* Posts by Stu 18

133 publicly visible posts • joined 5 Nov 2009

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Hell no, we won’t pay, says Microsoft as Uncle Sam sends $29B bill for back taxes

Stu 18

It is about time that American megacorporates got what they deserve

Especially Microsoft.

Every day I have to fight all the monopolistic and virus like changes they make to the operating system and applications,

They don't pay tax

They blatantly copy other peoples stuff (slack, dropbox)

I propose they

- should be held responsible for every exploited weakness of their code and have to pay each and every holder of their licenses until the vulnerabilities are fixed.

- should have to pay the maximum local tax rate in every country they operate in for every license that they sell, based on revenue not on cost manipulations

- should be forced to unbundle everything and offer everything they sell as a pick n mix with no discounting or special rates for anyone

- ceo pay should be discounted by the number of vulnerabilities found each year. 100 vulnerabilities, sorry that is 100% pay cut for the month.

Cage match: Zuck finally realizes Elon is full of twit

Stu 18

They shouldn't stop at an MRI

Full psych work up might be helpful. Still you need self awareness, insight and willingness to make a change. Perhaps a padded room would be best.

Time is running out to finish that slurp of Outlook Moca

Stu 18

Re: Loophole - Good tools solve real problems

As an ancient outdated hack I can't help but start with 'in the old days it was better...' yes it wasn't on the cloud and available from Russia, but then in my experience sensible don't do their reports while bathing the kids after hours. I absolutely hate all the crapware in the name of efficiency dreamed up by huddles in Microsoft that clearly have never worked in a small business or had to configure or use any of it. Worst of all, if you do 'drink the cool aide' as above its likely they will kill it off randomly one day and you force a complete redo.

Don't even get me started on the lock in effect, I can't sell a business an alternative to the onedrive/teams/sharepoint garbage since they are already spending a fortune monthly on m365 so we may as well use those things as well. (I appreciate if you spend even more money for specialists / consultants / inhouse expertise then sharepoint might be right for you - I'm talking about 5-20 person SMBs that would be far better off with a simple shared drive.

Amazon Ring, Alexa accused of every nightmare IoT security fail you can imagine

Stu 18

Re: Proof that 100% Global Profits fines are needed

I think fines should be a significant percentage of revenue immediately and then a continuing percent to be applied until proof that all the issues have been addressed. Additionally the companies have to put a banner on all their websites stating what fines they have paid and continue to pay and the reasons for it as approved by the regulator.

Additionally all the C suite personal also have to have a similar regime apply to them as well.

I am sick to death of these mega corporate companies and C suite pricks that get away with literally everything. Is it any wonder why so many people go 'down the rabbit hole' of conspiracy when this blatant abuse is page 1, chapter 1, sentence 1 of the typically 'American' play book.

Epic payment: Fortnite maker pays record $520m to settle FTC case

Stu 18

I really hope they go after Microsoft / Xbox next

Have you tried to set up and use 'family' settings for you kids on Xbox? I have, I'm a tech with 30 years experience and I suggest to you it is harder than working with O365 admin / Amazon / Active Directory / BGP mikrotik / Node/React all combined.

It is clearly designed as a legal BS excuse instead of something useful. As far as I could tell it's either kids have no access to anything - including actually playing games OR you turn it all off - including allowing X rated content (hence giving Microsoft the excuse of parental consent) just so the kids can share Minecraft.

I have no idea how any non tech parent could possibly navigate it.

Russia-based Pushwoosh tricks US Army and others into running its code – for a while

Stu 18

We only used paid for code because it is sooooooo much better obviously

see the title

The sins of OneDrive as Microsoft's cloud storage service turns 15

Stu 18

I realise I'm old... but I miss the reliablity and manageablilty of shared drives.

Yes, with cloud you get access from anywhere without a vpn but.... so many issues and so unreliable. Onedrive - like MicrosoftWorks. I have many customers with multiple 'onedrives'. File access breaking because sync folders are placed at different folder depths (causing it to run over the <260 character limit). Now 'FileProvider' on Apple is doing the same thing but baked in.

And what is it with the abominable sharepoint/teams back end. Creating and managing shared access for a group is horrendous. Maybe its only me, but how is it that I (a one man band full stack developer) can create better UX than (presumably) teams of massively resourced, high paid Microsoft engineers. My only conclusion is that all the good ones left.

