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Comment Re:Cyberocracy (Score 1) 31

Reminds me of this silly comedy superhero cartoon for 10-year-olds that I happened to get a glimpse of at some restaurant (so I don't know the name of the show or its characters).

The evil granny-like old lady stole all the merchandise in the store by walking up to the security guard at the door and saying, "Oh, and I have this coupon for : I get everything in the store for free." (shows coupon)
Guard: "Oh, okay."

Comment My BLU hasn't patched KRACK yet (Score 1) 81

I've had a Blu Vivo 6 for a fraction over a year now (bought on Black Friday 2016 - its actual release day here in the UK) and there's not been a *single* update for it (not even a minor one).

I'm still waiting for BLU to patch the KRACK vulnerability on my phone.

I got a BLU Advance phone for $75 on Amazon. Nice phone, dual SIM, 5.5", 64GB SD card expansion, Android Marshmallow. This just this past summer (just before Amazon took them off the market for leaking data to China).

For the longest time, it bugged me to update the OS, but I thought: "It works. Why update and risk installing crapware?"

Then KRACK happened. And my BLU phone was still asking to be updated.

I saw that the date of the update predated the discovery of KRACK, so I knew that if I updated, it would not protect from KRACK. However, no other update was available, and eventually I figured that perhaps my failing to install a previous update was preventing a newer update from happening.

So, reluctantly, I updated. Immediate regret. First, after updating, there was no other update available. I didn't get to shield my phone from KRACK, and I'm still waiting for an available update.

Second, it installed this new BLU app that kept telling me to register, and also showed me some "great deals!" on services and things I can pay for. Umm, no thanks.

Third, it messed up my keyboard. The BLU phone originally came with this decent swipe keyboard, not just the standard one that came with Google. That disappeared, and it took a whole week for me to figure out that I wanted to install the TouchPal keyboard app, and another week of hesitation while I read reviews about the keyboard app showing intrusive advertisements, and finally I figured out that I could install the "TouchPal For HTC" app that would work equally well but not have the ads. Apparently it still wasn't the same version as previously, as there were a few glitches (e.g. holding down the N key defaults to the letter with a foreign diacritical, not the question mark which is far more commonly used).

So, for my troubles of agreeing to upgrade, I got: no KRACK protection, ads, and a decline in keyboard function.

No thanks, BLU. Can anyone tell me if CyanogenMod or whatever jailbreak is compatible with the BLU phones?

Comment Yes, PS Form 1500 can stop junk mail (Score 2) 154

I've tried talking to the post office and mail carrier. They insist that they are being paid to deliver junk mail and that no action on my part can make them stop delivering it.

That's not true: there's a way to stop them, if you want to take the trouble to implement it. You might have to google around for it, but I'll provide a link to get you started.

So, basically, your post office has a form that you can fill for blocking "erotically arousing or sexually provocative" junk mail: PS Form 1500.

You must be thinking, "Well, that's all well and good, but I'm talking about ads from the local grocery store, not sexually provocative stuff." This is where Rowan vs USPS comes in. You see, the only person who can decide what you find sexually provocative is YOU. So, you can say, "I find the logo of my local grocery store, and these pictures of low-priced vegetables, to be EROTICALLY AROUSING OR SEXUALLY PROVOCATIVE," and no one can say otherwise. The US Postal Service must stop delivering it. This was upheld by the Supreme Court.

So, go for it. Stop the junk mail.

Comment Fru and Kung-Fu For Kinect are Kinect-worthy (Score 1) 61

We got a Kinect so that our kids could move around a bit without having to exit the home in the dark winter evenings. Other than the bundled "Kinect Sports Rivals" and "Dance Central Spotlight", we also found Kung-Fu for Kinect and Fru enjoyable. In particular, Fru is a rather cool game where your body silhouette becomes part of the gamescape and you have to manipulate it to ascend levels.

Comment can't ignore Big Brother trend; here's what to do: (Score 2) 144

Because it is so convenient to have Alexa-type or "Ok, Google"-type technology, more and more people will adopt it. So, we Slashdotters who are aware of the technological and techno-political implications of the loss of privacy are fighting a losing battle, if we merely ignore this or decide that we won't buy an Amazon Echo or turn off the microphone permissions on our smartphone. Not only do we miss out on rather amazing technology (which, granted, is not that great a sacrifice), but we can't avoid being at least indirectly affected by our society as a whole which is embracing the whole Please-Spy-On-Me trend. It's not practical to refuse to go to your sister-in-law's family dinner just because they have Amazon Echo turned on inside the home.

So, we the technologically literate/elite need to take an active role in shaping the way technology interacts with society. It's going to be hard doing the "society" part, so we should work on the "technology" part.

We are okay with technology that's under our control. When we realized that signing up for email meant some central email server was going to handle a huge chunk of our private communication, we didn't shy away from email; we overlaid PGP on top of it. Wen we saw that syncing our personal devices via iCloud meant giving our data to a big corporation, we ran our own private OwnCloud server instead.

So what we need to do is to replicate, not just the Amazon Echo little microphone thingy, but the server that's behind it doing all these things. We need a FOSS replacement for a speech recognition server. That way, we can still retain the capability of voice command, without giving up our privacy to do so.

