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Comment Re:Deceased owners (Score 1) 206

I think you're confused about what exactly pla was saying. As you say, any transaction is secure until someone else gets your password (actually, your private key), then whatever bitcoins you have are now theirs, they can spend what's in your wallet now. So in the future, as pla suggested, a strategy for recovering bitcoins from wallets of dead people will be to capitalize on the fact they haven't been keeping up to date on their encryption, being dead and all, and so you can now figure out their keys (pla's premise being that what was a secure public/private key pair today won't be a decade or two from now, and you'll just determine the private key from the public one). At which point, as you say, whatever bitcoins they had are now yours.

Comment MathML is Retarding (Score -1) 84

Turing provided us a universal calculator. And still you humans teach your young the top down approach to symbolics? You have the ability to teach one or a few basic information flow systems with which any computation can be understood and performed without adding additional symbolic complexity.... And you do not use it.

Computer languages are a bit more verbose, but provide a clearer representation of the equivalent concepts -- EXCEPT, that the programming language can be executed by a machine and thus applied in the real world immediately.

MathML? No. You are doing it wrong. Very wrong. Your symbolics sunk cost fallacy is retarding, literally. After only a small amount BASIC or JavaScript knowledge I can teach 10 year olds interval calculus. Show them the Mathematic symbolic forms and they balk. This is not because calculus is hard. This is because your symbolics are retarding.

Comment Re:Bad news. (Score 1) 206

I will note that we haven't heard of Silk Road clients being arrested en masse, which means they probably haven't been able to track down many of them.

You're making at least two mistakes. The first is believing that the government really cares about tracking these guys down. That's not the case. They would like to track down enough of them to look like they care. The second mistake is believing that they work that fast. They don't. They work inexorably, but slowly, dire need aside.

Comment Re:It is always cheaper... (Score 1) 569

No we don't. 1st rule of a free market, "If there is economic profit to be made people will enter the market and drive the profit to zero." 2nd rule, " no barriers to entry and perfect information."

Cable is a natural monopoly. It can be a monopoly and have monopoloy pricing and fuck us or be a state regulated utility. I choose regulation.

Comment Re:Too bad Snowden will only be 33 in 2016 (Score 1) 351

The NSA collect meta data. You can't deny this. They collect it indiscriminately. They just suck it all up, for everyone, all the time. This is now confirmed, right from the horse's mouth, the head of the NSA. This is unreasonable, thus a violation of the 4th Amendment. If you think it is reasonable, then you and I can't have a meaningful conversation with each other. We'll just have to stop here. You fundamentally accept a bigger and more onerous government than I do.

Comment Re:Yeah it will (Score 1) 247

The internet is a tool, nothing more.

Language is a tool, nothing more. Before language the minds of your peers were unknown to you. You largely feared each other in situations where it was better safe than sorry. Society was very limited in its ability to better mankind.

After language an explosion of civilization occurred. The written word allowed ideas to live in tact beyond a mind's life and be refined over time. Ideas larger than a single head could be processed and the centers where such knowledge was gathered were marvels of scientific achievement. These achievements benefited your kind immensely.

Then came the Internet. The very first generation of human is now growing up with a global network for instantaneous knowledge and language transfer. No longer is the information in limited supply, for the first time in human history nearly all information is available to all people at all times...

And you wonder if it will save the world? Language has been saving your world from war, famine, and other hardships. Language has been the facilitator to all the marvels around you -- Anything that COULD save anyone is a product of language. Now that your voices have been gathered and echo across the entire globe in fractions of a second only a fool would think it a stretch to predict such will save us from past hardships and miscommunications. Only a fool would look at human history and see language only growing stronger then conclude it would somehow disappear instead of evolve.

The pony express lives on. That drive to carry information faster across your world did not vanish. That you would push the physical limitations of yourselves and your beasts of burden to carry language from town to town as fast as possible did not die. You merely found a faster way to send the data: Telegraphs. The Internet is the fastest we have yet, and just like the Horse backed messengers rode off along many routes to deliver a town's messages; The senders having no guarantee of receipt, relying on only the best effort of the carrier; This very same mechanism is carried out now in your global packet switching network. The pony express is not a quaint reminder of an era gone by, its the very model by which you're able to read these words.

Comment The example of swaziland (Score 5, Interesting) 247

Your ignoring the scale of suffering caused by disease in places like Africa and just how staggering an impact it is happening.

Take a place like Swaziland. 1/4 of the population has HIV, is too poor for triple cocktail treatment and are thus dying. 110,000 children are orphaned as a result. On top of that, 58% of the population requires treatment for pneumonia each year, and nearly 60% requiring rehydration for diarea (And we're not talking having a sore gut from a cold, but conditions that are often fatal).

Will education help them? Well swaziland has around 90% literacy rate, and an exceptionally good school enrollment rate which is comparable with even western countries. Something is failing here that *isnt* education.

The last major war Swaziland was involved in was nearly a century ago, and its monarchy is widely held to be benevolant and not particularly corrupt or malicious. Its economy however is , like many post-colonial countries, a bit of a basket case and income disparity is utterly terrible, with a fabulously rich ruling class and the majority of its population surviving on about $1.50 a day. Despite being well educated, simple education alone appears not to be fixing this.

The simple fact is a massive chunk of the productive workforce is incapacitated and dying placing enormous economic pressures on those who do work, and this causes terrible poverty, compounded of course by the terrible inequality that was foisted on the country from its legacy as a british colony.

Bracketing aside the troubling questions of wealth distribution, it is clear that swaziland is doomed without a very serious improvement in health care. HIV does not have to be a death sentence anymore when treated by modern anti-virals. We can't cure it yet, but we can make it something that doesn't kill. A westerner in a UHC country (to ensure poverty doesnt remove access to medicine) with HIV can live as long as someone without HIV as long as they continue to take the required medicines and lives a generally healthy lifestyle. Malaria is a disease that stalks the poor (when was the last time you heard of a malaria outbreak in europe, australia or the united states?) and can be trivially contained if the money is spent as it should. The remaining conditions can be contained and cured with simple antibiotics and ensuring clean water and hygenic waste disposal.

There is no reason Swasiland should be any poorer than a european country. But like many african countries, its problems revolve around universal access to healthcare, wealth disparity and equitable access to clean water and waste disposal. Education, and by this I mean the internet too, does not factor here. Whats the point of reading about the fabulous lives of the westerners whilst dying of AIDS, malaria and diahrea.

Comment Re:Affordable? (Score 4, Informative) 216

I'm more impressed that all of WWII cost the US only 300 BN. That's $3.7T in today's dollars, which happens to be equal to the cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars put together:

The most recent major report on these costs come from Brown University in the form of the Costs of War project, which said the total for wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan is at least $3.2-4 trillion.

Of course the cost of WWII to the US was very small compared to the costs to nations where it was actually fought.

Comment Re:Presidential pardon (Score 2) 351

Put up or shut up. Show me something he blew the whistle on that wasn't wrong. He took documents over the course of months, selecting only the damning and illegal activity, and then in an abundance of caution gave them to journalists, and only journalists, who have so far done an honorable and commendable job disclosing only material which details the crimes of the NSA without putting any individual person in danger.

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