Lesson Plans Rule 34
Two kinds of behaviors means a possible variety of motives. Tara notices another unusual clue. The unsub is apparently quite the gift-wrapping expert — the body parts are well-packed and secured, as are the boxes themselves.
But, Reid wonders, why would he quit medical school to go work as a courier? It seems quite a change in career. Things get even creepier when Garcia warns the others that the unsub is apparently filming his murders and putting them online. Jeffrey Dahmer on line one… Moving on!
So four more women get body parts, and the head of the latest victim, a psychiatrist named Nicholas Kaufman, is among them. Perhaps the site where he posted his videos will help the team narrow things down a little. The website is called Xanadu, and it specifically caters to some of the darker and more disturbing fetishes on the web. But you do mistake me for a submissive. Want to guess who his next victim is? So what do we learn about the unsub? Well, his name is Emmanuel, and his issues apparently stem from way back.
He was a musical child prodigy and got accepted into medical school, but while there, he showed his interest in twisted fetishes early on. That news was the final straw, and upon being released on parole, he started up his crime spree, seeking revenge on these men. As for sending the body parts to the women? According to his mom, he knew all of them personally.
He feared that people would take the wrong lessons from them, comparing it to consuming pornography. The team tries to reassure Rossi of all the good his books have done — they were all influenced to do this work in large part because of his books, after all, and law enforcement in general have benefited from them, too. This case was incredibly weird, and I think a large part of that is because of how all over the place the unsub was with his motives. All we saw was a video shared online and confirmation from Galina that he posted something there.
I could totally believe Gideon having those kinds of reservations and concerns, and trying to impart some advice to Rossi in that way. I also felt there was an unspoken implication that Gideon was afraid of what the fame from that kind of work would do to Rossi himself as well, and I like the idea of him being quietly protective like that. Other good things about this case: As infuriating as her cocky attitude was, given the particular circumstances, it also made her intriguing, and I liked that she was able to get in a valid point about how what we see in news reports can be just as messed up as anything else.
On that note, kudos should also go to the young man playing the unsub. It was nice to see Luke worrying about her as well, and I hope we can see more moments of him being there for her as she tries to deal with these issues. One of the team members had to deal with a similar issue on the home front. Meanwhile, back in Quantico: As the episode starts, we see that things are not well in the Simmons house.
He wants to stay home, but Kristy insists that he go do his job. Matt still checks in while working the case, just to see how things are going, and luckily, Kristy seems to have everything pretty well under control. She has an idea of just what might be troubling her son, however, and Matt learns the full nature of the issue once he returns home.
Remember last season, when Kristy was held hostage at her workplace and the BAU had to work the case and save her and the other hostages? You're a criminal mastermind. You've fed it the complete rules and operational parameters of the Mafia Commission. It does however arrive in 'kit' form, how much of a kit it is I don't know. I suspect most people who will be buying a 3D printer will be quite technically minded though. Like you, I used to think that the deflationary mining schedule of Bitcoin was inspired solely by goldbug principles and was a major flaw of the system.
Then I started poking around the Bitcoin protocol some more, and realized just how many empirically untested assumptions it made at the time it was created. Viewed in that light, the 21M coin limit starts to look like a prudent attempt to mitigate the worst case scenario impact of a whole host of unknown attacks. Without the coin limit, that inflation is hypothetically unbounded. I'm not sure whether this is a case of Satoshi getting this right or just that a broken clock is right twice a day, but either way it makes sense in a way that most deflationary monetary economics doesn't.
Here in the US, we're still mostly using magnetic stripes, so you can theoretically clone a card if you can get it swiped through a reader you control. A true pure currency would never change in value. Its a currency designed by people who think only inflation is a bug, deflation is a feature. There is a group here in on?
Half were all about the evils that are coming heavy overlap obviously because there is a Black Man in the White house and his various nefarious schemes. Meanwhile, Paypal canceled my debit card last week. Still, another place where they can monitor tap the cash flow of the little people. In arabian and asian countries this developement started later late 20th , so beeing in or out of a closet works different in these contexts. Looking a few years into the future or at a married man in a western country, the picture is probably different again.
