I agree that HTTPS is a good thing, but browser support isn't as good as you make out. (I'm not saying they shouldn't switch, just that you're dismissing the browser support too easily without giving it due consideration.)
If we take away the police's extra money from these traps, cops won't be able to buy their children their favorite movies and cartoons. Those poor children will have to turn to piracy to watch their favorite shows. This piracy, in turn, will harm the poor corn farmers of America. Since corn is used in virtually everything, prices will go up across the board. Due to an overburdened economy, the government will have no choice but to raise taxes. More taxes means more lobbyists pushing for even worse laws. More laws will lead to more people helping each other avoid breaking those laws, starting the cycle anew.
All because you selfish bastards wouldn't think of the children!
I actually think is sort of a smart (if devious) move by Lacoste.
* They establish that they don't want to be associated with mass murders (duh)
* They manage to have their name brought into headlines
* While there is an association between the two (mass murders, Lacoste) that didn't exist before, it's not necessarily a bad one: they're "against" mass murders, and could be remembered as much for denouncing the guy as by any direct association of his wearing their clothes.
It's an abuse of and waste of police time to have to deal with it, but from a pure marketing standpoint it is kinda savvy. Hell, beforehand, I'd never even heard of Lacoste, and was interested enough that I wikipedia'd them just because of this article.
Something like this in a searchable index would be great. Or maybe if you could restrict a Google search by things like open source, public domain, although I understand that tagging search entries with flags like public domain, copyrighted, open source, closed source, etc, would be a massive undertaking, I could see a fairly big benefit in terms of usefulness for doing so.
"I like to think Dark Helmet is black and then I drool over his great man breasts in the darkness known as 'my closet'. It's hot in there, if you know what I mean."
Very RELIABLY and LEGALLY gotten by Reporter Random T. Troll (who worked for News Of the World) Chronno S. Trigger's voicemail.
True story. Srsly.
^ Would that be what you meant? I mean, it's as truthful as the AC up there, amirite?
That would only work if they only kicked children offline, see. Then those pesky kids (and that stupid Dog, Scooby Doo) couldn't get into any online troubles.
I think it goes back to the same issues Mike raises about border crossings.
You choose what to stick in a safe. It has a very limited capacity. A PC, however, can have enough room to hold every digital file you're interested in, depending on how much you want to spend on storage space and form factor.
It's not so much that you're hiding something as there may be something in there you simply don't recall off the top of your head that they use against you in another way, much like a fishing expedition.
When you say that Obama "has been the most aggressive President ever in trying to punish whistleblowers", how much of that is directly because of Obama vs underlings in government who are doing this stuff?
I know that a lot of people assume that anything done during a president's term is the president's doing, and am just curious if you're following that same train of though or if there is info pointing that Obama himself is for this type of thing (as opposed to say, powerless/spineless to stop it). Not trying to defend him or say he isn't doing it, I'm just honestly curious about it.
Damn. I knew I should have taken the blue copyrighted pill instead of that silly red public domain one. Now I'm in a world with it's own programmed rules, some that can be bent, some that can be broken, and some that have bad acting lawyers saying "I know kung fu" while distorting reality with ip based lawsuits.
He didn't turn it into something different. It's obviously still the same picture, just pixelated.
It's obviously the same in the same way that p!=p, maybe. The so similar that they're different enough that even a talented web designer proficient in Photshop couldn't modify the original and had to get a friend who was better at it to create a whole new image with the intent of making it look like first.
If that's not transformative, you're not an anonymous coward. Oh, wait.
For starters, you suck at analogies. Aside from that, I'm not entirely sure that we are trying to solve the murder problem.
We're all about (rightly) punishing murderers. But I seriously doubt the laws are there with any real intent on prevention. The main two types of people who would murder a) feel no qualms about it, so if they don't mind murdering someone they don't care about some arbitrary law made by a government they likely don't care about, and b) do it because of some momentary emotional or mental overload (they get extremely angry, paranoid, etc) and aren't able/willing at that particularly moment to worry about the law anyways.
