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Comment Re:Corporations have no social responsibility. (Score 1, Troll) 74

Honestly, the problem was Co. v. Riggs (203 U.S. 243 (1906)) that established corporations be treated legally like people.

The moment this happened it was the beginning of the exoneration of c-suites from the consequences of their actions. I suspect that if these individuals' freedom and wealth were liable for the consequences of their choices, the subsequent century would have played out rather differently.

Comment Re:if they made sense you wouldn't need bribery (Score 1) 288

Dipshit alert.
If you want to go to that granularity, there's no Black culture nor Asian culture, etc.

Literally, if there is a society of people that's a) uniformly a single ethnic group and b) collectively acts in ways that are identifiable and predictable to the group, it would be Scandinavians.

I'd recommend you read something by Geert Hofstede, if you can read.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

Comment Unsurprising (Score -1, Troll) 32

Who do you believe of two amoral organizations?

Rockstar: giant corp, obviously has a vested interest in painting the employees as shits
Union: ALSO a profit-driven organization just from another direction. Has a vested interest in showing the employees were sainted victims of corporate fascists.

Answer: neither, I simply don't give a shit and would happily see both Rockstar collapse and all of their organizing workers immediately unemployed.

Comment Was this relevant to the theft? (Score 1) 83

Has it been determined whether the IT situation was related to the theft that occurred?

Obviously it sounds like basically no bad option was left unchosen when it came to their IT config; but I'm curious whether this was a situation where the perps were actually sophisticated enough (or unsophisticated at traditional smash-and-grab/balaclava-when-on-camera techniques) to incorporate the bad IT into the heist; or whether the entry was more or less pure physical access control failure that happens to put the general state of the system in stark relief?

Obviously if it were a heist movie there'd be a hoodie kid using the power of fast typing to haxx0r the cameras and guide the operatives while using a precociously cobbled-together AI to selectively delete them from the surveillance footage; but if the overall physical security posture was bad, and the building is largely accessible to the public, it seems entirely plausible that someone just cased the joint and walked in much as they would have 50 years ago; though a different interested party is probably hosting a C2 server or some exploitation payloads on their DVR.

Comment It's a global problem (Score 0) 43

I think the backdoor isn't Chinese in the sense of the government or the country, it's more of a vendor problem globally. Vendors do this to keep control of what they sell, to be able to force customers to buy support subscriptions on pain of having the product stop working if they don't. Vendors from countries other than China do this just as often. We should be worried about what all vendors do, not just Chinese vendors.

Comment Re:if they made sense you wouldn't need bribery (Score 1) 288

That's pretty much what I finally decided on too. Shrug. I work for a EU firm in the US so we even have a corp car policy that if you get an EV they'll pay for installing a charge station at your house which I suspect I could finagle (or end up paying only an upcharge for) into a decent home-size battery-storage that I've wanted as well.

Maybe my next car-buying cycle.

What people on /. can't seem to wrap their head around is that it's possible to be pro-EV conceptually while recognizing that they might not be the answer to every problem or not there technologically yet:

- yes, I'm a cutting edge tech guy; I would LIKE to drive an ev for all sorts of reasons, some of them irrational
- at the same time, I recognize the shortcomings and have to recognize REAL LIFE calculations of time, value, etc.

Comment Re:if they made sense you wouldn't need bribery (Score 1) 288

Initially, yes, I thought so too.

I don't know what universe you live in but it's rather often that I drive MORE THAN JUST to/from work in a day? I live in an exurb, so while I figured I could get by with 40mi/day on elec to cover the occasional run into the nearest shopping center, parts story, Costco, or Microcenter...well yeah, if most of my driving is going to end up being gas-powered (on an overweight, overcomplicated, under-engined vehicle as well) then...why waste my $/time on a PHEV?

Comment Addiction vs. Options... (Score 2) 37

I'd be curious what the breakdown is between 'addicts', in the compulsively-does-thing-despite-knowing-it-is-contrary-to-their-interests sense, and sad but locally reasonable behavior from people with tepid options.

