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Censorship

Censored Religious Debate Video Released After Public Outrage 717

First time accepted submitter tkel writes "On October 12, 2011 Theologian John Haught publicly debated prominent evolutionary scientist and atheist Jerry Coyne at the University of Kentucky. Although both agreed to a videotaping of the event, Haught later prohibited its release because he felt he had been treated unfairly. Coyne released blog posts addressing the matter as an offense to free speech. Reviewing their new status in the blogosphere, Haught and his associates at the University of Kentucky have decided to release the video."

Comment Re:You think the housing collapse was bad (Score 1, Insightful) 917

"Come on, who do you think is at fault here - the young teenager taking the easy money being offered? Or the multinational corporation with packages designed to temp said teenager, and profit massively out of the situation?"

How is it you missed the other party in your search for fault? The federal government that guarantees all the loans? If the government guarantees that the banks will get their money, doesn't it make sense for the banks to take advantage of that?

Comment Re:Bitcoin (Score 1) 709

Where are you banking, because I want to bank there!

Or when you say "a return", are you referring to an amount less than inflation, so they're giving you more dollars back, but less purchasing power, for letting them use it in the meantime? In that case, I already have one of those.

Comment Re:Even Chinese must obey laws... (Score 1) 481

At $1000/kg into LEO, a metallic asteroid one mile in diameter ought to be worth about $10,000 TRILLION dollars.

You're comparing apples to oranges, or rather, raw material to finished, useful goods. A kilogram chunk of rocky metal in space is worth a lot less than a kilogram of food, or equipment. At least until there's the capacity to manufacture any needed item in space, and getting that infrastructure in place is going to cost a lot too.

Comment Re:So I get three more years... (Score 4, Funny) 249

It gets better--following their math, 92 minutes a week gives a 14% reduction in mortality from all causes, and every additional 15 minutes gives an additional 4%. there's no point of diminishing returns identified. So, if you exercise 7 hours a week, you become immortal.

On average. In reality, some people exercising 7 hours a week will live much longer than that, and some much shorter.

Comment Re:Isn't leaving things out fun? (Score 1) 645

A more accurate headline would've been "Sergey Brin thinks managing your own computer is 'torture'."

The Bush administration would probably have had its lawyers write papers determining that managing XP installations is not, in fact, torture, and have the enemy combatants at Gitmo doing sysadmin work until they broke down and revealed their terrorist plans.

Comment Re:Trust (Score 1) 189

The return address is not required in many cases, so regular mail can certainly hide who you are communicating with. Or the return address can be easily spoofed.

And if you drop the letter in a big blue mailbox or at a post office, there's no way to track the origin of the letter.

Comment Re:Use aliases. (Score 1) 323

I'm assuming your perl script uses a logged in google session if that's what you do in your browser. Is your perl script using the same user agent as your web browser? Do you allow javascript to run on google.com in your browser? Does your script run all the time, periodically (but randomized intervals), while you're awake, or does it run around the times you generally are searching for real? That's just a few ways that Google could determine which searches are really you and which are a script.

Comment Re:Mistake in Summary (Score 1) 318

"unsolvable with conventional computers"

They're not unsolvable, they're infeasible. There's an important difference.

You can solve TSP for 1 million cities if you're willing to wait a few billion years, but the fact that you're waiting a few billion years makes it infeasible.

If you can keep one or more of today's computer in a runnable state for billions of years, I'll concede that you're right. My bet, however, is that every single one of today's computers will be little more than dust in "a few billion years", effectively making the problems "unsolvable with conventional computers" because they simply can't last that long.

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