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Comment Re:IF.. (Score 1) 561

For much of the 20th century, it was thought chess made a good proxy for intelligence. Skill at chess correlated with high intelligence. Though it was clear that lack of chess skill didn't mean a person was stupid. This correlation was believed so strongly that the AI community bought into it and tried for decades to make a computer beat highly skilled human chess players. When this effort finally succeeded, it only further confirmed what many had suspected for some time, which is that skill at chess can be obatined through sheer brute force calculation. It doesn't require intelligence, whatever that is exactly, though that helps. We need better measures and definitions. And, yes, most IQ tests aren't it.

Comment Re:Corporate Brianwashed Fools (Score 1) 710

Be a team player

That is among the most hypocritical phrases commonly used in the workplace today, ranking up there with "show your commitment". Most of the time it's management trying to whitewash that they've just demanded something unfair or illegal of a worker, and threatened their job over it. You should buy a new car, show your commitment (and, uh, set yourself up so that if you lose yoru job you can't pay your car note and will lose it too). Of course they can't say that, so they turn to hinting. And a few times, they honestly mean be a team player, in a good way. They have to mean it sometimes, or the phrase wouldn't work as well. Be a team player, yeah!

Joe Slacker

That's another huge problem. This mentality that people are naturally lazy and have to be forced to work is wrong, but so few people believe that anymore. They accept a whipping for being a slacker as for their own good. I wonder if we'll have to fight the US Civil War over again someday, stop the new slavery.

Comment when is our govt going to do this?! (Score 1) 69

Buildings and lots all have addresses, assigned by the US Post Office if necessary. Highways and streets all have numbers or names or both.

We all ought to have our own addresses on the Internet. No one thinks anything of having an IP address, and everyone who knows anything about the Internet realizes an address is necessary. Why aren't names accorded the same importance and privilege? We need stable addresses, and with dynamic IP, we don't have that. I don't like such vital connectivity being in the hands of a private company no matter how good they are.

Comment Comcast is Worst Company in America (Score 1) 118

WCIA 2 time champ, too. We all understand the mergers are about extending monopolies and gaining power, the better to gouge consumers.

And what will be done about it? Nothing, as usual. Our national government will even help the poor things gouge us harder. Give them lots of infrastructure, redefine broadband to include even slower speeds, and keep squashing competition from local governments because it's unfair that they should have to compete against a government.

Oh, and Net Neutrality? Just a bargaining chip. Worth a few hundred sinecures.

Comment Re:pure security theater (Score 1) 875

I've heard snakes are the reason people see short grass as beautiful. There isn't anything intrinsically prettier about shortness. Lakes create far more snake habitat than tall grass, but somehow it's okay to have lots of man made lakes, to insure a stable water supply. Then there's the Smokey Bear angle-- short grass doesn't provide as much fuel for fires.

"Weed" is another of those overused terms. What is a weed? If plant nurseries had their way, every native plant would be considered a weed. More profitable for them if you have to constantly buy "weed" killer and replacement plants.

Comment Re:pure security theater (Score 1) 875

Trying to stop erosion. Not much sunlight gets past the trees and the neighbors' wooden fences, and the grass was barely hanging on. Then another neighbor added another fence which had the unfortunate effect of blocking what little sunlight still got through. He moved away shortly after, but the damage his little improvement did remains. Most of the grass died. What's left grows in clumps, with large areas of bare dirt between.

I know what's going on with the yard. I don't need the city horning in with their dumb rules. Why don't they make that neighbor tear that fence down? "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!"

Comment pure security theater (Score 1) 875

Nah, this isn't about going to war against citizens. It's about allowing some idiot to use security as an excuse to buy toys. Could be some kind of kickback involved. Someone's nephew needs a job, perhaps.

Everything can be cast in terms of security. Just this week we received a reprimand for letting the grass get too high, and it invoked safety as a reason why everyone should have to mow the grass often. Here are some excerpts from the letter:

"The City ... takes great pride in the health, safety, welfare, and appearance of our community.... Every individual property owner's maintenance contributes to the overall positive appearance of their neighborhood...." The letter states that a Community Image Officer noticed that the property is in violation of the ordinance that states a person may not allow weeds or grass more than twelve (12") tall to accumulate. It concludes with this: "With your help, we can keep our community clean and safe."

We certainly can't allow grass to grow dangerously high!

