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Comment Re:If your not connected to the internet your secu (Score 1) 55

People did get computer virus infections before the wide use of the internet. It came from people sharing floppies or other portable media. Also, you'd get the odd LAN viruses. The Internet just made it far easier to both spread and make use of the intrusions.

Oddly enough, people used to write virus programs with nothing more than the malicious desire to crash your computer or the completely amoral idea of wanting to see what would happen, because it was difficult to get your computer to phone home before people had "always on" Internet connection, so you couldn't really use infected machines for DDoS attacks or for reliably sending back information to the virus writer/operator.

I remember having to be worried about infected disks long before I ever owned a modem at home.

Comment Re:Nuclear Power Fears (Score 1) 419

Well New Horizons would probably be extremely difficult, if not impossible without an RTG. I think the article is concerned with suggesting that we're hamstringing ourselves by only using RTGs when we have no other option, as opposed to a situation where it would significantly improve the success of the project.

Of course, as a dozen people have already pointed out, an RTG is far too heavy for this lander anyway, so the point is moot.

Comment Re:Nuclear Power Fears (Score 1) 419

Really? You think that a rocket with an RTG on it is the same thing as an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile with a half dozen Multiple Re-entry Vehicles each with a payload of about 768Kt each?

Are people really that unable to comprehend the difference about what is being talked about here?

The worst thing that can happen to an RTG is that the rocket explodes and spreads the Plutonium over a wide area. Not pleasant, but we're talking maybe a few cases of cancer, not Hiroshima. There's not even a chain reaction involved.

Comment Re:Obligatory reading (Score 1) 419

It's unlikely to ever get much higher in a verifiable way. Yes, we can certainly assume that some people will die of complications of it, but would anyone have even noticed after such a long term? Many are going to die long before that due to smoking or heart disease or other non-Fukushima caused cancers.

It may not be valid to lock someone up for 10 minutes, and then call them okay if they die after a day or even ten years, but over a lifetime?

Everyone's going to die of something. There is a possibility, albeit a remote one, that no one will ever die of a Fukushima induced issue ever again after a certain point. How will we ever know? You can say that this or that cancer is most likely caused by irradiation or ingestion of some isotope that could only come from the incident, but it's rarely that cut and dried.

Comment Re:In other words (Score 1) 124

I don't really like the limitation on the number of hours, really. That was always one of the things about unions that bothered me. I am forced to not work to my full potential even on a job I actually like.

If I am going to do a job, I want to do a job that I like. And if I am doing a job I like, then I'd like the opportunity to work at it.

I like working and I like contributing towards a goal. I wouldn't want to be told to go home to give someone else their "turn". I don't mind working 60 hours, as long as it is something I want to do. If I have an income to fall back on, then I have the option of picking something I really want to do, without fearing for my ability to eat, and then being able to do that work.

If those people who don't really want to do my job, but are doing it because they need to eat are forced to take a turn at the wheel to make their money, then it makes everyone unhappy.

I am unhappy because I have to go home and not work on my project (which I like).

Worker #2 has to come in to work a 20 hour shift to support himself, but really doesn't like doing the work.

And of course, the business suffers because you have to find even more people with the skills and the interest to do the job because your first choice person has to go home when the week is only half over.

Ultimately, we shouldn't define people by their worth as labor. It shouldn't be about giving everyone a job, it should be about everyone enjoying the fruits of our civilization and working on what they want to work on.

Comment Re:time for guns (Score 1) 219

One person against the government, yes. They will get swatted.

That said, it drives up the cost of every action. When enough people go into armed opposition, it becomes a lot more difficult for the government to act with impunity.

It is true that the Second Amendment was written in a time where the concept of Federalism and states' rights were stronger. The huge monstrosity of a government we have today was not envisioned, so it was probably assumed that the militia could deal with the government, if needed.

Let's understand, however, that the fact that the Second Amendment is less effective now, does not really remove the need for it. An enraged population will eventually destroy a government it can no longer tolerate, guns or not. Guns aren't about destroying the government, they're about keeping the government from going so far that it comes down to cataclysm.

The real reason for the Second Amendment is not to actually overthrow the government, but to ensure that the government does not become too comfortable and forgets that there is an ultimate sanction for their misdeeds. That sanction can still come with knives or stones, but an armed population keeps the threat imminent enough that the government can't forget about it. The danger is a government so out of touch and so secure in it's control that it completely ignores the possibility of revolution until bloody revolution is the only solution.

Comment Re:Wasn't Really Trying to Hide in the First Place (Score 1) 219

It isn't a matter of how important the journalist thinks FB's policies are, it is a matter of him posting in a place and in a manner that would give away his identity when he has no reason to believe that they wouldn't.

Facebook makes no claims to protect users from being discovered. Quite the opposite, really. They are very upfront about the fact that they want you to be identifiable.

I can only believe that this journalist either was unaware that it would go this far, or that he was willing to risk his life to make sure it got to a larger audience. He may have believed that he'd piss them off, but just have normal harassment, which may have been an acceptable cost for him to improve his standing as a journalist and the visibility of his story.

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