Depends on how Georgia law works. In my state, minors have few rights to start with, and the school is de jure "in loco parentis", and has extremely wide discretion as to what can be done to or with their charges.
I'm still having trouble with the "no drugs were found" part, though. Out of 850 students, I'd expect at least a dozen dealers and fifty or more people with a stash, judging by where I went to school. Unless their definition of "drugs" that particular day happened to be quite specific and they weren't counting the usual pot, Percocets, and Ritalin.
> Google didn't store the auto-collected cell tower info. That doesn't excuse the practice, but it at least keeps it from becoming tracking data the government can access without a warrant. --- Sure. Unless Google was just passing the data straight through to the Fed or some third party.
The question for me is, why does the state of Florida feel that pictures of current and former firemen are such sensitive information that they have to be restricted from public view?
We have any number of police departments who seem to feel they should be operating in secret, but... firemen? What's next, dogcatchers? The DMV? Will the state legislature start meeting in ski masks?
A handheld device with a tiny screen, crummy audio, and a risible method of entering text would be no computer at all, as far as what I do.
I have five feet of desktop, which is now cramped enough I'll be adding a fourth monitor at the next upgrade. And I use a thirty-year-old IBM PC/AT-339 keyboard, larger and heavier than a modern laptop computer, designed specifically for typing.
And it's all mine, not a terminal into someone's walled-garden Android or Apple ecosystem.
The difference between my desktop and your "handheld device" is similar to the difference between a Cadillac CTS-V and a pogo stick. Sure, your pogo stick is a "vehicle", but your'e not going far with it.
Desktop sales are down? Sure, and they'll be falling for a while. Most everyone who wants one has one already, and they last for a long time. Meanwhile, millions of people who had no real use for a computer other than Facebook and AIM can do that on their phones.
I was actually interested enough to click through. I got a mostly-blank page with a few random icons. Okay, Konqueror fails to render some broken HTML, so I tried Qupzilla. The page comes up, but the "shipping" tab doesn't do anything, and the "add to cart" button doesn't do anything either.
Maybe I could open a virtual machine and try a Windows-based browser, but I don't reward browser-specific web sites with purchases.
The problem with any facial recognition database is, there are fewer faces than people, so you're always going to have false positives.
I have found *two* people who are my apparent identical twins. One of them was born in the same hospital I was, three days earlier. And we have the same name. He's probably the reason that no matter how often I try to correct credit reporting data, it doesn't stay fixed.
The other is a mass murderer and terrorist in Palestine, one of the top five now that bin Laden is gone.
One of these days I'm going to walk into a Federal building that's running their facial recognition system - comp.risks wrote about the first systems in the 1980s - and their alarms are going to go TILT. And if I'm in a bad mood that day, it's going to be on like Donkey Kong.
Note that the District of Columbia claims copyright protection for the whole of the DC code, and has sued people who have made the electronic version online.
Also, some years pack the US Printing Office tried to assert copyright over the Federal Register.
1) the British Parliament named us "British America" while we were still a colony. We just dropped the "British" part.
2) we're the oldest continuous polity in the New World
3) we were the first, so so far the only, polity to include "America" in our name when we became independent
It's okay to say "America" to mean "United States of America." After all, you wouldn't want to use "United States", and have someone confuse it with the Estados Unidos de Mexico south of us.
Now, the Canadians who keep calling themselves "North Americans", I'm not sure what's up with that... It's nothing to be ashamed of, though the Newfies might regret it in their more sober moments.
At one time I was subscribed to almost a hundred mailing lists. Looking at my little pocket notebook by the keyboard and counting pages, it looks like I'm signed up with about that many web forums. Sometimes you have to do that to see pictures, etc.
Some of those I went to once, for some specific purpose, and never returned. Others, I haven't logged in in so long I'm sure my account has timed out. I have no idea how many of the mailing lists might still be up, or if they're sending mail to a long-dead account.
I tend to grab a freemail address to feed vendors or sites that won't complete a transaction without "your email." When I forget the address or password, I just get another one. There might be somewhere around a dozen accounts floating around out there that I don't even remember.
Meanwhile, I don't Tweeter, or Tumbler, or ICU, or PCP, or whatever the new hotness is. I'm starting to come across more and more people whose only experience with the 'net is Failbook, and they can't understand why I'm not on it.
Feh. You don't even need an account for usenet, which was arguably the first online "social media." rec.motorcycles FTW; the Denizens of Doom patch on my jacket is old and faded, but Geeky the Daemon still glares at the helots as I ride by. "Live to Flame - Flame to Live"
Yeah. That's one of several reasons we're retrofitting most of the shop with Mach and new motion controllers.