Comment Re:Cartels (Score 3, Insightful) 253

If a law is so easy to casually disregard, and violating it provides a clear benefit to the violators and the harm it causes is theoretical, that's a sign the law itself is bad. Eating at Burger King should not be thought such a harm to McDonalds that it should be outlawed.

We ought to have digital public libraries by now. Such a thing is a clear benefit to society. Searchable works of art! No more archaic card catalogs. No more denying a patron because all the copies are currently checked out. No more losses from patrons being careless with the physical media and damaging it. Far less storage space needed, space which can be used to hold more works, or repurposed. No more late fees and returns. No more having to physically travel to the library, twice, spending time and most likely gas. Did you see the article some days ago about streaming saving society lots of money compared to fooling around with DVDs? We could have all of this, now, if not for copyright law.

Everyone should be willing to practice civil disobedience of bad laws. Be like Rosa Parks and don't meekly go along with racist seating arrangements. If US citizens are no longer willing to do that, maybe we ought to petition the British Monarchy to let us back in the fold, and we'll all issue a national apology to George III.

Comment Re:You can't enjoy five million dollars from a cel (Score 0) 253

Are you the kind of asshole who runs around your neighborhood and rats out all your neighbors who don't mow often enough? Maybe you ought to add listening for loud music to your activities, so you can file a noise complaint too, and try to identify the songs while you're at it so you can go running to your pals in the MAFIAA to complain that because you overheard a copyrighted song, their rights were infringed. Even better if you have to trespass to get close enough to identify the songs.

File sharing IS a legitimate activity. In many cases the user doesn't know the copyright status. Shouldn't have to know. But even if it is copyrighted by someone else, and the user knows that and does not have their permission, so what? Last I heard, you can still trade books among your friends, and check out works from the public library. If this activity is illegal, that is reason to change the law, not blow the public's money on futile and damaging policing efforts. Copyright law is against the public interest, and needs drastic reform or abolishment.

Not having to do or help with policing is a basic right. The 4th Amendment has a bit to say on the subject of searches. The police can't just search your home, they have to have probable cause and a warrant. Equally, you shouldn't have to search your own home. The 3rd Amendment might even be applicable. You can't be forced to house a soldier in your home. Seems like you shouldn't have to allow a digital cop program on your servers either. A business based on file storage should not have to bear the burden of checking the copyright status of all the files stored on its servers. Cloud vendors don't have to do that, why should Megaupload?

Comment Re:If people would fight their tickets... (Score 4, Interesting) 286

You have to fight more creatively than that. As others have noted, many authorities cynically use situations like this to "generate" revenue. They've set the system up to make it difficult to fight and change. Going through whatever process they set up is not likely to have any effect.

I tried their system on a red light camera ticket. Had my evidence that their yellow was too short and requested a hearing. The hearing was a total kangaroo trial. My evidence was ignored. It was picture number one showing that the light was red before the car crossed the painted line, and picture number two showing the red light and the car in the intersection. Verdict: guilty. End of discussion. That the light in picture number one would have been yellow if it had been set to the correct time was not considered. The judge advised me that I could go on to municipal court and raise that question there, where it would be considered. Well, maybe. But I was through with them. What would happen next if I went on? The muni court would rule against me and tell me I could appeal?

They've also cunningly set their shakedown price at a low enough level that it's not worth fighting. The ticket was "only" $75. I fought anyway, but lost of course. Also, to dodge around the requirement that the accused gets to confront the accuser, they made this an offense against a city ordinance, not a traffic violation. So you don't get screwed by your auto insurance company seizing on this as an excuse to consider you a more dangerous driver, and raising your rates. This dodges around another problem, which is that they have nothing to show who was actually driving the car. They simply fine the owner, never mind who was driving.

There's a flip side to this weaseling out of those legal requirements. The simplest way to fight is to refuse to pay. Their power to compel payment is much more limited. They can't put a black mark on your record and have the state stop you from renewing your driver's license or car license, because it's not a traffic violation.

So, what to do? I can't vote against the politicians who set this all up, as I don't live in that city. I can however boycott businesses in that city, and I do. It's not just pure revenge, it's also prudence. I don't risk any more tickets if I never drive there.

