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Comment Re:YOUR BROWSER is supplying this information... (Score 4, Insightful) 100

Your browser supplies HTML5 Geolocation. But it sounds like the submitter is having problems with GeoIP detection. That's a server-side issue and relies on subscription databases for identifying where physically on the globe an IP might map to. It's also horribly inaccurate as the submitter has found.

Comment IP Detection is different from HTML5 (Score 1) 100

Short Answer:
Signup for a VPN or Proxy service with an exit point in the region you want.

Longer Answer:
IP-based geography detection (GeoIP for short) depends on the databases and services that various providers are leveraging. It's inherently inaccurate. Good luck getting these fixed as there are a bunch of different services (including the W3C) that you would need to get updated. Are you sure your routing exit point isn't actually in Ireland? My company's IP address maps to an exit point in San Francisco, even though I'm located in Los Angeles.

HTML5 location detection is pretty accurate, insofar as it relies on your browser to tell the site/service where you are. You should be able to force that setting in your browser.

Comment Re:Simple fix (Score 1) 158

You spend money on food regardless if you have any income. Ergo, food expenses are not direct costs associated with your income.

If you have to wear a uniform to your job, and pay for it yourself, then it is certainly tax deductible. Just like travel, meals, etc.

Rule of thumb - if you could do without it when unemployed, but it's required for your *particular* employment, then it's a direct expense that you can probably deduct.

Comment Re:Here's why (Score 1) 468

The problem is that most voters simply don't know what to care about. Voters worry about irrelevant issues like abortion, gay marriage, inequality, and racism, while not worrying enough about the stuff that matters, like banking regulation, tax policy, nepotism, and crony capitalism.

That's not true, and it's a tired trope I keep hearing over and over. Voters do care, but they care about different things. Some people care more about sociological issues, whereas others care more about socioeconomic issues.

Comment Re:Meet somewhere in the middle (Score 1) 179

Their month-to-moth offer is still Unlimited, and says so in the language. And I have the opportunity to sign a new contract, and lock in the same service (for example, to subsidize a phone).

They are trying to use contract language to redefine Unlimited to mean something other than Unlimited, but still call it Unlimited to avoid.

With current LTE speeds, it is possible to hit the "soft" threshold for a monthly data use in less than 90 seconds.

If they want everyone off the plan, they could change the terms and call it "Throttled" and not be lying. But they want to have their cake and eat it too. They know that if they truly ended the plans, customers would take the opportunity to walk to another carrier.

Comment Re:Meet somewhere in the middle (Score 2) 179

I have Grandfathered Unlimited with AT&T. They're screwing us.

Unlimited used to mean Unlimited. Now "Unlimited" means if you use more data than our basic tiered plan, we are going to arbitrarily throttle your speeds to those available when you first bought into the plan (Edge, vs LTE).

It is very clearly a reduction of service for "Unlimited" users to encourage them to drop the plan for the tiered pricing, which has no speed restrictions. Verizon just got slapped around by the FCC for doing this. AT&T is due.

Back in dial-up days, companies tried the same kind of crap and got punished for it. Eventually ISPs shifted to truly unlimited plans. Later, rinse, and repeat.

Comment Re:This is insane. (Score 1) 324

If every employee suddenly were running up internet costs, you can bet your ass companies will start blocking internet access unless you go through the hassle of proving you need it.

Say goodbye to free wifi at coffee shops.

Your phone would be affected as well, so there goes more skyrocketing costs.

No-one will download security updates if they now have to pay for the transmission.

The result of this would be the internet in the affected country reverting to user behaviors, features, and services from 10 years ago as it would introduce a sever stifling effect on data usage. Your described pattern would be what most people would do, and the internet as we've grown to know it would die.

Comment Re:Compelling, but a mix still better... (Score 2) 399

This was a big plot point in a scifi novel I read years ago. A group of people willingly underwent amputation to reduce the mass of legs, allowing them to add more people to their launch crew.

If I remember correctly, there is a staged automobile accident, causing the main character to lose his legs (not knowing it was intentional) resolving the problem of being separated from the love interest who would be on the shuttle.

This is really going to bother me until I can remember what novel it was.

Comment Re: Missing option (Score 1) 219

The only objective meaning of life is to procreate and continue one's own genetic legacy.

Consciously being able to control and plan for this beyond an individual's lifespan is an incredible achievement for the evolutionary process. Having that capability, and not exercising it, is effectively suicide.

By observing any celestial body in our solar system, we can virtually guarantee that Earth will experience a humanity-ending event. Not taking action to continue our species past such an event, when we have the capability to do so, is effectively suicide.

Comment Re: Missing option (Score 3, Insightful) 219

No, escaping the Earth is not an option for the human race to survive. Massive immigration to other planets and stellar systems is not and will never be feasible.

Survival of the human race is not the same thing as mass emigration.

If a large comet hit the Earth tomorrow, humanity as a species would be gone. If we have self-sustainable colonies on other planets, the species would survive, even though the vast majority is wiped out. No one is proposing that we can save all of humanity in event of a catastrophe. That clearly is impossible. However we certainly should take steps to ensure the survival of our species. If we don't, then what's the point of evolving to have the capabilities and self-awareness to do so?

Comment Re:I disagree (Score 1) 549

I understand the difference between authentication and authorization. Onsite signup provides both authentication and authorization in a single process. 3rd party signup (OpenID) can *only* provide authentication, it can never provide authorization. An additional step is required tIn this regards it's no different from shared public keys.

OpenID is more complicated for the end user to manage, AND it puts additional technical burden on them to understand. How am I (the average user, not the site admin) supposed to know my OpenID is compromised? How do I fix it? How do I know the server that provides my OpenID is compromised? Keeping track of a password phrase is fundamentally a much simpler problem for the end user. Where do you want to place more burden of responsibility? Site operators, or end users?

You're saying that you don't want Google to trust authentication from anywhere else because you want to trust that any authentication coming from Google is equivalent to valid authorization, which helps you prevent spambots from signing up for your service

No, I'm saying as a site owner, I don't want to trust authorization from just anywhere, because logged-in users are core to my service model. To make things easier on my users, I allow signups with common third party ID services, because I understand their authorization mechanisms. But now I've sacrificed my control over my users.

Fully peer-to-peer authorization (which is what OpenID provides) is effectively fully-public authorization. In which case, if it's public, why do you even need peer-to-peer authentication?

Again, we're saying the same thing about the fundamentals of the mechanism and problems. But we differ in our beliefs on the motivations. You say the failure of OpenID is malicious intent on the part of the big corporate players to create locked-in ecosystems. I say that's a side effect and the failure stems from the inherent need of a site owner (big or small) to effectively manage their userbase with minimal burden on the users.

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