Comment Re:Does it, or doesn't it? (Score 1) 179
For what sort of exposure, over what time frame?
For what sort of exposure, over what time frame?
"Anything that kills a living organism is potentially a problem for humans"
Yeah, I'm seriously worried about my white blood cells!
Well, if they are going to accept "documents" (scans, easily edited), as proof of something, then really they should only accept real, notarized paper versions.
Notarized documents.
Gandi.
lest anybody think otherwise, Harrison Ford is quite an experienced airplane and helicopter pilot, with thousands of hours
My sister worked at a helicopter company where Ford trained or certified or something like that. Unfortunately that didn't result in me getting to meet him, though she did.
in this case, how could anyone argue the short film doesn't violate the rights of the franchise creator
Because I don't believe that content creators should have rights that violate anybody else's rights to do whatever they want with the content.
Business can't plan or talk to customers or have any strategy whatsoever without at least some estimate...that's just the real world. If devs don't give estimates, managers have to make estimates. If managers don't make estimates, business makes estimates. You want devs to do the estimating.
I just don't want the boss to be disrespectful to me when the estimate is not accurate. Get us some estimation training or something. Don't give me a lecture. I'm too old for lectures.
Reddit shouldn't be doing this because it tends to violate an innate human right and because it will destroy Reddit
That's Reddit's choice to make, though, right? Just use some other forum.
It also comes in the wake of last year's Fappening
Can we get a definition of that for old farts with a UNIX beard like me? I know there was a massive hack and sale of celebrity nude photos for Bitcoin or something. Is that what this refers to? What's a Fappening?
Yeah, I'm gonna Google it, but the editors could add a parenthetical explanation, or a link to Wikipedia, or something. I remember when Slashdot used to use built in links to everything2 - I wish they had transitioned over to Wikipedia so the clueless like me could be more easily informed.
Ha ha ha, your key is on "your" website. That isn't even running https. So how would anyone know that "your" key really is your key?
With your bare hands?!?