Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Restriction of speech is still necessary (Score 2) 355

I'm not sure I agree with the concept of "legitimate censorship". I think actions should be illegal, not thoughts. I certainly believe that the production of child pornography should be illegal (and it is, under laws pertaining to child abuse) and therefore I don't really see an issue with distribution and possession of it also being illegal. That isn't censorship, that is simply the application of relevant, existing law. The point is that someone had to actually *do* something illegal in the first place.

I would be far less certain about (for example) hentai or other images of children which were created without any illegal act. I think being sexually attracted to children is a sickness that requires treatment, but only *acting* on it is a crime. I probably think about committing murder several times a day, but I'm not a murderer until I do it.

Similarly with Hate/Offensive speech. If I'm telling people to go and kill infidels or burn down buildings, that is incitement to commit an offence, which is (and should be) illegal. If I'm telling people that I don't like brown people and neither should they...that would be an opinion. If people agree with me and decide to go and blow up a mosque then they have committed a crime and deserve to feel the full weight of the law. But should I be charged with something? What if I said I don't like politicians and a listener shoots Andy Burnham?

Censorship is a poor replacement for enforcement of the law and until someone commits an act which is provably against the interests of the society those laws are designed to protect, they should be left the hell alone to do what they want.

Comment Re:Technology Blamed For Helping UK Rioters (Score 2) 682

Well...

I'm not rioting...in fact I'm a reasonably comfortable 30-something with a career and a (rented for now) place to live in an okay part of the UK.

It's easy to forget though that the last generation or two have been able to make money, probably more money than 95% of these kids will ever see in their lifetimes, by the hard toil of *owning a house*. People who are working now and looking forward to retirement have ridden an unsustainable bubble of market-driven growth that has made their lives, to all intents and purposes, a cakewalk.

Because of the recent financial problems, you now need 15% deposit minimum for pretty much any mortgage and unless things change you'll be lucky to make more than about 1%-2% per annum appreciation on your capital. Same deal with an ISA or anything else. Even if these kids could get jobs (which they can't) the chances of being able to make provisions for old age are pretty much zero.

Best bet is to stay on benefits, but even those are being cut and the pressure increased on people to find work. At the same time the UK government is trying to force ill/disabled people back to work by taking away Incapacity Benefits from them, leading to even more competition for entry-level jobs.

The sad fact is that no amount of hard work by this generation of young kids is ever going to put them on an equal footing with earlier generations who coined it in by doing nothing during an unsustainable financial boom which these kids are paying for with their lives and their futures.

Hell it doesn't excuse looting and arson, but all these "why can't these kids get a job and work hard like I did" people really wind me up. Not saying the parent is like that but if they are 35+ and living in the UK then the Universe pretty much DID "hand them everything they want without having to do anything to earn it", at the expense of the kids who are out burning stuff and stealing trainers.

Comment Re:This means (Score 2) 54

With digital distribution bringing unit costs to zero one can sell at an impulse buy price and rake in mountains of cash, simply by not being greedy twats.

This.

I probably own 25 games from http://www.gog.com/ and another 15-20 from Steam which I mainly bought because the price was somewhere south of a Big Mac and fried. I probably only played Cannon Fodder for 2 hours or so, but for a couple of dollars I couldn't care less.

I also buy a lot of older PS3 games second-hand, the most recent being Oblivion and Bioshock 1+2 (total cost: £12). I think by comparison the last full-price "AAA" title I bought was probably Half-Life 2.

I generally avoid games that involve microtransactions but I think they are perfectly valid as a business model provided they don't affect game balance. In the words of the bloke from Extra Credit you should allow players to buy convenience, but not power. If I can pay to level faster or get gear more easily, that's good...if I can pay for items or abilities unavailable to free players, that's bad.

Comment Re:It's a growing list (Score 1) 375

In neither case has your identity been stolen. A man's wife would not sleep with a different man simply because the second man had a bank account in her husband's name, and so on.

Clearly you've never watched that great documentary on identity theft; Face Off with John Travolta and Christian Slater

Comment Selling subdomains! (Score 1) 239

Who wouldn't want to own a piece of this?

wide.open.org
legs.open.org
yes.we.are.open.org

On a more serious note, how about trying to make the ultimate Open Source portal...expert articles, software reviews and so on. Make a set of Yum/Apt repositories for pure open-source software and also mirrors of various high-profile git/svn repos.

Run a moderated Wiki for open-source topics, give front-page exposure to small, interesting open-source projects, get some execs from big, OSS-friendly companies to write some testimonials to help with advocacy. Host some OSS-related aggregated RSS feeds. So many things that could be done.

How about offering a paid-for email redirection service (yourname@open.org) with any profits over-and-above the upkeep of the site going to the EFF or similar. Make it easy to donate, maybe look out for some free hosting from somewhere.

