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User: sopssa

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  1. Re:Encryption, end-to-end, now on Look Forward To Per-Service, Per-Page Fees · · Score: 0

    You can use the https:/// if you pay the slashdot subscription first.

  2. What a shitty summary on Xfire Purchased, Team Leaving · · Score: 2, Informative

    3D Realms seems unlikely and the random edit was only in Wikipedia for a few minutes. And why does the summary link to the static "down" html page? The website is up and working. Nice twisting there.

    But really, the previous owner was Music Television. I always thought that was a little bit weird.

  3. Too late on Could Open Source Render Facebook the Next AOL? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're too late to join the game. The problem is that Facebook already has everyone you know, so everyone joins it because everyone else already is there. Some random mumblings about walled gardens and open source won't make normal people switch over.

    Difference with AOL (never even heard about Prodigy) versus email is that a lot of people used the standard email. I think AOL was mostly just US-centric too, I don't know anyone who would had actually used it. This was also time when internet was mostly used by geeks who understood it and valued open standards.

    Someone in these kind of stories always suggests that you set up your own Facebook-like service or just a website. That's just thinking too much of yourself - why would people visit your site just to see your stuff? Facebook is great because it lets me easily see them from all the people, even if I don't keep in touch with them so much.

    Also, how do you handle things like Facebook games and cooperation with people in them? Oh, you say Facebook games are stupid and people shouldn't play them. Arrogant attitudes like that don't really help either, because people obviously like the games. We aren't the ones to tell other people what they should or shouldn't like.

    In Facebook's case one big service works a lot better than thousand small ones. How would you even search for people, places, events and so on with them? It would go back to the @something.com convention which defeats the whole purpose.

    When I was recently visiting a different country I could easily search for the one guy I knew. From his connections I found everyone else I had met and also saw a lot of interesting events and businesses I wouldn't had otherwise known about. You can't really use a search engine for something you don't know about. This was the first time I actually understood how great service Facebook is - you just have to use it correctly.

  4. Re:Windows is more secure than ever! on How Cyber Spies Infiltrate Business Systems · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Did you notice the story is about targeted attacks? OS doesn't have much to do with those. In fact since these are companies internal networks and servers and not workstations, I suspect they actually run some UNIX variant.

  5. Re:Hardly on Too Much Multiplayer In Today's Games? · · Score: 0, Interesting

    I play Modern Warfare 2 almost all for it's multiplayer. The single player campaign was great, but the fun begins in multiplayer. I also love games that have co-op play along with single player, because you can play with your friends and it opens up a lot of new possibilities. Games like Left 4 Dead with 4 player co-op (and versus mode) are also extremely fun because you have to work as a group and if you mess up, other players need to save you and you affect the game. It's a lot of fun.

    I do also play games like Splinter Cell Conviction and Civilization series where the main point is with the single player. However for example playing Civilization with real people add completely new aspects to it.

    Why it has to be either only single player or multiplayer (or badly tossed in multiplayer)? Work on both of them to make them great. The upcoming Medal of Honor actually has two completely different teams working for single player and multiplayer - EA's own team for single player and DICE for multiplayer and they even use different engines.

    Multiplayer provides a lot of fun, so why take it off? Especially when it's value that usually only paying customers can enjoy. Many times on slashdot I've read that companies should provide more value to paying customers versus pirates - multiplayer is it and can definitely be a good factor in if a person buys the game or pirates it, and I personally love playing with other people.

  6. Piracy will be impossible on Electronic Arts, THQ Look To Microtransactions · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Note that in this case the games itself would be free like in asian markets and I doubt that the normal games are going anywhere. This is most likely to expand their market. There are a lot of people, especially teens, who rather pay for individual items than go to a store and pay full $60 for a game.

    It also makes piracy really hard, especially when the games are played online and the info about items and addons you own are on the server. It's practically impossible to pirate that. With the 90% piracy rate on PC games it's not surprising that publishers are looking for new ways, even if that's sad. PC gamers really need to think about their future and not try to get everything for free, because it just leads to publishers making games where it's not possible - shitty online games with microtransactions for the housewifes.

