Comment Re:I thought Slashdot was filled with geeks (Score 1) 138
I did read the story which is how I know it's just making shit up. There is no DRM here or enforcement and as such the summary is a complete load of crap.
I did read the story which is how I know it's just making shit up. There is no DRM here or enforcement and as such the summary is a complete load of crap.
This isn't DRM. It's some html tags that do all of jack and shit.
It applies to contractor's computers too.
And? Any use of government property or information falls under whatever rules the government wants to set for its use.
Did you even bother to read the Ars Technica article to see what the GP was talking about?
You actually expect either the submitter or the editor to read the article instead of just mischaracterizing the story by just making shit up?
Even so, information is leaked by people, not P2P software.
But if they weren't able to run the P2P software in the first place it would have had a 0% chance of being leaked to Limewire.
Yes. It is their property and they can set whatever rules they want on its use.
Then you never saw the flamefests that happened on lklm
Copying (downloading) music for personal purposes is considered fair use in many if not all European countries.
That's great. Care to explain when Boston, Massachusetts became part of Europe?
Until one of these things can give me a full 1024x768 or better display
Only XGA? What is this? 1990?
Because I don't wear my phone?
No. That would be coincidental not ironic.
Nope, they're just not used to seeing dirty, uncut cocks.
This submission was posted by sampenzus which means it's just more idle crap polluting the front page.
So you'd rather have companies never disclose this information at all by hiding them indefinitely as trade secrets? There are many things wrong with the patent system, but to block them entirely would lead to less propagation of information into the public domain.
"If I do not want others to quote me, I do not speak." -- Phil Wayne