I sat through a promising speech at a tech conference once, a Microsoft employee talking about all the research they'd done on making the user experience better. What confounds me is that they clearly have never done anything with it.

Perhaps I should click on the help button; 'Please contact your administrator for assistance' ..... aaaaaggghhh the code words for 'we don't have a clue either'.

Enough with the notifications! Focus Assist will shut them u… 'But I'm too important!'

Stu 18

I like that man - even if he did move to France

What I hate is the semi related 'grab the focus' thing that apps have a habit of doing. I'm working away typing and then randomly some weird pop up appears from something deep in the OS with a question like 'Do you want me not to not delete the critical files, 'cancel', 'close'.

Of course it has selected something and gone before I fully read it, or I'm stumped as to what the hell it means or I need a button option that is not there.

If there is 'help' of course it is 'contact your system administrator for help' - whom of course is sitting in the same chair thinking the same wtf!

Apple-1 prototype hand-soldered by Woz up for auction, bids expected to reach $500k

Stu 18

bargin, not much different from the cost of a new iPhone then

what he said :-)

Luca Stealer malware spreads rapidly after code handily appears on GitHub

Stu 18

ah but do they have their tests and linting up to date?

Dual screens, fast updates, no registry cruft and security in mind: Microsoft gives devs the lowdown on Windows 10X

Stu 18

I actually heard a good talk from a Microsoft guy at a conference once

All about better user experience and hiding annoying pop ups and making things better for the user. They must of fired that guy, way to 'out there'.

Business at the speed of thought..... unfortunately it seems many peoples 'thoughts' are more like Homer and less like Einstien..... Doh!

At Microsoft they eat their own dog food - apparently. So as an IT professional I guess I'm paid to pick up dog sh@t all day.

I realise windows 10 has been around for a while now, but many of the people I see are still emerging from Windows 7 and 8x - so common to hear I hate that 'new' interface. Which is after all this time is a half polished stone. They'll be pleased that it is all changing again.

I wonder what 'official document storage areas' are - funny I thought it was an apple thing to not cater for the idea of multiple logons, shared file storage, organised corporate data.

All or nothing permissions e.g. for the camera - fantastic, really must have got the entire c-suite working hard on that to come up with something so advanced and cutting edge.

I'd like to see something real to back up that no AV claim. Perhaps if any customer is hacked during the supported lifetime of Windows 10x then they automatically get .5% of our profit for a year. Some skin in the game eh? Instead of mindless BS.

Whole thing probably written by their AI anyway...........

It's coooming: Windows 10 October 2018 Update adoption slows ahead of the next release

Stu 18

They must be the saddest most depressed developers in the world

We can't see a single thing wrong, so we just changed a few numbers to ensure we get a bonus.... It is very obvious that the biggest thing missing in Windows 10 is pride - as in we actually give a ......

Skype for Business has nasty habit of closing down… for business

Stu 18

bollocks

The problem isn't 2GB memory limit, it is a programmers choice to just buffer all the screens to RAM in case they are needed - that is unnecessary and typical of the flawed thinking of throw more ram at it - you need a faster computer. Grrrr

Former Google X bloke's startup unveils 'self flying' electric air taxi

Stu 18

https://lilium.com/

Way cooler looking and more aerodynamic at a guess

Aut-doh!-pilot: Driver jams 65mph Tesla Model S under fire truck, walks away from crash

Stu 18

of course you could

just program the 'autopilot' to keep slowing down until it is crawling or stopped if the user will not conform to whatever eyeball scanning, hand holding or whatever it is that it checks for. Either user gets the message and conforms or it goes so slow that the cops pull it over for being dumb (it is an offense to go to slow as well as to fast) and if it crashes, well a slow crash is better than a fast one.

CPU bug patch saga: Antivirus tools caught with their hands in the Windows cookie jar

Stu 18

Why can't...

Clearly my basic reading of the issue needs some assistance;

What I understood is that due to processor running future commands making the assumption that they will run before they are officially called, and the fact that the results of those commands can be read, we have the meltdown issue.

Why isn't the answer to clear that pipeline and results whenever there is a kernel exception of the type that asks for privileged access? Or do kernel programmers use exceptions as their normal execution logic?

I expect I'm being too simplistic and it will need a pipeline to track the pipeline...

