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Comment Re:seems like a waste of money (Score 1) 541

Hey, I ragged on the GOP the same as most others for making that ludicrous comment and generally being the party that doesn't take rape seriously.

But in this case, with CIA operatives and others involved, the huge amounts of money being spent, I consider this to be a rare case where the term may actually apply.

And I start to wonder if either you are part of a government smear group yourself or you had someone you know raped so it's a hot button the government can use to turn your brain off.

This case STINKS to high heaven. Something is ROTTEN in denmark here.

For one thing- this is money and time that could have been spent capturing multiple other bonafide violent rapists. How many crimes went unpunished while the officers sat on a multi year stake out? How many more will go unpunished over the next several years?

I've noticed you've quietly backed away from all of the misstatements I called you out on in your previous post, and have now resorted to calling me a shill and pounding the table. I'll take that as a tacit admission that you know you're wrong.

Comment Re:seems like a waste of money (Score 1) 541

Except if you read the link you will see she wasn't sleeping. She later recanted and said she was half asleep.

Except that if you read the link, not only did the defense never claim she recanted her accusations, the "half asleep" line doesn't seem to cited anywhere other than their own allegations. The "she later recanted" bit seems to be something you invented. Why? I don't know, but it sure makes you look suspicious.

Let's put it more likely given the spending of millions of dollars over a dubious rape case by a foreign national (it's not like he pulled a stranger off the street and violently violated her while she screamed and pleaded for him to stop and he didn't drug them etc etc.)

Ah, so only violent rape by a stranger counts as "legitimate rape"? Which GOP senator are you?

Anyway.. what's more likely...

The US government is smearing him, is going to illegally take him away and torture him out of spite (since he really has no secrets they don't already have)...

Or that he SUDDENLY became a rapist RIGHT AFTER dumping a bunch of US government secrets.

Considering that (i) other women have come forward saying that Assange assaulted them in the past, and (ii) Assange's lawyers have said that everything in the allegations are true, but that they don't think they're criminal, then it's pretty apparent that the latter is more likely. Particularly because the former relies on the erroneous assumption that the US government couldn't extradite someone from their closest freakin' ally in the entire world and instead have to wait until he's brought to Sweden.

Comment Re:seems like a waste of money (Score 1) 541

Full details here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Assange

The rape charges are a bit tenuous. Firstly, they started with consensual sex. Secondly, some of the females changed their accusations.

In one of the two cases, the "rape" charge based on not using a condom was found to actually be that the condom broke during consensual sex.

To quote the meat:

An extradition hearing took place on 7â"8 and 11 February 2011 before the City of Westminster Magistrates' Court.[260][261] At the hearing, Assange's defence raised a variety of objections, including mismatches between the EAW and the original accuser statements to the Swedish police[262][263] that exaggerated the nature of the complaints.[264][265] In particular they argued the original police reports showed - contrary to the EAW - absence of alleged rape; absence of alleged force or injury; admission in both cases of consensual sex on the same occasions as the allegations; and splitting of a condom used with plaintiff 1 rather than failure to use one.

The defence also highlighted evidence that: plaintiff 2 had later admitted to being "half asleep" after consensual sex, rather than "asleep"; that the plaintiffs had originally been seeking to compel Assange to take an STD test rather than prosecution;[266] and that plaintiff 1 had thrown a Crayfish party for Assange at her home the evening after the alleged incidents, from which she tweeted: "Sitting outdoors at 02:00 and hardly freezing with the world's coolest, smartest people! It's amazing!" and invited Assange to stay in her room afterwards.[267][268]

Yeah, the defense kept highlighting evidence that was unrelated to whether Assange committed a crime, since that evidence was about details that occurred, you know, after the crime was committed. If I steal your car, and the next day, we go out for a beer, that doesn't suddenly make your car not-stolen. Maybe you decide to press charges, maybe you don't, but I've already committed every single element of the crime. Maybe, for example, you decide not to bring charges because we're buddies and I returned your car later... or maybe you later find that I also vomited in the back seat and smashed the quarter panel, and bring charges. Do I get to claim "but we had a beeeeeer!" as a defense? Of course not.

In this case, if the allegations are true (and they seem to be, since Assange has never claimed the acts never happened, merely that they weren't criminal), once Assange penetrated a sleeping woman knowing he didn't have her consent, he committed rape. Maybe she decides not to press charges if he has an STD test... Maybe he refuses to have the STD test, and she does go forward with charges - just like you and the vomit in your car. Point is, once the criminal act is performed, any subsequent acts are irrelevant. They don't go back in time and reverse reality.

And this is one of the reasons why he lost at the extradition hearing, and also lost on appeal.

Comment Not true - blatant misstatement of facts (Score 3, Informative) 541

Further, what he's "wanted for questioning" about isn't a crime in the United Kingdom (no, he's not been accused of "rape" in the traditional sense, he's been accused of continuing consensual intercourse after a condom broke after having agreeing to use one,) nor the US, nor most other countries on earth.

Sorry, that's simply not true. Regardless of whether you believe Assange is innocent or guilty, he has been accused of: (i) forcefully holding down a woman and spreading her legs in order to penetrate her against her will; and (ii) non-consensual sex with a sleeping person who had explicitly told him no.

Now, you're free to disagree with both those allegations, free to accuse the entire justice department of Sweden of slander or whatnot, but you're not free to lie about what the accusations are or whether they're considered crimes.

