Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | tribe2012's commentslogin

I'm in DC as well, and you're right about all the "beltway bandits" as we like to call them.

But, there are plenty of wealthy beltway bandits who are willing to make investments. You just have to approach them a big differently.


Can you provide some insight? I've found the investment ecosystem out here pretty thin.


While I do think there is some amount of maturing that goes on in a job with a big company, I agree with this for the most part. I improved my technical skills dramatically working as a software engineer, but I still could have easily started my company without that experience.


Great to hear a non-profit is attacking this. Unfortunately, companies like code academy don't benefit from users actually learning to code. They are focused on user engagement. Ideally, they are one and the same, but in reality so many of these "learn to code" platforms do not teach the concepts very well.


Even for-profit companies could make "fix" vs. "ongoing treatment" work in a market where there is a constant supply of new patients (children) and a huge market relative to the size of the company. If one person learns to code reasonably well through something like this (or codecademy), referrals should be cheap customer acquisition.


I agree that privacy is a fundamental right. However, has anyone thought about how we haven't seen any real terrorist attacks in the past decade? There are people out there wanting to hurt the US. And it's not difficult to do. It really isn't. Clearly the NSA is doing something right.

Like I said, I wholeheartedly agree that privacy is a fundamental right. But, I would like to see more people acknowledging the flip side of the argument.


http://www.globalresearch.ca/5352917/5352917

1) All the public ones they have published on their website are false, made-up bullshit. You'd expect the NSA bringing forward some credible evidence of thwarting terrorist plots in light of incredibly heavy criticism, yet they can't.(the article says 13, but it was later proved that it was exactly 0.)

2) From that, we can infer that, if your assumption of people wanting to hurt the U.S. is true, only old fashioned ways of countering terrorism work e.g. human intelligence.

3)"There are people out there wanting to hurt the US" sounds rather naive fox-news-like.


What about the children and non-combatants who have incorrectly been killed due to drone strikes? What is the correct number of non-terrorists that should be killed per terrorist who is killed?

After September 11th some Americans thought a mass termination of people in Afghanistan would be a good idea (you had to be an adult or teenager at the time, people spoke this, they certainly did not print it in the NYTimes.)

The point is, once you begin making judgements solely on outcomes, those judgements become amoral. That can be ok when its an amoral activity, like optimizing server architecture, but when the activity involves who to kill and not to kill, the decisions last forever.


> "Clearly the NSA is doing something right."

Unfortunately, there's no way to independently verify this statement. Only those inside the security apparatus have any data to examine this but they have a clear incentive to make themselves look indispensable (and indeed, get more funding).


Poor choice of words. What I'm saying is that there have undoubtedly been thwarted terrorist attacks. I would like more transparency from the government on what led to those. That way, we can at least have an intelligent debate.


This isn't true.

They claimed 52 or 53 at first, then lowered that number to 1.

Then to zero.

There is no evidence whatsoever that this dragnet surveillance has been useful in any way whatsoever in fighting terrorism.

I think you might also be seriously overestimating how many people actually want to attack the US. Terrorists have more or less become a boogeyman at this point, the chances of anyone in the west experiencing a terrorist attack are so ridiculously small.


I don't think anyone has cited specific cases of thwarting terrorist attacks. There's been quotes about some number (52?) of terrorist attacks thwarted, but so what? Which ones?

I agree that more transparency is necessary, and that we must have an intelligent debate, leading, ultimately to dismantling the current mass-surveillance apparatus. But I disagree about the "undoubtedly" part. If you'd said "maybe" I might have agreed, but there's just no evidence. There is evidence of abuses, but no evidence of successes.


It was later dropped to 13, and then to 0. SIGINT does not work.

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140111/22360125843/nsa-go...


> "...there have undoubtedly been thwarted terrorist attacks."

We don't know this. In any case, it's the wrong question as we have to ask ourselves what the cost really is. The gov could just implement a curfew, lock everyone up in their homes and then we'd all be 'safe'. This the fodder of many a scifi movie and it would certainly thwart the plans of 'bad guys'.


I've spoken to a former Googler that was on the search team, and he said the duplicate content isn't as big of a deal as one would expect. They realize when it is and isn't an issue. For example, blog reposts do not hurt you (in fact they may help you) even though they show up as duplicate content.

Just my 2 cents. I'm not a fan of WPEngine anyway.


I would be shocked if there's any sort of duplicate content penalty for having two different domain names point to exactly the same site (same IP and everything).


There is actually no such thing as a "duplicate content pentalty". It's not a penalty. Google indexes (and cares about) whatever they crawl first: the other duplicates are pretty much ignored, even though they will show up in the index.


I love ING direct. Even after converting to 360 they've still been pretty good.


I've used Mixpanel for some time. It does most of what it's supposed to but I'm not a huge fan. I can't wait to check them out.


Thanks for taking a look! Email me at spenser@amplitude.com


Would this mean everyone in CA would need to get new licenses?


Yes for all licenses with the possibility of different rules. The redone letterhead will be a major cost (no, I'm not joking).


Think about all the flags that the whole nation would have to replace.


Think of all the state drop-downs that need to be replaced.


Just goes to show that the skills required to get a job are different than the skills required to start a company


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

Search: