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Comment Re:Wrong (Score 1) 307

If you are "proxying" connection, then you are downloading from user D1 and uploading to D2. It does not matter if you are not retaining that data, you are still copying stuff illegally. So in the end if content owners are unable to determine identity of actual downloaders, they can go for proxying users and hit them with exactly the same lawsuit.

Copying data from storage into RAM
ISPs (all along the pipe from your house to the server) copying data into buffers for routing
Defragging your hard drive, copying data from one sector to another

All of these examples are just as silly as what you claim is infringement.

Comment Re:Good (Score 1) 851

What do all true Christians believe?

"True christians" believe in a Christ, Jesus, and in what he taught-- at least by the definition in use for the last 2000 years and as spelled out in the Bible.

Good try, but by including "and what he taught" in your definition, we're back to the same argument. Or do you prescribe to a literal interpretation?

Comment Re:Don't keep old email. (Score 1) 228

Define "The Cloud". Who's to say your ISP doesn't store a copy of all emails received by you?

Same reason you don't save every piece of electronic crap your computer shits out on a daily basis.

Cost.

You're making the assumption it's costing them money and not turning them a profit.

For instance, Google uses your emails to make money. Read your eighteen-page legalese documents from your ISP lately? How about their "third party marketers" legalese? There has been a marked increase in companies aggregating such data in a way that "maintains privacy" but we all know how usually pans out, don't we? Also, you have no idea if the data is scrubbed of all personally identifiable information before it's stored in their database, or just before they sell it.

And even if you know your ISP isn't currently selling your info, there is no guarantee that they're not building a database of your emails so they can start doing it next year.

Comment Re:Can people be just people ? (Score 1) 336

Do they have to be compared to others?

I mean, Elon Musk is Elon Musk, whatever Elon Musk does, or doesn't do, is his business - as long as it does not interfere with the life of others.

It's simply a journalistic method for introducing somebody to a new thing by comparing it to known objects. For example, using an orange as a comparative object when trying to describe what a grapefruit is.

Comment Re:Net energy? (Score 5, Insightful) 580

Given that nobody (except Iceland) is at 100% renewable energy, yes it does matter. Say you consume 100 TWh a year. Say 25 TWh of that comes from renewables, the rest from fossil fuels (ignore nuclear to keep this simple). Say petrol (gasoline) accounts for 10 TWh of your energy use. And say this process requires 2x as much energy as it creates in petrol.

If you create all your petrol using renewables to power this process, then you're reducing your fossil fuel consumption by 10 TWh, but increasing your renewable consumption by 20 TWh. However, you only have 25 TWh of installed renewables capacity. So the 20 TWh of renewables this process consumes displaces 20 TWh of other consumption which used to come from renewables. To make up for that shortfall, you have to burn 20 TWh more fossil fuels.

You might have a point, but it's entirely impossible to tell because the numbers are pulled directly from your ass. (No offense.)
 

You cannot pick and choose where your power comes from. If your renewables production is static and less than 100%, then nothing you do on the consumption side matters. Once you exceed that static amount of renewables production capacity, every new power drain you add comes entirely from fossil fuels.

I believe you are incorrect. Ask anybody who has successfully moved their house off the grid if they can pick and choose where their power comes from. Yes, if you have your big Air-to-Petrol plant hooked directly up to the grid, you can't choose. But there are plenty of other viable methods, and when you don't have a constant need for reliable power (like say a factory or even a house does) you can easily get away with a wind/solar farm powering your plant. This is even more true when you're in the business of converting excess energy into something transportable and easily stored.

Comment Re:I don't understand (Score 1) 333

TFS talks about efficiency. I can only guess that they can improve the bandwidth of the communication by using quantum teleportation but I'm not sure how and would be intrigued to find out.

Tim.

Seems like increasing the bandwidth could indeed be the case. From what I understand of how this is working, they are storing the information in the photon itself, which differs from how we send info with light today by just using the absence / presence of photons. Just by the fact that we can now leave the stream on the whole time we're sending info should boost the potential bandwidth.

This is just my layman's understanding from reading a bit into it this morning though; I could easily be wrong.

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As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. -- Albert Einstein

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