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Comment Re:Who prints a 60 page PDF? (Score 2) 578

My dad is 82, and he won't print out more than a page or two because he's too cheap. :)

But the guy writing the article talked about DDOS and redundancy for the servers so he probably is familiar with the ability to view a PDF (though for some reason he was surprised that he could not print b&w documents with just an HP magenta cartridge).

Comment Who prints a 60 page PDF? (Score 2) 578

The author of the linked story at Business Insider sounds quasi-tech and was a volunteer for the phone calls. He received an email late Monday night with a 60 page PDF of instructions and lists of names to call, and complained that he had to print it at home. Who prints PDF's when they can just view the document on their PC and make the calls, especially on a home inkjet printer?

It sounds like not only was the development of this tool a disaster but so was implementation at the user end point. If this tech-savvy guy tried to print at home with limited success just imagine what the "regular" Romney supporters were doing (or not doing) when they got the 60 page PDF.

Comment Re:Shouldn't apply unless these were businesses (Score 1) 458

but if it was private individuals reselling items at a market price then I don't see a real case here for prosecution

So "Bob's hardware" sells a few dozen generators to "Bob" at regular price, who then sells them as a private individual at the currently inflated market-price...

Seems a bit easy to abuse.

I don't know about "easy". Bob's Hardware would need to collect sales tax from Bob, and Bob would be limited in the payment methods he could accept (i.e. cash). If he took other payment methods (Paypal, bankcard, check) it would leave a paper trail with big numbers of the size that catch the eye of tax auditors. Even cash is tougher to hide now thanks to the anti-terrorism laws.

And of course the scenario itself is clearly not even an arms-length transaction so I believe your example would fall under the jurisdiction of the AG.

I am not actually familiar with the laws that apply in this case. I know there were news reports of people buying out the stock at Home Depot and then selling from their trucks a few miles away. They may not have been illegally price gouging, but they likely were violating laws about commercial activity on public streets, failure to collect sales tax, zoning restrictions against commercial activity in a residential zone, etc.

Comment Shouldn't apply unless these were businesses (Score 2) 458

If these were ads from storefront businesses then the AG should get involved, but if it was private individuals reselling items at a market price then I don't see a real case here for prosecution. I own a hardware store and we have been crazy busy these past two weeks trying to keep up with demand for batteries, gas cans, generators, extension cords, and other storm goods. Our prices are the same today as they were a month ago, and in fact some of our batteries are on sale and we kept them on sale. I know of a few stores that did raise their prices on generators and some other goods, seems like a poor decision as the customer will likely find out later (or already knew) and will remember that price gouge when choosing where to shop during "normal" times.

Comment Will be really surprised if they storm the place (Score 4, Interesting) 1065

The UK government has already stated that they will not let Assange leave the country, so he's stuck in that embassy anyway. There have been rumors of smuggling him to the airport in a diplomatic limo, or hiring him as a diplomat, but those are not practical and the UK could detain him once he left the embassy grounds. So why bother storming the embassy?

If by chance they do storm the embassy then it will be obvious that the US government stepped up the pressure and got impatient. Get the popcorn out, this could get interesting.

Comment Bravo Cloudflare! (Score 4, Interesting) 56

I've been using Cloudflare for my DNS hosting since the beta days and they are an outstanding group of individuals. Their free DNS hosting is top-notch, with no pressure to upgrade to the paid option. They are some of the same people behind Project Honeypot. It's good to see firms like Cloudflare stand up and be counted when free and open access to information is threatened.

Comment It's all about profit and control (Score 4, Insightful) 331

Moving to the cloud, whether Apple or Microsoft or any of the other players, has two main purposes:

- Guarantee ongoing profits through subscriptions and micro-payments to the providers for storage, use of cloud-based applications, or viewing or listening to cloud-based media.

- Control of digital media, making DRM easy to enforce since your audio and video files will all be on their servers to be scanned, audited, and confiscated.

Even with the fluctuating prices for hard drives the cost to store media locally is lower than ever, and there are plenty of options for sharing your media over the web yourself due to the low cost of high speed Internet access.

Facebook

Submission + - Major Leage Baseball Facebook pages hacked (usatoday.com)

John3 writes: "Someone apparently hacked the Facebook pages for Major League Baseball teams. Individual team pages had bogus updates posted, including an update from the Yankees that Derek Jeter was planning to have a sex change operation. The various team pages are managed by MLB and not the individual team, and it appears that the bogus postings have been removed. Deadspin has screen captures of the various postings, some quite amusing."

Comment Engineer is backtracking (Score 5, Informative) 152

There is a follow-up blog post where Zink backtracks a bit and admits the headers could be forged.

"In comments of various blogs a lot of people have suggested that these headers are spoofed, or there was a botnet connecting to Yahoo Mail from a Windows PC and sent mail that way. Yes, it’s entirely possible that bot on a compromised PC connected to Yahoo Mail, inserted the the message-ID thus overriding Yahoo’s own Message-IDs and added the “Yahoo Mail for Android” tagline at the bottom of the message all in an elaborate deception to make it look like the spam was coming from Android devices."

Comment Re:Mailman is likely the best available (Score 1) 131

I had forgotten about Yahoo Groups, so just went to explore them. And thanks for the feedback about Mailman. It sounds like it's not much of a change from Listmanager in terms of functionality. My users are really looking for the threaded web discussion interface and both Yahoo and Google seem to have that in a reasonable format.

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