Having said that, there's not much in there related to my point. I mean, if you want to go that route, I could say that the RIAA doesn't go after potential aliens who might exist and might be listing to music that sorta kinda sounds like it might be similar to something created by a human, during a drunken college party, so since the aren't suing the alien asses off those Plutonian Pirates for all of their Plutonian dirty money, the RIAA really doesn't care about stopping piracy. And we all know that's the trtuh, cause the RIAA is all about peace, love, and screwing others over. Amirite?
In their minds, I think that the enormous cost of fighting piracy is worth it, once they find the "solution". That is, the labels think that with enough tries, sooner or later they will find the magic bullet that kills off piracy. For good.
The problem is, of course, that even if they (by some miracle) manage to "solve" the problem of piracy, it won't stay that way. It's not a one-and-done kind of problem. Within days of most any "solution", the collective internet can and will have found some sort of way around it. Or else they'll invent a new method.
If you're sticking your fingers in your ears like the labels and don't recognize that fact, suddenly their efforts seem more ... well, not well thought out, but less crazy at least. Even if it cost them a few billion in sales to stop it now, if they manage to "stop it" for good all they have to then do is artificial scarcity to bring all of that money back to them.
I say we let the Copyright minimalists all copy money. Furthermore, to help promote the "copy" aspect, they should post pictures of them doing so.
Then we can send the lot of them to jail, and by removing a large percentage of the idiots from the public, become a smarter, more progressive country.
Plus, while they are in jail, they can "copy" the act known as getting butt-plundered some of those other pesky "pirates".
Re: And yet another study showing that "new" thinkers get knowledge from kids
It's certainly more knowledgeable than calling infringement theft.
Oh, wait, you mean a false "knowledgeable" with a false "theft", causing the opposite due to double negatives? Now I see what you did there, talking about those smart kids. Nudge nudge wink win.
On the post: Twitter Makes All Its Shortlinks HTTPS By Default
http://caniuse.com/#feat=referrer-policy
Zero IE support before Edge and only limited support with Edge means a ~large~ portion of browsers (for most sites) will be impacted.
Can I Use estimates only 65% of the world's in-use browsers (up to 74% of US only in-use browsers) would be supported.
On the post: Is It A First Amendment Violation To Get Pulled Over For Flashing Your Lights To Warn Others Of Cops?
Re: Re: Re:
All because you selfish bastards wouldn't think of the children!
On the post: Portlandia: We Satirize Portland, But If You Satirize Us, We'll Go Legal On You [Updated]
confused...
And the bird IS the word ...
do they own all the words?
I am pretty sure I just committed 41 counts of copyright, with all these word I just used. 43 if you count the numbers.
On the post: Lacoste Asks Police To Stop Norwegian Mass Killer Anders Breivik From Wearing Its Clothes
Smart Move
* They establish that they don't want to be associated with mass murders (duh)
* They manage to have their name brought into headlines
* While there is an association between the two (mass murders, Lacoste) that didn't exist before, it's not necessarily a bad one: they're "against" mass murders, and could be remembered as much for denouncing the guy as by any direct association of his wearing their clothes.
It's an abuse of and waste of police time to have to deal with it, but from a pure marketing standpoint it is kinda savvy. Hell, beforehand, I'd never even heard of Lacoste, and was interested enough that I wikipedia'd them just because of this article.
On the post: Need More Public Domain Material?
searchable
On the post: If Your Comment Section Is Awesome, It's Your Community's Fault
Re: Re: Breathtaking lack of self-awareness.
Very RELIABLY and LEGALLY gotten by Reporter Random T. Troll (who worked for News Of the World) Chronno S. Trigger's voicemail.
True story. Srsly.
^ Would that be what you meant? I mean, it's as truthful as the AC up there, amirite?
On the post: Guy Kicked Off Comcast For Using Too Many Cloud Services
Re: Re: We don't want your money
On the post: Justice Department Says It Should Be Able To Require People To Decrypt Their Computers
Re: Not sure I see ...
You choose what to stick in a safe. It has a very limited capacity. A PC, however, can have enough room to hold every digital file you're interested in, depending on how much you want to spend on storage space and form factor.