  7. Re:It's about being truthful on Windows vs. Ubuntu — Dell's Verdict · · Score: -1, Troll

    Just because someone makes positive comments doesn't make one a shill. It's funny that I've also been accused of being a shill for Valve, Steam, Google, and large amount of other companies or products I have good experience with. It's almost funny how often someones first defense on slashdot to some positive comment is to call him a "shill". But yeah, lets all be negative.

    and fyi, I stopped posting on slashdot because for the last three months some people followed me and down modded all my comments, even many days later, resulting in -1 karma and 2 posts limit.

  8. Re:First Post !! on Firefox 4.0 Beta 1 Released · · Score: -1, Redundant

    It may trump IE, but it sure does feel and respond slower than Opera and Chrome. It's not always just about how quick the javascript engine and so on is, but how it feels to the user. Instant rendering of the page as soon as it starts loading (like in Opera) and responsive UI contribute a lot to user experience. Mozilla seems to forget this fact. Opera in comparison is really responsive, even while it comes build-in with huge amount of more features.

    Memory footprint doesn't tell much because of the way modern OS tries to allocate RAM. After all, all non-used RAM goes to waste.

  9. Other countries should start policing Internet too on US Pirate Movie Site DNS Seizure Fail · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More recently in 2008, Kentucky courts seized the domain names for 141 online gambling sites (all for companies based in other countries including Malta and Costa Rica). The Kentucky court action threatened to disrupt global traffic to PokerStars, Full Tilt, Absolute Poker and many others. As of March of this year the case is still winding its way through Kentucky appellate and supreme court (the case has been reversed then upheld and is currently resolving issues of standing).

    What gives US the right to seize domains of companies based in other countries and force their laws, views and things like ACTA and banning of internet casinos to citizens of other countries?

    You wouldn't want China to take down international sites that violate their laws, would you? Or radical countries like North Korea? It's not even just about Internet, but in general too. What makes it OK for USA to do so. Actually, instead of filtering maybe China should start just taking down the sites they don't like.

    Since US tries to put laws on the citizens of other countries, I say it's only fair other countries do the same. Like execute the death sentence of Facebook CEO. The best thing about this is that if Zuckerberg gets put into Interpol wanted list, he gets extradited to Pakistan as soon as he visits some other country. It's only fair, right?

  10. Re:I experienced this! on YouTube Hit By HTML Injection Vulnerability · · Score: -1, Troll

    I don't really understand who uses YouTube like that anyway. Usually I search for something and I get what I want, or I follow a link on a discussion that is already interesting to me. Then there also many sites and forums that categorize videos of a certain theme. YouTube is obviously too big to cater for everyone in a different way.

  11. Re:Really? on YouTube Hit By HTML Injection Vulnerability · · Score: -1, Redundant

    They probably introduced the bug recently. It's not like they wrote the code once 6 years and called it done, code on websites changes all the time and generally with any program it's easier to miss something and introduce new bugs in existing code since you can quite easily forget something.

  12. Fear on Tunneling Under the Great Firewall? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This fear of China is just WTF. "my lack of a nickname on this submission being testament to that", VPN's, Tor, all of that just to browse the regular Internet. Anyone who writes these things obviously have not been there or in the other Asian countries.

    Most of the western quality hotels provide access to unfiltered Internet and you are most likely staying in one of those. Besides, the Chinese and Asian in general are quite relaxed people. Just think if American cops would be this patient and try to help the guy.

    Seriously, the Chinese, Asian and rest of the world hate and fear by Americans is getting beyond ridiculous.

  13. Re:Did Microsoft REALLY just patent the diode brid on MS Design Lets You Put Batteries In Any Way You Want · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    If it were as easy to come up with as you're saying, why didn't you do it?

  14. Re:Why should they care now? on Microsoft Busting Its Own Browser+OS Myth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What does this prove? Different versions of IE's can obviously provide the system and application wide libraries too, but there has to be at least one of them installed for it to work.

    Then there is also the fact that countless amount of software uses IE's rendering engine, which has to be present in the system for those to work. Which again works with different versions of it.

    I'm happy Steam changed to it's own WebKit, but it was just a few months ago and there still are thousands of other software that uses it.

