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Comment Re:Great news! (Score 0) 343

No, I actually don't. I think exposing an all-seeing police state has great implications for the rights of that state's citizens, but has very little bearing on life vs. death. Snowden's revelations haven't actually saved anyone's lives, or stopped a war, or otherwise prevented violence. I think there are better candidates.

Comment Re:Great news! (Score 4, Insightful) 343

I'm all for Snowden getting the prize. To bad it has been cheapened with some of the past awards.

I'm not. I think giving it to Snowden would serve only as a repudiation of Obama's prize, and not as an actual reward for promoting peace. It would only cheapen the award further.

It's the Nobel Peace Prize, not the Nobel Privacy Prize or the Nobel Stand-Up-To-Authority Prize. What Snowden did was good and needed and courageous, but it wasn't related to Peace or to saving lives. In fact, it's actually inflamed diplomatic tensions. How about giving it to that doctor in Africa who didn't get it in 2013, or the megatons-to-megawatts guy suggested above?

Comment Re:the moral of the story (Score 4, Insightful) 448

How in the world is that the conclusion you came to? Hiroshima's Twitter handle, in this case, was simply the thing-of-value stolen by the extortionist. The story would have unfolded exactly the same way for a 2-digit Slashdot UID, or a valuable physical object, or just plain old cash. This story is about the method of extortion, not about the target.

If a friend says "I got mugged," do you reply "well, you shouldn't have been carrying a wallet"?

Comment Re:Keep the number of requests below 1000 (Score 1) 117

From TFS:

how many National Security Letters they received, how many accounts were affected by NSLs, how many Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act orders were received (both for communications content and 'non-content'), and how many customers were targeted by FISA requests.

You'll notice that they covered that contingency, actually. They can report not only the number of letters, but the number of people affected by letters.

Comment Re:Not scarce, no rare (Score 4, Informative) 96

In 2012, the USGS estimated 71 billion tons of world reserves, where reserve figures refer to the amount assumed recoverable at current market prices; 0.19 billion tons were mined in 2011.[23] Recent reports suggest that production of phosphorus may have peaked, leading to the possibility of global shortages by 2040.[24] In 2007, at the rate of consumption, the supply of phosphorus was estimated to run out in 345 years.[25] However, some scientists now believe that a "peak phosphorus" will occur in 30 years and that "At current rates, reserves will be depleted in the next 50 to 100 years."[26] Phosphorus comprises about 0.1% by mass of the average rock, and consequently the Earth's supply is vast, although dilute

From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorus#Occurrence.

"Peak phosphorus" sounds like "peak oil", but there does appear to be a number of people afraid of future scarcity. However, the ability to cheaply precipitate phosphorus out of sewage waste (and hopefully, with a few tweaks, out of agricultural runoff also), could significantly reduce dead zones, especially the Gulf of Mexico dead zone. That seems reason enough to pursue this.

Submission + - Congressmen Call For Clapper's Head (washingtonpost.com) 1

Antipater writes: Six members of Congress, led by Darrell Issa, have released an open letter to the White House that urges the President to go further in his intended reforms of the NSA. The letter, found here, calls out issues like the NSA's weakening of encryption standards and national security letter abuse. It also calls for the immediate firing of James Clapper, stating that "[his] continued role as Director of National Intelligence is incompatible with the goal of restoring trust in our security programs and ensuring the highest level of transparency."

Comment Re:I like the open plan (Score 4, Interesting) 314

I like my company's open plan, too. Working in cubeville felt like I was in a pen - there was a subtle "what are you doing outside your cube? Your work isn't done yet!" vibe going on. It was dehumanizing.

At my current job, we have L-shaped desks arranged into plus-signs, with all the monitors at the center. So if you want human contact, all you have to do is lean back to talk to the guy next to you. If you don't want human contact, just don't talk to the guy next to you.

Now, I can definitely see how it can go bad. We keep peace and quiet because everyone in the room is also an engineer, and nobody wants to be Loud Howard. We keep our sales guys and people-on-the-phone-all-day in a different place. If those didn't happen, or if our "open office" was really just us being stuffed into a tiny space for budget reasons, then I would have a problem with it. But overall my experience has been very positive.

Comment Re:a pittance in ayn rands america. (Score 1, Interesting) 111

More than one worker drowned in concrete during the construction of the Hoover Dam, and there are bodies entombed in the blockwork.

Many workers died constructing the dam, yes. But none of them drowned in the concrete pours (they may have drowned in the mixing buckets; I don't know about that), and nobody is entombed in the blockwork. A human body is much weaker than concrete - a body in the mix would have compromised the structural integrity of that area. Even if someone had drowned in a pour, which would have been very difficult given that each pour only raised the concrete level by about an inch, the body would have been pulled out as an unacceptable structural risk.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoover_Dam#Concrete

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