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Stories from January 19, 2012
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1.Maddox - I hope SOPA passes (xmission.com)
569 points by CWIZO on Jan 19, 2012 | 198 comments
2.A Word to the Resourceful (paulgraham.com)
463 points by anateus on Jan 19, 2012 | 168 comments
3.The Trello Tech Stack (fogcreek.com)
431 points by elehack on Jan 19, 2012 | 93 comments
4.Death sentence for Iranian web programmer (thenextweb.com)
369 points by waitwhat on Jan 19, 2012 | 109 comments
5.Anonymous takes down Department of Justice and Universal Music (rt.com)
365 points by coupdegrace on Jan 19, 2012 | 97 comments
6.Every Linux screen locker bypassed with a keypress (seclists.org)
316 points by Jonhoo on Jan 19, 2012 | 88 comments
7.Playing chicken with cat.jpg (daemonology.net)
288 points by cperciva on Jan 19, 2012 | 104 comments
8.Vim ported to iOS (applidium.com)
288 points by stevelosh on Jan 19, 2012 | 127 comments
9.How Google Code Search Worked (swtch.com)
287 points by basugasubaku on Jan 19, 2012 | 45 comments
10.The Audacity of the iBooks Author EULA (venomousporridge.com)
281 points by pooriaazimi on Jan 19, 2012 | 136 comments
11.Piracy - You can't have your cake and eat it (broadmuse.com)
271 points by willdamas on Jan 19, 2012 | 317 comments
12.Rand Paul promises to filibuster PIPA (dailycaller.com)
262 points by dataminer on Jan 19, 2012 | 23 comments
13.The Real Difference Between Git and Mercurial (xentac.net)
182 points by xentac on Jan 19, 2012 | 76 comments
14.PIPA support collapses, with 13 new Senators opposed (arstechnica.com)
181 points by llambda on Jan 19, 2012 | 45 comments
15.Courtney Love does the math (2000) (salon.com)
175 points by dmor on Jan 19, 2012 | 36 comments

At the risk of megadownvoting here...

Megaupload never complied with DMCA requests - I made several as part of some research and never received any response. The site charged for access to, and provided advertising around, pirated content. The site paid people (users/staff - it's a fine line) to provide popular content.

It went to extraordinary lengths to hide the identity of its operators.

Now if people believe that anyone should be allowed to set up a site, fill it with full length DVD rips,and then charge $10 a month for access then no wrong has been committed. But I think most right-minded people would say that is wrong - otherwise we'd all be doing it.

Kim Schmitz has made a lot of money over a five to seven year period doing this. But the risk that came with that was that eventually he'd face serious jailtime.

I cannot believe that Megaupload is being touted as an anti-SOPA posterchild. It is, pure and simple, a piracy site full of pirated material. I'd be astounded [see update] if anyone here uses it for anything other than pirating. But let's not pretend it's Dropbox - it isn't.

I am also astounded that people on HN are calling this a legitimate business. What was its business? Was it being used to distribute Wikipedia archives? To host videos of people's kids singing? No - it was hosting pirated content. Not torrents, not links. AVI files of films. AND THEN CHARGING FOR ACCESS.

[Update: It seems some people below did use it for sending big files. Colour me astounded. I've never had to do this so it's new to me. I guess the fact remains that they had to subsidise this activity somehow - and that they made their money off popular content. They have to hope this is enough to cover their asses.]

17.This game was made entirely in css (no javascript) (jsrun.it)
170 points by Feanim on Jan 19, 2012 | 50 comments
18.Kodak files for bankruptcy (marketwatch.com)
164 points by leak on Jan 19, 2012 | 70 comments
19.Julian Assange Rolling Stone interview (rollingstone.com)
162 points by libraryatnight on Jan 19, 2012 | 32 comments
20.Swizz Beats is the CEO of Megaupload (factmag.com)
150 points by bjonathan on Jan 19, 2012 | 31 comments
21.Anonymous strikes back: takes down DoJ, Universal, RIAA and MPAA sites (geek.com)
128 points by 11031a on Jan 19, 2012 | 31 comments
22.Apple announces iBooks 2, iBooks Author to "reinvent textbooks" (arstechnica.com)
116 points by FluidDjango on Jan 19, 2012 | 181 comments
23.Machine Learning on the Cheap and Easy (thunderboltlabs.com)
110 points by thunderboltlabs on Jan 19, 2012 | 15 comments
24.Redditor Dr. Michael Ham announces his candidacy for US senate (New Mexico) (reddit.com)
109 points by x3c on Jan 19, 2012 | 20 comments
25.Quixey Challenge: Fix a bug in 1 minute to win $100. Refer a winner to win $50. (quixeychallenge.com)
111 points by quixey on Jan 19, 2012 | 33 comments
26.Results of Mozilla's SOPA blackout (blog.mozilla.com)
102 points by mbrubeck on Jan 19, 2012 | 5 comments
27.Idea reach and the cofounder myth (swombat.com)
98 points by noelsequeira on Jan 19, 2012 | 20 comments
28.Larry Page: Google+ now has 90 million users globally (thenextweb.com)
99 points by MRonney on Jan 19, 2012 | 52 comments
29.Jvm performance tuning (notes) (umbrant.com)
94 points by rxin on Jan 19, 2012 | 8 comments

The baby boomers didn't change a damned thing.

In Britain, liberalism was architected primarily by people who were part of our very old establishment. The decriminalisation of homosexuality was achieved largely by the work of Lord Wolfenden, Lord Pakenham and Arthur Gore (8th Earl of Arran). The same goes for most of the political changes we associate with modernity and progress - with the notable exception of Bevan and his peers, the people turning the wheels were mainly minor aristocrats in dusty tweed. A great many of the most significant changes were made contrary to public opinion, the most obvious being the abolition of the death penalty - a policy which most Britons still oppose.

The boomers credit themselves with having changed the world when they were young, broke and essentially powerless, but deny any credit to the generation that constituted the establishment at the time. Conversely, now that they control the majority of capital, make up the biggest electoral demographic and holds most of the elected offices, they deny responsibility.

The most destructive act of the baby boomers was creating a culture in which the individual is seen as having supremacy over the institution. The consequences are obvious and stark - a political system with single-digit approval ratings, where nobody feels represented and nobody feels responsible. A political culture defined not by fundamental ideological allegiance and difference, but by special pleading. There's no such thing as a socialist anymore, no such thing as a conservative or a trade unionist, just people with opinions. America always pretended to be classless but Britain has gone the same way, preferring the egoistic fantasy of an egalitarian society over the reality of one where power and wealth and privilege are still very much in force.

We're trapped in a solipsistic nightmare, where conspiracy theories have replaced an understanding of social power. Until the people who are in charge actually admit that they are in charge, we're fucked.


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