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Comment Re:Customers Let Them (Score 1) 117

There's a little difference in the enterprise space, of course. But on the consumer side, people just don't care.

Unfortunately, the difference is that enterprises pretend to care about security but in reality every member wants exceptions for themselves based on their power and position, so the end result is insecure and inconvenient. Nor are they wrong to want those exceptions, since security tends to get in the way of getting anything done, so anyone who actually cares about it will be outcompeted by someone who doesn't.

Of course it doesn't help that most people hate their employers and will get satisfaction from every little act of rebellion, even if all they did was look the other way.

Comment Re:Genesis! (Score 1) 153

And, unfortunately, people who become deeply enmeshed in science are as apt to ignore morality as those who become too deeply enmeshed in finance or politics.

I don't think it's so much a matter of ignoring morality as losing perspective: you become so focused on a small portion of the world that you lose sight of anything beyond. And it happens to everyone to some extent, finance and politics just happen to be high-power positions which shield you from corrective feedback.

Comment Re:Genesis! (Score 2) 153

The opposite of "knowing" is not "not knowing". That can easily be remedied. If you do not know, you ask someone who does know, and then you know too.

Well, no. How do you know if the guy you asked actually knows anything about the matter but is simply making shit up as he goes or reciting some half-remembered factoid he heard from an unknown source? You can't. You can double-check, and quadruple-check, and so on, but ultimately every model of the world rests on unproven assumptions. After all, they're subject to the incompleteness theorems and as such can't be self-contained.

But then again none of this matters, since science vs. religion was never about knowledge but simply a case of two memetic complexes - or, if you prefer, "gods" - fighting for territory in the noosphere. Humans merely get sucked into the fight due to being the physical platform on which the noosphere rests.

Comment Re:Genesis! (Score 1) 153

The fact is that, as always, those who found it are basically screaming "sensational discovery, mystery XYZ is finally solved", while other scientist are more cautious. It's the old theme of "sensationalism versus business as usual", dangerously close to the stance of attention whores.

"Business as usual" is competition over limited funding, and that means marketing your accomplishments to show you can deliver results. Let's not look down on attention whores when We The People are the johns.

Comment Re:Actually, you CAN'T do that (Score 1) 65

The force between free quarks increases with distance to about 10,000N, then remains constant (no, I have no idea how this makes any sense, but it's what I read).

According to Wikipedia it's because gluons, which mediate the Strong Force interaction between quarks, also feel said force themselves (that is, they carry color charge(. So rather than disperse with distance like, say, photons do, they tend to stick together and form "ropes".

So it's analogous to how a flashlight loses power faster than a laser.

Comment Re:It is the oppressive governments that are uneth (Score 1) 71

The Hacking Team is just business, and a business is amoral.

The Hacking Team consists of humans, and as such is incapable of being amoral. They're simply evil.

A business exists to maximise its own profit as it sees fit, and it should be free to engage in whatever behaviour that is in the interest of its owners.

"Should" why? No one has any kind of obligation to help maximize your profits.

If it succeeds by performing questionable acts, it is the fault of us, the society, which enable it to proceed that way.

The society is responsible for the loophole existing in the first place, and the company is responsible for exploiting it. Blame is not an either-or game.

Especially, it is the liability of the governments that hired THT in the first place.

What if those governments rebranded themselves as "corporate states"? Then they could claim they were simply companies maximizing their profits, which would make them blameless, according to you.

Comment Re: but hate speech can be forbidden (Score 1) 312

I find your comment offensive and a micro-agression against me and my kind. This is hate speech.

No, it's not. Whether you are offended or not is irrelevant. What makes something hate speech is that it attacks a group, making them more of an acceptable target for future attacks. Hate speech is, in other words, the propaganda campaign that precedes every war and atrocity in human history. That makes hate speech not just speech but also an action, the first blow that starts chipping off the preceived humanity of the target that protects them from violence.

Is someone simply being a jerk? Then it's just speech, offensive or not. Is someone working themselves up into a rage in preparation for an attack? Then it's hate speech.

Comment Re:No! (Score 1) 227

Probably, but by that time, you'll have to give control of your implants to your employer, and they will turn them on and off at will.

Which seems unlikely, since implants are a part of you, and the candidates for positions requiring high security tend to have other options. It's the McDonald's staff that needs to worry about such requirements.

Comment Re: No it is not (Score 1) 351

IMO that is the reason why advertising is morally reprehensible. It's manipulative mass mind control.

Of course it is. And as people get more used to it and filter it out, it becomes harder to manipulate them in general - even by the politicians and special interest groups. So I guess it's a case of the Invisible Hand accidentally smacking the 1% on the face.

Comment Re:First thing I thought of (Score 1) 446

My first thought was that the entire point of the site was to BE a blackmail scheme.

Correct. From the article: "In a long manifesto posted alongside the stolen ALM data, The Impact Team said it decided to publish the information in response to alleged lies ALM told its customers about a service that allows members to completely erase their profile information for a $19 fee."

Comment Re:There is no cure for absolute fucking stupidity (Score 1) 232

Now if you just add that the smart people end up hiring the stupid people to be armed and around them to protect them while decrying the evils of guns, you might have a solid theory on your hands.

Nope. People who believe violence will keep them safe will arm themselves, directly or indirectly. Intelligence doesn't enter into it, one way or another, any more than it does with any other basic instinct.

It seems like all the largest mouth pieces against guns sure have a lot of them around in the hands of hired help to protect them.

There's a running joke that the most vocal gay bashers are closet gays themselves. It's the same principle at work here. Internal contradictions tend to make people search for scapegoats.

Comment Re: Or speak English, it's 7bit clean (Score 1) 196

As I pointer out elsewhere here, Chinese can be written with a latin alphabet and a few accents. Likewise languages such as Sanskrit. Just as there is a difference between English handwriting and what can be represented in Ascii, we face a related issue with ideograph based writing systems. We would be better of writing Chinese webpages in pinyin, and developing a separate system for calligraphy and ideographs.

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