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Comment Re:Awful lot (Score 0) 233

Awful lot of trolls post in favor of citizens united. Didn't know the Koch Brothers bot army was running so well.

Of course you yourself are trolling here. It is perfectly reasonable (though still subject to debate) to agree with the SCOTUS that businesses should be allowed free speech, and to characterize me and others as Koch Brothers bots is... well, it's pretty lame trolling, notwithstanding your current "+4 Insightful". I don't typically feed trolls, so this comment is directed at those who mis-moderated your post. :)

Comment Re:It's still about censorship (Score 1) 233

Isn't it wonderful to simplify an issue down to one sentence? You can solve all the problems in the world that way. /sarcasm

So answer me this: is a newspaper recommendation of a political candidate speech? Deny companies political speech, and you have all kinds of unpleasant fallout. You are suggesting censoring the NYT. (Were you aware of that?)

Comment It's still about censorship (Score 1) 233

The solution to speech you don't like is not censorship, it's more speech. I have no problem with newspapers editorializing on political subjects and recommending candidates for office. I further have no problem with people banding together to make their joined voice louder by creating documentaries, websites, etc. The slippery slope of trying to chop people down to all be the same sizes is ultimately misguided and works against free speech.

Comment If it ever takes off, no stopping it (Score 3, Interesting) 62

If genetic modifications ever emerge as the medical miracle they're supposed to, there will be no stopping the use of the technology. All you need is for a country to refuse to enforce or recognize the patents, and presto -- the world's foremost medical tourism destination. I sort of despise the idea of patenting features of nature, so perhaps a bit of schadenfreude there.

I have no doubt the information will be spread, too. If Snowden can be widely hailed as a hero for leaking the NSA's rampant cybercrime, just imagine the pats on the back for the guy who leaks the key to cancer. (Yeah, yeah, along with threats of jail time, so he'll have to light out for Cambodia or whatever.)

Comment Re:Schadenfreude on so many levels (Score 1) 173

Indeed. Unfortunately, the prosecution of crimes committed by the federal government is a decision that is typically up to the federal government, and they almost always decide to give themselves a pass. The NSA's history of sabotaging public security standards and overreaching in their spying is (if not legally then at least effectively) protected by sovereign immunity.

And now some people are estimating how many billions of dollars the US economy is losing as the world shops elsewhere for cloud computing due to the NSA's excessive and unjustifiable cybercrimes. I'd love to see a bunch of people fired in Fort Meade, but I'm sure they'll just continue to blame it on Snowden.

Comment Schadenfreude on so many levels (Score 4, Insightful) 173

The NSA has been hacking pretty much everybody in the world and their little sister, so nobody should be shocked when the same thing happens to us.

The real kicker is the perennial lecture from clueless politicians about how we should put back doors into all our private sector encryption so law enforcement can take a peek whenever it likes. Because our information will be safe with the government. *snort*

Comment Re:Reasons to be skeptical (Score 1) 235

Anyway, it's the first time I've seen a Star Trek-like computer working for real (well, the same special conditions could exist in a spaceship).

Not sure what you mean by this, my dear AC. AplSiri / GNow / MSCortana work the same way and can be used to create similar demos. Heck, there are a lot of similar products out there -- the Amazon Echo is even more Star Trek-like since it's always on & listening.

Have you really never played with Siri before?

Comment Reasons to be skeptical (Score 5, Insightful) 235

1. This demo was likely created by an engineer or sales person with SoundHound. More impressive would be a demo by a third party journalist or reviewer without a vested interest.
2. The impressive speed probably won't scale to the millions of simultaneous users Siri, Google Now, and Cortana support (assuming audio is processed in the cloud, which I admittedly don't know for sure).
3. Obviously the demo uses phrases that work. I guarantee you an ordinary person will often get "Sorry, I didn't understand the question" or whatever SoundHound's equivalent is.
4. While it sounds impressive at first blush, nobody really cares how many days it is between next Tuesday and Christmas of 2025. And that happens to be not only useless, but also pretty easy to special-case in your expert system / AI logic. So how about a demo that answers the question: "How can you make a mushroom omelette without soggy mushrooms?"

Comment Re:Read this (Score 1) 276

Read Trust me, I'm Lying -- it is a book by a self-confessed media manipulator who got depressed and [...]

Especially read the Amazon comments about that book, including the one that claims that right there on the Amazon page are patterns of manipulation of reviews and ratings of the book that suggest he is cynically trying to manipulate people to make a pile of dollars, and hasn't actually:

[...] left the industry.

Comment Re:Read this (Score 0) 276

What you're saying is technically true, and is true of all sting and entrapment operations. What we saw in the videos was technically not ACORN facilitating crime, because the undercover persons were only posing as criminals. And since there was no crime, nobody was prosecuted.

ACORN was still defunded/shamed out of existence., and this was perfectly appropriate. It's the same as with DPR and the Silk Road -- Ross Ullbricht thought he was hiring hit men to commit murders, but because it was all fake, he wasn't prosecuted for those specific actions.

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