I'm not sure that speech recognition ("SpRec" --my own monosyllabic abbreviation) in the FOSS world is all that advanced; after all, sprec makes a lot of money, and I don't think corporations are ready to part with their proprietary research. Fortunately, a quick Google search shows that there is hope: some FOSS sprec programs are out there, though still in their infancy (Simon, Kaldi, CMU Sphinx, HTK sprec).

I would call on all the technorati out there to recognize sprec as one of the areas where we need to develop. Where there is a lot of corporate ingress into a big developing market, FOSS needs to be there as well to counterbalance corporate interests. Witness what happened with the popularization of GNU/Linux, Firefox, etc.

Thanks for your attention. Please spread the word.

Comment who cares about parts of speech? (Score 1) 156

Solve is not a noun.

<sarcasm effect="gagging">
Don't you know? If you actually take into account parts of speech in your grammar, you are not cool and techy! I can receive an "invite" to a "consult", but if I fail to show up I can have another "go".

Clearly your "know" is bad and your "learn" is insufficient. Next time, first find out more about "speak"!
</sarcasm>

Comment You can tell browser not to follow redirection (Score 1) 44

For those people who need to click on the link, for whatever reason (e.g. it's on an email from a potential employer), there's still a way to know where it leads, right? You can tell Firefox (or whatever browsers) not to follow "redirect" instructions until it asks you. Or am I missing something here?

Comment 1 of 5 Proper Media employees gave David control (Score 4, Insightful) 401

That link, is a complaint from Proper Media to the courts, saying that:

- at first, Snopes.com was owned by David and Barbara Mikkelson
- the two divorced, and Barbara held on to her 50% of the company
- then she effectively sold her 50% to Proper Media, a company
- but technically she couldn't do that, because Snopes.com had to be owned only by people, not by companies
- so, she sold it to 5 people who owned/ran/were Proper Media company. These 5 people pinky-promised that it would be just like Proper Media itself held the shares.
- so then, it was 50% David Mikkelson, 50% Proper Media
- but then one of the Proper Media people by the name of Green conspired with / got seduced by David Mikkelson, and went over to the dark side! (cue dramatic music)
- now, with David's 50% plus a little bit more from Green who quit Proper Media and is now in David's employ, David controls more than 50%!
- that's not fair!! Green *promised* that he was holding the shares for Proper Media!

Personally, I'm not sure that Proper Media has a case. If there was a legal requirement that shares couldn't be sold to a company, only people, then there was a reason for this, exactly so that individuals could make decisions and not have to act like a coordinated legal entity. If Proper Media says that Green "should have" done such and such ... well, that's going to be hard to argue. So, legally, I think David Mikkelson has better standing.

Comment Canada != US : no engineering competency exam (Score 1) 369

APEO (now called PEO) has not required, until recently, any exmaination on technical ability. They figured that, if you got the engineering degree, then you are technically competent. The professional licensing exams are all about Law and Ethics in engineering.

When I called to ask in detail, they even said specifically: once you are a Professional Engineer, you are always qualified to be a professional engineer even if you haven't taken any exams since first doing the licensing exam (even if it was decades ago).

So, is it forever? Once you get a Professional Engineer's license from Ontario, isn't there anything that you need to do to maintain the license? The answer is: yes.

You have to pay your fees; otherwise you lose the license.

Shows you where their values lie. More recently, they are implementing a "competency upkeep" type system, which makes much more sense and should have been done in the first place.

So, no, not quite the same as a US engineering license.

Comment Tutorial to patch Win7 without adding telemetry? (Score 2) 123

I'd like to draw on the collective wisdom of my fellow Slashdotters:

If I am one of those people who turned off Win7 updates to avoid being forcibly upgraded to Win10, can anyone recommend a good website that will guide me through updating Win7 to patch the WannaCry flaw, without adding the telemetry or other unwanted pieces of the upgrade?

I am more familiar with Linux but am forced to use Windows at work, but I insist on avoiding Windows n where n>7.

Comment Knowledge of capabilities is "sabotage"? Really?? (Score 1) 100

Yes, that's entirely possible. And yet, the technology has plenty of legitimate uses and should not have been sabotaged.

Knowledge of the capabilities of a large-scale deployment technology that affects such a large proportion of the populace can hardly be construed as sabotage, especially when there is such potential for abuse.

As an analogy, it would be one thing to leak the specific movements of a police investigative team. ("Psst! There's a bunch of cop cars headed toward your warehouse where you keep the stolen cars.") But it would be perfectly legitimate to give the capabilities of the police. ("Psst! There are over 100 police officers in this city who are going to keep an eye out for stolen cars.")

Comment Slashdot "plain text" is just HTML with linebreaks (Score 1) 50

The "Plain Old Text" setting for Slashdot simply inserts <br> tags where your lines end, so that you can use line breaks for formatting. I've always used plain text, and happily take advantage of the ability to insert <blockquote> and other tags manually. Yes, I actually have to type the four characters "&lt;" instead of a less-than sign.

And I always preview. That will save you a lot of grief.

Hope that helps!

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