Comment Re:Conclusion of the report... (Score 4, Insightful) 67
Or tor. Or VPN endpoints overseas. Or ssh tunnels.
I don't really see how legislation can reasonably expect to keep up with technological innovation.
Or tor. Or VPN endpoints overseas. Or ssh tunnels.
I don't really see how legislation can reasonably expect to keep up with technological innovation.
Sure, but that's still far closer than it should be to becoming law.
I don't see where it stipulates what would need to be retained. Is it merely header information? A list of URLs (SSL will break this)? A copy of the data itself?
No matter which direction this goes, it seems to me that it would be very, very easy to overwhelm them with data. Fire off a perl script that connects to $giant_list_of_random_URLs 500 times a minute. Turn it down when you need to do work, crank it up when you go to bed... and you're suddenly costing them an enormous amount of storage while turning their signal to noise ratio into crap.
Replying to do erroneous moderation (was aiming for insightful, whacked redundant instead).
The difference between "illegal" and "right and wrong" are two very different things; the further they diverge in a given society, the more dysfunctional that society appears to the broad brush of history.
True, but...
wait for it...
ICANN has more domains.
That's a bit misleading; every time this has been brought to light it's been the case of the general public bribing a cell company employee. It's a problem, to be sure, but it's also not like I can punch my credit card info into verizonrecords.com or whatnot...
I went to Disneyland last week, will be going again tomorrow; they've never had a fingerprint scanner that I'm aware of...
There's something to be said for sticking to your list price; if everyone charges the same thing for a widget, then you're competing on a more level playing field rather than the race to the bottom we're seeing now.
It's a bit disingenuous to go from talking about video card economics to large televisions; I'd probably never buy either the former locally or the latter online.
You are when you calculate the frequency of needing to return a product sourced online. Once in a while a product has to go back, but it's far from common.
Lost money?
The circumstances surrounding this make it very hard to be sympathetic to people who get hit by it. "My banking information was compromised, and all I wanted to do was help take down the website of some entity that displeased me today" isn't really a rallying cry many people can get behind.
I really don't think that selling $3 packs of capacitors to hobbyists is sustainable in 2012...
The sole reason to go to a BestBuy is "I need this item today." That's about it.
Well, one of their VPs embezzled $65 million from them back in 2008, so they could probably be better...
There are two ways to write error-free programs; only the third one works.