My point is not that arabs or asians are so-and-so sexuality wise, but that westerners like me learned a specific sorting algorithm for people, one criteria is "sexual identity", the algorithms and criteria others learn may differ. Anyway, here I have beautiful pictures men had taken of them together in america in the late 19th, that to me show that the heterosexuality that I learned and live is a pretty recent invention: If he had felt a little more for his wife and kids I would have liked him, despite that he's somewhat stupid and dishonest and so on.
Re Business Plans for the mafia: Normal business relies on the state in numerous ways: Schools to train the workforce, police to enforce contracts, schools again to discipline the workforce getting up early and sitting still for hours at a time is alearned "skill" , to build it's infrastructure like roads, armies or political pressure to ensure access to overseas markets Ov course, said workforce uses the state too by exerting pressure regarding heatlh at the workplace, social security and so on - all things that may or may not also coincide with the interests of the industry.
Additionally we have banks, insurance and so on that also need to state to wotrk and to be trusted. I think modern capitalism, ewith it's highly mobile money, works the way it does because institution like banks and tools like stocks or derivates are ultimately trusted: You are somewhat sure that there won't be too much insider trading and other frauds, so you trust your money to complete strangers - via stock market - so they can work with it and kick you back some dividends. If you are rich enough and your bank fucks up, you also know the state will be there to bail out the banks and secure your savings to some degree.
So there's a huge system that's ultimately backed by the state that you entrust your money to. Now, the mafia has to do a lot of the states function itself: Overseas access to markets? So organized crime works somewhat like an aristocracy. Now, on the financial side it is far more difficult but not impossible to achieve the same mobility of capital, because you can't just do an IPO to raise funds, you need to find backers who trust you, and who also trust in their ability to enforce the debts meaning they are larger than you.
I think this makes it hard to apply modern business plans to organizzed crime - not impossible, but hard. The myth goes that at it's heyday, the medellin cartel had a consumption of s of kilos of rubber bands, simply to bind all those stacks of money. They were smart guys, it does not make sense for a normal business to have that much money lying around - they would not have done it this way if it was avoidable. From the story we do not get that much what the actual working on the financial side of the Operation is finde with me, was a lot of plot anyway , we only got I don't know Manfred Max evil twin, the venture-sadist?
The Husiness Hells Angel? Anyway, a cool take on a modern MBA. I checked the link in the article. It leads to the same pages on the Maplin site I read and linked to. From the Velleman site, it appears that the first batch they had sold out.
So maybe Maplin were selling it for a few days. My latest card doesn't even have raised numbers, the characters seem more etched than stamped. But I would expect that if fraudsters want something that looks just like a real credit card, the place to start would be by stealing a credit card, rather than making one.
As someone who has spent time in Edinburgh's medium security psychiatric unit owing to serious bipolar disorder which manifests in extreme mania before progressing on to acute psychosis, my only real problem with Rule 34 is that you appear to confuse psychopathy with psychosis.
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It's a conflation which is commonplace with people using psychotic as a synonym for what is meant by psychopathic. There's a reason why psychopathy is known as madness sans delirium. Most people who are psychotic are no threat to anyone other than themselves except inadvertently. Yet you have the psychopath developing psychotic symptoms within a very short period of his unspecified, though presumably anti-psychotic, medication being unavailable. The time-frame is hopefully one of narrative convenience as it can take weeks or months before psychosis re-manifests itself.
I become psychotic approximately four to six weeks after I cease medicating. So is the gangster a psychopath who also has a psychotic disorder or did you simply a screw up and confuse two discrete things, namely psychosis and psychopathy? As an addendum, psychopaths, in Scotland at least, are only usually 'treated' in a secure hospital environment if they have another treatable psychiatric disorder such as bipolar or schizophrenia otherwise they're left to rot in prison, which also tends to be the case for those with personality disorders, and it's a subject of much debate as to whether psychopathy itself is in any way treatable.