It's not so much that you're hiding something as there may be something in there you simply don't recall off the top of your head that they use against you in another way, much like a fishing expedition.
On the post: Monkeys Don't Do Fair Use; News Agency Tells Techdirt To Remove Photos
Re: Copyrighting animal pictures
On the post: The Latest Attempt By The Obama Administration To Punish Whistleblowers
question from the politically inept
I know that a lot of people assume that anything done during a president's term is the president's doing, and am just curious if you're following that same train of though or if there is info pointing that Obama himself is for this type of thing (as opposed to say, powerless/spineless to stop it). Not trying to defend him or say he isn't doing it, I'm just honestly curious about it.
On the post: Is Copyright Needed To Stop Plagiarism?
Re: Good Post
On the post: Kind Of Blue: Using Copyright To Make Hobby Artist Pay Up
Re: Re: Re:
It's obviously the same in the same way that p!=p, maybe. The so similar that they're different enough that even a talented web designer proficient in Photshop couldn't modify the original and had to get a friend who was better at it to create a whole new image with the intent of making it look like first.
If that's not transformative, you're not an anonymous coward. Oh, wait.
On the post: Kind Of Blue: Using Copyright To Make Hobby Artist Pay Up
Re:
Sadly, there is such a symbol. It looks like this: ©
On the post: 'Geek Power': Best Buy Sends C&D To Newegg Over Marketing Campaign
Re:
On the post: With A Choice Between $100 Million In Cash & Fantasyland, The Labels Choose Fantasyland
Re: Re: root problem
We're all about (rightly) punishing murderers. But I seriously doubt the laws are there with any real intent on prevention. The main two types of people who would murder a) feel no qualms about it, so if they don't mind murdering someone they don't care about some arbitrary law made by a government they likely don't care about, and b) do it because of some momentary emotional or mental overload (they get extremely angry, paranoid, etc) and aren't able/willing at that particularly moment to worry about the law anyways.
Having said that, there's not much in there related to my point. I mean, if you want to go that route, I could say that the RIAA doesn't go after potential aliens who might exist and might be listing to music that sorta kinda sounds like it might be similar to something created by a human, during a drunken college party, so since the aren't suing the alien asses off those Plutonian Pirates for all of their Plutonian dirty money, the RIAA really doesn't care about stopping piracy. And we all know that's the trtuh, cause the RIAA is all about peace, love, and screwing others over. Amirite?
On the post: With A Choice Between $100 Million In Cash & Fantasyland, The Labels Choose Fantasyland
root problem
The problem is, of course, that even if they (by some miracle) manage to "solve" the problem of piracy, it won't stay that way. It's not a one-and-done kind of problem. Within days of most any "solution", the collective internet can and will have found some sort of way around it. Or else they'll invent a new method.
If you're sticking your fingers in your ears like the labels and don't recognize that fact, suddenly their efforts seem more ... well, not well thought out, but less crazy at least. Even if it cost them a few billion in sales to stop it now, if they manage to "stop it" for good all they have to then do is artificial scarcity to bring all of that money back to them.
On the post: An Open Letter To Sony CEO Howard Stringer
Re: Attention:
Well, I thought that article by Tim "The Dark Capitalist Lion Taming Helmet" was just great.
I think, sir, maybe you just have Tim-envy. =)
On the post: If You Can't Understand The Difference Between Money And Content, You Have No Business Commenting On Business Models
Re: It's a great idea!
On the post: If You Can't Understand The Difference Between Money And Content, You Have No Business Commenting On Business Models
It's a great idea!
Then we can send the lot of them to jail, and by removing a large percentage of the idiots from the public, become a smarter, more progressive country.
Plus, while they are in jail, they can "copy" the act known as getting butt-plundered some of those other pesky "pirates".
On the post: Yet Another Study Shows That Students Inherently Know That File Sharing Is Not Theft
Re: And yet another study showing that "new" thinkers get knowledge from kids
Oh, wait, you mean a false "knowledgeable" with a false "theft", causing the opposite due to double negatives? Now I see what you did there, talking about those smart kids. Nudge nudge wink win.
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