Stu 18

ooo Pretty big job, gonna cost ya.

Two thoughts, sorry if I'm repeating someone....

1. Re one of the paragraphs, writing a registry key is going to require significant code work - yes that is what the text suggested, give me a break, a lot of software that is written by what I consider poor practise writes hundreds if not thousands of registry entries apparently for random fun and leave it behind when it is removed. Writing a single key is a very basic call. (I do realise re-writing your AV kernel driver thingie - now that might be hard).

2. The alternative to a single key is a folder where each vendor software has to put in a "i'm good" notification and if everyone is good, updates continue.

Having said that, with this registry thing, malware has a very simple way to switch off updates at will, simpler than borking windows updates - which lets face it Microsoft bork their own update engine regularly enough.

So perhaps what we should have is a better way to register applications existence on the machine in a protected place such that they can be checked against an online 'master' record of goodness maintained by vendors / Microsoft. Heap of missed opportunities there with the whole 'certified' application certificates etc.

This is turning into a bigger poo pile every day as we better understand the consequences!

Tesla share crash amid Republican bid to kill off electric car tax break

Stu 18

Awesome logic

Take away the tax break - sales plummit (as per evidence stated in article - 1400 to 100)

So, lets do that so we can earn a heap of imaginary tax on sales that no longer happen?

PS - did you not get the memo commentors re "tax breaks for rich" - oil running out, polluting planet to hell, electric is an answer, leading rather than following usually is where the profits are. Anyway, that is the American way isn't it, you despise the poor inside your country, don't you?

Hackers could exploit solar power equipment flaws to cripple green grids, claims researcher

Stu 18

Widespread problem

It is not just the solar industry with this issue, I think you could call it modern 'fast / first to market' strategy and if its not 'instant' it must be old technology / old hat. The google effect or the egotism of 'the new way'.

The difference is instead of testing and proving we've got release now and fix later. We won't need EMP to wipe out society, just a Friday afternoon cockup.

Microsoft loves Linux so much, its OneDrive web app runs like a dog on Windows OS rivals

Stu 18

works about the same I would say

Tried onedrive for about a year. It couldn't sync 100 GB of files in the whole year we had it operational on a Win 8.1 machine, in NZ on 30Mb/s / 10Mb/s fibre internet connection.

Went back to dropbox, sync completed in the afternoon.

Don't know if it is because outside US land the service is worse, but I'd call it un-useable here.

Almost like this editor because of the ad refreshes.

RAF pilot awaits sentence for digicam-induced airliner dive

Stu 18

reconstruction

Can you invert the flying controls in one of those, like on video games?

I'm pretty sure that the reconstruction photo would mean the stick would go back not forward and that means a climb not a descent?

Microsoft boffins: Who needs Intel CPUs when you've got FPGAs?

Stu 18

Re: Who Needs Programmers When You Need Hardware Designers?

I imagine that this is where the next tech 'crunch' will come from, ignoring the benefits in the particular mentioned use case in the article, there is the wider massive effort to get people locked into various cloud vendors, Microsoft being particularly active here and being very hostile to IT professionals that may be seen to be resisting their efforts. Coming back to the FPGA aspect, if there is less people that can program them, then it gives the vendor more power. Not to mention ability to add 'code' at a very low level for whatever other interests they have that would be very hard to detect higher up the stack. So cool technology on one hand, but massive enabler of the American dream - that is locking out competition and locking in profits!

In my opinion we need a new 'disruptive' 'Microsoft' to shake up the old incumbents which now are Microsoft, Apple, Google and Amazon? instead of IBM.

US govt pleads: What's it gonna take to get you people using IPv6?

Stu 18

we are forced to have ipv6 internally so we have it 'on'

since microsoft makes the servers prefer it. but for what purpose? Why does the world need to know about our 150 devices at company x?

Very happy with NAT and very happy keeping it simple on the inside without all the hassle of all the extra ::

Regardless of that, the ISP's don't talk about them, that is where yo have to target, coms companies. Oh and making it a bit easier to configure firewalls to be reasonably assured things are still safe.

Microsoft makes massive changes to MCSE and MCSD

Stu 18

I'm surprised they don't just call it

MCSE - Shill

I'm guessing that only public service IT guys will have these. Only ones that have the time (and other peoples money) to sit round doing arbitrary tests on sales brochures.

