One good thing I like about macOS is that it can mount ISOs, .toasts, and .DMGs.
I still have Daemon Tools: macOS doesn't handle the more proprietary formats.
Government regulatory and licensing powers, like any tool, can be used, misused, and abused. This is clearly in the second or third area for it to be "Drone operators will steal our business of surveying, even if they're just offering pictures."
If there was anything meriting an arrest, it would have been brought up. Either they were smart enough to wear masks to prevent identification and were smart enough to not record their "rioting", or there was nothing that was actionable.
Re: Clearly, you hate people protecting their own work.
Either A. Reply to your previous comment, or B. Put them all in one big post. Don't separate it out into separate threads. And I prefer B. It's less spammy that way.
It's constant topic here in your attacks on copyright, patents, trademarks, and DMCA.
Remember that the Constitution of the United States of America, the highest law of the land, has said Congress may enact such laws, not that they must. Also, it must be for the benefit of the arts and science. If the law starts harming innovation and media, something is wrong. Maybe the existing laws need to be re-written or abolished entirely.
Boo hoo. -- If your "job" involves finding such
then you're probably malicious / pirate.
Nice line break.
There are three main types of hackers: black-hat, grey-hat, and white hat. Black hat hackers look for exploits in code and systems to sell the information off. White hat hackers look for exploits in code and systems to make sure that they're safe from future hacks and exploits by telling the people that they hacked what they did. Grey hats do both. White hats make systems more secure by checking the vulnerabilities and reporting them to the company/people who control the site.
DMCA works fine for everyone honest. Only pirates hate it.
Nope. A lot of content creators on YouTube have had their livelihoods taken away by fraudulent DMCA notices. TotalBiscuit, the Cynical Brit, had a couple of strikes by Sega Japan against his Shining Force videos because Sega Japan went on a DMCA spree to drum up search rankings on the sequel Shining Ark. Yes, this is abuse of DMCA. Yes, his channel was affected. And it wasn't just his channel.
He also had a couple of videos being critical of a couple of different indie games, both which were very poorly made. Both times, the developer issued a fraudulent DMCA claim. One of the games, Garry's Incident, got a special video where TotalBiscuit goes into the problems with DMCA and being a content creator on YouTube.
do you want Airbus to allow Chinee knock-off parts on their assemblies of already multi-sourced death traps?
If they work (both in stress tests and as replacements), I see no issue. Things go wrong when testing starts being skipped or ignored.
You DO NOT "own" the content on a DVD or book.
No, but you do own the physical item itself. If you cut out all the words of a book and paste them together randomly on a poster, is that copyright infringement? Can the author or publisher go after the person who bought the book for misuse of their product (and remember: books can be resold, so the original buyer might not have been the one to cut it up)? What about showing someone else a picture in a magazine: are you infringing on copyright by showing someone who didn't buy the magazine the picture? If not, why not?
There needs to be some sense on what a user can do to the product they bought. Copying it and selling the copies verbatim is an obvious no-no; reselling an item after it's no longer wanted or needed is accepted. Other than that, it has become a legal grey area on self-modifying the stuff you built, such as third-party ink cartridges or the right to repair.
And people are complaining about Biden being pro-PRC. Through inaction, Trump has given Hong Kong to China. Xi will be calling his buddy Trump after this is over and congratulating him on distracting the world so that Communist China could take over Hong Kong.
On the post: Court To Cops Who Caught Pokemon Rather Than Robbery Suspects: That's A (Justified) Firin'
Re: I said this before…
I've heard Latinos/Latinas hate the Latinx label and have even elevated it to that of a slur.
That said, there is something wrong when committing a crime isn't a fireable offense, but wasting time is.
On the post: Russian Government Abuses IP Law, Regular Law To Shut Down Alexey Navalny's 'Smart Voting' App
Re:
Can we please get a "Sad, But True" button?
On the post: Mystery Over Fake Section 1201 Takedown Claims Sent By 'Video Industry Association of America' Deepens
"I will continue to circumvent the imagined blocking"
Guys, I think we've found "Wolf Fang".
On the post: T-Mobile Investigating 100 Million Subscriber Data Breach
Re: 'T-Mobile did what now? We're focusing on social media, shoo
As a customer…
Done!
On the post: CCO Of Activision Blizzard Busy Blocking Everyone, Including Employees, On Twitter Amid Fair Employment Lawsuit
The entire leadership of Activision-Blizzard need to resign without the golden parachute: They should have enough money to not need that parachute.
Bobby Kotick either inherited the problem or caused it. Either way, he should have stopped this but he didn't.
On the post: Appeals Court Says No Sovereign Immunity For Turkish Security Forces Who Attacked DC Protesters
Re:
From what I've read in this article, the lawsuit is against Turkey itself, since it was their representative that the security was "protecting".
On the post: Copyright Troll Richard Liebowitz Keeps On Losing In Court
Don't be a Liebowitz
As Leonard French has said, "Don't be a Liebowitz."
On the post: Wired's Big 230 Piece Has A Narrative To Tell
Re: Dishonesty
This reminds me of the scripture "They draw near me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me."
In other words, he only says he likes the first amendment, but twists its definition to suit his purposes.
