Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:You Disgust Me (Score 3, Informative) 382

...I wouldn't be surprised if he ended up with a fine plus time served.

Furthermore, he almost certainly could get a plea bargain-- believe it or not, prosecutors don't want to go to court if they can possibly get a conviction without doing so. Unfortunately, a plea bargain would have required Swartz admitting that he did broke the law, and it looks like he was not the type of person who would do that.

Swartz tried to plea bargain two days before he killed himself. The prosecutor adamantly refused to accept less than a guilty plea to every single charge (even the patently absurd ones), and was also adamant that prison time would be required.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2262137/Aaron-Swartz-Reddit-founder-request-plea-deal-turned-Massachusetts-prosecutor.html

If you're just going to make stuff up, you should probably be quiet.

Comment Re:You Disgust Me (Score 1) 382

Well, you're not MIT or JSTOR. *They* didn't press charges, or even pursue civil suits, but the feds did it anyway?

What does it say about the merits of this case that it was "United States v Aaron Swartz?" I'm skeptical as hell -- as you should be -- of any federal criminal case in which the supposedly wronged parties aren't even the plaintiffs.

Comment Re:You Disgust Me (Score 1) 382

If I bypassed your home's security and installed a laptop in your home that connected to your network and took all your files, would you want there to be laws against that?

Yes, but I'd also like the ability to call off the fucking dogs if you and I work out a civil solution to your wrongdoing. Remember that JSTOR and MIT were both aware of Swartz' actions, and neither had asked the feds to charge him. In fact, JSTOR had asked the feds *not* to charge him.

The red flag of prosecutorial over-zealousness is obvious from the name of the case: "United States v. Aaron Swartz." Not MIT, not JSTOR, not the alleged "victims." United States. The prosecutor was *way* out of line.

Comment Re:Another Double Standard (Score 1) 1160

"They are not an extreme version of what the people controlling this country believe ... I put them more in line with Anne Coulter and whatshisface on Fox"

So they're not an extreme version of what the people controlling this country believe, they're just in line with some of the more extreme media darlings of the cable news network that does an astonishing amount of tone-setting for the national dialogue? Oh wait.

Comment Re:Another Double Standard (Score 0) 1160

Westboro Baptists can get away with it because they're white, and are simply the extreme version of what the dangerous people who control this country believe. I promise you if brown people who believe in a slightly different god did what they did they'd be hauled in for questioning and quite possibly extraordinary rendition-ed off to be tortured by the CIA.

Comment Hey politicians! (Score 1) 144

Do you want to do whatever the fuck you want, with no regard whatsoever for the wishes of your constituency? Do you want to then get reelected over and over again because only 200 old-ass white people show up at the election to vote straight down the party line?

Sound like paradise? Can't possibly be real?

But wait! It is real! It's local government! Getting in is easy, too! Just wait for an incumbent to die or retire, then take their place in whatever party they came from. Unless you get redistricted, you're now set for life. Congratulations!

Comment Re:Really? (Score 5, Interesting) 195

I'm inclined to agree with you.

I'm as entrenched as anyone could possibly be in the Google ecosystem, and it's not because they're force-feeding me their products. I frequently try alternatives when comes to stuff like online calendars, documents, email, whatever.

The reason my attempts to use other services never stick is simple: they're just not as good as Google's offerings.

I can kind of see where they're coming from if Google is in fact promoting their own services in their search, but I suspect that their own algorithms are picking out their own services because the most people use and talk about them...again because they're just the best offering.

Personally it's tough to sell me on the idea of a provider of free web services getting into antitrust territory, because a different search engine is always one different URL away. The same goes for all their other services. It's tough to even call them out on vendor lock-in, because thanks to the data liberation front they're one of the best companies I've ever seen on the internet when it comes to avoiding lock-in.

I'm dubious.

Comment Well... (Score 1) 700

Lots of them. Here are a few pulled from my Goodreads list, in no particular order

His Dark Materials Trilogy by Philip Pullman - these are kids books, but when I reread them recently I realized that they had a profound effect on my adolescent mind.

Neal Stephenson - his science fiction gave me a taste of what the world could be.

Born to Run by Christopher McDougall - It's kind of silly, but a few years ago this book planted the seeds that got me running -- and not just running but running almost daily and LOVING it. Now I'm coming up on thirty with my fitness level tracking upwards. It's amazing.

Deep Economy by Bill McKibben

Comment Re:That's quite oke. (Score 1) 315

That's not the point.

The problems with ideas like this boil down to two major points:
1) It's your tool, and you shouldn't have to dial up a DRM server every time you want to use it.
2) Even if you disregard such anarcho-handyman ideals it's still utterly unenforceable. There are plans galore for increasingly high-quality DIY CNC and 3D printing machines on the internet, and if I build one in my garage I'm sure as hell not going to make it dial into a DRM server. Doing that would be a lot of extra work and amount to crippling my own creation. Guess what? Neither will criminals building their own devices like this to mass-produce knockoffs.

All a system like this does is make lawyers and executives warm-and-fuzzy. All the while inconveniencing legitimate users, not even fazing criminals, and making a few new criminals out of people who choose to bypass the system so that could...say...operate such a device without the need for an internet connection.

Slashdot Top Deals

Real Programmers don't eat quiche. They eat Twinkies and Szechwan food.

Working...