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Comment It's not a license to deploy (Score 1) 194

It's a license to test AND apparently Google allowed it to expire, the spectrum page states:

A DMV committee then met and approved the country’s first self-driving vehicle testing license. On 4 May 2012, the Prius was issued special gold-on-red autonomous license plates, number AU-001. However, Google seems to have done little with its historic license plate. Most of the company’s testing has since been focused on California, and when its Nevada license expired in May 2013, Google failed to renew it for at least eight months.

Comment Re:Who would have thought (Score 1) 194

If the driver is the autopilot, then the engineer taking control should cause the autopilot to automatically fail.

Apparently it was agreed upon before the test:

In communication with the Nevada DMV before the test, Google said its policy was to prohibit autonomous operation at railroad crossings that lack signals and for human drivers to take over. It also noted: “[Roundabouts are] particularly challenging, where many drivers don’t know the proper rules in the first place.” In an e-mail to colleagues at the DMV, Breslow wrote, “We can’t fail an applicant for not being able to navigate a traffic circle if they say that there [sic] vehicle can’t yet do it.”

Comment Re:Who would have thought (Score 1) 194

If you have to be at full driver attentiveness at all times, what the heck is the point? A self-driving car should let you take a nap, read a book, or otherwise tune out from the road.

I don't think you have to be at full attentiveness at all times, but you won't be able to take a nap either. On the other hand, you would be safely able to study a paper map a bit.

So the car sounds an alarm and stops due to this obstacle it doesn't know how to handle, and you then need to pick up the wheel, look around, and navigate the situation safely.... if you're sleeping or stuck in a book, you will be stopped in the middle of the road and inconveniencing other drivers.

If LaneAssist is a useful feature, then this should still be a useful luxury feature as well..... just not as useful as a fully independent self-driving car would be.

Likely tangible safety improvements will still be a good reason for this feature.

Comment Re:Great news (Score 1) 269

Just because they don't know where to look, doesn't mean it's not there.

Probably, there are a great many genetic factors that could play a direct or indirect role in intelligence, either for the better or for the worse.

Also... let's not discount things such as eating habits, and nurture --- discipline, motivational factors, inspiration, culture, etc.

And the fact that it might be genetic, but 50,000 people might each have totally different genes contributing to their higher intelligence.

Comment Re:Normally (Score 1) 275

Businesses should be able to have comments that are just ridiculous removed as there are some people you just cannot please, no matter what.

I disagree. "Ridiculous" is too subjective. I think the main issue is small businesses who do not have many reviews to begin with are disproportionately harmed by negative reviews, especially when false negative claims are made by the one or two people who happen to be "savvy" to a particular review site, where the highly pleased majority of customers never visit the review site.

Personally... I think, in this case, the review site should be liable for choosing a selection of reviews to publish which misrepresent customers' views.

Businesses should be able to hold customers accountable for what they claim in a review, if the customer makes any statements which are false, or "potentially libelious statements".

The review site should be liable for soliciting and selecting reviews to be published in an irresponsible manner. A responsible manner would include soliciting reviews from other customers; not publishing or scoring a product or service based on a very small number of reviews received, and providing clear and prominent disclaimers.

Comment Re:hmmmm (Score 5, Informative) 275

This law applies specifically to consumer goods. How many consumer goods require an NDA to purchase?

Many EULAs contain something that is NDA-like.

Some consumer products even forbid you from publishing performance metrics or the results of comparative performance testing.... if I recall correctly, VMware used to be known for this, specifically.

Comment Re:WRONG! (Score 1) 65

Nice. Real nice. We are talking about Satoshi creating an anonymous email here - BTC wasn't invented yet!

I'm just attempting to point out that Satoshi has made it even easier than before.

It was still possible to register a domain anonymously before, so even the registrar wouldn't know the ID of the person..... it just involved a little bit more work and expense.

Comment Re:WRONG! (Score 1) 65

Someone that is trying to stay anonymous doesn't want their name splattered over Whois dns records.

Every major DNS registrar has a privacy service. These days you could also use a 3rd party escrow in a different country, and buy the domain using BTC.

Comment Re:WRONG! (Score 1) 65

But all systems rely on a key thing. So you're not really saying anything at all.

Not true. There are systems which require a combination of elements, so they don't rely on any one thing.

For example: Instead of simply sending a password reset e-mail, they might ask you to complete a captcha, then on success send a password reset e-mail.

When the link is clicked, then you have to answer some security questions correctly.

Give too many wrong answers, and your account will be locked out, and you have to call in and have customer support send a SMS to your backup phone and a message to your backup e-mail account which you need to receive and verify to unlock .

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