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Comment Re:Get Out of Your Bubble (Score 1) 275

What you actually need are impartial and unbiased news networks who report news in a genuinely unbiased way, strictly separate their reporting from their editorialising and ask hard questions of whomever happens to be in charge and the opposition. Preferably this would codified with broadcast standards that they would be required to stick to.

I agree. But sadly that requires a demand for real journalism, but sensationalism and anger-porn are what people tend to gravitate toward.

Comment Re:Pulled Fox News ... (Score 1) 275

No, it isn't a "great service" since a significant number of Dish customers are going to want to watch that programming and now won't be able to do so. That is the opposite of "great service."

Don't worry. Fox will cave and people will get their highly editorialized "news" to keep them happily enraged about all the wrong stuff. And Dish's tactics means they get all that spin without paying the higher rates that would be required by Fox's current demands. It's a win-win.

Comment Re:503 (Score 1, Insightful) 396

... You've already done that once already by pushing forward an SSL-related change far ahead of when it really needed to be, and now it looks like you're floating a trial balloon to go one step further.

Am I overreacting here? Or is Google going too far, too fast with this?

You are overreacting. It's a positive step and there is no good reason in 2014 that all internet traffic should not be encrypted. Oh, and it's a free browser and there are other options both free and proprietary.

Comment Re:Huh? (Score 2) 191

because the DRM has long since been dropped in the music space.

This is not true, even if Apple insists on saying it is. As near as I can tell, what they mean is that they aren't putting DRM on music that was added after the DRM-free date. However, the iTunes library is full of music that is as "protected" by DRM as it ever was. Or at least that was true three years ago, when I spent far too much time working out how to strip the DRM off of a song I downloaded from it.

No, they removed the DRM from the vast majority of their catalog and automatically upgraded songs in the iTunes library back in 2009. The reason that not all music is DRM free is not all labels and artists agreed to sell non-DRM music. Apple has to abide by it's contracts, even if it pisses a few people off.

Comment Re:Or You Could Just Not Drink To The Point of Int (Score 1) 134

Not to be preachy, but it always strikes me as odd to what lengths some people will go to mitigate the damage their drinking does, rather than exercising just a bit of self control and not drinking to the point of intoxication. Having to make computers take care of us in this fashion and stop us from harming ourselves just seems silly.

Believing that it's silly to use technology to help people make better decisions when they are impaired seems silly to me. Doubly so on a site supposedly for people that are into technology.

Comment Re:No thanks (Score 1) 134

We are all capable of making our own decisions, without the need for verification. Those that need verification prompts to exist in our society, need to seriously rethink their basic thought process and self control.

It must be tough being perfect in an imperfect world. See, I can be judgmental too. That was fun.

Gravity forbid we use tools and technology to help us make better decisions.

Comment Re:Science does not work like that (Score 1) 329

You neglect about 8000 papers of 12000 papers originally involved that were discarded by the authors of this study, because they lacked a pithy statement in the abstract as to whether they agreed or disagreed with the global warming consensus.

Papers that are not addressing AGW and take no position on AGW are irrelevant, no matter how many ad hominem labels you spew and assumptions you make. Many climate studies are purely refining and making observations (and contrary to the spin of propagandist, the vast majority find that the heat content of the Earth as a whole is increasing). As to a "pithy statement in the abstract," the whole point of a fucking abstract is to summarize the findings of the paper.

The ACTUAL SCIENTIFIC CONTENT of those 12000 papers played no role at all in this crappy piece of cargo cult science, it was all about whether people made certain statements in the abstract or not.

It's a simple analysis of the position taken in papers. And, again, the whole point of an abstract is to summarize methodologies and findings. The fact that it collides with your worldview is irrelevant. The fact that in your heart of hearts you believe in a massive effort by climates scientists to take part in a worldwide multi-national conspiracy to do what ever strange thing it is that you think they are doing is irrelevant.

Comment Re:Science does not work like that (Score 1) 329

I understand how science works, thanks.

Can you link me to some conclusive research? Because I haven't found any. There seem to be just as many studies opposing that humans are responsible as there are studies implicating us.

