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Comment Re:Forest for the trees (Score 1) 161

It's not trivial to get credit cards in the UK. Say you were bankrupted even a long time ago. Or, I heard, say you never borrowed money or you never once paid late fees, surcharges, etc.

It's not particularly difficult either. Most people haven't declared bankruptcy, been involved in financial crime or other rare event that will make you ineligible for credit. Given the number of challenger banks out there if the high street banks turn you down you've got options and options for days. Hell, a lot of the challenger banks are skirting the rules on credit to get new customers, Starling for one offers a line of credit (overdraft facility, effectively the same thing) on almost every account, default is £500 and can't be reduced to less than £50.

Comment Re:Back in the day... (Score 1) 78

Way back, there was a helicopter service from the roof of the Pan Am building to the airport in NYC. It was discontinued due to several people getting killed in an accident.

Which is always going to be a bigger risk with small aircraft, in particular with helicopters because they're vulnerable to high winds and more single points of failure.

Commercial VTOL flights are also notoriously uneconomical, you only really use them when no other form of transport is suitable.

Comment Re:Great (Score 2) 78

It's good billionaires are going to have something to spit on us from. I'd hate for them to have to use lung power to do it because they're in a mere limousine.

You'd be lucky if it were just spit... Joby is Scottish slang for shit.

Comment Re:This needs to die. (Score 1) 41

"applying the ban only to the use of personal data to set higher prices without establishing a baseline or standard price".
So you set very high baseline prices, then use personal data to offer varying discounts. That does look like a loophole.

How about "No dynamic prices or discounts based on personal or biometric data are allowed"? Put in an exemption to offer a discount to certain classes (student or vet discounts, discounts for seniors)
In the past dynamic prices (discounts) were used to increase turnover: get new customers in the door with offers, keep them coming back with loyalty programs, and have them buy more with volume discounts. Now, it is used to extract the maximum amount of cash from every customer. It seems that the MBAs who came up with this have fully embraced the first tenet of communism: from each according to their ability.
"How much is this item?"
- "How much do you have?"

A simple answer is, prices must not be changed during opening hours. This is basically how most countries regulate their petrol stations. A price is set at the start of the day and may not legally be altered until the following day (otherwise we'd have them changing the price depending on how many people are queuing up).

Comment Re:subscription model wont die (Score 1) 21

Even on Xbox you can still buy the games. You only need the subscription if you want to play online, but you can buy the lowest tier service without all the games.

You don't need a subscription as every game offered is still available for purchase separately.

Or rather rent, since digital purchases are not quite purchases, just a long term rental.

Any subscription is too much, I'll continue to play on platforms that don't charge you money for basic functionality.

Comment Re:I'm not buying it (Score 1, Insightful) 103

I remember when Columbine happened. I also remembered when the Federal building in Oklahoma got blown up. Guess what WAS'T around back then? That's right: OpenAI wasn't a thing. But those events still happened.

Blaming a chatbot for a tragedy is like blaming McDonald's for your obesity: even if the restaurant didn't exist, you were going to end up in that condition because of your eating habits anyhow. The name of the restaurant might have changed but the song remains the same.

This guy had it in his head to shoot up the school, OpenAI or no OpenAI. Rounds were going to fly downrange even if AI didn't exist. This is some lazy logic.

This is just the only country in the world where this kind of thing happens refusing to admit why this kind of thing happens and trying to find any reason except the obvious to explain why this kind of thing happens.

The old excuse of "video games and rock and/or roll music" just ain't cutting it no more.

So they're back to trying to find any scape goat they can to avoid admitting the US has too many guns and an unhealthy love of violence.

Comment Re:Sadly (Score 1) 127

BBC tends to be unbaised when they report on American news because they don't care about D and R.

When the BBC reports on British news, they are biased. (But compared to comedians they are extremely good).

Erm... just exactly which side is the BBC biased against?

The right will tell you the BBC has a leftist bias whist the left will tell you the BBC is biased towards the right.

They can't both be correct.

Comment Re:Honestly they don't care about you (Score 2) 52

If you look at $40 is having your pocket picked they just don't care about you anymore. You are no longer a worthwhile consumer to them.

Increasingly the focus of large corporations is on more affluent consumers that would see $40 as peanuts. Like if somebody picked your pocket and walks off with a nickel you just wouldn't care. You probably wouldn't even notice the missing nickel. That's the kind of consumer Disney wants.

Disney doesn't want affluent consumers, people who have money typically have it because they aren't spendthrifts and understand the value of their dollar/euro/pound.

What Disney want are the kind of people who "don't even look at the price tag" and just put everything on credit. The kind of people who's pay barely even touches their bank account on it's way to service their ever increasing pile of debt so they'll need more debt to get through the month. That's the kind of mindless consumer Disney wants, perfect for consuming their mindless garbage.

This kind of consumer will never have a whole $40 in their pocket.

Comment Re:A rare good use of AI (Score 1) 34

Since any translation package would beat most linguists alive today,

It's always funny, any time you hear someone say that somebody else's job could easily be replaced with AI.
It's universally about a job they have never done a day in their lives. Programmers, Accountants, Customer Support staff, all supposedly very easy to replace by just plugging in ChatGPT according to 'experts'.

In reality this is just just a fundamental misunderstanding of what an accountant, CS staff or linguist does.

This.

I'm no linguist but I speak enough Spanish to know how limited machine translators still are. They're fine if you don't speak any of the language and need to find the bookshop or can help to order a meal, a succulent Chinese meal but they lack any understanding of idioms, slang, nuance, tone or context. This is before you get to local dialects, abbreviations or typos.

Comment Re:Fake Issue (Score 1) 364

This is all fake until I see the European elites private jets grounded.

I just want to make sure I'm following what you're implying.

Your standpoint is that as long as the richest, most influential people in Europe... those with the greatest capacity to trade for any commodity or service that exists... as long as they can leverage their way into a fuel load, then reports of limited supply are false.

That's your position?

Yep, my point of reference is the Daily Mail Compoface scale.

When we see an increasing number of sad looking faces on the front of Tabloid papers with the headlines "Ryanair cancelled our flight to Magala and ruined my hen party" then we'll know we're in trouble.

Comment Re:No actual shortage (Score 1) 364

Just like with their former dependency on Russian energy only a few years ago, Europe once again finds itself incapable or unwilling to mitigate risk in the same sector. Shocking.

Erm, Europe doesn't get much oil from Iran. Most of it is imported from Norway or the US amongst others. The only route it might (and I mean might as this could easily be going overland) is Iraq or Saudi Arabia (10% in total).

The problem is that this is fucking with the global market as the countries that do import a lot of Middle Eastern fuel, notably in Asia such as the Philippines, are scrabbling to get alternate fuel sources. So Europe will have no trouble sourcing jet fuel, the question is how expensive will it get.

Europe and the UK are handling this quite well, current fuel prices in the EU are between EUR 1.50 and 2.50 depending on nation as they all have different taxation structures, supply agreements, et al. Prior to Operation Epic Stupidity (end of FEB 2026), fuel in the UK was £1.50, at the peak it's £1.80, so 30 pence per litre (about US$0.40), Germany was EUR 1.80 and peaked at 2.25, in the US prices almost doubled in the same time.

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