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Comment Re:What an idiot. (Score 1) 547

NB: "Circumstantial" and "direct" evidence are not truly meaningful concepts in law. Evidence is evidence. There's no bright line between good and bad.

Here, he had no way of knowing what they had or might get, and may have been very surprised even to be questioned. I doubt he would have done well lying (which itself itself may be illegal obstruction...you can only insist on silence, which will make them considerably more interested in you). It is legal for the police to lie too, up to a point. A confession isn't proof of guilt either...just evidence.

Heck, he may have simply had an attack of conscience. He still should have asked for a lawyer first, to get the fairest deal rather than make concessions that may have hurt him more than necessary (sometimes we exaggerate our own guilt or dig a hole through careless words). I'm sympathetic at least that he was under enormous stress. He made a terrible choice.

Comment Re:What is the TSA for anyway? (Score 1) 427

Well, last shot: I didn't mean IQ, whatever IQ is, and I certainly never mentioned it. I meant competency and the ability to think independently. For one thing the "first batch" of screeners was probably different from the second, third, fourth etc. batches; at least in the beginning they were pretending TSA was something new. It could be a training failure or poor policy limiting personnel but—whatever the cause—I am NOT comforted by what I have seen that air travel is even a hamster's breath safer than it was before 9/11. Procedure is never enough, and the phenomenally stupid questions I have been asked by security do not suggest much more is being added. Some of the workers may be fabulous, but it doesn't save the program; too many are not.

Now, a toilet scrubber. I think you've hit on something there. How tragic that would even occur to you in connection with what is a very important job.

Comment What is the TSA for anyway? (Score 5, Informative) 427

I've had a sneaking suspicion that the TSA is a stealth jobs program for the otherwise unemployable. It's not so much the intrusive searches and so on as the STUPIDITY of their measures (how are four small bottles of liquid different from one large bottle?). As a game I stand in line at the checkpoints daydreaming about all the ways I could sneak things through—ideas that I won't share because it appears that terrorists are generally, thank goodness, even dumber than the gatekeepers. Many critics have already dissected their policies, e.g., http://www.schneier.com/ It's just too easy.

Terrorism is a very serious problem that can get people killed. So is the TSA.

Comment Re:Jail Time? (Score 1) 175

Piercing the corporate veil is for extreme abuses and rarely done — or the corporate form would be meaningless. Believe me, MUCH easier said than done. Especially when the defendant has essentially unlimited legal resources.

I'm not making an argument about what is right, just the law. Obviously corporations sometimes get away with (virtual) murder.

Comment Re:Not a "bad idea" (Score 1) 264

"Can't be bothered to take any extra effort?" Checking off the box on your license application IS registering to vote. If you are so fond of picture ID and offended by (hypothetical) fraud, what better time to register than when you're getting that very ID?

Believe me, if the person lacks ID, there are very specific requirements re identity. If the law is not being followed, that's a different problem. To accuse anyone who doesn't endorse your particular preferences for ID as favoring fraud is ridiculous. There's no perfect mix. Also, fraud is practiced by both sides; to focus on fraud only by the poor (by using the hassle method) is to put one's thumb on the scale. Besides, no one has bothered to prove the alleged widespread fraud, though there are also methods to challenge the qulaifications of voters at the polls.

The only motor voter issues I saw, BTW, related to the government dropping the ball and failing to register people. The voters I saw were qualified and eager to do their duty as citizens, and it's really upsetting to see them tripped up by red tape and gov't incompetence when so many people just stay home. That's not lazy, it's patriotic.

Comment Re:Not a "bad idea" (Score 1) 264

As a member of the party I suspect you're accusing of "enabling voter fraud," well, I might as well say the other side wants to disenfranchise legitimate voters by making it more difficult in much the same way as now-illegal literacy tests and poll taxes. I've worked at the polls for three elections now as an attorney monitoring people turned away for a variety of reasons, mostly invalid. I'll help anyone vote who has a right to regardless of their political affiliation, and I know which party that favors. The opponents of motor voter and such don't care about fraud; they care about winning.

Comment Re:Greed (here) is good (Score 1) 193

I like macs but not platform dependence - my kid *had* to run windows software. I wouldn't want iPad dependence, either.

I think, though, that there is a case to be made for color, real wireless, and meaningful performance. Most of the added stuff for textbooks, animations and so on, don't do a whole lot, but color adds very meaningful and sometimes essential "bandwidth" (for example, an article on color blindness). Presumably you'll be able to get all that for $50 in a few years. $500 isn't even terrible. Oh, and a reasonably big screen! We have a B&W Nook, and a color one, which are fun and nice but not good enough as browsers, which i consider the relevant format not the classic trade paperback.