No more random "activation code" warnings, no GPS location errors when we move a machine to a different building, no "your call is very important to us" for hours on the support line...
Under Common Law there's the concept of "warranty of fitness." If you sell something that's supposed to be a combination lock, it's supposed to work as an ordinary person would expect a combination lock to work - that is, to be openable only with one specific combination out of some large number.
What Onity shipped was the equivalent of a combination lock that might be set to 36-24-36, but *also*opened with the default combination of 1-2-3. Which, even if it was secret to start with, didn't stay secret for long, which reduced the lock's effectiveness so severely it was nearly worthless. It might technically still be a "combination lock", but it is no longer suited for the purpose it was sold for.
Yeah, but the police aren't the only ones wearing bodycams now. You can get a cheap one under $100 and a better one for under $200. If you work in retail, or have a CDL, or work in emergency services, they can save your job if you're maliciously accused.
My little MP3 player, which is clipped to my shirt as part of my clothing, has a record mode. It's audio only, but it has proven useful in various disputes.
I'm mostly waiting for the size of the video recorders to come down, not so much the price; I'm carrying quite a lot of equipment already in my daily load-out, and I don't want a big bodycam too.
"We know the Truth, and we pass it on to the ignorant. We don't like it when the ignorant say we're full of it. They should simply be grateful we take the time to tell them what to think.
Further, dissent from the little people causes disturbances in our ivory tower, where we all march in lockstep toward a glorious socialist future."
After many years I finally bought hearing aids. After several sessions of tuning with the audiologist, I realized that the continuing problem wasn't my hearing, which is now fine, but that most people can't speak intelligible English.
They speak in sentence fragments, use wrong words, use wrong vowels in words, mispronounce words, omit words, bark random syllables, or just make a barely-modulated whine. And now that I can hear surrounding conversations, a surprising amount consists of "eh?" and "what?"
If "they" actually have software that can make sense of that gibberish, I'd be interested in buying a copy...
On the post: Angry Lawyer Already Engaged In A SLAPP Suit Promises To Sue More Critics, Use His Machine Gun If Sanctioned
Re:
Unless he's been to the toy store and bought an airsoft. You could put your eye out with one of those.
On the post: Sheriff's Office To Pay $3 Million For Invasive Searches Of 850 High School Students
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
I'm still having trouble with the "no drugs were found" part, though. Out of 850 students, I'd expect at least a dozen dealers and fifty or more people with a stash, judging by where I went to school. Unless their definition of "drugs" that particular day happened to be quite specific and they weren't counting the usual pot, Percocets, and Ritalin.
On the post: Investigation Finds Google Collected Location Data Even With Location Services Turned Off
---
Sure. Unless Google was just passing the data straight through to the Fed or some third party.
On the post: Miami City Attorney Tries To Erase Photos Of Fired Firefighters From The Internet
We have any number of police departments who seem to feel they should be operating in secret, but... firemen? What's next, dogcatchers? The DMV? Will the state legislature start meeting in ski masks?
On the post: Internet Association Sells Out The Internet: Caves In And Will Now Support Revised SESTA
Any organization, if it's around long enough, will begin to work against the principles it was created to support.
On the post: Techdirt Podcast Episode 142: Who Still Needs A Personal Computer?
I have five feet of desktop, which is now cramped enough I'll be adding a fourth monitor at the next upgrade. And I use a thirty-year-old IBM PC/AT-339 keyboard, larger and heavier than a modern laptop computer, designed specifically for typing.
And it's all mine, not a terminal into someone's walled-garden Android or Apple ecosystem.
The difference between my desktop and your "handheld device" is similar to the difference between a Cadillac CTS-V and a pogo stick. Sure, your pogo stick is a "vehicle", but your'e not going far with it.
Desktop sales are down? Sure, and they'll be falling for a while. Most everyone who wants one has one already, and they last for a long time. Meanwhile, millions of people who had no real use for a computer other than Facebook and AIM can do that on their phones.
On the post: Daily Deal: Hi-Res Car DashCam
Maybe I could open a virtual machine and try a Windows-based browser, but I don't reward browser-specific web sites with purchases.
You lost a sale, there.
On the post: Details Emerge Of World's Biggest Facial Recognition Surveillance System, Aiming To Identify Any Chinese Citizen In Three Seconds
I have found *two* people who are my apparent identical twins. One of them was born in the same hospital I was, three days earlier. And we have the same name. He's probably the reason that no matter how often I try to correct credit reporting data, it doesn't stay fixed.
The other is a mass murderer and terrorist in Palestine, one of the top five now that bin Laden is gone.
