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US Federal Judge Rules Suspicionless Border Searches of Laptops Constitutional 462

AHuxley writes "The American Civil Liberties Union sought to challenge the U.S. legal 'border exemption' three years ago. Can your laptop be seized and searched without reasonable suspicion at the border? A 32 page decision provides new legal insight into legal thinking around suspicionless searches: your electronic devices are searchable and seizable for any reason at the U.S. border. The ACLU may appeal. Also note the Kool-Aid comment: 'The report said that a reasonable suspicion standard is inadvisable because it could lead to litigation and the forced divulgence of national security information, and would prevent border officers from acting on inchoate "hunches," a method that it says has sometimes proved fruitful.'" It's even legal for them to copy the contents of your laptop for no reason at all, just in case they need to take a peek later. A bit of context from the ACLU: "The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Pascal Abidor, a dual French-American citizen who had his laptop searched and confiscated at the Canadian border ... Abidor was travelling from Montreal to New York on an Amtrak train in May 2010 when he had his laptop searched and confiscated by customs officers. Abidor, an Islamic Studies Ph.D. student at McGill University, was questioned, taken off the train in handcuffs, and held in a cell for several hours before being released without charge. When his laptop was returned 11 days later, there was evidence that many of his personal files had been searched, including photos and chats with his girlfriend."

Comment Re:Morons (Score 1) 564

Buddy, have I been there. Users are the worst part of the computing industry.

Had a guy call me once... "I can't get my email".

I asked him what he was using, Outlook, Thunderbird etc. Guess what he said?

Wordpad.

If I could have reached through the phone, I would've slapped him.

Comment Re:Get rid of those things (Score 1) 944

Why is it preferable to store 96 bulbs and periodically replace them than to buy one that lasts forever?

I have over 5000 square ft in my house. The shelf space these take up is trivial. I also live in the boonies, so I have everything on hand. Just like living on a farm. I also don't believe that these bulbs will "last forever".

The power cost of each individual bulb is trivial, but when you add up all the bulbs in the house it is not. According to The US Energy Information Adminsitration, 13% to 17% of household energy use is lighting.

People here all think I live in America. Funny, I did mention "province" in my first post, yet all the tree huggers could see was my atittude about "saving the planet" and my lazy math. I couldn't care less about my electricity bill for lights. I have the money to pay the bills and am going to put in solar panels next year, maybe.

Electricity is an expensive way to get heat. That is why most houses are not heated by electricity.

I agree, but there are quite a few houses in Canada that use electric heat. Everyone also missed my sarcastic comment about using computers for heat.

I am an iconoclast. People, especially Liberals, need to stop worshipping the planet. ( After re-reading my posts, maybe I am guilty of trolling liberals :-) )Up here we have the crackpot David Susuki. I'm sick of his rhetoric.

I don't believe the planet will last 100 more years as it is. That's got nothing to do with global warming. This sums up my belief of the planet and global warming:

Revelation 21 "21 Now I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away. Also there was no more sea."

It all burns and no tree hugging hippie liberal freak is gonna change any of that by changing a few light bulbs. /troll

This is the part where I get flamed by the secular humanists.
Ecclesiastes 12
13 Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter:
Fear God and keep His commandments,
For this is the sum duty of man.
14 For God will bring every work into judgment,
Including every secret thing,
Whether good or evil.

Peace.

Comment Re:Get rid of those things (Score 2, Insightful) 944

I don't give a shit about a green planet. It all burns and will soon enough.

We have power and lots of it here. I'm not going to pay 20 bucks a bulb for the next big thing so some tree hugger can feel good about themselves. I've changed less than 10 bulbs in a decade here. That's 7.80 at current prices. Don't give a shit about changing to some other bullshit new light. I tried the last "craze" to cfl bulbs and was really pissed off when I found out about the mercury. I like the light the incandescents give off and that they're instant on without any environmental hazards in my house.

Don't give a shit about power prices anyway. How much do you really think it costs to run a 60 watt bulb at .08 a kwh?

