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Comment Re:Wow, a whole 1%? (Score 1) 163

If you are going to do that you need to ban chart trading and day trading as well and get back to people investing based on actual fundamentals. Good luck with that.

In the meantime the stock market is nothing but a game that has little to no relation to the success or viability of the businesses and in that world the fast trading algorithms serve to provide liquidity.

Comment Re:Wow, a whole 1%? (Score 1) 163

"Ever hear of a mutual fund, 401k, 403b, IRA, etc"

Ever hear of a bond, a commodity, a long term investor... When an auto-trade algorithm hits an action point... it has no impact on any of them. This only potentially impacts high risk investors and by definition they've opt'd in to the risk and have the burn coming.

Anyone else either isn't speculating by gambling in the stock market or is at least trading on longer scales of time that erase momentary blips in a stock price like this.

Comment Re:Oh For Crying Out Loud (Score 1) 161

This is more a discussion about mobile devices, which (unless you jailbreak them) don't trust the user.

Barring a root exploit (which do exist for a bit, and are patched when found), a keylogger on android is much less of a possibility. With Apple, the crypto is handled in hardware, and a keylogger gets to be near impossible (though phishing is not).

Comment Re:Spies are sneaky (Score 1) 202

"Oddly no. One reason so few people die to terrorist incidents is that there's a lot of time and effort expended on preventing and mitigating against them."

There is absolutely no evidence to support that claim. As anti-terrorism efforts have heightened since 9/11 there has been an increase in terrorism from pre-9/11 not a reduction.

Comment Re:Why is the government funding this? (Score 1) 53

"Tor has done nothing but enable criminals ...read silk road trial?"

While technically silk road is enabling people to break laws it was formed as an act of civil disobedience to protest unjust laws. The fix for silk road is not to shut down privacy and tor, the fix for silk road is to shut down the laws that protect the existence of a black market. The federal government has no right to tell individuals what they can and can't do with their bodies. What is in the interest of the general welfare is to regulate manufacture and distribution in the same way they do with food and that can't happen so long as they outlaw the substances and thereby protect the black market.

Next you point to insurance costs due to negative health effects. Then I point to knee and hip replacements that are the result of years of excess physical exercise that cost dramatically more. Suggest we outlaw jogging and shut down gyms since it makes far more fiscal sense than outlawing drugs. Then I point to search and rescue, fireman, high rise construction workers, and high rise window washers and suggest we should outlaw people making the reckless decision to enter these jobs as well since we are calling the cumulative result of preventing individuals from taking individual risks the general welfare and bound to do so if we are to remain logically consistent.

Comment Re:Conspiracies (Score 2) 53

"Am I the only one who thinks "the government" is actually made up of lots of independent minds, each with their own idealism and morality?"

That is the exact argument always levied against government conspiracies. It has been debunked thanks to the work of wikileaks, Mr. Snowden, and CIA revelation dumps. Anyone who didn't buy that argument, worked from the assumption you could trust those individuals to behave like any random stranger from the private sector showing up at your door at night, was sane, and intelligent would have come to the conclusion that these organizations were likely guilty of just about everything they turned out to be guilty of.

Government agencies might be populated with lots of independent minds but they are all basically structured like military or corporations with an executive structure. Every single day, every for profit corporation in the US is strategize to save costs, which translates in saving every penny at the expense of their workers they think they can spin without pushback. Year on year companies manage to slash health benefits for example. You don't need a conspiracy, the organization has interests which conflict with those of it's individual members and it's a significant portion of the population that is generally required to distrust the organization and it's spin in order push back against those interests.

So, get back to me when it proves to take a significant portion of the American population conspiring to prevent the illegal and unconstitutional spying revealed by Snowden from continuing. At this point the government is so corrupt that even the vast majority of the American population finding out about their conspiracies and being pissed about it has had ZERO impact beyond blowing some wind.

Also, the Navy and the NSA are one government organization. There is a reason the NSA director is always a high ranking military officer. How exactly does it take a significant portion of the American population to undermine a project built by a small group of people and paid for by the organization with interests that conflict with the rest of us?

Comment Re:Uh, what? (Score 1) 91

"Well... whatever. How things work in the real world is that the graphics driver generates code in the ISA of the GPU, which the GPU then executes.

We won't see LLVM-in-hardware, for the same reason we don't see Java-in-hardware. Software compilers work well, and allow for hardware that's aimed at being really fast, not at accepting some inappropriate ISA. Also, that hardware wouldn't play nice with other APIs like Direct3D."

If the ISA of the GPU is byte code what stops the Direct3D SDK from generating it? It is the byte code and not LLVM I'm suggesting be implemented in hardware. A common instruction set similar to x86 in CPU land and just like in that space it only exists as a public interface that is then translated into optimized intel or AMD underlying magic on the chip almost immediately.

Or rather, an API agnostic open specification byte code that all API's can target. The benefit is obvious, if intel, amd, and nvidia all implement native hardware support for a common instruction set it not only provides a compatibility blanket that dramatically simplifies building better API's but it also dramatically simplifies producing drivers for their hardware.

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