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Comment Re:Distraction. (Score 2) 262

if you don't like it, get a bus/train where you can text to your hearts delight.

Among numerous other reasons, this is why we need a far more reliable public transportation system (The nearest bus stop where I live is almost 3 miles away and it only gets service once a day). If buses and trains were commonplace, law enforcement could penalize reckless/distracted driving far more harshly and the number of drivers texting while driving would quickly approach zero.

Comment Re:Mozilla Corporation - Fighting for Freedom agai (Score 1) 123

I like the US forcing its American Way on others...

Your desire to lord over me is not on an equal footing with my desire to be free.

Those two statements contradict each other, especially when "forcing its American Way on others" means an occupying force.

It is about freedom -- of associaton, of speech, of property.

Property is not a natural right.

Comment Re:We must find out for sure! (Score 1) 412

Last I checked, the time will slow down so much that you'd never hit the black hole (event horizon), that is, before the universe will end.

For an observer outside the black hole, yes. The light bouncing off of the object falling into the black hole gets redshifted more and more, and it never quite appears to fall in.

From the perspective of the thing falling in, it passes through the event horizon without the "redshifting" delay.

Comment Re:My answer (Score 1) 525

When using an internationally frequented forum don't assume people are using the US 'definition' of America or that they are obligated to do so to be polite.

When using a site that implicitly (or explicitly, it's probably in the FAQ somewhere) caters to Americans, don't assume that the convention on what to call the United States in your home country is used here. It's not about being polite, it's about being expedient so people don't have to re-read your comment multiple times.

Comment Re:Yes. (Score 1) 482

If states can pursue and kill any hacker as they please without due process, then improperly-secured servers should be grounds for aiding the enemy.

I'm not suggesting either of these should be done, but it would level the playing field. If the sysadmins and their bosses don't like that liability, they shouldn't hook up important infrastructure to the internet.

Comment Re:Manning is a Hero and a Traitor (Score 1) 348

Of-course since you are actually willing to entertain the thought of a 4 year old voting in a serious manner, I have to conclude that you are mentally retarded unfortunately or have never dealt with 4 year olds.

If you don't want me to have a serious discussion about the subjects you bring up, you don't have to tell me twice. It destroys any shred of credibility you might have in future discussions, but I suspect that's something you've gotten used to.

Comment Re:Manning is a Hero and a Traitor (Score 1) 348

let's have 4 year old voting.

Total hyperbole -- even so, I'll bite. Would it really be that bad? A 4-year-old that actually wants to vote is not someone I would underestimate, and it's possible that getting people involved in the political process sooner would make them care a little more and net us a smarter electorate in the end. It's true that kids are more vulnerable to suggestion and aggressive marketing, but that sort of drawback sticks with a significant fraction of the population into adulthood. If children were informed about their rights as voters, I don't see how it would hurt our nation.

Comment Re:Manning is a Hero and a Traitor (Score 1) 348

limiting suffrage to land owners was one of those principles, and I completely agree with it, land owners were the ones paying taxes, but today it cannot be limited just to land owners, but it must be limited at the most to the people who are paying taxes

To put it bluntly, fuck that. This would only give the wealthy elite another very powerful tool to disenfranchise less-wealthy voters.

Do I think people who don't own land should be able to vote? Yes. People who don't pay taxes? Yes. Convicted felons in prison? Yes. 16-year-olds? Yes. (In fact, I'm leaning towards not having an absolute age restriction at all.) Every citizen with a civic conscience, no matter how much I may agree or disagree with them, should be able to vote for the people that rule them.

Comment Re:Manning is a Hero and a Traitor (Score 3, Insightful) 348

Free market capitalism is as removed from reality as ideal communism, and just as unworkable in practice with large groups of people. Social Security has zero contribution to our national debt -- if anything, Congress needs to stop looting it for purposes entirely unrelated to public welfare.

As for Bradley Manning, I wish we as a nation would grow a spine and stand up against the injustice against him, the injustice against other whistleblowers, and the injustices he helped expose. We need to drag the authoritarians kicking and screaming through an equitable process to make this happen, but it's something we would all be better off doing.

Comment Re:Manning is a Hero and a Traitor (Score 1) 348

USA government kills civilian children on daily basis with bombs, that's part of the information released by Manning. I don't give a shit what the literal legality is of what he did, he is not a traitor

USA government, every single fucker in it that knew and authorised that knows and authorises murder of people on daily basis should be rotting in jail, Manning is a normal person that became part of a completely corrupt, oppressive, ridiculously blood thirsty system and he did not stand for it.

Thank you, roman_mir, for telling it like it is. I often rage at your comments, but it's good to see that we agree on some important things.

Comment Re:People want better ads. (Score 1) 978

web sites are private space, thus the rules are different for them.

The servers the sites are hosted on are typically private, but the information they send out over public infrastructure (the internet) is public speech. The client is not forced to listen to and process all that data, luckily, because some of it can be malicious. Likewise, the client doesn't have to request the loading of an ad just because the source code of the page recommends it.

Both the server and the client are private properties, and shouldn't need to care about what should or should not be done in a public space when creating/rendering the page.

The freedom of the client to choose what it wants to process supersedes the content provider's desire to render the page a certain way. Flipping that on its head would only be disastrous for internet users.

Comment Re:Oh, the surprise. (Score 5, Insightful) 800

American citizenship has no bearing if you are actively engaged in planning WAR against the USA.

Actually, yes, it does. Sorry to burst your authoritarian bubble there, but U.S. citizenship and due process are not things the U.S. government can remove without consent. If you hear otherwise, the U.S. government was doing something outrageously illegal.

The War on Terror is deliberately blurry to the point that any organization suspected of subversion can be considered an enemy. Even if they aren't citizens, does that make it just? You live in a fantasy world where the U.S. government can do no wrong.

Comment Re:I can predict the future (Score 1) 165

Are Internet-users in the UK actually limited to one ISP per area?

I'm not sure, but if the UK is anything like the US, I wouldn't be surprised if customers had no choice in the end.

How do ISPs profit from scarcity of addresses? I assume that you're referring to the practice of reserving static IP addresses for a premium, but they already did that pre-scarcity.

You answered your own question. Carrier-grade NAT would allow ISPs to charge a premium for a residential IP (and an even bigger premium for a static IP).

Now that addresses are exhausted wouldn't it simply mean that they have fewer IPs available to sell to new customers, while existing customers who already lease static IPs will cling to the ones they already have?

The whole point of IPv6 is to do away with the scarcity of end-to-end static IPs. From a business perspective, IPv6 would destroy the investment these existing customers have made.

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