Theft on iPods and 'Phones (my son lost his 4S) is huge here. I haven't heard much about the computers. A mom tells me the iPads are not allowed to go home. She hasn't heard of thefts ... just the usual abuses (like posting harassing messages without realizing they're traceable to the device ... yawn). It shouldn't take too much genius to set something up to hobble or brick missing machines. I don't know. Kids carry a lot of valuables these days. You shoud hear my rants about "essential" gadgets.... :) Oh wait, you have a 5-digit UID -- oldtimer?

Comment Re:Greed (here) is good (Score 1) 193

Yes, they get the online version, too. (Arlington VA) The high schools are starting to give out iPads, too. Some number of kids are given laptops if they don't have computer access at home (my not-poor but deprived kid got one of these because, well, we don't do Windows). This is a fairly affluent district, but the iPad used doesn't seem so $$$ compared to textbooks that already cost $80/each. The kids take better care of them than I would have expected, too. I wonder if Apple has a good bulk price for the things. Hey, most of the kids already carry cellphones worth $200-800. When I was a kid I carried a quarter for the payphone, and it was NOT that long ago. Yes, there's no reason most of the same stuff should not be available on a cheap kindle or nook or whatever. The iPad does allow the student to do some more creative work... ... but the immediate Q here is content. The e-reader (whatever the tablets are) is inevitable. I'm hoping textbooks become kind of like Linux? Except easier to install. :) I didn't refocus on college textbooks, the actual OP, but there OMG i would have saved a lot of money. On texts I often didn't use. ... if texts stay proprietary, will there be a secondary market in them? I think the publishers will at *most* offer licensing deals to institutions. Well, anyway, surely we can manage some public domain basic math texts; the fundamentals haven't and never will change.

Comment Greed (here) is good (Score 4, Interesting) 193

It's not just a good idea, it's inevitable. The immediate drive, always a convincing one in politics, is money. the interesting Q is HOW to do it, but whether to start, and to do it with public money is a no-brainer. You might otherwise as well question whether public-financed education is relevant. That ship has sailed, and this is just one part of that critical project. Feynman's essay on textbook adoption is timeless: http://www.textbookleague.org/103feyn.htm

Current textbooks are overweight, expensive, and boring. Many schools including ours have been reduced into getting students two copies because they were to heavy to take to school and back (really). Now the kids rarely even open the things.

Comment Re:Heaven forbid (Score 1) 170

Patience, it will happen. I wonder about the translation barrier—good translation is expensive. No, not all of us Americans expect everyone to learn English. :) But also, the book I'm working on ... I'm very sensitive about the way I put things and have to wonder how much is "lost in translation." Anyway, these arte other issues from copyright.... Where do you live? I'll make it a priority!

Comment Re:Heaven forbid (Score 1) 170

Yep. As I emphasized, the stuff should get read, and copyright at some point just gets in the way. I'm not sure how many authors, now dead, would have wanted the extensions to happen. *Disney* on the other hand wants to conserve its assets and didn't want to see new Mickey Mouses. That's the real fire behind these extensions, and weird sentimentality about the oeuvre of (semi-martyred) Sonny Bono. Now, most writers *don't* die with huge estates and do want to pass something of value to their heirs (it's unlikely to be a family estate! which doesn't expire). They have to strike a balance in there somewhere.

When you made the burgers, you were paid on the apot. That's not the usual model for writers. They get it a dime or dollar at a time. Maybe that's part of the problem.

Comment Re:Heaven forbid (Score 2) 170

Writers are part of society. What is best for society includes their welfare (food, housing) and, for their readers (all of us), keeping them productive. Finally, this is for better or worse capitalism, so you have some control over the things you make (in Lockean theory). If you want to depart from that principle, fine, but don't just inflict it on the writers because it's easy!

The rest of your arguments are just that writers like musicians can get into some other business and give their work away. Well, some can, but why force them in the name of the common good? Writing is a profession in itself with real work product taht deserves the respect given other things. (Yes, I know there's a longrunning debate over "words want to be free" or something, but I can't even grasp that one imposed 100%. I *do* love old works that are public domain, i think it's a great thing -- partly because many copyrighted works are for the moment so hard to come by.)

Preservation of the text obviously takes precedence over losing them! Then everyone loses. Google is engaged in a very important thing and I hope they'll be socially mided about it ... as opposed to (evil) greedbags.

And I intimated in the original comment that our current laws are stupid. That one's easy.

Comment Heaven forbid (Score 5, Insightful) 170

... that people get to read these works!

As a writer I understand the tension between wanting to be read and wanting to be paid. Some want only the former, some the latter; I want both, kind of like eat to live and live to eat combined. Such is my right. But I find the resistence to digitization foolish, a fixation on money and a holdover from dead tree books plus a first use doctrine many publishers and authors never liked. It's obstructionist.

As a reader, full speed ahead. I am so tired of books missing at the library or out of print. Then there's the allure of getting a book within thirty seconds. Yes, I'll pay for the privilege, can we please hurry up with an eye to both principles (get read, get paid)? And books in the public domain? Rapture. (Topic for another day: The insane extension of copyright in the Mickey Mouse / Sonny Bono Act.....)

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