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Comment Re:You raise some good points.... (Score 1) 27

I may be unusual in this, but I was able to read the Wyden bill, with ammendments, in a weekend. It's not much bigger than The Lord of the Rings Trilogy, and much less complex.

I'm with you on this to an extent.

Legislation is written with wide margins, double-spaced, and decently big type. I was reading a draft of the climate bill for the House, which was right around 1000 pages. I'd say that in a real, serious book with normal style</subjective opinion> those 1000 pages would condense to around 250 pages or less.

The problem is, a huge number of things can depend on very few words, or even lack thereof. I had a journal about the proposed cybersecurity bill. Notice the language:

SEC. 18. CYBERSECURITY RESPONSIBILITIES AND AUTHORITY.
The President
(1) within 1 year after the date of enactment
of this Act, shall develop and implement a com-
prehensive national cybersecurity strategy, which
shall include
 
[....]
 
(2) may declare a cybersecurity emergency and
order the limitation or shutdown of Internet traffic
to and from any compromised Federal government
or United States critical infrastructure information
system or network;
[....]

(3) FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND UNITED STATES CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND NETWORKS
The term Federal gov-
ernment and United States critical infrastructure in-
formation systems and networks includes
(A) Federal Government information sys-
tems and networks; and
(B) State, local, and nongovernmental in-
formation systems and networks in the United
States designated by the President as critical
infrastructure information systems and net-
works.

So basically, if the President says it's a critical network, then it is a critical network, according to statute, and subject to the President's authority to block or selectively filter traffic. Who knows what else, maybe DoS too? What does "limitation" mean? Now, in a logical world, nothing this vague and wide-reaching would ever make it into statute in the first place.

But if anyone tried to call out the legislation for it, they'd be met with responses saying that nothing too extreme would be allowed to happen (This is America!) and that whoever's criticizing it is just fear-mongering. Even though the legislation authorizes exactly that in plain English. This opens the door to incrementalism, where they slowly but surely get closer and closer to the authority they've already been granted. Just up the dosage every now and then, and the people are too dumb to realize.

All that said, I haven't read anything on the health bill(s?) yet. But I'll be completely surprised if they don't have this wordplay chicanery going in the health legislation too.

Cellphones

Submission + - US cell phone plans amongst world's most expensive (oecd.org)

Albanach writes: An OECD report published today has shown moderate cell phone users in the United States are paying some of the highest rates in the world. Average US plans cost $52.99 per month compared to an average of $10.95 in Finland. The full report is available only to subscribers, however Excel sheets of the raw data are available to download.
Security

Submission + - Schneier on Self-Enforcing Protocols 1

Hollow Being writes: In an essay posted to Threatpost, Bruce Schneier makes the argument that self-enforcing protocols are better suited to security and problem-solving. From the article: "Self-enforcing protocols are safer than other types because participants don't gain an advantage from cheating. Modern voting systems are rife with the potential for cheating, but an open show of hands in a room — one that everyone in the room can count for himself — is self-enforcing. On the other hand, there's no secret ballot, late voters are potentially subjected to coercion, and it doesn't scale well to large elections. But there are mathematical election protocols that have self-enforcing properties, and some cryptographers have suggested their use in elections."
Sci-Fi

Submission + - Gilliam eyes Philip K Dick's The World Jones Made (sffmedia.com)

bowman9991 writes: "What do you get when you mix Monty Python's Terry Gilliam and Philip K. Dick? We could find out shortly. Renowned as a director of the excellent science fiction/fantasy films 'Brazil' and '12 Monkeys', Terry Gilliam is planning to adapt Philip K. Dick's science fiction novel 'The World Jones Made' for the big screen. The novel explores predestination, free will and determinism, and features genetically engineered humans, atomic mutants in live sex shows, spore based aliens and an interstellar war — more than enough to spark Terry Gilliam's fertile imagination into dizzying overdrive."
Quickies

Submission + - Where do you draw the line supporting users? 2

z0mb13e writes: Every so often in my role as the one and only IT person at my company, I am called up to 'support' users when they fudge a spreadsheet/document/etc because they weren't paying attention or don't really know what they are doing beyond the rinse and repeat they have been shown. This basically boils down to fixing their mistakes and correcting data. They don't want to know how to fix it and show little to no interest in learning how to use the applications properly. Worse than that is the requests for 'help' that basically involve being asked if something is possible, me explaining that it is and the conversation ending with the words 'Ok so if you can do that for me...'. Most of the time it is easier to do what is asked than to engage in conversation about how the user should be doing it themselves.

Where do others draw the line? Do you just suck it up and get on with it or do you insist that users take the time to develop the correct skills and do the work themselves?

Comment Re:Bullshit (Score 1) 23

Well, I dare you to do what others have done in the last year- go to your local supermarket with $28 and see if you can live on ONLY those ingredients you can buy for a week.

That's very possible, at least with the prices where I live, as long as you have the time, experience, and equipment to cook good meals.

You won't have the most balanced diet in the world. With that kind of budget, you'll probably have to leave out fruits, except for maybe OJ, but you can definitely survive food-wise, and not be all that unhealthy.

Comment Re:All of it with strings attached (Score 1) 3

Good point about strings.

The thing that gets me is, states are unable to pay for a lot of things because they can't inflate currency like the feds. So, to the extent that this is being payed for, it's being done through destroying savings, encouraging malinvestment, and helping banks disproportionately, because they get their hands on new money first.

Security

Submission + - SPAM: After links to cybercrime, Latvian ISP cut off

alphadogg writes: A Latvian ISP linked to online criminal activity has been cut off from the Internet, following complaints from Internet security researchers. Real Host, based in Riga, Latvia was thought to control command-and-control servers for infected botnet PCs, and had been linked to phishing sites, Web sites that launched attack code at visitors and were also home to malicious "rogue" antivirus products, according to a researcher using the pseudonym Jart Armin, who works on the Hostexploit.com Web site. "This is maybe one of the top European centers of crap," he said in an e-mail interview. "It was a cesspool of criminal activity," said Paul Ferguson a researcher with Trend Micro.
Link to Original Source
Medicine

Submission + - SPAM: Is Genius I.Q. Linked to Psychosis? 2

destinyland writes: "New research suggests a genetic mutation linked to psychosis (and schizophrenia) could also be related to genius IQs. This supports the pscyhological theory that genius "blends intelligence with just the right amount of psychoticism" (which creates unconventional thinking). Evolution may even have favored schizophrenia and bipolar syndrome because the same gene also boosts creativity. But one geneticist still believes exactly the opposite. "Madness is often madness — and doesn't have as much genetic association with intelligence.""
Link to Original Source
Patents

Submission + - Microsoft Patents XML Word Processing Documents

theodp writes: "Embrace. Extend. Patent. On Tuesday, Microsoft was granted U.S. Patent No.7,571,169 for its 'invention' of the Word-processing document stored in a single XML file that may be manipulated by applications that understand XML. Presumably developers are protected by Microsoft's 'covenant not to sue', so the biggest question raised by this patent is: How in the world was it granted in light of the 40-year history of document markup languages? Next thing you know, the USPTO will give Microsoft a patent for Providing Emergency Data in XML format. Oops, too late."

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