Maintaining him in a semi-functioning state is useful to his employers, but he's not in a good way. It's a year or more since I last got a new card, and all mine still have stamped details. That said, etched details would be easier to fab, but I agree your point that it'll be easier to steal cards than fab them. I checks the stuff too. The critical points about "some assembly required" seem to be the need for an electronics soldering iron AND a multimeter, which suggests that you've got to build a PCB, and calibrate the completed fabber.
I maintain one VISA card for making online purchases. I regularly have to type its number into various web pages, which make nasty comments because I didn't include the dashes, or nasty comments because I put dashes in. And I keep wondering why so many commercial sites with an expiration date drop-down box only have ten entries, stopping at October, and I have to scroll down to select November The latest replacement card has microscopic stamped numbers, only visible by taking my glasses off and holding the card up at an angle to catch the light.
I wound up putting a piece of masking tape across the long edge and writing the number in felt tip. The card normally stays in my desk drawer, so I didn't feel the need to zap the "security chip" and magstripe with my Magnaflux machine. The US economy isn't nearly as plastic-based as some, but since I've gone to cash-only for face-to-face, I've run into a number of businesses that either don't accept cash, or act like it's more hassle than it's worth for them to take my money.
I thought of suggesting Mourning Tartan , but has Charlie ever worn a kilt? Living in Edinburgh, I'd guess you have to at least once. You sure it's not some of the tertiary colours, you know, the ones "on the far side of blackness, the colours that you get if you split blackness with an eight-sided prism", very popular with assasin master students?
That'll probably happen for many people, as 3D printing at the domestic level is pretty finicky. Completely tangential, but if "You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alive" is a typo, it is the best typo I've ever read. I'd read the hell out of any book you wrote set in biological architecture. Are any of the pieces of the plot from the aborted going to be recycled in other books? Do you expect that things will turn around enough within your lifetime to give it a second chance at being written and released to an audience to whom the premise makes sense again?
Caldera Systems, who [ I remember the time when Windows for Workgroups 3. At least I was young enough I only had to get my parents to buy the update. Ah yes,but do they offer black, dress black, hunting black, weathered black, and indeed racing black? We don't joke about tartans. Here's a link to a screenshot showing detail of one of their black on black with black stripes kilts. I would have thought that was not legal. Ref 78 - Never heard that one before, but would suggest that it only applies to V5. I semi-seriously started thinking of it as Economic SF a couple years ago, at least since reading the Merchant Princes.
From the Reserve Bank of NZ website: Unfortunately, the legal tender rules are not straightforward. The rules of legal tender say that cash cannot be refused in payment for a debt. In the case of purchases from a shop, however, no debt is incurred by the customer at the time they offer to pay for goods with cash. This means a shop can refuse to accept the cash and insist on payment by other means e.
If, however, the customer has incurred a debt before paying e. Whether a debt has been incurred will depend on the circumstances, but in most situations where a consumer offers to buy goods with cash no debt has arisen. Please note s27 of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand Act , which limits legal tender in respect of certain coin denominations. A Lo-o-o-o-ng time ago I did a bid of research on cash, for an article linked to a fame, Then the company selling the game went bust, the the Royal Mint changed the sizes of coins, and it just didn't seem worth the effort to re-write.
Some British coins had been the same physical size for centuries, but not any more. You can't point at a coin in your pocket and say "this size" Legal tender rules seem to have originated in that slightly awkward period of mixed gold and base-metal coins. Pre-WW1, the value of the Pound Sterling was tied to the weight of gold in a coin. And likewise at a slightly inflated rate for silver coins. So the legal tender rules made all the copper pennies have the correct value, but set a limit on how much copper somebody had to accept.
The penny was silver until though not minted for over a century, changed to bronze in , and to plated steel in Charlie 32 I WAS going to write you a personal note, offlist on this one. What caused this revelation? The interview with a retiring MetPlod Superintendant - note that he'd only made it to superintendant, despite [ or more likely because of ] the fact that he had a good science degree. Well, good for him. Charlie has worn his kilt at the and Hugo Award ceremonies, and at weddings. Here's a picture from Gotta be careful sitting in the front though.
