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Submission + - Gmail Now Rejects Emails With Misleading Combinations Of Unicode Characters

An anonymous reader writes: Google today announced it is implementing a new effort to thwart spammers and scammers: the open standard known as Unicode Consortium’s “Highly Restricted” specification. In short, Gmail now rejects emails from domains that use what the Unicode community has identified as potentially misleading combinations of letters. The news today follows Google’s announcement last week that Gmail has gained support for accented and non-Latin characters. The company is clearly okay with international domains, as long as they aren’t abused to trick its users.

Comment What does MY money smell like? (Score 3, Informative) 158

most of it laundered drug money ... What do bitcoins smell like?

I'm far more concerned, whether the smell of my honestly-earned money is any different from that of the laundered drug proceeds. I suspect, the smell is exactly the same and, should I ever choose to cross the border with substantial cash, these devices will point me out. A major loophole in American (and English) legal system, allows seizure of "suspect" assets even if the person himself can not be arrested.

Now, why would an honest citizen need to carry his cash with him?.. Oh, well...

Comment Linking to evidence (Re:FreeBSD network stack) (Score 1) 195

My objection was not to merits or lack thereof of a particular OS, but to the practice of placing the burden of research on the audience (and opponents).

Whatever it is you are stating, should be backed by evidence. It is best to include the links with the statement being supported, but it can be tedious. So, links should be provided upon request — without any lip like "just google it yourself"...

Comment Re:You can't travel anonymously... (Score 1) 127

I would say it would be against the Fourth Amendment as I would say it is an unreasonable search

Oh, but "reasonable" is a term with such a wide interpretation, you drive a train through it — sideways...

Just ask a European what they think privacy is and you will see that it is much more that just the stuff you do at home when you are alone. It inclused everything you do and what defines you as a person. That is the startingpoint.

Ah, yes, the famous "why can't we be more like Europe" whine.

Well, you can not board a train anonymously in Europe either — so, in that regard, we are "like Europe" already. Or do you believe, European police don't have access to the rail passengers?.. Of course, they do — and it does not even cause an outrage, unlike here...

Comment Re:You can't travel anonymously... (Score 1) 127

The mere freedom of association includes by pretext the right to travel to associate.

A very explicitly spelled-out right to "keep and bear arms" is readily infringed upon all over the nation. Even the most liberal locales — like Texas — require you to obtain a license. And it can be suspended even there upon a mere accusation of a crime.

In less liberal locales — like New York — the Executive can withdraw the license at any moment and for any reason — or without reason at all. Says so on the document itself... In other words, over the generations even that right turned into a privilege.

And that, once again, is a right, that is quite explicitly enumerated in the Constitution — for better or worse. What are we to expect for a right, that exists (or not) only by implication and must be derived from another or, worse, from the well-meaning but nebulous 9th Amendment?

Comment Re:You can't travel anonymously... (Score 1) 127

The law doesn't state you have freedom to use any means of transport available. You can be banned from airlines, trains, buses, and your rights technically aren't infringed because you can still walk

If the First Amendment were interpreted this way, you could be banned from using newspapers or radio for your speech — and it would not have been an infringement, because you can still talk to your friends...

drive your car

Nope, that still requires a "driver's license" — a government's permission to drive your own car on any road, to which the public has legal access. And the Executive government can withdraw that permission without bothering with the Judiciary.

or hitch a ride in a friend's vehicle.

Nope, can't do that either. Not legally.

Comment Re:You can't travel anonymously... (Score 1) 127

Like people on GPS bracelets to ensure they do not leave the state.

The bracelets are an alternative to being in jail — having your freedoms suspended by the Judiciary, not Executive. Executive can arrest you — limiting your freedoms temporarily — but they can not deprive a citizen of his rights for very long without a successful a successful trial.

Try again when you have been around the world, checked out the laws and rights enshrined within those laws, been arrested under those laws

I've been around the world quite a bit, but I have never been arrested. Nor do I accept that as a requirement to holding (and putting forth) an opinion.

I can still enter the UK despite my last trip causing a ton of problems with the Bobbies.

But Michael Savage can not — without causing the Bobbies any problems whatsoever.

The only countries on the American landmass that are stupid about shit like this are the USA and Canada.

Stupid like what? Keeping understandables out? I would not call it "stupid" — quite the contrary — but, unfortunately, we aren't that. Not any more...

Comment Re:You can't travel anonymously... (Score 0) 127

We already have freedom of movement [wikipedia.org], which is enshrined in the Constitution, as interpreted by case law.

In that case, the "no-fly" lists are, indeed, unconstitutional — and the ACLU are asleep at the wheel. Perhaps, having aligned themselves over the past decades with the Far Left of the American politics, they don't want to further hamper a Far Left President... Or, maybe, they are just disorganized and lacking decent members and funds — as eventually befalls all Far Left organizations, who don't manage to secure government funding while in their heyday.

What we don't have is freedom of anonymous movement.

Well, in that case we don't have a right to anonymous speech either. But numerous people on this and other forums would disagree — sometimes violently...

In my humble opinion, any right — speech, travel, carrying weapons — must be exercisable anonymously, or else it is not really a right at all, but a mere privilege.

Unfortunately, I — a first generation immigrant — have been rather disappointed by Americans generally agreeing, the government should be limiting certain rights with "common sense", even if "sometimes" it could go "over the top".

Comment You can't travel anonymously... (Score 1, Interesting) 127

This sounds like a case of the left hand doesn't know what the right is doing.