'Addict' is a comparatively easy call to make when people are getting fired because they no-showed to play WoW; or spending all their time scrolling tiktok despite having a school or college worth of peers to socialize with; but if you are retired, less physically able to get out and about than you used to be, and at the age where your friends and peers are starting to die off, it seems like a much more open question whether having an engaging if ultimately rather hollow hobby is an 'addiction' or just a kind of depressing local maximum.

It's obviously not some ideal of perfected human flourishing; but if you are doing it because you don't really have things to do, rather than at the expense of things you have to do, that's not really classic addict behavior; just a mediocre hobby.

Comment Re:if they made sense you wouldn't need bribery (Score 1) 288

I drive to Chicago about once every 3 weeks - about 440 miles each way
I drive to a lake cabin about every other weekend on average (more in summer, less in winter) - 149mi each way.
You tell me if my "range anxiety" is rational, then? The run to Chicago is about 7 hours assuming I can align around traffic. No, I don't want to add 1.5 hours fucking around at chargers esp as ABRP shows at least 2 of the required stops are at chargers with 3 or fewer points - ie likely to be in use.

My work is 5 mi away, would have been perfect for a PHEV except for:
Common low temps by my home: -30f/-35c Dec-Feb; about every 3rd winter we hit -40 for a few days. Yes, I keep my car in a garage but there is no indoor parking at my work. No charging at work, either.
And what would my Chicago run take at -30F?

Audi PHEV has "30 mi" range on electric (supposedly) but the sales person admitted that this could drop to FIFTEEN miles in very cold weather.

Comment Re:if they made sense you wouldn't need bribery (Score 1, Interesting) 288

They're also a fantastically wealthy petro state with a highly-educated population and a persistent culture of high conformity, collectivism, ecological responsibility, and social welfare most of which are features which have been famously hard to export to ... anywhere.

And they are nearly entirely white making it extra ironic that their culture is so frequently touted as exemplary by leftists who simultaneously insist "white culture" is the source of everything wrong with the world.

The racial distribution of Norway population - surprisingly hard to find as they themselves attempt to hide it by using terms like "Norwegian" but then lumping in immigrants etc: are in fact 99.18% are white and 0.82% are multiracial.
https://www.neilsberg.com/insi...

So... are these the "good whites" then? Are they "surprisingly articulate" too? Or is it just that they conveniently drive EVs?

Shall we compare some numbers?
Miles per year: 8000 NO vs 16000 US
Norway average trip per US is even shorter in proportion.
Average Norwegian road speeds are much less (far fewer major trunk highways, basically)

Comment Re:The level of irony. (Score 1) 128

Could you help me understand the 'irony' here? Is saying impolite things about a dead guy the moral equivalent to being perhaps the most pivotal figure behind a war with an estimated half-million dead and a causus belli that was transparent bullshit; not to mention the elevation of extrajudicial torture to official policy? I'm not sure I follow.

And, if you'd like to expand on the 'political leanings' thing; I'd be more than happy to call anyone whose politics involve thinking that Cheney did a great job a monster as well; especially when it's so hard to argue that any of Cheney's ugliest aspects even paid off. Flirting with more expansive theories of the ends justifying the means can be a dangerous business; but, bare minimum, you can attempt to rank means by degree of atrocity and ends by degree of effectiveness; and on that score Cheney's work was honestly pretty shit.

Remember the 'Pax Americana' that the neocons assured us could be bombed into the fractious elements of the middle east? Lol. Bin Laden? Dude was chilling in an upmarket suburb in Pakistan while we were pissing away blood and treasure on hitting a mixture of hapless civilians and 'insurgents' who had the temerity to suggest that our puppet government was not the legitimate local administration in one peripherally involved country and one uninvolved one.

So, go ahead, please, explain your other level of irony. Tell us whose political loyalties are to this grade of not-even-effective violence. What'll it be?

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