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Comment Re:Who watches the watchmen? (Score 1) 1018

Nice argument but fallacious for the following reasons: 1) "It would be trivial for Assange to filter information and only display leaks that would damage the country of his choice" Of course, one would hope this is exactly what he does.
2) "Wikileaks has assumed a level of authority and trust that it has not earned nor that is remotely justified via its internal policies and structure" Incorrect. The Media has placed an air or authority on thier actions, Wikileaks has never made any assumptions or claimed any authourity.
3) "Who is Assange to judge and / or label corporations or individuals?" Who are you to claim he has no right or that his judgenment is not profound?
4) It was called wikileaks becuase the site was originally built on the open "Wiki" website technology freely abvailable (hence all the wiki on the internet)
5) He is not a governmental body nor is he affiliated with one, he can say and do what he god damn likes and there is nothing short of murder that any American can do. 6) The rest of the world is taking great pleasure in watching the last pathetic remenants of United States Culture wither away under the blazing light of truth.

Comment Re:So... (Score 1) 1018

"People who have never suffred deserve no reparation." That's is quite possibly the most short sighted ignoble thing I have ever read on the subject. Ok, I look forward to the day when the Chinese invade the USA and exterminate the white & black folks and set up the Communist States of America and keep a few white boys on reservations for the tourists to go and take photos of: "Look Li-Yen, theres some real Americans. Yeah look they are just sitting watching TV stuffing there faces with fatty foods" "Daddy, daddy why are there only Americans left in reservations?" "They were an inferior culture that could not resist the Progress we offered them, look how much better off they are now than when they were a superpower - we can control how much food they stuff in there holes and stop them blowing up arabs." "Daddy daddy, why did the americans kill the arabs?" "Well Li-Yen the Americans wanted to destroy any culture that did not watch american gladiators, eat chipotel and slavishly venerate the Israelis." "What happened to them all dad?" "oh most died of cancer from the GM fast food, those that survived that were killed by the Innuit and Japanses, something about it being 'thier turn'."

Comment But how much energy is that? (Score 3, Interesting) 109

Okay so they give widely varying estimates of the crater's size - assuming the centre value of 120 Km a +/- 60 Km ia one hell of a margin of error. I imagine that the energy released from such an impact is orders of magnitude greater than any nuke we could ever throw at each other. The article metions the release of CO2, but i thought that by definition asteroids were just lumps of rock. So where does the CO2 come from after the impact?
Image

Rupert Murdoch Claims To Own the 'Sky' In 'Skype' 186

Crudely_Indecent writes "Not content to own just news stories, Rupert Murdoch is now going after individual words! His BSkyB is fighting a legal battle with Skype, claiming that it owns the 'Sky' in 'Skype.' From the article: 'A spokesman for Sky confirmed that the company has been involved in a "five-year dispute with Skype" over trademark applications filed by the telecomms company. These are, the spokesman added: "including, but not limited to, television-related goods and services."'"

Comment Re:Or learn C-flat (Score 1) 565

Does it not depend entirely on how you have tuned the instrument? B# in a bizarre avente garde jazz tuning ("hey lets invent some new notes, after g... we could call them h and i. Oh shit! yeah lets decimalise the bastard!") is a significantly different tone to B# in a classically tuned instrument. Now if your talking indian and chinese instruments that opens up a whole world of weird takes on the concept of B#!

Comment Re:Well, really... (Score 1) 487

"enforced in most foreign nations" You evidently have not spent any time in Asia or Africa. Or most of the rest of the world for that matter. By and large most governments could not give a flying pigs penis for US copyright, we are well aware that it is simply a tool to force overpriced crap onto our domestic markets at the expense of local innovation and production.
Communications

Verizon Hints At Scrapping Unlimited Data Plans 319

BusinessWeek reports that Verizon may be preparing to follow AT&T's example by eliminating unlimited data plans later this year. Quoting: "'We will probably need to change the design of our pricing where it will not be totally unlimited, flat rate,' John Killian, chief financial officer of Verizon Communications Inc., the wireless unit’s parent, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York today. The company anticipates 'explosions in data traffic' over wireless networks as new phones on 4G networks incorporate data-heavy applications, such as video downloads, he said. Verizon is working to keep its network running smoothly as more of its customers switch to smartphones that connect to the Internet. ... 'The more bandwidth that you make available, the faster it will be consumed,' said Craig Moffett, analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York. 'From Verizon’s perspective, the last thing you want is for another generation of consumers to be conditioned to the idea that data is always going to be uncapped.'"
Crime

The South Carolina Primary and Voting Machine Fraud 467

cSeattleGameboy writes "South Carolina sure knows how to pick 'em. Alvin Greene is a broke, unemployed guy who is facing a felony obscenity charge. He made no campaign appearances and raised no money, but he is the brand new Democratic Senate nominee from South Carolina. Tom Schaller at FiveThirtyEight.com does a detailed analysis of how a guy like this wins a primary race, and many of the signs point to voting machine fraud. There seem to have been irregularities on all sides. 'Dr. Mebane performed second-digit Benford's law tests on the precinct returns from the Senate race. ... If votes are added or subtracted from a candidate's total, possibly due to error or fraud, Mebane's test will detect a deviation from this distribution. Results... showed that Rawl's Election Day vote totals depart from the expected distribution at 90% confidence. In other words, the observed vote pattern for Rawl could be expected to occur only about 10% of the time by chance. ... An unusual, non-random pattern in the precinct-level results suggests tampering, or at least machine malfunction, perhaps at the highest level. And Mebane is perhaps the leading expert on this very subject. Along with the anomalies between absentee ballot v. election day ballots..., something smells here.' Techdirt.com points out that South Carolina uses ES&S voting machines, which have had strings of problems before; and they have no audit trail."

Comment Re:They don't care about the problems today. (Score 1) 430

"The consumer shouldn't need to sympathize with a company. It's not a person. It's a thing." Actually you will find out that Corporations (such as UBI soft) are legal PERSONS. They are NOT things. This was a piece of Machiavellian law introduced last century to give corporations carte blanche to do what ever they hell they liked. As they are persons criminal proceeedings are brought against the corporation not the board of directors etc. Also bare in mind that a corporations employees are legally constrained to fuck-you-in-the-ass IF it can provide an increased profit for stock holders. It is ILLEGAL for a corporation to knowingly not pursue an action that would increase profit.
Censorship

DMCA Amendment Proposed For UK 208

Grumbleduke writes "During today's debate in the UK's House of Lords on the much-criticized Digital Economy Bill, the unpopular Clause 17 (which would have allowed the government to alter copyright law much more easily than it currently can) was voted out in favor of a DMCA-style take-down system for websites and ISPs. The new amendment known as 120A sets up a system whereby a copyright owner could force an ISP to block certain websites who allegedly host or link to infringing material or face being taken before the High Court and made to pay the copyright owner's legal fees. This amendment was tabled by the Liberal Democrat party, which had so far been seen as the defenders of the internet and with the Conservative party supporting them. The UK's Pirate Party and Open Rights Group have both strongly criticized this new amendment."
Image

Using Classical Music As a Form of Social Control 721

cyberfringe writes "Classical music is being used increasingly in Great Britain as a tool for social control and a deterrent to bad behavior. One school district subjects badly behaving children to hours of Mozart in special detention. Unsurprisingly, some of these youth now find classical music unbearable. Recorded classical music is blared through speakers at bus stops, outside stores, train stations and elsewhere to drive away loitering youth. Apparently it works. Detentions are down, graffiti is reduced, and naughty youth flee because they find classical music repugnant."

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