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Comment Re:Ignoring laws (Score 1) 78

How dare those cops ignore our sacrosanct lawz??!!11

This may come as a surprise to you, but if a law the people don't want in the first place is unenforced, the people don't mind. OTOH, illegal / unconstitutional acts committed against the people by law enforcement are very much frowned upon by the populace at large.
To put it differently, if you're toking up in your back yard and I find a cop didn't bust you, I could care less. OTOH, if I find you're being illegally monitored I'm liable to take offense, as it could just as easily happen / be happening to me.
While you have a point, it looks much better on paper than in the real world.

Comment Re:There is no legitimate reason to show it. (Score 1) 645

So we have a decision: Do we want a presentation of reality, raw and un-truncated, or do we trust that the media companies are making good decisions that fairly (whatever that means) present a subset of the information that is unbiased and accurate? What news agency do you consider sufficiently comprehensive while at the same time completely without bias?

Comment Re:Same answer every time. (Score 1) 178

Any time someone asks me what "the cloud" is I tell them to substitute the words "someone else's computer on the internet". Almost without exception they look thoughtful for a moment, then suddenly my previously expressed misgivings about putting personal / sensitive data "in the cloud" make more sense to them.

Comment Re:Same answer every time. (Score 1) 178

Well, you probably don't need it all with you all the time. For instance, your work machine probably doesn't need all your music and your tablet can hopefully do without your software install files and client information. A little moderation and a home server or NAS to hold everything should do fine. Set up some remote access (VPN or SSH tunnel) for the times you don't have something with you and breathe easier knowing your data is entirely (mostly) under your own control.

Comment Re:Same answer every time. (Score 1) 178

Unless you're going to enjoy maintaining that offline system locked in a vault powered off 99% of the time.

Funny you should say that. I have an old Mac Mini with a bunch of external drives hooked up to it. Every other week it turns itself on, plays the Imperial March from Star Wars and runs a Carbon Copy Cloner incremental duplication of the files from my server. It emails me when it's done so I can turn it off, as there are multiple jobs and I can't tell which one will finish last. When it's done I turn off the mini and it sits there another two weeks. Every so often (when I think of it) I sync up to an old Drobo as well then unplug it. This means that yes, I do in fact have an offline system powered off 99% of the time. Sadly I do not have a vault but otherwise I have three copies of (almost) all my data at any given time.

Comment Re:For profit proganda. (Score 1) 645

Well...

of denouncing Muslims for their "barbarity."

You know, you're right. I meant the subset of Muslims who make up ISIS, and I misspoke. Next time I'll be sure to say some Muslims. Care to retract your sweeping generalizations about "The American Christians"? The act of burning someone to death is a barbaric act. Doesn't matter who does it. I feel pretty confident this is a rational and defensible position.

What is ISIS doing that isn't as barbaric as the things we do every day?

Well, kidnapping, torturing and enslaving / selling children for one. Putting people in cages and setting them alight for another. Let's not get started on their treatment of women.

Burning somebody alive. Big fucking deal.

I'm... speechless...

The American Christians burned thousands of people alive.

So here's your source article, no citations for the "thousands" figure anywhere. There are two examples given, Sam Hose in 1899 and Jesse Washington in 1916. Note that these are examples of past barbarities Americans committed and they're documented so we can learn from them and not repeat history. This is not happening today in America, and there is probably nobody alive now who was not an infant when it happened. Can you say the same about the Muslims that murdered Muadh al Kasasbeh?

Clearly for ISIS to burn a prisoner to death was [insert the same condemnation you use when Christians and Americans do the same thing].

History? Speaking as an Atheist in America, I don't think Christians (or any significant number of Americans) have tortured anyone to death by burning them in a cage in a very long time.

But be consistent. Whatever you say about the Muslims, you should say about the Christians who caused just as much or more painful suffering and death.

While Christians may well have caused as much painful suffering and death as Muslims, I'm not seeing them doing that now. Once again, I can't say the same thing about ISIS.
Also note that your ideas of what I should say are largely irrelevant to me at this time.
Please feel free to continue grinding that axe though!

Comment Re:There is no legitimate reason to show it. (Score 4, Insightful) 645

We all know what happened. It was adequately described. Fox New just panders to the warmongers among us and is trying to rile them up.

I would advance the argument that the function of a news agency is to report the news. Not some of the news or the news you / I approve of. This is what's really happening in the world around us, without protecting us from things we may find objectionable or viewpoints differing from our own. How can we possibly make rational decisions or hold properly informed opinions based on only some of the information about a given situation?

Comment Re:Institutionalized Prejudice (Score 1) 779

On the contrary, helping people to succeed does not necessarily mean that others do not succeed.

Assuming a finite supply of resources, helping some people succeed necessarily means that others are not helped.
It is therefore important that we choose a good way of selecting who gets the assistance. I strongly suspect that reverse discrimination (giving preference to females, low income students and minorities as explicitly stated in TFA) does not result in ideal selection criteria in this situation.
Maybe something involving academic achievement and a desire to learn the subject matter (regardless of gender, social standing or anything else unrelated to the subject matter) might be more appropriate?

Comment Re:Simple: (Score 1) 175

As someone who used to use his pocket computer for that, let me assure you they'll completely forget what they learned this week by the same time next week due to a lack of repetition. The idea is good though. Maybe they could work out a way to automate their homework and turn that in for extra credit / dual credit between their math and computers class?

Comment Re:I'm at a loss. And I RTFA (Score 1) 252

On the off chance you aren't deliberately tossing out a red herring...
You will find very few people arguing against improved devices or superior efficiency. The problem arises when your "smart" devices start collecting and distributing information about you over the worlds largest information interchange network. Do you see how that could be objectionable to some people?

Comment Re: now that cell phones are powerful computers (Score 2) 74

I'm fairly sure you were going for the "funny" tag, but just in case you were serious...
When a company assures you your information is secure, look at what recompense you will receive as a result of them being wrong. That figure is a great indicator of how confident the company is in the security of your information.

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