In a similar vein, I fight against the MAFIAA creatively. One can pirate, of course, and millions do. But what I did was dig into the backgrounds of the people they use in their battles to terrorize ordinary citizens. Specifically, their expert witnesses. In one case, the witness was affiliated with a university, and was using their name. I inquired of that university's provost whether they approved of this activity by their employee. Turned out, they didn't even know about it. And when they found out thanks to me telling them about it, they definitely didn't like it. Haven't heard a peep out of that expert witness since.

Comment Re:What this means (Score 1) 191

How can you tell if they "ripped off" the technology, or they thought of the idea on their own because it really isn't that hard and shouldn't have been awarded a patent? If they can rip off the technology that easily, then maybe it was too obvious to deserve a patent? Your first mover advantage isn't any help because the idea is too easy to utilize? It doesn't take years of preparation and training? Then it shouldn't have been patented.

But that's all beside the point. We shouldn't grant monopolies on ideas at all. It results in these ridiculous and expensive fights that does no one (except lawyers) any good. We should have a much more permissive system, not the punitive, restricitve, wrong headed system we have now. The system should recognize that ideas aren't as special and unique as some people like to imagine, stop encouraging people to cling to ideas like they're gold, stop making the stakes so high and pushing them to fight each other to determine who wins it all. This is science and progress, not championship boxing, and not racketeering.

Comment Re: His 'role in the site' (Score 1) 221

Piracy is a more important issue than most people realize. This isn't about just an obsolete business model of financing art via sales of copies, this is nothing less than the biggest thing that sets us apart from all other animals. We can talk to each other like no other animals can. Thousands of years ago, we figured out how to write. We used to have only drawings, paintings, and sculptures to communicate visual information, and nothing but memory for audio, now we have cameras, recorders, and more. But talking and writing and all these other methods are useless if we can't use it to communicate and share ideas and information with each other. Communication is absolutely necessary for civilization to exist. These slimy media owners want nothing less than to impose and collect a tax upon all communication.

He most certainly is a political prisoner.

Comment Re:Actually Faster than light travel does occur (Score 1) 202

I agreee, and don't see Relativity as reason why FTL travel cannot happen. The idea that FTL violates causality is based on an extrapolation of Relativity.

Suppose you are holding a flashlight. You accelerate. No matter how fast you go, the light from your flashlight still seems to you to move away from yourself at light speed. You can be going nearly lightspeed, let's say 1000 kph slower than light, relative to other observers, and they will see the light from your flashlight moving only a little faster than you, and certainly not away from you at lightspeed. To them, it will appear to be moving at lightspeed relative to them, and you will appear to be moving at slightly less than lightspeed. Yet even as the observer sees the light from your flashlight moving away from you only 1000 kph faster than you, you see the light from your flashlight moving away from yourself at lightspeed. This inconsistency is resolved by time. You experience time more slowly than the observer. Your experience of time is slowed so that both you and the observer see the light from your flashlight moving at lightspeed.

The extrapolation is that to go faster than light, an object would have to experience time going backwards so that light still appears to move away at light speed. Experiencing time going backwards violates causality, causing all kinds of time travel paradoxes.

Why shouldn't it be possible to travel faster than light and not violate causality, not have to travel backwards in time? An object could go faster than light and still not arrive before it left. Maybe FTL can't be done with rocket motors, even hypothetical super rockets that don't have fuel problems, but warp drive could do it. Seems to me more likely that Relativity is not a complete explanation of the universe than that FTL travel is impossible.

Comment Re:Criminal scum (Score 1) 226

I have no doubt that torrentz.eu would be seen as infringing copyright material.

I'm not so sure. Torrent sites merely link to material that may or may not be mostly copyrighted; they do not host it themselves.

If it were to go to court, based on the law as is written

Possibly even here, they would be declared innocent. But the law may have clauses that declare activities like merely linking, or not responding to takedown requests in a timely fashion, are infringing, and they'd be found guilty. Or the legal system may feel pressured to find them guilty even if the law doesn't have any such clauses. Hard to guess how a court case would turn out.

As to views on copyright, I too have at least one complication I haven't worked out, which is that copyleft depends on copyright. I would like to see copyright abolished. Patents too. But I like copyleft, and would like some means of keeping that viable. I think the intent of copyleft can be preserved through other means, and we can repeal copyright law. Then we could at last have our digital public library. As to how artists would make a living without copyright, I think there are sufficient other ways that they could be fairly compensated, even better than they are now under our current very poor system.

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