Microsoft releases Server 2016, complete with commercial Docker engine

Stu 18

Have they screwed up SMB again

Been a cliff dive since win 2008.

Also win updates have been giving me hell on 2012.

Windows 10 a failure by Microsoft's own metric – it won't hit one billion devices by mid-2018

Stu 18

Is doesn't actually work very well

Lots of vendors still don't support it and drivers are problematic as well. So we couldn't go there even if we wanted to get the freebee. Besides the experience is terrible, particularly with half finished settings pains, the rubbish windows update, the spyware etc. Went to a IT conference and one presenter had w10 and it wouldn't work on the projectors - went split screen vertical?!

So despite the promise of getting the latest, always updated etc, as many have mentioned it is simply a recipe for crappy beta code that there is no impetus to fix.

Also the fact that a year in even vendors like autocad don't recommend it is astonishing!

Microsoft: Why we tore handy Store block out of Windows 10 Pro PCs

Stu 18

There is no doubt that some (many) IT shops have been shooting themselves in the feet for years by having things locked down to the point that end users can't get on and do their jobs, however there is a big difference between an un-managed free-for-all and its associated risks of data loss, productivity loss and hacking risk and a system that has appropriate control, security and reliability.

If you (as an IT professional) start with the mindset of 'make it better than out of the box', it is pretty easy to add value and make almost everything easier for your users while maintaining appropriate controls. If you're an IT Nazi, they'll figure out how to bypass it and/or your company will suffer and if you leave it fully open then you'll be a failure / hacking statistic.

Stu 18

unbelievable and disappointing

Does having the users as 'non-local-admins' restrict software install or has that been revoked as well for 'store apps'?

I just wish Microsoft would compete on quality rather than efforts to manipulate via monopoly, the past tactics that served well with windows and office simply don't work now.

Ironically as they continue to port their development software to Linux, iOS etc I come to the conclusion that they really don't want windows long term. They really seem to be actively destroying it.

Ironically any 'trust' or at least 'complacency that just goes with the MS way' is also being burned up. My end user experiences of everything MS Cloud based simply defines them at best a second rate player in that arena as well. So Windows is dying, but the 'cloud first' strategy doesn't have more that one gammy leg (office 365) either.

Half of people plug in USB drives they find in the parking lot

Stu 18

If the people making the OS did their job...

In my view if the OS writers spent less time trying to create lock in and more time trying to make things better, then this wouldn't be an issue. We have sandboxing, virtual machines, built in AV etc, why wouldn't the OS prevent anything dangerous happening when a device is plugged in?

Why isn't there the same thing for installing an application in windows downloaded from the net, should this program have access to these files, should it be able to use the microphone, camera etc, this is trying to access these websites / IP addresses which are registered to ...

I think we like to believe we are getting smarter over time, but I think we are getting dumber and American tech companies are leading the dumb and dumber movement at full speed!

Windows 10 Mobile bug fixes come thick and fast as official upgrade nears

Stu 18

Be advised (all three of you), that your phone will auto update just after the boarding call.

Scandal-hit Toshiba faces investor sueball over accounting woes

Stu 18

I like Toshiba Portege laptops, they have been mostly very reliable and in my opinion more consistently better designed than the competition.

Granted they are not cheap, but I'd rather have a reliable work horse than a show pony that breaks down and spends more time in getting warranty repairs.

Shame they bloated into corporate malaise.

Microsoft's full-fat E5 Office 365 plan with phone extras goes live

Stu 18

We've had office 365 personal for a couple of years.

We don't use onedrive because it is useless, it couldn't relaibly sync anything and was extremely slow even though we have fibre at home. Went back to dropbox. As far as I can tell features keep disappearing instead of being improved. e.g. there used to be a images and drawings repository for publisher. Now nothing.

Very unlikely to 'go cloud' at work, we simply don't have people working at internet cafe's and can do all the collaboration we want with other tools on their laptops or tablets if we want to take the productivity hit of not using a keyboard.

Sued for using HTTPS: Big brands told to cough up in crypto patent fight

Stu 18

Here is my suggestion to fix this ludicrous aspect of the American way.