On the post: Accusations Of EA Employee Side-Selling 'FIFA' Rare In-Game Items Is A Problem If True
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Nah, the lowly developers can be fired and hired with impunity. Why are they called Human Resources if we weren't meant to strip-mine them?
On the post: Activision Forces Online Check DRM Into New Game, Which Gets Cracked In One Day
Re: Re: 'Teach you to pay us...'
One good thing I like about macOS is that it can mount ISOs, .toasts, and .DMGs.
I still have Daemon Tools: macOS doesn't handle the more proprietary formats.
On the post: Activision Forces Online Check DRM Into New Game, Which Gets Cracked In One Day
Re:
No, it's how far we have fallen.
On the post: Drone Operator Sues North Carolina Over Its First Amendment-Violating Surveyor Licensing Laws
Re: "government has plenty of rackets"
Government regulatory and licensing powers, like any tool, can be used, misused, and abused. This is clearly in the second or third area for it to be "Drone operators will steal our business of surveying, even if they're just offering pictures."
On the post: Data Broker Looking To Sell Real-Time Vehicle Location Data To Government Agencies, Including The Military
Re:
Misdemeanor? Nah, felony all along the way. Gotta get that disenfranchisement for undesirables in somehow.
On the post: Accusations Of EA Employee Side-Selling 'FIFA' Rare In-Game Items Is A Problem If True
Re: Re:
Profits from loot boxes goes to the upper management, not the lowly developers.
On the post: Identifying Insurrectionists Is Going To Be Easy -- Thanks To Social Media And All The Other Online Trails People Leave
Re:
What makes you think they haven't?
If there was anything meriting an arrest, it would have been brought up. Either they were smart enough to wear masks to prevent identification and were smart enough to not record their "rioting", or there was nothing that was actionable.
On the post: Lawmakers Complain About Comcast's Bullshit Expanded Usage Caps
Re: They don't even have their act together on this
Minor correction: The binary version would be 1,073,741,824, not 1,024,000,000.
On the post: Portland, Maine Passes Facial Recognition Ban That Says The City Can Fire Employees For Violating It
Re: OKAYING EACH WAS CLEARLY TURNED ON.
Or the system saw an ISP sending a lot of messages and flagged the ISP as a potential bot farm.
On the post: Senator Tillis Plans Major Copyright Overhaul: Recognizes Legit Problems, But Current Solutions Are Lacking
Re: Clearly, you hate people protecting their own work.
Either A. Reply to your previous comment, or B. Put them all in one big post. Don't separate it out into separate threads. And I prefer B. It's less spammy that way.
Remember that the Constitution of the United States of America, the highest law of the land, has said Congress may enact such laws, not that they must. Also, it must be for the benefit of the arts and science. If the law starts harming innovation and media, something is wrong. Maybe the existing laws need to be re-written or abolished entirely.
Nice line break.
There are three main types of hackers: black-hat, grey-hat, and white hat. Black hat hackers look for exploits in code and systems to sell the information off. White hat hackers look for exploits in code and systems to make sure that they're safe from future hacks and exploits by telling the people that they hacked what they did. Grey hats do both. White hats make systems more secure by checking the vulnerabilities and reporting them to the company/people who control the site.
Nope. A lot of content creators on YouTube have had their livelihoods taken away by fraudulent DMCA notices. TotalBiscuit, the Cynical Brit, had a couple of strikes by Sega Japan against his Shining Force videos because Sega Japan went on a DMCA spree to drum up search rankings on the sequel Shining Ark. Yes, this is abuse of DMCA. Yes, his channel was affected. And it wasn't just his channel.
He also had a couple of videos being critical of a couple of different indie games, both which were very poorly made. Both times, the developer issued a fraudulent DMCA claim. One of the games, Garry's Incident, got a special video where TotalBiscuit goes into the problems with DMCA and being a content creator on YouTube.
If they work (both in stress tests and as replacements), I see no issue. Things go wrong when testing starts being skipped or ignored.
No, but you do own the physical item itself. If you cut out all the words of a book and paste them together randomly on a poster, is that copyright infringement? Can the author or publisher go after the person who bought the book for misuse of their product (and remember: books can be resold, so the original buyer might not have been the one to cut it up)? What about showing someone else a picture in a magazine: are you infringing on copyright by showing someone who didn't buy the magazine the picture? If not, why not?
There needs to be some sense on what a user can do to the product they bought. Copying it and selling the copies verbatim is an obvious no-no; reselling an item after it's no longer wanted or needed is accepted. Other than that, it has become a legal grey area on self-modifying the stuff you built, such as third-party ink cartridges or the right to repair.
On the post: Beijing Tightens Grip On Hong Kong With Arrest Of Pro-Democracy Lawmakers
Beijing Biden?
And people are complaining about Biden being pro-PRC. Through inaction, Trump has given Hong Kong to China. Xi will be calling his buddy Trump after this is over and congratulating him on distracting the world so that Communist China could take over Hong Kong.
On the post: Netflix Gets Cute Using DMCA Notices To Take Down Tweets Critical Of 'Cuties'
Goats
What was Popehat's comments on goat fornicators again? Ah yes…
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