I hardly ever have reason to wear mine. I think the FBI was worse than you think: As an aside, Boston is one of the East Coast cities iirc, the other is Philadelphia where the "Mafia" never dominated. In Boston, organized crime was dominated by the Irish-American community.
In other words, the FBI wasn't so much suppressing organized crime as conspiring with it to suppress a rival gang. ALL Law Enforcement agencies suffer from some degree of corruption, from the small time example like the local County Sheriff An elected office in most US jurisdictions whose continuous Drunken Driving was never questioned, the minor things like odd free donut, etc.
And of course the US "War on Drugs" has sent corrosive foods of money through the underground economy, even the "Legal" Asset Forfeiture mechanisms have had a corrupting effect on Law enforcement practice. I'll be relocating to Chicago by year's end much better job and the Offspring is in college , so I've been reading up on that illustrious city's history, starting with Royko's Boss , which chronicles the rise and tenure of the first Daley up to or so.
All I can say is, there's a reason why so many gangster movies are set in Chicago. And it isn't because the authorities there were particularly tough on crime. Although I'm fairly left-leaning, I do fear that Obama's political roots in Chicago show. I'm not terribly surprised, either. A black kilt, black shirt, and big clunky black boots with black socks? Some people would make comments on these fashion choices - but I wore that outfit myself to a friend's birthday party just last Thursday! Okay, I had one black button-down shirt rather than a black coat over a black T-shirt. I don't know if anyone remarked on Charlie in , but I got "Nice kilt!
Or is this a kickstarter project waiting to happen A sgian dubh is not classed as an offensive weapon when worn with Highland dress in Scotland as it's "cultural", like Sikh quoits. Most kilt hire and sales shops will supply you with a plastic replica sgian dubh with a fancy knotwork hilt and optionally a faceted Cairngorm stone but you can pay more and get a real working knife although they limit the blade length to something more appropriate these days. Returning to rule 34, the part in the discussion about corruption and the fbi as a gang A rule 34 squad turns to some black-hats as informants, feeding them some info in turn.
Meanwhile, some black hat guys connected the dots of accidents happening to their spammer idols. Anyway, a counterstrike is in the making, not only in the black hat community. As is within the operation. But whom have our copper friends sided with? The official slogan is "Chicago, a city of neighborhoods", which ends unofficially with "and where the residents stay in their own if they know what's good for them.
Well, so did Daley. Not the best neighborhood. Of that 16, I recognise 10, would expect all but one of those to recognise me, and encountered 4 of them just last night.
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How small the British SF scene can be. USB flash-drives can be pretty tiny, likewise USB wifi adaptors, so something with some geeky tech in it seems quite possible. Multitools seem a bit more tricky. Some of the "safety" ones I found on Google might look a bit tacky, but they're plastic and cheap. You might be able to work up something pretty quick with a tool such as a Dremel. Google for the Sandisk Cruzer Fit as an instance of what you could use. Having the USB drive completely hidden might be a bad idea.
It looks like you're trying to breach security. Well, the point is to have something that's recognizable both as a sgian dubh and as a geek accessory for the 21st century. I'd thought of the Atwood knife multitools see link above , because it would be fairly easy to make a blade that functioned as a screwdriver and bottle opener, and possibly something else hex wrench, perhaps. The rest of the hilt could be filled up by a nice little laser pointer for playing with cats, or something else a bit bigger.
USB drives come to mind because they're generally useful and take up very little space, exposed or not. As it happens, I was carrying a Leatherman tool which came in handy before the end of the evening. It doesn't look much like a sgian dubh, though. The great advantage of the Swiss Army Knife" isn't the knife It didn't -- it identifies with everyone who fits its search criteria, in parallel. Why would a useful AI be single-tasking? I've played enough IF that I immediately grokked the reason for Halting State being written in the second person. I assumed Rule 34 was in the second person for the same reason, and finally twigged the real reason towards the end, when we became aware of the true nature of ATHENA.
