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User: gsslay

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Comments · 1,633

  1. Re: Another, But It Will Work This time, scenario? on Swiss Village Votes for Free Money. Now It Just Needs the Cash (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    Awhhh! Poor rich people are being picked on! Look, how they suffer!

    The rich people are the ones benefiting most from our society and reaping the most rewards. It is fair that they proportionally contribute the most to maintaining that society.

  2. Re:More Innocuous? on Researchers Come Out With Yet Another Unnerving, New Deepfake Method (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 2

    More like the person who wrote it doesn't know what it means.

  3. Streaming on demand a drama for 100 minutes onto a TV.

    Streaming on demand a drama for 40 x 6 minutes onto a TV.

    What difference is there, other than the length and that one is called a "movie" and the other a "box-set" ?

    The distinction between a TV show and a film is vanishing. They use the same technology. The same actors. The same costs.

  4. Re:It's a great idea on China Reassigns 60,000 Soldiers To Plant Trees In Bid To Fight Pollution · · Score: 1

    My god! You're right! We must cut down all trees within a mile of anyone! Otherwise they'll only get burned down!

    We also need to have some kind of method of restraining domestic animals. Something that fences them in, or maybe out. Come on, if we put our heads together I'm sure we could invent something to do this.

    Good job our superior western intelligence has realised these things, and we don't follow these foolish Chinese in their futile efforts.

  5. Re:I fully expect... on 'Watershed' Medical Trial Proves Type 2 Diabetes Can Be Reversed (bbc.com) · · Score: 2

    But only if you continue to not hold your head underwater. Go back to holding your head underwater and the drowning returns!

  6. Most people think Tenant was the best followed by Baker.

    You've researched this? What was your sample size?

    Oh, silly me. You haven't. You're just stating your preference and giving it legitimacy by making up facts.

  7. Re:The law of economics on Ask Slashdot: Can Smart TVs Insert Ads Into Your Movies? (gigaom.com) · · Score: 1

    Like everything else, the consumer will do a cost\benefit analysis. If they believe that they are getting something beneficial from accepting the ads that exceeds the annoyance of having them, then they will accept them.

    Off the top of my head I can only think of one benefit; a reduced price for the TV, but no doubt they're trying to come up with others.

    Personally, it would have to be a massive reduction in price before I'd consider the cost outweighed. But others may have tighter budgets and greater tolerance for adverts.

    I also would expect a thriving industry of ad-disabling devices, allowing you to remove the adverts facility after purchasing the TV.

  8. Re:It kinda sucks. on Star Trek: Discovery Is Returning For a Second Season (engadget.com) · · Score: 1

    All of a sudden 20 years before Kirk and the Enterprise (reboot or not) they have a drive that teleports the ship to any known sector

    So obviously the technology didn't work out. Maybe there's a story behind that? Maybe it might make for a good plot line?

    the main character is SPOCKS ADOPTED SISTER THAT YOU NEVER HEARD OF BEFORE?

    Hmm. Maybe there's a story behind that?

    AND SHE HAS A BOYS NAME?

    MIND BLOWN! A girl with a boy's name!? It's madness! This is just pushing credulity beyond all known limits! Maybe there's a story behind it?

    Basically you're complaining that the show has stuff in it that you don't already know about. Do you not think it might be a bit boring if it was just a history lesson on pre-Kirk stuff you already knew?

  9. Re:Meh on When an AI Tries Writing Slashdot Headlines (tumblr.com) · · Score: 1

    This is an insight into the future where many news articles will be written by robots.

    Unless future events will occur by randomly shuffling events of the past to make news, I'm not clear what this experiment demonstrates that's useful.

  10. Re: Take care of your body on Doctors To Breathalyse Smokers Before Allowing Them NHS Surgery (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    That's not how taxes work. You don't individually get to pick a choose what you want your taxes spent on, based on what you believe you personally and directly benefit from.

    The NHS benefits the entire country as a whole. All those doctors and nurses in private healthcare, who do you think trained them? Every other person who you work with, provides your services, makes up the rest of the society you're living in, who do you think is keeping them healthy?

  11. Re: And now skype on How Facebook Outs Sex Workers (gizmodo.com) · · Score: 2

    This is the correct answer. Facebook sees you in the same location, (by network or GPS association) and therefore decides you might want to be friends.

    This wonderful piece of logic is exactly what you need to become better acquainted with that creepy guy who always seems to be hanging around your gym. Or the work colleague that you tolerate but certainly don't want to socialise with. Or your annoying neighbour. Or your stalker.

  12. Re:Evil Spell checker on PSA: Microsoft Is Using Cortana To Read Your Private Skype Conversations (betanews.com) · · Score: 1

    If anyone is interesting in actually reading what Microsoft says about this, they'll see it is an entirely optional addition that the user has to turn on and agree to.

    If you don't want Cortana reading your Skype messages, then don't switch the option to tell Cortana to read your Skype messages. What's difficult to understand about that?