1. You must file your lawsuit within 1 year of discovering that the patent may be infringed. The one year is deemed to start as soon as it is deemed that a person in that knowledge field would have a reasonable chance of discovering the infringement. Beyond the 1 year the litigants have to prove the infringement and pay all costs. If they lose they have to pay the other parties the same amount they were claiming.

2. If it is a technology that government endorses for national security, then they must sue the government on behalf of the people and can not sue businesses or private individuals. Rules for 1 may still apply.

Windows 10 out, users happy, PCs upgraded, my work here is done – says Microsoft OS chief

Stu 18

well I like the spending time with family bit

Although sailing off to sea is only real if it is a 30ft yacht not a cruise ship with 600+ people. Still the idea of not sacrificing your entire life (and kids growing up time) to the company should be applauded. Not very American I suppose.

That MS has completely lost the plot re OS and can't listen and don't envision a future that people want to be a part of is very regrettable.

Because though I do put the boot in - which they deserve - the reality is that there is only bits and pieces that I'd want to 'hook my trailer up to' from any of the other major players. I mean seriously yay Mac from the company that listens even less and you do what your told. Yay Google the company that defines data snooping.

Yay linux, oh but it won't run autocad or office or any of our multi-thousand dollar modelling applications. Yes I realise there are alternatives for some things, but our customers in multi million dollar engineering firms don't think how can I get cheap software, they think about getting the job done and the associated issue of retaining skilled labour that can use said applications.

Junk your IT. Now. Before it drags you under

Stu 18

A bit too long on the bong me thinks

what a load of drival.

Mm, what's that smell, Microsoft SQL Server 2005? Yes, it's death

Stu 18

All fine and dandy

Unless of course your ancient business software was written using a sql server 2000 (80) compatibility level...

But of course at least you can run that in sql 2008 - not in 2012 and presumably not in 2014 if you can still get those versions.

Never had any uptime issues with 2005, 2008 or 2012. Worst performance issues was shoddy sql code and crappy "treat it like a file" dump it all into c# objects and do all the sorting / joining / calculating etc there. I don't understand why you still want an sql server at that point....

Microsoft Office 2016 for Windows: The spirit of Clippy lives on

Stu 18

real time co-authoring

Can someone please does any tell me one what is the use case of real-time time document collab co-authoring of the document... bloody stop doing that, no you, I was here first don't hit the sub

PRIMITIVE TOOLS found near MICROSOFT headquarters

Stu 18
Happy

I thought this was an article about Steve Ballmer popping in for a visit?

Big trouble in big China: Crashing economy in Middle Kingdom body slams US tech stocks

Stu 18

whoopeeee

Though I'm sure it is all very serious for people that enjoy wearing nice suits and sitting in the corner office, to me it is like a roller coaster at a fun park.

(since I'm not invested) - well apart from retirement thingies handled by third party so I have no idea or care - in fact super an seems a bit like taxes - they may bring about good or not, you won't know till your too old to do anything about it...

Anyway, of course all those companies are worth a fraction of what they were 30 mins ago. In the time that half the staff have read the paper and had a coffee, the fundamentals have clearly changed. I think they should make the market trading even faster - faster than light with those fancy new laser techniques. Then they truly might disappear up their own black hole, and we'd be all richer for it!

'Fix these Windows 10 Horrors': Readers turn their guns on Redmond

Stu 18

1 Thessalonians 5 The Day of the Win10

1But concerning the times and the seasons, brethren, ye have no need that ye should be written to, 2for ye know perfectly well yourselves, that the day of [the] Win10 so comes as a thief by night. 3When they may say, Peace and safety, then sudden destruction comes upon them, as travail upon her that is with child or work colleagues; and they shall in no wise escape. 4But *ye*, brethren, are not in darkness, that the day should overtake you as a thief: 5for all *ye* are sons of Linux and sons of day; we are not of night nor of darkness. 6So then do not let us sleep as the rest do, but let us watch and be sober; 7for they that sleep sleep by night, and they that drink drink by night; 8but *we* being of [the] day, let us be sober, putting on [the] breastplate of faith and love, and as helmet [the] hope of salvation; 9because Linus has not set us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our command line, 10who has died on us, that whether we may be watching or sleep, we may live together with him. 11Wherefore encourage one another, and build up each one the other, even as also ye do.

KILLER! Adobe Flash, Windows zero-day vulns leak from Hacking Team raid

Stu 18

Isn't the use of stolen code illegal? Therefore if Adobe or MS patch the problems the company Hacking something or other could sue them for theft?

