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Comment: Re:This is out of control (Score 5, Insightful) 995

by onefriedrice (#39652291) Attached to: Zimmerman Charged With 2nd-Degree Murder

Does it make his actions acceptable to you? Ignoring sane neighborhood watch protocols and the 911 operator and confronting someone while packing a gun?

I don't know that Zimmerman did confront Martin. The operator told him he didn't need to follow, and it's unclear what happened after that because of conflicting testimony. Considering how few real facts are known, the only reasonable response is to say that I have no idea whether Zimmerman's actions are acceptable or not. However, following someone is not usually illegal. Having a gun is not illegal. And, in Florida, shooting someone and killing them with a gun is not illegal under certain (very special) conditions which you may or may not agree with, although it is the law.

Now it seems the prosecutor has collected enough facts that she thinks she can convict Zimmerman for breaking the law. A panel of Zimmerman's peers will determine whether or not he really is guilty. If he is guilty, I hope the trial is the least of his discomforts. If he is innocent, the trial will probably not be any worse than how the media and race baiters have already ruined his life, but having to battle false charges certainly wouldn't make things any easier. Whether he is guilty or innocent, let justice prevail.

Comment: Re:This is out of control (Score 5, Insightful) 995

by onefriedrice (#39651921) Attached to: Zimmerman Charged With 2nd-Degree Murder

His innocence or guilt is in the hands of the court, which is where it belonged all along.

Nope, it is where it belongs (in court) if the prosecutor decides to bring charges, and not before that time. It's easy to sit in your armchair and pretend to know facts that can really only come out of a thorough investigation, but there may be a time, if you ever happen to just be in the wrong place at the wrong time, that you are grateful that such things are investigated before arrests and charges are made. False charges have ruined the lives of innocent people before. The system may have flaws, but the fact that crimes (which may not be crimes) are investigated before charges are filed is not one of those flaws.

In this case--unless the prosecutor is simply bowing to pressure from the uninformed masses, which would be disgusting--the prosecutor was not convinced of George Zimmerman's story or believes his actions were not sanctioned by the current laws on the books. In that case, a trial is perfectly reasonable. If Zimmerman is found guilty by a panel of his peers, he will be punished. If not, he will walk. This is the way it should be, but only after a proper police investigation and review of the facts by the prosecutor--not the supposed "facts" you get from your nightly news anchor, but the real facts insofar as they can be determined.

The Internet

MPAA Chief Dodd Hints At Talks To Revive SOPA 279

Posted by samzenpus
from the they're-back dept.
suraj.sun writes "Christopher Dodd, the former Connecticut senator who now leads the MPAA, hasn't given up on his dream of censoring the Internet. In an interview with Hollywood Reporter, he said that Hollywood and the technology industry 'need to come to an understanding' about new copyright legislation. Dodd said that there were 'conversations going on now,' about SOPA-style legislation, but that he was 'not going to go into more detail because obviously if I do, it becomes counterproductive.' Asked whether the White House's decision to oppose SOPA had created tensions with Hollywood, Dodd insisted that he was 'not going to revisit the events of last winter,' but said he hoped the president would use his 'good relationships' with both Hollywood and the technology industry to broker a deal."

Comment: Re:Time for a change (Score 1) 177

by onefriedrice (#39498137) Attached to: Microsoft Releases ASP.NET MVC Under the Apache License

They may have a decent product, but they still over charge, which is also "evil".

On no, a big bad evil corporation is making money. I can't call myself a friend to Apple or Microsoft, but this statement is just retarded. Companies charge what people are willing to pay. A lot of people (apparently) disagree with your valuation of Apple products, and nobody was tricked into buying an iPod or iPhone. There were so many sold that there is no excuse for somebody to not know what they were getting when they threw down their money, and the cost was obviously worth it to them.

