Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:"Will announce later today..." (Score 2) 163

Further to this, the article hints at Cameron making a mandatory, default filter, however in the original article this is never stated. So arguing about the source is kind of a moot point as the original source never mentions any mandatory filtering. Waiting is a great idea here, this should not have made it to submission.

Comment Re: I can assure you... (Score 1) 642

Worse, you can't leave windows box without antivirus, so you're screwed

It seems a bit silly to use something so insecure that you have to install programs, on top of the OS that will protect what's underneath it. Wouldn't it be better, to create an OS that has security properly, sanely and correctly built in, so one doesn't have to worry about all of this stuff? On another note, I have been using vista, and 7 (and XP) for a few years now, and they all still BSOD occasionally, and I never really know why.

Slashdot is full of folks who've last used Windows more than 10 years ago

Hmm. It seems you made a sweeping generalisation of an entire community, this makes you look like an idiot.

Get with the times and at least update your hate machine.

I updated my "hate machine" this morning. And Last week, I could probably do it again right now. I don't really like the idea of using an OS that has a continuous development process, yet only releases in infrequent discrete points of time.

Comment Re:Dear BPI, (Score 1) 89

Close. It's theoretically true. In practice much of what is said on Slashdot is a carbon copy of something somebody else said. So point 1. You can't copyright something that isn't actually yours. Point 2. Copyright law states that one must actively announce that the content is copyrighted, that it is not to be replicated without consent, and any breaches must be actively fought.

Summary: 'All posters here are copyright holders' - Not true in practical terms, just because we all /can/ be, doesn't mean we all are.

Additionally, copyrighting most Slashdot posts would be like trying to patent a simple and obvious feature on a phone, like 'Slide-to-unlock'. We all understand how insane that is... right?

Comment Remember that time... (Score 3, Informative) 89

Remember that time where the internet was freedom? Where one could create a website, it was subject to law, like any other act. Remember when the providers of the internet buckled under the pressure from "the powers that be". Sites could be blocked, freedom quashed, because somebody didn't like the content of a site, because somebody thought it aided in crime and law breaking, despite not breaking any laws itself.

When we start forcing ISPs to block sites, based on anything other than law, we open gates that will never be closed. One leads to more, more to many and eventually freedom on the internet will be dead.

This is the key issue we are dealing with. It is getting overlooked because "piracy is bad". We have many other questions to ask: does blocking these sites even /help/ the problem of piracy? this suggests not! Is piracy really the problem, perhaps the intermediate companies between consumer and author's of content are to blame somewhat?

Why do we have to constantly start making much larger problems while trying to fix smaller ones. Fix the music industry, the film industry, the E-book-monolopy that Amazon is building, fix the problem at the root. Provide consumers with a modern, suitable market in which they pay the author's of content for their products, for a price that represents the true worth of that product. Allow the consumer to have freedom with that product to use it in any device, in any form. Provide a good service, that is value-for-money, and people /will/ use it. We've seen it work before

Leave the internet alone, once the gates are open the wars begin....

(This is one army, preparing arms...

Comment Re:Free hardware? (Score 2) 229

But really today what are kids going to be using the computer for.

Browsing the Internet.

and nothing else.

These are students. They may be kids, but they are in a computer lab to learn.

Stick a windows OS with IE in-front of them, and you'll get kids browsing the internet. However put a GNU/Linux distribution in front of them, and you could have students that are interested and focused on learning logical and open-source, free Operating systems and software.

With open source we can teach kids that if something isn't there, if something isn't available, we have a few options. One option is to throw money at a corporation like Microsoft. Other options such as creating something yourself, finding multiple technologies or techniques to solve the problem are perhaps a little more constructive. Problem solving, creativity, fairness, team work.... just a few of the many things using and developing free, open-source software teaches us.

Comment Re:"EC says it hasn't received them" (Score 1) 81

Nothing in this world happens by random - or have you heard of truly random number generator? No!

I have. Random occurs at the quantum level. http://www.fourmilab.ch/hotbits/ This site creates "hot bits"; truly random numbers. " HotBits are generated by timing successive pairs of radioactive decays detected by a Geiger-Müller tube interfaced to a computer."

Comment Irony? (Score 2) 81

Is it just me or is it Ironic that the UK broadband is being delayed! Perhaps the government have reached their mail-data-limit for the month and are being heavily throttled? On the other hand, it could be as simple as a lost packet!

Slashdot Top Deals

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?

Working...