Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | omd's commentslogin

Extremists? Is that what you call anyone who isn't a sexist like you? And what does SRS have to do with anything? I left reddit to get away from the r/mensrights freaks like you so you might want to keep your bullshit there.


Wow, defensive AND insulting. Thanks for proving my point about toxicity and boring-ness.


Please don't attack other users personally. It's never necessary, makes you look mean, and poisons the well for everybody.


I didn't read that as the extremists being anti-sexists. In some recent threads on these topics, I've seen some excellent reasoned thought from the anti-sexists and some extremely childish behaviour from people with the opposite opinions.

It could mean either, or both, with or without justification. So, no reason to get irate.


Only because Medium hasn't accumulate‎d enough free content yet to disclose how they are planning on appropriating and monetizing it.

Don't forget Medium is brought to us from the makers of Twitter, with such classics as "Here's an API; get the fuck off of my API."


It's a concept rather than a specific quote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Living_Constitution


This already exists. It's called a taxi company.


>20% of the metered fare will be automatically added and paid to the driver as a gratuity.

http://support.uber.com/entries/22338858-Tipping-Drivers


That's talking about calling taxis (i.e. yellow cabs). kevingadd said he took a black car, not a taxi.


If you're working as a company representative, either in retail or customer service or answering the NSA hotline, then listening to questions and complaints is exactly what you were hired to do. If you take those complaints personal then you should find another line of work.


There's a difference between calling a hotline and lodging a complaint, and generally being a dick for giggles.


Talk about smugness.

>Opinions are just that - opinions.

Except when they're not in line with yours apparently. wow.


>That Twitter would hand over your identifying information because they don't like the contents of your tweets?

Twitter refused to hand over the data until the French court forced them to.

>The idea that governments can prohibit the written expression of thoughts and ideas?

I have no problem with governments prohibiting hate speech. I have never felt suppressed by these laws because I have never felt the need to express hate speech online or offline.

> "But others who have just as much rights as you and do want to send out distasteful tweets DO feel suppressed."

Good. The majority of people in my country agree that living in a respectful society is more important than having the freedom to say things that you wouldn't want to say. You can find that overly restrictive but then so are traffic lights, queues at the supermarket, clothing, and doors.

>Or was it the distasteful tweets of some bigots (or perhaps more likely, just unfunny and immature people) about the jews?

That's just being willfully ignorant.


In all seriousness, who does get to decide what speech is illegal in your country? If you're about to say something that might upset some group, do you restrain yourself or say it any way and wait for the courts to decide of your speech was lawful? From my American perspective, it sounds like an awful restriction to have.

I wonder what percentage of people in your country feel that their speech has ever been restrained in any way.

Also, what about political speech that is satirical and offensive to some groups, like Parazit or The Daily Show?


It's not about saying things that might upset some group. It's about saying things in a public forum that are deliberately upsetting and abusive and promoting hatred. You don't have to worry about it because you know exactly what you are doing when you do it. It's like worrying about getting a ticket because you accidentally drove in reverse down a one way street. And if you look the vast majority of cases get dismissed.

Also consider that American corporations wield an immense power to restrict speech, and they are quite liberal about doing so.


We switched from Linode to http://www.cloudvps.com last year because they are in my home town here in The Netherlands and the prices are almost half of Linode's. We have some high traffic websites running with them and have had no problems so far.


It looks to be the plain ole Google Maps API:

https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/...


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: