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Comment Re:Punish unjust copyright claims (Score 2) 287

That's how it works in criminal court. Copyright Infringement is a civil matter, which is why people are getting sued for money rather than placed in jail. In Civil Cases you (usually) need something called "preponderance of the evidence", which is basically the same as just piling legal briefs onto each side of a sea saw until one side clearly tips.

Comment Re:will never use it (Score 1) 800

Siri's AI is just piggybacking on a DARPA project that has been running for 40 years utilizing the resources of the top universities with Artificial Intelligence programs in the United States. In other words, the company that developed Siri is using technology developed by people who have been working on the bleeding edge (which also means any competitor can just piggyback on the same project).

If Apple threw their cash reserves at AI research, the best it could do is hire the researchers who basically already built the AI behind Siri. You would definitely see huge advancements, but none that wouldn't have happened anyway, and they would instead be owned by Apple rather than openly published.

Comment Re:University research paper. Bad Slashdot (Score 1) 481

I'm sure they'll get funding from somewhere to continue research if 25,000,000,000,000 is on the line...

The assumption from TFA is that we could only manage to keep an asteroid of that size in earth orbit for a couple years before it breaks away and drifts off. Considering $25 trillion is a bit less than half of the world's current annual GDP, I'm not sure you could feasibly invest in and develop an enterprise that could mine off that much raw material within the couple years we have it. And even then, it's unlikely to be worth the investment if you have to redirect the majority of the world's resources just to pull it off.

Comment Re:Cain married his sister (Score 2) 1014

So by your interpretation, god allowed the part about creating other humans to be omitted from his book, thereby misleading the vast majority of people reading it into thinking that the earliest humans were highly incestuous. Then, upon realizing this fatal mistake, he decided to outlaw incest altogether.

If this dude has a master plan, he's certainly half-assing it.

Comment Re:Crappy, crappy film (Score 3, Informative) 225

It's also worth noting that the land was actually traded for several thousand dollars (in that time, not today's) worth of beads, firearms, cookware, and other manufactured goods (the bulk of which was NOT the beads).

It's especially worth noting that the natives who sold the land didn't live there. They actually sold a neighboring tribe's land. The rest is violent force and cooties.

Comment Re:Rewrite the Constitution or face default! (Score 3, Informative) 1042

You realize this says "taxes and interest" under income, right? Social security contribution from the American people only come through a tax... why would the word "interest" be under income?

Because social security 'invests' its money into federal securities, which the federal government then uses to finance other programs (this and similar IOUs to trust funds make up about 4+ trillion of the current debt). The intention is, of course, to pay off the necessary securities before the social security payments need to be sent.

Now, the federal government could choose to pay those obligations and default on something else. Not all of the debt has to go bad at once, but this is a delicate balance. Do you pay your overseas creditors? Do you pay your employees? Do you pay your debts that you owe to yourself (social security)? As far as protecting the credit rating goes, it's probably wisest to pay outside creditors first. The fact is we already hit the debt ceiling in May, and we are holding on until August 2nd by not investing in certain federal pension and retirement programs with the excuse "we'll make it up later once we get a higher debt limit". This is at least a slight bit of evidence that we are more likely to prioritize outside creditors, and therefore default on something like social security or federal wages.

But it all remains to be seen... The fact is I'm a little surprised the Treasury hasn't released a plan with its payment priorities already, or at least I haven't been able to find one.

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