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The Courts

Undersized Grouper Case Lands In Supreme Court 251

An anonymous reader writes The Supremes have decided to hear a case regarding whether groupers are 'tangible articles' under the Sarbanes-Oxley law. The issue is that the crew of the Miss Katie was caught with undersized fish. A marine fisheries officer wrote them a ticket and put the fish in a box that the captain was ordered to turn in when he got ashore. Rather than do this, they threw out the undersized fish and replaced them with bigger ones. Prosecutors, rather than charging them with offenses of catching undersized fish (which would have resulted in a fine and a small jail sentence), went after them under the Sarbanes-Oxley law which forbids the destruction of "any record, document, or tangible object" and which could result in a 20 year prison sentence, though the prosecutor only asked for two years on this one. Lawyers are arguing over whether "tangible object" here is something that could contain records, or whether it's any object whatsoever that might be evidence. So far in comments, many of the conservative justices, including Roberts, Alito and Scalia, have expressed skepticism as to whether this would lead to overcriminalization for petty crimes and would give prosecutors undue leverage given all the things Sarbanes-Oxley can apply to. They also question whether this was intended in the law, given that "tangible object" was listed in a context including documents and records and appears to have been only contemplated in terms of servers, DVDs, or other tangible objects that might contain documents or records. Meanwhile, Kagan and Kennedy appear amenable to a more literal reading of the statute, given that groupers are in fact touchable and that makes them "tangible objects" under the ordinary meaning of those words.

Comment I have a different hypothesis (Score 1) 273

Too many kids quit science because of the way in which it's taught. High-school science classes quickly leave the practical realm for the hidden/theoretical realm, for want of a better word. This hidden realm contains the deeper concepts but the average high-school student doesn't have the resources to play around with the knowledge e.g. electron microscopes, spectrometers, or particle colliders. Kids are being required to regurgitate equations on command or memorize biological taxonomies. That's major boring sh*t. I venture to say that more kids want to be involved in a FIRST competition or a Mythbusters-style of learning. Kids want to blow stuff up. They want to push buttons and see the effects. They want to build things. Don't believe me? I can recall the experience of visiting the Ontario Science Centre back in the mid 1970s. You could play around with pretty much EVERYTHING. The place was always packed with people.

Comment Re:Crock o' beans (Score 1) 739

Yes, there is a mountain of paper work and there's nothing new about that. What's different now is that there is a legion of bureaucrats with no medical training whose purpose in life is to be the person the doctor has to get permission from to order a test or treatment, second-guess said doctor's requests, and deny said requests wherever possible. These people are now entrenched in the industry and the doctors will go before they do.

But what you're talking about wouldn't be fixed by a government-run healthcare system which we already have in the U.S. aka Medicare. There are now a lot of doctors who will no longer take Medicare patients not just because of the paperwork involved but because of the simple fact that they may not get reimbursed for months after treating the patient and sometimes not at all leaving the doctor holding the bag.

Couple this with a trial bar who has never once had its wings clipped with tort reform. Docs for the past couple of decades have been forced to practice C.Y.A. medicine and order every test just to be sure that some ambulance chaser lawyer has fewer avenues on which to sue. I'd be very interested to know how much malpractice insurance rates are in Canada.

Comment Crock o' beans (Score 1) 739

Facts: My insurance premiums went up 21% this year and18% last year. Pretty much the week that the SCOTUS decided that this was a tax (or was it a fine), my premiums went up 20%. My health is great and I'm not in any of the high-risk groups nor have I been since I started paying for my own insurance many years ago. I see ZERO benefit from this. None.

To those who thing the docs are making money off of this, think again. Most small practices are selling out to gigantic hospital corporate entities which means they are now all on salary dictated by some useless functionary who isn't a doctor. The docs have to use a thing called the ICD (International classification of diseases). In version 9 of this list, there were roughly 13,000 codes. Now in version 10, there are 68,000. So what? Well, if you inadvertently use the wrong code, you are assumed to be guilty of fraud. And who gets the blame? Not the useless functionaries, oh no. The doc is left holding this bag of excrement. This is one big reason why small practices sold out. The back office costs kill the practice.

But then consider this: my bro-in-law is a physician and head of the department. I asked him how many people work for the hospital. He said, "5000." So I asked him how many of those are actual doctors or nurses. He said, "Fewer than 1000 and of the rest I have no idea what these people do even being head of my department."

So, who is benefiting from Obamacare? The bureaucrats and paper pushers aka Ship B people.

Space

Rosetta Probe Reveals What a Comet Smells Like 53

An anonymous reader writes If you like the smell of rotten eggs, horse urine, formaldehyde, bitter almonds, alcohol, vinegar with a hint of sweet ether, you'd love the smell of a comet. Researchers at the University of Bern, in Switzerland, determined the odor of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet by analyzing the chemicals in its coma, the fuzzy head surrounding the nucleus. The molecules were collected by an instrument aboard the Rosetta spacecraft, which has been flying in tandem with the comet.

Comment Re:I'd rather have longer range (Score 1) 92

Needing lots of access points is bad engineering. Take, for example, the Sands Convention Center in Las Vegas. When they wanted to have coverage throughout the building, one vendor quoted 1500 access points. Fifteen hundred. That's godawful. Think of the power requirements alone. But that's for a permanent installation. Let's say you wanted to set up a temporary, secure, wireless network in a few minutes for something like an active shooter scenario in a school so that SWAT teams could use it to transmit body-worn camera video back to incident command. You don't have the luxury of time to plan optimum placement or the ability to set up dozens of hotspots. This is where building penetration is essential.

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