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Comment Re:Governments and banks should take care of it. (Score 1) 243

Governments aren't about trust, they are about compliance. You can be unhappy and distrustful all you want, but if you aren't posting from jail, odds are that you wouldn't fake SSL certificates just as you don't fake passports.

It doesn't need to be perfect, after all, just better than the meaningless system we have now.

Comment Re:Hume and the Irony Universe (Score 1) 258

founded in a mix of both direct empirical experience and consistent reason derived from other direct empirical experience

Oh, I see. Induction is solved because we can show, based on empirical evidence, that our empirical evidence is correct. Great.

The more charitable way to describe that is "bootstraping". People in the know sometimes shorten it to BS ;) But only when they don't want to say its circular reasoning.

Comment Re:first (Score 1) 258

in this universe at least.

COOLEST "first post" EVER.

You have read them all? In all universes? ;)

Nah, that first post can't be the coolest.

Entropy says that if it really was the coolest, it would also be the last.

See, deducing across universes is easy.

Comment Correct me if I'm wrong but... (Score 1) 47

the Playmetrix software allows them to embed 'call backs' into their game code that trigger when players do something of interest. This is all visualised via graphics and charts so activities become infographics.

Is this novel, or complex, in any way? Aren't aspects and business intelligence covered in the first half of CS courses?

Why is 'call backs' in quotes? They probably are just callbacks, nothing arcane behind it.

I guess venture capital and headlines really are all about the buzzwords.

Comment Re:subject (Score 1) 244

I knew it! Hollywood couldn't write 4 lines without fucking one up.

To be fair, the others aren't capitalized correctly either. So they only got 'Hollywood' right, and it must be because that's copyrighted.

Alright, it's definitely authentic.

Comment Re:They're right, y'know (Score 1) 250

In fact, distinguishing knowledge from belief pretty much disqualifies it as a religion. Religions generally deny the value of knowledge, primarily by classifying knowledge as just another set of beliefs that's no better than anyone else's beliefs.

Actually, that's a bit of a misinterpretation of knowledge. And religion.

Assuming knowledge is a justified/rational/reliable/whatever true belief, there can be still religious knowledge. Now, most scientists wouldn't consider "mystical revelations" as a valid source of knowledge, being irrational/unreliable/whatever, but there's a lot of difference between a random belief and a supernatural-based belief, and religious scholars have made this distinction for centuries. There are lots of other non-empirical knowledge sources after all, math, logic, introspection, and so on, and faith could just be one of them.

What you're describing is a kind of relativism so extreme I don't think it has serious proponents. Not educated, anyway.

Yahoo!

Submission + - Yahoo to scan emails users send and receive (digitizor.com)

kai_hiwatari writes: Yahoo! has updated its Additional Terms and Conditions and now they have got the right to scan user communications without any restriction. The change in the ATOS, noticed by Which?, is under Section c of Acceptance of Terms of Yahoo!’s Additional Terms of Services.
According to the ATOS, it is the responsibility of the Yahoo! user to warn his contacts that Yahoo! will scan their messages.

Google

Submission + - Google: Orkut will co-exist with Google+ (arnnet.com.au)

splitenz writes: Google's other social networking site, Orkut, which has been around for about seven years and has tens of millions of users worldwide, will continue to operate alongside the new Google+ for now.

However, Google is leaving its options open regarding the possibility of fusing the two through some sort of integration further down the road.

Science

Submission + - Diver Snaps First Photo of Fish Using Tools (sciencemag.org)

sciencehabit writes: While exploring Australia's Great Barrier Reef, professional diver Scott Gardner heard an odd cracking sound and swam over to investigate. What he found was a footlong blackspot tuskfish holding a clam in its mouth and whacking it against a rock. Soon the shell gave way, and the fish gobbled up the bivalve, spat out the shell fragments, and swam off. Fortunately, Gardner had a camera handy and snapped what seem to be the first photographs of a wild fish using a tool.

Comment Re:Muggles (Score 2) 282

I'm not defending paranoia, but if I were planting a cache in a crowded place, and receiving suspicious looks, and was still determined to put it there... what would be the problem of chatting up someone nearby (like a vendor that sticks around), showing how it works, asking where he thinks would be a good spot (just to engage, no need to actually listen :).

At worst it would be someone uninterested, but capable of clearing this kind of misunderstanding before panic mode. At best its someone that thinks its cool and joins in afterwards.

Seriously, I'm not a "people person" at all but this is just common sense.

Medicine

Magnetic Nanoparticles Fry Tumors 111

sciencehabit writes "In a new study, a team found that injecting mice with tiny magnets and cranking up the heat eliminated tumors from the animals' bodies with no apparent side effects. The nanoparticles heat up when a magnetic field is applied, and because they are only injected into tumors, only cancerous cells get fried. Researchers hope the technique, known as magnetic hyperthermia, could be used in cancer patients, obviating the need for chemotherapy and radiation."

Comment Re:Nothing... (Score 1) 362

Conspiracy nut guesswork really is something. Dome the stars are painted on? Really? That's absurd!

You assume the government did actually launch the probes. It's all a setup. Can't you tell between a real engineer and an actor?

What we should be asking is why is Hollywood behind it. Stick with the facts.

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