  15. Great News on EU Plans To Make Apple, Adobe and Others Open Up · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Apple is the single largest abuser of open technology, standards, formats and platforms. To create anything for any of their platforms, you need to use Apple tools, Apple hardware and pay Apple. It's not even technical limits on the hardware, but all artifical barriers created by Apple.

    I have no idea why Microsoft always gets yelled at because other third parties don't implement their support fully, but Apple gets a free pass on it.

    The great thing about the "Any kind of IT product should be able to communicate with any type of service in the future." is that it can also mean that Apple needs to open iPhone and iPad for third party developers not just via their App Store, but fully without jailbreaking.

    This is great news for independent developers or hobbyist.

  16. How is this news exactly on New Tool Reveals Internet Passwords · · Score: 0, Insightful

    These password recovery tools have been available as long as there have been passwords in use.

    There isn't much you can do about it. They are cached passwords so the applications need to be able to get them back exactly as they were saved (website logins, email logins and so on). You cannot do md5 or other hashing methods on them and since you have the binaries, the encryption/decryption algorithms and keys or the logic is right there available for anyone to disassembly and debug.

  17. Lemmings on 36-Hour Lemmings Port Gets Sony Cease and Desist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sony still sells Lemmings across various platforms. He had to see this coming.

    Besides directly calling it Lemmings was even more stupid move. Sony has to defend the Lemmings name too, and if the port is low quality it hurts the whole Lemmings brand.

  18. Re:1.5 Trillion?! on RIAA Says LimeWire Owes $1.5 Trillion · · Score: 0, Funny

    It's not punishment. It's what they've calculated as the damage you've caused (allowing other users to obtain free copies from you). Now you might not agree with the $750 per song, but if you do something illegally you should pay the base price and also extra for the damages and trouble you've caused.

  19. Re:iAds on Apple Announces iPhone 4 · · Score: -1, Troll

    And it's not even particularly unobstructive ads, just see this image and this image showing them.

    Steve is showing off interactivity with ads. Pretty cool, if you want to interact with a car ad.

    "So now we've got this cool navigator on the bottom. It spins the car. The only way you'll be able to get one of these is through this ad on the iPhone. So if you want to get a Leaf you need to get an iPhone..."

    Even worse than flash or those stupid punch-the-monkey ads. You actually have to interact with them.

  20. iAds on Apple Announces iPhone 4 · · Score: -1, Troll

    I find this one the most interesting feature.

    iAds

  21. Re:This guy deserves a medal on Claimed US Military Wikileaks Source Arrested · · Score: -1, Troll

    Not to mention that if the foreign governments, agencies or yes, terrorists, have the encrypted versions of these memos, and now have the unencrypted versions, they could find a way to crack our encryption algorithms.

    You clearly don't know how modern day encryption works. It would be insane to try to crack the encryption based on encrypted/unencrypted versions instead of cracking algorithm.

  22. Re:Feh on Claimed US Military Wikileaks Source Arrested · · Score: -1

    There was two versions of the collateral murder video. If you didn't bother to watch the longer version, it's not their fault.

    And they did fire children and innocents who stopped helping wounded people on the street. Are you such a person who would just drive past wounded and bleeding people laying on the street instead of helping them?

  23. Still same costs on Time For Universal Data Plans? · · Score: -1, Insightful

    And ISP's and operators will cut their profit to one-third and still have the same costs? Yeah, that will happen.

    That and TV and internet distribution methods work differently. TV broadcasts the same data to everyone and backbone speeds don't matter. Delivering that same thing over Internet is not yet fully possible, even while we're getting there. But they are fundamentally different technologies.

  24. Re:An analyst is necessary for this? on Porn Sites Pop Up In China · · Score: -1, Troll

    Why not? World changes all the time. Even China is a lot different place than it was many years ago. Eventually it will happen.

  25. Apple versus Microsoft on iPad Bait and Switch — No More Unlimited Data Plan · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    And when will slashdotters see that Apple is bad for the industry? Of course, someone will again come along and say that Apple does it for its customers.

    They want to control everything, require you to buy Mac OSX to develop for iPad and iPhone, charge a lot more for hardware than needed and do shit things like this. Still people here say it's somehow good and that Microsoft is "bad".

    Apple is the new bad guy, not Microsoft.