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Comment: Re:Cops will not like this (Score 1) 750

by taustin (#43788349) Attached to: House Bill Would Mandate Smart Gun Tech By U.S. Manufacturers

If anyone ever comes up with a smart gun system that's 99.8% accurate, that will, no doubt, be good enough. Pity no one has yet, and no one is likely to any time soon. Biometrics just aren't there yet, despite improvement in recent years.

As to the rest, if you expect otherwise, you're a naive fool. Especially if you think that somebody is going to replace a critical piece of equipment with a - as you note - 99.8% success rate with one that is, at best, an order of magnitude lower (which 99% is, and last I heard, nobody could manage that with smart guns, either, in the real world.) It's rare to see any biometric ID system exceed 80% in real world conditions.

Comment: Why is this an issue? (Score 1) 519

by taustin (#43783763) Attached to: Working Handgun Printed On a Sub-$2,000 3D Printer

$ 1725 for the pringer, $25 for the materials, and 48 hours to print it.

Versus my local hardware store, where I could build a zip gun that will fire as many rounds as I want, without any worry about it exploding in my hand, ever, for about $5, in about half an hour (including drive time), and have no record kept of me buying politically sensitive tools.

A Google search for "zip gun plans" produces about 2 million hits. 3D printed guns are nothing more than crappy zip guns, more dangerous to the user than to the target. And to be crappy compared to the average zip gun is saying something.

Comment: Amateurs (Score 1) 162

by taustin (#43550393) Attached to: WWDC Sells Out In 2 Minutes; Ticket On eBay 45 Minutes Later

I'll be impressed when they can match ComicCon San Diego, who have a hard time finding a ticket sales service that can stand up to more than a few seconds before it collapses under the load. The only reason it took 93 minutes to sell out completely was the slow server response times. Not many wet sites can handle 140,000+ people trying to log in at the same time.

Comment: Does Google Glass record audio? (Score 1) 307

by taustin (#43192231) Attached to: Should We Be Afraid of Google Glass?

If so, it's not the same as the surveillance cameras that are everywhere already. And in some states (including California, Google's home state), recording audio without permission from all parties is illegal (and in California, a felony) under many circumstances.

I think I'll set up a Cafe Press shop selling t-shirts that say "I refuse you permission to record audio in my presence."

Comment: Re:Sucks to be him (Score 4, Insightful) 298

by taustin (#42594271) Attached to: Bug Sends Lost-Phone Seekers To Same Wrong Address

That simply isn't true. Only the debtor can send a C&D under the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act. But anybody can send a C&D for any reason to any one at any time. Anti-harassment laws have nothing to do ith FDCPA.

The difficulty is that debt collectors who call on the phone will always be out of state, and you have to sue them in their location, which means small claims it out. You'll have to hire a lawyer, pay thousands of bucks in legal fees you have no hope of recovering, and probably not be able to collect the actual judgement because most debt collectors have nothing to sieze anyway.

Better to just convince them they're wasting their time. Make it clear that a) you're not afraid of them, because you know how powerless they are, b) you're going to waste as much of their time as you possibly can, thus costing them money, and c) you're going to be the biggest abusive prick you can possibly be over the phone, because they can't do anything about it.

You might also start screening your calls with an answering machine that says "All calls will be recorded. By staying on the line to talk to a live person, you consent to being recorded." They hate court-admissible evidence.

Comment: Re:Sucks to be him (Score 2) 298

by taustin (#42594163) Attached to: Bug Sends Lost-Phone Seekers To Same Wrong Address

The laws that protect the debtor don't protect the debt collector, either. To quote Major League, "This is the outlet you've been looking for." You say say literally anything to them, and they can't do a damned thing about it without providing court-admissable evidence of their own crimes to the cops. So take your frustrations out on them. Call them names, question their intelligence, their parentage, question their species and what their mother mated with. Hell, tell them you're masturabting while you're talking to them. Take out all your frustrations on them. They'll make a note in your file that calling you is a losing game.

Free bonus hint: A debt collector who is calling you on the phone is a joke, no matter how much the debt, no matter what they threaten to do, even if you are the one that owes them money. If they were serious, you'd get a letter. The ones that call on the phone are trying to get a couple hundred bucks before they sell the debt off to another scam artist. They literally won't let you pay it off, more often than not. They are con artists. And they know it. So don't feel bad about abusing them. They, personally and individually, deserve whatever abuse you heap on them.

No problem is so formidable that you can't just walk away from it. -- C. Schulz

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