Comment Re:Obama won't veto this... (Score 1) 231
By all accounts, the fix is in. The veto threat is a nice little good cop, bad cop show for the cameras.
Comment Re:encryption (Score 1) 402
How many times can you run the payload of Keylogger In The Corner Of The Chip before your customers stop trusting your chips. At least this way they can blame the data loss on the Mission Impossible shit.
Comment Re:encryption (Score 2) 402
Sure, not feasible on a glued-together Macbook, but most business-class laptops have easily removed keyboards attached by a ribbon cable. On something like a Dell Latitude, it's easily a 1 minute job. The keylogger hardware isn't isn't exactly off the shelf, but not out of the question for a state-sponsored attack. Still, you have a point. Any target that's worth attacking with such sophisticated equipment is probably paranoid enough not to be traveling around a foreign country with the digital crown jewels, encrypted HDD or not.
Comment Re:encryption (Score 5, Informative) 402
A hardware keylogger inline with the keyboard cable takes care of that. It only means they'll have to break in twice instead of once.
Comment Re:Congress Sucks (Score 1) 858
Sometimes, I get the feeling Kucinich is allowed to exist to make leftists look stupid. If you want to feel proud and not embarrassed about supporting a leftist, check out Howard Dean and Bernie Sanders. Must be something in the water up in Vermont.
Comment Re:One of the ways to "not balance the books" ... (Score 1) 858
And again, Germany has a public healthcare system, and they're not going broke. They're the ones bailing out the rest of Europe (so far). The original reference to the Euro debt crisis is a strawman.
Comment Re:CA is boring (Score 1) 821
Same here. Biked to polling place at lunchtime (80 deg!). Two people in line. Super fast and easy. No competitive races for offices. Ballot props are where the action is.
Comment Re:Reasonable (Score 2) 559
Sure, in a happy world of rainbows and unicorns where GMO foods with significant market share had real benefits to customers, we could discuss the finer points of GMO in your food, but the seed giants are their own worst enemy. It's a vendor lock-in device used to corner the market on herbicides. If there was ever a market for "good" GMOs, Monsanto killed it.
Comment Monsanto = monopolist (Score 3, Insightful) 559
Regardless of your stance on the health effects of GMOs, if would behoove us to look more closely at the business practices (specifically w.r.t. intellectual property) of the seed giants, i.e. Monsanto: patenting life, monopolizing the seed market, shaking down small farmers with patent infringement suits, and all so they can sell more Roundup, creating a monoculture of herbicides. It's the same corporate playbook we've seen countless times in the tech world.
We had herbicides before Roundup-ready GMOs. It ain't no huge innovation, aside from being a revenue win for Monsanto.
http://cenblog.org/cleantech-chemistry/2010/03/what-did-farmers-do-before-roundup/
Comment Re:TWO WORDS (Score 1) 454
Well obviously... Inconvenient to extract data for evidence in a court of law != impervious to government snooping
Comment Re:First my beloved Viper fighter, now this (Score 1) 820
Comment Re:Training! (Score 1) 1201
Comment Re:Training! (Score 3, Insightful) 1201
Comment Re:One word (Score 2) 169
deregulate just another word for "shit happens"