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Comment Re:That's a tiny number (Score 1) 464

Ignoring the president of the day, there are four reasons I wouldn't open start a company in the US, at least not until the situation's resolved:
  1. I don't want to deal with the kleptomaniac, kiddie fondling perverts in the TSA (See YouTube for examples).
  2. I don't trust American police (see YouTube and countless news articles for examples).
  3. HMRC are known thieves but the IRS seem to be even worse, based on cases of people I know of and the proven abuse of position within the IRS as exposed this year.
  4. Because I'm not American I know your government would treat me like a common criminal (even without any evidence) and monitor and record everything I did (digitally).

Since the TSA (or someone like them are not going away and I see the situation only getting worse, the quality of officers in the Police there isn't going to improve (not when the recruits have gone through government indoctrination/schooling), the IRS will still keep stealing from and abusing people (just like HMRC will), and the intelligence contractors that run the US's intelligence services will make sure they steer things towards bigger contracts for them I don't see it ever happening.

Comment Re:Unconscionable Contract clause (Score 1) 519

As a contractor, I've studied contract law. When they told her about it they were making an offer to contract and if she ignored their offer suggests implicit consent. If she replied though and refused their offer and made her own counter-offer the call situation would be different. This way, if they ignore her counter-offer and say nothing it would be they who agreed to her terms. If she rebutted their offer and made her own through an affidavit they'd have to do the same, rebutting each of her statements, point by point.

Comment Re:Hint taken. (Score 1) 519

It already is, under Common Law which is the law of the land in both the US, UK and other countries. Defamation, libel, slander, etc (depending on the method of abuse). All she has to do is to write an affidavit, get it notarised and send it in to them along with demands of her own, including damages for the harm they caused her. If it was me, I'd go on the offensive as it seems they're the guilty party after all. But saying that, it's always best to study the full facts before taking action.

Comment Re:grain of truth? (Score 1) 413

anarchists: I don't see this one per se, but the govt described bradley manning as an anarchist so that's why they think that.

I'm not sure if I understood the term anarchists in the same way as he meant it but anarchy has two main extremes. On one hand it may be seen as another definition for libertarianism where state has less control over the lives of the people. The result would, from the point of view of those within the state, this would be anarchy. They inevitably prefer a more ordered society they can control from the centre. The other extreme to which I referred is what these people hope people will associate the word with, that of burning cars, of gangs roaming the streets looking for a victim, the total breakdown of society. Based on the context and the speaker, I suspect he meant a negative meaning of the word. Aren't you glad the government is there to protect us from freedom?

Comment Re:Esoteric material? (Score 1) 329

I don't as a rule like the idea of censorship as it's a slippery slope to very wrong places. This being said, I don't know what people could posisbly want to access things like that for, other than the authorities when tracking down these monsters, but even then it should be under controlled conditions to prevent their exposure.

Comment Who's pulling the strings? (Score 1) 83

Who's to say these criminals (the Jihadis, not the banksters in this instance) are working for who they believe themselves to be? They could be working on the payroll of banksters or some shadowy government agency who want to create a 'reason' to pass legislation they can't pass without a tradegy taking place first...

Submission + - RAID vs. RAIN (networkworld.com)

Leofcwen writes: I have recently begun studying RAID and soon came across RAIN courtesy of Wikipedia. The most obvious thing that struck me about RAIN is that it is much less dense than RAID and so to achieve the same level of storage one would need to make use of an awful lot more servers which even at 1U would take up a lot of space. Am I missing the point here or does keeping ones storage systems as dense as possible make it more efficient in terms of space and presumably power which in terms means lower carbon emissions? Does the processor power in the RAIN boxes mean one doesn't need separate servers for general processing? Who here has experience with both and what did you think about each one? Are there any open source software systems to run each system and if so, how do they compare with their commercial counterparts?

Thanks in advance,

L.

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