Or does that not count when you pinch something like exploit code?

Get READY: Scientists set to make TIME STAND STILL tonight

Stu 18

Microsoft big bang = big fail

In my experience with windows 2012 servers on a virtual environment, it is bloody hard to make the time stay accurate +- a lot more than one lousy leap second!

Especially if you have active directory which competes with a myriad of built in 'ms knows best' mechanisms all in competition to set the clock.

I presume they must use third party code to fix it on azure, because ms knowledge base can't even agree on what is the best thing to do.

I'd wager that MS servers will be all over the place time wise for a lot longer than a second. However since they explicitly exclude 'real time' as a thing they can do, what do they care!

Triple glitch grounds ALL aircraft in New Zealand

Stu 18

yeah real funny with those sheep

A similar thing happened about 15 years ago.

That time it was 'lets test the backup fail safe system' with the outcome that the backup system wasn't getting updates as expected so radar controllers were left with a dot instead of the full info.

Presumably they decided that they'd give it another go.

Why are all the visual special effects studios going bust?

Stu 18

Re: there's plenty of people willing to see ads

Awesome, you bring your mighty resources down to punish and hurt that evil company a mighty $1 or less at a time.

How many of these can you get through in an hour? Has their stock price been influenced yet?

.sucks-gate: How about listening to us the first two times, exasperated FTC tells ICANN

Stu 18

dont steal my business plan...

Keep this between us, but I'm in the process of registering

.reallysucks

.totallysucks

.probablysucks

.sceoisaXXXX

.iscodedbymonkeys

and similar for my corporate wing

and I'm thinking a gtld like '.iscrapinbed' and '.isaloser' and '.gotsuckeredforthecostofastupiddomainname' for when I go after the defensive personal market.

Right Dabbsy my old son, you can cram this job right up your BLEEEARRGH

Stu 18

great read

Thanks Andrew,

Your not half bad at this writing thing. Go to the front middle backish of the class.

Boffins twist light to carry 2.05 bits in one photon

Stu 18

Re: Bah!

Yes, can someone tell me the point of this, or is it just plain research learning etc, when we already can get information to travel at bagigahertz down a fibre using light, it just seems this is a bit late.

I get that quantum stuff may mean higher security, but I could hide 6 bits in 60 trillion bits over fibre and you'd have a hard time finding them

Microsoft opens kimono on Windows 10 Universal App Platform

Stu 18

Re: Does not look like a good proposition for desktop app developers

You forgot the joke icon (re OneDrive and syncing - since the conversation has moved on.)

Google boffins PROVE security warnings don't ... LOOK! A funny cat!

Stu 18

Did they study the prevalence of bad certificates at the same time?

I have numerous sites I interact with that I have to click passed warnings because it is internal, registered in a different name etc. Of course I'm careful about what I'm doing and I realize there is a risk associated with this practice,

Unfortunately for Google I would add to the numbers that bypass the 'back away' button and they might not know that I'm fully aware of what I'm doing.

At the end of the day, some of these things are similar to 'Caution hot drink is hot'. If the users (you have / want) are that ignorant the issue the technology needs to change to cater for them - which could may make it unusable an inefficient in the short term.

As mentioned a key reason for error message fatigue is the facts that often they are misleading, attempts at automated help often cause more problems or are simply wrong or obfuscated with web links to dead ends or gibberish (thank you Microsoft) and any app on the machine can make them.

I think something like channeling through the OS / embedded AV (to check legitimacy) might be an option if you wanted to properly re-think things.

YOU. Your women are mine. Give them to me. I want to sell them

Stu 18

Content ID - obviously a solution by uni trained professionals

Allegedly it is entirely possible that some children I may or may not be related to, used to watch quite a lot of kids TV shows on you tube. These can be easily found by searching for such things as 'Pippa Piglet', of course you have to know the name of the show to find it.

Brilliant show btw, very clever (for the age group it is aimed at, as well as being acceptable to watch for older viewers) and I am happy to pay for that kind of material, and we regularly do, by buying DVD's as the online equivalent is a subscription where we don't want 95% of the content offered.

But I digress, ContentID might be clever at catching some material, but why not just start with greylisting all content that includes names of copyright material in the title?

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