One of these days I'm going to walk into a Federal building that's running their facial recognition system - comp.risks wrote about the first systems in the 1980s - and their alarms are going to go TILT. And if I'm in a bad mood that day, it's going to be on like Donkey Kong.
On the post: Members Of Congress: Court Was Wrong To Say That Posting The Law Is Copyright Infringement
Also, some years pack the US Printing Office tried to assert copyright over the Federal Register.
On the post: DHS To Officially Require Immigrants' Files To Contain Social Media Info
Re: Re: Re: Re: Screening
On the post: DHS To Officially Require Immigrants' Files To Contain Social Media Info
Re: Re: Screening
2) we're the oldest continuous polity in the New World
3) we were the first, so so far the only, polity to include "America" in our name when we became independent
It's okay to say "America" to mean "United States of America." After all, you wouldn't want to use "United States", and have someone confuse it with the Estados Unidos de Mexico south of us.
Now, the Canadians who keep calling themselves "North Americans", I'm not sure what's up with that... It's nothing to be ashamed of, though the Newfies might regret it in their more sober moments.
On the post: DHS To Officially Require Immigrants' Files To Contain Social Media Info
Re: Re: Question
Some of those I went to once, for some specific purpose, and never returned. Others, I haven't logged in in so long I'm sure my account has timed out. I have no idea how many of the mailing lists might still be up, or if they're sending mail to a long-dead account.
I tend to grab a freemail address to feed vendors or sites that won't complete a transaction without "your email." When I forget the address or password, I just get another one. There might be somewhere around a dozen accounts floating around out there that I don't even remember.
Meanwhile, I don't Tweeter, or Tumbler, or ICU, or PCP, or whatever the new hotness is. I'm starting to come across more and more people whose only experience with the 'net is Failbook, and they can't understand why I'm not on it.
Feh. You don't even need an account for usenet, which was arguably the first online "social media." rec.motorcycles FTW; the Denizens of Doom patch on my jacket is old and faded, but Geeky the Daemon still glares at the helots as I ride by. "Live to Flame - Flame to Live"
On the post: Tesla Remotely Extended The Range Of Drivers In Florida For Free... And That's NOT A Good Thing
Re: Re: Re: The upside has a downside
On the post: Tesla Remotely Extended The Range Of Drivers In Florida For Free... And That's NOT A Good Thing
Re: Re: Re: Limiting battery capacity
No more random "activation code" warnings, no GPS location errors when we move a machine to a different building, no "your call is very important to us" for hours on the support line...
On the post: Kaspersky Gets Awful Patent Troll To Pay Up To Drop Its Own Case
Pretty much like Oracle has no connection with the CIA.
"What we have here is a failure of the victim-selection process..."
On the post: The Epic Crime Spree Unleashed By Onity's Ambivalence To Its Easily Hacked Hotel Locks
Re: Re: What really sticks out...
What Onity shipped was the equivalent of a combination lock that might be set to 36-24-36, but *also*opened with the default combination of 1-2-3. Which, even if it was secret to start with, didn't stay secret for long, which reduced the lock's effectiveness so severely it was nearly worthless. It might technically still be a "combination lock", but it is no longer suited for the purpose it was sold for.
On the post: Officers With Personal Body Cams Taking The 'Public' Out Of 'Public Accountability'
Re: Not Admissable
I wouldn't automatically assume they haven't edited the video themselves.
On the post: Officers With Personal Body Cams Taking The 'Public' Out Of 'Public Accountability'
My little MP3 player, which is clipped to my shirt as part of my clothing, has a record mode. It's audio only, but it has proven useful in various disputes.
I'm mostly waiting for the size of the video recorders to come down, not so much the price; I'm carrying quite a lot of equipment already in my daily load-out, and I don't want a big bodycam too.
On the post: NPR Gives Up On News Comments; After All, Who Cares What Your Customers Have To Say?
Further, dissent from the little people causes disturbances in our ivory tower, where we all march in lockstep toward a glorious socialist future."
On the post: CCTV + Lip-Reading Software = Even Less Privacy, Even More Surveillance
After many years I finally bought hearing aids. After several sessions of tuning with the audiologist, I realized that the continuing problem wasn't my hearing, which is now fine, but that most people can't speak intelligible English.
They speak in sentence fragments, use wrong words, use wrong vowels in words, mispronounce words, omit words, bark random syllables, or just make a barely-modulated whine. And now that I can hear surrounding conversations, a surprising amount consists of "eh?" and "what?"
If "they" actually have software that can make sense of that gibberish, I'd be interested in buying a copy...
Next >>