  13. Re:Reminds me of a friend.. on Will London Monetize Wifi Tracking Data From Its Tube Passengers? (gizmodo.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    correlate it with other data they have on me

    This is the key thing that is getting glossed over. Yes, they know there's a child. But that's correlated with everything else bought. So know they know what age the child is, what prescription drugs are purchase by the household, what conditions the child may inherit, what the household's diet is like, what drinking habits are like, what life expectancy the child might have based on this. What is the likely academic achievement of the child based on the neighbourhood and the household income spent in store. How that compares to the child's peers in the school they are very likely to attend. What health insurance may cost the child in future.

    Still happy with the store to be that familiar with the child's diapers?

  14. Indeed. It's funny to see so many people here thinking that the US has some sort of claim on IBM, they're betraying the home country, and somehow Indian employees are worth less than Americans.

    IBM is a multinational. It sells to whatever country is interested and it'll hire employees where-ever suits it.

  15. Re:Analysis on IBM Now Has More Employees In India Than In the US (newsindiatimes.com) · · Score: 1

    It doesn't take a "smart" analysis to see the basic error in your figures and draw conclusions.

  16. Re:Summary: Mostly challenged school curriculum on 'Banned Books Week' Recognizes 2016's Most-Censored Books (and Comic Books) (newsweek.com) · · Score: 1

    I used the word 'normal' because it was the word used by the person I was replying to. 'Normal' is, of course, a loaded word that should be used with care. It has over-tones of defining what is acceptable. It was this I was addressing.

    Something that is unusual is by definition not normal.

    I would prefer to say that something that is unusual is, by definition, not usual.

  17. Re:Summary: Mostly challenged school curriculum on 'Banned Books Week' Recognizes 2016's Most-Censored Books (and Comic Books) (newsweek.com) · · Score: 1

    You are attempting to equate someone's gender identity with another's sexual practices. Two entirely different things approached entirely differently.

  18. Re:Summary: Mostly challenged school curriculum on 'Banned Books Week' Recognizes 2016's Most-Censored Books (and Comic Books) (newsweek.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A book can be about a transgendered child (which is 'normal'. It sometimes happens, therefore it is normal) and not about surgery or administered hormones. I doubt very much that any of these children's books discuss these things at that level.

    I'm unclear why reading about this unusual, but normal, state of affairs is going to traumatise a child. Or why having it in a book is considered 'forcing it on kids', any more than the subject matter of any other book they are obliged to read is 'forced' on them.

  19. Re:He would lose in court on Pepe the Frog's Creator Is Sending Takedown Notices To Far-Right Sites (vice.com) · · Score: 0

    You are clueless about parody and the first amendment.

  20. Re:Good luck with that on Pepe the Frog's Creator Is Sending Takedown Notices To Far-Right Sites (vice.com) · · Score: 2

    I suggest you go look up the terms "parody" and "satire". You clearly don't understand what they mean.

    Hint: they don't mean "being funny, with someone else's copyrighted material" or "criticising something unrelated, with someone else's copyrighted material"

  21. Re:So, not harmful? on Fish Are Eating Lots of Plastic (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    If eating the plastic doesn't harm the fish, and causes no harm to the people that eat the fish, then why is this in the "health and science" section of the Washington Post?

    From the fine article:

    But that doesn’t mean it’s not harmful for them. Some negative effects that scientists have discovered when fish consume plastic include reduced activity rates and weakened schooling behavior, as well as compromised liver function.

    I know this was buried way deep into the article on the second paragraph, but obviously you didn't get that far.

  22. counterfeit gift card on Hacking Retail Gift Cards Remains Scarily Easy (wired.com) · · Score: 1

    "Caput's written them to a blank plastic card with a $120 magnetic-strip writing device available on Amazon, and found that most retailers accept his cards without questions."

    This is the scary part. And obviously counterfeit gift card, but accepted without question because it could be swipped?

    Would the retailer accept obviously counterfeit cash just because it said "Cash" on it?

  23. Paying $99.99 to watch two large sweaty men punch each other for a while?

    I'm finding it really hard to sympathise with these people.

  24. Re:in other words.. on How the NSA Identified Satoshi Nakamoto (medium.com) · · Score: 1

    Not only illegally gather data, but in an investigation of someone who has committed no crime.

  25. Re:We have nothing to fear on Facebook Makes Safety Check a Permanent Feature (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One more every-day feature designed to heighten people's fear of something statistically very unlike to happen to them. I look forward to it being extended to an feature where every time you log in, it automatically messages all your Facebook 'friends' that you haven't been struck by a bus, fallen in a lake, choked on your sandwich or 101 other possible ways someone, somewhere may have died recently.

    Hang on, it's been a full 10 minutes since I reassured everyone on Facebook I'm still living, and I hear someone fell off their bike in Australia. They need to know it wasn't me. Be right back....

    Stay safe everyone. I worry about you and it's be a while.