Comment Re:Get rid of those things (Score 4, Informative) 944

Let's see, listen to these lying bastards and buy a "lifetime" bulb for $20. each, OR just use the 30cent bulbs that I've been using for 50 years?

I bought 96 bulbs for $75. a lifetime supply for me. I have changed exactly 6 bulbs in my bathroom and two in my storage area in 7 years.

I live in a cold country. I don't care about a trivial power cost. I need the heat. Doesn't matter if it comes from a bulb or natural gas. Shit, I heat with computers sometimes!

This whole bulb fiasco is a money grab and to bail out dumb governments who didn't plan for electrical growth.

My province added 150 windmills this year and will add 300 in the coming two years. We have wind, coal and natural gas. Changing a few light bulbs will make very little difference here.

You can pry my incandescents from my cold dead hands!

United States

Edward Snowden's New Job: Tech Support 328

Nerval's Lobster writes "Government whistleblower Edward Snowden, exiled in Russia after releasing top-secret documents about the National Security Agency's surveillance activities to the press, has a new job: tech support. Snowden's lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told the Associated Press that his client starts work Nov. 1 for a "major" Russian Website, which he declined to name. In June, Snowden—a former CIA employee who worked as a contractor for the NSA—began feeding an enormous pile of classified charts and documents about federal surveillance programs to The Guardian and other newspapers. Many of those documents suggested that the NSA, ordinarily tasked with intercepting communications from terrorists and foreign governments, collects massive amounts of information on ordinary Americans, which in turn ignited a firestorm of controversy. The Snowden revelations have continued into this week, with The Washington Post reporting that the NSA has aggressively targeted Google and Yahoo servers. Snowden's documents suggest that the agency has figured out how to tap the links connecting the two tech giants' datacenters to the broader Web. Google told the Post that it was "troubled" by the report. A Yahoo spokesperson insisted that the company had "strict controls in place to protect the security of our datacenters" and that "we have not given access to our data centers to the NSA or to any other government agency.""
Games

GTA V Proves a Lot of Parents Still Don't Know or Care About ESRB Ratings 621

Deathspawner writes "Grand Theft Auto V has shown itself to be potential GOTY material, and has even managed to break a sales record already. But aside from that, the game has also become one of the most adult-oriented games ever released, with torture, drug use and sex prevalent not long after beginning the game. You'd expect this gameplay to deter most parents from picking the game up for their young children — but not so. An anonymous editorial at Kotaku written by a video game store employee says that out of the ~1,000 copies sold in the first week, at least 10% of them went to parents accompanied by a child. Clearly, this could be interpreted as a problem. Techgage adds that this is one of the biggest problems facing gaming today. With one breath, many parents criticize video games for being so violent, and with the next, they're saying 'thanks' at the counter after picking up these very games for their kids. While ESRB ratings and other warnings about violent games for kids have good reason to exist, many parents still ignore them, aren't aware to them, or simply don't care about their warnings."
Microsoft

Maybe Steve Ballmer Doesn't Deserve the Hate 240

Nerval's Lobster writes "Who could forget Steve Ballmer's defining moment, that infamous 'Developers! Developers! Developers!' rant that became a YouTube hit? Or the reports of frighteningly accurate chair-throwing? Who could miss the tech media and investors blaming him for everything from Microsoft's largely stagnant stock price over the past decade to its inability to get in front of trends such as mobile devices? But tech columnist (and Kernel editor-in-chief) Milo Yiannopoulos talked to a bunch of Ballmer's friends and colleagues, picked through Microsoft's history, and came away with the argument that the man deserves a second look as an effective leader. 'He stands accused of running one of the greatest companies in American history into the ground, even as its stock price remains remarkably resilient and the company continues to turn a healthy profit,' he writes. 'The mature verdict on Steve Ballmer is that he has made only one major strategic error: not combining his own brilliance for sales and detail with a visionary product leader who has the authority to create bold new revenue streams for the company.' Do you agree? Or does Ballmer deserve his reputation as a bad CEO?"

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