considers just.

    and section 38.1 states:

    38.1 (1) Subject to this section, a copyright owner may elect, at any time before final judgment is rendered, to recover, instead of damages and profits referred to in subsection 35(1), an award of statutory damages for which any one infringer is liable individually, or for which any two or more infringers are liable jointly and severally,

            (a) in a sum of not less than $500 and not more than $20,000 that the court considers just, with respect to all infringements involved in the proceedings for each work or other subject-matter, if the infringements are for commercial purposes; and

            (b) in a sum of not less than $100 and not more than $5,000 that the court considers just, with respect to all infringements involved in the proceedings for all works or other subject-matter, if the infringements are for non-commercial purposes.

    Now does each photo they are alleged to have copied without satisfying the terms of the license count as a separate infringement or are they all lumped together? If the former, that could be very, very bad for them.

  24. Re:Nuclear Launch Codes on Facebook "Trusted Contacts" Lets You Pester Friends To Recover Account Access · · Score: 1

    What's next? All 3 to 5 friends will have to enter their codes simultaneously to recover the lost account?

    No. Three out of five friends need to enter codes. I thought most people posting on Slashdot would know about codes where n out of m keys are needed to uncover a secret.

    And if you don't, there's a Wikipedia page listing a number of different systems.

  25. Re:Teen Drama in 5 4 3 2 1 on Facebook "Trusted Contacts" Lets You Pester Friends To Recover Account Access · · Score: 1

    1) Get your friends together for a party (especially a bachelor or bachelorette party.)
    2) You and your friends get drunk.
    3) Your (drunk) friends decide it would be "fun" to access into your Facebook account and post naughty message as you.
    4) ???
    5) Prof... *ring ring* Hi, Grandma. What? There's a picture of my naughty bits on my Facebook page? No there isn't! *check* What the?!