I thought it was a nice piece of misdirection: If I ever figure out how to overhaul it and write it, I'll do so. An entire trilogy in that mode But that's probably just my ignorance speaking. What I find interesting, well, a bit interesting is that in the twenty-first century with all the fabulous tech and so forth it's still useful to have a knife, even a simple not mutlitool sort of thing, just a simple knife.
And how outraged I get with travelling and not caring to get mixed up with security theatre and so forth that of course I end up just needing a fucking knife and of course not having one to hand. Nor the Swills alpine tunnels, either. Maybe this is a better answer than just 'because', maybe not: If you go with a Dennett-style interpretation of consciousness, it's just the master-narrative.
So multitasking consciousness would be impossible. Alternatively, each and every one of those processes following a human may have human-equivalent awareness and the AI's consciousness - the master-narrative - incomprehensible. Possibly enough not like our state being that probably can't label it 'consciousness' anymore. But what do I know: Of course, you can always argue that no computer truly multi-tasks; the closest they come is either time-division multiplexing on a single core or limited parallism between rendezvous on multiple cores.
Well, there's an older idea of unity of consciousness. Even God can't be three persons it's a mystery. I don't follow Dennett because I can't follow Dennett, can't follow his argument. But an AI could model indefinitely many personalities or personae without actually having one. Am I possibly agreeing with you here? Human beings don't generally multi-task; we task switch, i.
However, over-learned non-conscious behaviours from walking or chewing gum to driving a car can happen simultaneously and we can think or talk about other things at the same time -- just as long as the automatic task doesn't suddenly become so complex it requires conscious oversight approaching a complex road junction, finishing the chewing gum and looking for somewhere to dispose of it.
Since I live in earthquake country, I routinely carry a "survival knife," which, in this case, is a single bladed lock-back utility knife that's so useful it's always in my pocket. Hence, it's available as a survival knife in case I have to cut my way out from under a bunch of wall panels that fall on me when the Big One hits, or more likely start cutting up rags for bandages at a triage and primary treatment area. Seriously, though, I think a multitool with fancy scrollwork and an optional cairngorm would be the ideal thing to wear with a kilt, especially at the Festival Fringe.
Call it the Scots Army Knife, and absolutely make sure it's capable of opening every known bottle and can. Here's a wee bit of inspiration for ya. Why not do it anyway? Somewhere between those two. I know, there's a snowball's chance, but still. Publishers like to see novels on a schedule divisible by 12 months -- ideally one a year. Less than that and they feel they can't maintain shelf visibility in bookshops, so they have an incentive to spend their promotional budget on other authors who can produce the goods.
As it is I'm currently committed to writing a trilogy in 18 months, which is pretty harsh going. Luckily it's in-series so much of the world-building and character development is already done and it's going to be structured as a single Neal Stephenson sized story with two dotted lines down the spine labelled "cut here" to mark the mid-point climaxes. I sort of agree with well agree with you in the cases of some individuals but I have had a "Eureka moment" on a software problem whilst driving without crashing. I, and I'm not alone except maybe amongst regular poster on here reckon that Charlie's crime fiction is comparable with Christopher Brookmyre, Quentin Jardine and Ian Rankine should all be on Wikipedia , and I'd read any of them before Stout or Wolfe never hear of Upfield before; will check Wikipedia.
I think the sticking point may be the SF element. If, however, you staged a different murder at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe each year, you could do your research on the street, as it were, and not spend so much effort on the background. Or do the Martha Grimes ploy. Instead of setting murders around famous pubs, set them at Cons.
Note that this has been done, notably in Zombies of the Gene Pool. It would give you a great reason to attend Cons all over the world. If I recall correctly, the Sicilian Mafia operated only in the more civilized parts of Sicily. The interior was too lawless for a Mafia to take hold.
