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Comment Re: Setting the stage for global censorship (Score 1) 16

I believe the legal term they fall under is "safe harbor". You'll have to check me on that. There's also legal concepts for proportion of legal vs illegal use. If it were set up where it's only use is to do facilitate illegal activity, well, it's clearly an accessory to that activity.

Comment Re:Maybe you noticed (Score 3, Insightful) 497

Don't sell the guy short - love him or hate him, you can't deny that he was the vision (good or evil) behind the company. This happens with all companies that outlive the careers of their founders - once the original visionaries that started the company start to retire, they are replaced with people who "just work there". Once that happens, the company either finds a new vision or it falters. There aren't many of the originals left there - thus, probably not much of the original vision.

Comment Re:They would only be hurting themselves (Score 1) 1318

Don't be so quick - extradition isn't the only way Mark could end up in Pak - If he were on his way to a meeting in Mumbai or Bangalore flying from somewhere in Europe and his plane had to make an emergency landing (pilot would probably prefer not to stop in Iraq or Afghanistan, even if it's just for gas), it's possible he could end up on the ground in a country where he has a death warrant. (Hopefully, such a situation would be covered by an international treaty, but I wouldn't know.)

Remember - this guy probably doesn't just work from the home office.

Comment Re:Oh, really? (Score 1) 1217

Indeed - if this became commonplace, a public school that wanted to keep the riffraff out could find all manner of "critical" materials that all students would be required to purchase. This could be similar to the poll taxes that used to be used to keep the poor from voting. The fact that there are school assets available "during the day" for students to use is somewhat relevant, but you and I both know that there will not be enough to go around, there will be severe restrictions on use (and I'm not talking about web restrictions - I'm talking about file storage, functionality lockouts, etc) that will inhibit the value of the asset to the student.

No matter how you slice it, this will create a very uneven playing field using an arbitrary financial discriminator.

If it were required for a particular elective class or a class for which there was a non-computer-required equivalent, that would be completely different. It would be less ridiculous to require high school students to purchase their own textbooks - and we know how that would go over.

Comment Re:Blacklisted (Score 2, Informative) 265

There seems to be a disconnect with "businesses" that make their living primarily off of a government license or special status. As we saw when they dissected the banking crisis, many "financial" businesses are quasi-governmental in nature and as such should have much less latitude to declare themselves "purely private" entities with freedom of choice.

Having said that, I do not believe that banks should have any latitude to deny service to anyone who is not causing a direct problem for the bank. (i.e. breaking laws that involve the bank, refusing info required to meet regulation, abusive to the staff, etc.) Most businesses operate this way - it's only when you get self-righteous employees involved that start to treat the business like they own the whole thing that you get nonsense like this. It is not the bank's place to discipline a business for conduct that is neither illegal nor causes problems for the bank.

Comment Re:That would be all well and good (Score 3, Interesting) 461

Consumers squeeze corps, corps squeeze consumers - agreed

Corps have industry trade groups and lobbyists, consumers have (in the USA) representatives and senators.

When it comes down to it, people decide what's ok and what's not. Corps are not people, consumers are. (except when it comes to campaign financing)

Having minimum standards sucks from the supply side, but their absence is much more damaging on the demand side. To use your analogy - ways to make flights cheaper would include doing away with seatbelts and emergency exits (the seals are a maintenance issue). Nobody uses them anyway. Also, would you even notice if aircraft inspections were reduced? The average consumer wouldn't either.

Comment Re:Multilayer WTF? (Score 2, Interesting) 926

One problem with this whole thing is that if the luggage owner doesn't know there is contraband in it, they will act differently than someone who knows what they're carrying.

Observing "suspicious behavior" is a big part of picking this stuff out.

I think this should be enough to invalidate their test unless they were intentionally isolating the behavior observation methods out.

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