Just as many? From Quantifying the consensus on anthropogenic global warming in the scientific literature:

We analyze the evolution of the scientific consensus on anthropogenic global warming (AGW) in the peer-reviewed scientific literature, examining 11944 climate abstracts from 1991–2011 matching the topics 'global climate change' or 'global warming'. We find that 66.4% of abstracts expressed no position on AGW, 32.6% endorsed AGW, 0.7% rejected AGW and 0.3% were uncertain about the cause of global warming. Among abstracts expressing a position on AGW, 97.1% endorsed the consensus position that humans are causing global warming. In a second phase of this study, we invited authors to rate their own papers. Compared to abstract ratings, a smaller percentage of self-rated papers expressed no position on AGW (35.5%). Among self-rated papers expressing a position on AGW, 97.2% endorsed the consensus. For both abstract ratings and authors' self-ratings, the percentage of endorsements among papers expressing a position on AGW marginally increased over time. Our analysis indicates that the number of papers rejecting the consensus on AGW is a vanishingly small proportion of the published research.

Based on those percentages, of the approximately 3977 papers published that took a position on AGW, about 3893 supported AGW and around 84 rejected AGW. So the appearance that their are "just as many" opposing studies is an illusion.

Comment Re:How about a straight answer? (Score 3, Funny) 329

Most of the debate comes from industries who stand to loose from climate based taxes.

Or from the various powerful special interests that stand to gain from climate-based spending and taxes.

Here's the list of largest companies by revenue. And that's excluding state owned companies, like Saudi Aramco. I'm not seeing a lot of powerful special interest groups that stand to make money from climate-based spending and taxes in that list . But I sure see a lot who would like to keep the status quo.

Comment Re:As for the people who say "XXX kills more than. (Score 4, Insightful) 772

terrorists, stop being an idiot. Richard Reid tried to light a shoe bomb and didn't kill anyone, yet let at all of the trouble and hassle EVERYONE who flies has to go through now. It isn't always about death. It's also about our way of life. How much money do you think is being spent to find explosives on persons who fly?

So stop saying "More people are killed by albino left-handed sharks than terrorists because that isn't the point."

No, that's exactly the point. We've completely caved to fear and thrown what little moral standing we had in the world right out the window. We've spent well over a trillion dollars, killed thousands of people directly, tens of thousands indirectly and replaced an evil but fairly contained dictator with a sectarian battlefield. Because we're bad at math and suck at assessing threats. We are a nation cowards, armed to the teeth and afraid of shadows. We are the fucking boogieman.

And before I get shit for it, no I don't think we deserved to be attacked on 9/11 and terrorists are asshats. But that doesn't justify overreacting and it doesn't justify holding people sans due process and torture.

Comment Re:*yawn* (Score 5, Insightful) 772

This was 100% politics and had little to do with much else. Why else release such inflammatory information AGAIN?

...

The really sad part though is that it is highly possible that the release of this report will cost Americans their lives. The world is a dangerous place, but it's stupid to poke the enemy or hand them such a public relations win as this will be. We will be lectured by Iran and North Korea for human rights abuses and you can bet ISIS will be happy to use this to recruit/conscript more help.

(sarcasm)Oh Yea! That's great.. (/sarcasm)

The really sad part is that people get so caught up in petty politics that they can't see that torturing people is immoral and ineffective and that maybe we should consider not fucking torturing people and hold ourselves to a higher standard than "other people are worse than us."

Comment Re:Not even close (Score 2) 772

The waterboarding done by the Japanese involved putting a hose down peoples throats, filling their stomachs to the bursting point and then hitting the victims stomach with sticks until it actually did burst.

Not even close to the same thing.

But still cruel, ineffective at actually getting reliable information and likely used on people that didn't have the information they sought and we (US citizens) should be fucking ashamed of our government and ourselves by proxy.

Comment Re:Partially. $400 radiator cap. Like Comcast inte (Score 1) 137

Abusing / competing with dealerships is one issue.

There is another issue with vertical integration, and it's been discussed a lot in relation to Comcast having some vertical integration; both producing and distributing content, running the infrastructure and the value-add services on top of that infrastructure. As mentioned elsewhere, dealers make their money via their service department and extras like upgraded stereos and other options. If the manufacturer is the only dealer, that means for some items they are the only service center, and can charge $400 for a radiator cap which should cost $4.

...

The irony here is that dealers are the ones that are notorious for overcharging for parts and labor now. I understand the intent of the original laws, but they don't work. Having dealers has not worked out in the best interest of consumers. Times have changed and we don't live in the era of two or three big automakers. There are about a dozen major automakers selling cars in the US so there is plenty of competition in case a few "behave badly." This is the exact opposite of the cable industry.

Dealers basically have a geographical monopoly. We'd be better off if GM, Ford, Chrysler, Honda, Suzuki, Mercedes, BMW, Hyundai, Mitsubishi, Tesla etc were competing for return customers.

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