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Comment: Re:This is rather disconcerting. (Score 1) 54

by Razgorov Prikazka (#43783855) Attached to: Inside the Microsoft Digital Crimes Unit
But if youre finally at the questions, things go from bad to worse. One would expect a "Digital Crimes Unit" to:
  - investigate security holes (preferably before shiping it out)
  - make sure that virus-makers dont have a chance.
  - find, cage and string up the idiot that makes Win8 harder to get rid of than a bad case of Herpes.
  - see to it that three-letter-agency's (both US and nonUS) place backdoors in MS software.
  - Explosions, romance, fast car's, flashing badges and glue-on-moustaches

But noooooooh... They really rather cry about the baddies making stupid botnets.
DCU, pffff what a laugh </roll-eyes>

Comment: Re:Yeah... (Score 3, Funny) 1076

I agree, and it goes further than just priests! Here are some interesting factoids for you:
97% of the neo-nazi's believe they are superior to black people
97% of the Black Panthers agree to the fact that they are superior to white people
97% of the children believe in Santa
97% of paranoid believe they are being followed
97% of the homoeopaths believe in homoeopathy
97% of the astrologists believe in astrology
97% of the KKK think lynchmobs are a good thing
97% of the intelligent design gang are absolutely convinced that God made it all
97% of all the interviewed Zen budists were convinced it is possible to clap with one hand
97% of the paganist movement think sandals are fashionable
97% of the physicians didnt believe in washing their hands before doing surgery
97% of the politicians think they are doing some great things

In case you are wondering... Yes, I am a 3 percenter!

Comment: Re:It is time (Score 1) 207

And I suppose saying that the world is only 6000 years old is the biology equivalent of Narnia? I think the water they found is also 6000 years old, but the intelligent creator made it appear to be older to see ho will doubt him.
The intelligent creator also provided me, a man, with nipples, so maybe some day's he is just drunk or just not /that/ intelligent ;-D

Comment: Re:its funny (Score 1) 97

Actually... you should see the politician who thought up this law. Whenever it is about IT (or something else he doesn't know about) He lowers his voice as to be more authoritative and starts droning on about CP. He does that trick every time again. It is quite annoying. Couple of month ago he wanted to make it illegal to keep your facebook passwd to yourself when in custody. And there he was on the telly again in his lowered voice: Well you see... Child pornography, you must know, can only be battled like this you see. That is why we need FB login credentials hhmkay?
Tsjees. As if paedophiles use FB to communicate on their activities... 148 liked this rape!

Comment: Re:"So far" (Score 0) 97

And that is why rkhunter, clamav, encrypted partitions including swap, well configured iptables and well defined policies are so important. I got nothing to hide and want to make it as hard as possible for the police to find that out just that. Even if they are allowed to try.

Couple of weeks ago I went to buy a new laptop. At the shop I was immediately mugged by some MS employee telling me that windows was the best. I told him that I wanted to install Linux. He couldn't comprehend and I told him that it was more secure. He still didn't get it. So I asked the guy to help me out finding an AV for linux. He checked them all and couldn't find one "they are all for windows machines". I smiled at him and told him: Nice fucking product if you need third party software just to keep it secure.
That was his red pill I guess.

Comment: Re:Any way to see them coming? (Score 1) 119

by Razgorov Prikazka (#43594097) Attached to: Speeding Object Makes Small Hole In the ISS Solar Array
<quote><p>I wonder if our radar tech is advanced enough to be able to see these small projectiles in time to intercept them.</p></quote>

If "your radar tech" is as good as the Phanlanx CIWS the answer is no. If "your radar tech" is as good as the Goalkeeper CIWS they might stand a chance.

Comment: Re:Politics or Video Games. (Score 5, Interesting) 70

by Razgorov Prikazka (#43569197) Attached to: Wolfram Alpha Drills Deep Into Facebook Data
It is politics that made me not take a FB account in the first place.
This is why: In the 1930's Adolf Hitler was ELECTED into government. A couple of years later he invaded a lot of countries, including mine. The nazi's took control of all the files the government had on its citizens. People who had (for example) Rosenbaum or Levi as a family name were 'visited'. Police files on 'crimes' like homosexuality were examined as well and although the original government wasn't actively prosecuting gay people, the nazi's turned out to be slightly more active in that regard. People who had checked the box 'Jehova's Witness' also got to stare down the business end of a rifle. And the list goes on. All straight out of the paper files, with compliments of the former government.
If the nazi's had FB tough, they would have their hands on far, far, far more explicit and far more detailed information, searchable with a mouse click. And people provide those bits of information without hesitation, without complaining and out of free will. The idiots!
And for anyone thinking... nah, that 1940's business would never happen again... You are probably among the first one's rounded up.

Also, politics may change. What is legal now, might not be legal tomorrow (because the elected government puts new laws in place), and the elected government will set their constitutional instruments (aka police, intelligence agencies) on FB to monitor offenders.
Social media and politicians are as dangerous as a box of nitroglycerin. In a roller coaster. Doing 100mph. On square wheels...
No thank you, not for me!

Comment: Re:Well, in my line of work (Score 1) 315

by Razgorov Prikazka (#43321451) Attached to: Does Scientific Literacy Make People More Ethical?
A few exceptions do not disprove the average. That is true.
My point wasn't on the averages though. when we look at averages, medians, weighted averages and the lot... well that has to do with statistics. My point was that one exception renders a theory useless and I gave not one but a (be it incomplete) selection of scientist who did not behave in a way that we nowadays would call moral.
If you can find an exception to a theory it disproves the theory right? The old "White swans, black swan" thing didn't make all the swans 90% white and 10% black, or "mainly white on average", it meant that not all swans are white. Or in this case, scientific literacy obviously does not make one a knight in shining armour that knows best.
Falsification is, or at least that is what I learned, a basis for all science philosophy since C. Popper.

But maybe psychology, sociology, ethics and the lot aren't real science, but merely academic exercises of statistics...
Transportation

+ - A Sea Story: The Wreck of the Replica HMS Bounty

Submitted by Anonymous Coward
An anonymous reader writes "On October 25, 2012, as residents of the US east coast made frantic preparations for the arrival of Hurricane Sandy, the captain of the HMS Bounty (a replica tall ship constructed fifty years earlier for the Marlon Brando film 'Mutiny on the Bounty') made a foolish decision, with the assent of his crew, to proceed with a scheduled vogage from New London, CT for St. Petersburg FL. CNN's Thom Patterson has written a long story with the benefit of survivor testimony to the NTSB and US Coast Guard. Captain Robin Walbridge thought he could outrun the hurricane, and besides, he'd 'sailed into hurricanes before'. The crew (officially there were no passengers, a fact that allowed the ship to evade certain safety regulations) consisted of tall ship enthusiasts with widely varying amounts of nautical experience, perhaps taken by the vast historical literature on the great age of sailing. A day and a half into the voyage, Captain Walbridge altered his plan of sailing east of the storm, to sailing south and west of it. A day later, the Bounty was less than 200 miles from the eye of the storm; the engine room started to flood, and the pumps were jammed with debris being torn off by the storm's 70 mph winds. The end came early next day, the Bounty was knocked down by a huge wave, tossing the captain and several crew members overboard. The Coast Guard rescued fourteen of the crew members, but Claudene Christian (an adventure-loving novice who had enlisted as crew a few months before) was dead, and Captain Walbridge's body has not been found."

Q: Why was Stonehenge abandoned? A: It wasn't IBM compatible.

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