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Comment Re:Viability nothing (Score 1) 170

On the contrary, it fits definition 2 perfectly, definition 3 slightly, and definition 1 not at all. Copyright infringement is appropriation without right. It is not taking property.

I think that the confusion is that it's more-or-less correct to call it "stealing", but it is not correct to call it "theft". "Theft" is a legal term, and "stealing" is not.

Comment Re:personal privacy trumps all (Score 1) 134

To put it another way: There is no clash between privacy and security. Privacy is security.

The word "security", or any variant thereof, appears exactly once in the US Constitution: "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated [...]"

Comment Re:masdf (Score 4, Insightful) 297

Unfortunately, these are the same people that are easily exploited and swayed into terrorist acts.

If they're that malleable, then they should be able to be steered into being a productive member of society instead of being a criminal. The FBI had a choice about which they could do. They chose the one which would give them a headline and a story on Slashdot.

Comment Re:masdf (Score 5, Insightful) 297

That doesn't make him less dangerous.

What makes him dangerous is filling his head with dangerous thoughts. The vast majority, if not all, of the people whom the FBI have entrapped in the past are some of the more vulnerable members of society: people without a strong social support structure, part of a marginalised community, often poor, often unemployed, and so on.

It's a fundamental axiom of modern policing that the best way to stop crime is to stop people from becoming criminals in the first place. If someone is at risk of becoming a criminal, the best thing you can do is divert them away from that as early as possible. For the FBI to turn a non-criminal into a criminal is not just a failure, it's sociopathic.

Comment Re:regulation? (Score 1) 245

Extract the most restrictive cities (with their severe gang problems) and the US has one of the lowest firearm homicide rates in the world.

Help me out here, because I honestly don't understand the argument. The five cities in the US with the highest violent crime rates are, in descending order: Detroit, St. Louis, Oakland, Memphis, and Birmingham (AL). Which of these are "restrictive" by your criteria, and compared to what?

Note that I'm not actually making the argument that the US has a high firearm homicide rate (although it does among stable democracies). However, it's also worth pointing out that the US has ne of the highest firearm suicide rates in the world. Statistically speaking, if you own a gun, the person most likely to be killed by it is you.

Comment Re:regulation? (Score 1) 245

The Howard gun laws did nothing statistically speaking, there's even a research paper which shows that there are no statistical breaks as a result from the gun buyback.

ABS and AIC statistics are pretty clear that death and injuries due to firearms in Australia (locally) peaked in the year of the buyback, and has steadily decreased in all years since. Data on homicides and data on suicides are available for your own analysis if you don't believe the statisticians.

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