Comment Re:Webkit browsers (Score 2) 299
OK, then, I shall try again.
If I follow your math correctly, then in just 27 months, over 105% of internet users (17% * (107% ^ 27)) will be using WebKit browsers!
OK, then, I shall try again.
If I follow your math correctly, then in just 27 months, over 105% of internet users (17% * (107% ^ 27)) will be using WebKit browsers!
If I follow your math correctly, then in just one year, 101% of internet users (17% + (7% * 12)) will be using WebKit browsers, leaving just -1% left to split between Mozilla-derived, Opera, and Internet Explorer!
How silly! EVERY company loses favor. Styles change, customs change, companies bet on the wrong horse or stay the course and stagnate.
EVERY company loses favor sooner or later.
Some Japanese hotels like Hoshi have literally been around for ages.
Also, check out Tower Publishing, around since 1772, and JPMorgan Chase, with us since 1799.
Take a quick peek at Wikipedia sometime. Though I can't prove that all of these companies will be around forever, I think that companies that have been around through several generations come close enough for me.
Facebook is not going to be the first immortal company.
I doubt any company can truly be immortal, but the companies on that wiki page are as close at it gets.
Sting me once, shame on...
Sting me twice...
OtherOS was Sony's single best security feature.
Well said.
George Hotz ("geohot") tried his hand at it, given that he had been rather successful at cracking Apple's iStuff. He found an exploit that gave hypervisor access, and in response, Sony removed OtherOS in a firmware update, as geohot's hack required use of OtherOS.
So this can all be traced back to geohot getting involved... though in my opinion, Sony shouldn't have responded by removing OtherOS, causing all the collateral damage. It inevitably was going to result in a lot of really serious people getting involved and, by extension, more stories like this.
A bald-faced lie? They said Wikileaks was violating several of the terms of service. One of the terms of service is "don't use our service to break US law". It's pretty clear that Wikileaks was violating US law. Ergo, not a lie.
Nearly every legal expert who has spoken on this topic has argued that Wikileaks has not violated US law.
At any rate, you're nitpicking over the wording used by the Amazon representative. Perhaps "doesn't own or otherwise control the rights to the classified content" was not the clearest way to put it, but unless you're deliberately being dense, the meaning is clear: Wikileaks is not permitted by US law to distribute these documents. Clearly, distributing documents in violation of US law qualifies under "don't use our service to break US law".
Publishing classified documents is not illegal, unless the documents fit certain criteria that (so far) these leaks do not. The person or organization who leaks the documents does have some liability, but not Wikileaks. As has been said many times before, Wikileaks is analogous to the New York Times in the Pentagon Papers incident.
Thank you for a comprehensive, readable explanation of the supply-and-demand model as it applies to digital (and other) sales. May this post be modded up to +5 Informative.
1) Eliminate my moral system, since I believe parent trolling is wrong. It is more or less fraud in my book.
It makes for a pretty fun day at the museum, though.
Why did your post get rejected? I find it very informative and well supported with links. Thanks for bringing it back.
Perhaps because it was very informative and well-supported with links.
They've been posting things that embarrass the government and affect its public image.
Specifically, I think you mean the US government. One thing (not the only thing though) that bothers me about Wikileaks is that it seems to be exclusively, or at least principally, dedicated to embarrassing the US government.
Here's one that I'm particularly OK with. If I recall correctly, this was the first time that I had heard about ACTA.
Graham Syfert, the "Copyright Defense Lawyer", is an EFF-listed lawyer.
Do you think that the EFF accidentally mistook the manager of a "phoney storefront" for a lawyer credible enough to refer people to?
The hardest part of climbing the ladder of success is getting through the crowd at the bottom.