Comment Re:In other news (Score 2) 442

Best part is you'd have no trouble finding a lawyer to help you sue someone who used the above phrase.

You're right, you wouldn't have trouble finding a lawyer. And that's one of my biggest problems with a lot of lawyers: many of them have no sense of morality or justice. I'm not just talking about lawyers who represent defendants of violent crimes because I realize that they deserve a fair trial. I am referring to all of the lawyers that would argue either side of a case depending on which side offered them more money. These people are not driven by an inner sense of justice and making the world a better place, but simply following their own motivations of greed and rationalizing away any negative effects their greedy actions are causing society.

In almost every dispute, both parties think they're right, and both may even have good and reasonable reasons for believing they're right. So, yeah, a lawyer could argue either side of that, because there may be good reasons on both sides. It may be a question of what the law really is (see the recent Myriad v. AMP patent case as to whether isolated genes are patentable), or may be a dispute over the facts (if a contract term means "A", then party A is correct; if it means "B", then party B is correct; and they both have legitimate reasons why it should be read the way they want), or other such reasonable disagreements. So, since a lawyer could argue either position, suddenly they're immoral or greedy in your eyes?

If every decision was so clear cut between good and evil, or just and unjust, then we wouldn't need lawyers in the first place.

Comment Re:Cooling (Score 3, Insightful) 607

6" is 152mm. That's not massive. It's ~25% larger than a 120mm fan.

And there's only one instead of 4-8 fans.

It's actually 60% larger than a 120mm fan. Don't forget about that r^2 term. And one larger fan draws more air per minute with lower power and, more importantly, significantly less noise than 4-8 fans.

Comment Re:No longer "on a computer". (Score 1, Insightful) 84

Most of this appears to already appears to happen on my android phone (NFC payment via Google Wallet). So apparently something you can already do is now novel if you do it "on an iPhone"?

When you say "most of this", are you going by the Slashdot summary, or the claims of the patent application? Because the former is going to be about as accurate a summary of the invention as you'd expect.

Comment Re:This system is highly illogical. (Score 2) 84

The idea of patenting an idea, material or process in this day and age makes no sense to me. All these things are built on 10.000 generations of improving upon others inventions, and the changes are incremental. What hubris to claim an idea or process as your own?

35 USC 101: Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.

If you come up with a super-efficient battery, the fact that "batteries" have been known for centuries doesn't mean that you can't get a patent - you get a patent on your improvement and it doesn't cover the original, old battery.

Comment Re:First to file vs first to invent (Score 1) 84

The patent process has recently changed from "first to invent" to "first to file". What is means is people who can demonstrate they already have invented it and been using it could not be sued. But you should have enough documentation to prove it. Also only the original invention gets this protection, not any enhancements. Others, even if they are aware of the invention being already deployed and in use, even if it is really obvious and non-novel do not get any protection by the claims of prior-art. They need to go to the courts and prove it is obvious and non-novel. But also if it has been in the market for one year, it is prior art, even if the original inventor did not file and some one else files for it after one year. And in software patents, if the feature is in the shipping code/product, even if there is no way for the user to access it, the feature is considered a released product and the one year clock starts ticking. We are adviced to use very strict #ifdef "patent_pending" #endif to protect all the special codes from getting into production builds.

Caveat: This is the engineers understanding of the patent process as explained by the legal department. I won't bet even two cents on it being right.

It's not... The change from first-to-invent to first-to-file only comes up when two people independent file for a patent application on the exact same invention. Previously, there would be a process called an Interference, kind of like a mini-trial, to determine which one of them truly conceived of the idea first. They tended to be around $100k in costs, per side, and take signifiant amounts of time, and one person ended up with nothing. With first-to-file, it's now just whichever one of them filed first wins.

This may seem like a huge change, but there were, on average, 20 interference proceedings per year. 20. Out of more than half a million patent applications.

Comment Re:The Human Condition ... (Score 1) 247

Since I clearly never argued any of the strawmen you just attributed to me, you are simply trolling. Goodbye.

"The human doesn't need any hardware to add two numbers, or calculate sums of angles. "

Incorrect. A human needs a pen and paper in order to do the calculations.

Being a human computer is not simply doing a trivial sum in ones head. It means taking input (on paper) doing complicated calculations with that input (again, on paper) and then producing output (on paper.)

In the article I linked you can even see a picture of some human computers along with their requisite tools - desks, paper, pens.

You repeatedly argued that humans required hardware - namely, a pen and paper - to perform calculations, including "add[ing] two numbers, or calculat[ing] sums of angles". The quotes are there in black and white, and they're not strawmen, they're your words. Frankly, I think they're as idiotic as you now apparently admit they were.

Comment Re:The Human Condition ... (Score 1) 247

It strains credulity to believe anyone could be as dense as you are acting here.

I agree. I can't believe you're seriously and vehemently arguing that people cannot do math in their heads and that without paper or other tools, people could not perform calculations, in spite of the fact that many people do it publicly and sell books about it. You've repeatedly claimed people like this don't exist. And then you call me ignorant?

Frankly, I think most Slashdotters could perform simple sequences of mathematical algorithms in their heads, such as the square root, squares and addition steps required for determining the length of a hypotenuse given lengths of the sides. Frankly, I'm shocked anyone would doubt that this is possible without requiring paper.

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