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Comment Re:Autopsy killed the Post office (Score 1) 297

You do know that you missed the "manually" part right in the very sentence you quoted, right? It's no different than writing out a check as far as the ability to check for errors.

I have bill pay set up through Schwab, and I get all of my reminders for services that are set up that way through their system. However, just like GGP, I am concerned about errors and forgetting. I absolutely still get paper copies of every single bill, verify the amounts, and then manually enter the payment amount through the bill pay system. The system saves the biller's information, so all I have to enter is the amount and the payment post date.

Comment Re:Go the whole hog... (Score 2, Interesting) 405

The compelling reason to use OpenSolaris is a mature ZFS implementation. That's why I use it as a home fileserver. I was running a SXCE build from early 2008 to get ZFS, but then I just blasted away my boot drive and dumped OpenSolaris on it. Imported my pool and away it went. And now the install runs on its on pool (root pool, or rpool), so things are even easier.

Different OSes do different things really well. This is one area where OpenSolaris shines.

Comment Re:I think (Score 1) 219

Assuming your problem there was DRM (which it likely wasn't), the individual applied DRM restrictions to media which foreclosed external playback on a projector, to which you were entitled by the agreement. How would that be DRM's fault, and not the fault of the individual who inadvertently applied the restriction?

It's the same as if you hire someone to code something for you and give you the source code, but at the end of the project they only give you the binaries. That's not a problem with binaries (plenty of people don't need the source code to everything, and aren't willing to pay for the privilege to obtain it), it's a problem with performance of the contract.

Comment Re:I think (Score 1) 219

Last I checked, the only thing Netflix was selling was a subscription service.

Here's the thing about DRM: You want unfettered access to a particular media file? You want to be legally entitled to do whatever you please with it? That's worth a completely different amount than the limited ability to only play it on a single specified device, as governed by DRM.

Why would anyone want DRM? Because I don't particularly enjoy paying several thousand dollars for an unrestricted license to something when the ten dollar version with DRM that blocks uses I don't care about suits me.

What happens if you do away with DRM, nay, copyright, entirely? I mean, surely any "purchase" of a copyrighted work should let you do *whatever* you want with it! Heck, first sale doctrine is too restrictive, I want to make additional copies of it, and sell those! Who are you to tell me otherwise?

I'll tell you what happens -- the cost for the initial unit will be prohibitive. DRM is my friend, because it allows me to enjoy more affordable licenses, particularly subscription services (e.g., Zune, Netflix video on demand, etc.) which otherwise *would not exist*. Is that too complicated?

Comment Re:Redirect the evil! (Score 1) 594

The US judge doesn't need jurisdiction over you to nuke your e-mail account. They just need jurisdiction over your e-mail account, which they have in the case of Gmail. This isn't an "increasing tendency by American companies to conflate US Law with World Law," (whatever "World Law" may be??) it's just how the law works in current and former Commonwealth countries. Yes, yours included. If I, as a US citizen, had an account with BigPond, you damned well better believe it's subject to Australian jurisdiction.

Comment One Size Fits All (Score 2, Insightful) 495

I wholeheartedly support a correctly implemented patent system in industrialized nations. Although not all inventions fall into this particular category (and we can go on and on all day about those that don't), a number of very valuable inventions require massive investments of time and money to develop and perfect. Without any assurance of the ability to recover for these investments, people would be hard-pressed to engage in them in the first place. Think, most obviously, pharmaceuticals.

A uniform patent system would require poorer countries to adhere to patent norms that would be inherently contrary to their own interests. If you have nothing to protect, and it is absolutely to your advantage to take, why should you be forced to follow along? It makes no sense to ask developing nations and others with no need for a patent system to obey the restrictions earned elsewhere. And, here's the important thing, these two completely different levels of protection can in fact peacefully co-exist. The market will correct. If a poorer country absolutely needs a particular drug developed which no other country needs, maybe then they would find use in patent or patent-like protections. Until then, it's silly to impose our will on others.

Comment Re:It's Already Legally Governed, Drop It (Score 1) 184

I think you'll find that the really important quote from the article, as regards residents taking care of a park for years, is:

Adverse possession does not typically work against property owned by a government agency.

Not to mention, even using the quote you gave, that the example probably fails at least the exclusivity requirement.

Comment Re:FAQ claims copyright (Score 2, Insightful) 154

I wasn't expecting to find the correct answer to a legal question here on Slashdot, but, there it is. /thread. Too bad I don't have any mod points.

One nit, though, just be careful with "renaming a field" as a solution ... that could still get you nailed as a derivative work. I do like the idea of building the framework from scratch, and only then populating it with the data.

Comment Re:Social corruption (Score 1) 270

Nothing's stopping you from contracting with the individual artists/rights holders for some other amount.

This is capitalism *at its finest*. There is a giant barrier in the way to individually negotiate and enforce thousands of separate contracts, one per song a station might play. Instead, a fixed rate solves the problem.

Why don't people get this? The alternative to compulsory fees isn't *gratis*, it's "go figure out how to contract with a thousand separate entities to let you play their music."

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