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Comment Re:Liability laws (Score 1) 41

The question "who is responsible for accidents" here is no different from a thousand other "who is responsible" judgements. Unless you have some reason to think that a repaired John Deere tractor is more likely to cause accidents than a non-repaired one, this is just a distraction.

We have a legal system that addresses questions of who is responsible. If you don't like the way these decisions are made, you need to fix the legal system, because changing right-to-repair laws won't do beans to solve that problem.

Comment Some gold coins buri in a lot of weak circumstance (Score 1) 76

The arguments are pretty broad, and it does seem the author worked back from a conclusion toward proof which in statistics doesn't work.

Being interested in decentralized currency and being a libertarian are essentially a Venn diagram that's a perfect circle. There were numerous other examples where the author would have concluded the average late 90s Slashdotter created Bitcoin because that was just your average neckbeard from the era, nothing unique to Satoshi. I was ready to just write off the whole article based on this extremely flimsy correlation.

The writing analysis comes down to a fundamental flaw. They chose a number of idiosyncrasies and then judged all candidates on those idiosyncrasies using the AI. But we don't know that those are the only idiosyncrasies of writing. Maybe only 1 author wrote both "email" and "e-mail" but maybe 1 other author only commonly misused "analogy" vs "metaphor" but since that person wasn't Back, they were ignored.

However , that all being said in defense of sloppy research. I can say with 100% confidence that a Giant Fucking Nerd that spends months, years and endless nights on a message board or mailing list don't usually just disappear. They especially don't just disappear at the exact moment that their biggest passion project suddenly finally heats up and gets popular. They got him dead to rights it's him. I need no more convinced.

If I'm a giant fucking e-currency nerd, I've created my own proof of work currency in the past (one of only a handful of people) and discussed/debated/thought about e-currencies like mine... and then suddenly someone finally actually starts on a viable implementation that's actually attracting a lot of attention... I would need welfare checks to make sure I wasn't dead because I would be following it so obsessively. Black even mentions that this happened while he was writing his dissertation with PGP... and he didn't even contribute to PGP. But we're supposed to believe that something as important (or more) that aligns with your politics and builds on your own work--going so far as to cite it as an inspiration... just isn't interesting enough for you to bother discussing?! Yeah lol no.

Comment I'm happy with my System 76 laptop (Score 1) 54

Just a couple weeks ago, I replaced the battery in my 6-year-old Lemur Pro. Not very hard, and now it's great at holding a charge again.

Yes, getting this thing in 2020 cost me 2-3 times as much as today's new Macbook Neo, but I needed a machine I could rely on, that wasn't designed as though I'm the manufacturer's adversary.

Comment Based on Real Physics [Re:NV centers] (Score 3, Informative) 244

The multi-km range seems a stretch, but quantum magnetometers based on Nitrogen-Vacancy defects in diamond is a real technology.

https://www.photonics.com/Arti...
  https://www.ll.mit.edu/r-d/pro...
  https://www.nist.gov/programs-...
  https://academic.oup.com/nsr/a...
  https://pubs.aip.org/aip/apl/a...

Comment Re:Anyone got examples (Score 1) 61

Y2Claude

And yes they posted at least one example:

https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/Op...

several sections throughout this post we discuss vulnerabilities in the abstract, without naming a specific project and without explaining the precise technical details. We recognize that this makes some of our claims difficult to verify. In order to hold ourselves accountable, throughout this blog post we will commit to the SHA-3 hash of various vulnerabilities and exploits that we currently have in our possession.[3] Once our responsible disclosure process for the corresponding vulnerabilities has been completed (no later than 90 plus 45 days after we report the vulnerability to the affected party), we will replace each commit hash with a link to the underlying document behind the commitment.

Comment Re:Go Vegan and Nobody Gets Hurt (Score 1) 87

Correct, Google AI was mistaken by sticking that word "Domestic" in there along with "USDA". Only 94.2 million cattle In the USA, which the maximum number of Bison was somewhere around 30 million. This matches the 3x to 4x increase that I expected. I am surprised that the USA has such a small portion of the world total however, but the 1.5 billion number was backed by multiple sources.

I have also heard that both Bison and grass-fed cattle emit less greenhouse gasses than most farmed cattle, not sure what the factor is.

Comment Re:How is this possible? (Score 5, Informative) 66

According to the writeup; there are two methods: it is possible for an extension to mark some parts of itself as 'web accessible'; and linkedin has assembled at least one characteristic file for 6,1000-odd extension IDs and attempts to fetch it to confirm/deny the extension's presence.

The other is based on the fact that the whole point of many extensions is to modify the site in some way; but the site normally has largely unfettered access to inspect itself, so they have theirs set up to walk the entire DOM looking for any references to "chrome-extension://" and snagging the IDs if found.

Not exactly a 'declare installed extensions'; but it looks like, out of some combination of supporting the use cases where an extension and page actively interact by design and either not wanting the possibility or not wanting the complexity of trying to enable 'invisible' edits(presumably some sort of 'shadow' DOM mechanism where as far as the site and everything delivered with it knows only its unedited DOM and resources exist; but the one the user sees is an extension-modified copy of that one, which sounds like it could get messy), inferential attacks are fairly easy and powerful.

Comment Re:So much for the rule of law (Score 1) 83

No, the judges looked at the laws and determined that the activity is under Federal jurisdiction.

Since you are unhappy the thing to do is get the law changed to exclude prediction markets from the laws regulating futures contracts.

I happen to agree with you by the way. The Commerce Clause was way over extended back in the days of FDR. If there is no physical product crossing the border it should be under the State's jurisdiction. The prediction markets do not want to set up 50 different companies so want to stay under the Federal umbrella for obvious reasons.

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