Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Some thoughts from Argentina (Score 1) 152

It really shows you don't know much about the new Argentine media law. Before the law, licenses were assigned by a government official, directly appointed by the president. Now, there is a commission, with some control by the opposition, and a formal public competition.

You can read more about the media law in this site: (Spanish) http://www.leydemedios.com.ar/

(Of course, this Fibertel is not related with the media law)

Comment Re:Some thoughts from Argentina (Score 1, Interesting) 152

Not neutral. The new law is not “setting things up so that the Government alone chooses who gets a license and who doesn't”, that's propaganda. The new law is just an anti-monopoly law.

Besides, you have your facts wrong. They haven't been operating illegally for several years. Fibertel was "dissolved" on Jan 15th, and the government has been warning the company for some time now. What happened now is not surprise for anyone but the uninformed.

Source: http://english.telam.com.ar/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=9961:government-announces-end-of-fibertel-telecommunications-services-&catid=42:politics

Presidents come and go, but Grupo Clarín has been controlling national politics for decades from the shadow. It will be a good thing to see it go.

Comment Re:I live in Argentina (Score 0) 152

So, if I understand you correctly... the Kirchners help corporate friends, and group Clarín is a good and big company that Argentinians should be proud of. Yet, in help of "their corporate friends", the Kirchner are pushing antimonopolic laws.

This is the kind of schizofrenia created by media monopolies on weak minds... =)

Comment Re:So what? (Score 4, Informative) 152

Grupo Clarín owns the national major newspaper, and seems to control the 2nd major one. It owns TV channels in every town and city, and in many cities is the only cable operator. It controls the only newspaper paper plant in Argentina and uses prices to undermine other newspapers.

As I explained in another comment, this is really about the government trying to stop a new merger, because Clarin had acquired the 2nd largest cable company in Argentina. The govt rejected the merger, but Clarín went ahead and dissolved the company, creating for itself an illegal situation (because the ISP license belonged to the old comany, which is now dissolved).

We are here in very interesting times regarding the role of journalism, and the fight agains media giants...

Comment This is really about antimonopoly measures (Score 4, Interesting) 152

This is part of the intention by the government to stop the merger of the two biggest cable providers. The merger has already been done, despite it being rejected ( http://www.buenosairesherald.com/BreakingNews/View/10918 ). The new merged company dissolved one of the parts, without getting the license to operate under the new company. So, now they are operating under a license belonging to a company which no longer exists.

The issue here is government vs media giants. Antimonopoly measures, which are common in developed countries, have a lot more opposition in non-developed countries, where economic interests go over the people's interest (yes, more than in the US =) ).

Comment Re:No (Score 1) 706

Maybe the kids are right.

I truly think school is a waste of the child's time because it teaches things the children don't want to learn and in most of the cases it teaches things children won't be needing anyway.

School is mostly a Sisyphean task. Paying kids to transform this into a Sisyphean job is not a good choice. Wouldn't it be better to change what school is into something that kids can make sense of?

Children want to learn, what they don't want is to be answered questions they didn't ask. If you hear a child, you'll notice he's constantly asking questions. I don't think motivation is an issue, the problem is motivating kids to do many pointless things.

Comment Re:No (Score 1) 706

Well.. maybe there's a flaw with the school system that requires to be fixed.

My point is almost the same as yours. Although we differ in conclusions. I think school is flawed for the same reasons you mentioned. And we should correct that. You think we should give money to the children so they don't question why they have to go to school in the first place.

In my experience, kids are bottomless pits of curiosity, unless you teach them not to be. Kids really enjoy learning, but you have to answer what they want to know and not just throwing random knowledge to them.

Last week my sister started asking me questions. She wanted to know what was the "optical things on the mouse, cameras, and remote controls". It took me a while to realize she was talking about LEDs. And after that, just by her inquiry, we went from LED to semiconductors to GaAs to the mining and production process. And I didn't have to push any knowledge (or money) on her, it was just her curiosity alone.

Slashdot Top Deals

Today is a good day for information-gathering. Read someone else's mail file.

Working...