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The Courts

Court Orders Breathalyzer Code Opened, Reveals Mess 707

Death Metal writes with an excerpt from the website of defense attorney Evan Levow: "After two years of attempting to get the computer based source code for the Alcotest 7110 MKIII-C, defense counsel in State v. Chun were successful in obtaining the code, and had it analyzed by Base One Technologies, Inc. By making itself a party to the litigation after the oral arguments in April, Draeger subjected itself to the Supreme Court's directive that Draeger ultimately provide the source code to the defendants' software analysis house, Base One. ... Draeger reviewed the code, as well, through its software house, SysTest Labs, which agreed with Base One, that the patchwork code that makes up the 7110 is not written well, nor is it written to any defined coding standard. SysTest said, 'The Alcotest NJ3.11 source code appears to have evolved over numerous transitions and versioning, which is responsible for cyclomatic complexity.'" Bruce Schneier comments on the same report and neatly summarizes the take-away lesson: "'You can't look at our code because we don't want you to' simply isn't good enough."

Comment Better service (Score 1, Interesting) 369

ISPs don't have enough competition. Will someone tell me why none of these ISP companies setup infrastructure throughout the entire U.S. and overthrow the competition. Why is there always only 1 or 2 major ISPs in certain areas? I'm sure one of them could offer way better service than what is given right now throughout the U.S. and still make a large profit.

Comment Oh no (Score 0, Flamebait) 906

Obama is listening to my calls where I tell my friends to come watch a movie or tell my mom to stop calling. How can you do this to me Barack??

Unless you actually plan on doing something horrific and are dumb enough to talk about it over a phone this shouldn't be a problem. The worst thing I can think about it is, how much money are they spending spying on everyone?

Comment Re:Not sure I agree with that last bit. (Score 1) 502

Suicidal people have, since time began, justified wilfully idiotic acts with spurious reasoning that only makes sense in their own heads. Whatever the outcome of this people will continue to think suicide is their best option - either for their own sake or because they misguidedly believe it'll make someone else feel bad, or even get punished.
Using Megan's suicide as a rallying cry of "oh how terrible, everyone will be bumping themselves off for revenge now!" is pretty small minded and it devalues the good that came from Megan's too short life in my opinion. Shame on you.

How does claiming that suicidal people will gain confidence in committing suicide from this act devalue Megan's life? You said it yourself that some people commit suicide believing it will make someone else feel bad or get punished. So if that is the case for Megan, she is getting what got what she wanted and wouldn't oppose to others doing the same for their own sake.

Someone who commits suicide is always the person doing the most wrong. There are of course situations of torture etc., that can be justified. Killing yourself because of what people on the internet say about you is not one of those situations. People tend to act like she was some amazing child and some sort of "hero" possibly. How can anyone be inspired by a 13 year old girl killing herself because of what a 16 boy said to her over Myspace. The girl has other problems when that is the case.

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"You don't go out and kick a mad dog. If you have a mad dog with rabies, you take a gun and shoot him." -- Pat Robertson, TV Evangelist, about Muammar Kadhafy

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