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[1748.06 --> 1753.50] card doesn't work we're shopping we're not leaving so awkward i'm not even worried about that although
[1753.50 --> 1759.74] i did have a really awkward situation at uh tim hortons where i i forgot my wallet and my wife forgot her
[1759.74 --> 1767.82] wallet and we were in vancouver and i had already placed my order and i was like oh crap i forgot my wallet can
[1767.82 --> 1772.38] i run out to the car and grab my wife's so when i come back she's got my order ready for me and i'm
[1772.38 --> 1779.42] like yo dog i'm sorry my wife doesn't have her wallet either i have to go i think i made it up to them
[1779.42 --> 1784.38] i went and i borrowed some money from a relative who lives in vancouver and then i went all the way back
[1784.38 --> 1789.42] to that tim hortons even though it was out of my way i was like i have cash now you know but i still
[1789.42 --> 1795.34] they probably had to throw at least some of it away like i feel terrible um anyway sorry what were we
[1795.34 --> 1800.38] talking about uh stealing stuff from stores uh drinking things before you leave right i just
[1800.38 --> 1806.62] feel weird about it i remember that i just yeah yeah i i i don't do it i know my i i think my mom
[1806.62 --> 1810.38] does a little bit i know other people that i go shopping with have done it and even with that when
[1810.38 --> 1815.98] i'm with someone who's doing it i feel super uncomfortable i don't know why it's just i'm not
[1815.98 --> 1822.62] really into that at all they have to have you on video someone has to watch you put it in your pocket
[1822.62 --> 1826.54] they can follow you and watch you but you have not broken the law until you attempt to leave the
[1826.54 --> 1831.42] store without paying okay so there you go perfectly reasonable because you should be able to go around
[1831.42 --> 1837.90] a shopping center without a basket or shopping cart right i mean they can ask you to leave your bag at
[1837.90 --> 1843.42] the front yeah so i usually and they can ask you to leave the store yep yeah it is there it is their
[1843.42 --> 1851.98] right to do that yeah we have 5 000 live viewers right now who are tuned into our stream which is
[1851.98 --> 1859.50] like super late like two and a half hours two hours late like janky janky quality don't know anything
[1859.50 --> 1864.62] about the topics in the middle we have no we have no lighting other than like the terrible fluorescent
[1864.62 --> 1870.62] lighting in this board room yeah and uh and you know what guys thanks for showing up we love your
[1870.62 --> 1875.42] support that's really cool we appreciate you guys you guys are cool speaking of things that aren't
[1875.42 --> 1883.74] cool is comcast has um has a past of being against tor and is listed on tor's bad isp project list thing
[1883.74 --> 1891.10] all right so well as if uh as if comcast was not listed on a good one good isp list come on
[1891.98 --> 1897.74] anyways i still have to point that out but all right um so this next topic is from and then there was
[1897.74 --> 1903.74] one as well original article is from venture beat so the nsa is mapping the internet i'm not sure if
[1903.74 --> 1911.74] this is news but uh nsa stuff just like assume anything you could ever dream of that's like bad
[1911.74 --> 1915.90] and on the internet just be like yeah the nsa probably has something to do with that so the program is
[1915.90 --> 1921.26] trying to create an interactive map of the global internet in close to real time that would try to
[1921.26 --> 1926.54] identify the devices through which data flows such as routers the program is supposed to help in
[1926.54 --> 1932.46] computer attack and exploit planning offering a battlefield map for cyber warfare targeted
[1932.46 --> 1939.74] companies sounds good yeah yeah yeah so targeted companies include a deutsche telecom the owner of t-mobile
[1939.74 --> 1948.22] and uh the german isp net cologne so pretty cool nsa you guys are just staying cool this is interesting
[1948.22 --> 1954.62] because germany was already pissed off yeah i know right about tapping into uh what's her name's phone
[1955.74 --> 1962.78] so it'd be pretty interesting this next one literally know nothing about it are we gonna do this one are
[1962.78 --> 1969.74] we gonna jump over it yeah no uh yeah let's let's let's go ahead so uh apple's warrant canary disappears
[1970.30 --> 1977.02] uh suggesting new patriot act demand so this was originally posted by lolz on the forum we don't have an actual
[1977.02 --> 1981.98] link though yeah it's okay okay the original article is from gig ohm so if you want to just maybe post
[1981.98 --> 1987.50] that link in the in the chat so apple's first transparency report on government activity in late
[1987.50 --> 1994.94] 2013 included a footnote that stated apple has never received an order under section 215 of the usa patriot act
[1994.94 --> 2001.74] we would expect to challenge such an order if served on us um so writer and cyber activist corey doctorow
[2001.74 --> 2007.98] uh recognized that language as a warrant canary or a way of thwarting the secrecy imposed by the
[2007.98 --> 2013.82] patriot act companies and publishers have included these canaries to signal to their users that so far
[2013.82 --> 2019.58] they have not been subjected to a given type of secret subpoena by law enforcement when this language
[2019.58 --> 2023.66] is removed it is likely that the situation has changed and the company has been subject to such a
[2023.66 --> 2029.74] request but of course is being told that they can't say anything about it so having that canary in
[2029.74 --> 2036.46] place protects them and their users as long as people are paying attention so section 215 of the
[2036.46 --> 2041.34] patriot act permits the nsa to demand companies to hand over their business records in secret
[2042.14 --> 2052.06] it is believed that it is the legal foundation of the prism program so yeah not good not good
[2052.06 --> 2058.78] mind you this uh this comes uh this comes out around the same time as apple's um recent change to the