Comment: Re:Why no PPAPI? (Score 1) 404

by onefriedrice (#39127295) Attached to: Adobe Makes Flash on GNU/Linux Chrome-Only

"Their needs" being "we need to run Flash or nobody will use our browser".

That just changed, though.

From the blog post:

Flash Player will continue to support browsers using non-”Pepper” plugin APIs on platforms other than Linux.

So, this is only an issue for the Linux version of Flash. Even then, they are providing security updates for the non-Pepper version of Flash on Linux for five years. Mozilla may choose to eventually implement PPAPI just so Linux users can use the Pepper version of Flash, but that need is clearly not as great as you imply.

Comment: Re:So says the religious guy. (Score 1) 1237

by onefriedrice (#39120029) Attached to: Santorum Calls Democrats 'Anti-Science'

Interesting hypothesis, so the next and most obvious scientific questions would be: where is the evidence, how was the evidence gathered, and how can I reproduce the experiment? That is what differentiates most of the world's religions (perhaps even all of them) from science.

Nobody is saying science is religion or religion is science, just that they do not have to be at odds. Nobody is saying that when they profess a religious belief that they are doing science, just that they think they know something before it has been definitively proven to be true or false.

And no, creationism (even "strict" creationism) has not been proven false. The Bible does not say that the Earth is only a few thousand years old, and indeed it is not; it's obviously much older. The Bible does not say that the Earth was created in six days. Rather, the actual Hebrew word used in Genesis is much more vague, indicating merely some expanse of time. The Bible does say that Adam was the first human and that a woman was created from his rib, but that doesn't mean that humans did not evolve from another species which also also had some measure of intelligence.

As long as we don't know why anything exists or who or what started the universe, it's not anti-science for someone to choose to believe that God did it. On the contrary, the scientific method allows us to hypothesize before we experiment or before we even know how to perform an experiment. That's what faith is, a choice to believe, or a hypothesis.

Chrome

Google Working On Password Generator For Chrome 175

Posted by Soulskill
from the 123456-letmein-hunter2 dept.
Trailrunner7 writes "Google is in the process of developing a tool to help users generate strong passwords for the various and sundry Web sites for which they need to register and authenticate. The password-generator is meant to serve as an interim solution for users while Google and other companies continue to work on widespread deployment of the OpenID standard. The tool Google engineers are working on is a fairly simple one. For people who are using the Chrome browser, whenever a site presents them with a field that requires creating a password, Chrome will display a small key icon, letting the users know that they could allow Chrome to generate a password for them."

Comment: Re:Yay, now we get Sanderson back! (Score 1) 228

by onefriedrice (#39069597) Attached to: <em>A Memory of Light</em> To Be Released January 8, 2013

Don't count on it. George R. R. Martin is going to die before he finishes Song of Fire and Ice. So Sanderson has job security there.

Sanderson doesn't seem like a good fit to finish A Song of Ice And Fire. I haven't read all of Sanderson's books, but my impression is that GRRM's series is far too risque for Sanderson to handle well. I haven't read any Wheel of Time either, though, so my impression could be way off base.

Comment: Re:If you compare maps.... (Score 3) 173

by onefriedrice (#39002131) Attached to: FCC Maps the 3G Wasteland Of the Western US

Like the GP said, the free market has tunnel vision and doesn't fix shit.

Your concern is wasted on the people who actually choose to live in those places. Those who really care so much about how connected they are to the rest of the world can just as easily choose to relocate nearer to a city. The rest will continue to live happy lives as they always have. The only ones who think these people's lack of fast internet or mobile data is such a travesty are people like you who already have a fast connection and think that everyone else should want the same thing.

But don't worry. Our brilliant politicians in Washington agree with you, so they will spend millions of taxpayer dollars in order to bring 3G speeds to people that couldn't care less. Really smart. The only tunnel vision is that of those who stubbornly refuse to acknowledge that the free market is responsible for much of the good that they take for granted every day.

Never have so many understood so little about so much. -- James Burke

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