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Comment Re:Would have stuck with VHS (Score 1) 129

Right, but if consumers may lawfully crack DRM in order to perform actions that are otherwise legal (under fair use or the equivalent, say) then in practice this is unlikely to be a problem. If it ever is, you just regulate or outright legislate such that anyone selling works in electronic formats for profit with DRM applied must lodge an unrestricted copy in escrow with some official body to ensure that the work can be used as the law otherwise permits once it has been lawfully acquired.

Ultimately, any creative industry has to sell its work to make any money. The general public as audience, via their respective governments, can impose whatever terms they want to ensure fairness and the creative industries will have to comply. This is no different to any other business that is regulated by consumer protection laws, usually because previously someone was exploiting the situation unfairly.

There is really no reason to pander to these industries if they abuse the one-sided power structure that exists today. They have nowhere to go. And I write that as someone who makes a decent living creating works of various kinds, because despite the bleatings of the big content distributors, I am evidently still able to make that decent living without imposing nasty DRM schemes on my clients/customers. If I can do it with my little businesses, I'm pretty sure the guys making programmes and films with multi-million dollar budgets can do it too, without making me sit through an FBI warning that is completely irrelevant in my jurisdiction or stopping me watching something over here even though the discs have been available across the pond for a while.

Comment Re:They can go bite a donkey (Score 1) 699

I think the problem that you're failing to recognize which the OP stated was that yes, I pointed my browser at a website. What I did not point my browser at is the 14 IFRAME ads and analytics hosted by 15 other 3rd party providers.

Can I therefore assume that you also want to be prompted for explicit permission every time a site you visit uses a CDN to serve some static assets, and every time you buy something on-line and the site links to data served by their payment service, and so on? Because I don't think that version of the Web would be an improvement, and I don't see how to distinguish between "desirable" and "undesirable" third party content without downloading it or at least seeing its URL first.

Once you have the URL then of course a browser can choose not to download it, as many of us do with ad blockers today. I don't see anyone here seriously agreeing with the IMHO silly argument by the French publishers in this case; certainly I'm not agreeing with them myself. All I'm saying is that if you run a browser that downloads someone's entire freely offered site, claiming that they should somehow have sought your permission or they're effectively stealing your bandwidth by supplying data your browser explicitly asked their server to supply is nonsense.

Comment Re:They can go bite a donkey (Score 1) 699

That seems reasonable enough.

However, I don't think anyone can credibly argue today that serving a web site that includes ads (or analytics and the like) is "entirely abnormal". Just the number of sites using Google's ad network and analytics tool would be sufficient to disprove any such argument.

Similarly, there's nothing at all unusual about relying on third-party servers for part of the page. Prohibiting that would break every CDN, most on-line payment schemes, most on-line webfont and video hosting services...

Comment Re:They can go bite a donkey (Score 1) 699

I am genuinely confused.

I wrote a post saying that it was absurd to argue that:

1. a website was using a downloader's bandwidth without permission,

2. this was effectively stealing the bandwidth, and

3. courts should force website owners to ask downloaders, who are actively requesting the freely offered content, for permission to use their bandwidth.

As I write this, the parent poster and several others have all replied as if I was somehow supporting the notion that downloaders should therefore be compelled to watch ads. I certainly am not advocating that position, and I don't see how you can even possibly read that into what I wrote before.

Comment Re:Would have stuck with VHS (Score 1) 129

I thought [Blu-ray] got lost in the negative gap between DVD and getting stuff over the internet.

On the contrary. I still use Blu-ray because after I've bought a disc it is mine, permanently and unambiguously, and with the full force of my country's consumer protection laws behind me if anyone tries to interfere with my use of it.

I am not vulnerable to an on-line service yanking a series I'm watching from their library when I'm only mid-season. I am not vulnerable to disruption at my ISP interfering with my enjoyment of the film just at the crucial moment. I am not vulnerable to arbitrary price hikes in pay-per-view delivery caused by corporate politics far beyond my level of caring. I just play the disc.

Technically, they could add unskippable content to that disc that would interfere with my enjoyment. Obviously streaming content can carry ads just as easily, but the reality is that Blu-ray is much better than DVDs typically were on that score anyway. Anything that wasn't would just go straight back to the store as unfit for purpose.

Technically, they could also play some funny games that might break my Blu-ray player as part of the DRM scheme. Again, compared to some of the things people have tried to do with on-line DRM schemes, that seems a relatively low risk to me. In any case, it would be a brave vendor who sold a disc that actually did that in my country. If it ever damaged a legitimate customer then the vendor would immediately be on the hook both for the consequential losses (new Blu-ray player, anyone?) and potentially for criminal charges as well.

Comment Re:the evils of Political Correctness (Score 1) 201

It's a no-brainer that you'll find statistically insignificant differences between two samples of the same population. That means nothing.

It is possible that intelligence varies by race,. but I haven't seen any good evidence for it. (I've seen loads of crap evidence.) Lacking strong evidence, it can hardly be called a "no-brainer".

Comment Re:Cheaper, too (Score 1) 96

especially when scratching below the surface reveals that Cisco is using the exact same silicon in a bunch of products and charging 3-5 times as much.

That's really the key point. Their own executives reportedly concluded that if they tried to move into the SDN space, they would turn their $43B business into a $21B business, yet they were publicly embarrassed when what was supposed to be a billion dollar deal with Amazon fell through. They are probably contemplating what happens when SDN and open devices are no longer the new kid on the block but an established, mature part of the industry. I don't suppose they much like the conclusions they must surely be reaching right now.

Comment Re:America, land of the free... (Score 1) 720

A democracy is a government run by the people. A republic is a country without a monarch. The US is a democracy and a republic. The UK is a democracy but not a republic. Nazi Germany was a republic but not a democracy, and, if you consider North Korea's leaders to be the hereditary monarchy they sure look like, North Korea is neither a republic nor a democracy.

Comment Re:It does expose those blind spots (Score 1) 368

Slide rules have significant digits, typically two or three. The usual 32-bit float has more like six, which would be impossible to match with a handheld slide rule. Whatever accuracy problems a modern computer has, a slide rule has more. The limits for a slide rule are how accurately you can set and read one, and how little the slide is going to be accidentally nudged by something, while the limits for a computer are digitally imposed.

A slide rule might be faster than entering numbers into a calculator, and it may look cooler, but it's less accurate. One possible advantage for the slipstick is that it enforces a certain discipline on arithmetic, so the user is pretty much compelled to know the the approximate answer before the calculation, meaning that getting a completely wrong answer due to user error is less likely, but there's no reason you can't adopt that discipline with a calculator.

Comment Re:you want change? (Score 1) 368

FWIW, in 1924 the US was in many ways the most powerful country in the world, having great area and natural resources, a large population, and a very large industrial base. The Washington Naval Limitation treaty had given the US Navy parity with the British Navy, and the British needed the excuse to stop building large warships much more than the US did. Don't underestimate US power of the time just because the US was mostly focused inwards.

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