Sell tasteful, targeted advertising rather than huge glowy flash banners and less-than-useless adwords crap.

Then, when the site has mahoosive PageRank and millions of hits a month, we move from OSS to Viagra and we'll make...billions!

Comment Re:Passwords are stupid (Score 2) 343

Are we sure passwords are stupid? They're certainly annoying when compared to using certificates or biometrics or whatever. Isn't the problem here more that passwords that are hard to crack are also hard to remember and also that password reuse is bad (m'kay).

I read an excellent article by Dennis Forbes recently who suggested a browser-based mechanism to deal with this. Basically, never send your password to the recipient (whether it's Gawker or your bank). When you type into a HTML password field, hash the password you type in with your username and the domain of the site as a salt and then submit that. That way no-one (including the site owner) has any chance to store or intercept your plaintext password.

Now if you use the same username everywhere, you might want to avoid "12345" as a password, but a single complex password could be used for all your sites without worry. It would be a different hash sent to (and stored by) each site, it would be immune to rainbow table attacks and if you use a good password it would also be secure against brute force attacks.

http://blog.yafla.com/input_typepassword_Needs_To_Grow_Up/

If browser developers were smart, they'd let you generate or enter a complex UID (generate it on your PC browser and then provide it to your iPhone, laptop, work PC and so on...) and salt with that as well. That way your passwords would work across multiple machines (if you used the same browser password) but it would add huge additional complexity to a brute-forcing attempt because now they need the domain (easy), your username (easy), your site password (hard) and your browser password (hard). So an attacker couldn't login to your accounts even if they beat your password out of you unless they were using one of your devices. Conversely, if they stole one of your devices, they'd still need to crack your site password.

Comment Re:Weve seen that argument before (Score 1) 1066

Not that I'm pro-copyright (certainly not in its current form) but I think the difference here is that in the case of a chef (for example) you are paying for the restaurant, possibly the name of the chef and the fact that your meal was cooked by the "artist". If you get a copy of a CD, it's an exact replica of the original and indistinguishable in every way. Unless you like cover art there is zero added value.

For it to be the same thing, you'd need to be talking about live shows and I'm sure that just like most fans of Heston Blumenthal would rather eat at The Fat Duck than The Obese Mallard (a tribute restaurant in Hereford) I think most fans of Metallica would rather see James and co at the O2 Arena than catch Metal Licker doing a set at the Dog and Handgun in Milton Keynes.

The reason there is an issue in these modern times is that there are now methods for precisely duplicating copyrighted works that simply didn't exist when the laws (and the whole concept) came about. Each meal prepared by a top chef is a unique, crafted object...each copied Blu-Ray is just a copied Blu-Ray.

Comment Re:How long until..... (Score 1) 144

Surely an even better idea would be some kind of read-only VMWare Appliance (or similar). User clicks a link on their desktop which launches a program that checks the VMWare image hasn't been tampered with (CRC and md5 or something like) and then boots a basic Linux VM which opens a kiosk-mode browser that goes straight to your online banking. Couple that with a proper two-factor hardware token and that should be good enough for most things. If the VM/Browser had draconian checks on things like SSL certificates and DNSSEC, that would be even better.

There would probably be some possibility of an attack at the Hypervisor level I guess, but you'd still have the other forms of protection as well.

Comment If we're talking Specialist Distros... (Score 3, Informative) 221

Surely BackTrack needs a mention. One stop shop for Penetration Testing, Ethical Hacking, Security Analysis and pretty much anything else security-related. It might not qualify as a fully-blown "distro" depending on your definition, but it's a lot more customised than your standard "Clonebuntu" variants.

If you are even remotely interested in Network Security or Penetration Testing, it's a really invaluable tool.

Databases

Cassandra and Voldemort Benchmarked 45

kreide33 writes "Key/Value storage systems are gaining in popularity, much because of features such as easy scalability and automatic replication. However, there are several to choose from and performance is an important deciding factor. This article compares the performance of two of the most well-known projects, Cassandra and Voldemort, using several different mixes of access types, and compares both throughput and latency."
Graphics

Submission + - Tired MMORPG Graphics Brought Back To Life (blogspot.com)

Lexical_Scope writes: Dark Age of Camelot was released just over 8 years ago and still has a relatively hardcore following. During the intervening years, it's graphics have started to look a little (okay, a lot!) dated in comparison to modern titles. Silakka has used some really innovative techniques to port some of the DAOC maps into the Crysis Graphics Engine with spectacular results. He discusses the technologies and tech used on his blog, which is well worth a read. WARNING: The videos might cause otherwise sane viewers to resub their DAOC accounts...I did :(

Slashdot Top Deals

UNIX was not designed to stop you from doing stupid things, because that would also stop you from doing clever things. -- Doug Gwyn

Working...