[2058.78 --> 2064.78] way they handle user data which is awesome which is pretty awesome that basically in a nutshell means
[2064.78 --> 2073.34] that if your phone is locked even apple cannot get to it um so that is is pretty much their way of
[2073.34 --> 2079.34] throwing up their hands and going well okay you served us a warrant for something we legitimately can
[2079.34 --> 2085.66] access so peace bro i really like that that's really cool and i actually know a lot of people that are
[2085.66 --> 2091.98] pretty heavy android users that might legitimately switch just because of that reason it's it's a
[2091.98 --> 2096.22] reason to switch it's kind of a big deal i'd like to see how google responds to this yeah because i you
[2096.22 --> 2101.26] know the way that the way that google is about data farming they want all your data they want all your
[2101.26 --> 2106.54] data they want it all the time and they want it all the time i got to feel like if google were to
[2106.54 --> 2111.98] decide that they were going to leave your data alone when your phone is locked would be that would be
[2111.98 --> 2118.22] very out of character for them so i don't know they might put them in a bit of an awkward position
[2119.34 --> 2125.82] all right so this was originally posted on the forum by ion bassa the world's first fully functional 3d
[2125.82 --> 2132.46] printed car this was bound to happen yeah you gotta bet that there were any number of people working on
[2132.46 --> 2140.54] making this happen oh my god you can download a car so it was designed printed and driven by arizona based
[2140.54 --> 2147.34] local motors printing and assembly took just 44 hours hey local motors these are the guys that make
[2147.34 --> 2152.70] that uh trike thing that i'm hoping to get all right uh for the for review don't worry about it
[2153.58 --> 2160.38] probably won't even happen but yeah after 44 hours hours the car was drivable it's named the strati so
[2160.38 --> 2167.58] italian for layers electric powered it's a two-seat compact roadster it has a battery a motor wiring and
[2167.58 --> 2174.94] suspension these all came from a variety of sources including ronal's tweezy city car twizey yeah i don't
[2174.94 --> 2182.70] know yeah i'm clearly tired and i apologize for any words that i'm slurring or or pronouncing incorrectly
[2182.70 --> 2190.62] because i'm just not processors yeah gtx processors um chassis and body are printed from a carbon fiber
[2190.62 --> 2197.26] reinforced plastic compound it has only 40 parts to it in comparison to a normal car with 20 000 or more
[2197.26 --> 2203.42] parts this is actually this ties into a conversation we had earlier today where we were talking about
[2203.42 --> 2210.46] how electric cars right now are very expensive but once they become more of a commodity item and and
[2210.46 --> 2217.02] less of a less of a curiosity less high tech i expect them to actually be much cheaper not even necessarily
[2217.02 --> 2223.10] that but once battery production goes up because that gigafactory that tell us uh tell us oh no right
[2223.10 --> 2229.50] oh you have sullied the good name of tesla by calling them tell us i feel like a horrible person
[2230.22 --> 2236.38] you are a horrible person the gigafactory that tesla is intending to uh build in nevada will actually
[2236.38 --> 2243.02] produce more of that type of battery than all of the other factories in the entire world combined right now
[2243.02 --> 2249.58] yeah yeah which is like ridiculous so with battery production going up to that extent i am expecting and
[2249.58 --> 2257.66] and based just based on how simple yeah an electric car is compared to an internal combustion car i mean
[2257.66 --> 2264.14] i i think i think gas powered vehicles are going to look stupid to my kids by the time they're old
[2264.14 --> 2270.86] enough to be adults buying a car it's it's going to be this it's going to be this weird you know eccentric
[2270.86 --> 2276.54] thing to do to own a fossil fuel powered vehicle i really do think so i think that we're still going to
[2276.54 --> 2283.82] continue to see fossil fuels augment battery power so having a small you know lawn mower like rider mower
[2283.82 --> 2288.14] class uh internal combustion engine in there to charge the battery in an emergency or whatever else
[2288.14 --> 2294.78] i think we're going to continue to see that but expecting cars to just run on gas i i don't know
[2294.78 --> 2299.98] industrial vehicles potentially especially being down here actually is pretty amazing while we were
[2299.98 --> 2309.10] coming to nvidia headquarters i saw on the road at least uh 10 different electric cars and like not
[2309.10 --> 2313.82] just teslas because this area is known for teslas a whole wide range of them so that was actually
[2313.82 --> 2321.58] really interesting to see um the 3d printed car will cost anywhere between 18 and 30 000 though so
[2323.42 --> 2329.82] right now the materials alone are probably what's driving up the cost i mean just plain plastic filament
[2330.14 --> 2335.18] nothing special about it incredibly expensive you buy enough of that stuff to build a car
[2335.18 --> 2339.02] you're gonna be spending a lot of money now you talk about carbon fiber reinforced filament
[2340.94 --> 2346.46] yeah um and also it's it's going to be such low volume at the beginning that you're not going to
[2346.46 --> 2352.14] be able to take advantage of local motors is kind of a specialty kind of shop so it's not surprising
[2352.14 --> 2357.26] i mean if they were producing a thousand times as many of them i think we would see prices drop pretty
[2357.26 --> 2360.94] considerable and i'm sure if you work with them it's going to be a very personalized experience as
[2360.94 --> 2365.98] well this is kind of cool too uh the cost might seem high at first but many of the parts can be
[2365.98 --> 2372.14] reused when you decide to trade change cars or upgrade so uh yeah i'm guessing things like the
[2372.14 --> 2378.62] motor could potentially be reused if you decide to you know uh okay i want a single seater type vehicle