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Comment: meringuoid's law (Score 1) 314

by thisissilly (#36323732) Attached to: Embed a Video, Go To Jail?
"Whenever a controversial law is proposed, and its supporters, when confronted with an egregious abuse it would permit, use a phrase along the lines of 'Perhaps in theory, but the law would never be applied in that way' - they're lying. They intend to use the law that way as early and as often as possible." http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=169254&cid=14107454

Comment: Re:A million? (Score 1) 510

by thisissilly (#35694330) Attached to: Google's Driverless Car and the Logic of Safety
Consider that the rest of the world has 22x the US's population. Consider that a large part of that does not have the good roads and vehicle safety laws of the US, or ready access to emergency rooms in the event of an accident. Even if their vehicular death rate was the same, that means 42k*22=924k, for 966k total. I'd say 1m is not a bad estimate.

Comment: Re:Ummm Personal responsibility? (Score 2, Insightful) 520

by thisissilly (#33369322) Attached to: Look-Alike Tubes Lead To Hospital Deaths
If they have a 0.001% failure rate they will still err every decade or so.
Good point. And let me add, consider the fact that hospitals can have hundreds of nurses. If the average nurse makes an error only once a decade, then 100 nurses will average 10 errors each year. Error prevention systems are a good thing.

Comment: Re:Go Costner! Boo on BP! (Score 4, Insightful) 289

by thisissilly (#32946108) Attached to: IEEE Looks At Kevin Costner's Oil Cleanup Machines
oil companies will go broke if they screw up

Call me cynical, but it would never happen. Instead, oil companies would take a lesson from Hollywood, and make every single oil well its own corporation, so any disaster would be insulated to a single small corporation that goes broke.

Comment: Already against the law in the UK (Score 5, Informative) 259

by thisissilly (#32004582) Attached to: Supreme Court To Consider First Sale of Imports
Tesco (think British Wal-mart) was legal purchasing Levi's jeans in Europe from wholesalers, and then reselling them in the UK for lower price than Levi's wanted them sold there. Levi's sued them, and won. We can only hope the US Supreme Court sees things differently.

A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that works.

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