Rocket to the Morgue by Anthony Boucher, from I was recently thinking that Halting State would work well as a long-form TV serial; glad to see the idea has some legs. And, really, this is the best message board around. At least, the best one that I visit regularly. Ah, is that what that book's about? I saw my father's old copy, but it was too beaten up to read Old paperbacks don't age well, I'm afraid. McCoy even made a comment about it in one episode.
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I kept thinking, even an s-tech revolver might do the job where Federation tech fell short However, over-learned non-conscious behaviours from walking or chewing gum to driving a car can happen simultaneously That's what we call "lizard-brain processing. The driver's conscious attention should be on traffic. That's why we used to make a distinction between "racing drivers" and "drivers of racing cars.
As someone who works on organised crime professionally and reads SF recreationally, I especially appreciated the Organisation's model in Rule 34; this is the kind of post-modernist, business-model crime we're already seeing emerging from the Russians but also beginning to creep into old guard structures like the Mafia. In an age when the Chechens franchise out their 'brand name', this should hardly surprise. Great ideas in a great storyline, but it's a shame that so many law enforcement agencies are having trouble adapting to this kind of model.
They clearly ought to read the book An interesting take on performance driving; most previous stuff I've seen some by racing drivers say that when they're going well it's like everything goes into slow motion. I believe the term is: If they work properly, please delete this post. You've been told before that if you're going to write a comment in a different editor, do it in Notepad rather than Word. Word replaces double quotes with 'smart' quotes ]]. Also, for the record, although they may have just been fixed in the last 3 or 4 minutes, the links now work fine in Chrome under W7.
I haven't used Word in a long time, but I think they call the feature "smart quotes" and it can be turned off. Open Office and Libre Office do something similar. Sometimes it can be awkward: Further on this - I can probably remember how to do it in most versions of Word Greg, so if you can post the version number or year I'm guessing something like I'll give it a shot.
Cassin photo here as well. Usually I will make such correction silently, since it's obvious what the problem is and what the poster had intended. If a link is initially not there and then later works, that's the probable cause — ahb ]]. I'll try to remember to use "Notepad" in future This sounds like flow to me. Ok, I only skimmed the article. You're possibly right, but I've seen text sources talking about this going back to the s, so significantly pre-dating "Flow theory". Would be much appreciated! Also, how far off the mark was my last comment re. Whatever the cause, I think Rule 34 was the best Stross novel yet.
Maybe it's good for some people to do hard work rather than counting on talent. There are non heteronormative subcultures and neighborhoods, and the novel was clearly set in such, whatever the authorly guilt reasons for it. Which is fine, if you like science fiction you should be ready to look at things a sight more radically unfamiliar than that.
The second person wasn't a problem.
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It matched Halting State and if there's a rationale behind it whatever. It all went for an uncanny valley type effect that set a tone that worked well with the plot. No questions that don't boil down to a request for a more in that setting. Competition would rear its ugly head. Even though the whole force was looking the other way by illicit influence from the top, individual policemen could risk being unusually upstanding and by-the-book--unless given an individual bribe as well. Lower rung criminals who were part of the larger enterprise would compete with each other to bribe lower level law enforcement more than the next guy as well.
A few months ago, Bruce Schneier linked to an analysis of Bitcoin from his blog. Bitcoins, you see, record a history of all transactions in an anonymised form in each coin, so the history of the entire currency's transactions can be traced. As it happens, this history absolutely stinks of "scam". Early in the history of Bitcoin, a very large transaction occurred and immediately after this, portions of this whopper of a transfer got repeatedly passed back and forth between a few of the participants, in a manner scarily like that employed to obfuscate who owns what in a conventional financial scam.
Bitcoin isn't conventional, though, so we can conclude that whoever was doing this didn't know that the actions could be traced and that they would not obfuscate the initial transaction. This then strongly suggests criminal and not-quite-smart criminal involvement in the whole thing. The net result is that for anyone reading that article, Bitcoins tend to seem irrevocably tainted. You're actually missing the point; for a criminal a credit card is not so much the physical card its self so much as the informational entity linked to it.