Why? Seems like exactly the opposite — DEA does know, Amtrak has the information, and DEA arranged for the information to be available to them at ease...

While neither collection method sounds constitutional to me I am not surprised.

I'm not surprised either, but I don't see, how this is unconstitutional. The Constitution has nothing on the right to travel and, if you ask a government official, you'll quickly realize, they consider traveling to be a privilege instead.

You can not buy an Amtrak ticket anonymously. And you can not give your ticket to anyone else. With air-tickets this fraud was put upon us (years before 9/11) with the argument, that the airline and the law-enforcement need to screen the passenger names against list of criminals — so they need to know all names in advance.

But most Amtrak tickets are purchased within hours before departure, AFAIK, so this argument would not hold.

The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground.

Thomas Jefferson

We need the traveling to be explicitly declared a right, that only the Judiciary can suspend after a trial — rather than a mere privilege, that the Executive can withdraw on their whim (such as by adding you to a "no-fly" list) or, indeed, demanding to "see your papers" (and recording them for future use).

I can't see it happening any time soon, though. Bushitler-created TSA has only expanded under the Nobel Peace Prize Administration — and now insists on covering not just air-travel, but all mass transit. Driving a personal car has required a government permission for near a century, and being driven by someone else is increasingly difficult too.

Comment Re:Where do I sign up? (Score 1) 327

If many employees are not doing the work however, the problem is likely not the employees but a more general systemic issue relating to management or work structure

Oh, I didn't mean, it is only the low-level employees themselves, who must all be fired (though some of the ought to be). What I said applies equally to managers — whom their managers are reluctant to fire because it is both difficult to do and hurts the person's own record.

Comment Re:Where do I sign up? (Score 5, Insightful) 327

Really? I'm sorry, but when was the last time any IRS official pulled a gun on someone and told them to hand over their money.

If you don't pay, IRS will put a lien on your house. If you still don't pay, the house will be sold — and police (with guns) will arrive to kick you out from it.

Don't be stupid disputing the obvious — all governments world-wide collect revenues at gun-point. It is normal and the only way possible. It just means, the monies thus collected should only be used in situations, where weapons would take place: enforcing laws and fighting foreign enemies.

You mean like Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, AIG [....]

Corporations don't have the means of coercing people to buy their services, don't even bring them up here.

After all, the benevolence of the private sector is so well known we sing their praises every day because they never, EVER take advantage of people or stick it to us in their quest for profits

Again, corporations are not (normally) in a position to coerce anybody to buy their services — only the government is in such a position and its role in our lives must be minimized, not perpetually expanded.

Your link is to a description of some outrage committed by Comcast — which is funny, because the company is a book-case example of crony capitalism: it (and other cable giants) grew out of government's idiocy of giving them monopoly, and their CEO today plays golf with the President.

Corporations are not any nicer, than they have to be — in order to compete. But monopolies — like Comcast — don't have anyone to compete with. And the government is the biggest and harshest monopoly of all. One can cancel their Comcast bill — even if it can be infuriatingly ridiculous. Now try opting out of Social Security...

Comment Re:Where do I sign up? (Score 0, Flamebait) 327

Nah, I foresee a large number of vacant positions in the very near future - Particularly as we get closer to November 4th.

Wishful thinking. Federal employees are practically unfirable. For one, they are — bizarrely — unionized (to protect them from their employer — us), but that's only part of the reason, for corporations with unionized workforce still do fire bad workers, even if it is harder for them to do so than it ought to be.

The real problem is that firing an underling reflects poorly on his manager(s). This is also the truth everywhere, of course, but in normal enterprises there is this dirty and otherwise reprehensible "profit" to think about, so a bad employee can still be fired even if the manager's record gets hurt in the process. But the glorious government enterprises do not defile their mission with concerns for profit — their revenue is collected for them at gun point by the IRS.

Hence, practically nobody ever gets fired from government — "counseling" and "discipline" is the worst, that usually happens to our civil servants. Is it not time, we put our health care into their capable hands? Oh, wait...

Submission + - New Jersey May Shield Drivers From Other States' Red Light, Speed Cameras (aol.com)

schwit1 writes: New Jersey may soon prohibit other states from issuing traffic citations to its residents for alleged violations caught on speed or red-light cameras.

Lawmakers in the Garden State have introduced a bill that would stop New Jersey's Motor Vehicles Commission from providing license-plate numbers or other identifying information to another state or an interstate information network for the purpose of doling out a fine.

"I've been getting loads of complaints from people," state senator Nick Sacco told The Star-Ledger , the state's largest newspaper. "They drive to Virginia to visit relatives. They go through Maryland. They come back home and start receiving tickets in the mail. And they swear that they're not speeding; that they're keeping up with the traffic."

The whole process stinks from a lack of due process. You are guilty until you can prove your innocence and your state will suspend your license without a hearing if you fail to pay out of state traffic fines.

Submission + - Google Is Backing A New $300 Million High-Speed Internet Trans-Pacific Cable 1

An anonymous reader writes: Google has announced it is backing plans to build and operate a new high-speed internet Trans-Pacific cable system called “FASTER.” In addition to Google, the $300 million project will be jointly managed by China Mobile International, China Telecom Global, Global Transit, KDDI, and SingTel, with NEC as the system supplier. FASTER will feature the latest high-quality 6-fiber-pair cable and optical transmission technologies. The initial design capacity is expected to be 60Tb/s (100Gb/s x 100 wavelengths x 6 fiber-pairs), connecting the US with two locations in Japan.

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