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Comment Re:The essential forgetting (Score 1) 202

It's actually a very short-term line of thinking. It starts with a fear of losing their oldest but still popular item (think Mickey Mouse). "Quick! Extend copyrights before we lose this monopoly!" they would think. Now they have a huge catalog that isn't going anywhere anytime soon.

Now whenever it's time to be creative they have two paths. Create something new, and try to make sure it's not infringing on anyone else's huge catalog. Or take something that was popular in a certain demographic and remake it at a time when that demo' is full of brand new people that likely don't have any emotional ties to a 15+ year old movie. Now that a AAA movie costs dozens if not hundreds of millions of dollars to make, those investors will prefer a proven performer versus a risky startup.

I agree that the people behind all this stagnation likely have little concious knowledge of it or it's long term effects. But they know what is profitable, regardless of how, and they keep doing it. Which is a pretty near-sighted short term strategy.

Comment Re:Hmmph. (Score 1) 477

Yeah. And all people hate each other and never help anyone without making turning a profit. And all cultures are the same because all humans have not only the same impulses but no impulse control. Just because you say humans are dumb beasts that just want to eat, sleep and fuck indiscriminately doesn't make it true.

Plenty of people are convinced to volunteer and give away their resources. Some even believe that procreating is something that should only happen under certain situations and abstain from it otherwise. Others are even capable of going on hunger strikes for long periods of time.

People that were already lazy to begin with likely keep being lazy when they're provided for. People who already work hard will likely keep being productive and busy when they are provided for. Personally I'd rather have the lazy people provided for so they don't become destitute and desperate, which leads to crimes like assault and robberies.

Comment Re:Next step to prevent PC piracy (Score 1) 795

You are focusing on the wrong point. Just because people are freeloading doesn't mean you aren't meeting quotas and quarterly estimates. A product could have 99% piracy as long as that 1% actually pays the bills. If the DRM scheme causes a net loss of customers your DRM actually caused you to lose money, even if the piracy was 0.00%

The data shows that people LOVE buying cheaper games, so much so that the income from those sales (when lowered enough) actually exceeds the income at launch time. Lowering prices costs nothing to do and apparently increases income.

DRM has been shown to cause negative PR, bugs, and other defects. Those things have never lead to more customers or more income. All while costing money and time to implement and maintain.

So the attractive option is to just drop prices by 75% and make more profit while paying $0 extra. Instead of spending thousands developing and maintaining, or just licensing out a DRM solution that will create nothing but disincentives to actually pay money for the product.

Comment Re:Freenet (Score 1) 467

You should really switch to a more secure operating system. When I type my passwords in linux the cursor doesn't even move, thus preserving the secret of how long my password and passphrases are.
Seriously consider increasing your security by moving to Linux.

Comment Re:We will see... (Score 2, Interesting) 269

Exactly. They conspired against the free market. You know what we used to do to the people that did that? Look back at McCarthy. Your ass would be blacklisted and you could no longer play with others that followed the rules. They would also spare no expense at throwing the legal system at you (regardless of the legality of their arguments).

Weather or not I agree with what happened back then it is plain to see just how different the American public feels about protecting their Free Market these days.

Comment Re:Agreed. (Score 4, Interesting) 383

I've been helping some students learn programming that have similar math issues. Their code is sub-optimal. It's just that simple. They don't have the knowledge to design or understand certain algorithms and usually just brute force trial & error until they happen upon the correct output.

Since it is the correct output they've done well for introductory courses. Unfortunately their code is littered with superfluous variables, if/else blocks, and no ability to sub-divide into smaller problems with well defined inputs and outputs. In fact I assume these are exactly the kinds of programmers that end up on TheDailyWTF.com

Comment Re:Previous work (Score 5, Insightful) 453

I was with you until the yelling part, an interview is a two way street. If I'm getting yelled at in an interview I can only imagine how bad it will be in the workplace.
On second thought, if that's actually how your office functions, then I guess it is honest and appropriate. I just wouldn't want to work there.

Comment Re:hmm (Score 1, Insightful) 462

To keep this whole discussion honest, yes it is. A registration code is a form of digital rights management. While more recent forms have been much more controversial, type in the wrong code and see if you get to play the game.

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